Posts Tagged ‘social networking’

2008 eROI Online Marketing Prediction #2: Collaboration Software

Sunday, January 6th, 2008

Social networking sites will turn into collaborative software platforms (think online Calendar, spreadsheets, word processing, web conference, presentation collaboration, image manipulation between many parties, and the already-standard email, chat, IM, blog, profile pages). Social networking isn’t just for kids anymore. Over 60% of new Facebook users are over 30 years old now. These 30, 40, 50, and a few 60somethings are professionals who will leverage these online communities to help with more than just business development.

If Facebook, LinkedIn, and other social community sites add professional collaboration tools like personalized calendars, spreadsheets, whiteboards into the mix, business people and businesses as a whole will standardize their entire internal communication operations (document sharing, chat, IM, blog, email threaded discussions) on these collaboration communities for increased productivity, mobility and trackability. A leader in the new frontier of Web 2.0.0.8 Collaboration Software is Portland’s own Jive Software and their blazing hot new product called Clearspace.

2008 eROI Online Marketing Prediction #8: Widgets

Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

Online marketing dollars will rapidly shift towards Custom Web Apps and Widgets. We really can’t take credit for this prediction - every panelists and keynote speaker (including top folks from NBC Universal, CondeNast, and Google) at the Sep’07 MediaPost’s OMMA East show was preaching the power of widgets. Why? Because users don’t want to leave the online communities where they socialize and interact in. Until recently, brands and media companies assume that online users will leave Facebook, MySpace, or other community and go to the advertiser’s site or media site to learn more.

That has changed. Now, brands need to make their marketing messages more interactive and more portable. YouTube popularized this with providing the code for any video for people to copy and paste onto their blog, website, Facebook or MySpace page. Doritos, NBC, HBO, and any other savvy advertiser or media company is starting to do this. For example, HBO put a widget of a disco ball countdown on its site FutureSexLove.com. When the show launched, the disco ball virtually exploded across the thousands of sites, blogs, and profile pages that downloaded the widget.

Wordsmithing: Customers Own Your Brand

Saturday, June 30th, 2007

In my previous blog post, I reflected on my talk in New Orleans at the annual conference for the IABC on the importance of blogging and social networking. The following day after the speaking engagement, I flew back to spend a couple days with my parents and extended family on a quick vacation. I was telling my Dad about how well the whole event went and some of the key points I made in my speech.

One main point is the notion that: Customers Own Your Brand, NOT YOU (the marketer). The case study I showed was Kettle Foods People’s Choice Awards where the company allowed its customers to name the next flavor of potato chips (Doritos is now copying this campaign 2.5 years later). My Dad understood my point that customers have a huge influence on your brand, but vehemently denied that customers truly owned any consumer brands that were near and dear to their hearts. Those brands controlled their own strategic decisions and at the end of the day, legally and financially owned their own organizations.

Of all the people in the world that I hate to admit he may be right, it’s my Dad (I respect him so much that I’d rather the roles were reversed with me giving the counter-point to his argument). But, the truth is - I need to choose more specific words that don’t exagerate the concept that Customers Must Co-Create Your Brand with You (instead of being talked at).

So, how does that point work for you, Pops?

I’m a lurker

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

I admit it… I’m what they call a lurker. I spend countless hours reading industry blogs and articles. I have more rss feeds than I could read in a lifetime and as the Creative Director of eROI, I build websites on a daily basis that rely on user-generated content. So the question is: Why is this my first blog entry?

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Apparently I’m not alone. A recent study published by Forrester Research showed that many people my age (I just turned 30) fall into the lurker category. For those that don’t know the term, a lurker is someone who reads content on the web without participating or adding content themselves. Based on this study, the majority of the creators and participants online fall within the 15-20 year old range. This isn’t a huge surprise based on the success of sites like youtube and myspace, but what does this mean for the future of the web? With this level of adoption and acceptance of social media will virtual environments like Second Life really become a part of our culture? Will adults really interact within one another as if they are in a video game. I don’t think it’s so far fetched to think so.

Innotech eMarketing Summit: Building Community Online and Matchpoint Case Study

Saturday, April 28th, 2007

The theme of this year’s Innotech eMarketing Summit really hammered on Social Networking and Web 2.0 sites. While this seems to be over-played in the media, the content and speakers in this 2-day event of back-to-back seminars was truly AWESOME.

From brand new upstart Citizen Agency, I learned a dozen new social networking sites that I’d never heard of before that were incredibly niche, but fascinating. They drove home key points about building community online throughout their presentation such as: “these are my peops,” “they talk my language,” “they get me,” and build off of one another’s conversations. Sites I hadn’t heard about:
Dogster.com
Catster.com
Intuit JackRabbit community site
VIRB.com
Last.fm
BarCamp.org
Ma.gnolia
BareNakedApp

Also, you should know about some amazing Web 2.0 companies in our backyard in Portland:
Jive Software
Platial
Values of N
JanRain
MatchPoint

Lastly, for any of those who wanted to download my presentation on Building Community Online and Matchpoint Case Study, please download it here >>

Cheers.

Mohan Nair: an Inspirational Revolutionary

Friday, April 27th, 2007

Nair-Mohan-BW.png If you haven’t seen this man speak, you are missing an opportunity to be inspired. Mohan is dynamic, bright, no-nonsense, and demands for all of us to take action and creative positive change in the world. At Portland’s InnoTech eMarketing Summit, Mohan talked about the ingredients for success in business, e-business, healthcare, and human nature on an individual level. In his current role as Chief Marketing Officer for $7.8 billion healthcare giant, the Regence Group, he has a surprising amount of passion (to be expected from a startup founder, not a healthcare juggernaut). Perhaps, it’s because he now has the platform to radically change the largest industry in the country and make it truly transparent.

Here are a few notes I took from his keynote speech this week:

Problem: We’ve become too oriented around Data Obesity but Knowledge Starved.

Solution: The key is at the core of the company’s philosophy, the concept, the mission, but ultimately it’s about the CAUSE!

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Five Perspectives on Building a Social Networking (Web 2.0) Site from Scratch

Thursday, April 19th, 2007

Social networking has blanketed the news for the past 18 months, not because it’s a fad, but because it works. In our 2007 Online Marketing Predictions report, we concluded that social networking would keep growing strong, but that it would become very niche-oriented. eROI was fortunate to get paired up with client MatchPoint Corp which came to us with an incredible concept of targeting professional parents who want to connect with one-another, network for intros or referrals, find relevant service providers to support their home and business lives, or ultimately find high-value, flexible contract-basis jobs. In short, this niche business model is part LinkedIn, part MySpace, part Monster.com, and part full-service staffing agency. MatchPoint asked us to architect, design and build this well-designed and powerful tool for fostering online community. And, it had to be done in four months. So, we did…Starting from a blank slate is exhilarating but scary.

What follows are the perspectives of six different people, discussing five different pieces of this puzzle that needed to come together seamlessly in order to complete a stellar site.

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Strategy Development by Ryan Buchanan, CEO; Anna DeMent, Sr. Account Exec.

On a global scale, social networking is getting more and more niche for a reason. It works. Niche social networking sites foster a loyal community of users who have something very specific and valuable in common, like professional parents. Furthermore, MatchPoint has something most social networking companies do not have: a business model based on profitable staffing placement, not advertisements. It also has an exclusive network where professional parents only have full access to the entire site after a MatchPoint Regional Manager approves their profile. Therefore, it’s a highly targeted network from which professional parents, companies, and service providers stand to gain substantial value.

From a website strategy perspective, we wanted to create a much more visually appealing social networking destination than sites like LinkedIn and MySpace. We also wanted to have very clear calls to action to draw the user into the flow of the site (and accomplish MatchPoint’s business objectives as well). On the homepage, new users are drawn to “Create a Profile.” Secondarily, users have the opportunity to login, search profiles and network or search jobs. To test drive the site and see live content, we wanted to enable the user to get access to a small portion of each registered user’s profile and job information before requiring the user to login for full access.

There are three distinct users: professional parents, clients / companies and service providers. Once logged in as a professional parent, she or he can “Expand my network” and invite others to join, or select job favorites to work with the MatchPoint Regional Manager on flexible contract-job placement, or connect with Service Providers like nannies, daycare, house cleaning, or even dog walking. Logging in as a company rep, you can post and manage company job listings as well as identify talented, prospective parents to fill those jobs. Creating a service provider profile enables that person to post service listings relevant to professional parents.

Branding + Design by Todd Quackenbush, eROI Designer

Branding: a great example of when concept, execution and trust in the designer came together well.

The logo: made up of two different pieces, the mark and the type, both were customized and work with one-another but can still function independently. The mark represents an abstract “m” consisting of three elements, two of the same shapes and a point, all of which come together, implying a network of people that come together to function as a new entity. The form is clean, sharp in some places and soft and curved on others. The colors are very contemporary.

The type: based on a font but with much customization to ensure it belongs with the logo’s look and feel. Intentionally, grey was chosen instead of black, making the logo pair, or lock up, more comfortably with the orange.

The website: great because Jeff (experienced in interface and information design) was able wireframe and break down the functionality, freeing me, the designer, to focus on look and feel. Tag team! The challenge of the site was to get so much functionality on each page to feel comfortable, designed, and not crowded. We spent a lot of time going back again and again to drawing on the white board, envisioning how the user would interact with all aspects of the site and what would or would not be intuitive. This included the registration wizard, where people might expect to receive a triggered email sent to their inbox and being able to save and continue the current step they were in. Also the colors for the site and rollovers were based on the colors from the branding.

Interface Design by Jeff Reynolds, eROI Senior Designer

It has been said that good user interface design is invisible. I think it’s important to keep this in mind — that the best interfaces are generally transparent to the user to the point that end objectives are immediately recognizable.

When one is designing a simple website, allowing for intuitive interaction is not an incredibly difficult task. Users have learned through repetition to expect certain circumstances — navigation across the top or on the left side, paragraphs of body copy with “read more…” links at the bottom, etc. There is a sort of standard in simple web layout, and this is beneficial to end users for obvious reasons — people know where to go to accomplish various tasks.

The web is expanding, however, in huge ways. There is now the ability to create, and a demand for, web-based services and applications that go far beyond what people have typically become accustomed to, and what has been bred into web design. What this creates is a need for interfaces that, in some cases, are as niche and customized as the services they’re linked to. These interfaces are based around new, custom content and functionality that may have never before been done on the web (or perhaps have never been done well). So how does one design an interface that will feel comfortable and intuitive in instances where no standard has been set?

First things first, and although it may seem obvious, it’s amazing how often this is muddied: the designer has to determine the objective of the new service or application. The designer must ultimately be very comfortable saying, “Blah blah blah is what we really want our users to do.” There are typically a lot of elements that support this final conclusion, and all those supporting elements are of varying importance, but hierarchically, the idea of getting a user easily and efficiently to the information you’re providing must always be the top priority. It’s easy to let a project become overwhelming because of its many features, or let excessive design drown out the objective. This is why it’s so important to “keep your eyes on the prize” as a designer.

Next, the information being delivered has to be examined on a more granular level. Essential to any successful web project is a broad understanding and documentation of the elements necessary on the various pages that a user will be interacting with; this knowledge allows all elements to be taken into consideration, and the most complete vision of the project to be implemented from the start. There is often no way to know what the future will bring, and interfaces need to incorporate a level of elasticity so that unforeseen elements can be introduced, but having the highest possible level of information at the start is nonetheless of utmost importance.

When the designer has these details, they can begin to lay them out; here is where arguably the most important layer of design is implemented. Intuitive interaction is developed in these early stages — the grouping of similar elements, placement of objects in appropriate areas, hierarchical alignment, etc. It’s incredible important to know how a user will see these details, and to plan for it. Sometimes it’s as simple as saying, “This edit button relates to that image, so they should probably be directly connected.” Other times it’s more complicated, such as a determination of how a step-by- step process should be implemented (should users be able to go back in the process? is this going to be edited in the future? how much time is filling out these forms going to take? should we implement a save function for an incomplete process?).

Polishing typically comes after this information design stage (though realistically they’re often happening concurrently), and involves the more conventional brand implementation, and “prettying up” of the interface. It’s easy to dismiss this step as fluff, but that’s really a huge disservice. Making a project feel appropriate within its brand, and making it fun to look at and interact with, is a huge part of sustaining an audience and getting potential users excited about it in the first place. When the two levels of the design — the information and the polish — work together, the result can be almost magical.

An interface that is invisible is one that is concise, intuitive and informational.

Producing the Site by George Huff, Emerging Technologies Manager

One of the major goals of being a production artist at eROI is to build a site pixel-perfect; a person comparing a site’s Photoshop comp to what’s in their browser will see exactly the same thing. Being a major goal, this is also a major challenge. MatchPoint presented a whole slew of challenges to our production team which we addressed through use of a ton of new tricks.

As you may have noticed, there is a good amount of textures and patterns throughout the site. The layout is challenging in the sense it can’t be put in a box. There are also drop shadows everywhere, and as we web producers know, PNG images are so tricky! So what did we do?

Utilizing CSS, HTML, and JavaScript, we molded and shaped this site to be pixel-perfect, as well as keep our programmers happy with the flexibility of the content. In building MatchPoint, we walked the line between aesthetics and functionality, and as with any challenge, it inspired us.

matchpoint-tore.jpg

Programming the Web 2.0 Site by Tore Gustafson, Programmer Extraordinaire

Social networking sites at their core are really a collection of a lot of common and architecturally simple applications. What is a blog from a development standpoint? Really, it’s just a few database columns including things like a date, an article and a title. Then all you need is the application framework to edit and display that information. A social networking site takes applications like a blog, or email, or adding a person to your personal network, and builds a cohesive framework for all the pieces to play together.

Building MatchPointcorp.com from scratch, however, was by no means a small task. Mapping the database architecture for a site that offers so many different capabilities was probably the most time-consuming task, not to mention building interfaces for both delivering content to the end user as well as an administration portal enabling managers to administer their users, companies and service providers, and ultimately connect them to one-another.

Probably the most enjoyable aspect of developing sites like this is getting cool Flash-like (and much more) effects working with plain old JavaScript. JavaScript frameworks like prototype and the ensuing add-ons like mootools have made JavaScript not only more consistent across browsers, but actually fun to code. If you’re a developer and still ignoring JavaScript, grab a copy of prototype and dig in!

It’s Official: Email is Hot!

Thursday, April 12th, 2007

Part of me is distressed by this news and part of me is happy. Why? Because I’m eROI’s Emerging Technologies Manager; guess what I do! According to this survey, 90% of 4000 people state their leading activity on the internet is sending and receiving email. Booooooooring (shhh don’t tell my boss I said that)!!

While eROI is firmly embedded as a leader in the email marketing industry, I’m on the lookout for next thing, and enjoying every minute of it. And in the spirit of being completely honest, everything I am loving right now will probably never be as useful as email -or- maybe it’s just too similar to notice.

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Matchpoint + eROI - Building a Social Networking Site from Scratch

Tuesday, April 10th, 2007

matchpoint-tore.jpg

Our lead programmer, Tore Gustafson, is going to talk about the challenges of building this site from scratch from a programming (not design) perspective:

Social networking sites at their core are really a collection of a lot of common and architecturally simple applications. What is a blog from a development standpoint? Really it’s just a few database columns including things like a date, an article and a title. Then all you need is the application framework to edit and display that information. A social networking site takes applications like a blog, like email, like adding a person to your personal network and builds a cohesive framework for all the pieces to play together.

Building matchpointcorp.com from scratch, however, is by no means a small task. Mapping the database architecture for a site that offers so many different capabilities was probably the most time-consuming task, not to mention building interfaces for both delivering content to the end user as well as an administration portal for Matchpoint managers to administer their users, companies and service provider and ultimately connect them.

Probably the most enjoyable aspect of developing sites like this is getting cool flash-like (and much more) effects working with plain old javascript. Javascript frameworks like prototype and the ensuing add-ons like mootools have made javascript not only more consistent across browsers, but actually fun to code in. If your a developer and still ignoring javascript, grab a copy of prototype and dig in!

Web 2.0 Companies in your Backyard

Monday, March 26th, 2007

Web 2.0 companies are springing up all over the place. I know most of you are thinking that this is just like the Dot Com rush of 1999, but it’s different because many of these business models are sound and social networking / user-generated content works (given the right implementation of it).

One company (Matchpoint) in our backyard came to us 6 months ago with an amazing concept - connect professional parents, highly-skilled and intelligent parents who are getting back into the workforce, with each other and ultimately to flexible, contract jobs. It has some elements to LinkedIn, but it is far more visually appealing, niche, and a hybrid full-service revenue model of having real regional managers place professionals in these jobs. Create your own profile on Matchpointcorp.com!

In Seattle, venture capital reporter John Cook, documents the top 100 Web 2.0 companies in the city alone. Here are the top 5:

Atomic Moguls: Next generation fantasy games. (New entry)

Avvo: Consumer-oriented online legal service. (Stealth)

Bag Borrow or Steal: Luxury goods borrowing service.

Beet Inc.: Online music. (New entry)

BeRecruited: Online sports recruiting site. (New entry)

Read his full blog posting with all 100 Web 2.0 listings >>

Praise to the Barbarian Group

Thursday, March 1st, 2007

Last night, I had the pleasure of meeting and listening to Rick Webb, co-founder of The Barbarian Group, speak on driving the whole viral marketing world forward. As the creators of Burger King’s “Subservient Chicken” and Milwaukee’s Best “Beer Canon” shown below, these guys continually prove that being original is the only game to play.

beer-cannon-milbest.jpg

Rick’s prognostications of the top 4 trends for ‘07 in the web marketing world:
1. Niche Social Networking
2. Games (adver-games)
3. Branded Utilities (widgets)
4. Entertainment (where video truly becomes interactive again rather than just YouTube)

eROI 2007 Online Marketing Prediction #6 of 10

Thursday, November 30th, 2006

6. Great Content is King. Quality content is more important now than ever before. Each of us receives dozens of email newsletters on a daily basis. There are over 100 million viewings DAILY on YouTube. One in twenty visits on the web is to a social networking site where new content is generated every second. There is a glut of content and it’s only going to get more crowded. The key point worth noting is that the few companies providing great content are HUGE winners because of all of the online and offline marketing channels that work together in a sort of crescendo effect, amplifying the messaging of well positioned brands. Word of mouth spreads so much faster than it used to through blogs, iTunes, YouTube, MySpace, websites, and online press. Fans of the TV program “Grey’s Anatomy” can convert non-believers because the content of the show is good enough to keep them once they’ve heard about it. The opposite holds true of “Snakes on a Plane” which had a huge online following, but bombed at the box office because the content sucked. Keep this in mind when strategizing and implementing your next viral marketing site or email campaign.

eROI 2007 Online Marketing Prediction #10 of 10

Thursday, November 23rd, 2006

It’s Thanksgiving Day and it’s that time of year again when eROI makes its outlandish predictions for the year to come. In prior years we have given you a mix of business and personal lifestyle predictions, but this year we’re sticking to just the online marketing world. We busted out our omniscient crystal ball and this is what it told us:

Top 10 Online Marketing Predictions for 2007
10. Social networking will get more and more niche. Social Networking has blanketed the news for the past 18 months because it works. YouTube and MySpace have built loyal communities through entertaining user-generated content and great tools for communicating with other like-minded people. However, Social Networking is going NICHE. People use specific tools to connect, recommend, rate, and communicate within their niche groups. For this reason, there are many types of Social Media now and there will be five times this many by the end of next year:

B2C: MySpace, Facebook, Gaia, Friendster, Second Life
B2B: LinkedIn, Jigsaw
Search: Digg, Delicious, Wink, Technorati
Shopping: Wists, ThisNext, Woot
Expert Communities: Blogs, Wikis
Mapping: Geosearch
Video: YouTube, TurnHere, Splashcast
Images: flickr

We Can All Shoot Video

Wednesday, November 15th, 2006

No I am not going to bang the idea that we can all shoot video. I am just going to share with you another brand that is getting into asking everyone to create an ad and upload it. With YouTube we are all now experts it seems. Or at least novices that can make some compelling stories that others will watch. Are we all voyeurs? Is it just human nature to want to watch others? Or are we creating a online community that owns the brand? Owns the content? And brands are just a way to express yourself around a feeling they emote?

I have lot of questions around what is happening with the social and video sites.

TheJackies300.jpg

Not sure, but what I do know is the JACK in the BOX is hit a few times a week by the eROI team and I have a digitial video camera in my office. Maybe we might hit the Jackies.

http://jackinthebox.com/jackies/

Social Networking is Way Bigger than YouTube + MySpace

Thursday, November 9th, 2006

Social Networking has blanketed the news for the past 18 months because it works. YouTube and MySpace have built loyal communities through entertaining user-generated content and great tools to communicate with other like-minded people. However, Social Networking is going NICHE. People enjoy specific tools to connect, recommend, rate, and communicate within their niche groups.

For this reason, there are many types of Social Media:

B2C: MySpace, Facebook, Gaia, Freindster, Second Life
B2B: LinkedIn, Jigsaw
Search: Digg, Delicious, Wink, Technorati
Shopping: Wists, ThisNext, Woot
Expert Communities: Blogs, Wikis
Mapping: Geosearch
Video: YouTube, TurnHere
Images: flickr