Shinyred

Archive for November, 2009

The future for commercial blogging – a case study

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

So which is the most powerful and influential blog network in the world? Well there are two contenders, the brit owned New York based Gawker media and Weblogs Inc, which for all intents and purposes these days is AOL. And when either of the networks tweak their designs the rest of the blogging world watches very closely. So last week’s revamp of AOL’s flagship blog, Engadget, has already become a big talking point among commercial bloggers.

Since purchasing Engadget and the rest of Weblogs Inc in 2006 AOL has established the gadget site as the number one consumer electronics portal in the world. It has moved a long way from being a typical blog both in terms of the content on the site and its design. Last week’s tweak takes it even further away from what we used to understand as blogging. It underlines how now blogging is as much about long tail content designed to appeal to readers (and whisper it, search engines) over a longer period of time. Highlighting long tail content has become hugely important now for commercial blogs. Sure most still receive a large chunk of their traffic via quick news stories and are fed by RSS, Google News and organic Google search. However long tail content has enabled some websites/online companies to grow massively (Demand Media springs to mind) and it is content that inevitably has longer shelf life and more intrinsic value than most news content.

Let’s see how the new Engadget reflects this

Firstly at the top of the site there is now a floating bar that Engadget calls its hero module – this can be used by the editors to focus on any type of content they feel has a long shelf life. At the moment the bar is full of Christmas buying guides, next month it will be CES etc. This is where Engadget’s premier long tail content will fit.

Underneath the hero module there is now a pictorial section which highlights top stories. This is where the medium tail content sits – stories that are the most important for that week which will have a longer shelf life than most standard news stories. These are housed in five large-ish images and are designed to pick on the day’s premier news. Since Gawker added top story thumbnails to its pages many months ago this has become a standard feature on many blogs. It is highly effective in keeping casual readers on a site. In some ways it is surprising that Engadget has left it so long to add this.

Finally there is what are arguably the redesign’s coolest feature – the hubs. These are like mini categories which focus on key individual products or events. Take a peek at the one for the recently announced Motorola Cliq phone, you get to access to all the stories that mention the phone along with videos, galleries and a timeline that shows which it was announced and when it was most written about. Once again this is all about re-organising content to give it a longer life. It takes the concept of categories and tabs to its logical conclusion.

Strangely Engadget hasn’t followed Gawker, and its gadget blog Gizmodo, to a home page that features just snippets of story and thumbnails Instead Engadget keeps the long established blog format which allows readers to access a lot of stories without ever having to click on. This flies in the face of most current commercial web design which attempts to get readers to continue to click through – the more page impressions the site gets the higher its ad revenue.

Anyhow, the team at Engadget has come up with was really innovative, dynamic and user friendly redesign and it will be interesting to see if other AOL sites gets a similar treatment soon.

Poke and changing behaviour through social media

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

I’ve been looking at a couple of ambitious and compelling new campaigns from the good folk at Poke.

The first, Orange People Project, is a new Facebook app that makes it easy for people to join together and do something. By going to where the audience exists – 20m FB users in the UK alone – this is a natural way to create new communities by matching unmet needs to willing helpers. It’s early days but has the potential to be something special.

The second is for children’s charity Barnardo’s and features teens talking about the reality of their lives. Often demonised by the media, the Teens’ Speech allows the adults of tomorrow to communicate directly with anyone willing to listen, and go beyond the stereotypes. Find out more on the Poke blog which has links through to where the content is being played out ahead of an alternative to the Queen’s Speech on MySpace during Christmas Day.

Both campaigns pack a punch because they genuinely have the power to change behaviour and perceptions among their audience. And actually “campaigns” is kind of the wrong word, because they will evolve and grow beyond a short-term timeframe… nice work guys.

Facebook now the major social media destination for brands

Friday, November 6th, 2009

There’s a roundup of some new interesting advertising based facts by the team at Econsultancy. Some are quite surprising too, with IAB reporting that UK online ad spend actually went up in 2008, though I wonder if that increases will be repeated in 2009.

The one that most caught my eye though was from a survey which reports that Facebook is the destination of choice for online retailers who want to engage with social media.

The report into the US market, dubbed Social Commerce on Facebook, Twitter and Retail Sites, indicates that 57 per cent of companies in the Internet Retailer Top 500 Guide have a presence on the website.

It also concludes that as many as 75 per cent of these firms utilise at least one of the major social networking sites or social shopping sites to advertise or make their brand known.

According to Jeffrey Grau, who penned the report, said: “Retailers need to place their virtual storefronts where their customers congregate.”

It would be every interesting to see comparative figures for the UK. I guess that many top retail online sites do have a presence on the social networking site, but that figure probably isn’t as high as 75%.

It would be even more interesting to disover figures for non retail brands

Since Facebook changed its offering for brands earlier in the year it has become an excellent place for companies to create pages which not only engages Facebook users but also act as online hubs that pull and push content from other websites like Twitter and YouTube. Shiny Red has worked on several of these types of sites now (like this one)  and they have proved very effective at bringing brands closer to their customers.

Why Seesmic is useful for brands with Facebook pages

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Just as Facebook is adding more and more Twitter style features and acquiring things like FriendFeed which collates Twitter activity, so more and more Twitter apps are enabling users to control their Facebook pages.

Probably the best of the bunch is Seesmic which today has announced an upgrade to its Facebook capabilities. Seesmic started out as a video based website, but then the company snapped up Twitter API company Twhirl and launched the very useful (over 2.5 million downloads so far) Seesmic Twitter app. It works in a similar way to our favourite Tweetdeck in displaying Twitter updates, replies and searches etc in a very easy to use grid format. You can also use Seesmic to update your Facebook page too. It also has very good web and mobile based services too.

The latest Facebook revamp – version 0.6 – is great news for people who control Facebook fan pages, What the app enables you to do is manage activity on Facebook’s fan pages as well as personal profiles, so you can update them at the same time as you update your Twitter accounts. It is another reason why Seesmic, and its rivals like Tweetdeck, are becoming a very useful tool for social media PRs.

Twitter list of top UK fashion bloggers

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

If you are a regular Twitter user you’ll know that the last couple of weeks has been all about lists. Thanks to a tweak to the Twitter website users can now make lists of users and shares them with others. There’s a good post on how this works here.

So will lists transform the way that people use Twitter? It is too early to say at the moment. So many people now user third party software to access their Twitter account and only a handful of these apps have added list functionality to their offering. For the record lists are available now on Seesmic, but not on my favourite Twitter system Tweetdeck or the many mobile versions of Twitter.

One of the most interesting things about the lists is that its shows how people perceive/categorise you. One Shiny Redder is in ‘awesome music related list.’ ‘top London folk’ as well as other social media types.  I am waiting to be included in a Scott Walker obsessives list

Anyhow in a spirit of generosity and sharing I worked with the editor of Shiny Style, Andrea Petrou, to produce a list of UK fashion bloggers on Twitter. It is by no means comprehensive, but includes most of the main bloggers who update their websites more than once a day.

While doing the research I was struck by how vibrant the UK fashion blog scene is. There are lots of very professional looking sites that have great content that are constantly updated. Along with the equally vibrant mummy blogging sectors the fashion bloggers put two metaphorical fingers up to the notion that blogging in the UK is on the wane.

It is also interesting to note that most of the successful bloggers have hooked up with one of the major blog networks. So in fashion the key players are Handpicked Media (which has a huge selection of titles including the excellent Queens of Vintage), Aigua Media (which has several ex Shiny titles like Catwalk Queen) and Shiny Media itself which boasts Shiny Style and Brandish.

The list is here

Case studies

Bassetts Becta ebay McDonalds National Lottery Panasonic Pfizer Sky Very Cobra Beer

Twitter

Latest Blog Posts

Shiny Red shortlisted for two Reputation Online Effectiveness awards
July 20th @ 15:07

Our pick of the Cannes Lions, and World Cup finale
July 9th @ 13:07

Digital Download
July 2nd @ 15:07

Shiny Red
4 Flitcroft Street
London
WC2H 8DJ

020 7520 9535
info@shinyred.co.uk
Web Design Cite