Nielsen's top social media list shows social nets up, AOL down

Nielsen Online has released the list of the top U.S. social networking sites and blogs for October, 2007.

MySpace may not have the buzz right now, but it’s still #1 by a factor of three. Meanwhile, AOL is off across the board and the classmate sites are struggling.

Top 10 Social Networking Sites for October 2007 (U.S., Home and Work) by name, number of unique monthly visitors and year-over-year growth rate.

Myspace, 58,843, +19%
Facebook, 19,519, +125%
Classmates Online, 13,278, -2%
Windows Live Spaces, 10,261, +32%
AOL Hometown, 7,923, -15%
LinkedIn, 4,919, +189%
AOL People Connection, 4,084, -30%
Reunion.com, 4,082, -14%
Club Penguin, 3,880, +157%
Buzznet.com, 2,397, +117%

Source: Nielsen Online

Coke to launch corporate blog

The Coca-Cola Co. is just a few weeks away from launching a corporate blog, Adam Brown, Coke’s Director of Digital Communications, told the Executing Social Media conference in Atlanta today. That would make Coke one of the few Fortune 100 companies (it’s 94th) to enter the blogosphere. General Motors, at #3, has been blogging for three years.

Brown identified Coke’s first blogger as Phil Moody, a 30-year employees who’s responsible for the corporate archive. However, “We really want to get to an ensemble cast of bloggers where we can talk about not only our heritage, but also the environment, AIDS in Africa and other important issues,” he said.

In taking that approach, Coke is adopting a tactic that’s being practiced by an increasing number of corporations, including Southwest Airlines, Eastman-Kodak and Chrylser LLC. It spreads the work around and exposes the ideas of interesting individuals in a corporate venue.

Brown didn’t identify the URL of the new blog. If anyone comes across it, please post the address here.

Daily reading 11/13/2007

Blogging and Blogger relations at SAP

Last week at BlogWorld Expo in Las Vegas I met up with Mike Prosceno, VP of Marketplace Communications at SAP. SAP has an unusually progressive approach to working with the blogosphere. Not only does the company use blogs for internal and external communications, but it has embraced bloggers as important influencers, treating them in much the same way it treats mainstream media. Listen to an illuminating 11-minute interview with the guy who heads up SAP’s blogger relations program.

Virtual events’ success grows – BtoB Magazine, Oct. 8, 2007

A study by one event organizer “examined more than 200 Unisfair virtual events that totaled nearly 3,000 sponsors and 500,000 attendees. The results found that the average virtual event has a registration of 3,102 people with an attendance of 1,587. Leads generated for each sponsor totaled 348 per event, and attendees spent an average of two-and-a-half hours at each event while visiting an average 16 locations and completing at leastfive downloads.”

“Advanced Micro Devices…held a virtual event last year…the success rate for AMD’s event well exceeded expectations: ‘When you look at the physical trade show, we’llmaybe give away 700 to 800 pieces of collateral. At a virtual event wecan get 500,000 downloads,’ [an AMD executive said].”

Daily reading 11/10/2007

Managing a Corporate Blog, Like HP’s – MetzMash

Wal-Mart’s Biggest Marketing Tool? Its Web Site – MediaPost, Nov. 8, 2007

“The rate and review feature lets consumers post comments about products online. Since the July launch, consumers have written and posted reviews on 80,000 products, with more than 1,000 coming in daily.

“About 80% of items have either a four or five star rating, which gives us confidence we’re selling quality merchandise,” Vazquez says. “When the service first launched, the suppliers got a little nervous, but even products that get one-or-two star ratings provide useful information and feedback from customers.”

    Top 10 Marketing Blogs – 2007/2008

    ClickZ: Defining Social Media

    Marketing segmentation through social media

    Howard Kaushansky of Umbria gave an enlightening talk about audience segmentation of social media influencers at Blogworld Expo this morning. He talked about two examples of what his company has done for different clients in the consumer products field.

    For an apparel maker, Umbria analyzed postings to blogs and social networks to identify the following segments:

    Fit Finders (39% of the population), Self Expressives (19%), Bargain Seekers (17%), Label Whores (11%) , Style Gurus (8%) and Dissenters (6%).

    Here’s an example of segment characteristics: Fit Finders are Generation Xers looking for appropriate jeans for their changing physiques. . Low-waisted jeans aren’t working for them any more, but “old person jeans” aren’t appealing either. Plus-sized Fit Finders are looking for fashion-forward styles rather than shapeless designs.

    Self Expressives want control. They want to distress their own jeans, design clothing reconstructed from jeans and add personal style to jeans through patches and embroiders.

    Style Gurus are looking to be unique. They’re looking for authenticity and real inspiration. “Some men are actually starting to become interested in wearing women’s jeans because they view them as more stylish,” he said. These insights emerged from online conversations.

    Umbria’s analysis is entirely text-based. “We’re listening in on this world, not asking them to fill out surveys or segment themselves,” he said. It’s not just what people say but the words they use. Fifteen-year-old girls speak differently than 54-year-old men.”

    For another client that makes packaged food, the company analyzed women’s blogs to identify four core segments: Me Time, Weight Management, Balance and Wellness and Beauty from Within (percentages weren’t given).

    They then analyzed women’s needs and interests by time of day. The company also identified common moods at each time of the day and mapped foods, packaging and promotions to these moods and activities.

    For example, afternoon is “Connect Time” when women share stories and experiences to gain support, external perspective, humor and advice. During Connect Time, activities include emailing, blogging, phone calls, sharing a meal, getting beauty treatments, going out, and spending time with family.

    These segments were mapped to moods and foods. For example, “Me Time” is early morning, often before families are awake. At that time, women are looking to empower themselves. “Me O’Clock” yielded these strategic insights:

    • Women embrace this time as an opportunity to regain control
    • Don’t tell them what’s right; enable them to make better decisions and express themselves
    • The emotional benefit of this time is personal empowerment

    Ideas for productions and promotions:

    • Personalized snacks
    • Calendars with times blocked out for “Me Time.”
    • Market teas and other products with a stimulative effect specific to early morning personal time.

    With blog monitoring, “You can listen to these people and understand what are the drivers and unmet needs.”

    Daily reading 11/08/2007

    Online Spin » Blog Archive » My (Early) Predictions For 2008  Annotated

    Social media will develop the “killer app”: an aggregate buying tool for groups.
      I think that social media will become a VERY useful tool when social networks are used to benefit the individual user along with the group (as in business networking, etc.). I see the killer app as an aggregate commerce engine where you can gather together 10 of your friends looking to buy a flat-screen TV and buy them all in bulk at a discounted price, shipped to each separate location. It’s Costco embedded in your social network, and it puts the “social graph” to a practical purpose. The logistics of this may be difficult, but I think it will be inevitable.

        Last group of AMA Webinar questions answered

        Here is the final set of responses to questions that time didn’t permit me to answer during the AMA Marketing Seminar on Oct. 15. Each of these permalinks is tagged “AMA” so you can easily group them together. Thanks again to everyone for coming and for asking such great questions.

        Q: Chris asks, “Do you think this will impact corporate cultures? And how?”

        That’s a big question, but I’ll try to summarize. One enormous impact of new media will be to force companies to be more open and transparent about their activities, motivations and mistakes. Once customers began talking to each other and sharing their experiences with your company, you have very little control over those conversations. It’s going to be a lot harder to hide your blemishes and to keep secrets.

        Already, many marketers are finding that their carefully managed product rollout plans are sabotaged by bloggers who get their hands on secret information. I believe that businesses, particularly large ones, are going to have to learn to live in a world where information can’t be covered up very well. This will force them to be more transparent with their constituents about their plans. That won’t be easy for everybody.

        Internally, I expect social media to flatten corporate cultures. Communication within most companies has traditionally been controlled from the top down. But once individuals have the ability to speak freely with each other, those lines become much fuzzier. In most companies, this will be a good thing. However, a company that values a strict hierarchy will be challenged by this. They can refuse to give their employees blogs, but they can’t prohibit their employees from communicating off-hours via blogs or social networks. Again, this won’t be easy for everybody

        Q: Viktor asks, “Will passionate social media users get paid at some point in time?

        A: Many of them are getting paid now. For example, I spoke in my presentation about Adrants, which is a one-person operation that is generating good cash flow from advertising. Many models are being developed to reward bloggers for their hard work, although in reality very few people can make a living in this way. I expect that a small minority of people will be able to make decent income as new influencers, but only a very tiny number will become wealthy from it. These are niche markets, after all.

        Q: S Law asks, “How do organizations and businesses engage bloggers to get that positive word of mouth?”

        A: Much of my book is about this, so I’ll refer you to that, or to other books I referenced earlier, including Naked Conversations by Scoble and Israel; Marketing to the Social Web by Weber; What No One Ever Tells You About Blogging and Podcasting by Demopoulos, The Corporate Blogging Book by Weil; and The New Rules of Marketing and PR by Scott.

        To summarize, though, you need to take the following steps:

        • Get to know which influencers matter in your market;
        • Read or listen or watch what they’ve been publishing and learn what their passions and biases are;
        • Engage in conversations about topics of mutual interest. Don’t try to sell to them, though;
        • Provide interesting and valuable information that they can use to further their interest and create new content for their sites;
        • Invite them to become involved with your company as an adviser, reviewer and/or media representative;
        • Show your gratitude. In most cases, this doesn’t mean paying them so much as treating them as insiders and respected advisers. Although t-shirts are always welcome!

        Q: Erika asks, “Have you looked at social influencers in the healthcare provider community? What is the prevalence there?”

        A: It’s very difficult to estimate numbers for any topic because of the large number of spam blogs. All the services try to filter out spam, but none succeeds very well.

        Technorati lists nearly 5,000 blogs as being about medicine in some capacity and 2,000 as being about healthcare, although in reality the numbers are much smaller than that. There does appear to be quite a bit of healthcare information out there. For example, a Google blog search on “diabetes” turns up several thousand posts in the last day, and the top few hundred look legitimate.

        In general, people use social media for topics that matter deeply to them, and there’s no question that medicine is one of those areas. If you try searching the two sources I mentioned above, you’ll pretty quickly get a picture of what’s being said out there.

        Q: Scott asks, “How do you weed out fake comments, possibly from the company or someone that is one-sided?”

        A: Most blogging services offer the option to screen comments. This requires a little extra effort on your part, because you must go in and look at each comment individually before approving it, but this is necessary in some cases because comment spammers tend to send a lot of their trash to certain blogs.

        There is no way to verify a person’s identity when they post a comment, other than to verify e-mail addresses or search for their name. In general, you need to use common sense and make sure that comments don’t betray a bias that could

        be driven by competitive issues.

        I should stress, however, that you don’t want to suppress legitimate comments just because they’re negative. People expect to participate in the discussion, and as long as their words are reasonable and not profane, they should be allowed to do that. If you start censoring visitors, you will quickly hear from people about it, and often in public places. Don’t get into blogging if you’re not able to stand a little heat.