Last couple of days

Posted by Marshall Sponder on March 25, 2010 | Link It

It’s always busy when a show like Search Engine Strategies is in town thought it turned out I didn’t go to any of the sessions planned as the promised press pass never materialized (as it turned out, I was too busy to go to anything  this time – not having a press pass didn’t turn out to be a problem) and I got what I needed just talking to certain people at the exhibition hall (such as Eric from Compete.com and David Meerman Scott, Author of   World Wide Rave.

I got my free signed copy from David Meerman Scott, as I stumbled to the front of the line (without realizing it) and heard him mutter …. “I make 25,000 a day to give advice” …. and then I thought .. and said  aloud to him …. “Yah, and I wish I had that problem“.   Then again, maybe I don’t want that problem.

I heard his keynote was great but I missed it – so I looked at the book itself  World Wide Rave – while on my way to work and decided it was too much of a “feel good” / motivational message and I’m more of someone who likes to be shown details (he did show some) – but still, overall, the tone of the book didn’t really resound with me – so I decided to just put it on the shelf for now.

Yesterday I went back to SES to talk with Eric Austrew from Compete.com and got to see a preview of the new release that will be taking place on May 15th – I can’t talk much about it – he wanted to share what Compete was working on because the idea was originally mine (though I was not the only one who asked for this new feature – which will involve categorization).   I went out of my way to connect with Eric Austrew because i wanted to see what it was that he did with some of my ideas (we discussed the features that will be released in May over a year ago).

While there will be issues with categorization – Compete.com keeps getting better and better – and of course – I’m glad to help.

I also heard that some people wanted footage of my talk at Jeff Pulver’s 140 Meetup earlier this week (FourSquare was the featured speaker along with me) – I think it was recorded but I also had a friend shoot video which I’m thinking of  put up (though the sound is slightly out of sync with the video) and sharing here.

The main points I spoke about are below – besides agreeing with someone in the audience and Jeff Pulver that Social Media is boring and we need to  rename it.

I set up  Radian6 alerts set up on Havana Central that sends email status every 10 minutes  when anyone tweets or mentions the restaurant chain in any way.  Got and alert from a customer who was saying she was in the restaurant – via Twitter.  When I read my email alert from Radian6 I immediately realized the customer was in the restaurant at the very same moment we are.

The alert took place in real time – the customer and her friend were given free drinks and discounts – we used Social Media and Social Media Monitoring (via Radian6) to reward a customer who was having a great time – and we made that time better.

TWEET FROM: KIMBERLY819
Source: twitter.com, Posted on: Mar 01, 2010 9:36 PM by KIMBERLY819
Chillin with my girl Yesenia in the city!! Great restaurant Havana Central!! Great Live salsa band!! Oooooooowwwww!!!!
Following: 86 | Followers: 65 | Updates: 270 | Sentiment: Positive

TWEET FROM: KIMBERLY819
Name: KIMBERLY819 Posted on: Mar 1, 2010 1:07 AM
Followers: 66 Following: 87
What a GREAT night at Havana Central!!!! My new favorite spot!!
Link http://twitter.com/KIMBERLY819/statuses/9811482654

We gave Kimberly and her friend a free drink immediately – thanks to Radian6 -that sends us alerts frequently (with a picture of the tweeter when it’s available from a profile) we had no trouble finding her – she was right around the corner from the receptionists table as you enter the 46th Street Havana Central entrance.

THAT gesture was worth it in my opinion … look what the customer tweeted after the evening was over …..

You want Social Media ROI – you got ROI – a new loyal customer – perhaps a loyal customer for life – and you know what that is worth – a lot of money.

Read more: http://www.webmetricsguru.com/page/3/#ixzz0ijDzkfdF
Under Creative Commons LicenseAttribution

In fact, for tonight’s talk on the Analytics of Real Time Location data I decided to take a look at how often the Kimberly819 could happen and what it might mean to Havana Central if we could reward a customer when they are actually in the  restaurant and are either tweeting they are present or announcing to their friends on FourSquare they are in one of the 3 locations.
At least 20 times in the last month a customer tweeted they were in one of Havana Central’s locations:

For those customers who have linked their FourSquare accounts with Twitter and Facebook the numbers are even higher with about 5% of the total conversation recorded as having happened at one of the restaurants  – and I can swear the number is closer to 10% as we get 2 or 3 tweets a day from people who are announcing they are at one of Havana Central’s locations.
Suppose we go with the higher number (around 60 individuals a month say “I’m at Havana Central” in one slang way or another) and estimate the typical loyal customer will return a certain number of times and spend a certain amount in per visit – we can get a approximate ROI number.
I’m going to make an deduction the typical “rewarded customer” we find via Twitter, FourSquare and Facebook might spend $300-$500 a year at the restaurant in addition to anything else they might have spent there if they had not been rewarded.
That might end up meaning that reward customers with a drink or something could yield close to 30K a month in additional revenue – and over a year that could mean as much as 360K – just by making someone’s visit a little bit friendlier and better for them.
I believe  FourSquare is becoming a major factor in changing how business perceives  Social Media.  Recently FourSquare announced a new real time dashboard for business owners to interact with their customers in real time.  The New York Times had a few case studies it shared about FourSquare’s new dashboard and how it’s been used.
Foursquare statistics page

AJ Bombers, a burger bar in Milwaukee, tested the new statistics tool and plans to use it to choose specials and promote new menu items, said Joe Sorge, co-owner of the restaurant.

“If I’m in another location, I can actually sit and look at that screen and see who checked in last, and I can reach out via Twitter and say ‘Welcome. Have you been here before? What kind of food do you like?’” said Mr. Sorge. “It makes the experience more enjoyable for the customer.”

Shelley Bernstein, chief of technology at the Brooklyn Museum, sees promise in the Staff pages. “Basically, the new statistics tools give us the ability to promote a personal face for our staff so we’re not just seen as an institution,” she said. “We’re wrapping all of this into our Web site through Foursquare’s A.P.I.’s, and we allow people to interact with staff and have the opportunity to engage with them in new ways.”

Another test customer, P.C.C. Natural Markets, a Seattle-based organic foods company, saw a large number of new Foursquare users coming to its stores over the weekend and used the analytics tool to figure out where they were coming from.

“By using the Foursquare dashboard, we figured out that they were coming for a new organic doughnut that had been advertised on TV,” said Ricardo Rabago, social media specialist for the company.

Mr. Rabago hopes to use the new tool to figure out when people are coming for lunch and offer coupons and specials to entice them to return

Hoping to get access to the dashboard to use with Havana Central, shortly – in which case, I’ll write about it here.

Finally, last night I went to Converseon for a wine party that also included an announcement of Converseon’s new Chorus offering.

CHORUS combines, organizes and reports data gleaned via these two methodologies to create a set of unique actionable insights to improve media and message optimization and allocation. This includes:

  • Social media and offline word of mouth value: How word of mouth and social media impact purchase behavior and interactions
  • Relationship: How online conversation drives offline word of mouth, and vice versa.
  • Sentiment drivers: The sentiment towards brands and campaigns, as well as the drivers by channel or topic
  • Target reach and Influence: The social media venues that have the greatest impact on my audience
  • Amplification: How online social media conversation amplifies and impacts offline sentiment
  • Segment behavior: How online conversation impacts various segment activity and behavior offline
  • Messaging optimization: The messages that resonate most with the audiences, and across which channels

According to Dr. Walter Carl, “With CHORUS, marketers can now understand which media fuels discussions and decisions. It’s more than a post-mortem reporting system. Brands will be able to optimize media mix and messaging based on social media and word-of-mouth purchase drivers.”

I spoke with Dr. Walter Carl for about 20 minutes to get the lowdown on how CHORUS works – which is a whole post in and of itself – clearly this is a solution for measurement that is customized for a brand that wants to measure the online and offline influence of it’s own product(s) against it’s competitors.

I was about to go home after the Converseon meeting but saw there was a Charity Party for Search Engine Strategies and decided to go – turns out hardly anyone else was there but for 10 people – but it made the conversation all the better.

Charity Party – 8:00-10:00pm
We Build Pages 2010 Charity Party to Help the Homeless

$30 entry fee covers beer, wine, soda and hors d’oeuvres. All proceeds go to commonground.org to help the homeless in NYC.
Location: Hurley’s, 232 W 48th Street – Upstairs

I was glad I went as I spent about 90 minutes talking with the We Build Pages people including Jim Boykin, who’s blog I read.

Link Building – Methods and Risks with Jim Boykin

This isn’t your grandma’s link building session. Jim has been an industry leader in the area of link building for over 10 years as the founder and CEO of We Build Pages (www.webuildpages.com). Jim also won the search engine journal’s “Best Link Building Blog” in 2006 and 2007 (Jim rarely blogs anymore). Jim has seen and done it all when it comes to link building, and he knows which links effect search engine rankings, and the types of risks involved in certain types of link building. If higher search engine rankings are a major focus of yours, this is a “must attend” session.

  • Speaker:
    Jim Boykin, CEO and Link Building Ninja, We Build Pages Internet Marketing Services

Location: Sutton North

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Speaking at March #140conf NYC Meetup: Real-Time Web + Location Services

Posted by Marshall Sponder on March 22, 2010 | Link It

Tonight I’m speaking at Jeff Pulver’s March #140conf NYC Meetup: Real-Time Web + Location Services along with FourSquare.  Here’s the marketing notes about this meetup event and then I’ll talk about what I’m going to say.

An opportunity to discuss the emerging Real-Time Internet and the effects on business. A monthly gathering for friends of #140conf to get together and discuss issues of the day.

Schedule:

5:00 Registration / Networking
5:45 Discussion Starts

Speakers include:

- Jeff Pulver – State of NOW :Update. A look at the state of the Real-Time web. Talk will include reflections from SXSW 2010 and time for interactive Q+A.

- Anoop Ranganath, foursquare – foursquare @ SXSW

- Marshall Sponder, analytics and location.

7:00 Networking continues.

Excited – Jeff Pulver discussed having me speak at his meetup recently for an Analytics panel -  I’m going to focus how  Social Monitoring is able to deliver ROI more through real time platforms such as FourSquare and what that portends for the future of Social Media ROI and Social Monitoring.

Recently  I did a post about SxSWi – focusing on  geolocation – around the same time  Jeff Pulver mentioned location based services  superseded Twitter at South by South West this year in his post (and I heard that Evan Williams presentation at SxSW was awful too … but hey, I wasn’t there so it’s all rumor to me)

SXSW 2010: The days twitter became less relevant

Just last week it was announced  FourSquare is working with Starbucks and what this tells us about the future – the analytics businesses can have in real time is going to make Social Media fully measurable for those who buy into platforms like FourSquare by years end.
I used an example that took place a few weeks ago at Havana Central – the restaurant chain Cecilia Pineda Feret, who is a Social Community Manager for (I also am doing some freelance analytics enablement work for Havana Central) .
I set up  Radian6 alerts set up on Havana Central that sends email status every 10 minutes  when anyone tweets or mentions the restaurant chain in any way.  Got and alert from a customer who was saying she was in the restaurant – via Twitter.  When I read my email alert from Radian6 I immediately realized the customer was in the restaurant at the very same moment we are.

The alert took place in real time – the customer and her friend were given free drinks and discounts – we used Social Media and Social Media Monitoring (via Radian6) to reward a customer who was having a great time – and we made that time better.

TWEET FROM: KIMBERLY819
Source: twitter.com, Posted on: Mar 01, 2010 9:36 PM by KIMBERLY819
Chillin with my girl Yesenia in the city!! Great restaurant Havana Central!! Great Live salsa band!! Oooooooowwwww!!!!
Following: 86 | Followers: 65 | Updates: 270 | Sentiment: Positive

TWEET FROM: KIMBERLY819
Name: KIMBERLY819 Posted on: Mar 1, 2010 1:07 AM
Followers: 66 Following: 87
What a GREAT night at Havana Central!!!! My new favorite spot!!
Link http://twitter.com/KIMBERLY819/statuses/9811482654

We gave Kimberly and her friend a free drink immediately – thanks to Radian6 -that sends us alerts frequently (with a picture of the tweeter when it’s available from a profile) we had no trouble finding her – she was right around the corner from the receptionists table as you enter the 46th Street Havana Central entrance.

THAT gesture was worth it in my opinion … look what the customer tweeted after the evening was over …..

You want Social Media ROI – you got ROI – a new loyal customer – perhaps a loyal customer for life – and you know what that is worth – a lot of money.

Read more: http://www.webmetricsguru.com/page/3/#ixzz0ijDzkfdF
Under Creative Commons LicenseAttribution

In fact, for tonight’s talk on the Analytics of Real Time Location data I decided to take a look at how often the Kimberly819 could happen and what it might mean to Havana Central if we could reward a customer when they are actually in the  restaurant and are either tweeting they are present or announcing to their friends on FourSquare they are in one of the 3 locations.
At least 20 times in the last month a customer tweeted they were in one of Havana Central’s locations:

For those customers who have linked their FourSquare accounts with Twitter and Facebook the numbers are even higher with about 5% of the total conversation recorded as having happened at one of the restaurants  – and I can swear the number is closer to 10% as we get 2 or 3 tweets a day from people who are announcing they are at one of Havana Central’s locations.
Suppose we go with the higher number (around 60 individuals a month say “I’m at Havana Central” in one slang way or another) and estimate the typical loyal customer will return a certain number of times and spend a certain amount in per visit – we can get a approximate ROI number.
I’m going to make an deduction the typical “rewarded customer” we find via Twitter, FourSquare and Facebook might spend $300-$500 a year at the restaurant in addition to anything else they might have spent there if they had not been rewarded.
That might end up meaning that reward customers with a drink or something could yield close to 30K a month in additional revenue – and over a year that could mean as much as 360K – just by making someone’s visit a little bit friendlier and better for them.
I believe  FourSquare is becoming a major factor in changing how business perceives  Social Media.  Recently FourSquare announced a new real time dashboard for business owners to interact with their customers in real time.  The New York Times had a few case studies it shared about FourSquare’s new dashboard and how it’s been used.
Foursquare statistics page

AJ Bombers, a burger bar in Milwaukee, tested the new statistics tool and plans to use it to choose specials and promote new menu items, said Joe Sorge, co-owner of the restaurant.

“If I’m in another location, I can actually sit and look at that screen and see who checked in last, and I can reach out via Twitter and say ‘Welcome. Have you been here before? What kind of food do you like?’” said Mr. Sorge. “It makes the experience more enjoyable for the customer.”

Shelley Bernstein, chief of technology at the Brooklyn Museum, sees promise in the Staff pages. “Basically, the new statistics tools give us the ability to promote a personal face for our staff so we’re not just seen as an institution,” she said. “We’re wrapping all of this into our Web site through Foursquare’s A.P.I.’s, and we allow people to interact with staff and have the opportunity to engage with them in new ways.”

Another test customer, P.C.C. Natural Markets, a Seattle-based organic foods company, saw a large number of new Foursquare users coming to its stores over the weekend and used the analytics tool to figure out where they were coming from.

“By using the Foursquare dashboard, we figured out that they were coming for a new organic doughnut that had been advertised on TV,” said Ricardo Rabago, social media specialist for the company.

Mr. Rabago hopes to use the new tool to figure out when people are coming for lunch and offer coupons and specials to entice them to return

Case in point, I have a friend who is not at all into Social Media, she doesn’t have internet at home – only uses it at work – she owns a low tech phone and can’t even get emails on weekends.
You know what – by year’s end there will be millions of new people using FourSquare and Twitter – they want the discounts and real time coupons and they’ll need location based platforms to deliver it.
I can see millions of new people on FourSquare as soon as it becomes common knowledge they see they can get real time discounts just for showing up somewhere – get a free coffee and danish at Starbucks or a free drink and Havana Central.
FourSquare, in particular, will alert business owners in real time when people check in at their establishment. By years end, we won’t be talking about accuracy of measurement as much as how much ad dollars are moving to location based platforms.

I hope you join me in what will certainly prove to be a very entertaining evening  at Jeff Pulver’s March #140conf NYC Meetup: Real-Time Web + Location Services

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Age of Conversation 3

Posted by Marshall Sponder on March 22, 2010 | Link It

I’m part of the Age of Conversation 3 that is being published in April 2010.

In fact, there’s two Sponder’s that are in Age of Conversation 3 and I believe Steve Sponder is a distant relative of mine who lives in London (I’ll try to connect with Steve Sponder next week when I’m in London for Monitor Social Media Bootcamp on March 31st, 2010) next week.

Steve Sponder

Marshall Sponder

Steve Sponder reached out to me a few times but now we have the opportunity, perhaps, to meet – and what’s the odds that both of us are part of the Age of Conversation 3 – that blows my mind (but maybe, it shouldn’t).  Just to be clear, there are only about 400 Sponder’s in the entire world – it’s not a common last name – nothing like “Smith” or “Morgan”.

What I know about the publication date for Age of Conversation 3

  • The book will be out no later than mid-April – perhaps sooner than that
  • Some very exciting news on the publishing front – don’t know what it is yet.
  • There will have a Kindle and iPad version of the book as well as the hardback and paperback

Here’s a list of all the authors of Age of Conversation 3.   To be fair, each of us has one page (about 400 words) which falls into a one of the chapters, of which there are several.   I don’t want to spoil it for you but I will definitely by a copy of this book and I hope you will, too.

Adam Joseph Priyanka Sachar Mark Earls
Cory Coley-Christakos Stefan Erschwendner Paul Hebert
Jeff De Cagna Thomas Clifford Phil Gerbyshak
Jon Burg Toby Bloomberg Shambhu Neil Vineberg
Joseph Jaffe Uwe Hook Steve Roesler
Michael E. Rubin anibal casso Steve Woodruff
Steve Sponder Becky Carroll Tim Tyler
Chris Wilson Beth Harte Tinu Abayomi-Paul
Dan Schawbel Carol Bodensteiner Trey Pennington
David Weinfeld Dan Sitter Vanessa DiMauro
Ed Brenegar David Zinger Brett T. T. Macfarlane
Efrain Mendicuti Deb Brown Brian Reich
Gaurav Mishra Dennis Deery C.B. Whittemore
Gordon Whitehead Heather Rast Cam Beck
Hajj E. Flemings Joan Endicott Cathryn Hrudicka
Jeroen Verkroost Karen D. Swim Christopher Morris
Joe Pulizzi Leah Otto Corentin Monot
Karalee Evans Leigh Durst David Berkowitz
Kevin Jessop Lesley Lambert Duane Brown
Peter Korchnak Mark Price Dustin Jacobsen
Piet Wulleman Mike Maddaloni Ernie Mosteller
Scott Townsend Nick Burcher Frank Stiefler
Steve Olenski Rich Nadworny John Rosen
Tim Jackson Suzanne Hull Len Kendall
Amber Naslund Wayne Buckhanan Mark McGuinness
Caroline Melberg Andy Drish Oleksandr Skorokhod
Claire Grinton Angela Maiers Paul Williams
Gary Cohen Armando Alves Sam Ismail
Gautam Ramdurai B.J. Smith Tamera Kremer
Iqbal Mohammed Brendan Tripp Adelino de Almeida
Jacob Morgan Casey Hibbard Andy Hunter
Julian Cole Debra Helwig Anjali Ramachandran
Jye Smith Drew McLellan Craig Wilson
Karin Hermans Emily Reed David Petherick
Katie Harris Gavin Heaton Dennis Price
Mark Levy George Jenkins Doug Mitchell
Mark W. Schaefer Helge Tenno Douglas Hanna
Marshall Sponder James Stevens Ian Lurie
Ryan Hanser Jenny Meade Jeff Larche
Sacha Tueni and Katherine Maher David Svet Jessica Hagy
Simon Payn Joanne Austin-Olsen Mark Avnet
Stanley Johnson Marilyn Pratt Mark Hancock
Steve Kellogg Michelle Beckham-Corbin Michelle Chmielewski
Amy Mengel Veronique Rabuteau peter komendowski
Andrea Vascellari Timothy L Johnson Phil Osborne
Beth Wampler Amy Jussel Rick Liebling
Eric Brody Arun Rajagopal Dr Letitia Wright
Hugh de Winton David Koopmans Aki Spicer
Jeff Wallace Don Frederiksen Charles Sipe
Katie McIntyre James G Lindberg & Sandra Renshaw David Reich
Lynae Johnson Jasmin Tragas Deborah Chaddock Brown
Mike O’Toole Jeanne Dininni Iqbal Mohammed
Morriss M. Partee Katie Chatfield Jeff Cutler
Pete Jones Riku Vassinen Jeff Garrison
Kevin Dugan Tiphereth Gloria Mike Sansone
Lori Magno Valerie Simon Nettie Hartsock
Mark Goren Peter Salvitti
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UPCOMING SPEAKING

The inaugural Social Media Analytics Summit is the first ever two-day business conference with a complete focus on social media analytics. Social media analytics enhances customer service, improves brand and reputation management, and measures overall social media success for businesses