Tuesday 23 April 2013

Sorry Wall Street But Barring A Miracle, Your Boss Will Soon Be Able To Monitor Your Social Media Account

Securities regulators want to overturn bans on monitoring employees' social media accounts, the Wall Street Journal's Jean Eaglesham and Michael Rothfeld report.
That would put them in line with the very entities they regulate, as the banking industry also opposes the measures.
At least four states have adopted privacy laws restricting employers from looking at what workers are Tweeting and posting to Facebook.  
But last year, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA) challenged California's law on grounds that it prevents brokerages from policing investment advice, Eaglesham and Rothfeld write.
Now FINRA is joining the chorus to allow access. From WSJ:
Securities regulators worry that the raft of new laws aimed at protecting employees' privacy puts investors at risk. They say the fast spread of financial advice on social networks such as Facebook Inc. and Twitter Inc. could create new channels for Ponzi schemes and other frauds, and that fighting those frauds will be harder if state lawmakers snarl efforts by companies to monitor what employees are pitching to investors.
In 2009, a finance exec paid a $10,000 fine in connection with hyping a stock on Twitter, WSJ notes. 


http://SocialBusinessToday.net - The Best in Social Business

Twitter reportedly bags huge payday with 'milestone' ad deal


Twitter's been hammering home its value as an advertising medium and Madison Avenue is apparently nodding in agreement. The company has reportedly nailed a multiyear deal with Publicis' Starcom MediaVest Group that's worth hundreds of millions of dollars, according to theFinancial Times.
It's a big deal -- a really big deal, which the FT describes as a "milestone" -- and one which undergirds the argument the social media giant has been making to advertisers still sitting on the fence about whether to sign on the line which is dotted. According to the report, which quotes unidentified sources, "the deal grants SMG's clients, which include Procter & Gamble, Walmart, Microsoft and Coca-Cola, special access to preferred advertising slots, research and data, and new products, such as an "in-tweet mobile survey" program that will allow companies to poll consumers for real-time opinions." The sides are also planning what was described as a "social TV lab" to explore the impact of social media on television watching for marketers interested in connecting ad campaigns across different media, according to the FT.


http://SocialBusinessToday.net - The Best in Social Business

Monday 22 April 2013

Tumblr rolls out mobile ads in bid to make $100 million in 2013


In its latest effort to generate revenue, Tumblr, one of the most popular social networks among teens and young adults, is selling ads and displaying them on its mobile apps.
Much like Facebook and Twitter, Tumblr said it will now show its mobile users "sponsored posts" on its Dashboard news feed. The sponsored posts are blogs that companies have paid to show up in between content posted by Tumblr bloggers.
The company told Forbes in January that it was hoping to boost its revenue from $13 million last year to $100 million in 2013. Despite launching in 2007, Tumblr has only recently become popular among the general public.
Tumblr added ads to its desktop website almost a year ago, and last month, the company told Bloomberg it was charging just under $100,000 for ads on its social network.
To kick off mobile ads, Tumblr has partnered with GE, Pepsi,Warner Bros. and ABC Entertainment and ABC Family.
"The content our brand partners have created is more than just advertising -- it is thoughtful, beautiful, and diverse content that fits seamlessly alongside the best work on our network," Tumblr founder and Chief Executive David Karp said in a statement Monday.
The company said it will roll out ads to users during a beta period between now and the end of May. Tumblr said users will see up to four sponsored posts per day.
Among those ads will be blogs showcasing upcoming films "The Great Gatsby" and "The Hangover Part III.


http://SocialBusinessToday.net - The Best in Social Business

Can Social Gifting Popularize Social Commerce?


Remember that frenzy over “Social commerce”—the hope that online merchants might be able to use sites like Facebook to directly sell more product? Well, so much for that. As marketers have found out, people don't typically use social media to buy products (with the possible exception of Pinterest). Plant the seed? Sure. Engage potential customers? No problem. But slap down credit card numbers? Thanks, but no thanks.
It seems the act of commerce is simply not aligned with the reasons people log on to social media. But what if the act of commerce is itself social? That might be a different story—or at least,Aggregift hopes so. Think of the service, which was first made publically available in December 2012, as a sort of Kickstarter for gift giving. Bob Cratchit wants to buy his boy Tiny Tim a new walking stick, so he drops a link for the product on Amazon into the Aggregift site, so Facebook friends and relatives can pool funds and sponsor the gift.   
Aggregift, says company cofounder Gregory Schvey, is ultimately a platform for group purchasing. For brands, the value proposition is that each purchase turns into highly-public word-of-mouth marketing. “As you contribute to a gift, it promotes that product as well,” Schvey says. “People see it on the news feed or Twitter feed where they're promoting the item.” He adds that, on average, each gift has more than one thousand impressions.  
The company so far has one public retail partner—Amazon—and Schvey estimates it will have between two to six by the end of 2013. He declines to name who he's in discussions with currently, but he notes that the retail partners Aggregift is courting are more focused on specific verticals.
So why is this interesting to marketers? For one, depending on Aggregift's success (and it's still early days), there might be some clues on how to entice purchases on social media sites that haven't traditionally been conducive to such activities. Could turning the act of purchasing into a social, communal activity, as Aggregift does, become a strategy for merchants trying to sell products on Facebook?
And if Aggregift becomes explosively popular, it's easy to see marketers trying to get their products onto the site's curated gift idea lists, which is broken into various categories (like “Chic Fashionista” or “Inspired Foodie”).
The second thing that might interest marketers are the segments that use Aggregift: birthday gifts for mid- to late twenty-somethings, baby showers, engagements, and children's birthday parties. “So instead of action figures,” Schvey says, “the [child] gets an Xbox or something like that.” He admits that the emergence of this fourth segment surprised him. “We did not see this [use case] coming and we began catering to it because of the popularity.”


http://SocialBusinessToday.net - The Best in Social Business