WebProNews

Tag: Metrics

  • Periscope Says 40 Years of Video Watched Every Day

    Periscope Says 40 Years of Video Watched Every Day

    Twitter’s livestreaming app Periscope has just released its first growth report, and both users and activity is steadily rising.

    According to Periscope, there are over 10 million registered accounts in just four months.

    Of course, accounts don’t equate to active users. Periscope has around two million daily active users – but that’s not really important, according to the company.

    According to Periscope, it cares about “Time Watched”.

    “Time Watched serves as a proxy for active user growth, without suffering some of the limitations of focusing exclusively on a metric like Daily Active Users (DAU) or Monthly Active Users (MAU),” says the company.

    “It’s most reflective of the value we’re creating for people and the world. Success for broadcasters means more time watched on their broadcasts. Success for the audience (viewers who are watching and participating in a Periscope) means more high quality broadcasts in their feeds that they want to watch and participate in. Success for broadcasters and their audience means success for Periscope.”

    Periscope says that over 40 years of video is being watched every day – and that doesn’t include periscope.tv viewing.

    Periscope just added a new feature called couch mode for endless viewing.

  • Should You Pay Attention to Attention Metrics?

    Upworthy, the site that brings you articles like If I Told You What This Is About, You Almost Definitely Would Not Click On It and Boy Meets Girl. Girl Reveals Secret. That’s When Things Get Intimate. And Beautiful, is moving away from the pageview as a primary metric for judging an article’s performance. Upworthy, the site that has its own clickbait-heavy headline generator and that The Onion has devoted an entire site to parodying, says the ‘click’ is an outdated and unreliable way to measure engagement.

    Upworthy, the site that built a small empire on the back of Facebook, whose actual tagline is “Things that matter, pass ’em on,” now says that the ‘share’ is also ill-equipped to truly measure an article’s success.

    Should you pay attention to attention metrics? Let us know in the comments.

    So, what gives? What should we measure instead of clicks and pageviews? How can we measure performance without looking at how often something is shared across the social landscape?

    According to Upworthy and a handful of others, the answer is the Attention Web. Or Attention Metrics. Or to Upworthy specifically, Attention Minutes.

    Whatever you want to call it, the point of the new metric theory is that looking at the amount of attention a reader devotes to an article is a much-improved measure of engagement. Upworthy announced in February that they were ditching uniques and pageviews and opting to measure Attention Minutes, saying,

    “We dabbled with pageviews, but that’s a flimsy metric, as anyone who’s suffered through an online slideshow knows (20 pageviews! Zero user satisfaction!). Pageviews are only a great metric if you’re being paid for each pageview; we don’t run banner ads, so they’ve never meant as much to us.”

    Thus Attention Minutes were born, wherein Upworthy began to look at ‘Total Attention per Piece’, which is a “combination of how many people watch something on Upworthy and how much of it they actually watch,” as their primary metric. That made waves at the time – as other properties began to take a look at this ‘Attention Web.’

    Blogging platform Medium decided to start paying some contributors based on total time spent reading their collections – instead of paying them based on clicks. Speaking of the latter model, Medium’s Evan Hansen said,

    “We…learned (surprise) that high quality posts do not automatically garner attention and audience commensurate with the effort of producing them. As a result, our payment model failed to support some really terrific contributors.”

    Analytics company Chartbeat also went all-in with Attention Metrics, as the company’s CEO, Tony Haile, took to TIME magazine with the bold but rather linkbait-y headline What You Think You Know About the Web Is Wrong.

    His thesis, of sorts?

    Here’s where we started to go wrong: In 1994, a former direct mail marketer called Ken McCarthy came up with the clickthrough as the measure of ad performance on the web. From that moment on, the click became the defining action of advertising on the web. The click’s natural dominance built huge companies like Google and promised a whole new world for advertising where ads could be directly tied to consumer action.

    However, the click had some unfortunate side effects. It flooded the web with spam, linkbait, painful design and tricks that treated users like lab rats. Where TV asked for your undivided attention, the web didn’t care as long as you went click, click, click.

    In 20 years, everything else about the web has been transformed, but the click remains unchanged, we live on the click web. But something is happening to the click web. Spurred by new technology and plummeting click-through rates, what happens between the clicks is becoming increasingly important and the media world is scrambling to adapt. Sites like the New York Times are redesigning themselves in ways that place less emphasis on the all-powerful click. New upstarts like Medium and Upworthy are eschewing pageviews and clicks in favor of developing their own attention-focused metrics. Native advertising, advertising designed to hold your attention rather than simply gain an impression, is growing at an incredible pace.

    It’s no longer just your clicks they want, it’s your time and attention. Welcome to the Attention Web.

    To Haile and Upworthy, clicks, shares, and even time on page are unreliable metrics. Attention Minutes as a metric, according to Upworthy, “a fine-grained and unforgiving metric that tells us whether people are really engaged with our content or have moved on to the next thing.”

    The reason to give this a look, and the reason you’ll likely hear something about Attention Metrics over the next few days is that Upworthy just released its code for Attention Minutes tracking.

    In the most Upworthiest of headlines (The Code [Literally] To What Lies Between The Click And The Share. Yours, For Free… Really), the site says that “you’re more than welcome to use our code as a starting point to build Attention Minutes into your system.”

    Ok, so they’ve convinced you. Clicks are bullshit. Now you’re ready to jump over to this new metric.

    Well, hold on a second.

    Buzzfeed, Upworthy’s co-target of The Onion’s clickbait ire and co-purveyor of clickable, shareable content, recently asked “What does an attention-obsessed media look like? And do we want it?”

    “Adopting a new media metric dredges up a host of concerns: What does an attention-obsessed media look like? What kind of content does it produce? What does it mean to readers? If previous metrics are any guide, unscrupulous publishers will be quick to game the system as they did with SEO. In a time-spent world, attention optimization is a very real worry,” says Buzzfeed’s Myles Tanzer.

    Tanzer quotes others who shoot down time on page as a “silver bullet” metric for engagement.

    “We publish four to five longforms. If someone is spending 20 seconds there and leaving, it’s not good,” he said. “If you’re reading a breaking item about Eric Cantor losing his race, 20 seconds on the page is probably OK,” says The New Republic labs director Noah Chestnut.

    True. Valid point. But Upworthy would argue that their Attention Minutes go well beyond time on page – and that’s precisely the point.

    “Our implementation is far more precise than ‘Time on Page’ as it’s usually measured. Time on Page generally relies on a very sparse set of signals to figure out whether viewers are still paying attention. And especially on the last page of a visit, it can be hugely misleading,” says Upworthy

    “We built attention minutes to look at a wide range of signals — everything from video player signals about whether a video is currently playing, to a user’s mouse movements, to which browser tab is currently open — to determine whether the user is still engaged.”

    Ok, but even so – that argument is for Attention Minutes as an effective metric. Effective or not, the other and possibly more important discussion revolves around whether or not we want to adopt a new attention-based metric for success.

    What do you think? Is it worth paying attention to the attention metrics? Let us know in the comments.

  • Facebook Updates App Insights To Be Cleaner, More Reliable

    For the past few years, Facebook app developers have relied on App Insights to learn how consumers use their app. While it’s certainly already a good tool, Facebook thinks it can improve it to make it even better for developers.

    Facebook announced this afternoon that it will be rolling out App Insights 2.0 in beta form today. The newly updated toolset allows developers to gather even more information on how their app is being used alongside a lot of other useful information, including traffic sources.

    To start us off, Facebook says that it has completely redesigned the interface to be easier to navigate. Furthermore, the new interface has been “designed around how your apps integrate with Facebook as opposed to how users interact with Facebook.” What all this means is that Facebook will now show you metrics like New Logins, Stories and Referrals on the front page.

    Check it out:

    Facebook Updates App Insights To Be More Readable, Reliable

    Facebook has also re-organized metric data so developers can easily compare data across their own apps as well as others. For your own data, all of it has been consolidated into a single graph that tells you how much traffic comes from Facebook, Open Graph stories or Requests. You can also compare your own metrics with anonymized metrics from other apps to see if a spike in your data is being seen in other apps.

    Finally, Facebook says that it has worked hard to make the new App Insights more reliable than ever. Thanks to a comprehensive audit of its data sources, Facebook is now confident that you’re getting accurate numbers not only from desktop visitors, but from mobile devices as well. It will also display warnings when it detects that there may be something wrong with the data.

    App Insights 2.0 is now available to developers, but Facebook stresses that it’s still in beta. Developers who aren’t ready to make the switch just yet will be happy to know that Facebook will continue to support App Insights 1.0 as the default option for the foreseeable future. If you’re not afraid of the future, you can try out App Insights 2.0 right now by going to your App Insights overview and clicking “try the new App Insights.”

    Image via Facebook Developers Blog

  • Facebook Modifies Its Public App Metrics Reporting

    Facebook may not be at CES, but the social network is busy readying its own announcement for next week. We don’t know what the company will be announcing, but it has one announcement this week to tide you over.

    In its weekly platform update, Facebook announced that it is changing how its API reports public app usage metrics. For the longest time, the reported metrics was just a number showing how many monthly active users any particular app had. There was no way to actually rank apps without looking through all the metrics available, or using a third party service like AppData. That’s all changing next week.

    Starting January 16, Facebook will move to reporting app usage by overall rank and active user thresholds. For example, the social network says that an app with 1.1 million MAU will now be reported as having more than 1 million users as well as being the #300 largest app. Facebook says the new metrics reporting will “provide a more consistent view of the ecosystem and highlight successful apps earlier in the lifecycle.”

    Developers need not worry about the change as the new metrics are for general reporting use only. It won’t impact the actual number of users any particular app has, and developers can still see the exact number of users their apps have in App Insights. With that being said, developers should be aware that Facebook will be adding “daily_active_users_rank” and “monthly_active_users_rank” to the application object via the Graph API and FQL to provide access to the new ranking API.

    As usual, the weekly announcements are closed out with a bug report. In the past week, Facebook received 202 bug reports with 111 bugs being accepted for further review. The social network also fixed 51 bugs. You can see the full list by hitting up the blog post.

  • Android Set to Grab Even More of the Handset Market This Year

    Digitimes Research, the research division of Digitimes, today announced the results of their research into handset manufacturer shipping growth. They’ve predicted that Android, which can already be found on the majority of shipped handsets, will be fully 70% or more of the handset market by the end of 2012.

    These numbers make sense when you consider that almost every handset manufacturer, including Samsung, Motorola, HTC, and others, are releasing multiple Android phones onto the market. Digitimes, in fact, attributes part of the rise to the increasing number of Android handset available in China.

    Of course, the open-source nature of the Android platform allows manufacturers to slap a version of Android on any old touch-based device and call it a smartphone. There are plenty of inexpensive (or free), feature-poor Android phones on the market, which are most likely padding Android’s numbers. Plenty of these Android users still pine for a “cool” Apple device, and many might switch if they can gather the funds.

    Handset shipments 2012 graph

    Another finding of the Digitimes research that will surprise no one is that BlackBerry and Symbian devices will continue to see shipment declines this year. Specifically, BlackBerry device shipments are predicted to decline 40% and Symbians will decline 65%. In encouraging news for Microsoft, though, Windows Phone shipments are slated to increase 108%, meaning Nokia’s support of the platform might be starting to pay off.

  • Facebook Shows More Love To Developers

    Facebook Shows More Love To Developers

    This week has been huge for developers on Facebook. The company has not only released the full version of the much anticipated SDK 3.0 for iOS, but they have also pushed subscriptions and mobile ads to developers. While not as big as the aforementioned updates, this week’s Operation Developer Love has a few goodies for developers.

    The first update this week is the addition of four more metrics to Insights. The four metrics are post_impressions_fan, post_impressions_fan_unique, post_impressions_fan_paid, and post_impressions_fan_paid_unique. For more information on these metrics and Insights as a whole, check out Facebook’s documentation on the matter.

    Facebook also announced the breaking changes that will take place on November 7. The first is that Facebook will stop sending payments reporting emails to users on that day. If you want to continue receiving payments reporting, you’re going to have to implement the just announced payments reporting API.

    Other November breaking changes include the actor names always matching the access token, notification tables will no longer return pid or aid for photos or albums, and there will be a new permission required to read page mailboxes. For more on these breaking changes, check out Facebook’s post on the matter.

    The final change this week isn’t so much a development issue, but rather a policy issue. Facebook has updated their policy to say that nobody can export user data to a competing social network without their permission. They say that they provided the Download Your Information for regular users only. They don’t want developers using the tool for their own ends.

  • New Yelp Metrics Improve Its Use For Business

    Yelp is one of the better social media services for small businesses that want to track how their brand is doing out in the real world. The site has introduced some new metrics that makes the site even more attractive to small business owners.

    Announced today on the Yelp blog, the new “User Views” graph displays the traffic that your unique Yelp page is generating. The new metric also allows business owners to track traffic over a period of 30 days, 12 months and 24 months. Even better, the service also shows businesses how many times they showed up in Yelp search results over the past 30 days.

    Yelp Metrics Improve Its Use For Business

    The new metrics also track how users are interacting with your business. Under a new section called “User Actions,” it tracks how many mobile check-ins and calls were made to your business. On top of that, it tracks how many clicks were made to your Web site from Yelp as well as how many people called your business through the Yelp app. Other tracking features include the number of user uploaded photos, how many times users got directions and the number of Yelp bookmarks.

    Yelp Metrics Improve Its Use For Business

    If you want to take advantage of these new features, you can sign up for a Yelp business listing. This allows your business to have a special page on Yelp that helps drive traffic to your Web site and hopefully your business itself.

  • Ace Metrix CEO Reveals Super Bowl Ad Winners and Losers

    The Super Bowl has come and gone, and while the final play is still getting talked about, the ads are too. Last week, WebProNews spoke with Peter Daboll, the CEO of ad effectiveness firm Ace Metrix, who told us that there is a difference between an ad being likable and effective.

    Peter Daboll, CEO of Ace Metrix He told us that many ads are likable, but for an ad to be effective, it has to connect with consumers on an emotional level. In other words, consumers need to remember the brand, the product, and the goal of the ad.

    Which ads did you consider “effective” this year? Please let us know in the comments.

    As Zach Walton wrote earlier this week, the top 5 ads this year all included humor. Here’s the complete top 10 list from Ace Metrix:

    In a post-game interview with Daboll, he explained that Ace Metrix bases its analysis on a balanced set of geodemographic consumers viewing the ads. It then scores them on a 9-point scale model that rates the ads on the most important attributes that drive effectiveness. From there, it determines its Ace Score on a 0-950 scoring basis.

    “It’s not just a poll like American Idol voting contests with the thumbs up or thumbs down,” he said.

    Through this model, Ace Metrix can find out how effective ads were in connecting with consumers and spurring a behavior change. The firm analyzes ads all throughout the year in order to compare and contrast its data.

    Speaking about the winning ads of the Super Bowl, Daboll told us that it was obvious the brands had conducted adequate testing. Incidentally, when we spoke to him last week, he predicted that M&M’s, Doritos, and Coca-Cola would be in the top spots, and he was right. According to him, the marketers behind these ads are some of the best in the world.

    Because humor connects with broad audience, such as the Super Bowl, Daboll was not surprised it was used in the top commercials. He did point out that, humor isn’t the only element that works. The 6th most effective ad was the “It’s Halftime America” from Chrysler and was not humorous at all.

    Although the ad has sparked some controversy, Daboll said it really connected with consumers since it had the highest overall relevance score out of all the ads.

    Chrysler’s ad also topped the “Most Effective Automotive Super Bowl Ads” list but was followed by the humorous driven ad from Honda, “Matthew’s Day Off.”

    Here’s the complete list of automotive winners:

    The least effective ads this year were a bit surprising, since Budweiser had 3 of its 5 ads in the bottom 5. The others that didn’t connect well were Hulu’s “Hulubratory” and H&M’s “David Beckham’s Bodywear Collection.”

    Daboll told us that the H&M ad was long, boring, and way over the top, saying that the only group that liked it was women over 50. He also called Hulu’s ad “incomprehensible” since it wasn’t able to communicate its message.

    Although Budweiser normally does well, the company’s Bud Light Platinum spots did not resonate with consumers at all. In fact, many consumers were just puzzled by them. The company took a risk with advertising a new product at the Super Bowl, and it didn’t prove to turn out in their favor.

    “When you’re launching a new product on such a large venue, you still have to communicate some information about it… or people are confused,” said Daboll.

    “It’s very hard to do a great Super Bowl ad – that’s why you can’t give enough credit to the guys that seem to do it year after year,” he added.

    Daboll went on to say that the brands that consistently do well are likely already starting on next year’s Super Bowl ads. The key to success is not being funny, he continued, but it’s having the right message and testing until it’s perfect.

  • Super Bowl Ad Metrics More Varied This Year

    Super Bowl Ad Metrics More Varied This Year

    Super Bowl ads are not only entertainment during the big game, they serve the higher (or lower) purpose of trying to sell you something. We may forget that these ads are doing that when we’re busy laughing at the newest Doritos’ advertisement or Volkswagen’s Star Wars tributes.

    We put out a list of our top five best Super Bowl ads and the comments make it abundantly clear – the average consumer has vastly different notions of what makes these ads good. Taking a look at the Super Bowl admeter on USA Today provides a good measure of what consumers thought were the best ads. This is important to advertisers as the average consumer is there number one target. This should helps them refine their ads for the next year’s game.

    What makes a good super bowl ad? What do you look for when you’re rating your personal favorites? Let us know in the comments.

    Looking at the admeter, the top five ads all have a common theme – humor. People love to laugh. Ace Metrix seems to agree rating the top 10 most effective ads with the most effective being the ones based around humor.

    acemetrix

    The two ads that scored the highest tying for first place with a 671 Ace score was the M&M’s “Just My Shell” ad and Doritos “Sling Baby” ad. Filling the rest of the top five are humor-based ads that appeal to consumer’s base instinct to laugh.

    The CEO of Ace Metrix, Peter Daboll, confirms this by saying to Forbes that humor was the most effective advertising strategy at this year’s Super Bowl which is confirmed by so many ads trying to be funny.

    Daboll says that animals go hand in hand with humor as Coca Cola’s polar bear ads both ranked in the top 10. Doritos and Skechers both used dogs in their Super Bowl ads that catapulted both companies into the top 10 ads as well.

    Not all ads are created equal though, and not all ads are intended effect to make people laugh. Serious ads that get the attention of viewers on something that they can relate to, such as the current financial landscape, can get people interested in products. Chrysler’s “It’s Halftime America” ad scored well at sixth place with an Ace score of 633. GE’s “Building Something Big in Louisville” got tenth place with an Ace score of 600.

    Daboll calls it the “Made in America” ad that connects especially well with men. These kind of ads really “connect with the American people” in a way that the humor-filled ads cant. He goes on to say that these ads can “deliver a serious, emotive message and connect with viewers during the Super Bowl.”

    He also points to the success of longer than usual ads that he calls “storytelling” ads. The Chrysler and Volkswagen ads both nailed this effectively by lasting more than the usual 30 seconds without losing interest of viewers.

    Looking at the reaction to the ads across social media platforms reveals totally different results. While the H&M David Beckham underwear ad performed poorly with an Ace score of 450, the ad was the number one on social media platforms garnering a whopping 108,914 comments across all major social media platforms according to Bluefin Labs. Bluefin gathered their data in a 45-minute window after each ad aired to provide a fair estimate of how they do since the ads will most likely get more exposure over the coming days.

    bluefinresearch

    Compared to the Ace Metrix score, the Bluefin scores may be less effective as they just measure the comments. Comments can be negative and negativity usually outperforms anything else when it comes to online comments. Still, bad press is better than no press so H&M can take that as a sign that at least people were talking about their ad even if they didn’t like it. Unruly research shows brand recommendation as being an effective tool and social media provided that during the Super Bowl.

    There is a third metric to consider when rating these ads’ effectiveness. After last year’s Volkswagen ad that premiered before the game garnered more than 90 million views over the past year, other advertisers wanted to cash in on that exposure. Honda’s Ferris Bueller ad has gotten over 18 million views on YouTube since its release with Volkswagen’s new Star Wars ad getting over 17 million views. Both ads used a teaser that led up to the actual ad that boosted their effectiveness.

    AutoTrader and Edmunds.com both showed an even newer form of ad effectiveness as well through search and Web traffic. They rated auto ads by how much search and Web traffic they received during the game confirming that ads don’t necessarily have to be crowd pleasers to be big winners. While AutoTrader’s graph shows that search for vehicle models boomed during their respective advertisements; Edmunds.com’s research shows Web traffic to a specific model increased dramatically once its ad aired.

    AutoTrader and Edmunds clash with the Ace Metrix numbers as well. Ace is showing that Fiat, while getting the most Web traffic according to Edmunds.com, was seventh in overall auto ad effectiveness.

    Once again, as evidenced by our own picks, Super Bowl ads are different for everybody. It’s becoming harder and harder for businesses to pinpoint exactly what ads were effective or not. There are so many metrics and scores that advertisers can go off of that it makes it hard to tell where a company went wrong. While the Ace score can be a good indicator, other ad watch groups show that social media can go in the completely opposite direction.

    It doesn’t seem like there’s any one way to really tell whether or not an ad was effective at this year’s Super Bowl. The best bet is to use the USA Today admeter as it’s directly from consumers voting on the ads they liked and combine that with the results from ad firms like Ace Metrix and Bluefin.

    With so many different metrics to choose from, should advertisers look to all of them or stick to traditional metrics like Ace? Let us know in the comments.

    As a final piece of wisdom, almost all studies confirmed that sexy just doesn’t really work unless you’re David Beckham. Sorry, GoDaddy, maybe you should try something else next year.

    Take a look at our picks below and compare them to the researched best picks. There is a massive difference in opinion here, but it serves to show that Super Bowl ads are completely subjective and tastes change. While humor remains a strong contender, what people find funny is going to change year after year. There may even be a year where viewers want more “storytelling” ads with a serious topic.

    Our picks confirm what this research has shown us – one man’s, or ad firm’s, picks do not exclusively determine what the best ads are anymore.

    Here’s our picks for the top five best Super Bowl ads in no particular order:

    Pepsi’s ad seemed to please scoring a 628 Ace score. The ad nails all the important parts of a good ad – great celebrity casting, a fun premise and good music. Check it out to see if you agree.

    Volkswagen made a lot of nerds happy last year with their Darth Vader kid ad. While this year’s ad may or may not match up to that, the ending featuring classic Star Wars characters comparing the ad to last year’s ad makes up for it. It received a 590 Ace score.

    Audi made us laugh this year with their Vampire Camp ad that’s sure to strike fear into the hearts of night creatures everywhere. It received a 536 Ace score.

    The ad for the The Voice makes a great first impression by being action packed and featuring one of the best Betty White cameos ever.

    Rounding out the best, we have Doritos. Ever since they started to let their fans make the ads, they have consistently turned out fantastic Super Bowl ads. This year is no different. It received a 645 Ace score.

    What were your favorite ads of the Super Bowl? Let us know in the comments.

  • Measuring Social Media Effectiveness May Have Just Gotten Easier

    Measuring Social Media Effectiveness May Have Just Gotten Easier

    Everyone knows that social media provides some great opportunities for marketing, but measurement issues continue to plague businesses. You know content is being shared, but you don’t know how people who its being shared with are responding to it.

    Are you content with your ability to measure social media effectiveness? Let us know.

    ShareThis, which reaches 400 million people a month through social media share buttons across content all over the web, has released some new metrics for measuring social media effectiveness.

    One of the metrics is its Audience Index, which lets publishers understand and compare their social audiences against 850,000 other sites (and soon against categories), find out what types of influencers your site attracts, and find out how well you connect with influencers, listeners, and engaged customers.

    The other metric might be even more useful. That would be "Social Reach".

    ShareThis - Social Reach

    "We recently surveyed publishers (ours and others) and found that over 60% wanted (and were missing) social referral analytics," ShareThis explains on the company blog. "Social Reach measures the true value of shared media across the web by looking at outbound sharing and inbound social traffic and, in the process, gives proper credit to the listener/responder of a share as much as the original influencer/sharer. Publishers can now get a more accurate measurement of how a piece of content circulates around the Web after it’s been shared across any service, rather than just the simple number of shares counted by a single service like Facebook."

    "Social Reach is built in to all of ShareThis’ new share buttons that we introduced a couple of weeks ago, and the Social Reach score of each piece of content can be displayed on any page where our buttons are installed," the company says.

    ShareThis sharing & social reach data – your social equation

    View more documents from ShareThis.

    ShareThis shared some interesting stats regarding Social Reach with TechCrunch. For example, according to the company, Facebook accounts for 45 percent of all shared content across its network, followed by email with 34 percent, and Twitter with 12 percent.

    While Facebook may get more shares from ShareThis, email appears to be more effective, as people are more likely to click on an emailed link (31 percent out of the 34 percent, compared with 36 percent out of FB’s 44 percent).

    Either way, the metrics could prove to be very useful for publishers looking at optimizing their social media marketing strategies.

    What tools do you use to measure social media effectiveness? Share with other WebProNews readers.

  • Finding Alternatives To Facebook

    Finding Alternatives To Facebook

    With the news confirmed that Facebook membership now exceeds 500 million people worldwide – that’s nearly 10 percent of the world’s total population – it’s a worthy reminder to note that, never mind its size or seeming monolithic ubiquity, there are other social networking places to complement Facebook.

    The BBC has produced an attractive visual display on the rise and fall of social networks using metrics from market researcher Nielsen in June as its source.

    As the chart here on the top five social networks by country shows, Facebook dominates in six of the seven countries the BBC highlights – USA, Australia, Germany, UK, Spain and Italy. The difference in Brazil, where Orkut is the leader with Facebook a distant second.

    Yet even as Facebook is king, and not even well liked in some countries, look at the other social networks. In Germany, for instance, 8.5 million people are members of VZNet Netzwerke which includes StudiVZ, the big network for young people. In Spain, 6.6 million are with Tuenti. Brazil, too, where 5.9 million are in iG Comunidades. And let’s not forget MySpace (which recently underwent a facelift) – it’s in second place in the USA, UK, Australia and Italy and third in Spain.

    My point is simply a reminder that, from a business perspective in particular – notably, if you’re planning any kind of outreach or engagement activity in these countries – recognize that the dominant social network isn’t necessarily the only place where your engagees spend their time and exercise their influence – sizeable niche communities are elsewhere too.

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