Wednesday
03Feb2010

Social Search: Modeling the user as a content generator....

Social search engine Aardvark just published a very interesting white paper: "Then Anatomy of a Large-Scale Social Search Engine".  

I found this a fascinating read.  It expresses search as a social "village" model as opposed to the keyword driven "Library" model. We have all been trained to think in keywords for search, but there are many questions that just don't fit in a few keywords. The combination of natural language nuance plus contextually relevant people to answer your question is a powerful proposition.   

Of course this type of social search happens all the time.  We often join or create sub-networks with a particular interest area so that we can scope our natural language queries to the right audience.  If you are a parent in Berkeley you might join Berkeley Parents Network; if you are a cyclist, Road Bike Review; a foodie, Nourish Network and so on.  We then adjust our question to the relevant network, group, or sub-set of friends.  Or you just blast it out to all your followers,  friends and connections.  The promise of social search is to make this process much more efficient.  Does it work?  According to Aardvark:

  • 87.7% of questions sent to Aardvark got answered (very high answer rate!)
  • 75.0% of users who asked Aardvark a question also answered a question for someone else (very high participation rate!)
  • 70.4% of answer feedback had a rating of ‘good’ as opposed to ‘ok’ or ‘bad’ (high quality!)

What kind of questions do people ask:

The concept of modeling users as content generators really struck a cord.  Socialarc uses a lot of database modeling and parsing techniques to accurately identify what targets are most likely to be receptive to an outreach message.  Making sure the "offer" is contextually relevant (and value-add) to the audience is a key to a successful social media campaign.  Aardvark, and other social search engines, take that much further - to the level of the individual question and user.

You can read a summary on their blog and download the paper white paper here.  And we added a poll question on the side - tell us how you would find the latest cool local restaurant!

 

Monday
30Nov2009

What’s going on in the lab…

By Aaron Mann

It has been a busy November at socialarc, so here are some quick updates.  This seems somehow appropriate on cyber-Monday!

Among a lot of great campaigns we are working on, here are two that are holiday-focused to help with your gift-giving this season:

We were very busy on Black Friday doing Just-in-Time℠  Twitter outreach for the Visa Holiday Deals site, part of a much larger campaign covering both US and Canada:

 

Make sure to take the Quiz – shareable and very funny!

We are also working on the Claire’s Secret Santa Circle campaign, especially great for the teen girls in your family!

  

 

We’ve been doing listening deep dives for Bosch, Grant’s Distilleries (Glenfiddich, Hendrick’s, etc.) and Fosters.  And we have done some interesting top-level “issues” work, which is always a great learning experience.

Finally, we have been doing a lot of testing (aka playing) with new tools as well.  Google Wave, Klout, social bookmarking, Netvibes Wasabi, Video Distribution tools (many), and some new listening technologies too. 

Getting a chance to work with great clients and constantly use new tools makes life at socialarc very exciting! 

Saturday
31Oct2009

Twitter Lists, a brief guide...

By Evan Woods

Twitter's new list function has been in beta for a few weeks, and yesterday Twitter made it available to all users. So what are lists?

Lists are a really interesting new way to organize people you like and to get other people to notice you (like everything on twitter). You can see people’s lists that they give titles too, and when you click on these lists you see the members who are part of that list and their tweets.  In  this way, a list is sort of like a microcosm in which only the people on the list can tweet (these are the only ones seen). You can view lists on another users homepage or also on your home page.  Following someone’s list does not mean you follow them, or the people in the list. 

Everyone also has a “listed” count on their twitter home page (as seen above), showing how many people on twitter have listed them. This is essentially very similar to followers: the more people who list you, the more popular you are/the more you are liked. The goal is to have interesting lists, get listed as much as possible, and subscribe to lists that share your interests.

You can also look at other people’s lists to follow people of a similar category.  Here is what a list looks like on someone’s page:

 

Check out Listorious for a growing directory of Lists.


Thursday
15Oct2009

Homedics launches Restore – water, the way it should be.

By Aaron Mann

My hydration arsenal is extensive – a 1-liter Nalgene bottle I refill two or three times a day; 36 ounces of water bottles on the bike; various camelbacks for hiking/climbing; and coffee (98% water).  I drink a lot of water.

Up till now, I used tap water.  Our water in the Bay Area is generally quite drinkable, a big contrast to my time in southern California where even the plants want filtered water.  I don’t buy bottled water because it is both expensive and the bottles are hard on the environment. 

Homedics just launched Restore, a new state-of-the art and innovative in-home water purification system that combines filtration and UV Clean Technology.

Socialarc is thrilled to be helping them on this launch.  Restore rocks and here are some recent reviews:

mommygoggles.com

sweetiesswag.com

thegreenhead.com

Maybe the best endorsement I heard came from a friend who is a civil environmental engineer.  She has worked on recycled water for the last 20 years and said the plants keep adding more chlorine or longer UV exposure to compensate for the aging infrastructure from plant to tap. She hasn't used other water filters because “they only filter for taste and solids, not removal of anything harmful enough that would cause me any concern”. She loved this “plant in a pitcher” and wanted one.  One Christmas gift checked off the list!

Restore is California certified for microbiological water purification, a first for a water pitcher utilizing UV technology and is Gold Seal Certified to National Sanitation Foundation standards by the Water Quality Association.   

To summarize:

Pros:

Great tasting water

Easy to use

My Nalgene bottle stays a lot cleaner (no more of that fuzzy stuff building up every single week)

My 5-year old loves the colorful UV light.

Cons:

For years I used the coffee carafe to fill my coffee maker.  Now I use the Restore pitcher.  Meaning about 75% of the time I forget to empty the carafe and get a horrible mix of old and new coffee.  I’ll work this out in another couple of years.

Find out more here:  http://homedics.com/restore

Tuesday
13Oct2009

Privacy Versus Transparency: the New Rules of Social Media

By: Niland Mortimer

The recent flap over some M.I.T. students developing a methodology using Facebook data to predict whether a person is gay raises many issues about how we protect our privacy and the true relevance of this online discovery.

I remember when The Wall Street Journal published Jeffrey Zaslow's November 2002 article "If TiVo Thinks You're Gay...." many saw this as a gross invasion of privacy and the end of home DVR systems.  All it became was a joke.

The sorry aspect of these stories is that we live in a world where sexual orientation is something many want to hide.  It's telling that the M.I.T. students didn't, for example, develop a model that by investigating a person's friends they could predict the likelihood of that person being a vegetarian or a dog lover or a Mets fan.  "Gaydar" has an immediate draw for the media, hence the widespread publicity.

But personal privacy is a concern that everyone should take seriously by making a decision what to reveal or not, and to whom.  On Facebook, it's perfectly easy to limit the information you provide: you can select what to share and with whom to share it--friends, friends of friends, everyone.  Allfacebook.com has a great rundown of the privacy options on Facebook.

Everyone should be conscious of their choices and fully aware of the open sea of social media into which they're wading.  While It would appear that young people are less troubled with privacy concerns, I recall my son telling me when he was in 10th grade that he and his friends frequently warned each other about what content they put on their Facebook pages knowing that college admissisons departments looked at them.

That being said, the rules that apply to brands and businesses are very different.  Best practice for business is to be open and transparent in all online engagements.  This is can be a hard shift from the days where information flow was highly controlled; a one-way series of press releases and advertisements.  But it is a new mindset that is essential to adopt, and required in today's environment.  At Socialarc we manage our online conversations with objectivity and full disclosure, ensuring that our clients' goals and authentic voice are respected.

Be honest, be true, be aware.  But also be purposeful with the information you put out for all to see. Bill Bernbach once observed that great advertising helps a bad product fail faster.  With social media, this maxim holds true at light speed.  Walmart learned this the hard way with their MySpace-like offering aimed at teens that failed in less than three months due to over-control and lack of authenticity.

The rules of caution and transparency apply to social media marketing, too.  Consumers understand and accept marketing messages.  They reject marketing messages that pose as something else.  Connections should be clear and aims out in the open.  Then it's win-win-win for all involved.