Instagram and LinkedIn Add Tagging

Facebook is adding Hashtags. LinkedIn has added @tagging and now Instagram has followed suit. It seems the largest social networks are paying attention to the preferred features on Twitter and are incorporating them in a terrific show of follow-the-leader.

Here is the skinny:  In an update to their mobile apps, Instagram has added Facebook-like tagging to uploaded images. They are calling the feature Photos Of You.

To get started, grab the update and then open Instagram and upload a new image. Apply whatever filters you want and then proceed to the description and sharing screen. You’ll see  a new button to Add People. Tap that and you will go back to a screen displaying your image, only this time you can tap specific areas of the image and choose to tag that area with someone’s name, just like on Facebook. Once you’re finished, you can add a caption, map it, and choose to share to Facebook, Email, Twitter, Tumblr, Flickror Foursquare, just as before.

Tag, you're it! Instagram adds People Tagging

You can drag tags around and tap to remove them. Note that in order to tag someone, you need to search using their username. Hopefully Instagram will improve this feature to be more user friendly, as it would be more natural to search by name.

Once you save your image, it will appear within the Instagram feed with a small person icon in the lower left corner that you can tap to see tags.

Also note that all Instagram users are initially set to Automatically have tagged photos added to your profile. If you want to approve photos first, go to your profile and tap on the new Photos Of You icon, then tap the settings icon in the upper right. I’m sure many will be upset that Instagram has chosen to make this setting automatic rather than manual by default, and that the setting is buried within your photo gallery and not with other app settings and options.

The udpate is available for both iOS and Android users.

Screen shot 2013-05-03 at 11.50.19 AMMeanwhile, LinkedIn now lets you @mention companies and connections as the site continues to place a greater emphasis on followers and influencers.

I’ve also heard that Klout is (finally) going to start leveraging more of the activity and influence found on LinkedIn into their algorithm.

Social Media Explained Through Bacon

B2B Companies STILL Ignore Social Media

A new survey from Satmetrix, revealed today that the majority of B2B companies are still not tracking their social media activity and are ignoring customers who interact with brand pages online.

The global survey shows:

  • 51 percent of B2B companies have no social media tracking in place, in comparison to 22 percent of their B2C counterparts
  • 69 percent of B2B respondents ignored customers who provided feedback via social media because they had no process in place to respond

For those companies that did measure effectiveness of social media:

  • only four percent performed sentiment analysis
  • while 56 percent simply counted comments and followers

Chief executive officer at Satmetrix, Richard Owen said, “Whilst 77 percent of consumers post about products, 67 percent of businesses have no means of measuring what is being said and less than one in 20 have any insight into the sentiment of what is being said. This is both a huge threat and a massive lost opportunity.”

Converting Content to Conversation is the Key to Thought Leadership

It really does blow my mind that in 2012, we are having the same discussion we’ve been having for the past five years about the value of converting content to conversation online.

I’ve talked to many B2B companies throughout my career and every time we discuss social media, they insist their customers aren’t on Facebook. There are so many things wrong with that statement, it makes my head spin. First of all, Facebook is not social media; it is merely one channel within the social media space. LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube, Vimeo, G+, the blogosphere – anything peer-to-peer related is social media. (Come on, now, folks, it’s 2012 – surely y’all recognize this, right?!)

Secondly, your B2B customers may be “business buyers” and not “consumers,” but they are still human beings and human beings engage with their peers online to discuss their interests. I assure you, no matter how obscure your trade, no matter how small your niche B2B audience is, your customers are talking to each other and seeking out advice, guidance, case studies and recommendations.

It goes back to the old saying I first coined in 2008 that social media is like the high school cafeteria in that everyone gathers together around their shared interests. For every industry, there is a cafeteria – maybe it isn’t Facebook, maybe it’s Twitter or LinkedIn – but there is a cafeteria and a lunch table within it where your customers are talking. And, if you aren’t listening, you aren’t leading.

As I said in 2011, content creates thought leadership and every B2B company I know wants, nay, needs to be seen as the smartest kid in the class. And, content disseminated through Twitter, LinkedIn, G+ and other social channels equals SEO, something, again, we’ve been talking about here since 2009 and even in 2008 and SEO equals thought leadership.

So, I gotta say, seeing the results of studies like this just makes me crazy because it really is so simple and the opportunities have only grown over the years. Please, y’all, if you are a B2B company, step up to the plate and embrace the conversations happening around you every single day. And, if you don’t know how, connect with me on LinkedIn and I will show you because reports like this just drive me to the brink.

Content Marketing Creates Thought Leadership

Some of you emailed me after my last post asking for recommendations around the type of content to create for your clients. Obviously, this is a difficult question to answer in general terms. After all, the whole point of my last post was the value of the context of your content. So, it would be difficult for me to give you contextual advice without knowing more about your clients, their audience and competitive space. 

That said, I will offer up some general guidelines and further discussion around the value of content marketing.

First of all the type of content you create should be driven by the type of audience you are after. Consumers spend a great deal of time on YouTube and Facebook. B2B audiences tend to focus more on LinkedIn and SlideShare. And, Twitter, podcasts and Blogs fit both … as long as what you say is relevant and useful.

Consider this:

1. Content establishes thought leadership: 79 percent of content curators listed thought leadership as the primary objective. Creating valuable content around your category establishes you as an expert, period.

2. Consistency breeds familiarity. It takes anywhere from 5 to 12 exposures for a new idea to stick. The more consistent you are with your value proposition in your content, the more people will connect your brand to your message.

3. Content brings brands and customers together. This is especially true when there is an interactive element to the content, like comments in a blog, LinkedIn Q&A conversations or user-generated content campaigns.

4. Aggregation can set you apart. There is a flood of information online and Google can only give you a best guess at the most relevant, but there are millions and millions of pages returned for any search result. Aggregation sites like social bookmarks can help you connect your content with key audiences seeking it out.

5. Mashups can give you a unique edge. Merging existing content to create a new point of view can be a great way to leverage popular content. Taking multiple points of view on a particular issue and sharing it in a single location can be a terrific conversation-starter. More broadly, mashups can offer a way of creating something new while still using content curation as a basis for it because you are building on existing content.

6. Chronology is becoming more important as industries are evolving. We have seen incredible changes in so many industries in the past several years. Within marketing alone, we’ve seen the mashup of marketing disciplines like advertising and PR. One of the most interesting ways of looking at your content is to track the evolution of information is over time – and how our understanding of topics has changed over time.

Whether you are creating podcasts, blog posts, videos, SlideShares or participating in category-specific Q&A, the most important thing (behind context) is consistency. If you want your voice to have power, you have to power it with consistent content.

LinkedIn Beefs Up Community/Group Features

LinkedIn has added some new features to their Groups this week that will make networking and information-sharing easier while allowing you to better position yourself as a thought leader and/or identify other thought leaders around specific topics.

I’m happy to see that LinkedIn has beefed up the “social” tools within their community, although it still amazes me how few people take advantage of the lead-generating world that is LinkedIn. Here are some of the changes:

Searching Made Easier:

LinkedIn added levels to the search criteria from industry to specific keywords and activity.

Identify the Influencers:

You can quickly see who has the most activity within groups and easily track all of the posts/comments that person has made in the specific group. You can also easily identify the most popular discussions within any specific category.

Liking and Commenting:

Taking a tip from Facebook, LinkedIn now allows you to “like” and post comments in a FB-style format.

Easier Browsing of Discussions:

The group discussions have been re-formatted so it is easier to browse the three most recent comments in a discussion and follow the conversation. You can also more easily see member-generated conversations and news in one setting without having to click through the tabs from one to the other.

I really can’t encourage you all enough to engage in the LinkedIn community to drive new business leads and establish your thought leadership, especially now that the site is making collaboration even easier.

Here is a video taking you through some of the new features.

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