- Feb 09
- 17
MySpace and Facebook: Key Differences to Understand Before Marketing
- Posted by David Concepcion
- Published in Company News
About a year or so back, I wondered what happened to all my friends on MySpace. I knew a lot of them from another social network site that was dwindling, but I could always find them updating their pages on MySpace. They were soon MIA from there as well. I emailed a friend of mine and asked her what was going on. She simply said that everyone was basically migrating to Facebook.
The statistical data shows that MySpace is still the largest and most active social networking site. Hitwise.com has MySpace at number three on their top 20 Website lis
t with a 3.71% market share of internet traffic; Facebook is number six with a 1.65% market share. While MySpace is still number one by clear margins, Facebook has been creeping up over the last 18 months. The anecdotal information seems to bear this out as well. I have been friend requested more and more by friends on Facebook whom I first met on MySpace in the last few months than ever before. I know that my personal perceptions are trumped by data from Hitwise, and this is a debate that’s been going on for at least a year and is still raging, so don’t expect me to definitively settle this at all. However what this really comes down to is the basic marketing maxim of knowing your audience and using the best site for what you need.
If you’re a comedian, an artist, in a band, or made a film, you need a MySpace page. The ability to design your own page template,
post your own videos, songs, photos, etc. makes this the ideal site to market your art—whatever that may be. While getting friend requested by people you’ve never heard of can be annoying, for the artist trying to gain an audience it is one of the most beneficial word of mouth methodologies you can use. When I was creating my web series, I used MySpace to put out the casting notices as well as track down a couple of actors that were otherwise unreachable. I was able to gain a specific fan base and even hire a makeup artist for the show as time went on. For all the friending of strippers and bands you have to go through on MySpace, if you are in any kind of artistic field you are going to need this site.
The use of Facebook is different. If you want to track down old high school friends, college friends, business acquaintances, favorite hot dog vendors, you’ll be able to find each other on Facebook. Where you may not realize the page for “~I AM DA BOMB FO’SHO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~” on MySpace is an old college bud, Facebook makes it easier to figure that out. Plus asking “are you such-and-such” in the friend request seems to cut through the confusion. Marketing yourself here is trickier in that you are among friends, not an expanding audience. If you’re planning a big get together for friends, it’s great; if you want to hype a new product, not so much. However, empirical data shows that the ads posted on Facebooks get more productive cost-per-click ads than on MySpace, and the crowd on Facebook tends to be more affluent.
However there are definite times when being among friends works for you. If you’re looking for work you want to ask people you know—four out of five jobs are found this way. The various groups on Facebook are much more straightforward, easy to join and start posting for things. The community is also great moral support. In these tough times, when I was going through my job malaise, the simple status message of “David is DESPERATELY LOOKING FOR A NEW JOB!” was enough to get my Facebook friends to lend a good ear. One of them told me to send my resume to a recruiting friend of theirs. Different social networks, different purposes, different results.
Whether MySpace is adding the application ability that Facebook has had on for the last year is eventually irrelevant. What’s important is knowing your product and who to speak to. If you know your product, you know the audience you need to reach; knowing that can help you figure out which social network to be on. It’s good to be on both sites but for different reasons on being on either.
3 CommentsPandemic Labs is pleased to announce a new contributor to the writing staff here at PandemicBlog. Many of you might now him by this avatar, but for those of you who don’t, let me be the first to introduce you to Jiannis Sotiropoulos.
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Jiannis Sotiropoulos is currently living and working in Berlin. He specializes in online media, approaching it from a theoretical and aesthetic perspective. His studies in sociology and media sciences are his foundation in understanding the functions of the web and how its users interact. With his Masters Thesis on the attention economy of the social web, he scientifically decoded the marketing rules of social networks in the online universe. He continues studying social networks and waits to see how (and if) the future semantic applications will change the current laws of networking. His personal blog, Changemod, is a fantastic resource and has long been a favorite of the editors here at PandemicBlog. Without a doubt, Jiannis will bring a much needed scientific perspective to our discussions and we will all benefit.
Our Ongoing Mission
As our readers know, PandemicBlog aims to be a resource for insight into Social Media Marketing, Viral Marketing, and other forms of new media marketing that haven’t yet been discovered. We have tried to deal intelligently with topics ranging from the paradox of self-promotion with social media, and the power of viral marketing for small business. Up until now, this task has been shouldered almost completely by the editors, Matthew Peters and Brennan White. But…
We strive to be more.
From the conception of this blog our goal has been to bring together a group of thinkers and writers who can contribute their insight, expertise, and opinions on the sometimes nebulous world of Social Media Marketing. Jiannis is the first of our new group of contributors and we hope that a proper writing staff will have a synergistic effect, raising the value of this blog above the sum of its parts.
If you are new to this blog, please subscribe to our RSS feed so that you’ll receive all PandemicBlog articles and be updated on the other exciting new additions to the PandemicBlog team that will be coming in the near future. As always, please feel free to contact us with questions, comments, or topic suggestions. We want PandemicBlog to be a resource to all concerned with these forms of New Media Marketing, and the more we know about our readers, the better we can do.
3 Comments- Feb 08
- 15
Viral Marketing in the Fabric Industry?
- Posted by Brennan White
- Published in Company News, Online Video
Pandemic Labs Co-Founder Quoted in Industrial Fabric Trade Magazine.
Pandemic Labs co-founder, Matthew Peters, was quoted extensively in an article in the January Issue of the Industrial Fabrics Association Review magazine (page 42, titled “Catch the Fever”). The article, offering a high-level view of Viral Marketing, is filled with helpful quotes from social media thought leader Beth Kanter and Blendtec Director of Marketing, George Wright. The piece provides a brief history of viral marketing along with some valuable commentary and is a great read for anyone looking to catch up with the past few years of viral marketing news.
It’s interesting to see how each industry individually takes to Viral Marketing. It’s particularly interesting that, if this article is anything to go by, the industrial fabric industry seems to be very open to this new form of advertising. In fact, this article makes obvious to me a ridiculous assumption I was secretly harboring about “older” industries. Having worked in tech companies throughout my career, I had unconsciously assumed that non-tech industries were colder to these new technologies. Specifically, I had assumed that the earlier adopters of these types of marketing would come from the tech sector. Clearly this is faulty logic once I actually spend two braincells on it, and this article serves me a slice of humble pie.
The article embraces not only the history of viral marketing success (all the way back to the original BMWFilms), it embraces that history without the usual push-back from more traditional marketing thinkers that demand traditional marketing ideas and metrics. This excites me personally as, something I view as, an “old industry” is embracing a new technology better than most tech companies I’m working with!
In a similar, ‘tech isn’t as forward thinking as you’d assume’, vein Matt and I attended a tech industry panel event the other night that had a relatively high-profile group of panelists. In the Q&A, someone from the crowd asked a question that caused, in my mind, a very telling and depressing series of events. The question was, “What is the future of pre-roll video advertising?”. The panel took turns attempting to answer this question and it was painful! The comments ranged from, how ‘a study’ showed that pre-roll ads longer than 15 seconds actually “did better” than shorter pre-roll ads, to, how companies are now able to target pre-roll ads “better”. The small knot of social media folks I was sitting with started muttering unhappily. Did NO one see that pre-roll ads are demanding something that can no longer be demanded online? Do any of the CEOs of these extremely successful
tech companies see that consumers will NOT put up with pre-roll ads since the exact video they hoping to watch is probably available in 10 other places online with no ads at all? Finally, after much floundering from the rest of the panel, Mike from Polaris Venture Partners saved the day with his dead-on, one-sentence answer “Pre-roll is dead!”. To me, the success of online, interruption-based advertising isn’t even a question. Its days are already numbered.
To sit and watch powerful tech people, who theoretically have some power over the future of my technological experience, not grasp the engagement marketing/interruption marketing difference, is unsettling. Couple that experience with the full-on embracing of viral marketing by an industrial fabric industry trade publication and companies like ours suddenly feel like they might be barking up the wrong industry tree when offering our services heavily to the tech industry.
Whatever the implications to the industry as a whole, the Industrial Fabric Association’s viral marketing article is a great read for someone looking to catch up with some of high level points on viral marketing.
4 Comments- Feb 08
- 11
Pandemic Labs Launches Viral Dictionary and Library
- Posted by Brennan White
- Published in Company News
Pandemic Labs has launched a totally revamped website based on user feedback obtained over our first year of business. The new community-oriented features include:
- The Viral Dictionary- An attempt to aggregate terms and definitions used in viral and social media.
- The Library- A gathering of valuable articles, reports and studies containing important viral and social media marketing data and statistics.
- Useful White Papers- Including “How Does Viral Marketing Work?”, “Viral Marketing Terminology…” and more. These were compiled and written by Pandemic Labs to clarify what we’ve learned in this revealing first year.
We’ve put a lot of time and resources into making our Research page and white papers useful to both the marketing community and every day enthusiasts. Any feedback you have on the look, feel and usability of our site, our content or our blog is welcome.
No Comments- Feb 08
- 4
Super Bowl Commercials and Digital Destinations
- Posted by Matt Peters
- Published in Company News
A lot of people watch the Super Bowl, and that means a lot of people watch the commercials. Arguably, Super Bowl commercials have become an event unto there own over the past decade. According to newscast I saw before the big game, a thirty-second spot this year went for three million dollars (though I confess, I have not verified this with my usual journalistic tenacity). So at $100,000 per second, these are the priciest seconds in all of TV advertising.
This year, I decided to keep track of what advertisers were doing with their $100,000 seconds. This is not a complete breakdown of what the ads said/did/accomplished (there are far better sources for that), but instead a look at the ways in which the ads directed consumers to online destinations. Before I give you the results, let me just clarify a few things:
- I begin keeping track at the singing of the National Anthem and I stopped at the end of the game.
- I did not count and ads where Fox was promoting its own stuff (i.e. American Idol, House, and the Sarah Conner Chronicles).
- There are certain elements in this which are judgment calls on my part. You’ll just have to accept a bit of subjectivity.
So here it is.
There were 70 ads shown during the Super Bowl. Of those ads:
- 25 ads (35%) referenced a company or brand website (i.e. Hyundai.com, Underarmor.com, etc…) Note: this excludes the ads for companies who are online companies, such as SalesGenie.com and CareerBuilder.com whose ads obviously pointed to a website.
- 4 ads (5%) referenced a destination website. These are sites such as pepsistuff.com and thrillicious.com that are specialized digital destinations, separate from the company’s main site, which are built around consumer engagement.
- 4 ads (5%) existed primarily to get people to go to a destination website. The ads themselves had no real content, and would not have even been ads at all, had it not been for the digital destination they told people to go to. They were more like road signs pointing to the marketing, rather than the marketing itself. Examples of this were the GoDaddy commercial and the Audi commercial leading to truthinengineering.com.
Are these numbers staggering? It depends how you view them. But the fact that nearly half of all the ads shown last night pointed in some way to a digital destination might say a lot about where marketing is moving.
1 Comment
This weekend is PodCamp 3 in our good ol’ hometown, Boston. For any readers who are attending, you should make sure to check our the
At Pandemic Blog, we try to provide quality content to people looking to learn more about viral and social media marketing. To further this goal, we’re starting our ‘Reviews’ series of blog posts. In this series, we will review online marketing efforts from successful businesses, summarize their key features and assign scores in six categories. From these categories, we will arrive at a final Composite Score. This will result in a relatively standardized rating system that can then be used to accurately compare different online marketing efforts. The end goal, as always, is to further valuable discussion and to gain insight to viral and social media as they come into being, progress, succeed or fail.