PR industry developing social media measurement standards | Articles | Home

With hundreds of service providers who offer secret sauces and black-box solutions, how can a PR pro know if his results approximate reality? How does he compare reports from one vendor to the next?There is good news. Thanks to a cross-industry collaboration of PR trade bodies—social media analytics, advertising and word-of-mouth associations, and a handful of blue-chip client companies—the industry is definitely making progress.Tim Marklein of W2O Group and Katie Paine of KDPaine & Partners—who are both leading the charge—gave an update at the 4th Annual AMEC European Measurement Summit a few weeks ago. See www.smmstandards.org.The work follows the AMEC Barcelona Principles in 2010 and the AMEC Valid Metrics Framework in 2011, both of which established preliminary methods to measure social media.The next steps are to create standards in six priority areas, which are below. The first is complete, and the subsequent five are slated for updates this fall after additional cross-industry collaboration meetings.

via PR industry developing social media measurement standards | Articles | Home.

How to Make B2B Content More Shareable

When it comes to creating content for a company blog, “if you build it they will come” is not the right mantra. Smart social media promotion of your content is key, and it’s almost as important as creating the content itself.

That said, copying and pasting the same old thing to every social network — or worse, automating it — isn’t an effective strategy. Each platform has its own unique nuances that, when wisely taken advantage of, can increase clicks on links you share and page views for your blog. Here are tips on how to do that on each platform.

via How to Make B2B Content More Shareable.

12 Essential Social Media Cheat Sheets

etting around a social media site is not always easy. For some users, it’s a matter of getting used to social media. For others, the issue is keeping up with constant updates and changes to features, privacy settings, and account specifications. This, of course, is why social media cheat sheets exist.Cheat sheets are basically infographics that can give a user a simple rundown of various features and how to use them. Here’s a roundup of great cheat sheets for the most popular social networking sites.

via 12 Essential Social Media Cheat Sheets.

Facebook Tab Engagement Down 53% Since Timeline Launch

Facebook’s Timeline redesign profoundly altered the appearance and the function of brand Pages.It’s also significantly affected the degree to which fans interact with tabs, which point you to different content at the top of the Page.According to data provided to Mashable by PageLever, tab engagement has dropped off 53% since brand Pages began adopting Timeline.

via Facebook Tab Engagement Down 53% Since Timeline Launch.

Why Are B2B Social Media Firms So Hot?

The Great Cash-Out got under way in May when Oracle paid $300 million for Vitrue, a cloud-based firm that mans social media communications for McDonald’s, American Express and Gillette, among others. Oracle followed that acquisition by gobbling up social media monitoring firm Collective Intellect for an undisclosed sum in early June.

Meanwhile, Salesforce.com paid $745 million for Buddy Media, a Vitrue competitor that counts Ford Motor and Hewlett-Packard among its clients. Soon after, reports circulated that Microsoft was interested in buying Yammer, a provider of a Facebook-type solution for businesses, for $1 billion or so. Just last week, the smallish Syncapse bought a smaller social media firm, Clickable. That flurry of activity came after Adobe bough Efficient Frontier, another player in the social CRM space, back in November. Don’t expect things to die down, either — the latest industry rumor is that Facebook is going to buy Wildfire Interactive.

via Why Are B2B Social Media Firms So Hot?.

Social Media-Connected Teens Seek Time Offline [STUDY]

Today’s American teenagers are digital natives — connected to the Internet since youth. About 75% of 13 to 17-year-olds have personal social networking accounts. Since 2008, there has been a huge spike in teenage connectivity; only 59% of teens were on social media four years ago.

Despite seeing “racist, sexist and homophobic content” online, teenagers view social media networks positively. A national survey of 1,030 13-to-17-year-old individuals, conducted by Common Sense Media, reveals teenage perceptions of their digital lives.

via Social Media-Connected Teens Seek Time Offline [STUDY].

Do Share, Google Plus Post Scheduling | Social Media Services and Resources | Tweet Philadelphia

Twitter has many third party software clients that let users draft posts and share them later. And now another sign that Google Plus is growing—it has its , a Chrome extension, for drafting and scheduling posts. Welcome Do Share, and thanks to it’s creator, Joel Califa. Many of us love Google Plus because it has a member base as intelligent as what can be found on Twitter, but it is a very visually based social network (heck, photographers are the “rock stars” if you look for who’s getting the +1s).

via Do Share, Google Plus Post Scheduling | Social Media Services and Resources | Tweet Philadelphia.

How the Arab World Uses Facebook and Twitter [INFOGRAPHICS]

Social media has been often touted for the role it played in the popular uprisings that have spread across the Arab world since December 2010. Despite the buzz, you may be surprised that only 0.26% of the Egyptian population, 0.1% of the Tunisian population and 0.04% of the Syrian population are active on Twitter.

Of all the countries in North Africa and the Middle East, Twitter is most popular in Kuwait, where 8.6% of the population is active users, defined as those who tweet at least once per month. Facebook’s more popular throughout the region. In its most popular country, the U.A.E., some 36.18% of the population is on Facebook.

Khaled ElAhmad (who goes by the Internet alias Shusmo) created these two infographics, exploring Facebook and Twitter trends in the Arab world, using Visual.ly. His data comes from a Dubai School of Government report on Arab Social Media.

via How the Arab World Uses Facebook and Twitter [INFOGRAPHICS].