Tag Archive for 'Social Media'

vine vs keek - a standoff for control of an add-riddled world

keekvsvine

Vine has been out for only five days and already it’s hit a popularity peak- hitting #14 most downloaded free app. With a six-second recording time, the app has a strong resemblance to a GIF (an animated photo, in limited frame space). The appeal of GIF’s go widespread especially across the Tumblr and Buzzfeed generation. This has already captured the millennial generation.

What came before Vine was the 15,000,000 user app, Keek, in 2011. With Keek, you get 30 seconds of film time with no editing capabilities (like Vine) and quick access to share on your social channels. The drawback with 30 seconds is you lose creative ability. In Vine, you have complete control on how your video will look in 6 seconds, often capturing an audience far better than a 30 second video.

There was also Viddy. But that’s irrelevant these days.

Both video apps give you the ability to participate in voyeurism, both watching and performing. However, there are definite differences in the apps. We saved you some time by making you a pretty chart. You’re welcome.

Vine vs Keek

What’s to determine?

Vine and Keek hit two different generations and audiences. Vine captures the creative folks who want fun, simple videos who a quirky, GIF edge. Keek is for the true voyeurists who want to hear from people. It’s as simple as that.

Can you guess what we’re about?

Yeah. It’s all about Vine.

Keek rocks, Keek.

Find us: @jwalkny

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Brands Should Embrace Their Timeline

Leap Day marked the arrival of the new Facebook format – Timeline - for brands. Yes, Timeline has been available to individual consumers for a few months, but at the end of March, all Pages will be required to make the switch. For brands, the change is much more important.

For the first time ever, Facebook will be addressing the problem that haunts the dreams of so many social media marketers: The Death of the Important Facebook Post. How, you ask? Timeline cleverly allows brands to extend the “shelf-life” of their Facebook announcements by utilizing the super easy scroll-through setup. Now, users can seamlessly browse a brand’s entire Facebook “life.” Timeline does this ALL while alerting the user of important “milestones.” This layout creates a storytelling feel, much like a user reading the book from beginning to end, rather than just being presented with current information. What’s more, brands are able to integrate, chronologically, histories and stories that predate the existence of Facebook.

Timeline is more about design and visual experience than Facebook Pages have ever been in the past. Some are calling it a “digital canvas” that allows for more creativity. Wisely taking a cue from Pinterest and Twitter’s new enhanced profiles, Timeline allows brands to “pin” posts so that they appear in the top-left area of the page for seven days, guiding the users’ eyes to the headlines and information that marketers deem top priority. All of these new features limit the obstructiveness of advertising by allowing the consumer to feel a more genuine connection with the brands that they follow.

The layout also makes it easier for Page administrators to view notifications, messages, analytics, and edit content. Brands are provided with a more comprehensive breakdown of activity and demographics than ever before (age, cities, high traffic times, etc.).

But even with all these innovative features, there are some mixed reviews about Timeline. Some experts caution that if brands do not understand how to manage all of the new content options, hide posts that reflect badly on the brand and guide users to see relevant content, they will not benefit from the new format whatsoever.

Timeline is available to Facebook Pages now and will be mandated on March 30th. While the inevitable use of Timeline may be a nuisance to individual Facebook users who may see it as a stalker’s dream tool, Timeline will prove to be a dream social media platform for brands if they enthusiastically pursue the new marketing options enabled by Timeline’s content management features.

[Via AdAge / AdWeek]

Example-of-Facebook-Timeline-Milestone

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Bands Do It Better?

Ever wonder how that young, most likely un-showered, group of scruffy dudes with questionable intellect became the trendiest of-the-moment band with thousands of fans?  Well, apparently the music industry is sometimes smarter than it looks. Almost every emerging artist understands that being a social media powerhouse is synonymous with the momentum of his or her success. The music industry has come up with some of the most creative ways of digital promotion, and the most impressive performance results. Artists have always longed for a way to engage in a two-way conversation with their fans. Brands should take a cue.

Allowing people to “tag” themselves in official Facebook concert photos, having fans pay a small fee to listen in on the recording process and vote for their song picks for the album, providing rewards for “checking-in” at a concert on Foursquare, and creating new social platforms are just the start of the consumer-“brand” relationship that make bands stars. Mainstream artists are tapping into the trend too, as digital and social media investments become an integral part of their overall marketing plans. Just last month, Lady Gaga manager, Troy Carter, invested $4M in the startup tech-company, Backplane. The company is responsible for launching a self-sustaining social platform for Little Monsters. While the platform is still in beta, the investment signals big plans for the future.  Unlike other artist’s creative social efforts, this is a private “Monsters-only” community where fans can interact through an entity entirely separate from existing platforms like Twitter and Facebook.

What makes this endeavor most admirable is its departure from social media protocol that big business so heavily relies on. By choosing to operate on a separate platform, Backplane has allowed Gaga to carve out her own space in the digital landscape, and to own every aspect of the fan relationship. Giving this platform an even louder buzz is their South by Southwest Event: The SXSW Managers Hack - a launch event for the startup hosted by some of music’s biggest management professionals. This event invites developers from all over the globe to participate in an 8-hour challenge to construct a presentation of their concepts and ideas for the future of the digital music distribution. There will be a live web cast and play-by-play commentary.

Backplane reflects Carter’s belief that focusing on inventive, highly interactive social media concepts is extremely worthwhile. In an interview with AdAge this month, longtime music industry player Jeff Kempler agrees, “Foursquare, Twitter and Instagram are really good examples of platforms that enable artist-to-fan and fan-to-fan communication to occur in a way that's really very real and very humanizing.”

So, an old-school industry guy and Lady Gaga’s manager are keying into the idea that social media’s biggest selling point is its ability to make the target market feel like important, separate beings. How soon until big business follows suit?

Photo-by-Google

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Pin It To Win It

Pinterest is everywhere. We’ve all seen this before: the rise of a newly trending social media platform that changes the way we communicate and share content. But the buzz is mostly a consumer-facing discussion. The question from a business standpoint remains, how does Pinterest hope to monetize their following? Or – how will they incorporate brands?

It seems clear that Pinterest (and similar platforms like, SVPPLY and The Fancy), are the future of social media. Where Twitter allowed us to share links, thoughts and photos, these platforms now allow the micro sharing of visual content. These platforms are aspirational in a way that instills competition among users. The mood boards you create are seen as a personal snapshot and a glimpse into your level of taste - so let the social-heavens forbid that you fall to the bottom of the pile.

What’s most interesting is that Pinterest seems extremely self-aware of its potential, perhaps more than any other social media platform before it. For starters, “pins” can be linked to e-commerce sites: an automatic draw for brand marketers. This seems like free value to brands, no? Don’t worry, Pinterest has already figured out a way to quietly monetize this. Any “pin” across the platform that links to an ecommerce site with its own affiliate program, is actually modified by Pinterest, with its own affiliate tracking code. This way, Pinterest can monitor when a purchase is made via a link on their platform, and make bank.

Since this link-modifying was discovered, the digital world has been expressing some hesitation over whether or not Pinterest is being entirely transparent (or entirely legal) in the way they are disclosing this information to its users. The conclusion is that Pinterest’s terms of service basically allow them to do whatever they want with your “pins”.

If they’ve already figured this model out while still in beta, then the platform may hold even more potential than we thought. It seems like this trend has a few more tricks up its sleeve before it takes a bow. What new opportunities will Pinterest open to brand marketers, and how long before that business peaks? …Or has it already.

Pinterest-Mood-board_Social-Media-Trend

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Digital Dips Toes Into PR Waters

Marketing is becoming so blurred it's hard to tell what specifically is the agency, and what is purely the power of the internet. Agencies are now looking for people who are part PR, part strategist, part creative as the ever evolving world of the physical and the web collide. In this article you can read further about the topic at hand, it's super interesting.

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GRAMERCY PARK HOTEL CHOOSES RJW COLLECTIVE AS SOCIAL MEDIA PARTNER

We are very excited to announce a new partnership with GPH, extending over the next year. We have several unique programs which for now must remain hush-hush.
Expect to see some very cool things in 2010!

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RJW LAUNCHES KATIE LEE

We recently completed our second celebrity chief site, Tyler Florence being the first.
It is always exciting to work with great personalities such as Katie and Tyler because we are presented with the fun and often grueling challenge of making all the elements on a web page communicate in the same way the clients personality does.
Katie's site features a wealth of culinary information, from hundreds of recipes, tips for entertaining and extensive community forum for fan interaction.

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ARMANI EXCHANGE PARTNERS WITH RJW COLLECTIVE FOR LAUNCH OF A|X TV

Armani Exchange wanted to make an impact with their fall AX|TV webisodes. Focused on behind the scenes elements of their campaigns, RJW collective implemented a multi-tiered approach which included an animated announcement, sweepstakes with major blogs & rich media banners.

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