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3 posts tagged Radian6

Vine vs. Instagram Social Media Buzz


Vine vs. Instagram Social Media Buzz
Here is an infographic that I made showing the social media buzz about the launch of the new Twitter app “Vine” and how it compared to that of Instagram since Vine went live on the 24th January 2013.

Click here for a larger version

Vine vs Instagram social media buzz


Vine
Vine is a standalone (currently only iOS) app from Twitter that lets users create short, 6-second videos that run on a loop. It was launched on the 24th January 2013. It is a fun app to use (here is one of my vines) but there are already free ways to measure success with Vine which can be used by companies as well.


Summary

Vine was discussed the most in Twitter over the period 21st Jan 2013 to 9th March 2013, and secondly in Blogs. For Instagram, the opposite was true. Instagram was discussed more in blogs and secondly in Twitter.

Interesting to see a small growth of buzz around Instagram as the Vine app was going live. Vine has been received well, with many positive opinions. Have you made a vine? What do you think?
Watching a Vine a day, makes you work rest and play!

How to measure success with Vine videos

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Clive Roach

About The Author:
Clive Roach is the social media strategist for Philips Healthcare. He is active with strategy development, activation, governance, projects and educational training activities for all aspects of social media within Philips Healthcare. Clive has been working in the eMarketing area since 1997, and previously held roles in engineering, design and sales. Clive is also practical in addition to his current strategic role. In addition to this blog, he tweets daily on three Twitter accounts, has two Facebook fan pages, Google+, Pinterest, So.cl, Instagram, and participates in many other social networks.


Connect with the author via: Twitter | Google+ | LinkedIn | Facebook fan page

Radian6 Engagement Goes Mobile


Radian6 engagement goes mobile

Social Media management on the GO with the Radian6 mobile app

The Radian6 mobile app enables Radian6 users to monitor their Social Media activities while on the go. You have to first set up your profiles and dashboards with the Radian6 application as normal. Once that has been completed, you can use your Radian6 login to access your data via the free iPhone and iPad apps. It is now also upgraded for iPhone5 and is now iOS6 Compatible.

Radian6 enhanced mobile app

Radian6 has just released an enhanced version of the mobile app that now has the ability to add your salesforce account details to the same settings section where you would have previously added your Twitter account details.

Salesforce account integration



Getting started

Go to the options menu via the button in the top left corner. You can now add a stack, and there are 3 choices. The Engagement stack enables you to get real time updates and engage, while the summary stack will give you high level overviews, and finally the “My Tasks” choice will allow you to work on any tasks that have been assigned to you. You can also rename the stacks.

Radian6 mobile app options

The manage stacks menu option allows you to move the stacks around in the interface so that they line up in a logical order. You can also delete stacks.


Radian6 create a stack



High level information with the summary stacks

These stacks give you high level information at a glance about your Social Media activities. You can vary the time period from 1 day to 3 months (the 3 months option depends on what you have available as a part of your normal access).


Radian6 summary stacks

In addition you can also see share of voice (your brand vs. competitors given by your keyword groups) share of conversation (your brand vs. your industry given by your keyword groups) and top countries graphics in the summary stacks.
This is fantastic information to display to stakeholders while on the go! To me, these graphics visible on the go justify the time spent in setting up the keyword groups in this way in the first place.


Then the fun starts with the Engagement stacks!

You can reply and allocate posts to your team with the Engagement stacks. You can decide to have real time monitoring or you can select a date range. You can set refresh rates from 30 seconds to 10 minutes. You can manage all media types or make a selection. So you could decide to only manage blog comments, or Twitter, or Facebook only, or any combination you like. I love this flexibility!

Radian6 engagement

You can also assign posts to your team, tag, prioritize and classify posts. Lastly, you can also adjust the sentiment.

Radian6 sentiment change

A video summary of the Radian6 mobile app


Summary

I have used both the iPhone and iPad app versions of the Radian6 mobile app. Obviously the iPad app gives you more real estate to manage and view the graphics. I found both apps to be very fast, responsive, and easy to get up and running. If you need help, you can find handy help buttons but mainly in the summary stack. The Settings menu also has a useful “refresh all server data option”.

Overall, I highly recommend that Radian6 users give this enhanced mobile app a try. The Social Media Jedi is impressed and I think you will find it a worthy addition to your daily routine. If you do give it a try, let me know what you think.

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Clive Roach

About The Author:
Clive Roach is the social media strategist for Philips Healthcare. He is active with strategy development, activation, governance, projects and educational training activities for all aspects of social media within Philips Healthcare. Clive has been working in the eMarketing area since 1997, and previously held roles in engineering, design and sales. Clive is also practical in addition to his current strategic role. In addition to this blog, he tweets daily on three Twitter accounts, has two Facebook fan pages, Google+, Pinterest, So.cl, Instagram, and participates in many other social networks.
Connect with the author via: Twitter | Google+ | LinkedIn | Facebook fan page



Buffer

Influencers vs. Advocates.. but what should brands do to have success?


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Influencers vs. Advocates

Let me first deal with that question which some of us have asked ourselves for a while now. What is the difference between an influencer and an advocate? Here are two posts which tried to answer this question;

-           A blog post from Sparksheet

-           A blog post from Customer Rocks

As you can see from the comments, there were some disagreements with both posts as to what the difference was. I do not have the magic answer either; however, I will share my opinion after first looking at some definitions.

A definition of influencers

Individuals who have the power to affect purchase decisions of others because of their (real or perceived) authority, knowledge, position, or relationship. Alternatively, Brown and Hayes[*] defined an influencer as “a third party who significantly shapes the customer’s purchasing decision, but may never be accountable for it.

A definition of advocates 

A person who supports a cause and exercises his right to be heard, or represents a party before a court or tribunal to defend it or plead on behalf of it.

So it seems to me that influencers are particular types of advocates, who have an effect on the purchase decisions of others, and not in a political or legal sense.

From now on in this post I shall use the term influencer because I am talking here about advocates who, in various degrees, have an effect on the purchase decisions of others, so they are influencers.

 

How can I find my brand influencers?

Influencers are everywhere
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You should be able to spot a brand influencer very easily. They pop up regularly and say good things about your brand! When I was a community manager at Philips I had a great relationship with them over a number of years. They would answer many customer questions, and left the more difficult ones to me when they felt it should be responded to by the brand. If you are doing Social media correctly and regularly talking to your followers, subscribers, members, etc, then you will know who your brand influencers are. There are a few other ways to find your brand influencers. I list a few of them;

-           Commission a Social listening survey from a competent company like Oxyme. There are many other social media intelligence companies like Radian6, Attentio, Crimson Hexagon, Collective Intellect, Sysomos etc. Radian6 actually has an influencer widget, which gives you the ability to set the factors of influence that are most relevant to you.

-           The Adobe Social analytics tool enables you to integrate data from your Facebook, YouTube and Twitter channels with your web analytic data to identify the people who have brought you the most referrals, actions, or revenue.It is a very neat solution and I highly recommend it to existing Omniture users.

These two suggestions can not only find the influencers for your brand, but they can also asses how much influence they have. Here are some very quick cost effective alternatives;

-           For Twitter and Facebook, RowFeeder could be used to see who is referencing your brand and how often.

-           For Twitter, a simple option is to use the Formulist “Top fans” app, which you can now have added to Hootsuite.

-           For Blogs, look to see who regularly comments and refers to your blog. You can do this manually or consult your commenting system if you employ one, like Livefyre or Disqus.

- Communities like Linkedin allow you to see who are your top participants. JIVE communities allow you to add points for commenting and many other actions, and as an administrator, you can run reports to see who your top contributors are. You will need to check what they were doing to earn the points, as not all actions are those of influencers, referring to my quoted definitions earlier in this post.

-           Lastly, there are some free tools like Topsy or Socialmention. Just search for one of your brand names and see who is talking about it. I particularly like the list of “top users” shown down the left hand side of the results page of Socialmention. Remove your own usernames and then explore the rest! In Topsy.com, use the “search experts” option.

-           Here is a list of influencer identification tools that I love sharing. It is a year old, but I just love it.

In many ways, brand influencers share the same characteristics in B2C and B2B. You will find highly technical influencers in almost all subjects and most of them influence both online and offline, so do not discard the powerful effect of word of mouth. Some can tell you far more about your products than your own marketing departments! Here is one of my past posts on the power of word of mouth.


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Knowing that influencers are out there is one thing, but interacting with them is another.

If handled well, you can multiply the effect that your top brand influencers will have on your earned media results.

Do not approach them using non branded email accounts, and do not blatantly ask them to promote your content.

Influencers love insightful information, either gained by experience or via data sources. So if you can supply that to them, and in advance of others channels, it might be a huge win-win. They also like to have their questions answered in a timely fashion when they come to you as well. Brands can even ask influencers to answer other customer questions, which I have experienced myself from the influencer point of view.

Start carefully, with one or two influencers, then build up to develop a successful program. I suggest looking at the checklist created by Jeremiah Owyang. It is all good stuff, but working with influencers can also be dangerous if you opt to pay them. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has guidelines for disclosure of paid media on blogs and other social media, so it is well worth reading up on this if you choose this pathway and you fall under the scope of the FTC guidance.

One of my favourite authors on the topic of brand influencers was Augie Ray. I enjoyed debating the topic with him while he was at Forrester Research. I suggest having a peak at one of his reports from February 2010, which was titled “Tapping The Entire Online Peer Influence Pyramid”

In summary…

For any brand in this Social media age, identifying your Influencers should be a logical next step after first crafting your Social policies, and venturing on your first phase of Social interaction. Please refer to the above checklist that I referred to plot when you logically move onto engaging with your influencers.

Have you identified your influencers and what benefits did you gain by engaging with yours?

   

You can watch a video extract from this post;
YouTube

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Pluggio blogInterview with the Social Media Jedi about Influencers and advocates on the Pluggio blog

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References

[*] Brown, Duncan and Hayes, Nick. Influencer Marketing: Who really influences your customers?, Butterworth-Heinemann, 2008

Image1: renjith krishnan / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Image2: Clive Roach / Socialmediajedi.info

Image3: Kittikun Atsawintarangkul / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

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