Forrester: évolution des comportements sociaux

Le dernier rapport de Forrester : « A Global Update Of Social Technographics» qui se fonde sur les réponses de plus de 275 000 consommateurs en Asie Pacifique, Europe et Amérique du Nord, constitue un état des lieux de l’adoption des technologies sociales.

La participation croissante aux réseaux sociaux est l’une des principales tendances de cet état des lieux. L’Europe, en particulier, a connu une croissance a deux chiffres dans ce domaine, soit une augmentation de  11%, comparable à l’Australie (11%) et loin derrière la Chine (18%). L’Amérique du Nord a quant à elle connu une croissance de 8% seulement. 66% des adultes français sont aujourd’hui impliqués dans des activités online, contre 61% en 2009 et 58% in 2008.

En revanche, entre 2009 et 2010, aucun marché n’a progressé si l’on observe la proportion des internautes ayant créé du contenu social ; l’Europe se maintenant par exemple autour de 15%.

Selon Jacqueline Anderson, « La faible croissance des créations sociales se traduit par un manque d’idées fraiches, de contenu et de perspective ». « Par exemple, un tiers des consommateurs nord-américains regardent régulièrement des vidéos générées par des utilisateurs sur des sites comme YouTube. Mais seulement 10% d’entre eux téléchargent des vidéos qu’ils ont eux-mêmes créées. Les spécificités requises pour créer du contenu social sont uniques et, pour l’instant, le nombre de consommateurs intéressés par ces comportements a atteint un pallier. »

Focus France

  • Au niveau national, la France a connu une croissance significative des individus adhérant à un réseau social ou y entretenant leur profil : de 25% en 2009 à 40% en 2010.
  • Mais les consommateurs français sont moins enclins à créer du contenu social : environ 11% des adultes français sont des « Créateurs » de contenus sociaux, c’est-à-dire qu’ils ont posté un billet sur un blog, mis à jour une page web, ou téléchargé une vidéo qu’ils ont créé.
  • Ils sont toutefois 19% a pouvoir être classés parmi les « Critiques » : ils commentent les billets de bloggeurs ou publient des avis sur des sites d’eCommerce.
  • Environ 22% des Français sont des « Collectionneurs », abonnés aux flux RSS ou faisant usage des aggrégateurs du type wikio.
  • 28% des consommateurs français entrent dans la catégorie nouvellement créée des « participants aux Conversations » (Conversationalists), autrement dit les personnes qui utilisent Twitter ou mettent à jour leur statut sur leur réseau social au moins une fois par semaine.
  • Enfin, les « Spectateurs », qui se content de lire les tweets, billets ou commentaires d’autres internautes sont 52%, représentant le groupe le plus important en France.

Posted by Jose P. 

Volkswagen Plants Audio Ad in Print Newspaper


Readers of The Times of India heard an audio advertisement when they unfolded the print edition of the newspaper this morning. (You read that right.)

Volkswagen paid the publication to fit an audio chip inside the pages (above) that plays in an endless loop until you close the paper, according to tech blog Digital Inspiration. For power, the chip appears to incorporate a photodiode, a photo detector that converts light into current or voltage. That’s pretty clever.

Not a believer? Check out the video below showing the audio ad in action.

It’s clearly a publicity stunt on VW’s part, and it seems kind of creepy, but most readers are reacting positively to the ad on Twitter. And we’re sure The Times is enjoying the extra cash from the eccentric ad, like any print publication would these days.

“One of those rare days when ppl in #mumbai will buy times of india to see (also hear) the Volkswagen advertisement and not for news,” tweeted Moulin Parikh.

Posted by Jose P. 

China, India Offer Marketers Opportunities for Scalable Ideas

How many campaigns can you think of which have the potential to reach 384 million consumers? Every digital campaign in China has that potential. A recent campaign that tapped effectively into this market was the Experience New Zealand Right Now campaign, which rolled out in April 2010. Tourism New Zealand teamed up with filmmaker Lu Chuan and celebrity blogger Hung Huang to promote New Zealand to Chinese travelers. Capitalizing on the star power of these big names, Tourism New Zealand rolled out mini video travelogues showing great experiences these stars had in New Zealand. The content was shared on a range of media platforms including social-media sites like Kaixin.com, video-sharing sites like Tudou.com, blogs, online communities, and Tourism New Zealand's Chinese-language website.

It was the simplest idea: real-life stories of great experiences at a holiday destination. But it fulfilled a criterion that is key in Asia: does the idea scale?

There were three simple consumer insights that made this idea scale. First, celebrities have enormous credibility in China, and their opinions and insights are highly valued. Second, the Chinese consumer is digitally very well-connected and loves to share content. Third, everyone loves a good story! These consumer insights were gleaned not through mind-blowing genius, but through plain and simple sensitivity. Asian creativity relies on ideas which leverage on simple consumer insight and create a buzz among the people.

Asia's other enormous market, India, is also a place where scalable ideas spread like fire. A typical example is Gillette's Shave India Movement. This initiative started in 2008 under the mantle of "To Shave Or Not To Shave?" The public debated the merits of stubble versus the clean-shaven look. Last year, the movement took a new avatar as "Women Against Lazy Stubble," in which women who preferred the clean-shaven look created a movement persuading men to shave.

The Shave India Movement recognized the fact that Indians love to debate. By tying up with major media channels such as The Times of India, Gillette created a conduit for the average Indian to voice opinions on a personal issue. Cricket players and Bollywood stars, as celebrities with fanatical followings, were roped into the debate. The world's largest public shave took place in Mumbai in December 2009, and close to 2,000 men took part. Most importantly, Gillette, a brand with good awareness and respectability but lacking the oomph factor, finally exploded onto the Indian consciousness. It was reflected in a 38% increase in sales and a 35% increase in market share.

In a country where a multitude of citizens debate cricket, politics and movies at roadside chaat stalls and thattukadas, getting people to argue passionately about an issue is never a problem. But it required sensitive consumer insight to uncover these basic truths about the Indian consumer and create an idea that scaled.

In these respects, Asia is significantly different from mature markets like Western Europe or North America. In these markets, digital technology is often ahead of other regions, and the consumer engages with the online medium at a deeper level. Ideas that "wow" you and break through the clutter in a big way are more successful here. This could explain why European agencies like AMV BBDO and Jung von Matt outscore Asian agencies in sheer number of creative awards. Even in the Asia-Pacific region, the markets that win a disproportionate number of awards are Australia and New Zealand, both mature markets not very different from Western Europe and North America.

A typical example of good creativity in a developed market is Jung von Matt's Sounds of Hamburg campaign for the Hamburg Philharmonic Orchestra. CCTV cameras were installed at landmarks in the city to stream live videos to a site, and every user of the site could create a unique symphony for these videos. The user selected objects in the video and dragged-and-dropped musical instruments onto these objects. Every movement of the selected objects was algorithmically converted into a musical score, creating unique sounds representing everyday scenes in Hamburg. While a success in Germany, such an idea is unlikely to scale in Asia, where classical music is very much a niche pursuit. Campaigns that rely on innovation and novelty find their ideal home in developed markets.

In Asia, the marketer with the sensitivity and insight to reach this large population with scalable ideas will be the marketer who scores.

Posted by Jose P. 

How To Replace A Social Media Super Star

Yesterday's NY Times featured a cover story about an increasingly common problem of turnover that many Broadway musical productions are facing. As more and more of these shows feature recognizable star actors as headliners like The Producers with Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick, they run into the inevitable problem of trying to keep the production going without the stars who have become "irreplaceable" in their roles.

Some shows manage to keep up the buzz by replacing one star with another, while others fail because the show was too closely bonded with the actors who brought it to life. I started thinking about this distinction because it is a challenge that keeps many organizations awake at night when considering their efforts in social media as well.

To use social media effectively, you often need to foster the individual talents of employees who have a natural ability to use these tools and may be actively using them in their own personal lives. These are the individuals who frequently start social media innovation within the companies where they work. So what happens when they leave?

Having seen this happen at several organizations, there are a few case studies that I would point to as demonstrating the 3 different ways that companies can deal with this situation of having a vocal and public social media figure leaving their organization for any reason.

  1. The Handover - This is the ideal case where the branded efforts on behalf of the company can be handed over to another individual within the company. It is how Boeing chose to deal with popular CMO blogger Randy Baseler retiring when he handed over his blog called Randy's Journal to the new CMO, Randy Tinseth (who also incidentally happened to be named Randy). A more recent example is how Comcast has continued the @comcastcares http://twitter.com/comcastcares Twitter handle with a new voice behind it (Bill Gerth) because the original creator, my friend Frank Eliason, has moved on to a new job working with Citibank.
  2. The Farewell - A technique most commonly seen in the world of media is simply shutting down a blog when a popular blogger leaves an organization for any reason. There have been numerous journalists who chose (or were compelled to) shut down their blogs when they left the organization they wrote for. On the corporate side, the most recognizable example is likely how Jonathan Schwartz, CEO of Sun, wrote a farewell post and shut down his personal blog when Sun was acquired by Oracle. 
  3. The Springboard - The less common alternative that I have not seen as frequently is a third option that involves taking inspiration from the individual who is leaving, but to continue their work through a related but separate initiative. This could mean starting a new blog to take over for a popular older one, or rebranding or changing an existing blog to evolve to the next level after the original author departs.

Each of these are valid ways to deal with the challenge of having a social media super star leave your organization. More importantly, don't let a fear of this situation keep you from embracing the emerging stars and "accidental spokespeople" within your organization who have a genuine passion and desire to share their insights with the world. They can be one of your best assets - and it's not the end of the world in case they do eventually decide to leave.

Posted by Jose P. 

Le réseau social détermine aussi la portée d'une information

La structure d'une plate-forme collaborative influence directement la manière dont son contenu est divulgué. D'où la nécessité pour les marketeurs de maîtriser cet aspect pour optimiser la diffusion de leur message.

Réseau social

La structure d'un réseau social détermine en grande partie les dynamiques des flux d'information", expliquent deux chercheurs de l'université de Californie du sud dans une étude comparative de Digg et Twitter. Prendre en compte ces différences structurelles permet d'optimiser la diffusion d'une information, selon eux. "Une information atteint plus rapidement les membres du réseau Digg, qui est plus dense que Twitter. Mais sur ce dernier elle se propage plus largement", précisent-ils. "De fait, les internautes présents sur Digg sont généralement plus technophiles", explique à L'Atelier Gregory Pouy, directeur de la stratégie de contact chez Nurun. "Twitter compte beaucoup plus de leaders d'opinions, ce qui permet au message de sortir du microcosme que représente le réseau social", ajoute-t-il.

 

Prendre en compte la structure du réseau avant de lancer une opération marketing

 

Ainsi, le potentiel de Twitter est beaucoup plus fort, selon le spécialiste. En ce qui concerne Digg, les chercheurs insistent dans leur étude sur la densité et l'interconnectivité de la plate-forme. L'un des avantages étant qu'une information demeure accessible plus longtemps que sur le site de gazouillis. "D'une certaine façon, Digg historise" confirme le consultant. "Twitter fonctionne sur un système de flux qui se réactualise sans cesse. Quand Digg apporte une profondeur qui peut s'avérer intéressante" ajoute-t-il. Prendre en compte la différence de structure des réseaux sociaux s'avère ainsi crucial pour mener à bien une opération de marketing. "Mais ce qui compte avant tout, c'est la question de la cible"précise le consultant.

 

La structure importe, mais aussi et surtout la cible correspondante

 

"La structure importe, mais ce sont les usages qui sont faits de ces médias sociaux qui sont surtout déterminants" poursuit-il. Selon lui, il ne faut pas adapter le message au réseau social mais à la cible à laquelle il correspond. Par ailleurs, la plate-forme choisie détermine le type de communication. Comme le suggère l'étude, et comme le confirme Gregory Pouy. Twitter permet de créer du relationnel avec le consommateur, quand Digg se prête plus à l'exposition de la marque ou au référencement naturel, par exemple. "Il faut néanmoins avoir à l'esprit que tout n'est pas imperméable, et que les informations qui circulent sur Twitter se retrouvent la plupart du temps sur Digg, et vice versa" conclut le spécialiste.

 
 

 

Posted by Jose P. 

Le premier «.com» célèbre son 25e anniversaire

Il y a exactement 25 ans, le manufacturier informatique Symbolics inc. enregistrait le premier nom de domaine «.com»: symbolics.com.

Il ne faut pas comparer ce premier site aux standards actuels mais la glace était brisée.

L'entreprise en elle-même - aujourd'hui disparue - n'est pas passée à l'histoire mais ce que l'on retient, c'est tout l'effet d'entraînement que cela a engendré. En 1997, un million de noms de domaines furent enregistrés. Trois ans plus tard, la bulle .com éclata, avec des répercussions à l'échelle mondiale.

Si ce crash de l'économie «virtuelle» a prouvé hors de tout doute qu'un nom d'entreprise bien choisi n'est pas nécessairement gage de succès, les .com jouent encore un rôle très important dans notre vie en ligne. Ce nom de domaine est encore celui qui représente le plus le World Wide Web aux yeux des gens.

Encore aujourd'hui, environ 668 000 sites sont enregistrés sous .com par mois! Ce qui représente un bond que l'on peut qualifier d'important si on compare ce chiffre aux six noms de domaines enregistrés en 1985.

Un site web a été ouvert pour célébrer les 25 années du .com.

Joyeux anniversaire!

Filed under  //  Nom de Domaine  
Posted by Jose P. 

Twitter @anywhere

Le CEO de Twitter Evan Williams vient d’annoncer à la SXSW que le service de microblogging vient de franchir un nouveau dans son approche de convergence / intégration au sein d’autres plateformes en lançant @anywhere (Les sites web tierces pourront ainsi être en mesure de pluguer des fonctionnalités basiques de Twitter sans avoir à renvoyer leurs utilisateurs sur le service de microblogging).

Lorsque vous visitez un site web qui supporte @anywhere, vous serez en mesure de devenir “follower” n’importe quel compte associé au site sans avoir à vous rendre sur Twitter.com ou encore de partager une vidéo YouTube sans avoir même à quitter la page ou arrêter son visionnage

Et ce n’est que “le début” affirme Evan Williams qui prévoit plus de fonctionnalités par la suite du lancement durant lequel sont associés des partenaires comme Amazon, AdAge, Bing, Citysearch, Digg, eBay, The Huffington Post, Meebo, MSNBC.com ou encore The New York Times, Salesforce.com, Yahoo, et YouTube.

Plus d’infos sur le compte Twitter dédié @anywhere

Filed under  //  Twitter  
Posted by Jose P. 

[F4YB] WSJ: Facebook Revenues For 2010 Could Hit Between $1.2 To $2 Billion

by Jason Kincaid on Mar 3, 2010

Image001
Late last year, we published a list of the top 10 IPO candidates of 2010.  Leading that list was Facebook, which has grown to 400 million users and is finally starting to turn on the revenue pumps as it works toward its inevitable IPO. But this evening, the Wall Street Journal published an article
Image002
 penned by Jessica Vascellaro that may dash the hopes of anyone who thinks that will happen in the immediate future. The lengthy piece, which is well worth reading in its entirety, touches on quite a few issues related to Facebook’s history and its future, and largely revolves around CEO Mark Zuckerberg — who doesn’t sound all that keen to take his company public.

While the article covers a lot of familiar territory about Facebook’s past, there’s plenty of new information too. Of note, the article says that Facebook executives have “discussed how revenues for 2010 could hit between $1.2 to $2 billion” — figures that exceed even the $1.1 billion InsideFacebook’s Eric Eldon reported

 yesterday (clearly, the number is looking big). The article also asserts that Facebook is working on a tool for sharing your physical location with Facebook (something that we’ve been hearing about for quite a while, and that I believe will be key in the future).

With regard to Facebook’s IPO, the article discusses Zuckerberg’s penchant for “delayed gratification”, which he says he has a special capacity for.  And because Zuckerberg still maintains firm control over the company, and when it will IPO, delayed gratification seems to be the law of the land.

There are also a handful of interesting anecdotes about Zuckerberg. According to the article, a Facebook engineer once wrote an internal memo called “Working With Zuck”, in which he warned other employees not to hope for much in the way of back-patting from their CEO, explaining they should not “expect acknowledgment for your role in moving the discussion forward; getting the product right should be its own reward.”

Posted by arthurkannas 

[F4YB] Apple vs Google? Apple vs Amazon!

In Case You Were Wondering How Amazon and Apple Felt About Each Other [Apple]

 

8 people liked this

Amazon MP3 Store has a promotion called Daily Deal, where they prominently highlight an album that'll rake in sales for cheap—in exchange, labels have been giving them a one-day exclusive before the street date. Surprise, iTunes got pissed.

For example, Amazon sold Mariah Carey's "Memoirs of an Imperfect Angel" for $6 and Vampire Weekend's "Contra" for $4, both a day before the street date in a Daily Deal promo. So, after telling labels it wasn't the wisest move to give Amazon any kind of exclusive window over iTunes, iTunes has apparently been pulling marketing support for music featured in Amazon's Daily Deals. Acording to Billboard, record labels Capitol and Jive backed out of Amazon Daily Deal promos they were considering for artists like Ke$ha, and Hollywood Records turned down Amazon's offer entirely to do a Daily Deal on Nick Jonas' new album, as result.

Amazon and Apple have been fighting it out over music for years—Amazon beat iTunes to being DRM-free, largely because labels feared iTunes' massive influence over the industry, given the iPod's 70 percent marketshare. So, they hoped to build up a credible threat in Amazon (which is why it's not entirely surprising to see them still give Amazon some favorable treatment, since it's essentially the MP3 store the labels built). Now with books in the content mix, it's even more tense. Though when it comes to publishing, the shoe's on the other foot: The publishers are flocking to Apple because they're afraid of Amazon, who commands between 80 and 90 percent of the ebook market.

Admittedly, part of the reason I hope Amazon eventually does buy Netflix is to make the fight over content even bloodier, like a proper gladiatorial deathmatch. [Billboard via Techmeme]

Posted by arthurkannas 

Twitter Speeding Towards 10 Billion Tweets

About one year ago Twitter reached a huge milestone: one billion tweets. Four months ago, 5 billion tweets were served. And now, in about one day, Twitter should reach another very important milestone: 10 billion tweets.

Notice the trend? Although Twitter has been somewhat struggling with traffic (compared to its earlier immense growth) in the last couple of months, it still managed to go from five to ten billion tweets in four months; quite a remarkable achievement.

Counting tweets is actually quite easy: just look at the URL of any tweet. The number at the end of the URL seems to be the number of that tweet, and at this moment the number of one of the latest tweets is 9917803012. If this seems like a long way to go before we reach one billion, check out this counter. Yup, we’re getting there fast.

The five billionth (now deleted) tweet was a simple “Oh lord,” written by Robin Sloan. I wonder what the ten billionth tweet will say?

Posted by Jose P.