Time for a change

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Posted on 8th December 2011 by in Search Engine Marketing

Hey folks,

Since early 2010 this blog has been grabbing articles out there from my favourite sources and reposting here to provide a collection of interesting articles in one place.

I hope it was clear that this content was provided by other people and there was no intention to rip it off! Each article had a link to the original!  :)

With the advent of so many blog and social readers I plan to remove all content that I havent created and get into the habit of writing more myself.

I will provide blogroll links to my faves that these articles have come from…..feel free to comment if the current format will be too sorely missed.

Cheers,

Jon

7 Dimensions of Facebook Commerce

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Posted on 8th December 2011 by in Website Optimization

Social commerce is estimated to reach $30 Billion (yes, that’s Billion with a ‘B’) in the next 5 years. How is that possible?

Facebook Commerce is more than just Liking product pages. There are 7 dimensions driving Facebook Commerce that make up the “F-Commerce Ecosphere,” as shared by Janice Diner, founding partner of Horizon Studios, a social media consultancy at the Meshwest conference this week in Vancouver, BC.

The F-Commerce Ecosphere

Commerce Inside Facebook.com

F-stores

Since the first in-Facebook retail transaction in 2009, many e-businesses have launched their own Shop tabs on their Facebook Pages that either redirect to their website or support real-money shopping right on the Page.

Facebook Ads and Sponsored Stories

Ads and Sponsored Stories are advertising options, messages appear in the sidebar and in the News Feed.

Facebook Credits

Facebook Credits is a virtual currency redeemable for digital goods (like games, movies and paid apps) and virtual goods inside games (extra lives, character enhancements, etc). Facebook Credits can be used for micropayments inside mobile apps.

Considering Zynga sells 38,000 virtual items every second, this stuff is pretty popular with consumers. In 2010, Zynga’s virtual goods revenue topped 575 Million. The virtual goods insdustry is expected to total 1.2 Billion this year.

Facebook Credits gift cards can be purchased online or in supermarket checkout aisles, or can even be earned as loyalty incentives. Through the Shopkick mobile app, customers can earn rewards points for store check-ins, similar to Foursquare.

Move over Netflix, Credits can be redeemed for movie rentals too.

Open Graph Facebook Commerce

Facebook Mobile Platform

Facebooks mobile apps allow status updates on-the-go that push to Notifications, Requests, Timeline and News Feed, which may be shopping related.

Facebook Open Graph Beta

Open Graph 2.0 will move beyond the “Like,” “Share” and “Recommend” buttons to incorporate a new set of “verbs and nouns” like “I Like,” “I Want,” or “I Bought.” These actions can be pushed through Timeline, Newsfeed and Ticker. (Stay tuned).

So, “John Doe Likes this” could become “John Doe hearts iPhone 4S.”

Of course, let’s not forget Facebook Connect and its many ecommerce applications, covered in detail in this post.

Facebook Social Plugins

Plug ins allow users to perform Facebook functions on your site. Think “Like,” “Share” and “Recommend” buttons, fan widgets and comment boxes.

Facebook Places and Location Tab

Did you know Facebook is stealthily cataloginging physical location data for every Facebook business Page? This data can be integrated online and in-store via the mobile experience. For example, Walmart uses one’s zipcode to personalize its Page with offers, new products and special events.

Another amazing (and a bit creepy) use for location info is Ticketmaster’s Interactive Seat Map, which lets you locate where your friends are sitting in a theater.

While I’d be hesitant to say anyone’s making a mint off selling physical goods through Facebook, many brands have found it an important space to connect with fans. (See how I avoided saying “engage” there?) There’s a lot of opportunity to play around with social marketing, even if you don’t use all aspects of the ecosystem. It’s an interesting animal to watch, we’ll see what 2012 brings in terms of innovation and opportunity with Facebook commerce.

If you’d like to play with the full presentation deck, check it out below:

Looking for help with ecommerce strategy? Contact the Elastic Path Research & Strategy team at consulting@elasticpath.com to learn how our ecommerce strategy services can improve your business results.

Social Media Metrics: Not as Difficult as You Thought

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Posted on 8th December 2011 by in Search Engine Marketing

Posted by jennita

When was the last time you were asked, “So what’s our average growth rate on Facebook?” Err… Whether it’s a client, a boss, or the CEO of the company, you get questions like this. Ok so perhaps you’ve never heard this exact question, but I can pretty much bet that you’ve heard something similar. They want to know how your social media efforts are doing; they want to know that you’re tracking key performance indicators. But social media isn’t as simple as “track these numbers and *poof* you’ve got it all figured out.”

Determining KPIs

Every social media marketer struggles with which KPIs are the best to track. We know as marketers that having metrics to guide you and measure progress against is super important, yet here we still stand somewhat weary of what to keep an eye on.

While there are many posts out there telling you the absolute best metrics to track in social media marketing, I’d like to take a different approach. Saying there is a top list of metrics we should all blindly collect for collection sake is a dangerous way to approach social media tracking. In fact, I feel strongly that every organization will likely want to keep a close eye on slightly different metrics throughout the lifetime of their social efforts.

I know that throughout my time at Moz, I have paid attention to a number of different social KPIs; some of them are always there, and some of them are project-based. My tracking process has evolved with our social media marketing, so I don’t feel comfortable telling you there is a one-size fits all formula for social media marketing KPIs.

However, what I can get behind is the idea there are pieces to social that need to be measured in an ongoing way to help us better understand the health of our social media efforts. Here at Moz, we wanted to integrate social analytics into our PRO software for this exact reason — to help inbound marketers better know the health of their social media marketing efforts.

What Makes Your Social Efforts Healthy?

When I manage social here at Moz, I am always pushing for four things – growth, engagement, momentum, and results. What those four words mean to your social efforts versus mine might be completely different. However, the new social dashboard we’ve launched is there to help every marketer measure those four pillars more effectively. Let me run through each and give them a little more shape. But when it comes right down to it I truly believe, if you can check in on these four pieces and see progress, your social media marketing efforts are going well.

What Do I Mean by Growth?

I know, I know… everyone always tells you that it’s not the number of followers that count, and for the most part, I agree with this sentiment. However, while it’s not the size that matters most, it’s a great starting point and base to measure your growth. Often times, this is the number that your boss or client (or whoever) cares about.

In about five seconds, I can track the growth of both my Twitter and Facebook accounts, download the data into a csv to track, or show an exact screenshot in my weekly/monthly report. BOOM.

What Do I Mean by Engagement?

“Social media is about engagement.” How many times do you hear that one? Well, it’s true. If you’re not out there engaging with your audience (and vice versa), then what in the heck are you doing? This isn’t the place to go into all the details around how to do that, but I want to show you how easily you can track retweets, mentions, and replies over a given time period.

Do you follow the SEOmoz twitter account? If so, you probably see that we engage with the community quite a bit. To us, monitoring the level of engagement is much more meaningful than how many followers we have. We want to see that our efforts are engaging the community and that our community feels they’re heard and are a part of the greater conversation.

Social analytics in Moz will continue to grow with this in mind. We want to show you not simply that there is activity, but whether it’s valuable activity. What you see right now is simply the starting point. :)
 

What Do I Mean by Momentum?

Whee! To me this is the fun one. Sure, sure, sure the numbers may increase, but showing that the increase each week is gaining momentum is far more important. This is why we track KPIs: to show momentum. You want to see that percentage increase go up!


 

What Do I Mean by Results?

As social media marketers, we’ve had to defend our efforts and worth since the beginning. What does a tweet do for us? What does an engaged conversation on Facebook do for the company’s bottom line? What is the lifetime value of a new set of engaged eyes? Whew… these are hard things to figure out. There are lots of tools out there trying to nail this down.

This is where Moz social analytics comes in… we track your traffic from social media sources. All you have to do is hook your campaign up to GA (which if you have a campaign already you’ve probably already hooked up GA).

Social analytics is our first step in this direction. We aren’t hoping to be your social management platform; we realize that is not where our strength as a company lies. Instead, we have data. We have a slew of data, and we get inbound marketing. We hope to show you how all of your time spent on social actually has worth. We’ve started with traffic. We wanted to show which of your social efforts are resulting in more traffic. This is a great place to start.

So Where Does Moz Go From Here?

We have a goal here to show marketers important data to help them better prioritize their time. Time is a precious thing. We hope that our first stab at social analytics gets you closer to knowing how well your social media management is doing right now and help you better allocate your efforts in the future. We realize the limitations of our first launch, and we would love any requests/feedback/freak outs you have. Once you get a chance to check out the social analytics, please take a second to fill out this quick survey as this will help us build exactly what you want.

In the meantime, get on in there and check it out. No better time to start collecting this data than now.

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