Category Archives: Social Media

Why Klout Gets a FAIL For Their Notification Emails

These email notifications from Klout get a big, fat FAIL in my book:

Kloutnotifications

I should NEVER be REQUIRED to go back to your website to get notifications about your service.

You have already interrupted my life by sending me an email. Now you want me to further interrupt my life to go to your website to see whatever brilliant piece of information you want to share with me?

FAIL

This is a classic mistake by new services. They want to get people to come back to their website. Once users go to their website, the service can then track the users’ usage and also try to entice them to go into other areas of the service.

It may work for some services… but for many others it just services to piss off users. They may just ignore your email messages and your services… they may mark your email as “spam”… or they may write cranky blog posts like this one.

Here is a request to all the zillion new social services out there:

RESPECT MY TIME!

If you want me to use your service… and more importantly, if you want me to be a happy user of your service and promote it to other people, then follow this one simple step:

RESPECT MY TIME!

Send me a notification email WITH THE MESSAGE INCLUDED.

Facebook does this.

Twitter does this.

Google+ does this.

LinkedIn does this. (although I seem to recall they didn’t at first, but that was years ago)

Every service should do this.

Don’t make me go back to your website.

Respect my time.

Maybe I’ll use your service more…. maybe I’ll click back to your web site and respond or take other action. And yes, it might be a little less trackable… but you’ll have happier users. (And people like me won’t write cranky blog posts like this one. 🙂 )

Final Day of the 2011 FIR Listener Survey – Help Us Guide The Show!

Do you listen to the For Immediate Release Podcast? If so, do you have a few minutes to take the FIR listener survey if you haven’t already done so?

The survey is a very important tool to help Shel and Neville (and by extension, we who are correspondents) shape the future of the FIR podcast. The feedback IS highly valued and much appreciated.

THE 2011 FIR LISTENER SURVEY CLOSES AT MIDNIGHT GMT ON SEPTEMBER 20!

So please, if you have a few minutes, help us out and complete the survey!

P.S. And if you are not an FIR listener but are interested in social media, why not give it a try now? Each week there is an hour-long show plus sometimes other interviews and book reviews. I’m always learning something new from all the great content!

PodCamp NH Begins Tomorrow (Sat, Aug 13) in New Hampton, NH

PodcampnhIf you live in New Hampshire (as I do) and are interested in all things related to social media: blogging, podcasting, digital marketing, Twitter, Facebook, and so much more, PodCamp NH is happening tomorrow, Saturday, August 13, 2011, from 8:30am to 5:00pm in New Hampton, NH.

The schedule of sessions so far has been posted (tip: note that the schedule box has both vertical and horizontal scroll bars – there are simultaneous session tracks), and I’ve seen from Twitter that a number of great folks are already planning to head up that way.

The latest PCNH blog post has some more info – including that over 70 people have already registered! It sounds like a great event… and so if you are here in the Granite State or one of the surrounding states, please do head on over and check it out – and join in, too, because PodCamps are by design a place for people to collaborate and be involved.

P.S. Alas, I am not one of those 70 people going as I have other family plans tomorrow… but I’m looking forward to getting to one of the PCNH events one of these years…


If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either:


Want to Track the Chaos and Disruption in Media? Use Mediagazer, the Techmeme for media

Want to keep up with the ongoing disruption in the media business? Want to understand how business models are fundamentally changing? Want to learn about the newest tools that are appearing? Want to just stay up on the latest changes?

For years now, I’ve been using Techmeme.com to stay up on the changes in the tech world, but only recently have I really started to use Techmeme’s sister site, Mediagazer:

www.mediagazer.com

Like Techmeme, Mediagazer uses a combination of automated tools and human editing to curate the best stories – and the follow-on stories – in one place.

Mediagazer

It’s a well-done site that helps communicators keep up with the changes that are going on all around us in the media industry. Mediagazer’s feed is of course also available on Twitter.

Well worth a look if you haven’t seen it…


If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either:


Breaking News: MediaSift (makers of TweetMeme) Licenses Twitter Firehose to Merge With Klout And Sentiment Data

Data20conMoments ago at the Data 2.0 Conference in San Francisco, representatives of Twitter and MediaSift (the people behind Tweetmeme) stood onstage to announce that MediaSift is licensing Twitter’s “firehose” to provide a way to obtain filtered feeds from the Twitter firehose. The service, which will be branded “DataSift”, will be available at:

http://datasift.net/

Right now the service is in “Alpha” only and will be launched, per the news post, in Q3 2011.

The intriguing element here is that instead of dealing with the entire Twitter firehose through, for instance, the service that Gnip provides, with DataSift you will be able to filter the feed down based on keywords… or even Klout scores (or PeerIndex scores) and/or sentiment analysis.

This is where it could get interesting. You could then set up monitoring for tweets mentioning your brand name that had a negative sentiment and were from someone with a certain “authority” (remembering the issues with any such system). You could then act on those tweets in some fashion (sending out an alert, responding via Twitter, pinging someone via SMS). The key is that the filtering is done in MediaSift’s cloud and you get to interact with an already filtered and merged feed.

Pricing was not disclosed in the announcement, although it was said that you only have to pay for the tweets with which you interact – and could also do that on a time-driven basis (i.e. for an hour). On the DataSift web site, there is a pricing page with little detail, but a pricing calculator may give some view into the pricing (if that price there is in US dollars. I can’t tell from the symbol).

All in all it sounds like an intriguing service… now we just have to wait for it to actually be launched and publicly available.


If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either:


TED Video: The Birth Of A Word by Deb Roy (and visualizing social interactions)

If you haven’t seen this video that has been circulating around some parts of the Twittersphere, it’s well worth a watch. As the abstract says:

MIT researcher Deb Roy wanted to understand how his infant son learned language — so he wired up his house with videocameras to catch every moment (with exceptions) of his son’s life, then parsed 90,000 hours of home video to watch “gaaaa” slowly turn into “water.” Astonishing, data-rich research with deep implications for how we learn.

What is also interesting is the part after his son’s word where Deb Roy looks at how they applied their techniques to analyzing social interactions online…


If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either:


Free webinar, April 7 – Social CRM and Building Apps to Monitor Social Channels

Are you struggling with how to monitor and respond to customer interaction on social channels like Twitter? Do you have staff assigned to social monitoring but are trying to figure out how to scale your interactions? Are you looking at “Social CRM” and how you tie social channels into the rest of your customer interaction channels?

On Thursday, April 7, 2011, we at Voxeo will be hosting a free webinar called Social CRM and Building Apps to Monitor Social Channels where we will talk about how our platform and services can assist companies and organizations with scaling and supporting their customer interaction over social channels. The abstract of the session is:

Two thirds of today’s Internet users actively engage with social networks such as Twitter or Facebook. They use it mainly for personal communication, but often share feedback and thoughts about product or service experiences. Companies need to contribute to this conversation to protect their brands, enhance customer service or provide proactive customer care. They are or will soon be faced both with a staffing problem and the technical challenge of having to integrate with their more traditional customer interaction channels.

Learn how Voxeo can help you automate communication over social channels and bridge the gap between social networks and traditional channels such as IVR or direct agent interaction.

We’ll have a demo as part of the session and will leave plenty of time for Q&A. We’ll also show the analytics that are available for social channels… and how those channels can be integrated in with the other tools we have to create and manage “multi-channel” applications that interact with customers across voice, SMS, IM, mobile web and social channels like Twitter.

It should be a great session and the main presenter is my colleague Tobias Göbel who is quite excellent. Registration is free and we’d love to have you join us.


If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either:


SalesForce.com Gets SocialCRM In A Big Way – Buys Radian6 for $326 Million

Salesforceradian6The news rocking the Twittersphere and PR/marketing side of the online world today is that SalesForce.com is acquiring social media monitoring company Radian6 for $326 million USD ($276 million cash and $50 million stock). SFDC issued the standard overly formal news release which has the gory details for those whose eyes are still open. Radian6, on the other hand, has a nice friendly blog post up

The coverage is predictably everywhere… and climbing up Techmeme right now. Some stories:

For my part, I’m intrigued to see how they will further integrate Radian6’s extensive social media monitoring into SalesForce.com’s already powerful CRM environment. Some hints are in the news release:

  • Sales and Service Cloud: Social media monitoring and engagement has emerged as the requirement for any brand and customer engagement strategy, helping companies join conversations about their brands and stay connected to their customers and prospects. By combining Radian6’s social media monitoring and engagement platform with Sales Cloud and Service Cloud, companies will be able to keep customer success at the center of their business with real-time social intelligence.
  • Salesforce Chatter: Radian6 and salesforce.com will create the bridge between public social networks, like Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, blogs and online communities, and Salesforce Chatter, the private, secure social network for the enterprise. Chatter feeds will no longer just contain the activity happening within the walls of a company, but will be filled with real time insights from fans on Facebook pages, followers on Twitter, comments on blog posts and more.
  • Force.com Platform: Developers will be able to build apps that tap into the power of Radian6, putting the social web into everything they build. In such a dynamic market, this acquisition will present a huge opportunity for salesforce.com to extend its developer and partner ecosystem with technology not available anywhere else.

Done well, it could truly provide a powerful means for building “Social CRM” applications. I’m looking forward to seeing what happens next!


If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either:


My Problem With Klout Scores: Beyonce Gets a 50 – Without Ever Sending A Tweet!

KloutI have a friend who checks his Klout Score religiously. Daily… in fact… multiple times per day[1]. As a poster boy for Klout’s marketing, he wants to “get more Klout” and is perplexed by my lukewarm reaction when he brings it up, particularly given that I have a decent Klout score that is much higher than his.

The reason for my reticence is basically this:

Klout scores are useful, but very definitely imperfect.

Despite Klout’s bold marketing that they are “the Standard for Influence”, the reality is that they are simply one metric that can be taken into account when trying to determine how influential a certain person is online. They are not the end-all and be-all… the ultimate arbiter… etc., etc.

Just one metric.

Beyonce???

A case study in the imperfection of Klout’s system would be the Twitter account allegedly for singer Beyonce Knowles: @beyonce. The account currently has over a million followers… and a Klout score of 50. (Klout scores are based on a scale of 0 to 100.) Here’s the chart:

Kloutbeyonce

Notice that the account is indicated to be a “Thought Leader”:

You are a thought leader in your industry. Your followers rely on you, not only to share the relevant news, but to give your opinion on the issues. People look to you to help them understand the day’s developments. You understand what’s important and what your audience values.

But here’s the thing….

the Beyonce Twitter account HAS NOT SENT OUT A SINGLE TWEET!

Zero. Zip. Nada. Zilch. None.

Beyoncetwitter

And yet somehow this account has a Klout score of “50”? With a badge saying that it had “500 Total Retweets”? (HUH? How do you do a retweet when there are no tweets?)

Proponents of Klout may of course say that this shows the influence Beyonce would have should she decide to start tweeting. And sure… with 1 million followers, this account certainly could have some influence. And yes, perhaps this is just an “edge case” … but still, it is an example to me of why obsession over the metric isn’t helpful.

Technorati Authority, Redux

You see, we’ve seen this movie before. Those of us who have been around the blogging world for a while (coming up on 11 years for me) remember well the “Authority” ranking established by Technorati in its earlier years. It aimed to show how well your blog ranked in the millions of blogs out there. People tracked their Technorati Authority ranking religiously… they added buttons and widgets to their blogs… people wrote blog posts and had conference sessions about what you could do to increase your Technorati Authority… people stressed out when their Authority ranking dropped. It was all quite the rage.

And just like the Klout score, it was an imperfect tool… as were all the other metrics/indices/etc. that popped up trying to be the next best measurement of influence.

Technorati Authority was useful, but it was just one more metric to consider.

And IS it Beyonce?

Just to continue with the example a moment more:

How do we know that this IS Beyonce?

Anyone can create a Twitter account at any name. Anyone can put whatever name they want in a profile. Anyone can upload whatever image they want for their Twitter account. Anyone can put whatever URL they want into the “Bio” field of a Twitter account.

This “@beyonce” account is not a “Verified Account”. It very well could be Beyonce or one of her entourage setting this account up for future use. Or it could be a bored 13-year-old who noticed the account was available and is now sitting in his or her room laughing their ass off at how many people they suckered into following the account[2].

We have no way of knowing… particularly when the account isn’t tweeting.

The Klout score is for the Twitter account, which may or may not be the actual person named by the account.

Measuring Online Influence Is Insanely Difficult

If it were easy, we’d have simple metrics we could all agree upon.

Say you have User1 with 1,000,000 followers and User2 with only 100 followers… but what is missing is that in User2’s 100 followers are the heads of state for most of the countries of the world… and the heads of the largest corporations in the world. And that User1 has a high proportion of “spam” accounts.

Who has more “influence”? And is that online or offline influence?

Not easy questions to sort through… and ultimately bound by a certain degree of subjectivity. Which is why services like Klout, PeerIndex and others that are popping up all do provide a matrix of other indicators to provide more detail behind a “score”. Klout has “true reach, amplification, network” and a comparison matrix. Peer Index has “authority, activity, audience” and their own charts and matrices.

Of course, so often those additional indicators get lost in the desire for a simple “score” that you can use to sort people into different buckets of influence. (How many of you know your Klout Score but don’t remember the other numbers?)

Don’t get me wrong… the scores from Klout, PeerIndex, etc. are very definitely useful metrics… they can help us quickly understand whether the person screaming about our company online is someone with a large audience. Or they can help us identify people online that we may want to be following or targeting.

But they are just one more metric to be considered. And they are not perfect.


P.S. Hat tip to Anil Dash for tweeting that the Beyonce account was the first he knew of to hit 1 million followers without sending out a tweet, which is how I learned of the account.


[1] Which doesn’t make much sense to me given that my understanding is that Klout only updates their scores once a day.

[2] A separate blog post could be written about how Twitter’s encouraging people to follow various accounts may wind up recommending an account like this one with 0 tweets to a good number of people who may inadvertently click the “Follow” link without realizing that the account had never tweeted.


If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either:


Tumblr’s Awesome Error Message

Lately I’ve been using Tumblr a bit for a project and overall it’s gone quite well and left me quite impressed with the service. Today, though, while working on the site Tumblr had some problem because suddenly I couldn’t get to the site.

However, Tumblr did give me a great laugh with this error message:

Tumblrerror

And with that laugh, I gave them a bit of a break and went to do something else for a few minutes before checking back.

Lesson – if you have a technical problem, at least try to amuse people with your error message…

(And just a minute or two later my Tumblr site was responding again.)


UPDATE: My colleague Justin Dupree pointed out the origin of the Tumbeasts, as did someone named Daniel (nice name!) as a comment to this post. Thanks to both Justin and Daniel for pointing out the origin!


If you found this post interesting or useful, please consider either: