Carl Baldassarre

Posts Tagged ‘social media’

Will advertising be the third rail for Facebook?

In Interactive marketing on October 27, 2010 at 3:48 pm

The right hand rail is where the ads are on Facebook. The middle is where your friends are, in your newsfeed and on your wall. But if you “like” companies, the middle becomes prime advertising space, too. Walmart recently created a Facebook App called CrowdSaver that lets users give a thumbs up to deals — like a 42″ Plasma TV for $398. If enough people like the deal, everyone gets it.

It’s a good idea, and a good reason to give WalMart a place in your newsfeed. “You should be able to connect to a business in the same way that you connect to a friend, or a person on the site,” Mark Zuckerberg said in a Wired magazine interview in 2009. “And then that business should be able to publish things in the same way that that happens for people you care about.” It’s a logical thought,  but in practice it can lead to an avalanche of junk. Ultimately, a “Like” list is not that different from a mailing list. So could Facebook become the digital version of junk mail? Nah. For one thing, it’s easy to un-like over-zealous companies. But if Facebook leaves the social advertising boom to manage itself, they could turn into the next MySpace — or just a less satisfying version of itself.

 

Full Zuckerberg Interview:

http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2009/06/mark-zuckerberg-speaks/#ixzz13aakDVt5

Media talks, social walks when there’s money involved.

In Interactive marketing on September 9, 2009 at 1:24 pm

Facebook has been enmeshed in ongoing controversy about who owns user profiles and posts. But there’s really no question — Facebook owns it all in the same way that NBC owns time on its network affiliates and programming, or the New York Times owns advertising space in its print and online editions. The difference is that, unlike mass media of the past, social media sites have often been created based mainly on content from users, not employees. Read the rest of this entry »

Social media as part of corporate sites.

In Interactive marketing on April 15, 2009 at 3:42 pm

The corporate site is opening up. Blogs, widgets, user-generated videos and dynamic tools let users do more and say more, all in the interests of selling more. Skittles has embraced the trend, and remade their site into a traveling navigation module that lives on twitter/facebook/wikipedia and elsewhere. Only the product section has company-controlled content. But most companies still go too far in the other direction, with corporate sites that don’t include the rest of the Web enough or at all. The question is, will there ultimately be any difference between the typical company home page and the typical company Facebook page? Read the rest of this entry »

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