Tag Archives: trending
Twitter Launches Location-Based Trending Topics

Twitter Launches Location-Based Trending Topics

Twitter has begun rolling out location-based trending topics.

The product is officially called Local Trends. In a statement to us, Twitter said the following:

“We’re rolling out local trends to 1 percent of users today, but we’ll share more information when it reaches a larger audience hopefully sometime next week. We’ll keep you posted when that happens.”

The pictures below, courtesy of @lisabarone, show the new feature in all of its glory. Scroll past them for more information on the new Twitter feature.


Screenshots: Local Trends



More Info

Currently, only a few users have access to the feature (I don’t have it yet), but it should be rolling out to everybody soon.

Here’s what we can tell you:

- Local Trends allows you to set a specific location, so that you can see the trends around you. Most of the time, this would be your home. However, it looks like you can change it on-the-fly if you’re traveling, for example.

- Clicking on Local Trends gives you a list of different cities and countries in which you can view trends. It’s a limited list so far — only 15 U.S. cities are supported.

- You can access these trending topics from Twitter.com, on the right-hand column.

- A full rollout should occur sometime next week, if testing goes smoothly.

We think this is a logical and smart move, especially in the wake of the rise of location-based service such as Foursquare. We’ll have more analysis soon.

Top 10 Most Popular Topics on Twitter This Week

Top 10 Most Popular Topics on Twitter This Week

What did people buzz about the most this week? Who was the singer that people tweeted the most about? What issue caught the world’s collective attention?

Social media is not only a great medium for conversation, but it’s also an effective way to discover and analyze the popular topics of the day. By aggregating and picking apart the millions of tweets, status updates, and posts generated on the web every day, it’s possible to figure out what people care about in real-time.

Starting this week, we will be publishing the top ten trending topics of the last seven days, based on the amount of time they trended on Twitter. This data is provided to us courtesy of What The Trend, which tracks Twitter trends and provides user-generated descriptions of those topics.

What Was Hot This Week

Here are some of our thoughts and observation on Twitter’s top ten trending topics for the week:

- Unsurprisingly, the most discussed topic of the week has been the crisis in Haiti. After a 7.0 earthquake devastated Haiti, the world came to the people’s aid, raising millions via text message and other social methods.

- The Shorty Awards, which recognize great twitter users and their content, trended for nearly four days. It’s become more popular than even we predicted.

- Both Martin Luther King Day and the Massachusetts special election between Scott Brown and Martha Coakley took up two trending topics. Martin Luther King Day was on Monday, while the Massachusetts election occurred on Tuesday.

- In the realm of entertainment, Justin Bieber, the Golden Globes, and Jersey Shore were the most talked about items of the weel.

Be sure to scroll down to the end of the post for the full list.

What Might Be Popular Next Week?

What do you think will be the topics people discuss the most next week? We have a few guesses, but we want to hear yours in the comments.

Some of our predictions:

1. Apple’s announcement, including the Apple Tablet and the unveiling of iPhone 4.0.

2. The Grammy Awards, which air on 1/31, will garner a lot of discussion next week, along with some of its singers.

3. The plight in Haiti, as well as ways to help, will continue to dominate the discussion.

Top 10 Twitter Trending Topics, 1/16 to 1/22

All descriptions are provided courtesy of What The Trend.

Rank
Topic
Time Trending
Change
Max Index
Description
#1
Haiti
4 Days, 18 Hours
1
On January 12, 2010 an earthquake measured at 7.3 devastated the country’s capital, a week later on the 20th an aftershock of 6.1 struck, a telethon will be held on Jan 22, 2009 to raise funds for relief efforts.
#2
Shorty Award
3 Days, 20 Hours
2
The Second Annual Shorty Awards honor the most popular producers of short content on Twitter. Award winners are recognized in 26 official and 100s of user generated categories.
#3
Justin Bieber
1 Day, 13 Hours
3
Justin Bieber is a Canadian R&B/pop singer has a lot of fans who like to tweet about him!
#4
Follow Friday
17 Hours
2
Follow Friday is a tradition where people tweet people they believe are fun/interesting to follow (on Fridays).
#5
Scott Brown
1 Day, 3 Hours
NEW
1
Republican Scott Brown won the Massachusetts Senate race, beating Democrat Martha Coakley.
#6
Massachusetts
1 Day, 2 Hours
NEW
1
Republican Scott Brown won a bitter Senate race in Massachusetts on Tuesday, dealing a stunning blow to President Barack Obama’s legislative agenda and casting doubt on the fate of his sweeping healthcare overhaul.
#7
MLK
16 Hours
NEW
2
Today is Dr. MLK Jr’s actual birthday. He was a civil rights pioneer, Morehouse College Alum, & member of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, Inc.
#8
Martin Luther King
17 Hours
NEW
2
On Jan. 18th, 2010 the U.S. is celebrating Martin Luther King Jr. Day, a national holiday in honour of the famous civil rights pioneer. President Barack Obama has given a special address to mark the occasion.
#9
Jersey Shore
17 Hours
1
Reality show on MTV about 8 Italian youths enjoying life and living it up on the Jersey Shore. Season finale is tonight at 10PM Eastern. Reruns are currently on.
#10
Golden Globes
16 Hours
NEW
2
The 67th annual Golden Globe Awards was broadcast live on Sunday Jan. 17, on NBC. People are/were tweeting about the award winners and host, Rickey Gervais.
What the ####: Google’s Nexus One Censors Your Curse Words

What the ####: Google’s Nexus One Censors Your Curse Words

t appears that the Nexus One’s speech-to-text function performs the digital equivalent of washing your mouth out with soap.

Reuters discovered that the innovative voice recognition feature converts swear words into a string of # symbols when rendered into text.

Why the censorship? A spokesperson from Google says the “feature” is less about sanitizing users’ speech and more about making sure curse words don’t accidentally appear in transcriptions erroneously, a real possibility given the early and not always accurate state of voice recognition technology.

“We filter potentially offensive or inappropriate results because we want to avoid situations whereby we might misrecognize a spoken query and return profanity when, in fact, the user said something completely innocent,” the statement said.

Fair enough. Although that seems to imply that one day, when the technology improves, Nexus One users may see their right to be foul-mouthed returned. One can only ###ing hope.

Google Wave Opens Up to 1 Million Users

Google Wave Opens Up to 1 Million Users

When Google asked what you liked and disliked about their new real-time communication application, you unquestionably said that you wanted more invites to share with friends and family. Problem solved.

Today, Google decided to play Santa with Wave invites. It has just doled out significantly more invites to existing users.

In conjunction with the invite rollout, Google is also hinting that they’ll soon reach the one million user mark. The title of their post suggestively indicates that “a million stamps” have been licked, which we take to mean that they’ve now opened up Google Wave to a million users.

While invites may be more readily available, be forewarned: Google is still not ready to graduate the service from preview phase to beta stage. Still, we’re excited that more of you can get in on the shared experience that is Google Wave.

Google Launches Chrome for Mac

Google Launches Chrome for Mac

The day has finally come. As we were expecting, Google has just released Chrome for Mac, which can now be downloaded by Mac OS X 10.5 or later users.

If you’re anything like us, you’ve been anxiously awaiting the chance to get your hands on the new browser since last year’s release of the Windows version.

Of course, Google Chrome for Mac is just a beta release, and, as we’ve previously reported, you won’t be able to use applications like Gmail that run on Google Gears, but you can take advantage of other Chrome improvements such as speed and Google search right from the address bar.

Here’s a video demo that Google has released:

After you install Chrome on your Mac, you can optionally import your Safari or Firefox settings, which means your bookmarks and certain preferences can carry over from your existing favorite browser. Given that Google Chrome Extensions should launch any day, you might not even have to live without your favorite add-ons for very long (though at this time extensions are not available for the Mac version).

We’ve just installed it for ourselves, and after taking it out for a test drive, our first impressions are that this thing is slick. While we compile our notes, let us know what you think of Google Chrome for Mac in the comments.

Manage Successful Social Media Promotions

Manage Successful Social Media Promotions

With holiday shopping in full swing, social shopping is already making a big impact. Data from Hitwise shows that downstream traffic to the Retail 500 coming from both Facebook and Twitter increased 36% and 15% respectively on Thanksgiving from the previous day. Downstream traffic to retailers grew again on Black Friday and Cyber Monday as many retailers promoted sales through fan pages and tweets.

This data is very encouraging for marketers, but a social media campaign must still be managed correctly for maximum ROI. Here are some tips on how brands can best engage their customers by offering what everyone now looks to social media for – a bargain.

New Strategies to Turn Buzz Into Buy

Other recent research confirms the fact that people are increasingly turning to social networks to get deals on products and services. Razorfish found that the primary drivers of “friending” or “following” a brand were promotions and discounts. Over one-third of social network users and 44 percent of Twitter users engaged with a brand through discount promotions. This is good news for marketers, but the stats also pose challenges to the way marketing programs and advertising budgets will be structured in the future.

Brands have long spent big money on commercials, media placements, direct mail, and more. With most of these methods, there is little way to measure the impact on your bottom line. You either get lucky with a surge in sales after your campaign, or it didn’t work. Either way, success or failure was impossible to measure.

If done right, social marketing is a fantastic way to get the best of all worlds from a campaign – wide-scale and targeted distribution of your offer, for free. But to get it right, marketers have to step lightly. If you’re too pushy with too many promotions, your followers will feel “marketed at” or “spammed.” If you don’t offer good enough deals, your customers may become frustrated and stop following you. After all, they don’t really want to be your friend. They want bargains. Here are some steps for getting social media promotions right.

1. What Are People Saying About Your Brand?

Find out what people are saying about your brand, why they are saying it, and who they are saying it to. You have to do more than just get a vague reading on brand buzz. Track the actual pass-along of your brand’s social content via tweets, blog posts, Facebook postings, etc. to see which content is driving the most sharing on which sites. You can use social media traffic tracking software to do this.

Tracking this word-of-mouth buzz is crucial to formulating the right marketing messages and promotions. You must deliver relevant social deals that resonate with people’s interests.

2. Create a Social Promotion

Once you figure out what people want using the tracking methods above, go ahead and give it to them. For example, you might find that everyone loved your last 20% promotion – it was shared to hundreds of thousands of people via social sites and email – but that the most frequent negative comment was that shipping costs were too high. In your next promotion, offer free shipping.

Or, you may find that there was a huge surge in Twitter searches, blog comments, and Facebook updates about your brand’s winter boots during a snowstorm. This is a great opportunity to immediately put out a social promotion for 20% off boot purchases for one day only via Twitter, Facebook, and/or your company blog.

Have fun with your social promotions. Unlike paid search ads and other media buys, you don’t have to plan and budget for them. Instead, just try one or two out and see what happens.

3. Did It Work?

Figure out whether your promotion worked, and what bottom line impact it had on sales and profits. Go back to your social media tracking and measurement tool and find out how much your promotion was shared, what increase it caused in traffic to your website, and what direct impact it had on conversion. You might want to compare two different promotions run during a similar time frame to see which worked better and why.

For example, did a 50% Off promotion drive more sharing, visits, or conversions than a Two-For-One? In addition to doing simple “A/B” tests, compare results for promotions like these against the data from your regular marketing analytics platform to see whether your social media promotions are performing better or worse than traditional paid marketing campaigns. Social promotions almost always perform better than paid media ads in terms of conversion, but paid ads may drive a higher volume of traffic to your site.

Lastly, do an ROI analysis of your social media promotions to find out their real impact on bottom line profits.

Conclusion

Social media promotions are here to stay. Make sure you use the social channel to deliver “exclusive” deals that make your friends and followers feel special. They’ll thank you by making purchases.

What social media tools do you use to increase sales and measure your brand’s reach? Please share them in the comments below.

Microsoft Launches its own Twitter in China

Microsoft Launches its own Twitter in China

Microsoft has decided to capitalize on the popularity of Windows Live Messenger in China, launching a new service called MSN Juku, which they call a “local innovation developed by MSN China.”

The service, however, is a lot like Twitter: It lets users connect with their other Live Messenger contacts and post 140-character messages. There’re a couple of important visual differences between this service and Twitter; old messages scroll to the right, for example, just like in another Twitter clone, Plurk. But it’s still a microblogging service, and one local media report actually called it a knock-off of Plurk, which is also quite popular in Asia.

Juku, which is currently in beta, brings several other innovations to the table; it lets users play games and win prizes, something that sounds like science fiction when it comes to the traditionally feature-shy Twitter. However, at this point, Microsoft hasn’t announced any plans to internationalize the service and perhaps position it as a direct competitor to Twitter.