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Will Businesses Really Use Foursquare’s New Self-Serve Check-In?

August 4, 2011 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie

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I will warn you on this one. I have tried to be a location-based services user but I lose interest real quickly. My erratic check-ins at restaurants or sporting events are more a result of me saying “I guess I could check in” or my wife checking in thus making me get competitive and making sure I am not one-upped by her. Not exactly the stuff of location based legend, I know.

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That’s why when Foursquare announced that their business pages were becoming self-serve I had to actually educate myself as to what this meant. Since January of 2010 these pages have existed but the foursquare blog tells of the new option:

Today we’re making foursquare Pages self-serve (to the great relief of our BizDev team). Any brand, organization, or publication can now create their own Page, gain followers, share Tips, check in, and reach their fans. Join the likes ofMTV, the New York Times (NYSE: NYT), Tiffany Co, NASA, and Scanwiches by creating a Page for your organization now!

There are a bunch of features that make this perfect for brands:

• Reach the whole foursquare community with your Tips and check-ins (and push those check-ins to both Facebook Pages and Twitter).
• Let entire teams of people manage the same Page. With our new tool, you can make multiple people Page ‘managers,’ so that they can all contribute. It’s perfect for big organizations.
• From the web or your mobile phone, you can upload photos to your Tips and check-ins. It’s great for making them really shine for all of your followers.
• And, when your page is complete and you’ve added a few Tips, you’ll be featured in our Page Gallery.

The post says that over 3,000 brands have established these pages so I decided to skim through the gallery. The one thing I noticed was a pretty low engagement factor based on the stats shown for many of the pages.

I came across the X Games page. I figured that since this event just happened this past weekend and the crowd would be the hipster, young crowd that is like totally dialed into all things Internet-y this would be a good gauge of how these things work. Here’s what I found.

For the Most Popular options it looks like the X Games used to do some location based action (although not huge numbers considering the 10 million user claim by the service).

Go over to the most recent tab and you would expect bigger numbers because of a growth in popularity and the games just having happened this past weekend. Instead you get this:

So what’s my point? Well, this kind of pattern happened a lot when I perused the business page gallery so it makes one wonder just what is the impact of a service like foursquare for a brand?

Location based services don’t make the headlines that they used to. There were once competitors to foursquare (outside of Facebook and maybe Google (NSDQ: GOOG) Latitude) like Gowalla (remember them?) but the activity doesn’t seem to get people as fired up as it once did.

Do you agree? Is this just a statement about the popularity of the particular event or of the service? What are you seeing in your business around LBS’s? Is there real opportunity there or is this one area where the hype outran the reality, at least for now?

If you are interested in exploring this option with foursquare further for your business or organization, you can get started here. Good luck and let us know how it goes.

Frank Reed is the managing editor of Marketing Pilgrim. He also provides consulting, speaking and education services relating to local Internet marketing through Local Basix. Frank contributes weekly to Mike Moran’s Biznology blog and he writes even less frequently at his original home base, Frank Thinking About Internet Marketing.

Marketing Pilgrim



@frankreed


Aug 3, 2011 5:12 PM ET


Local Deals And Check-Ins Will Converge

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Advertising, Local, Marketing, Mobile, Social Media, Community, foursquare

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Five tips to get your Facebook posts seen in Newsfeeds

August 4, 2011 by  
Filed under Choosing Lingerie

If you are a regular Facebook user you will know that when you log onto the site your newsfeed will show the TOP NEWS for you, but you can switch it to MOST RECENT.  For example, this morning I had 239 posts in my most recent, which are posts that have accumulated overnight. When I clicked on MOST RECENT I didn’t see all 239 posts, but instead saw the last 20, but of course I could have scrolled down and seen the rest….

 

How Facebook decides which posts appear in TOP NEWS is down to their Edgerank formula. This Edgerank formula looks at three things to determine if your page posts will appear in TOP NEWS for each LIKER:

    • Affinity: How often that page LIKER interacts with your page, eg. liking a post, commenting on a post, commenting on the wall, etc.
    • Weight: Different types of content you post on your page.
    • Time: Facebook are trying to balance showing recent data without just having a chronological list.

      So now I have thoroughly confused you, how can you easily improve your Edgerank score? First up, if you want to know what your current page score is you can check it on the Edgerank checker site. Below are what works…

      • Comments score a higher weight than LIKES on a post, I think this is pretty obvious why – it requires more work!
      • Photo and video posts score higher than just text or links.
      • Link posts score higher than just text.
      • If you use Facebook questions every time someone votes it increases your pages affinity score.
      • If you post lots of items close together they are unlikely to all appear in one newsfeed.
      • If the friends (who LIKE your page) of person X who also LIKES your page interact on the page it has a bigger chance of showing up in person X’s newsfeed.

      If you want more details on this read this white paper by Awareness Inc.

      What should you do now?

        • Encourage people to comment on your posts, that means ask questions that are easy to respond to.
        • Use the Facebook Questions feature.
        • Include photos and video (this is video you upload onto the page, a YouTube video is a link) in your posts.
        • Don’t post lots of posts close together.
        • Monitor your posts to find the best time of day to post.

          Really everything that I have talked about here is what you should be doing anyway, and I have to say that I LIKE that Facebook rewards pages who are doing the right thing. What do you think? Is this for the too hard basket?

          Lara Solomon is the founder of Mocks, mobile phone socks www.MyMocks.com, founder of Social Rabbit – your guide in the world of social media www.Facebook.com/SocialRabbit and author of ‘Brand New Day – the Highs Lows of Starting a Small Business’. Lara’s business LaRoo was the winner of the NSW Telstra Micro-Business Award in 2008.

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