Posts Tagged ‘social networks’

4
Nov

Mashable/Socialised Radio? Is this the future of the medium?

   Posted by: Michael Carney    in radio

You may have noticed that radio — the good old-fashioned AM/FM type, not the fancy digital or satellite offerings — has been having a rough old time of it since the invention of the iPod by Al Gore.

Seems that those pesky consumers have preferred roll-your-own music to that pre-digested by programmers in Milwaukee or Boston or Dublin (or wherever).

Now comes the news that Listener Driven Radio, LDR — crowdsourced radio, to give it a sexy Web 2.0 label — is the Next Big Thing.

According to “Inside Radio”, Citadel Media is now making the LDR service available in the US:

Launched in July [2009] in the U.K. , France and Australia , the software enables listeners to impact playlists, request songs and upload or vote for new music through radio station websites, smartphones and social networks. You Pick The Next Song, for example, lets listeners choose from three songs based on clocks and rules set by the station’s PD.  Housed in a widget on a station’s website, the system collects audience feedback and integrates it into the station’s music scheduling and automation systems. Stations can go as far as turning an entire daypart or weekend over to listeners, within specific parameters.

“Radio has been scratching its head about how to embrace and make money from social networking,” says Citadel Media senior VP of programming and distribution Carl Anderson. “With this, programmers can keep their hands on the wheel as much as they want, while endearing their stations to listeners in a whole new way with constant interaction and research to program the station together.”

Listeners can paste the widget into their own site, blog or social networking page. McVay New Media president Daniel Anstandig, who developed the system, says it was built to influence P1 listener TSL and loyalty and allows stations to evolve from broadcasting to crowdcasting.  “It gives the keys to your car to more P1s and gives them the opportunity to shape your programming, while giving programmers more real-time feedback.”

Clearly the breathless writer of the press release had never heard of radio request programs, made possible by that dazzling technological wonder, the te-le-ph-one — in operation ever since, oh, the dawn of radio in the 1920s.

Now we’re trading telephone and email for widgets and apps. How thoroughly modern.

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21
Oct

Social Media Insights from Universal McCann Global Research

   Posted by: Michael Carney    in social

Universal McCann’s annual social media tracker Wave has mapped key changes in consumer uptake and usage of social media platforms for the past four years. Wave 4, released recently, reveals dramatic changes in the way that consumers are using the internet to create and share their thoughts, pictures and videos.

The Universal McCann (UM) research study reveals that globally social networks are becoming the dominant platform for content creation and content sharing.

After four surveys of active internet users—those who use the internet every day or every other day—showing impressive growth for all types of social media, consumers are starting to focus their digital life around the likes of Facebook, MySpace and Orkut.

It’s not that consumers are cutting back on blogging or sharing images it’s just that they are increasingly opting to do it via their social network page rather than the likes of Flickr and Blogger.

76% of social network users, for example, upload photos, up from 45% in Wave 3, and 33% upload videos compared to 16.9% last time around.

The heavy and varied usage of social networks has proven that these sites are no fad. Not only have 96% of social networkers visited a friends’ social network page but nearly two-thirds of all active internet users have spent time managing their own profile.

Another key change to note has been the expansion of video usage, with significant increases both in the number of social networkers and bloggers uploading video but also in terms of the number of the active internet users watching audio-visual content.

Key statistics from the report:

  • The total estimated global active internet audience is now 625 million people
  • Mobile internet usage has now reached nearly a fifth of all active internet users. Seventeen percent now access internet on the move as well as at home, work or college
  • Widgets continue to thrive with 34% of social network users installing them for their own use and 24% installing them to impress visitors to their profile page

Glen Parker, Research Director at UM EMEA, comments that “Social media is a very fast-evolving landscape and one that’s taking an increasingly important role in consumers’ digital lives. Brands that want to engage with consumers in these spaces need to understand how and where and why they are using the many different platforms that enable content creation and sharing.”

It’s All Going Social
UM concludes that every element of digital media is becoming socialised, providing marketers with new ways to engage a target audience like never before.

Wave 4 shows that social consumption of digital content is either already highly penetrated among active internet users or still growing rapidly. It also sheds new light on consumer motivations for social media behaviour. Through the research UM have observed that the desire to belong to something is as motivating as the desire to communicate and express one’s self.

UM believes that the engagement opportunities of social media are deeper than those of traditional mass media and that the power of social amplification is also much stronger.

The UM 10-step programme for successful social media marketing:

  1. Listen to/observe what the target audience is doing in social media
  2. Create a “social object” that is relevant to the brand and of genuine interest
  3. Segment the target into tribes. Give them something they can join.
  4. Allow them to engage via their preferred platform of choice—create multiple interfaces to your community
  5. Make the experience better when shared
  6. Optimise your content for sharing—particularly via newsfeeds and Twitter
  7. Use paid-for media to get the ball rolling
  8. Take advantage of extreme targeting offered by social networks
  9. Make sure you have the resources to manage your community management and refresh the content.
  10. Track the results and optimise where necessary


About Wave 4
UM questioned 22,729 active internet users in 38 countries between November 2008 and March 2009 for Wave 4.

Download the study here.

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