We’re often asked to define social media either directly (what is social media?) or indirectly (we need a social media strategy), so I thought I’d provide a list of the key platforms that make up what we call “social media”:
- Article directories that publish original user generated content (UGC).
- Blogs that feature original content and allow comment from users.
- Blog aggregators like Technorati that allow members to bookmark, tag, syndicate and recommend blog content to other people.
- File sharing sites with community and comment functions like YouTube and Flickr.
- Forums that allow users to post within a special interest community such as Crackberry.com for Blackberry users.
- Microblogging sites like Twitter and all associated sites like Tweetdeck that carry and syndicate content to their users.
- Review sites for products and services (like Travelocity) that carry user generated content (UGC) and reviews.
- Social bookmarking sites like Delicious and Digg that allow tagging and tag sharing so that other people can explore the same tags.
- Social networking sites like Facebook and LinkedIn that allow communities to manifest themselves online.
- Wikis - online encyclopedias that can be edited by anyone - like Wikipedia
It’s worth noting that there are two critical components in social media, the 2 C’s: Content and Community. These are the two sides of the social media coin.
On the one side, content lies at the very heart of social media. Content populates all the components above, all of which would cease to exist without content. In the case of social media, content is often user generated (User Generated Content or UGC) as opposed to being generated by a professional publishing house. If you are thinking social media in any way, you must be thinking content; without content there is no social media.
Community is the other aspect of social media. Communities gather around people of similar types (alumni, workplace, school, product users etc) or common interests (stamp collecting, trainspotting, FX trading) in the same way that “birds of a feather flock together” in many other aspects of social sciences. Communities are also important because they create a demand for content as members seek opinions or seek to make their own views known. Without communities there would be less of the subtle “friction” that causes many types of content to be generated and consumed.



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Google acknowledges the power of television advertising with Superbowl spot
So why did they do it? Television does amazing things for brands. It builds stature, it builds status, it builds employee confidence, it rocks competitors and it drives lots of traffic. More than that, TV advertising embeds brands into popular culture. It’s powerful stuff. However, Google is already part of popular culture so why advertise on TV? My guess is they’re interested in seeing how TV ratings can be correlated to web traffic. I could have saved them around $1m here. TV ads drive web traffic at a rate of between 0.015% and 0.25%. So with an audience of around 100m viewers, Google could have expected traffic uplifts in the US of between 15,000 and 250,000 within a few hours of transmission. What value is this to Google? When Google searchers clicks on AdWords it generates income for Google. Assume 50% of that 250,000 clicked into AdWords at a cost per click of $2, then there you have it; £250,000 of revenue. Not enough to cover the cost of the spot. But Google shouldn’t be disheartened by this - these figures are based on buying a spot with inherently high premiums. Outside the Superbowl, the economics might look considerably better.
And for Google’s fan base (of which I am one). They are right, Google AdWords is a very powerful business generator. It collects response at the end of the sales funnel - just as the Yellow Pages did for so many years. But something has to populate that sales funnel and drive search volumes. Something has to make each brand credible; make it top of mind, the safe choice; the right choice. That’s where TV comes in.Even though things look good for Google in search at the moment, I suspect there may be changes ahead - demand for AdWords is forcing up click costs at Google and this may drive search marketing budgets to competitors like Microsoft’s Bing. As Google loses traffic it will look to fight back and it has to do that by holding and winning back search traffic - the source of its revenue. There may well be a ferocious marketing battle to be fought amongst search providers, with Google standing to lose the most. Testing TV now, may indeed be a dress rehearsal for future TV advertising activity.
It’s interesting to note that predictions of the end of mass marketing tend to come primarily from within the non-TV marketing community. The reason for this is that those who have not been at the “business end” of TV advertising are unlikely to have made careful study of the effects of mass marketing versus the costs of undertaking it. Mass marketing can still be very powerful and it can be very cost effective. The temptation is to assume that because it costs so much, it couldn’t possibly work is erroneous. Perhaps with Google’s use of TV advertising, some of mass marketing’s critics may take time to reconsider. Google has.