Shinyred

Posts Tagged ‘Blogging’

New BitterSweet Partnership website

Monday, June 14th, 2010

We’ve had the pleasure of working with Molson Coors on BitterSweet Partnership for just over a year now. In case you haven’t come across it yet, it was set up by Molson Coors to show women the beauty of beer – because with only 13% of beer serves in the UK attributed to them, many women are currently missing out!  We’ve been busy talking to many female bloggers, Tweeters and Facebook users along the way – from those who already love beer like Cate from BitchBuzz and Gemma from RetroChick, to those who wouldn’t normally choose it, like Jenny from The Style PA.

 Most recently, we’ve been working to develop a brand new website design, which has recently gone live:

BitterSweet Partnership

Take a look at the new site at http://www.bittersweetpartnership.com – and be sure to let us know what you think.

How much promotion is OK in social media?

Friday, September 4th, 2009

Spambots are all the rage on twitter at the moment, with people accumulating hundreds of followers posing as naked ladies who are actually just trying to promote their product. This isn’t appreciated among the twittersphere (and nor should it!) but the question is when is the line crossed when it comes to promotion of a product or person on Twitter?

One example was a competition Moonfruit posted on twitter. This campaign gave away a MacBook pro every day for 7 days to people who twittered the hashtag #moonfruit, which resulted in the brand name Moonfruit being one of the most talked about brands in the twittersphere at the time. This technique wasn’t appreciated by all and was eventually removed by twitter with some marketers seeing this as spam.

Another equally contentious use of promotion was the publicity that Voltz drinks gained recently about a blog post promotion. The blog post talks about the blogger meeting a celebrity whereupon she told him that he should be drinking Voltz to help him keep a ’slinky waistline’. The endorsement of the brand in a blog post by someone who didn’t visibly represent Voltz drinks in a blatant use of promotion wasn’t welcomed by all.

However, the brand has been talked about online, which is ultimately what Voltz will have been aiming for. They have their name out there and people who have read the article will remember this brand name over another drinks brand which will have been their primary aim I should imagine. This doesn’t mean that people who recognise the brand name will necessarily buy the drink over another brand because of it but (some) people will now recognise it and might even buy it should they see it in the shops. And this is the same with Moonfruit too, they wanted to promote the brand name ‘Moonfruit’ and it was ultimately talked about in the social media world.

The question is where the line is drawn between promotion and spam on twitter, and who gets to decide this. Ultimately, in the two examples above, the decision lay with the twittersphere.

The future of media… hobbyists

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Over a year ago, Chris Anderson, Editor of Wired magazine wrote a feature on why “free” is the future of business. He stated that “The rise of “freeconomics” is being driven by the underlying technologies that power the Web. Just as Moore’s law dictates that a unit of processing power halves in price every 18 months, the price of bandwidth and storage is dropping even faster. Which is to say, the trend lines that determine the cost of doing business online all point the same way: to zero”

As a natural follow up, he’s now published a book on the subject, which is sitting pretty as a New York Times best seller. Essential summer reading? Well, my copy is in the post – even if it’s available digitally… for free.

As part of the book’s promotional media offensive, it could be that Chris has found inspiration for his a book from the unlikely source of German news magazine Spiegel. The intruiging tête-a-tête has the poor interviewer on the back foot from the first question as Anderson’s answers dissect the current media landscape saying that he no longer uses the words “journalism”, “news”, and even “media” itself.

His point, while abstruse, is that although he still reads articles and consumes media from mainstream outlets, he is directed to that news through other media – Twitter, RSS, etc. I’d have to agree here, I rarely visit a media outlet’s homepage, instead I’ll arrive there through a link that’s been shared or brought to my attention through various networks.

Anderson then goes on to make the following challenge to the mainstream – “If you have attention and reputation, you can figure out how to monetize it. However, money is not the No. 1 factor anymore. [...] Attention and reputation are two non-monetary economies. The vast majority of people online write for free.”

At Shiny Red, we’re always keen on looking at the technologies that are enabling members of the public to create their own content more easily, from simple blogging and website creation platforms like Wetpaint, to mobile video streaming technologies like Qik. There seems to be an unceasing rise of these services, which lend support to Chris Anderson’s suggestion that “maybe the media is going to be a part time job. Maybe media won’t be a job at all, but will instead be a hobby.” After all, if the mystery behind creating a story is truly simplified, then we can look forward to a continually growing number of sources of how we’re entertained and kept up to date.

Why Posterous just might be the future of blogging

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

posterous_logo1Over the last few months there have been many stories in both mainstream and social media chronicling the decline of blogging. Fewer people are apparently starting blogs, many blogs are not being updated and less people are reading them.

There is a fairly contentious debate as to why blogging has become less popular, but many commentators cite the growth of micro blogging or Twitter, as the most significant reason for its downturn.

I think they are right too. Twitter is a fast and instantaneous way of sharing information with a large group of people, it makes blogging look slow, cumbersome and rather one dimensional.

There are however still many good reasons why savvy individuals and brands will continue to use blogging software to deliver content.

1 I think that only very shallow minds can express everything they feel about an issue in 140 charactars.
2 Blogging should still be a major plank in website owners SEO strategy. For search engines original content on websites is still a massive draw and if a blog is updated regularly it will not only attract regular readers via RSS, Twitter or others sources but will pick up readers through Google, Bing etc

Why Posterous might be a game-changer

I think that blogging will still be a major part of the social media world if blogging software can evolve to make things easy for people to express their opinions. This is where Posterous comes in.

Posterous, along with its rivals Tumblr and Twitblogs, is the fourth wave of blogging software. It all began with basic systems like Blogger at the turn of the decade. Then more sophisticated systems like Wordpress and Movable Type enabled bloggers to produce more website-like feature-rich blogs. The third wave married blogging with social networking like the blogs on sites like MySpace as well as blogging software with social networking elements like Vox.

With Posterous and its rivals, we have blogging software that is optimised to not only ape the simplicity of micro blogging, but also to harness its reach, to syndicate content.

So is Posterous the future of blogging? At this point is hard to say. However given the way the Posterous has reignited many bloggers love of the format (I’d include myself here – nearly 100 posts in a month) I’d argue that it at the very least it will play an important role in shaping the future of blogging.

Posterous is not entirely new. It has been around for a year now, but it is now only really starting to gain traction with bloggers on both sides of the Atlantic.

Ease of use

What makes it so attract to bloggers is that it is so simple to use. With traditional blogging software users had to log into a site, input their text, upload images, size them and carry out other tweaks too. With Posterous there are two very simple ways of posting. Firstly users can email content. The subject matter of the email becomes the head, the body text the content and any attached images the pictures. It is incredibly simple to use and very effective when used with smartphones like the Nokia N97 and the iPhone.

posterous-bookmarklet

Secondly Posterous users can download a bookmarklet which sits in the bar at the top of the browser. When they find a page they want to link to or write about, they click on the bookmarklet and it appears on top of the page. It grabs any images on the page – the user just chooses the one they want – and they add any text or links in the text box. They then press save and within seconds their post is published. Even complicated things are made simple. Producing image galleries can be done in seconds rather than minutes by attaching a lot of images to an email – the software automatically presents them as a gallery. The software is also smart enough to recognise video content and presents it in the correct way on the page without the user having to make any amendments.

Once the post has been published Posterous does several other clever things. The user can set their account up so that each time they post, details of the post are automatically sent to Twitter, Facebook and other social networking sites. They can even use it to feed another blog.

So for example I very rarely post direct to Twitter now, but rather post a mini blog story on Posterous which automatically pings my Twitter account. The system’s excellent tracking ability means that I can see exactly how many people have clicked on my post. Some bloggers use Posterous as an alternative to Twitpic in that they can share many images quickly and easily with the Twitter community.

Oddly this makes Posterous a real contender for brands who want to start a blog. Many early corporate blogs attracted very little traffic. By integrating Posterous with Twitter, providing their Twitter feed has a few followers, a brand can be sure that their blog posts are being read from day one.

It’ll be interesting to see where Posterous goes in the next few months. An obvious move would be a deal with Google to allow users to monetise their blogs. Adding more advanced features so users can tweak their posts after posting would also be useful.

It will also be interesting to see if Posterous type features are incorporated into traditional blogging software like Wordpress and Typepad.

From this bloggers perspective though Posterous is the most exciting thing to happen to blogging software in several years. It might not slow the decline of the format but it will certainly attract hard core, time-poor bloggers and it could have some very interesting uses for both commercial and corporate bloggers.

Here are a few Shiny Red Posterous blogs

This is Tomorrrow , Laura’s Posterous, Gill’s Posterous A whole world of Crap, Curiosty And the good news is and the legendary Dark Place

Case studies

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

Twitter

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