The next Measure it! is on June 2nd at 10am-12pm

Venue is Hogan Suite, Academy Plaza Hotel, off O’Connell street. Map.

If you want to attend this free event, please leave a comment.

Following on from the first Measure it! and with the feedback to hold another, the next one is on June 2nd. We’ll have two or maybe even three 10 minute presentations on social media and measuring success of a campaign followed by breaking into groups and coming up with solutions to a given task.

The aim of Measure it! is to get people thinking about metrics and measurements for social media and marketing. A side-effect of Measure it! is you get to meet people who are also looking an metrics and have some great ideas to share.

Measure it! is free to attend with the precondition you are willing to share some insights and thoughts. Do come along for the two hours.

Update May 29th:
There will be presentations from Realex Payments, O’Leary Analytics and Barry Hand.

Facebook Ireland brings in City Targeting

There are 1.5 Million people using Facebook in Ireland. Almost 1 Million of them use it on a daily basis. There are lots of other stats we can dig out from Facebook and some are below. As of today you can see details of people in cities and get some pretty sweet extra demographics from a system that allows you to get details on age, gender, work, education, interests, birthday and whether they like your brand on Facebook already.

Facebook Ireland City Targeting

Lots and lots of cities and towns, here’s just some for Cork:
Facebook Ireland City Targeting

And the healthy stats as of publication:
1,575,720 people who live in Ireland
920,880 who live in Dublin, Cork, Limerick or Galway

699,800 people who live in Dublin
87,560 people who live in Cork
61,040 people who live in Limerick
70,320 people who live in Galway
90,980 people who live in Belfast

With this we can send targeted ads to people that use Facebook. Examples: Offer Leaving Cert grinds to kids in Cork. Offer last minute meal deals to people in Galway that like Italian food. Offer county themed T-Shirts to GAA fans in Donegal. Little bit of imagination and you can see how much fun it can be.

That’s ads. Expect to eventually do status updates targeted by Cities and location. Facebook interactions and marketing based on location details is around the corner too so stay tuned. Once you digest that and start to play with the ad system, remind yourself about Foursquare too.

Links for the week of April 19th 2010

RTÉ versus print news websites. Wrong battle lads and the wrong war perhaps.

Kings College Hospital asks the public to tell it how to improve.

10 tips for non-profits on facebook.

Meanwhile using Twitter for non-profits.

Google and Adwords and remarketing.

Let’s say you’re a basketball team with tickets that you want to sell. You can put a piece of code on the tickets page of your website, which will let you later show relevant ticket ads (such as last minute discounts) to everyone who has visited that page, as they subsequently browse sites in the Google Content Network. In addition to your own site, you can also remarket to users who visited your YouTube brand channel or clicked your YouTube homepage ad.

Links this week – 24th March 2010

Facebook will get serious about location, very soon.

There’s money in virtual goods, we know this and money in location sensitive virtual goods too.

Genius. Tech support for your company via your Get Satisfaction Facebook Page Tab.

Paul links to a free e-book on pricing.

The big big news is what Facebook is going to evolve to. Facebook Pages all over the web.

Links this week – Monday March 1st 2010

Facebook and elections, might be important for Ireland in the next few months.

Corona, much easier way of building iPhone applications?

Waxy has an amazing history of media pieces on tech being used for crime. The latest Please Rob Me website is just this iteration’s version of “telephone to tell burglars when you’re not at home”.

The U.S. Military is now saying ok to troops using social networks.

C Words: Creative, consistent, constructive, community-minded and use case studies

What marks out good engagement in social media? Some of the Cs of social media are in the title of this post. A while back at the EU NGO event we were asked about methods of engaging online and I thought that these were relevant.

Creative
There are only so many flash mobs, viral videos, blogger launches, hashtag polluting tweets and phototagging campaigns you can take and that can be cloned and redone again and again before people become sick of them and starting generating negative sentiment towards them. Do a Princess Bride night, do a Tweasure hunt.

Consistent
Update your Facebook Page on a regular occassion. Update your blog. Respond to questions and replies. Be around on Twitter and if you are interacting, answer questions even if they make you uncomfortable. Don’t selectively answer positive questions or broadcast out happy clappy stuff while people are tweeting you and having issues with your service.

Constructive
Add to a conversation. Earned media. If you know the answer to something, share it, share your experiences and insight. If you are worried about giving away knowledge and your IP, just how empty is your playbook? A few blog posts, tweets or Facebook updates shouldn’t make the smallest of impact on your body of earned knowledge. If it does, worry more about why, not about hiding it away.

Community-minded
Do stuff to make the overall community better. Do you necessarily need to wait to be asked? The more you partake, the more you are part of the community and the more you’re respected and loved.

Use case studies
Case studies are stories. We like stories. We put ourselves in stories, we make things up and wrap them around the words in the case studies. Telling a good story is important for any product/brand but having someone retell that story and add their own personal bit of magic to it is more powerful.

The above are a bit like the “Be” Tweet I sent out months ago on how to use Twitter well: Be useful , Be interesting, Be first , Be around, Be supportive

Thanks Online PR peeps

About three weeks ago I ran the Online PR course/workshop. The dealio with it was that those attending didn’t pay with money but accepted that they had a task to blog/Tweet something they found useful from the course. Thanks for the 35 people who came along and the below folks who have so far blogged about it.

Martina.

Steph.

Marc.

Jennifer.

JBBC.

Dena.

Dave Davis.

Derry O’Donnell.

Leo Fogarty. Includes a video too!

Vanessa.

Links this week – Wednesday 27th January 2010

150,000 Irish are on Twitter. Gabby feckers aren’t they?

Online Marketing Plan template from Toddle.

Pivotal talks face to face promotions.

If you’re into Foursquare. Foursquare X looks er mega.

Social business in 2010.

And on that. How to become a smarter social business person.

The 5 Reasons You’re Failing In Social Media

Some quick bits to read about social media

Social marketing and search marketing.

Using Facebook as a recruiter.

The Facebook Guide Book from Mashable.

Paid media to gain traction for earned media. In other words using the YouTube video promotion system to build up traffic for your video and at a certain momentum the viral nature takes over and you don’t have to pay to deliver the video in front of people.

Mobile Internet growth.

Mobile usage is ballooning across the continent and the African mobile phone market – at more than 400 million subscribers – is now larger than in North America. Some countries, such as South Africa, have ‘mobile penetration levels’ – the number of handsets compared with size of population – close to those of Western Europe.

For many people in Africa, mobile telephones are the only way that they will ever get access to the internet because of the poor quality, and often complete lack, of fixed-line networks. Fierce competition has pushed mobile prices down for consumers while many of the latest crop of handsets available in Africa allow easy access to the mobile internet. Web browsers can also be installed on older phones.

Finding the RSS/Atom feeds in Facebook.