Showing posts with label Information Technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Information Technology. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Here's everything Facebook just announced

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Facebook F8


At today's Facebook F8 event in San Francisco, Mark Zuckerberg and other folks on the team announced a bunch of new features, most of which were leaked ahead of time.
This is a conference for developers, so the announcements were pretty geeky, but the biggest deal was probably the ability for people to build apps that integrate directly into Facebook Messenger.
So, for instance, ESPN will have an app that lets you insert funny animated GIFs of sports events directly into a Messenger message.
Another big move was a video player that any site will be able to embed directly on their site, like you can do with YouTube videos today. Video has been a huge focus for Facebook recently, and this will extend its video reach to the entire web. It's a huge strike against Google's YouTube.
Facebook also announced an update to a mobile advertising product called LiveRail. It will help publishers show so-called "native" ads -- ads that integrate directly into the stream of content -- and make money from them. It's basically a big strike against Google's DoubleClick platform, which is the dominant force in online advertising. You can read more about the move here.
There were a few other interesting bits as well. See below for our coverage of the event as it happened:
  • 12:53 PM

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  • We're all waiting outside Fort Mason, where the conference is happening. Here's the line.

facebook f8 line
  • 12:55 PM

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  • OK, entering the building now. Weird symbols.

facebook line coming in
  • 12:58 PM

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  • Here's the inside of the room. More weird symbols. What do they all mean?

more symbols f8more symbols f8
  • 12:59 PM

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  • The crowd is milling around. We'll be taking our seats soon.

f8 milling around
  • 1:05 PM

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  • We're having some pretty serious problems getting online here. The event is in sort of a concrete bunker, so it's hard to connect. We're monitoring the live stream, but it's having troubles as well. Stay tuned....

  • 1:08 PM

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  • Mark is on stage now. Talking about how popular Facebook is for developers.

Screen Shot 2015 03 25 at 1.06.44 PM
  • 1:09 PM

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  • There are more than 30 million apps and sites on Facebook's platform now.

Facebook F8
  • 1:10 PM

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  • "We want to make sure we always put people first....Because when people feel good about their privacy and security, that's when they're open to new experiences, like all the apps you're building."

Facebook F8
  • 1:12 PM

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  • New platform called Threat Exchange, helps companies exchange info about malware and cyberattacks. Hackers assume that developers aren't communicating. Facebook wants to fix that.

  • 1:14 PM

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  • "Now, let's talk about the future....Facebook used to be this single blue app, and it did this thing. Now Facebook is a family." 1 billion+ use Facebook, but 700 million use Groups, 700 million use WhatsApp, 300 million use Instagram every month.

Facebook F8
  • 1:16 PM

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  • People are sharing many more times each day than we've been able to in the past, thanks to mobile. "This is a really big opportunity. But we can't do it alone." Because the sharing is happening in other apps.

Facebook F8
  • 1:17 PM

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  • Spherical videos -- videos that let you move around in a 360 degree view. They'll be supported in the News Feed, and of course coming to the Oculus Rift VR headset.

Facebook F8
  • 1:18 PM

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  • Here's another angle on that spherical video. You can really move around the whole range of vision.

Facebook F8
  • 1:19 PM

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  • Sharing is confusing, so they're working on a consistent way to share from different apps.

Facebook F8 share sheet
  • 1:21 PM

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  • Messenger now accounts for more than 10% of voice-over-IP calling globally.

Facebook F8 messenger
  • 1:22 PM

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  • Here's the big announcement: Messenger Platform. "It's a new platform that developers can use to build apps that connect with more than 600 million people who use Messenger every day."

Facebook F8 messenger
  • 1:23 PM

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  • Two big things today. First, a new way to discover apps that allow sharing within Messenger. Here's what that looks like.

Facebook F8 messenger
  • 1:24 PM

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  • Second, direct messaging to businesses.

  • 1:25 PM

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  • So, for instance, messaging receipts, tracking for packages, that kind of thing.

Facebook F8 messenger
  • 1:27 PM

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  • Now, David Marcus is going to come up to talk more details about Messenger Platform. He was the former president of PayPal and joined Facebook last summer.

Facebook F8 messenger david marcus
  • 1:27 PM

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  • More background on Marcus if you're interested:

  • 1:29 PM

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  • He's showing how you can add Giphy from within Messenger, giving you access to millions of animated GIFs right inside Messenger.

Facebook F8 messenger
  • 1:30 PM

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  • NOTE: David Marcus pronounces "gif" with a hard "g." Not like "jif."

Facebook F8 messenger
  • 1:32 PM

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  • ESPN has a Messenger app that lets you put animated GIFs of funny/interesting sports events into messages.

Facebook F8 messenger espn
  • 1:32 PM

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  • I can't wait to send animated GIFs of Richard Sherman picking off Colin Kaepernick next year, honestly.

richard sherman 1seahawks
  • 1:34 PM

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  • E-commerce has lost some of the personal experience of buying things in a shop. Facebook wants to make it a little more personal.

  • 1:34 PM

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  • When you buy something online, you get an email. When it ships you get an email, and so on.

  • 1:36 PM

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  • Now, you can get instant shipping notifications and enhanced receipts in Messenger.

Facebook F8 messenger
  • 1:37 PM

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  • Basically, Messenger can show you info every step of the transaction. It's all in one thread, not a bunch of disconnected emails.

Facebook F8 messenger
  • 1:38 PM

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  • You can even track when the shipment is getting close to you!

Facebook F8 messenger
  • 1:38 PM

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  • Zulilly, Everlane are partners, Zendesk is providing customer service.

  • 1:39 PM

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  • Next up is Ilya Sukhar, the leader of Parse. That's a mobile development platform that Facebook acquired a couple years ago. It makes it easier for developers to create apps that work on different platforms -- Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, and so on.

Facebook F8 messenger ilya
  • 1:40 PM

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  • This is going to get pretty geeky here. But basically, Parse takes care of a lot of stuff -- like security, and signing people in -- so app developers don't have to do that themselves for every app they create.

  • 1:42 PM

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  • Oh, they just started playing the snowman song from "Frozen"

frozen do you want to build a snowman
  • 1:43 PM

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  • A lot of apps are using Parse for sending push notifications. Orbitz pushes airport walking directions. CBS Interactive pushes news alerts. And so on.

Facebook F8 messenger
  • 1:46 PM

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  • Now Sukhar is talking about the Internet of Things. For instance, a garage door that sends a signal to your phone when it's open or closed. Parse has a new set of tools for developers to interact with these little sensors that are popping up everywhere.

Facebook F8 IoT
  • 1:47 PM

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  • They're announcing a lot of other things that will be of interest only to developers.

Details will be on the Parse Blog soon, Sukhar says.
  • 1:48 PM

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  • Deborah Liu is now on stage. She's the director of Facebook's platform business.

deborah Facebook F8
  • 1:49 PM

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  • "I am a voracious reader of parenting articles online." But she wanted to comment on it on HuffPo, but also have it show up on Facebook.

Facebook F8 deborah
  • 1:49 PM

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  • Voila! Now that's possible. People see comments in both places at once.

Facebook F8
  • 1:53 PM

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  • Liu introduces Facebook Analytics for Apps. New tools to help developers understand how people are using their apps. What they're doing, where they're dropping off, and so on.

Facebook F8
  • 1:55 PM

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  • "Finally, we want to help you monetize your app." Last year introduced Audience Network, a way for devs to display ads in app.

  • 1:56 PM

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  • "The best part of the Audience Network is native ads." These are ads that appear right in the app, and seem like part of them. "Ads now support the user experience, not interrupt it."

  • 1:58 PM

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  • Live Rail. New ad platform that extends native ads.

  • 1:59 PM

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  • And that's a wrap! Over in an hour.

Facebook F8 mark

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Saturday, March 21, 2015

A guide to finding, recruiting and working with bloggers

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tamarheadline


Working with bloggers can be a somewhat daunting task if you’ve never done it before. There are a ton of articles out there about WHY you should work with bloggers, but there isn’t a lot of info about HOW to set up your first campaign from start to finish.
I know this, because 75 percent of the brands that use our platform fall into the exact same pitfalls that we fell into when we first ventured down that rabbit-hole.

So first, a little background

I’m the co-founder of The Shelf, an influencer marketing platform. Most people don’t know this about us, but about a year and a half ago, our product made a pretty significant pivot into where we are today. Prior to this pivot, The Shelf was a smart-shopping app that sent sale-alerts to people as soon as the products they liked were discounted.
tamar1 520x239 A guide to finding, recruiting and working with bloggers
When we decided to start marketing our app, we tried Google AdWords, social ads, social media, and a bunch of other tactics to help market our app. But none of the typical techniques showed any sign of being effective.
Then, one day, I had a small epiphany.
(And this epiphany requires a little more backstory, sorry! Before The Shelf, my mother and I had a little quilt business that we started together. Yes, I know. Totally cool! Quilts + my mom = POPULARITY. We had a blog for our little quilt business, and every six months, we used to participate in a quilters’ blog-hop, where about 20 quilters would each send traffic to one another.
This was the greatest thing in the world for us! Because our rinky-dink blog wasn’t overly popular, the blog-hop allowed us to piggy-back on top of other people’s audiences and gain new traffic. The other thing that was reallyreally great about these blog-hops were the giveaways. Each participating blogger would host a giveaway on their blog, and this always did wonders for us! We’d get 600+ comments on each of our posts!)
tamar2 A guide to finding, recruiting and working with bloggers
Based on that experience, my plan to promote our shopping app via bloggers began to hatch: first, we needed to find bloggers who were bigger than us and get them to promote our content. Second, we needed to do giveaways! From our experience, those get results!
At this point, my idea wasn’t overly developed. This fact became abundantly clear during our first attempt at influencer marketing when I got a friend of mine to host our first giveaway on her rather large quilt blog (key word being “quilt”).
Needless to say, our shopping app didn’t resonate quite so well with her audience. We had THREE people join our site because we bribed them with a $100 gift card to a fabric store. (Our price per user was a not-so-great $33.)
It wasn’t overly obvious to me though what I’d done wrong, though. My conclusion was that this initial blogger must not have been popular enough. So I contacted a much bigger blogger friend of mine also in quilts about doing a post about our fashion app.
Surprise surprise! This post didn’t do too well either. While we did get people to join our site in order to enter that giveaway, they wound up hating our app. It was just too un-targeted. Further, quite a few of them sent us mean emails, demanding that we remove their email addresses.
Who knew quilters could be such a feisty little bunch?

Epiphany #2 : A little bit of relevance goes a long way

In hindsight, my mistake with the quilters is about as dumb as it gets. That audience was not even close to being our correct demographic. We had a fashion app! We needed fashion bloggers.
But I didn’t know any fashion bloggers!
So off to Google I went to search for “fashion bloggers”.
tamar3 520x59 A guide to finding, recruiting and working with bloggers
Surprisingly enough, typing in broad queries like that DOES in fact get you results. I found a slew of “top 20” or “top 50” or “top-whatever” lists.
After that easy Google search, I began breaking these lists down, blog by blog, finding contact info and pasting all of that into a spreadsheet, after which I pretty much mass blasted these celebrity-level bloggers with my “opportunity of a lifetime: partnering with The Shelf” messages.
Finding contact details took longer than you’d think though. And no one got back with me.
In fact, my first 50 outreach emails received no responses at all. That rather sad result transitioned me quite nicely over to my third realization.

Epiphany #3 : Don’t go for the “Kim Kardashians” of the blogosphere

If you line up bloggers on a spectrum of influence, some of them have become so influential that they have reached the status of being mini-celebrities.
Would a celebrity go with you to the prom? No, probably not. They’re busy going to the prom with other celebrities.
The same applies in this case. Celebrity bloggers are off galavanting around with celebrity brands. Not some no-name startup, like The Shelf.
This isn’t a bad thing. Just because a blogger isn’t an enormous celebrity with a global following does not mean that they don’t have influence.
After realizing that we were aiming a little too high, we decided to shoot for people getting around 15-30 comments per post.
But that’s where we got stuck. Finding this elusive 2nd-tier group of bloggers was quite a bit more challenging than scanning “top 50 lists.” No one was publishing lists of up-and-comers.
I started to embark on a multi-day project of sifting through blogrolls and aggregation sites like Bloglovin.  Once I found a blogger who looked like a good fit for us, I’d add her to a spreadsheet, and then I’d start sifting through her blogroll, assuming she had one, trying to find more matches.
tamar4 520x304 A guide to finding, recruiting and working with bloggers
This task proved to be way WAY more time-consuming than I’d expected. The part that took the most time was FINDING the right bloggers for our app. Now that I had realized the importance of relevance, I became neurotic about finding the right matches.
For our fashion app that helped people save money, we decided to look for fashion bloggers who were price-conscious. For every 10 bloggers that I’d come across who matched our engagement criteria, only 1 or 2 of them would also be price-conscious.
I worked on this for days. It got to be really embarrassing when I’d report to my co-founder each day that after 4 hours I was only able to reach out to around 10 people.
I wish I could say that things started moving a little better at this point. But there was one more light bulb that needed to go off.
I was spending tons of time narrowing down the right bloggers. But I wasn’t spending any time on my emails. I was sending them all the same basic template.  And even though I myself knew why I had selected a particular blogger (as opposed to the 50 others that I had deemed irrelevant), I wasn’t telling the blogger about my rationale.
And no wants to feel like they are at the receiving end of a mass-email blast.

Epiphany #4 : Cold-emailing is lame

tamar5 A guide to finding, recruiting and working with bloggers
This should really be pretty obvious. But I admit, it wasn’t obvious to us right away. I finally arrived at this conclusion after quite a bit of A/B testing. I tested out long emails, short emails, personalized emails, emails that mention payment in the title… literally every variation in the book.
In the end, I found that my winning combination was to focus on personalization. Short. And with a subtle implication of compensation mentioned within the my message  The email subject that did the best was somewhat vague, but also intriguing: “Collaboration Idea.”
Powerful, right?
This winning combination is going to vary for everyone. But the point is, don’t just settle on the first thing you write and then blast that out to a list of 100 people. Try variations. And personalize everything! Try to put yourself in their position: What sort of email would YOU want to receive? What kind of email would really get you excited?
After weeks of working on this influencer marketing project, my first big break came in the form of a price-conscious fashion blogger named Kimberly, who maintained a blog at Penny Pincher Fashion.
She will always be my favorite blogger. She was the first person to give us a chance, and the results of the giveaway I did on her blog were so fantastic, I knew I was onto something!  Those results gave me the incentive to keep going with blogger campaigns, because honestly, things were looking pretty bleak with only the quilter posts under my belt thus far.

Epiphany #5 : Name dropping helps

Up until Kimberly’s post, our hit rate was 1 in 80 (!)–as terrible and embarrassing as that is.
tamar6 520x313 A guide to finding, recruiting and working with bloggers
That being said, we’d learned a lot by that point. Moving forward, we were armed with all that knowledge, and now we had a link to that great post put together by a reputable blogger.  From that point on, all of my outreach emails included a link to her post, and this worked wonders. Our hit rate became closer to 1 in 10, and this gave us the momentum we needed to line up our next two posts.

Epiphany #6 : Paying bloggers is NOT a bad thing.  

There are many brands out there who passionately refuse to pay bloggers.
We were never one of those brands.  At that point, I was so darn glad to get someone to respond to my emails I were more than willing to shell out some cash. But that’s not to say I wasn’t extremely cautious with how we spent our money. At this particular stage of our company, my partner and I had both been working for a full year without salary so we watched every dollar spent.
tamar7 520x118 A guide to finding, recruiting and working with bloggers
I think it was this extreme cautiousness with our money that allowed the rest of my epiphanies to come in rapid succession. From that point on, I’m happy to report that I wasn’t learning my lessons the hard way anymore.
During our influencer marketing efforts, we ran a total of five campaigns, not including the two quilt posts. Of those five posts, there was only one that didn’t hit our campaign goals (and it just missed by a little bit.) The other four were such huge successes, we felt like we hit the lottery. They outperformed our goals by three times!.
In fact, the blogger who charged the most ($400 for a post + the $250 gift card that we gave away) performed exponentially better than our wildest expectations. She sent a whopping 9,000 people over to our site within the first few hours. And we had 3,000 signups by the end of the week!
We ended up taking that pivot from The Shelf as a shopping app and applying what we learned and making The Shelf into an influencer marketing tool. Guess what? We started our focus in fashion.

My Mini Epiphanies that really brought everything home for us

Now that I’ve given you all that history, I can tell you what I know now:
Do your research! Do it thoroughly. Your highest priority should be to find bloggers that match your demographic down to the finest nuance.
tamar8 A guide to finding, recruiting and working with bloggers
Get performance metrics. Depending on what sort of campaign you plan on doing (in our case it was a giveaway), check back through the blogger’s old posts to make sure they have a track record of performing well for the type of project that you plan on approaching them about.
I was extremely diligent with this. I’d review the last few months of posts for each person before I’d contact them. I’d also check to see what the comment count looked like on their past giveaways (most people had huge fluctuations here). Because of those fluctuations, I’d then look to see which giveaways performed the best, and why. We needed to be able to replicate their results.
Find out if brands returned. I also took this a step further to see if the blogger had repeat customers. If a brand used her once, did they come back a few months later? This is always a good sign if people liked them enough to run a second post!
Get a media kit. Most bloggers have a media kit. If they don’t, it’s okay for you to ask them about their traffic stats and past campaign results.
Communicate expectations. I was always very clear about what sort of ROI I wanted to achieve. Be nice about it, since not all bloggers will be receptive to this. However, you should let them know what expectations you’d like and then ask if they think this is going to be achievable based off of previous campaigns they’ve done.
Every blogger that I spoke to about this was totally up-front. Also, by defining my goals before the post went live, it helped me out with the one post which didn’t perform well. The blogger was aware her post didn’t deliver the results I was looking for. She did everything she could to make it right, creating multiple social posts, as well as sending out a newsletter to her followers. The extra effort did wind up getting us close to the ROI we were shooting for initially.
In the end, our four campaigns were a huge success!  We wound up paying around 30 cents per signup. You really can’t beat that!  That ROI blew Google AdWords so far out of the water it was worth the massive amount of torment which went into learning the ropes behind the enigma that was influencer marketing.
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Concluding Thoughts

You might be wondering: why did you guys switch ideas if you were doing so darn good after these campaigns? Good question. It was a very gradual change. After we decided that influencer marketing was the way we would grow our business, we started building an internal database for us to use when setting up these pushes.
If you remember, the shopping app was all about products and pricing. The technology we have in our current app powered that very shopping app that gave us the ability to analyze blogger posts and extract out the products they talk about. What does this mean, and why is this great? We know exactly what brands and prices of products are being written about.
Using this technology we had earlier, we built ourselves a jerry-rigged blogger search engine that let us discover bloggers with a certain amount of comments per post (say, 15-30) and also narrows down further to bloggers who talked about affordable stores and sale items. Bam! That’s a very specific demographic (ours). This blogger list was automatically generated, rather than spending days compiling a list with Google.
Initially for internal use, we saw a huge opportunity. We had struggled so much with creating our own blogger campaigns, but this tool made our lives SO much easier! We would have been doing mankind a disservice if we’d kept it to ourselves.
All kidding aside, that’s the story behind our first influencer marketing campaigns, about the mistakes we made and the progress we’ve made to date. The rest is history.
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