Saturday, August 14, 2010

Social Media Marketing Magazine Launches Online

The social media space has plenty of information flying around every second of every day. If you don’t have any real work to do just spend your day reading articles recommended by every social media practitioner and their brother. You’ll be busy.

In an effort to ‘cut to the chase’, get through the clutter and offer some different perspectives on social media marketing a new digital offering, Social Media Marketing Magazine is being unveiled today.The online publication is described on their site

Social Media Marketing (SMM) Magazine’s innovative editorial approach features the expertise of a number of marketing leaders from the business, publishing, and academic communities.

With their unique perspectives, SMM Magazine helps you navigate through the social media maze and emerge with a more clear understanding of how to achieve your marketing goals by applying effective strategies, tactics, and best practices.

The magazine is the brainchild of Kent Huffman, CMO of BearCom Wireless and Chuck Martin, Director, Center for Media Research, MediaPost, and Chairman / CEO of NFI Research. Both have very deep marketing backgrounds and are evolving right along with the rest of the marketing world as social media becomes a natural addition to the Internet marketing mix and the overall marketing mix of companies and organizations in marketing’s new world order.

The initial issue features articles from social media heavyweights like former Kodak CMO Jeffrey Hayzlett, author David Meerman Scott and Stanford University professor, Dr. Jennifer Aaker.

In the interest of full disclosure there is a blog and there are many folks included in that initial effort including a post from yours truly.

So take a look and see what is being said about social media marketing not just from your peers but from the perspectives of academia and authors as well. In an industry of fragmented content about this ever-emerging discipline, Social Media Marketing Magazine may be the needed aggregator of content and talent that help make sense of it all.

When you have visited the magazine let us know your thoughts here at Marketing Pilgrim.

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Facebook’s Zuckerberg at D8

In what can only be described as an uncomfortable viewing experience, Mark Zuckerberg faced the privacy music yesterday in a discussion with All Things Digital’s Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher. From the meandering musings of the Facebook founder to the sweating image of a person clearly under some pressure, this interview is all at once interesting, hard to watch, puzzling and more.

John Paczkowski’s live blog of the talk uses phrases like “Zuckerberg dodges”, “Zuckerberg continues with this theme until Walt jumps in and asks him to answer the original question”, “Another long rambling answer to a simple question” with the kicker being

[My God, Zuckerberg is literally dissolving in a lake of his own sweat. He's flushed, and you can see the beads of sweat rolling down his face. Could this be his Nixon moment?]

Here is the video from the AllThingsD site.

Personally, I hate to see anyone in this kind of position. I know I certainly wouldn’t want to be. The flip side of the coin is, however, that Zuckerberg’s continued toying with privacy and other semi-sacred matters of the people that have made him a billionaire is what is being literally brought into the light. If he is uncomfortable with what Facebook is up to or cannot really articulate the situation then this is what can result.

No use dog-piling on the guy at this point but I think that a dose of true openness and honesty might go a long way to move Zuckerberg and Facebook from the privacy doghouse.

Do I expect that? Hmmmmm, I’ll have to think about that one.

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Vote for Your Favorite SMB Online Marketing Advice

Voting is now open for the Small Biz Discovery Contest!

In the end, we received four entries to the SEO category and two entries for the social media marketing category. (No one jumped on the opportunity to give PPC advice. Is there a reason the category was unpopular? You tell me. P.S. Tomorrow I’ll tell you some of the lessons we learned from this contest and what we’d do different next time around.)

I voted sticker
CC BY 2.0

We really hope that you take a moment to check out the articles and vote for your favorite in each category. Actually, we’re depending on it, since it’s your votes that play a large part in determining the winners of the contest. You’re holding a pass to SES San Francisco and two seats in our SEO Training in your hands. Shouldn’t they go to the most deserving authors?

Then again, I wouldn’t want to be in your shoes right now. Choosing the article that best answers the question “What one recommendation would you give a small business owner to improve their online presence?” is no easy feat in this group of contenders.

In the social media category, on the one hand we’ve got a tactical, implementation-oriented guide to social media channels, and on the other hand we’ve got advice for creating an informed social media strategy.

The SEO field is even tighter. One article focuses on the way to build a solid foundation for SEO success. Another submission explains a top priority for SEO success is getting buy-in. A third looks “outside the bot” from the human perspective of time, patience and realistic expectations in SEO. And the final entry is a primer to bring a small business owner up to speed on basic SEO methodology.

How to choose!? It’ll be quite a challenge, and we appreciate the help — which is why we’re also offering a prize to one voter. If you vote, you can enter a drawing for a seat in our SEO Training. This first round of voting is open for the next two weeks, so why not do it now so you don’t forget? And feel free to spread the word. We’d love to know who’s SEO or SMM advice you agree with the most and who you think should get a free pass to SES San Francisco!

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Be Kule with Sokule

Sokule is a way to bring all your social media, branding, and pings all together in one place while helping you gain much needed traffic to your blog or website.

It’s also available on your mobile phone so you can take it anywhere and use it’s advantages everywhere.

From Sokule, you can post updates to your Twitter account, Facebook personal or fanpages,  your My Space account and numerous high-traffic social media sites with the click of one button. How cool is that?

If you’re trying to build your online presence, brand yourself and grow your web traffic, Sokule makes this task much easier.

You can schedule your posts and messages (up to 25) in advance so you don’t have to worry about updating every single day.

Depending on what you want to accomplish, there are levels of membership with Sokule. Including Free, Bronze, Bronze Plus, Silver, Gold and Founder. No matter your needs for branding yourself and driving traffic to your site, there’s a level suitable for everyone. You can also upgrade as your needs grow.

Another great feature of Sokule an affiliate program. If you love this service and want to promote it, you can earn a commission for everyone who signs up through your affiliate link.

Unlike Twitter and other social media accounts where you’re limited to a 140 character message, Sokule also offers you the option to post article length messages to the Sokule service.

During signup you’re given options to choose 3 separate categories to describe your online purpose and interests. The category listings were pretty standard but covered a lot of ground.

One downfall I didn’t like, and this is personal opinion, is the look of landing pages as you’re going through signup. The first offer is an upgrade to Silver member and while it may be a great offer, I was simply interested in a free account to get started. I clicked No Thanks and was taken to the Bronze signup page. Again I clicked No Thanks.

Signing up takes less than 5 minutes. At the time of this writing, I’ve waited 20 minutes and still haven’t gotten the confirmation email. This may not be uncommon, but most of us are used to signups and confirmations being instant.

However, I signed in 24 hours later and was taken to my members area ready to get started.

Using Sokule with the other social networks above does require upgrading to at least the Bronze level. I did not upgrade simply because I don’t need this service at the present time. But with all that Sokule has to offer, this can be a valuable service for professional bloggers or those who are trying to grow their blog to that level. This has been a basic review of the free service offered by Sokule.

If this is something that interests you, simply click this link to get started. Yes, this is an affiliate link. I will receive compensation if you sign up and upgrade past the free level. With that being said, if you join the affiliate program, you will need to print out a W9 form and mail it to Sokule.

Google’s Dominance in Video Delivery Continues

Google is a real all or nothing proposition most of the time. They either completely dominate something (search) or they barely make a dent (Google Buzz and social media). One area that they continue to dominate in and there is no real relief in site for competitors is the delivery of video content. I’ll let the picture from comScore tell the story from April of this year.

This kind of dominance is just as impressive as the search share lead that Google continues to hold over its competition. With video becoming more and more important in the business world this dominance stands to increase as well which can be disheartening to the competition.

One bright note is that even delivering a small percentage of all the video that is consumed by the US online audience can represent large opportunity. There were 30.3 billion videos viewed by US Internet users. That’s an average of 171 videos a month per Internet user. That’s just under 6 videos per day per Internet user. Of course, as with any average there are extreme users driving that number up but it’s still interesting.

Here are some other tidbits to consider from the report:

  • The top video ad networks in terms of their actual reach delivered were: Joost Video Network (by Adconion Media Group) with 36.6 percent penetration of online video viewers, BrightRoll Video Network with 19.5 percent, and BBE with 18.5 percent.
  • 83.5 percent of the total U.S. Internet audience viewed online video.
  • 135.7 million viewers watched 13.0 billion videos on YouTube.com (96.0 videos per viewer).
  • The average Hulu viewer watched 24.7 videos, totaling 2.5 hours of video per viewer.
  • The duration of the average online video was 4.4 minutes.

So how do you contribute to these numbers? Do you lean toward the low end or the high end of the scale?

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Disney Sells Movie Tix on Facebook

The Walt Disney Company is doing more than wishing upon a star that their new release “Toy Story 3” will have success at the box office. While the movie doesn’t open until June 18 Disney is using their Facebook presence to pre-sell tickets and create buzz for Buzz Lightyear and company.

The New York Times reports

The Walt Disney Company has created what it believes is a first-of-its-kind application allowing Facebook users to buy tickets to “Toy Story 3” without leaving the social networking site and while, at the same time, prodding their friends to come along.

The application, called Disney Tickets Together, could transform how Hollywood sells movie tickets by combining purchases with the powerful forces of social networking. When you buy a ticket through Disney’s application, for instance, it alerts your Facebook friends and prompts you to invite them to buy tickets of their own.

If this concept takes off then there are limitless applications for this including selling tickets for sporting events (when not restricted by other agreements) and any other event. Disney is trying to leverage the 1.3 million Disney Pixar “Likers” on Facebook. While this sounds really cool for Disney the next question we have to ask is whether Facebook is getting a cut of this deal? Apparently not.

Disney Tickets Together, which has been in development for months, works with ticket-buying sites like Fandango.com and covers the majority of the movie theaters in North America, Mr. Luckett (senior vice president and general manager of DigiSynd, a Disney subsidiary that manages the entertainment giant’s social networking presence. ) said. Facebook receives no percentage of the ticket sales but does, in theory, get more visitors on its site.

Facebook must feel like the lowest paid event planner on the planet. They arrange where everyone will meet and they give people the chance to do a considerable amount of business through their platform then when it comes to their cash register it sits there collecting dust and cobwebs. There has to be some deal we are unaware of because Facebook doesn’t need a theoretical increase in people visiting the site, they need revenue.

Facebook seems to be happy taking the high road of playing matchmaker for businesses and customers without getting a cut. If this catches on I think that will not last too much longer. If Facebook has learned anything in its years of existence is that the longer you let this happen for free the harder it becomes to turn off the entitlement factor.

But Disney Tickets Together represents a deepening relationship between businesses and Facebook users, according to Dan Rose, the site’s vice president for partnerships and platform marketing.

Very insightful and magnanimous for sure, but will this attitude pay the bills for Facebook moving forward?

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Friday, August 13, 2010

Social Media for Small Business

The first thing you have to realize when using social media is that you can’t just delegate it to the youngest person on your staff and assume you will connect with your customer. If your customer is following you, they are going to need to feel they are interacting with someone near the top of the company food chain.

Ask what you want to get out of social sites. Think about how you would use these tools before you ever sign up for that Facebook page. Think about the companies you do business with and what they could do to get your attention in social-space. Write down a plan and be prepared to adjust it in a month. Keeping in mind that your social efforts must meet a need to be successful.

Realize that people don’t use a blog, Twitter and MySpace to find a gas station. Simply regurgitating facts and statistics about your business isn’t going to fill up those follow lists. Much like sky-writing isn’t appropriate for every business, neither is every type of social media.

Understand that participating in a social network takes time and you need to make time for it everyday if you really want it to succeed. My favorite restaurant takes the time to tweet their specials everyday about an hour before lunch. They are injecting themselves into my awareness in a very subtle way. It is a much better use of social space than a blog or Facebook. It pops up in my Twitter feed at the perfect time. The other side is that what is in that tweet needs to contain something that interests me. Twitters brevity and informality helps in this case, they can’t waste a lot of space on anything but stating their specials in a short-hand that is usually reserved for friends. It comes across like someone doing me a favor rather than a sales pitch.

Don’t expect miracles. Social networking won’t make the phones ring overnight. If the message isn’t well planned, it may never make the phones ring. If adding a blog to your site sounds like a great idea, look at your numbers of visitors first. Let’s assume you have a housewares site. If you get 100 visitors a day to a part of your site where you sell your bacon handling devices, it is unrealistic to assume you will see 1,000 people a day reading the blog about bacon in that area. Of that 100 visitors, you might get 1-2 readers of the blog. Suddenly you need to promote your bacon-blog and do so in such a way that you aren’t spending time and money that could produce tangible results. Promote from within the channels you are already working in. Add a blurb about the blog in your emails, receipts, and site. Readers are bad at magic tricks, they rarely show up unexpectedly.

Once you get your business in a position where it makes sense to move into social media, look before you leap. Are there fans of your products talking out there already? It makes better business sense to support their efforts on your way in. If you find a fan of your company with a large network of followers, there’s nothing wrong with the head honcho giving them an honest “Thank-you” for their support. It validates the devotion and feelings they have for your company. Too often companies take those fans for granted. Think about your fans in terms of a relationship, is the road going both ways? A social network is not a replacement for a website. Keep your website up-to-date. A broken or non-existent site will have a lot more trouble convincing people to find you in social-space.

Communicate honestly with your network. If you have a product that you aren’t sure you want to carry, bounce it off the network and see what they say. Be prepared to develop a thick skin, there are people out there that live for controversy and drama. If you find yourself in a ping-pong match with a disgruntled customer, end it with an invitation to speak to you in person. Often anonymity makes for a less social interaction. One of the hardest seems to be owning your mistakes. It isn’t the fall that hurts, it how you handle yourself afterwards that people will remember.

Sometimes your employees will say things about you. You understand that your employees aren’t always skipping into work. They have bad days, they have good days. The socialization they do online is the same one they do face-to-face. How you respond to them griping about what a rotten day they had can put you in a position of looking like an overreacting big-brother. Head off trouble with a clearly worded policy that covers how discussing internal processes and identifying personnel are off-limits, but that you understand sometimes people need to vent. If you really want to have fun, give them suggestions about giving people pseudonyms with examples. Turn the issue around with frank discussions about how people make mistakes and that everyone will make a mistake, however having another employee discuss it would  be inappropriate. People have been griping about their bosses since the first caveman told the second to pick up a rock. It’s seems to be a universal truth that people gripe about their bosses sooner or later.

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Social Media Marketing Essentials for the Small Business Web Presence

The ever-changing paradigm of Internet marketing has greatly advanced a relatively recent phenomenon called social media marketing. In the broadest sense of the term, social media marketing (SMM) can and usually does embrace a number of outlets including: tweeting, blogging, viewer-supplied content sites, (such as Facebook, MySpace and YouTube) email campaigns and cell phone texting (SMS.)

To think almost none of these marketing outlets even existed even as little as four or five years ago is breath-taking proof of the swiftness of the evolution of social networking when wedded to advancing internet technologies. Facebook now boasts over 400,000,000 members; The Florida Supreme Court, for example, is now posting information on Twitter at twitter.com/flcourts. One wonders if even Stanley Milgram, lead researcher of the famous “Small World Experiment”, could have envisioned how rapidly social networking in this hyper-fast environment could prove to be.

For you, the small business owner/marketer, SMM should not be over-looked, as indeed, it may well be one of the more effective tools at your disposal for rich content on your site, indeed as an integral part of your strategic marketing plan.

To be sure, engaging actively in developing SMM strategies and tactics is time-consuming to be effective. Michael Seltzer’s Social Marketing Media Report for 2009 found 64% of marketers used SMM five hours a week, while 39% were using it for ten hours or more. Yet this same report polled an amazing 88% of marketers who had been actively employing these new mediums for years with 72% who admitted they were just getting started with only a few months experience. Most significant in this report: more than 30% were sole proprietors actively using SMM in their small businesses.

Is the investment in time and energy worth it? These statistics would indicate that many certainly think so. So what are the better outlets for social marketing? Let’s examine some of the examples typically cited.

Facebook (and Similar Reader Supplied Content Sites)

When businesses and organizations discovered the supercharged “six-degrees of separation” phenomenon of this social network site, Facebook business pages devoted to promotion, marketing and PR cropped up in waves. The notable advantages of Facebook are:

  1. It has a huge user base already using it that is likely also to include your existing customers.
  2. It’s easy to use and readily accessible.
  3. It can accommodate multi-media content, specifically tailored to your message.

Its few downsides such as a closed environment and the non-customizable formatting that is the trademark of Facebook are not really showstoppers. Its cousins, MySpace and LinkedIn for example, offer similar advantages and disadvantages but are tailored to differing demographics with uniquely differing outcomes. MySpace caters to a younger audience while LinkedIn is more of a networking site best suited for professionals and personal business contacts.

YouTube is an amazing opportunity to promote business products and services via reader-supplied videos. Some videos, even obvious business contrived contributions can go viral with tens – even hundreds of thousands of viewers overnight. It doesn’t require a lot of imagination to see the potential for the small business owner/marketer when these videos link to their web site. (Ref. www.facebook.com, www.myspace.com, www.linkedin.com, www.youtube.com)

Implementation: All of these social network websites simply require a free membership to get started and offer excellent help in the process and answering questions about their use. You link your web site to the page or posting — even using supplied graphical files of their recognized brand. All YouTube requires is the ability to create video files — easy enough using available editing software.

Blogging

Most businesses can profit with a blogosphere presence by either publishing a blog or advertising on one that draws the audience best suited for that business. Blogging has become a major force in disseminating opinion and news not typically found in traditional media. For that reason alone, small businesses find a hospitable and relatively inexpensive outlet for public relations, advertising and sales.

Because literally anyone can create and publish a blog, it is easy to get started. A vast array of free open-source solutions is available to assist you in the effort. Maintaining one is another story. Blogging, to be really effective, requires constancy and consistency. Again, social marketing does require an investment of time. The dividends are an environment relatively free of regulated restrictions and the potential for creating personal connection for customers and consumers with your message or opinions. Moreover, blogs allow for feedback with reader comments, a great way to harvest valuable opinion and insights. When a web site includes or links to a blog, it has the potential to offer customers, researchers and consumers a reason to become familiar with your business by connecting more personally with it. A great example of how well this can work would be GoDaddy’s colorful founder Robert Parson’s video blog. Whether you like him or not, he garners attention for his brand. (For examples and more information, see www.wordpress.org, www.movabletype.org, www.textpattern.com and others – Google: Blogging, blog software and blog forums)

Implementation: It’s possible to create full -blown web sites with WordPress (for example) with all of the structure and content management available in non-blog CSS/HTML, but often, you will link to your blog from your existing web site and vice-versa with a stand-alone blog site (complete with hosting if you like.)

Email Campaigns

Gradually supplanting “snail mail” direct mail campaigns, email campaigns are demonstrating a distinct advantage of messaging to controlled audiences with colorful and impacting content – and of course directly linking to your web site landing page.

Email has made the cost of direct contact advertising much more economical by eliminating costly printing and postage expenses. Lists are readily available from a number of reliable resources, (which you would need to obtain for direct mail anyway) including associations and memberships. Are these the people your business needs to target? If so, email deserves more attention from you than it often receives in a serious marketing plan – especially for small businesses.

But here is the important thing: think of email as social media marketing. When handled properly, it is a very powerful tool in your marketing arsenal, especially with the ubiquity of the Blackberry and other smart phones in use today.

Implementation: Creating HTML email and engaging a service for broadcast campaigns is relatively inexpensive. There are a number of competitive services available to help you with creating and sending them efficiently and hassle-free. (Examples: MailChimp.com, ConstantContact.com, www.iContact.com and others)

Twitter

Who would have thought that a communication idea like Twitter would have become the popular force it is today? Once again, the power of social networking has unleashed a simple yet powerful tool. In the words of Twitter itself: “Twitter connects you to your customers right now, in a way that was never before possible.” In addition to its useful immediacy, Twitter allows for a personal response or opinion to float out to any and all that are “following” you or your business. Twitter is more of an open environment than Facebook and so it tends to be easier to create a larger audience quickly.
How does it work? Again, it’s best described in Twitter’s own words: “Twitter lets you write and read messages of up to 140 characters, or the very length of this sentence, including all punctuation and spaces.” Messages can be sent and received from your laptop or your cell phone. They are real-time communication.

Why is that important? Let’s suppose you discover a benefit (or a complaint) one of your customers has twittered about your product or service. Something you may not have discovered on your own right away. Immediately you can begin promoting it (or doing damage control) right away, tweeting and posting on your blog or site accordingly. Trends and opinions are available to you and your business enterprise instantly and continuously.

Implementation: Becoming a twitterer really only requires signing up as a member and logging on. (Ref: www.twitter.com) Links strategically placed on your site would allow others to add your site to their follow list – which you would encourage of course.

Texting (SMS)

More and more businesses are using the cell phone to alert a customer to an important announcement or offer – assuming the customer has opted in for that. Many organizations other than your cell carrier are taking advantage of this.

For the small business, this can be a great way to develop customer’s awareness of your presence. Such messages can and should link directly to your site where the message is amplified with content related to the text. SMS stands for short message service. Simply put, it is a method of communication that sends text between cell phones, or from a PC or handheld to a cell phone.

Implementation: SMS services are available for a nominal fee to help in delivering messages to your customers and prospects. (www.interactivemediums.com, www.smseverywhere.com, www.openmarket17-px.rtrk.com and others – Google: SMS and SMS delivery) It is important to have a sign-up form on your site where users can opt-in for this service.

In Conclusion

A full generation – the Generation Y – has spent their entire lives with the computer and the subsequent flow of related technology that it embraces and embodies. Contemporary phenomena like Twitter and Facebook are just not phenomenal to them. If they represent a part of your businesses target demographics, you can’t even think of ignoring these social media marketing tools. But don’t make the mistake of thinking older generations are not using SMM in growing numbers too, because they are.

Malcolm Gladwell’s seminal book, “The Tipping Point” documented the extraordinary phenomenon of the tipping point and how often we fail to understand how it is achieved. It’s never an accident accident. For the small business that relies on their web site as a chief marketing tool, content alone, even sites using sound Search Engine Optimization and Pay-Per-Click campaigns are well advised to include all the assets for their site they can get their hands on, and that certainly includes social media marketing assets if they hope to achieve the tipping point in their own business enterprise. Any or all of these SMM tools could be invaluable for you and your small business. The best advise is to try them out if they are new and unfamiliar to you and get to know how they work. Good ideas will ultimately flow from the experience to lead you along the way. You can get additional help and training from hundreds of forums as well as training sites like: www.lynda.com, www.videoprofessoronline.com and so many others all found online.

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Like It or Not Facebook Button is Buggy

Facebook can’t seem to buy a break these days. It’s almost as if the privacy powers that be are reaching out and making life difficult for the social media giant just because they can. Could anything be worse than the string of bad reports that have dogged Facebook for the past couple of weeks? Not quite but this latest issue isn’t something that Facebook will like ;-) .

According to Mashable

Is your website experiencing problems with Facebook’s Like buttons? Don’t worry, it’s not just you and Facebook is working on a solution.

The problem that seems to be impacting potentially thousands of sites is that clicking on a Like button results in an error stating “The page [page URL] cannot be reached.” A bug has been filed with Facebook and the developers status page indicates that the company is actively working on a solution.

This bug seems to be occurring at random — everything from small sites to some pages on CNN.com are reporting problems. When users click on a button, a red “error” link appears and a pop-up is then displayed saying the site cannot be reached.

Not the end of the world admittedly but with such a widespread acceptance of the Facebook Like button out of the gate having it get all squirrelly is less than optimal especially in light of Facebook’s recent woes.

Now, the funny thing is that Mashable reports a possible ‘fix’ that if it is the case is going to make for some long nights in the Facebook marketing department.

Incidentally, an error that was occurring on a few CNN.com posts was seemingly fixed by changing the button text from “Like” to “Recommend.” That may be purely coincidental, but we did notice that upon making that change, the buttons that previously didn’t function now work. Developers might want to give that a shot and see if the change in preference yields any improved results.

Hmmmm, a “Recommend” button? It doesn’t really roll off the tongue like “Like” does but if the button works, hit it!

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What Twitter Must Learn From TechCrunch in Order to Thrive

The following is also my column in this week's AdvertisingAge. (Photo of Michael Arrington by Thomas Hawk)

Next month marks the fifth anniversary of TechCrunch and the ascent of one of the web's first power bloggers, Michael Arrington.

The TechCrunch story is fascinating as it exposes what many love about social media and the internet: smart risk-taking. This is precisely what helped the technology blog outmaneuver the press and quickly develop and maintain its massive following (along with a dose of controversy along the way).

At the ripe old age of 5, TechCrunch remains a must-read. According to DoubleClick Ad Planner, it reaches an estimated 7.4 million users a month. What's more, it has propelled Arrington into the upper echelon of technology influencers, earning him a coveted spot on the Time 100 list and regular appearances on Charlie Rose. Much of its success lies in Arrington and crew taking some strategic risks -- such as adding unorthodox events. They're not afraid to push the envelope or upset the status quo.

Nevertheless, in many ways, I believe TechCrunch and others from the Blogging Class of 2005 (like Mashable) are the last of their kind -- superstar blogs with iconic founders. The good old days of democratized media, where anyone can launch a blog and achieve worldwide influence, have come to an end. While there are still untapped niches that are crying out for good blogs -- ones that I believe corporations, not just entrepreneurs can fill -- the most profitable topics are spoken for. The window has closed. The game has changed.

Perhaps sensing this, some of blogging's most fervent enthusiasts moved on years ago to focus on Twitter. The age of Twitter began in earnest with a torrent of tweets from the early adopters who attended the 2007 South by Southwest Conference. Over the next two years, it came of age through countless media impressions and most notably a high-profile slot on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" in early 2009.

As Twitter mushroomed in influence, it quietly diverted our attention from blogs as the "it" emerging medium. It dawned on us that it's far easier to go where the conversation is, rather than expect people to come to us. What's more, Twitter's 140-character limitation was the perfect antidote for an attention-starved world where media snacking, rather than meals, rules. Blogs such as TechCrunch, however, adapted by feeding on Twitter for scoops, and in turn, powering its continued growth.

Still, Twitter reinvented media before most blogs had a chance to evolve. It was in the right place at the right time. It was simple and a perfect fit for our rising smartphone addiction. What's more, it fed our need for constant entertainment, engagement and ego stroking. Thus, Twitter became the primary window on the world for millions.

But Twitter must not get too comfortable. The only constant on the internet is change. If Twitter's execs don't reinvent its business now, someone or something will do it for them.

The best companies, like great artists, constantly reinvent themselves. Apple today gets more of its revenue from the iPhone than it does from the Macintosh. Facebook, despite an onslaught of controversy, is wisely pushing ahead with its vision to become the social operating system for the web, not just a social network.

"Twitter must not get too comfortable. The only constant on the internet is change. If Twitter's execs don't reinvent its business now, someone or something will do it for them."

Twitter needs to do the same. It's starting down this path by taking greater control over its own destiny. It's slowly adding services, including ad platforms and business tools, that compete directly with some of the most successful companies in its vast ecosystem. But it needs to become more. It needs a vision as grand as these other firms.

Evolution is always controversial -- just ask TechCrunch, Apple or Facebook. They all take their lumps. However, it's the only way an internet business can thrive in an era of constant change. Let's just hope that Twitter can evolve, just as fast as TechCrunch did, before someone or something changes the landscape.

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Yahoo Helps Users Track Updates More Easily

Well, I have to say that coming off a long weekend and having nothing to yell at Facebook for (at least to his point in the day) there is precious little else going on in the Internet marketing space. Believe me, I am not complaining because it can be nice when the industry takes a break to grab a little cheese with their whine. In other words, when no one is griping about something then there is not as much news. Just that statement on its own tells you something doesn’t it?

Back to reality though. Apparently Yahoo is working to make its mail service more social by allowing users to track other users more easily. Of course, considering how great these services worked out for Google and Facebook, Yahoo is being pretty cautious. They haven’t provided much in terms of innovation as of late so they last thing they need are changes that would produce a negative backlash.

TechCrunch reports

Here’s the product expansion in a nutshell – currently to see status updates for others in Yahoo Mail, you have to have a mutual follow, meaning both people have agreed to be “friends.” You can then see that user’s Yahoo status updates as well as updates on third party services that they have added to their Yahoo profile as well. In the new version there will no longer be a requirement for a mutual follow. So, like on Twitter, users can follow whomever they choose.

Ok, harmless enough. My question is though, who is using Yahoo to track their social media interactions? I have been a Yahoo mail user for a long time and I just never consider Yahoo for being the one-stop shop for my social media interactions.

Whether or not this is a viable option for you, Yahoo is at least trying to make sure that privacy concerns are not raised.

Yahoo Chief Privacy Officer Anne Toth, who has been with Yahoo since 1998, says that there will be no privacy surprises for users, who can choose to turn sharing on, turn it off, or make more granular settings. One thing users will have to get comfortable with is the fact that most of this data is by definition public anyway. The privacy settings simply allow those users to decide whether others can follow you, and get notifications on new content you’ve created.

So it looks like if anything has come out of the Facebook privacy debacle it’s that at least others have heard the cry of the masses (or just the social media insiders which is what I contend is more like the truth) and privacy is once again sacred……for the moment.

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