Saturday, December 25, 2010

6 Social Media Sites to Look Forward to in 2011

Now that 2011 is almost here, we can look forward to many new startups that will be available for alpha and beta testing. There are many social media sites and social networks out there fighting to stay alive among Facebook, Twitter and the rest. Are you looking for a bigger and better site to come along, or are you happy with what’s already out there? Personally, I’m always willing to give the new guys a try. I feel that there are many sites that are often overshadowed by the big guys and don’t get the recognition they deserve; so I want to point out 6 social media sites to look forward to in the New Year.

Pushee – Social Push Notifications

Pushee is the “first ever social push notification app for android.” If you are familiar with how push notifications work on the iPhone, then you’ll be happy to know that you can have the same thing on your Android plus help save your battery. Pushee currently works with Facebook and Twitter, but there are more services coming in 2011. The service is in public beta; there is no invitation needed, just a simple download required.

Pushee - Social Push Notifications

Broadcastr – Location-Based Audio Content

The Broadcastr website itself does not give any real clues about what this service is about, but they do say “We tweet. We blog. We YouTube. We connect on Facebook. What about our voices?” You can enter your email address to request an invitation; they are currently letting in 100 new users per day. According to the press release on PRNewswire, “Broadcastr.com features a map-based interface for micro-podcasts on any and every subject under the sun.”

Broadcastr, a New Social Media Platform for Location-Based Audio Content, Launches Beta

MyCube – A Secure Social Network

The beta for this site launches in January 2011. MyCube is “a content-rich social network where you have complete control of your privacy and interactions.” The focus of the site seems to be on security. They even have a “Vault” (which is already available for download) for Windows and Mac that you can download. This “Vault” allows you to secure your online data (from Facebook and Google) and back it up directly to your desktop; this is an open source project. You can go see more info on Slideshare if you’re curious.

MyCube - A Content-Rich Social Network Based on Privacy

Jumo – Working to Change the World

Here’s a social network that is not just for connecting with friends, but aims to make a difference. Jumo is “a social networking connecting individuals and organizations who want to change the world.” You will need a Facebook account to sign up. If one of your New Years resolutions involves giving back or helping those in need, this is a great way to get started. While Jumo is not as new as the rest of the sites listed, it’s still in beta and is a great change of pace from Facebook and Twitter!

Jumo - Working to Change the World

Memolane – Keep Your Memories Alive

I’ve actually received an invite to this site a couple of days ago, but I haven’t had an opportunity to test it out. Memolane, a site that lets you “view and share your entire online life in one place,” sounds very promising. You can capture photos, songs, tweets and other content from sites like Twitter, Facebook, Flickr, Picasa, Foursquare, Spotify and more. Memolane is in private beta, so you’ll need to enter your email address for an invite. There is also a short, yet informative video on the homepage showing you just what the site can do.

Memolane - Keep Your Memories Alive

Diaspora – The Facebook Killer?

You’ve probably already heard a lot of buzz about this one. Diaspora is supposedly going to take over and kill Facebook; personally I’ll have to see it to believe it. Diaspora lets you “share what you want, with whom you want.” The homepage focuses on letting you know that you’ll have choices about who you share with, ownership over all of your content and simplicity to manage it all with. Diaspora is in private alpha and you’ll need to request an invite by entering your email address. I’m rather curious to see how this one will turn out.

Diaspora - Share What You Want, With Whom You Want

Are you looking for more sites that are launching in 2011? Then check out Beta List, a new blog that lets you “be the first to discover and get access to the latest Internet startups.”

Which new site are you most looking forward to in 2011?

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Friday, December 24, 2010

5 Ways to Celebrate Christmas Using Social Media

Christmas is here again (already). What better way to celebrate than by using the social media tools we use every day? Whether you’re always on Facebook and/or Twitter or just want to give your blog a holiday makeover, these 5 tips are sure to have you in the holiday spirit and spreading Christmas cheer across the Web.

Change Your Twitter Background

Since your Twitter background also shows on the Twitter homepage (where you check your timeline), this is a great way to stay in the Christmas spirit whenever you’re reading tweets. There are quite a few Twitter background sources that you can use, but my personal favorite is WishAFriend because they can update your Twitter profile with the click of a button (like a few others can too).

While you’re at it, why not change your desktop wallpaper as well? One of my favorite sites for high quality wallpapers is DesktopNexus.

WishAFriend Christmas Twitter Backgrounds

Send Cards via Facebook

Nowadays, just about everyone is on Facebook. While some love sending traditional cards in the mail, most prefer to save a few dollars and send cards via the Internet. There are numerous apps on Facebook that are just for sending cards, postcards and other holiday greetings; one of the most popular is Blingee Book. There are thousands of cards and animated postcards to chose from and can be posted on the person’s wall or in a message.

If you have a friend or family member who happens not to be on Facebook, you can send them a free eCard by email. While you’re at it, why not join a Cause and help send Christmas cards to our Troops! Being the wife of a former troop, I know how meaningful just a simple card can be to them.

Blingee Book - Christmas Cards and More

Spruce Up Your Blog

Not only can you dress up your blog with Christmas themed social media sharing icons, but you can also go all out and use a Christmas theme – you can still get away with it for another week or so. You may also be able to find a few Christmas widgets to decorate your blog with. You’ll be surprised at the holiday themed widgets available.

If you’re looking for more ideas, check out Amanda’s post last year (on Blogging Tips) called The Festive Toolbox: Decorate Your Blog For Christmas.

Christmas Social Media Icons

Watch Christmas Videos

No matter what your favorite video site may be (YouTube, Vimeo, ect), I’m sure they have Christmas videos for your enjoyment. You can also share videos you like on your favorite sites like Facebook, Twitter or by email. This is a another great way to share the Christmas spirit with your friends and family.

If you prefer just listening to music while doing other things on the Web, you can create a Christmas station at Pandora or listen and share music via Grooveshark (or whatever your favorite music site may be). If you will be spending Christmas with the family, you can even have music play in the background while you open gifts or eat dinner; it’s a great way to keep everyone in a cheerful mood.

Create a Pandora Christmas Station

Share Your Christmas Photos

Most people take lots of pictures on Christmas, so why not share them with the world? There are so many photo sharing sites on the Web that it can be hard to pick just one. A site that I’ve seen a lot of people using lately is Picplz. If you have an iPhone or Android Phone, you can share your pictures on Facebook, Twitter and Foursquare all at once. If you don’t have one of those mobile devices, then you can upload your photos directly to the website and also share to Flickr, Tumblr and Posterous (in addition to the above-mentioned).

If you’re looking for something that supports even more services, Pikchur is a great option. You can share on: Facebook. Flickr, FriendFeed, Plurk, Tumblr, Twitter, Posterous, Foursquare and even more! Whichever service you choose, I’m sure others will enjoy seeing how you celebrated the holiday.

Picplz Mobile Photo Sharing for iPhone and Android

Which way way did you choose to celebrate?

Happy Holidays!

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Twitter Says No More to TwitterMoms

Two years ago, Megan Calhoun launched a website devoted to connecting mom bloggers through Twitter. Thousands of moms signed up and with that came the brand names, eager to catch the ear of this influential segment of the online population.

She called the site TwitterMoms and I joined up back in August of 2009. Since then, I’ve been involved in a wide variety of marketing programs which were offered exclusively to members. Most of these were pay or gift for post opportunities where I was rewarded for writing about a product on my blog.  According to the website, more than $160,000 was rewarded to community members over the last year. A portion of the money was given to charity, and many members added their voice to stories for NBC/iVillage, the LA and New York Times and other media outlets.

What started out as a fun way to connect, turned into big business for Megan and her team and that’s probably why Twitter is now complaining about the use of their name.

A week ago, Megan Calhoun posted a message saying that Twitter had written to ask her to change the name of the site due to trademark violation. Their motivation is understandable. The name, TwitterMoms, does make you think that it’s related to Twitter but it is interesting that it took them two years to make the claim.

Megan might have lost sleep over losing her hard-won, firmly established name, but she says that she’d been mulling over a change anyway, so it became the final push she needed to make it so.

Twitter’s request was entirely reasonable and understandable. We never hesitated to communicate our intention to comply with their wishes. The time for change had come.

So, we caught our breath and set out to find a great new domain name that more accurately described the community we serve and our mission. After considering dozens of options, we settled on SocialMoms.com. Our new brand will officially launch in early January.

SocialMoms is a much better descriptor for the company and I’m glad to see that they found a name that will likely trump the one they had before. It’s also good to see a grassroots effort continue to grow despite being pecked by the beak of a bigger bird.

It’s going to work out for TwitterMoms, but the story does point out the potential danger of hitching your wagon to someone else’s star.

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Thursday, December 23, 2010

Facebook and Google Expand on Social Shopping

I don’t think of shopping as a social experience, unless it’s a day at the mall with my friends. But when I’m online trying to fill a particular need, I’m not all that interested in sharing my choices with those who follow me on Facebook. Apparently, I’m alone in this because Google and Facebook are both working hard to make shopping a big part of their business.

Back in November, Google bought Boutiques.com. This site groups high-ticket fashion items by celebrity then uses a Likes and Dislikes algorithm to determine which tops, dresses and shoes are good for you. There’s an option to follow each of the celeb boutiques and every item has a share button so you can show those sweet $800.00 shoes to your boss on Facebook to explain why you need a raise.

Now, Facebook is coming back strong with their own ecommerce solutions that will allow users to purchase items without ever leaving the site. According to Business Week, Facebook is actively courting several large brand names in hopes of getting them to set up shop inside their fan pages.

Says Sucharita Mulpuru, an analyst at Forrester Research;

“It’s not natural to go to Facebook to shop—yet. But it’s not a long step.”

Facebook already has a few companies on the line. Delta is already set up to allow you to buy tickets from inside their Facebook page, but JCPenney’s shop and share function goes to an error message so it looks like there are a few bugs in the system.

For smaller companies, Payvment is beta testing a Facebook store app that sets up a storefront in under 15 minutes. They say they’ve timed it and I believe them.

I tested their system as a buyer and it’s very simple to use. I went to the fan page of Game Intern and put a Final Fantasy XIII Fang Play Arts Kai Action Figure in my cart. (Nothing special there.) Then I was prompted with a message that said if I “Liked” the fan page, I’d get a discount. Sure enough, after hitting the like button, I clicked to buy and $2.50 was deducted from the price. Not a huge discount but the fact that I could make it happen that easily was impressive. Of course, the item comes with the usual share buttons so I can show my friends the cool action figure I just bought. Hmm. . . I could get to like this.

Maybe social shopping is a good thing. It certainly makes it easier to rub your friends noses in the fact that you own a $25,000 replica Lost in Space robot and they don’t.

What are your thoughts on social shopping?

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Foursquare Hands Out a Holiday Gift: Photos and Comments

Foursquare has a gift for all of their users, a shiny new, souped up version of the app that will allow you to add photos and comments.

The ability to add comments turns this app from a trendy toy into something really useful. You can send a comment to a friend confirming your meet at a restaurant or send one to yourself to say, “don’t forget to use that coupon!” You can send comments through the website, Facebook or Twitter so it’s easy to access no matter where you are.

Foursquare has also added the ability to upload a photo and associate it with a checkin spot. Though most people will probably use this feature to show off pictures of their lunch, it could also be used by location owners to show their decor or their signage. The app also allows you to upload photos that are only visible to your friends by putting them in the checkin area and not the Tips or Venue section.

Another, more obsessive feature is access to your history. Now you can look back at the photo of what you had for lunch last month and count the number of times your friend left a comment saying he’s running late. The mystery writer in me sees this as the perfect alibi breaking tool. “Your honor, I’d like to submit the defendant’s Foursquare history into evidence.” Don’t laugh. You know it’s going to happen someday.

Right now the update is only available for the iPhone. Android and other platforms are expected to follow early next year.

Foursquare says they’re also working on ways to track comments and the ability to push photos to Flickr or Facebook. With the addition of these new levels of social media, Foursquare is on their way to turning a novelty act into a sought-after star.

Are you using Foursquare to promote your business? Tell us about it.

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Wednesday, December 22, 2010

2010: The Social Media Year in Review for Bloggers

2010 will be remembered as the year that social media made a big splash in the lives of business owners.

If you’re someone who runs an online business, you’ll have realized that social media has joined the ranks of SEO as a must-do activity (and, for some, has started to rival the number of traffic referrals sent, too).

While many people made mistakes as they tried to cash in on the next phase of the Internet, it was those who embraced the social element of social media who forged alliances, and built audiences and sustainable businesses.

Are you participating?

If you’re not participating in social media, you’re missing out on a lot.

The New York Times reported that Americans are spending as much time online as they are in front of the television set.

People are watching 2 billion videos a day on YouTube and uploading hundreds of thousands of videos daily. In fact, every minute, 24 hours of video is uploaded to YouTube.

Facebook served over 500 million active users, and 50% of those users log on to Facebook in any given day. The average user has 130 friends and is connected to 80 pages, groups, and events. If Facebook was a country it would be the third-largest in the world. Do you have a presence there?

Let’s not forget about Twitter—the social networking platform is on track to serve 200 million users by year’s end. I’ve got to ask you the same question: do you have a presence there?

Of course, people aren’t just networking and connecting online, they’re publishing too. As of December, 2010 there are over 32 million WordPress publishers.

Personal influence and reach is easier to build than ever before, and it’s more powerful than you could imagine. People’s purchasing behaviors are changing, as are the ways they find and consume content.

An introvert who spends most of their time on a computer in a basement can influence a network of thousands. What if they visit your blog and like what they see? You’ve got ways for them to share your content with that network, don’t you?

The bottom line

The way we use the Internet has changed, and social media simply reflects this. If you aren’t taking part, you’re getting left behind.

Have you actively used and experimented with social media over the last year? How have you fared?

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The FDA & Social Media: What To Expect In 2011

If you could have put all the people working in marketing at pharmaceutical companies together in a room today, you might have heard a collective sigh of disappointment. As many suspected for weeks or even months now, the FDA quietly confirmed that the long awaited guidelines for how to use social media for which they held a hearing in late 2009 won’t be coming this year and to expect them (perhaps) in Q1 of 2011. Earlier this month, however, the FDA did release a sweeping document that received much less fanfare from marketers - even though the implications of it may change the world of pharmaceutical marketing for the next half decade at least.

That document focused on the FDA’s “Strategic Priorities: 2011 - 2015″ and offers nearly 50 pages of insights into the future direction of the FDA and offers many hidden insights that everyone who is considering doing any marketing or communications for a drug, medical device, healthcare organization or biomedical research organization should pay attention to. Here are a few of the most noteworthy passages in that document along with thoughts from our Ogilvy Digital Healthcare team on their significance.

“FDA’s primary responsibility is to protect the American people from unsafe or mislabeled food, drugs, and other medical products and to make sure consumers have access to accurate, science-based information about the products they need and rely on every day.”

1. What It Means: Despite Lots Of Hope From The Industry, Social Media Guidance Isn’t A Priority For The FDA
There is only one point in the entire 48 page document of strategic priorities where social media is even mentioned, and much of the document focuses on the much bigger challenges and scope of the FDA. When you work in Pharma, you tend to underestimate the scope of the FDA’s mission. As this document spells out, issuing social media guidance is nowhere near a priority for the FDA - and despite what anyone working in this area may want to see happen, it is unlikely that this will change in the near future.

“One of the most pressing FDA-wide goals is promoting transparency in FDA’s operations, activities, processes, and decision making, as well as making information and data available in user-friendly formats while also protecting confidential and proprietary information.”

2. What It Means: The FDA Will Continue To Actively Use Social Media To Spread Its Own Messages
Perhaps even more frustrating than not having concrete guidance will likely be the knowledge and easy evidence that the FDA is poised to use social media much more actively themselves to reach patients, healthcare professionals and other governmental organizations. They have already launched several forward thinking social media initiatives including tweeting about FDA Recalls and creating a dedicated YouTube Channel. A few smart people have already noted the irony of this fact, but in the coming year it is likely to continue unchanged.

“FDA recognizes that communications must be adapted to meet the needs of many groups who differ with respect to literacy, language, culture, race/ethnicity, disability, and other factors. Social media tools can help meet some of FDA’s communication challenge. We are planning to use social networks to create a virtual community of organizations and individuals to disseminate FDA science-based information on women’s health. We will also be collaborating with other government partners, to integrate FDA information on women’s health into their programs.”

3. What It Means: The FDA Is Already Prioritizing Social Media As A Channel For Reaching Special Populations
This passage reveals a somewhat narrow view of social media’s potential to reach smaller niche populations based on gender, ethnicity or rare conditions - however it does demonstrate that there may be particular situations where social media may face fewer barriers to usage by the FDA, and also serve a highly important patient need for authoritative and accurate information, as well as access to a hard-to-find support network.

“Summary Of Long Term Objectives For Human Drugs: Oversee drug promotion and marketing to ensure that marketed drug labeling and advertising is truthful and not misleading.”

4. What It Means: Most FDA Oversight And Regulation Will Continue To Focus On “Misleading” Promotional Efforts
Though there is certainly room for interpretation in what the definition of “misleading” might be - history has shown that this one metric continues to be the most important one that the FDA uses when monitoring communications efforts from pharmaceutical companies. Added to this is the consistent feedback from epatients and their loved ones that in most cases they would welcome informational content and support tools from pharma companies, as long as they are not presented in an underhanded, dishonest, manipulative or overly promotional manner.

“For FDA to achieve its mission of promoting and protecting the public health, the agency must have a well-defined communications strategy to address the information needs and concerns of both internal and external audiences. An FDA strategic communication strategy will ensure the agency has clear and concise messages about its work and will ensure those messages reach the right audiences using the most effective channels.

5. What It Means: The FDA Will Be More Vocal In Disseminating Its Authoritative Views Through All Channels
As most anyone working in pharma marketing will attest to, part of the challenge that the industry faces is that its own efforts get lumped together with online miracle cure scams and generally unscrupulous advertisers and organizations who work outside of FDA guidelines and manage to get away with it. As the FDA takes a more vocal role through its strategic communications, this can translate into great benefits online for reputable pharma organizations who have their new products approved and are trying to spread that news to relevant populations as widely as possible.

THE BOTTOM LINE:
==================================

What this combination of the strategic priorities document and the recent admission that the social media guidelines will be delayed clearly points to is that we as pharma marketers need to stop praying for a magical guidance that will deliver the answer to all of our problems. Guidance may come in small pieces throughout 2011, but putting an entire effort on hold for the promise of clear rules is a bit like waiting to take the exit onto a highway until there are no cars on the road. You’ll be waiting a long time.

Instead, pharma marketing that promises to leverage social channels should voluntarily be transparent, useful, not overly promotional and serve a real need. Doing things right in this area doesn’t always mean looking for permission or waiting for someone else to do it first. Efforts launched in an ethical and non-manipulative way can and do work - and should be a part of your planning efforts for 2011, whether the social media guidelines from the FDA come in early 2011 or not.

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Medical Monday: 11 Pharma Blogs for 2011

Doctor preparing online internet prescription

My healthcare background was very limited when I started focusing on it as it relates to social media but I found a great deal of resources that have helped me understand the hype that is this healthcare social media space. The most valuable thing I’ve learned is that if you want to enter the space you better be able to “walk the walk” and “talk the talk”. That is why I’ve highlighted 11 social media blogs and resources (in no particular order) that have, in my opinion, not only walked the walk but have helped shaped this space in the past year and most likely will moving into 2011.

See below for some of the top blogs that have helped guide my journey into the healthcare social media space for 2010:

  • Eye on the FDA PR pro and former consultant Mark Senak does a great job at rounding up breaking news on regulatory aspect for the healthcare communications – clearly a hot topic these days!
  • Pharma Marketer Blog John Mack provides his own marketing perspective on the strategies that pharmaceutical companies take when approaching the online and social media space.
  • Pharmalot Having such a strong background in journalism, Ed Silverman provides insightful content and perspective on the pharmaceutical industry – that is probably why he was named one of the top biotech writers by e-newsletter Fierce Biotech.
  • Fierce Pharma Looking for a perspective outside of marketing? Fierce Pharma is a great location to get more market research and developments and insights into the pharmaceutical industries as it relates to regulation, generic drugs, Pharma patients and more.
  • 33Charts Just looking to get your daily dose of the convergence of social media and medicine? Look no further than Dr. Bryan Vartabedian’s blog, which focuses on the healthcare industry as it relates to the online space.
  • Pharma Strategy Blog With her extensive background in the pharmaceutical industry as a marketing/sales exec, to her extensive background as a biochemist, Sally Church showcases her expertise and talent in this space with every post she writes.
  • IN VIVO Blog Unconventional to the typical pharmaceutical blogs in terms of its eccentric writing, the IN VIVO blog provides daily commentary on recent developments in the healthcare space including developments, R&D and marketing.
  • Dose of Digital Dose of Digital is a great blog that provides theories and insights on how the healthcare space can leverage the online space as it relates to marketing. Well worth the read and bookmark.
  • Ragan Healthcare E-Newsletter Ragan Communication provides a great newsletter that aggregates content on the web. If you don’t have time to read them all, you should subscribe to their e-newsletter.
  • Pixel and Pills Pixel and Pills was created by two marketing firms to provide the latest in greatest on where pharmaceutical companies are going in the digital space.
  • Drug Store News Last but not least, if you are looking to get a perspective on the healthcare space as a whole, the Drug Store News site should be your first stop.

So there they are - 11 great resources for healthcare news online in 2011. While these are the cream of the crop, there are others out there that provide great content for beginners and experts alike. Are there any others you recommend? Let us know!

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Let’s Play: How Much Does This Social Media Job Pay?!

Here is a question that I always have and want some input from our readers on. This morning I was alerted by Paul Gillin about a social media manager’s job with USAToday that is listed on CareerBuilder. Pretty nice gig, right?

Well, considering you would need to live in the Washington, DC area (job is listed in McLean, VA) and you need to do the following (see description below), what is this job worth? What should it pay?

Since USAToday doesn’t post anything about salary let’s play the hottest new social media game “HOW MUCH DOES THIS SOCIAL MEDIA JOB PAY?!” It’s fun and I hear it’s all the rage (which is an out and out lie but whatever).

Here’s how you play. You read the job description below then in the comments you tell us how much you think the job pays. You can clamor on about what you think it SHOULD pay as well but we are looking for just your best guess at how many pennies are in the Social Media Job Jar at USAToday.

Here’s the job description:

The USA TODAY Social Media Manager will be responsible for setting social media strategy as part of developing new and existing products. Additionally, the position will be responsible for keeping on top of changes in the social media space, understanding their implications and guiding social media integration for the purpose of user engagement and advertiser fulfillment. Position will manage a Social Media Analyst position and work closely with research assistant, SEO and UI analysts to guide the development of product optimization across all platforms.Responsibilities include:

· Drive social media strategy for USA TODAY and best practices for product development and optimization. Oversee social media implementation and monitor/track performance of social media aspect throughout product lifecycle. Work with Social Media staff and across departments to coordinate and maximize efficiency of efforts.

· Social Media R&D: Stay on top of latest social media platforms, tools, and services, enabling an environment for experimentation. Guide application of such for product iteration as relevant and appropriate for the brand.

· Work closely with social media counterpart within Sales Solutions in order to provide new revenue-generating product solutions to advertiser needs

· Maintain and continue to grow the voice for USA TODAY on social media platforms that increases exposure to and engagement with the USA TODAY brand amongst new audiences. Actively participate in communication with site visitors and audiences outside of USA TODAY about new developments in social media, product development or other relevant areas. Desired skills include:

· Omniture, ComScore, Hitwise experience
· Social media monitoring
· Strong project management background
· Strong writing and presentation skills
· Contract and business development experienceUSA TODAY recognizes and appreciates the benefits of diversity in the workplace. EOE.

So what’s your guess? Please play “WHAT DOES THIS SOCIAL MEDIA JOB PAY?” today because we are pretty bored here at Marketing Pilgrim.

Thanks!

UPDATE 1: With our first two guesses setting the range from $45k to $150k per year there is a lot of room here!

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It’s The Social Media Time and Resources, Stupid!

Remember not so very long ago (probably just yesterday) when someone looking to really get involved in social media for business was told “It’s free so just go for it!” ? This usually came from a social media “expert / guru / ninja / maven / superstar / hero / stud / wizard /expert” (oops, already used that last one so I must be out of pathetic self-naming options).

This ‘expert’ actually didn’t realize that by promoting the medium as easy and free that no one would pay them to help them (hey, if there are any experts etc. etc. in finance who want to teach social media people what it means to be in business there is “gold in them thar hills” for sure). This phenomenon has created our current glut of social media ‘talent’ looking for a check which means they will say anything to get someone to sign up with them (look to the search marketing industry to see how well that has worked out).

But I digress. What the business world is finding out that despite the ‘low cost’ there is actually a very high cost to effectively be in the ‘social media for business’ game. Those who do this game for real know this already but for the poor Director of Marketing at XYZ Company the reality of what it takes is becoming very harsh very fast.

A survey conducted by R2Integrated (Internet marketing / social media service provider alert!) and reported by eMarketer shows that people trying to get into the social media game are getting a crash course in ‘there is no such thing as a social media free lunch’.

Looking at those results I wonder if there is not enough time and / or resources to do the other things listed like overcome skepticism of ROI, decide what platform, get executive buy-in, getting started and then learning the tools. Forget how much time it takes after you accomplish these things!

Once the social media marketing wannbe has cleared the hurdles stated above a curious thing happens. They realize that they still don’t’ have enough time and resources to do the social media marketing game effectively.

So what does this mean for the industry as a whole and the poor marketing executive for the upcoming year? I think it means that the social media industry needs to do a much better job of conveying the realities of the practice rather than promoting the fantasy of it. The social media “industry” is looking like a mirror image of its search marketing cousin that is rife with snakeoil salesmen and scam artists that it has lost credibility in the place it needs it most: the client side.

Stop with the hyperbole and the delusions that are more pitch than practical. Stop with the moving on to the next best thing that no one outside of the industry has heard about or understands and concentrate on the basics. Heck, these basics are still being hammered out so how in the world can the industry keep moving forward without collapsing the foundation of sand it has created?

As for the bewildered marketer? I would recommend a very serious assessment / audit process to start your 2011. Take the time to see exactly where your current strategies are working (so keep them) and not working (reassign the time and resources from dead spend to better areas). You may find that by trimming the excess marketing fat you can free up existing time and resources that were being wasted on the wrong activities. There, problem solved :-) .

Of course, nothing is that easy. However, if we all spend 2011 plowing forward without truly owning what has or has not been done to stabilize the art of social media we can call 2011 “The Year the Social Media Industry Shot Itself in the Foot by Promising Too Much Too Soon.”

Your take?

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Monday, December 20, 2010

Men More Dependent on Social Networks

If you were to venture a guess about what gender would have a greater percentage of its members saying it couldn’t live without social media what would you choose. At the risk of being called a sexist (fill in the blank), I immediately think women. Well, girls, as my wife found out long ago, I can be wrong on more than a few occasions.

eMarketer reports on a study that was done by StudyLogic for Sheraton Hotels and Resorts. It looks like men are the ones who have more of a social media need if we were to base everything on this study (which we won’t but who’s counting?). The results are in answer to the question of if you were not able to access social networks for several days.

Really guys?! Of course, on the other end of the spectrum the tough guys who could live without it outnumber those women feeling the same way. Oh well, I suspect there are a million different thoughts on why this happened so let us know in the comments, please.

The second half of that chart is what should really catch a marketer’s eye. The dependency on social media is much greater the younger the audience is. I often wonder if that will remain the same as that group ages or will they tire of it. If they do tire of the whole social networking game will their numbers start to reflect those seen in the older group now? These are all crystal ball type questions but ones that are of critical importance to the marketers of today and tomorrow.

Another area the study addressed was the frequency with which these groups accessed their social networks and once again the men win. Makes sense considering how wobbly kneed we apparently get if our social networks are taken away from us for any reason. Geesh.

While there is no surprise in how this dependency lessens in older folks the contrast is pretty stark. I wonder once again if this will hold true as younger people get older and their lives change with the things life either offers or throws at them. I know I am VERY different from when I was in my twenties and that has not always been a conscious act, it just happens.

So how do you view these findings? Are they what you would expect? How do they impact marketing in general? Do you think that these numbers will hold as young people get older? We would love to get your take on this.

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The JCPenney’s Facebook Shopping “Experience”

Some of the big news coming out of Facebook is their move into having full-blown stores by retailers inside their Fan / Like Pages. This is the new social commerce that many are talking about these days and it appears to be poised to bring a lot of money to retailers and Facebook alike: if it worked.

Before I share my experience with trying to “shop” at JCPenney on Facebook let’s hear the corporate view of what is trying to be done. Bloomberg Businessweek reports

Facebook is ramping up efforts to entice companies such as Delta Air Lines and J.C. Penney to sell wares on its pages and convert more of its 500 million users into online shoppers.

Managers at the Palo Alto (Calif.)-based social network have met in the past month with more than 20 companies, said David Fisch, who runs a newly formed commerce partnerships group at Facebook. The aim is to help retailers set up shop on its pages and build tools that let Web users interact while buying.

Facebook is adding e-commerce features to attract users, keep them logged-on longer, and generate higher advertising sales. The effort may turn the company into an online shopping alternative to retailers such as eBay, says Sucharita Mulpuru, an analyst at Forrester Research .”It’s not natural to go to Facebook to shop—yet,” says Mulpuru, whose firm is based in Cambridge, Mass. “But it’s not a long step.”

Well, what better way to see how something like this works than to try it yourself right? Let the games begin!

First, I go to the JC Penney Fan Page and go to the Shop tab. So far, so logical. I am met with this next screen.

Well, since I am shopping for others or I am just not interested in sharing this with others I hit “Don’t Allow”. Now, at this point I figure my shopping days at the Penney Facebook store are over because I have broken the #1 rule in “Zuck’s Rules of Doing Anything on Facebook” which is “All users must give all information they can to Facebook at all times just because.” It allowed me to move on with my shopping experience,when I got this screen. Let’s just say it allowed me to move on because the next experience I was in for had little to do with shopping.

I actually thought “Gee, maybe I can still play in Facebook without giving up the data farm.” Then I went to actually purchase items and things only went downhill from there. Half of the items I tried to “Add to my bag” were not available while anything else I tried to put in my bag would act as if it was there but when I checked the bag it would say it was empty. I kept fighting becasue I blog about this stuff but my suspicion is that the average user called it a day by now and left in frustration.

So I figured I would check out the wall and what do I find? Complaints, spam, and this interesting status update from Facebook that not only promotes JCPenney’s Facebook stores but other places I could try as well!

So while I can see that this is a great theory, I honestly can’t believe that this was let out into the wild in this kind of disarray. Not only did it not reflect well on JCPenney but with Facebook it showed just how unwieldy and difficult a page like this can be because it becomes less about the brand and more about the brand’s problems (delivery, bad customer service etc etc)

So my question is this. Did I have this experience because I did not allow JCPenney and Facebook to take information and parade my activities to everyone I know? I actually hope so because if this is how this store experience works in general then this needs to go back to the whiteboard.

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3 Advanced Web Analytics Visitor Segments: Non-Flirts, Social, Long Tail

SunshineThe last blog post shared custom analytics reports that you can use to find amazing insights faster, enabling you to create a focused, truly data driven organization.

In this blog post I want to continue the let's help make your day-to-day life better path. I'll share three advanced segments that I personally find to be of value in the process of moving from data to actionable insights. I hope you'll download and use these segments, but more than that I hope you'll learn how to create delightful analytics segments with the options you have at your disposal.

I am an unabashed segmentation fan: Web Analytics Segmentation: Do Or Die!

Without segmentation our analysis is focused on unrecognizable blobs of traffic. Total Visits. Average Page Views Per Visitor. Overall Conversion Rate. Yada, yada, yada. Boring. Useless. Life wasting.

With segmentation we focus on groups of people and we focus behavior that has logical connections (everyone who used a particular keyword, group that came via Twitter, people who viewed a TV ad, visitors who saw more than 4 pages on our site etc., etc). That helps us understand data & performance better. It helps us get data-gasms, improve ROI for our web efforts and get our bosses promoted.

How can you not love that?

Below are examples of segments that help us make a lot more sense of all the data we have and the insights that await us. You'll be able to download these segments and import them into your Google Analytics accounts and start using them right away!

Additionally, as I often do, you'll learn lots about the types of delicious analyses you can do with these segments. For good measure there is also a tutorial on regular expressions at the end (no good analyst can live without regex!).

If you use Adobe's Site Catalyst or CoreMetrics or Yahoo! Web Analytics or WebTrends or. . . you'll have enough detail below to create a segment in 5 minutes in those tools as well. Trust me, it takes just 5 minutes and, like with Google Analytics, you won't need to update your JavaScript tags or have to do extra work with IT or buy other expensive versions of their products just to do segmentation.

Let's go. . . three awesome analytics data segments. . .

#1: Non-Flirts, Potential Lovers

Did I get your attention? :)

We all obsess with our bounced traffic because it seems nutty that the person you spent so much time and love attracting to your website bounced! They did not click to see another page. They did not hit play on the video on the landing page. They did not click on a link on your landing page to your corporate site. They just left.

Here's how that segment looks:

web analytics segment bounced traffic

It is tempting to analyze these people. Where did they come from? What campaigns? What landing pages? Etc., etc.

You can find value, but to grow the business it is not prudent to focus on analyzing just the people who flirt with us.

Why not first analyze people who do engage with us?

At this point people switch to analyzing all the non-bounce traffic. This is how that segment looks (bottom right):

web analytics segment non bounced traffic.png

[The above is a standard segment in GA, just look under Default Segments.]

Better. Ignore the flirts. Focus on everyone else.

Unfortunately that is still a "blob." It includes anyone who just had two "hits" in their visit (hits is a technical term for a page view, event, custom variable, etc., etc., more than one hit = non bounce visit).

I want us to be a lot more deliberate.

Look at the Depth of Visit report (standard report in GA in the Visitors section). It shows the distribution of the pages people see on your site (not the "silly" metric, average page views per session).

The distribution will show you the "tipping point," the point at which a core group of people decide to stick with your site after overcoming their initial "fears" (and your perhaps sub optimal pages!).

Segment that.

To use a metaphor. . . look for people who made it with you to a third date. For many sites, but not all, that's people who have seen three pages. It might take 14 pages to buy, but if they stay to three they are giving you a chance. They might read 8 stories on your non-ecommerce content site, but you note that people who see three engage for a longer time.

Here's that segment:

page depth engagement analytics data segment

So simple right?

These 7,610 Visits were ripe with promise. Some people ultimately ended up buying, others just gave you a chance and decided not to consummate.

Rather than focusing on the bounce traffic ("flirts") it is much much more interesting and valuable to initially focus on people who give you a chance.

Where did they come from?  segmentation engaged traffic sources

12.11% from Organic Search via Google. Enough? Not enough?

More questions for you to answer. . . .

What pages did they enter on? What campaigns have a higher percentage of these people? What countries? What keywords? What is the delta between content they consume on your site compared to everyone else?

Look at the row with % of Total. . .

nonflirttrafficcontentconsumption

Helps you find what they are interested in, right?

More questions to answer. . .

Do they all happen to use the comparison chart first? Do they all absolutely read the Sports section? What's so unique about them?

This an astoundingly simple segment to create. Yet analyzing visitor behavior for this segment helps you identify, and perhaps do more of the things you already know are working.

Do this first.

Here's how you can get this sweet and simple segment:

  1. Log into Google Analytics.
  2. Come back here.
  3. Now click on this link: Non-flirt Potential Lovers Segment. It will open in GA.
  4. Click on the Create Segment button to save it in your account.

If you want to share this report with others (say via Twitter / email) you can use this url: http://zqi.me/nonflirts

Have fun.

#2: Social Media, Baby!

Social media is all the rage. Suddenly Marketers have discovered that convincing people to buy their products/services or read their content or apply to university takes just two things:

    A. 140 character missives sent frequently during the day extolling the glories of the company / newspaper / university

    B. Creating a Facebook page, and then proceeding with the glory extolling

So easy.   : )

Our job is to hold the feet of these adventurous people to the warm accountability fire, right?

[Remember everything below is only if you use Twitter, Facebook et al for pimping. If you are participating in those media in the manner in which you are supposed to, conversation and adding value rather than pimping, then I encourage you to read my Social Media Analytics post to learn what the best metrics and tools are.]

The challenge in measuring social media impact on your business is two-fold.

    1. Most content gets consumed in applications (think tweetdeck, my beloved twicca, mobile etc). They don't send referrers allowing us to tie to the source with our analytics tool (any tool, GA or Omniture or CoreMetrics).

    2. Splitting out activity that we caused vs. activity that was caused by others.

My recommendation is, again, two-fold.

First, if you tweet / update / tumble links back to yourself then please for the sake of all that is holy in the world add campaign tracking parameters.

Here's the link I tweet:

http://goo.gl/myisj

It points here:

http://www.kaushik.net/avinash/2010/12/best-downloadable-custom-web-analytics-reports.html?utm_source=social-media&utm_medium=twitterfb&utm_campaign=aktw

See the campaign (utm_) tracking parameters? Trackability, sweet, trackability!! Mobile, apps, html5 pages, bring it on. All visits tracked!

[If you use Site Catalyst or WebTrends or Yahoo! Web Analytics your campaign tracking parameters won't look like the above. Check with your vendor and tag appropriately.]

Second, split your social media value analysis into two different segments. Activity caused by you and activity on your site by all social media visits.

self driven social media traffic segment

You drag over Source and input the Value you are using to tag your SM links, in my case the utm_source is imaginatively titled social-media.

This tracking mechanism (campaign tag) is used both on Twitter and Facebook links. I can, and often do, split out Twitter and Facebook separately by using a different value in the utm_medium value. I can further segment them separately if I want. For now I want to analyze them at a higher level together.

I did pimping. I got 2,486 Visits. So what?

Easy question to answer, go to your outcomes report and apply your newly minted segment:

social media conversion rates

Pretty darn pathetic, right?

Only one of the above goals is connected to a "hard" conversion (leads generated, Goal 2). The rest are "engagement" and videos played and other such goals.

Still pathetic, right?

Do you know how awesome, or not, social media efforts directly initiated by you are? It's not that hard. Go figure it out.

Oh and yes, you don't have to stop here. You can apply this segment to your amazing Page Efficiency Report, to your Visitor Loyalty and Recency reports, to your. . . well any report you have. That allows you to measure a broader view of the success of your social media efforts, rather than my effort to instantly put your feet in the fire! :)

Here's how you can get this social media segment:

  1. Log into Google Analytics.
  2. Come back here.
  3. Now click on this link: My Social Media Traffic Segment. It will open in GA.
  4. Click on the Create Segment button to save it in your account.

If you want to share this report with others (say via Twitter / email) you can use this url: http://zqi.me/smtagged

Time to create our second, more expansive, social media segment.

As I had mentioned above, this time around we'll look at the social media to our website(s) from our efforts as well as that of all our friends / BFFs / haters.

Before you create this segment you should go checkout your All Traffic Sources report and see how your web analytics tool is capturing various channels people show up from. Based on that review of my site, here's the segment:

analytics segment all social media

A quick explanation.

Values for twitter, facebook, sphinn, stumbleupon are there for people who use web based versions of these social media websites. I can add delicious, digg etc., etc., if I want to. They are simply not that important a source of traffic for me. See why the review of the All Traffic Sources report recommended above was important?

[Some people will obsess and create a ginormous catch-all segment. But remember, you don't need to understand data from the last 10 visitors to make smart decisions.]

The value for "social-media" is there to capture the social media campaigns tagged by me. See our first social media segment above. You'll use your own tracking values.

Value for awe.sm is because for a while I was using awe.sm to auto-tag all my links. There are some latent visits which should get flushed out of the system in the near future (as I have standardized on www.goo.gl and www.bit.ly).

That's *my* All Social Media Segment.

If you are thinking: "Good lord that is messy!"

Welcome to the world of social media tracking. It is messy-ever changing-and you should know that you are going to babysit this constantly. Sorry.  [Also see comment above about needing the last 10 visitors: you don't!]

But after you create the segment, awesomeness follows. . .  analysis!

Step one: Answer: "So What?"

social media conversion ratesall sources

Better, but honestly still pretty pathetic. Remember the goals are a mix of hard and soft conversions (see above)!

By now I am never surprised when I see the above result for Social Media efforts of most outcomes-driven pimping efforts via those channels.

Perhaps you are an exception. Now you know how to measure it!

As mentioned above Analysis Ninjas won't stop at just Outcomes analysis and will dig deeper to see if there is any value that this traffic is adding to our company. My personal favorite place to start is Visitor Loyalty analysis.

Ok so these people are not delivering any hard or soft conversions. Does their loyalty profile look any different?

Here, check it out (standard report in Google Analytics and other tools):

visitor loyalty analysis social media traffic

Hmm. . . a very different profile from other visitors to the site.

Other traffic to the site has much less loyalty than social media traffic. See the delta between 60.98% and 44.35% in the first two rows? Also see the much better, sweeter, distribution for Visitors who visit from 9-14 times through 26-50 times.

For this content website there is value in the social media efforts in that they are delivering an audience that tends to then be much more loyal than all other traffic that ends on their website.

Provable value! From social media!! I know!!! :)

A couple more ideas for our Ninjas to dig deeper, and types of analysis they could do to determine other types of value.

It is trivial to measure the base metrics for your website for your Social Media segment. Visits, Pages/Visit, Average Time on Site, % New Visits, Bounce Rates, Conversion Rates. . . . and so on and so forth. . .

visits pages per visit avg time on site percent new visits bounce rates

You can quickly see at an aggregate level, or a detailed level, if your social media are delivering on the promise outlined by your $150,000 Social Media Consultant.

Here's another bit of analysis that can be useful for certain types of websites.

Say you have a real estate website, or you are responsible for craigslist.com. Both sites are primarily internal site search driven. People come to the site, search, find what they want, do business.

Take your newly beloved Social Media segment and apply it to your delightfully sweet pre-configured Internal Site Search reports. [Left nav -> Content -> Site Search]

Here's what you'll see. . .

internal site search analysis for social media traffic

You'll be able to analyze if people who come to your site from your Social Media campaigns engage with your site more or less (Total Unique Searches per Visitor). Do they exit from the internal site search results faster or slower (% Search Exits)? Do they have a harder time or an easier time finding the right result (Results Pageviews/Search and % Search Refinements)? And other such analysis.

You don't have to just report clicks and visits from social media. In our real estate website we got to the root of what's a deeper engagement (searching) and we got down to measuring real value (or lack thereof).

Ready to do some real social media ROI analysis?

Here's how you can get the all social media traffic segment:

  1. Log into Google Analytics.
  2. Come back here.
  3. Now click on this link: All Social Media Visits Segment. It will open in GA.
  4. Click on the Create Segment button to save it in your account.

If you want to share this report with others (say via Twitter / email) you can use this url: http://zqi.me/smallvisits 

Good luck!

#3: Search Queries With Multiple Keywords [3, 4, 5, 10, 20]

On this blog and in my keynotes I have bemoaned the obsession Marketers have with brand keywords and their sub optimal strategy of optimizing for keywords, rather than key phrases.

I am a search long tail lover. It is the way to happiness (and finding relevant users!). Hence our first segment focuses on helping you understand the balance between keywords and key phrases in the queries used by Visitors from search engines.

It is not actually a "segment," it is more like using advanced segmentation as a reporting engine in a way you can only do in Google Analytics!

My strategy is simple. Use a regular expression to get GA to segment search queries into various "words this query contains" buckets. Here's what it looks like:

searchlongtailwordssegment

"Magical" part: ^\s*[^\s]+(\s+[^\s]+){2}\s*$

Not that magical actually, just a humble regular expression. It is looking for the number of words in a query (in this case queries visitors typed into Google or Bing or Baidu that contained three words). The second regex counts visits with four word search queries.

[A quick note of thanks to Nick Mihailovski for helping me come up with the perfect regular expression. I was using ^\w*\s\w*\s\w*$. It was good but would not have caught some variations and it would not work for queries in non-English character languages.]

Ok back to using advanced segmentation as a long tail search report.

The final segment I have created, using the method above, has more "or" conditions that contain buckets for counting search queries with 3, 4, 5, 10, 20 and 20+ words. You can of course create any buckets you like; these were ones I find initially interesting.

When you click the Test Segment button (top right) you get this gratifying view (cropped to a small size):

search query words used distribution

Delightful right? It really is.

You get such an immediate sense of the long tail in a way that is hard otherwise in the mass of queries from search engines.

521 Visits from people who typed more than 10 words into Google/Bing! There were 36 visits by people using 20 words in their search query! And 237 people typed in more than 20+ words as their search query!

OMG!

Is your search engine optimization and paid search strategy accommodating for this type of behavior? You still bidding on a word or two?

While the above is not even your complete search universe view, it is a very simple and straightforward way to appreciate how long your search tail is.

And notice you did not even look at a report. You could do all of the above in the advanced segmentation view!

You likely want other buckets than 3, 4, 5, 10 , 20. No problem. Just download the segment below and make the appropriate changes and bam!

Here's how you can get this search long tail segmentation reporting:

  1. Log into Google Analytics.
  2. Come back here.
  3. Now click on this link: Search Query Length Segment. It will open in GA.
  4. Click on the Create Segment button to save it in your account.

If you want to share this report with others (say via Twitter / email) you can use this url: http://zqi.me/searchlength

Being the Ninja that you are I am sure your thirst of knowledge is not satiated.

Now you are probably wondering how the bounce rate looks for one segment of the long tail traffic (lower usually) or how the conversion rate looks (higher usually) or how many pages do they see (more engagement usually) etc., etc.

The above segment won't help you with that. But all you have to do is create the segment you want.

For example here's the segment for people who see four words exactly:

segmentforfourwordsinthequery

Save the segment, here it is: Visits via Search Queries containing 4 words.

Now apply it to your favorite search report and hello sweet, sweet delicious data!

performancedataforfourwordsinthequery

You know the search queries, you know how many people came and you know their performance ("engagement" or conversions or downloads or leads etc., etc).

Furthermore, you can also segment this data by Paid Search and Organic Search, or Google vs. Bing and start to do very focused analysis that should fundamentally improve your search marketing program.

You can also take another slice at segmenting your search head, mid, and tail. For example you can easily create a segment for Visitors who came to your site via search queries that had more than four words in the query.

Here's that segment: Visits via Search Queries with more than 4 words.

Now go apply it to your search engine or organic search or paid search or goals reports and do really valuable analysis that will earn you the eternal love and adoration of your peers and superiors!

[SIDEBAR]

In case you wanted to do something more sophisticated beyond what's outlined above here are a quick set of instructions, and a tutorial on using regex.

If you want to create a segment for search queries that contain just one word use this regular expression in your advanced segment:

^\s*[^\s]+\s*$

If you want Visits with two words in Google search queries use this:

^\s*[^\s]+\s+[^\s]+\s*$
or
^\s*[^\s]+(\s+[^\s]+){1}\s*$

If you want to identify Visits by people who use three words in their search queries:

^\s*[^\s]+(\s+[^\s]+){2}\s*$

Now you can keep adding to the number in parenthesis and do a happy dance.

Some more cute things.

If you want to query for more than x words, say more than three words use this:

^\s*[^\s]+(\s+[^\s]+){2,}\s*$

Did you see the comma after the number two above? Good.

If you want to identify all search queries where visitors to your site typed 2 or 3 words into the search engine, use this regular expression:

^\s*[^\s]+(\s+[^\s]+){1,2}\s*$

Fun eh?

So what the heck are all those characters in these regular expressions doing? Glad you asked.  Let's consider the regular expression we used to identify 2 word search queries.

The expression is (identified above): ^\s*[^\s]+\s+[^\s]+\s*$

Here's an explanation (as best as I can express in lay terms). . .

^          start at the beginning of the line
\s*        match zero or more white space characters
[^\s]+   match at least one or more non-white space character
\s+       match at least one or more white space character
[^\s]+   match at least one or more non-white space character
\s*        match zero or more white space characters
$          end of string

I hope all this "magic" makes a lot more sense.

[/SIDEBAR]

Isn't advanced segmentation cool? And to think you did all this with your standard javascript tag, all on the fly (including historical data analysis) and without having to buy extensive expensive add-ons!

Ok it's your turn now.

What are your absolutely dearest advanced segments? What's the coolest thing you have done with the advanced segmentation capability in your web analytics tool? Care to share some of your favorites? Perhaps a downloadable link?

It would be incredible to have your wisdom help all of us. Please participate.

Thanks.

3 Advanced Web Analytics Visitor Segments: Non-Flirts, Social, Long Tail is a post from: Occam's Razor by Avinash Kaushik

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