Archivos Mensuales: diciembre 2011

Facebook is not building Shadow Profiles of non-members, but must make privacy changes

Facebook is not building Shadow Profiles of non-members, but must make privacy changes

Ireland’s Data Protection Commissioner has today announced the results of its investigation into Facebook’s data protection policies, and among other findings has announced that it is satisfied that Facebook is not building ‘Shadow Profiles’ of data about people who are not logged in to Facebook. Facebook has agreed to a number of changes related to privacy, however.

In October, Ireland’s Office of the Data Protection Commissioner said that it was to audit Facebook’s International HQ in Dublin in relation to complaints over the social network keeping copies of supposedly ‘deleted’ data. Additionally, the Europe vs Facebook campaign, claimed that Facebook was building up detailed profiles of non-members.

Austrian citizen Max Schrems drew attention to this practice keeping deleted data after requesting a copy of all the information Facebook held about him – something Facebook is legally obliged to comply with in the European Union. You can see how much data was revealed in this video. Lee el resto de esta entrada

Our obsession with social networks guarantees their advertising power

Our obsession with social networks guarantees their advertising power
231050020_f29b2f749a_z
by
http://thenextweb.com/socialmedia/2011/12/22/our-obsession-with-social-networks-guarantees-their-advertising-power/

In a comScore study posted today, we are reminded of what we already knew; Facebook is an absolute beast when it comes to cornering people’s time online.

For example, this stat seemed so insane, I thought it was fake at first:

Social networking accounts for nearly 1 in every 5 minutes spent online in October 2011

Social networking is a hobby of 82 percent of the global Internet population, which sits at around 1.2 billion users. Just a reminder, Facebook has over 800 million users. Facebook most definitely owns social networking.

Stats and Thoughts

In October, Facebook reached more than half (55 percent) of the world’s global audience and accounted for 1 in every 7 minutes spent online around the world and 3 in every 4 social networking minutes.

Facebook’s users aren’t just loyal, they’re obsessed. These types of numbers show that the features that social network is building have one goal; to keep you on Facebook, and not let you leave. If you take a look at the most recent changes on the site, such as the Ticker and Timeline, they’re built to keep you digging into someone’s profile and content.

In October, Twitter reached 1 in 10 Internet users worldwide, growing 59 percent in the past year.

Facebook’s game is engagement, while Twitter is surging to touch as many people as possible. It’s safe to say that Twitter will never get anywhere close to the engagement numbers that Facebook has, and it doesn’t want them. With its latest redesign, the site is becoming easier to use, as Facebook is becoming more complicated. Twitter is betting that simplicity will win out, and eyeballs for any amount of time is key. The company actually has a shot to get more eyeballs in 2012 than Facebook if it stays focused and keeps being integrated into every mainstream property possible. Lee el resto de esta entrada

Natural Link Building 101

Natural Link Building 101

 

mappa_blog

Link building is one of the most important things you can do in terms of off-site search engine optimization. As you probably know by now, search engines like Google tend to rank pages higher in search results based on the number and quality of links to those pages. Essentially, the more links you have, the more likely you will be to rank well when someone searches for keywords related to your website. Some of the most common ways to build links to a website include the following:

  • Link Requests – This is where you simply ask another website owner to link back to your website. These are really hit or miss and depend on how well you can convince the website owner that your link on their website is beneficial to both them and their visitors.
  • Link Buying – This is the big no-no, yet it is still happening. Instead of politely requesting a link from a website owner, you approach them with a deal instead. Some consider it as advertising in the form of a link instead of a banner, but Google considers it a good reason to penalize a website.
  • Directories – There are a ton of directories out there – general directories, local directories, and niche based directories. Some will allow you to create a listing for free while others will charge a fee. The latter doesn’t constitute “bad link buying” even though you are paying for the link.
  • Content Links – There are a lot of ways to build links via content, from creating articles on article marketing networks to guest blogging with a link in your author bio.
  • Social Links – I’m not just talking about links in your social profiles (although we will get to those). This refers to all of the ways getting social online (blog comments, forum posting, answering questions, and using social media) can lead to links.

For this post, we’re not going to focus on the first three (requests, buying, or directories) but rather, the last two – content and social. Why? Because chances are you are already doing most of these right now, or know you should be!

The reason these two are so important is that they are not just about creating links for SEO value (although some will have some SEO value anyway). They are about creating links that people will be likely to click on, so instead of waiting for clicks and conversions from higher rankings in search results, you could be getting both immediately from the link itself! Lee el resto de esta entrada

Tipos de Marketing Viral

Tipos de Marketing Viral

Extracto del libro El imperio digital de Leandro Zanoni 
El_imperio_digital   (PDF full download)

(…)Tim Berners-Lee: The World Wide Web - Opportun...

  • Reenvialo a un amigo

Consiste en un mensaje de correo en cadena que alienta al usuario a reenviarlo al resto de sus contactos. Dependerá
mucho del contenido del e-mail para que eso ocurra, ya que de lo contrario, el usuario no durará en eliminar el mensaje
y la cadena se cortará. Podemos dividir este tipo de marketing viral en dos grupos:

  • Deseado: Son muy efectivos los videoclips típicos de YouTube con contenido humorístico, que la gente reenvía asus contactos de manera espontánea. Muchos de estos clips son anuncios de televisión que luego circulan por Internet.

La cantidad de gente que recibe el mensaje vía Web puede ser mucho mayor que la gente que vio el anuncio original en
TV, ya que muchos clips son antiguos o fueron creados para emitirse en otros países.
A modo de ejemplo, podemos citar el caso de “Peter Capusotto y sus videos”, el ciclo de TV que se emitió por
Canal 7 durante 2007. El programa tenía un rating relativamente bajo (de 1 a 4 puntos, cuando los programas más vistos
de la TV superan ampliamente los 30 puntos) pero “Pomelo” (el personaje interpretado por Capusotto) fue elegido
como el personaje del año de la versión argentina de la revista Rolling Stone, que lo llevó a su portada.1 ¿Qué ocurrió?
Los clips de humor de Pomelo fueron subidos por los usuarios a YouTube y rápidamente fueron vistos y compartidos
por millones de personas. Lee el resto de esta entrada

The business of gaming

The business of gaming

Thinking out of the box

Consoles are no longer the only game in town

THE IDEA BEHIND video games used to be simple. Nintendo, Microsoft, Sony, Sega and others sold consoles at a loss and made their money from the boxed games they produced for them. The punters, mostly young technophile men, bought the games from a shop, played them for a few weeks and then put them away.

Those customers are still around, but they have been joined by a plethora of others. New, more casual sorts of games are being picked up by a mass audience that would previously not have played at all. “In the past few years two things have changed,” says Mr Moore of Electronic Arts. “The first is the proliferation of platforms [on which to play games], and the second is that it’s become so much easier to call yourself a gamer.”

So the industry has branched out into a bewildering variety of sub-sectors and niches. At one extreme, companies in the traditional sector are still charging $50 or $60 for high-end console games with ultra-realistic graphics and cinematic game play. At the other, a shoal of smaller firms is developing simpler, more casual games aimed at a much larger and more diverse group of customers. In between, a mix of established firms and start-ups are testing new ways to develop games and new business models for selling them.

One of the biggest changes has been the rise of the mobile phone as a gaming device. Games specifically designed to be played on mobile phones already account for $8 billion of the $56 billion global games market, even though they typically sell at less than a tenth the price of a traditional console game. Such mobile games are simpler to play and require less time and dedication than the console titles. Their relatively low development costs and the fact that they can be downloaded over mobile networks bring them into impulse-buy territory, says Mr Harding-Rolls at Screen Digest.

Playing on the move

The potential market is huge. The number of mobile-phone subscriptions worldwide is over 5 billion. Last year 1.6 billion handsets were sold, a 31% rise on 2009. That is attracting attention from big, established firms such as THQ, an American publisher and developer of video games, and Square Enix, a Japanese publisher and developer that has a dedicated mobile division.

But many games for mobile phones are made by small start-ups, attracted by low entry costs. The best-known example is “Angry Birds”, released in 2009 by Rovio Mobile, a Finnish firm with just 55 employees. It is a light-hearted affair in which vengeful player-controlled birds hurl themselves at fortifications built by a group of egg-snatching green pigs. In terms of sales, it is among the most popular games ever made, with total downloads of more than 500m (the game is available in a free but limited edition as well as in a standard, paid-for version). By contrast, a console game is reckoned to have done well if it sells a couple of million copies.

Games are proving a popular application for mobile phones, and especially for the latest generation of smartphones such as Apple’s iPhone. PwC expects the market for such apps to grow from around $7 billion last year to $35 billion in 2015, and much of that growth is likely to be driven by games. They accounted for more than half of the 100 most popular apps for the iPhone in 2010 and make up a large chunk of the software market for other brands of smartphone too (see chart 1).

Online orcs

Thanks to the spread of high-speed internet connections, the web has emerged as a games platform in its own right. Blizzard Entertainment’s “World of Warcraft”, an intricate online fantasy world filled with orcs and dragons, attracts around 9m regular users, each of whom pays a monthly subscription fee of around $10 to play.

As with mobile games, much of the interest in online gaming revolves around attracting a new, more casual kind of player. Again, the potential market is vast. Companies such as PopCap, a Seattle-based games studio, specialise in easy-going games that run in ordinary web browsers. PopCap’s most successful game to date is “Bejeweled”, an abstract puzzle game in which users have to create patterns in a grid of coloured gems. It is easy to pick up but difficult to master, and can be played for a few minutes at a time. In 2010 sales of the full version, which sells for about $20, passed 50m. Lee el resto de esta entrada

All the world’s a game

All the world’s a game

Video games will be the fastest-growing and most exciting form of mass media over the coming decade, says Tim Cross

IN NOVEMBER 2010 “Call of Duty: Black Ops” was released. Fans in many countries queued round the block to get their hands on a coveted early copy. A lucky few had won tickets to invitation-only release parties which were broadcast live to viewers across the internet. The event had been advertised on billboards, buses and television for weeks. Chrysler even produced a commemorative version of its Jeep. In the event the reviews were mixed, but no matter: the publishers, Activision, notched up worldwide sales of $650m in the first five days. That made it the most successful launch of an entertainment product ever, and people kept buying. A month later the total stood at over $1 billion.

“Black Ops” is not a film or a book: it is a video game. For comparison, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2”, the current record-holder for the fastest-selling film at the box office, clocked up just $169m of ticket sales on its first weekend. “Black Ops” stole the crown from its predecessor in 2009, “Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2”. The latest instalment, “Modern Warfare 3”, released on November 8th, set a record of its own with $750m in its first five days. Lee el resto de esta entrada

Should We Always Deploy Content Management Systems?

Should We Always Deploy Content Management Systems?

by Maria Malidaki
http://sixrevisions.com/project-management/always-deploy-cms/

 

Should We Always Deploy Content Management Systems?

Content management systems are a wonderful tool for empowering website owners. Most of us have witnessed the power and ease of use of CMSs like Drupal and WordPress. They have changed the web development industry in a significant way.

Now, even average Internet users who have very little technical knowledge can have the ability to run and manage websites without any help from trained web developers.

Because of this CMS revolution, a major segment of the web development industry — dedicated to developing simple to complex CMSs for a broad set of users and premium themes for popular publishing platforms — has blossomed.

There are quite a few benefits to developing a site powered by a CMS. Chief among them is that the website owner is able to add and manage their website’s content, thus keeping visitors interested and search engines tuned in. And for the web professional, he has much less responsibility in maintaining the website.

But is empowering the business owner with a CMS always the way to go? Sometimes leaving tasks such as website maintenance and system upgrades to a professional leads to better results for the owner.

To explore the question of whether or not we should always deploy content management systems for our clients, let us first go through some types of clients who would not fully benefit from them. Lee el resto de esta entrada

Focus on online conversions, not visitor numbers

Focus on online conversions, not visitor numbers

http://blog.marketinggrin.com/focus-on-online-conversions-not-visitor-numbers

The fundamental part of marketing is to generate more money than you spend; to deliver a return on investment (ROI). This can be part of a sophisticated, long-term, multi-faceted marketing campaign, or a simple direct marketing campaign. Regardless of the campaign size, conversions are critical and ROI essential.

Digital marketing is no different. Digital campaigns should be focused around delivering a substantial ROI. The only way to achieve this is by having a clear conversion that you can measure on your site, and deliver a CPA (cost per acquisition) lower than the value of the conversion.

This sounds obvious; however 90% of websites fail to achieve this. Instead, generic, simple brochure style websites without sufficient call to actions are the norm. Unsurprisingly when digital campaigns are set-up, that solely drive traffic to these sites, they are unsuccessful. Simply driving targeted traffic to your site and hoping for results is a recipe for disaster. Targeted traffic will not convert if there is no conversion! This applies for both B2C as well as B2B industries. Lee el resto de esta entrada

Web Design Trends in 2012

Web Design Trends in 2012

It’s that time of year again, where we look into our crystal ball to see what will be the hot trends in web design for the upcoming year. It’s no secret that trends come and go, with some hanging around longer than they should. (Yes, splash page, I’m talking about you.) But trends are a necessity in the development and growth of our craft. Trends are born, improved upon, and often spawn other trends. So as a web designer, when you apply trends to your projects, challenge yourself to expand upon them and make them your own.

As you read this article, keep in mind that the shift in trends from one year to the next may be subtle, and you will probably recognize some of these trends already. But it’s our estimation that the concepts we mention below will grow and become even bigger in 2012.

1. Responsive Web Design

I believe eventually, we’ll all stop talking about responsive web design – not because it will go away, but because it will become what’s expected. However, I don’t think this will happen in 2012. It’s still too new of a concept, and there are many web designers that are not familiar with it at all.

320 and up boilerplate - responsive design

The continued introduction and adoption of more an more mobile devices is what will make 2012 the year of the responsive web site. Web designers and developers will move to the use of fluid layouts instead fixed width, and media queries will find their way into many more stylesheets – allowing more sites to easily be viewed across multiple screens sizes and devices. Lee el resto de esta entrada

Optimizing your Website for Social User Experience

Optimizing your Website for Social User Experience
Posted by
http://webdesignledger.com/tips/optimizing-your-website-for-social-user-experience

Social web 2.0 trends have taken over many of our modern static websites. Nowadays it’s difficult to find a company who isn’t on Facebook or Twitter or Foursquare, or any of the other increasingly popular social networks. It’s important to consider this experience and how you can portray social connection in the eyes of your visitors.

Fancy board room hotels

I’ve provided a few ideas for sprucing up any web design for a positive social UX layout. You’ll need to consider a number of factors such as interactivity and page elements for user interaction. From what I’ve experienced your visitors will be noticeably more interested in branding than anything else. And this interest always leads to more signups, conversions, and sales.

Form a Community

One of the first tasks you can perform is to surround your visitors with a sense of membership and community support. There are a number of ways you can synthesize this feeling with different web elements. Facebook lets you create a small widget you can embed into your sidebar, and FB users can “Like” your website right within the page. Additionally this widget catalogs the number of Likes as well as recent users & profile pics. Check out the Facebook social plugins menu to see what I’m talking about.

This opportunity grants users a chance to connect with each other and consider the Internet community as a whole. If you run a blog through WordPress or Google Blogger it’s easy to update the comments form with Facebook connection as well. This means users can respond to each-other in real time and hold dynamic conversations. Lee el resto de esta entrada

The Grim Future of Web Browsers

The Grim Future of Web Browsers
Written by: Christian Vasile
http://www.1stwebdesigner.com/design/web-browser-grim-future/ 

Nothing new appearing today in the IT world is labelled as a surprise, because everything moves so fast and at some point in time you start to know when the big news hit the market. With the technology advancing so fast, especially all the mobile devices we call smartphones today part of the mainstream and are, maybe, the most important thing in our lives. So by sending a message from your QWERTY Android device or by playing Fruit Ninja on your latest iPhone, have you ever thought that you yourself are changing the IT world?

The Grim Future of Web Browsers

Well if you haven’t, I can tell you for sure that you do. By using portable devices more often and desktop computers less the latest gadgets quickly become out of date. Without realizing we have become unplugged and do not need computers anymore – which also means we do not need browsers anymore. And why would we? At the end of the day we have our smartphones filled with apps that can keep us busy for a long time. Sometimes I don’t even check my Facebook from my computer, even if I am close to it, because it is much easier to do it from the phone. Ever since the IT world made it possible to connect to the internet wirelessly, nobody has looked back. People invest much more money today in phones and portable devices like tablets or eBook Readers than in computers. Lee el resto de esta entrada

The free way to see all your finances in one place. From any place.

The free way to see all your finances in one place. From any place.

WHAT IS MINT? HOW IT WORKS

Jonathan West
Marketing Director

Powerful features, simplified.

See all your accounts in one place

See all your accounts
in one place.

See all your balances and transactions together, on the web or your phone.
Mint automatically pulls all your financial information into one place, so you can finally get the entire picture. Learn more

Mint can send automatic alert-like bill reminders

Stay up-to-date
on your money.

Mint automatically updates and categorizes your information, and
suggests ways to help you save. We caneven send automatic alerts—like bill
reminders—to your mobile phone oremail. Learn more

Stay safe and secure.

Mint has more than 6 million users who know
their information is always secure. That’s becausewe use 128-bit SSL encryption–the same security
that banks use–and all data is protected andvalidated by VeriSign and TRUSTe.
Learn more

It’s completely free.

The fees that banks pay us for introducing new customers allow us to keep the service free for
our users. We’re committed to staying free foreveryone, whether or not you ever act on one ofour savings recommendations. Learn more

Follow us:
Get Mint for:

iPad | iPhone | Android

Branding y Social Media: la causa-efecto del nuevo panorama publicitario

Branding y Social Media: la causa-efecto del nuevo panorama publicitario

http://www.marketingdirecto.com/

Pensemos en el número de usuarios activos que tienen las redes en el momento actual. No cabe ninguna duda que el Social Media es ya hoy parte de nuestra cultura global e indivisible de nuestros hábitos y costumbres. Consolidar grupos de usuarios afines con los que interactuar, se ha transformado en el eje central del nuevo orden social. Y es que El branding y el social media se transforman en la causa efecto de éste proceso de aprendizaje por el que transitamos. Y para optimizar su eficiencia, debemos desterrar los hábitos y costumbres asimilados (hoy razones por las cuales se desintegran las economías) y en su lugar, situar los valores que nos diferencian de los animales.

Más allá de Facebook y Twitter, no podemos olvidar que avanzamos hacia un modelo en el que el hilo conductor es la emoción y el canal transmisor es la palabra, según recoge wwwhat’snew.com. Para transformar esto en crecimiento horizontal y eficiente, simultaneado con la generación de los recursos que necesitamos, las métricas y estadísticas emergen como indispensables. ¿Quieres un buen branding?, interactúa donde está tu target. Lee el resto de esta entrada

Ten Digital Trends Set to Go Mass-Market In 2012

Ten Digital Trends Set to Go Mass-Market In 2012

Google Circles, News.me, Facebook Credits, Foursquare Radar, Little Printer and More

By:

http://adage.com/

As a global digital agency, one of our top priorities is keeping our collective finger on the pulse of consumer appetites and behavior in digital media. Below, our take on the top 10 digital trends for 2012 that will go mass.

1. Your inner circle
We seek to mirror our social personals in the digital world. But so far, digital has forced us to bring together not only our social selves, but also our professional and familial ones, and present a single persona to everyone we keep in contact with online. The average Facebook user has 130 friends, from BFFs to new acquaintances. Thanks to new filters on social networks, we can at last separate more easily and filter the people we know and decide with each post we share what portion of our friends will access it. Look for greater sophistication in filtering techniques on social networks over the next 12 months.
Examples: Google circles, Facebook Groups, Twitter Lists

2. Personalized news
We currently create more information in a year than we ever have historically. Understandably, overwhelmed by the plethora of information online, people need ways to navigate relevant information and choose what to read. Already, RSS feeds and social networks facilitate the process through integration with news sites that allow users to generate passive status updates by posting content to the wall. Now, applications that sort content based on digital friendship are emerging. The result: social reading is the new standard in online content consumption.
Examples: Percolate, News.me, Counterparties, Flipboard, Zite

3. Rent, don’t own
Today we can get more entertainment for less. The average Netflix user spends over 11 hours per month watching movies. Digital has changed our sense of ownership and the behavior of renting is extending into categories beyond media and car rental where we realize that our use for certain products is limited and therefore do not warrant a purchase – think of infant clothes or art for home or office interiors.
Examples: Plumgear.com, Artsicle.com

4. Seamless transactions
We’re always demanding that our processes become more efficient, quicker and safer, especially when it comes to our bank account. We now carry at least one screen with us at all times. Forty percent of US consumers own a Smartphone, which has becomes so much more than a phone. Transactions are quickly becoming fully integrated with our screens in multiple ways, from paying with our phones to executing financial transactions. Expect to see additional shifts in how we conduct our banking and financial matters.
Examples: Bitcoins, Google Wallet, Monitise, Square Card, Facebook Credits

5. Home, body, web
Technology is fast reaching a tipping point where it is both sufficiently small and affordable (well,…almost) to allow us to monitor our bodies and adapt to our environment automatically. In San Francisco, over 1700 members of “Quantified Self,” a MeetUp group focused on personal measurement – whether through geotracking, life-logging or personal DNA sequencing. Our interest in leading healthier lifestyles, and automating the process through technology and sharing our results and experience, is increasing dramatically. NikePlus was only the beginning.
Examples: Nest.com, Jawbone Up Lee el resto de esta entrada

Are You a Lumberjack or a Tree Hugger?

Are You a Lumberjack or a Tree Hugger?
http://jeremywaite.net/2011/10/05/are-you-a-lumberjack-or-a-tree-hugger/#comment-268

Social media often bridges the gap between the commercial arm of the business and customer service or marketing.  It’s a good place to be because it gives you the freedom and creativity to add value and contribute across the company, but it’s also hard to keep your integrity when you have split priorities.

  • Social media for example is ALL about engagement, customer service, retention, relationships, loyalty, trust and goodwill.
  • Commerce is all about sales, transactions, media, acquisition, seo and page rankings. Lee el resto de esta entrada