Case study: Businesses using Twitter

Saints + Drew Brees wins the superbowl 2010

Posted in Authentic Entrepreneurship, Sports on February 8th, 2010 by 2above – Comments

Yes, New Orlean Saints has won the super bowl. And Drew Brees the super quarterback is the super MVP!! Why am I so excited? I am not even an American. I did not even like football anywhere close to soccer, or, should I say, the real “football”. How can I be part of Saint’s victory?

Let me tell you. Yes, I have a dream to be a successful entrepreneur, and I am working on it. At the same time, I have a terrific full time job at fitness anywhere, inc., one of the greatest companies one can beg to work for. Bear in mind, I have worked for many cool companies including Google back in 2002! And I still like fitness anywhere better. Fitness Anywhere invented the TRX suspension training, or the brand “TRX”. And Drew Brees trains on TRX, and he is the first NFL player we sponsor, or “partner” with. Drew loves TRX, watch this

Isn’t he a great person? Easygoing, hardworking, just like average Joe. But this guy won superbowl!! He is the most desirable athlete in the United States of America!! and He loves us, the team TRX! Isn’t it exciting? Being part of the superbowl victory!

Watch out, Drew Brees wants to be the best that he can be. In 5 years, he will become a successful entrepreneur. He is working on it very hard, and very smart.

Twitter It!

Stick to my 5 rules to find influential people on twitter that matters to you

Posted in Case study: Businesses using Twitter, Web Marketing Strategies on January 18th, 2010 by 2above – Comments

Any brand or local business can use some help from highly influential people on twitter, but, how do you find them? Imagine this: you a UFC/MMA fan and have a blog/online community which you dedicate to this subject with your own unique vision, you are dying to get the words out to other UFC fans. What is the best way to do this?

Simple. The following is a few manual tips that I find extremely useful to me.

Rule 1. Discount the actual twitter user influence ranking apps, such as twitterscore, twinfluence. etc. Ranking by twitter username is absurd to say the least.
Rule 2. Start with quality twitter search engine, I recommend using topsy.com, tweetmeme.com
Rule 3. find influential people about the TOPIC that interests you, then find the highly influential people that topsy.com and tweetmeme.com provides. Notice that they are not perfect but it gives you tremendous insights about who people listen to on twitter.
Rule 4. Filter/choose/target the influential people with your judgment and common sense: algorithms used in Topsy or tweetmeme is great, but not perfect. You need to think with your own head
Rule 5. Retweet and initiate contact with them, see if there is mutual benefit.

For now, there are not many automated tools let people do all these in one punch. But they will eventually come in a better, improved format.

Twitter It!

Today: How twitter influenced my social graph

Posted in Case study: Businesses using Twitter, Personal on January 9th, 2010 by 2above – Comments

I have been dormant on twitter for a while, ever since I decided to keep my head down and focus on building stuff without tweeting too much before internal beta. However I do read tweets on regular basis and always end up finding interesting people, brilliant services. Here is an example from today, an overcast Saturday while the city soaked in the mysterious pacific mist outside my window is perfectly picturesque.

Not sure how @gwenbell merged into my feed, but her tweet “I never hire somebody without having a meal with them, Would you?” got me curious. (yes I would, lol). A visit to her twitter profile landed me on her website http://www.gwenbell.com, completely pleased with the way it was designed, I clicked on her note at the bottom of the page: “Krystyn rocked the shit out of this”; Naturally, I clicked to Krystyn’s website, completely enjoyed her design style and hence followed her on twitter @squaregirl; at this point, I was also drawn by the touching photo of her Fiancee with her notes

“After a beautiful day in the city and playing in the snow, @richyferrell asked me to spend the rest of my life with him.”

. Although it made me feel sad about loss of my love of life, it did not stop me from clicking on “Come in, we are hiring” attached to something called “Authentic jobs”; As you will discover like I did, I was utterly impressed with the simplicity and powerful utility of Authenticjobs.com (@authenticjobs), it quickly becomes my favorite recruiting web services. Of course, I came across this great company who Krystyn works for, called http://www.squarespace.com/about

That wraps up my 1 hour adventure on the web, starting with a simple tweet.

To sum it up, my little journey (or dynamic social graph) was like:

@gwenbell
-> http://www.gwenbell.com
-> http://www.squaregirl.com
-> http://www.authenticjobs.com
-> http://www.squarespace.com/about

In this process, I was influenced by two creative women, inspired by one great web service (authenticjobs.com), and encountered a great company called squarespace, while enjoyed about 20 photos from flickr streams of these people.

There is one common trait among all these people: they seem to care deeply about what they do, and strive to put their best foot forward.

Twitter It!

Fans can truly feel Draft on Twitter

Posted in Sports on June 8th, 2009 by 2above – Comments

MLB.com integrating application into interactive experience: By Lisa Winston / MLB.com

Twitter: It’s the next best thing to being there.

The social networking application that has taken “immediacy” to new heights will be used to its maximum advantage leading up to — and during — Major League Baseball’s 2009 First-Year Player Draft.

MLB.com has launched the first online “social community” integration of the Draft by integrating Twitter into its expanding live interactive media experience, the Draft Caster, and its searchable Draft database, the Draft Tracker.

MLB.com will offer live coverage and analysis of the entire First-Year Player Draft, beginning Tuesday at 6 p.m. ET. The MLB Network will broadcast the first round on Tuesday evening from its Studio 42 in Secaucus, N.J., and those 32 selections also will be simulcast live on MLB.com.

Beginning with the 33rd pick, up-to-the-minute on-air coverage from the remaining rounds will shift exclusively to MLB.com/Live, where host Vinny Micucci will be joined by MLB.com Draft expert Jonathan Mayo and Major League Scouting Bureau director Frank Marcos.

Once the first night is done, the Draft will continue with rounds 4-30, via conference call from MLB Headquarters in New York, at noon ET on Wednesday. Rounds 31-50 will be on Thursday, starting at 11:30 a.m.

As the Draft gets under way on Tuesday — and even before then, in fact — fans will not only be able to follow along every minute of the way online, but they’ll be able to interact directly with Draft-eligible players and MLB.com Draft experts, among others.

The Draft Caster itself will allow fans to watch the entire first day of the Draft, with direct access to a searchable database of all eligible players, which will include biographical information, stats, scouting reports and, in many cases, video.

It will also, however, feature the addition of Twitter, and the participation of “tweeters” such as MLB.com Draft expert @JonathanMayoB3, who will also be serving as on-air talent for all three days of the Draft; and reporter @LisaWinstonMLB, who will be writing the up-to-the-minute coverage for MLB.com.

In addition, MLB.com has created a Twitter account devoted to the Draft, where you can stay updated on every piece of info as it becomes available (@MLBDraft).

Even more revolutionary, though, will be the online Twitter presence of some of the top prospects in the Draft, who will keep fans updated on their own personal experiences. Among the potential first-round picks already registered and “tweeting:”

@Michael_Trout: Mike Trout, a five-tool high school outfield slugging sensation from Millville, N.J., whose stock has steadily risen this spring.

@DrewStoren: Stanford University closer Drew Storen, a Draft-eligible sophomore right-hander viewed as the most Major League-ready reliever in the bunch.

@JacobMarisnick: Jake Marisnick, a toolsy outfield prospect from southern California who is considered one of the best athletes in the Draft.

@Eric_Arnett: A big strong quick-rising right-hander out of Indiana who is making Hoosier waves as a mid-round first rounder.

When asked to participate in the innovative event, Marisnick agreed immediately.

“I thought it would be pretty cool, a neat experience to get out there and let people know what I was going through,” said Marisnick, who has been one of the most active participants since the launch, despite being a newcomer to Twitter. “It’s pretty simple, you just let everyone know what you’re doing, what you’re thinking about. It’s a good way to keep in touch with others.”

Perhaps the biggest “challenge” to Twitter is the need to restrict your “tweets” (comments) to a 140-character maximum, though there is no limit to the number of “tweets” you can post.

“You have to think about how to word what you want to say, to keep it short and to the point,” said Marisnick, whose schedule is pretty busy these days with his high school graduation on Monday followed by the Draft on Tuesday.

“It will be cool on Draft day to be able to Twitter and let people know how I’m feeling,” Marisnick said.

Anyone with an internet connection and e-mail address can sign up for Twitter (www.twitter.com) at no cost and join the fun immediately.

And if you want to make sure your own “tweets” are displayed on the MLB.com Draft Caster and Tracker over the course of the three-day Draft, all you have to do is include the reference code “#mlbdraft” within your message.

MLB.com’s coverage will also include on-demand Draft recap video programs for all 30 clubs, live video look-ins to Draft ‘war rooms’ of select Major League clubs, interviews with Hall of Famers, club dignitaries and Draftees; scouting video of more than 700 of the Draft-eligible prospects, photo galleries from the Draft and Draft history dating back to its 1965 inception.

Twitter It!

Twitter Craze is rapidly changing the face of the sports

Posted in Sports on June 7th, 2009 by 2above – Comments

I can’t write a good sports tweeting case study: but someone else has the resources. This article was originally published by By Sean Gregory, Special to SI.com I made the key points bold for quick easy read. Enjoy!

Stewart Cink is a nice golfer — ranked 29th in the world, a member of the 2008 Ryder Cup-winning U.S. team — and one of the most affable, accessible guys on the PGA Tour. But the 17th flagstick at Sawgrass has more star power than the laid-back Atlantan. So why does a digital version of Arnie’s Army, 280,000 strong and surging, follow Cink’s musings on Twitter? Perhaps they are riveted by the revelations that he recently forgot the departure time of a flight, got lost driving around Jacksonville Beach and — brace yourself — refilled his allergy medication. Even Cink is bemused. “I’m honored,” he said of the size of his audience. “I respect and am grateful to everybody choosing to listen to the b.s. that I’ve put on Twitter.”

Such b.s. is booming. From Serena Williams (recent tweet: “Don’t forget I love The Little Mermaid”) to Shawn Johnson (“Just finished up setting the record for the World’s Largest Bed Jump hahaha”), Bruce Bowen (“Just met TD Jakes, I read many of his books”) to Barry Zito (“I can’t think of one good reason why the Denver airport’s in friggin West Kansas”), jocks are atwitter about Twitter.

In fact, the entire sports world is obsessed with the microblogging tool, through which users update their web audience with frequent messages of 140 characters or less. For example college coaches, who can showcase their programs to web-savvy prospects and their parents, are copycatting each other onto Twitter. Pete Carroll, John Calipari, and Charlie Weis — screen name “NDHFC” — are among the big names with Twitter pages (somehow, it’s hard to imagine Weis’ former boss, Bill Belichick, huddled in his hoodie, tweeting away secrets from the film-room).

The tool is scoring for the pro leagues too. All the majors — the NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, NASCAR — shoot their followers useful information like scores, schedules, and highlight clips, and inane chatter like this, from the NFL’s Twitter page: “Boomer Esiason sighting here at NFL quarters.” Whoopee. What’s more relevant is that on draft day, the Atlanta Falcons and New York Jets both scooped Roger Goodell by announcing their first-round picks on Twitter before the commish called their names from the podium. According to trackingtwitter.com, the NBA, which claims more than 600,000 followers, has a greater Twitter audience than all brand accounts besides Whole Foods and online shoe retailer Zappos. “Our favorite feed,” the site said of the NBA, which sits comfortably ahead of Starbucks in the Twitter top 25. “Great mix of content.”

For niche leagues, Twitter provides a powerful marketing tool. Women’s Professional Soccer (WPS), America’s second stab at a female pro league, is counting on Twitter to build a base. The league even encourages players to tweet during games. “Beer garden lookin a little full tonight,” Washington Freedom goalkeeper Kati Jo Spisak announced during an April game against the Boston Breakers (relax, soccer dads, she’s the backup. Spisak wasn’t scoping out the bar while shots sailed past her). At the WNBA draft in late April, players tweeted their reactions seconds after being selected. The league has also started a weekly series in which players answer real-time questions from fans on Twitter. Here, a cash-conscious league can engage its fans without paying a penny.

Why are all these fans flocking to Twitter for a sports fix? Sure, it’s a useful app for absorbing information. But a million other sites also fill that need. The occasional prospect might follow a college coach for insight into his personality. Very few of us, however, are pushing 280 and mauling the quarterback for the State U. What’s more pertinent, Twitter satisfies fans’ thirst for a closer connection to big-time athletes, many of whom are overpackaged and overmanaged in their quest for marketing cash. There’s also the way Twitter, which has become the fastest-growing major Web site in the U.S., peels back the curtain on an athlete’s existence, showcasing personality layers never seen at press conferences. When athletes share details of their most mundane tasks, joys and frustrations, fans are fascinated. Hey, look, that guy on TV is just like me!

“I love getting my tweets from Dara Torres because they allow us to see that she’s human, whether she’s talking about the greasy onion rings she’s eating or her butt-kicking workouts,” said Jen King, a 45-year-old crisis-hotline worker from Pekin, Ill., who follows the ageless Olympic swimmer and tireless Twitterer. A sample tweet from Torres: “Guy just moved all my bags in overhead, just moved them back… WTF???”

Psychologists note that sports permit people to “bask in reflected glory.” In other words, I associate with a winner, so I’m a winner. Twitter tightens this bond, even if it’s imagined.
“It’s not really personal, but it feels kind of personal,” said Indiana psychology professor Edward Hirt, who has studied fan behavior. “I’m part of a posse.” Sure, I may be just one of Torres’ 2,200 Twitter followers. She may never correspond with me directly. But I can at least tell my friends and acquaintances about Dara’s zany experiences, since Twitter offers a behind-the-scenes glimpse of her life. Knowing that some guy was a jerk to Torres on a plane might delight people, and in turn, make me feel a bit better about myself.”

There are good reasons for athletes to love the Twitter connection as well, not the least of which is the opportunity for no-contact contact.
Why get mobbed at the mall when you can charm thousands with a quick tweet from the comfort of your eighth bedroom? And, thanks to the 140-character limit, posts take much less energy-consuming thought than blogs, where readers expect a modicum of literacy. Misspellings and mysterious grammar are accepted tenets of Twitterese. Dwight Howard, suspended for Game 6 of the Orlando-Philadelphia series because he threw an elbow at Sixer Samuel Dalembert, tweeted during the Magic’s series-clinching victory. Third-grade English teachers, avert your eyes. Here are two of his messages: “lets cheer my boys on goo magic” and “im soo proud man. yall have no clue.”

Another attraction: Twitter lets athletes speak on their own terms.
“It’s going to be useful during the season, because after a game, I’ll be able to say my piece instead of just allowing different media outlets to portray me how they want to portray me,” said St. Louis Rams running back Steven Jackson, one of football’s prolific tweeters. Talk to any athlete or coach about the benefits of Twitter, and they’ll put message control at the top of the list. “In this world we live in now, everybody becomes media,” said Shaquille O’Neal, whose enormous following of more than 1 million has fueled Twitter fever in sports. “If something is going to be said, hey, it’s coming from me, it’s coming from my phone.” Journalists may lament athletes passing over the middle men. But honestly, what’s more interesting, a “we gave 110 percent” from the postgame podium, or a tweet like this from Shaq: “Dam manny ramirez, come on man Agggggggggh, agggggggh, agggggh.”

Twitter is two-way talk, which has perks. No, Serena Williams probably won’t read your stroke — or conditioning — tips. But when Cink mentioned that his iPod got soaked in a rainstorm, Twitter pals offered a remedy: Put the device in a bag of rice, which sucks the moisture out of the hard drive. iPod saved. Jackson solicited opinions about which suits to buy for the upcoming season, though in this case his followers weren’t much help. “Hell, no,” said the Rams running back, when asked if Twitter feedback impacted his sartorial selections. Torres exchanges parenting ideas with other moms. Milwaukee Bucks forward Charlie Villanueva, who almost sparked Armageddon by tweeting from the locker room at halftime earlier this year, asked followers for restaurant recommendations in Indianapolis. Responses flooded his phone. After agonizing deliberations, Villanueva chose … Hooters. “The food was great,” he says. The waitresses? “They were hot.”

These tips don’t always yield such bliss. Minnesota Timberwolves forward Kevin Love, after finishing a physical therapy session in Los Angeles, tweeted about spotting two NBA players in a nail salon. Respecting their right to pedicure privacy, Love hid the identities of the players. A few followers, however, encouraged him to touch up his cuticles. “People were like, ‘you know, there’s nothing wrong with a man taking care of himself,’” Love said. He decided to give the mani-pedi a shot, but when Love walked out of the salon after the softening, the cameras from TMZ, the celebrity gossip outfit, were waiting to give him hell. “Yeah, my followers basically got me busted,” Love said.

Twitter has the potential to cause more serious trouble in college sports. Coaches are creating accounts with an eye toward increasing a program’s visibility, and ultimately connecting with prospects. “It’s a recruiting tool, it’s fan-base enhancement,” said LSU football coach Les Miles, who has more than 4,500 Twitter followers. “If we can reach some people who know the prospect or is across the street from a great fan, it creates a conversation that spills into their lives, and makes LSU closer to them.”
Also see:Andy Staples on how the Twitter craze is catching on among copycat college football coaches

Coaches must tiptoe through a minefield: the NCAA prohibits them from posting messages about a specific player, just like they can’t woo a recruit through more traditional media outlets, like newspapers and television. “It’s a lot of navigating,” said Indiana basketball coach Tom Crean, who insists he needs Twitter to create a buzz about his rebuilding efforts. “When you’re dealing with this volume of technology, this volume of people, you’re going to make a mistake now and then. I’m very cognizant of it, but that’s not to say we’re not going to make a mistake. I know it won’t be willingly.”

Unlike his good friend Crean, who convinced him to tweet in the first place, new Kentucky coach John Calipari refuses to call Twitter a recruiting tool. “Would you stop,” said Calipari, who has quickly amassed more than 140,000 Twitter followers. “Please. They did a study that said most people on Twitter are between 35 and 45. On my page, it may be a bit younger, but I’d still imagine it’s in the 30s. I’m creating good will here, because people here are getting to know me, versus someone else telling them who I am.”

Nielsen Online, in fact, did report that the majority of Twitter.com visitors fall into the 35-49 demographic, though the site appeals to the younger crowd, too. Still, Calipari said he’d be “stunned” if more than a miniscule number of his followers were teenage basketball players dreaming of a Kentucky scholarship. When he tweeted “I’m on the baseline front row” from Cleveland Cavaliers playoff game, and “talked to LeBron” after, it didn’t cross his mind that a prospect would be dazzled? “No,” he said.

Calipari is quite sensitive about the issue. “You can’t equate everything I say to recruiting,” he tweeted May 14. “Open up your minds a little bit and let’s have some fun with this.” Regardless of Calipari’s motives for tweeting, the technology changes the recruiting game. How far will coaches push the Twitter rules, which the NCAA admits are still evolving? Sure, a coach can’t tweet about a player, or even announce that he’s driving to a specific high school to watch a game. But he may send coded messages to kids. For instance, Crean could tweet: “was in French Lick last night — wow, that town has a shooter.” Technically, such Twitter messages may be clean, though they clearly violate the spirit of the rules. How coy will certain coaches be? Also, a coach may send a harmless response to an anonymous Twitter follower. What if that person turns out to be a recruited athlete? Is the coach in hot water? Bottom line: NCAA officials better start monitoring Twitter, because that’s where the next scandals are incubating.

Pro coaches are not immune to Twitter controversy, either. Last month, Cardinals manager Tony La Russa filed suit against the social networking site claiming an unauthorized page using his name damaged his reputation and caused emotional distress. The lawsuit includes a screen shot of a tweet from April 19 that said, “Lost 2 out of 3, but we made it out of Chicago without one drunk driving incident or dead pitcher.”

Whether you’re a college coach pumping your program, or a player thumbing away just for fun, let Shaq offer a simple tip for making the All-Twitter team: “Never be boring,” he said. Unfortunately, a simple sweep of athletetweets.com, a site that collects jock and coach missives from the Twittersphere, shows that some people defy the Big Tweeter’s wisdom. Take a Lance Armstrong tweet, from early May: “Just landed in Venice. Never been here. Can’t wait to experience it.” Inspiring. Lance, we know you love three things in life: bikes, beers, and babes. Not one fan will think any less of Livestrong, or of your sicko work ethic, if you give us a real tweet: “Drinkin’ a Peroni in Piazza San Marco, that brunette snapping pigeon pics … BELLA!” (He may be catching on though: on Friday morning, Armstrong announced the birth of his son, Max, on Twitter.)

For an example of intriguing communication, Lance should check out the page Minnesota Lynx forward Candace Wiggins, who tweeted this: “Omg. Rodney King came over to my uncle’s house again. He lives down the street. Wow.” Omg indeed. Jackson is also a talented Tweeter. Here’s an entry from one Saturday in May: “Movie day. .. just finished watching paid n full. Now I’m going to watch Rent.” Really, Rent? An NFL star is into artsy musicals? That’s a nice insight into Jackson’s personality: No day like today, buddy. However, Timberwolves guard Rashad McCants, over Twitter, told Jackson that Rent was a song and dance act. Jackson followed up with: “@Rashadmccants7 what up homie? It’s a musical? Awh man.” Keep an open mind, Steven. Those tunes are quite catchy.

Many athletes don’t see Twitter’s appeal.
“I’d rather be playing with my kids,” said Baltimore Orioles infielder-DH Ty Wigginton, who proudly points out that he’s never thumbed LOL. For other athletes, it’s a privacy issue. “I don’t think I want to tell people everything I do all day,” said Philadelphia Eagles middle linebacker Omar Gaihter. “It’s just invasive. It’s like you’re on a reality show, and you have a camera following you around all day, every day.”

Coaches worry that manic 140-character conversation can numb team chemistry. “Our players will be texting each other, even though they’re riding the same bus,” said Tennessee women’s basketball coach Pat Summit, a 1,000-game winner. “Talk. A big part of being a team is getting to know each other and tuned into each other instead of tuned out.” And at the end of the day, shouldn’t players be spending more time focused on their jobs and less tweeting about manicures? “One guy has told me less twittering, more jump shots,” Love said. “Less getting your nails done, more jump shots.”

Will we ever get Twittered-out? A warning sign is already out there: according to Nielsen Online, Twitter’s audience retention rate, or the percentage of a given month’s users who come back the following month, is just 40 percent. “I believe we will ultimately have Twitter fatigue,” said David Stern, a surprising comment since he leads the most Twitter-happy league in sports. But Stern is betting sports will benefit from the inevitable pullback. The thought: right now, everyone is shadowing each other on Twitter. Friends, acquaintances, annoying co-workers and distant relatives all have access to each other’s daily tasks. But you’ll soon get sick of knowing breakfast habits of the high school classmate you last saw in 1993. You’ll ignore the state of your neighbor’s lawn. We’ll soon remind ourselves that the every day tasks of average people are as compelling as a stale piece of carrot cake. Twitter’s technology will stick, but the audience will be more selective. “At some point, you will see people going back to old reliable friends, the sports leagues and players that they know,” Stern argued.

If Stern is right — and history has shown he has a keen feel for tech trends — Twitter will change athlete/fan interaction forever. Teams are already grappling with Twitter’s momentum. For example, at their mini-camp a few weeks ago, the Rams media relations staff, and new head coach Steve Spagnolo, addressed Twitter in team meetings. They did not demand players stay off the site, or limit their tweets. The Rams just asked them to keep sensitive information off Twitter. Think about that for a second. A spitfire NFL coach had to lecture his players, among the most macho, muscular, and ferocious athletes on the planet, about something called “Twitter.” Hear that thumping sound below you? That’s Lombardi knocking his head against the grave.

Does Twitter distract jocks from their day jobs? Athletic Twitterers emphasize that posts take 30 seconds at most to write. “If someone wants to say I had a bad game because I use Twitter too much, that’s a ridiculous reach,” Jackson said. Cink has already heard such whispers, though he dismisses any suggestion Twitter is messing with his swing. “It’s had no effect on golf at all,” insists Cink, who, coming off a career year in ‘08, has struggled on the Tour while flourishing on Twitter. He missed the 54-hole cut at the Players Championship. “I stink. Literally and figuratively,” he tweeted.

Even if he never gets his game back, Cink is one Twitter addict who has left a mark. There’s a reason that, despite his test-pattern Q-rating, Cink has almost 300,000 followers. If anything, the web is a democracy, and savvy users vote for the best stuff out there. Cink’s page provides an ideal mix of golf insight (strategies, swing tips, a view of the 17th hole of Sawgrass from the drop area), humor (“Too bad you weren’t on the redeye with me back from Vegas. Guy puking in bag across isle.”), and the banality that fascinates fans (“Waiting for the rain to clear out. Hoping to hit bike trail with dogs this afternoon”).

Cink also converses with individual members of his Twitter crowd, which helps them feel like they are a part of his world. Hopefully, other athletes will follow Cink’s example. “It’s like the only legacy I have,” he said. “One day, on my gravestone it’s going to say, STEWART CINK, TWITTER PIONEER OF PGA TOUR. AND ALSO, PLAYER.” As epithets go, it could be worse. It’s under 140 characters, too.

Sean Gregory is a staff writer at TIME magazine.

Twitter It!

A thorough interview with Biz Stone by Danny Sullivan

Posted in Interviews: Twitter App Founders Round Table, Restaurants & Foodies, Retail & Grocery, Travel & Leisure, Twitter Monetizing Strategy on June 3rd, 2009 by 2above – Comments

You have seen it all, all the interviews filled with buzz words, until this one conducted by Journalist Danny Sullivan, the founder of one of highly regarded blog site: searchengineland.com. The interview covers some extremely important topics such as thoughts on repositioning Twitter, Search Ads, The Twitter Ecosystem & More. I suggest you to take half hour, sit yourself comfortably and absolutely do not take call from your girlfriend during the reading. Ok, let’s read!

Last Thursday, I talked with Twitter cofounder Biz Stone on a variety of issues about Twitter but especially focused around search. In the interview, he discussed: how Twitter may redesign its home page to better reposition itself as a sharing and discovery service; how discovery might be enhanced by perhaps by allowing people to share “groups” of friends with each other; how the Twitter ecosystem of third-party software and services have helped people have “patience” with the service by adding features it couldn’t yet develop; the importance of SMS and more.

The Hotness Of Real Time Search — But What Is It?

All the major players are reported to be talking to Twitter about everything from buying the service to getting its “firehose” datastream of tweets. What types of deals are being discussed? Stone said that it’s all still talk, that no one quite has figured out how they should work together.

Certainly there’s much discussion that “real time” search is hot, with Google’s Larry Page saying last week that Google knows “they have to do it.” But what exactly is real-time search to Twitter? Does that mean just getting Twitter’s information or gathering information from other places where people post immediately?

Stone acknowledges that Twitter is a big part of real-time search, in the sense of helping people find out immediately what’s going on — but he also thinks Twitter’s used for more than that, such as a communication tool between people. And if it’s the biggest fish in the real-time pond, he expects many more will be jumping in.

“I imagine more and more people will be interested in this,” he said.

He also said that the existence of Twitter putting out information so quickly has caused everyone to reconsider what else should go out at real-time speed.

“Twitter has changed the pace or has alerted us that there is a pace at which we can operate in real time. And then, how can everything else follow suit, and do we want everything to follow suit? So like you said, there’s content being uploaded to YouTube right or Flickr right now, there’s tons of stuff being uploaded. That doesn’t mean you necessarily just want everything as it’s coming in. I think there’s still tons of learning to be had here, what’s relevant, when does real-time make sense?,” he said.

The video below has him discussing these points:

Does Real-Time Need A Pause Button

After watching how the mistaken news that the law in California against gay marriage had been overturned spread so quickly on Twitter, I wondered if Stone ever wished he could push a big “pause” button to slow people down or perhaps issue systemwide “Amber Alert” style messages to everyone on Twitter.

Stone said that even before Twitter, rumors could spread quickly just through blogging. But he acknowledged that Twitter can spread information fast and “balloon out,” though rumors can also be put to rest just as quickly. Still, “that doesn’t mean we don’t want to address that in some way” he said.

The video below has him discussing these points, along with the advice that you should take cover in an earthquake first, then Twitter:

A Twitter Genius Button For Discovery?

Where might search go? One key area is to help people discover other people and information that they might not have actively known about.

“I think you can zoom out even more from search. You think of search as a box and a button, but when you think of trends or even an @ reply, those are all exciting queries. Those are all leading to more and more discovering. It just took us long enough to say ‘Here’s search in the web UI.’ There’s a lot more that can be done with Twitter to help people help each other. Right now we have this follow model, but even personally. I’ve been following the same people. Is there a way twitter can show me more interesting stuff? Trends is a rudimentary version of that. OK, everyone’s talking about American Idol. There can be more,” he said.

Of course, Twitter faced criticism when it removed an option allowing people to see replies from those they follow to those they don’t. While Twitter said few used this option, there was plenty of vocal outcry on blogs, from those who found this a great way to discover new people. But those people were having to depend on this due to Twitter’s failure to recommend new people to them more intelligently, he explained.

“Because we don’t actually offer good ways to do that, that was like a hack for people. But I think we could do a better job of serendipity. I agree with that. I wish I could go to Twitter and hit a [iTunes-like] genius playlist button. What information am I not seeing?,” he said.

Friends As Playlists?

Speaking of playlists, Stone also said Twitter’s considering a way that friends could almost be grouped into categories:

“One of the things people have been asking forever for is a way to create lists of accounts, a way to swap lists around,” he said.

He stressed there are no immediate plans for this — it might not even happen. It’s one of many ideas that Twitter is discussing. But it’s an interesting one. In a way, it would turn groups of friends on Twitter into playlists that you could share with others.

For example, I follow a long list of people who are related to search, others who are involved with newspapers and yet others who cover the technology space. Want to follow my search engine people? Get my Twitter “playlist” of people on that topic.

Integrating Keyword Searches Into The Twitter Stream

Early on, Stone said those at Twitter recognized the power of letting people track tweets based on matching keywords, providing an option to get alerts through SMS and instant messaging. “But that’s as far as we got with search,” he said — the company then hooked up with Summize that was doing stuff “light years ahead” of where Twitter was at, leading to the purchase of Summize last July.

Now keyword tracking is fully integrated with Twitter through saved searches, though there’s still an issue to me — matching tweets don’t show in your main Twitter stream. Instead, you have manually click to see the latest results. That doesn’t seem the best experience if Twitter’s trying to promote discovery more fully.

“You’re right. I don’t know where we’re at in terms of the product development, but I agree with you that showing and getting this stuff in front of me, I would like that,” Stone said.

Of course, several Twitter clients can flow matching tweets into a main stream (see How To Track Keyword-Based Tweets Within Your Twitter Stream), which does take some pressure of Twitter having to build this particular feature.

“The the great thing for now is that the people who are really the power users have these things they can go to, but that’s no reason why we shouldn’t figure out better ways to enhance our web experience,” he said.

In the video below, Stone talks further about how the ecosystem around Twitter has reinforced it, noting at one point, “It helped a lot of people keep their patience with us as we took a long time to get ahead of our scaling issues. At least there were other products creating innovative, interesting new UIs for Twitter that kept people happy.”

Old School Twitterer

Talk of clients made me wonder what Stone uses. As it turns out, nothing, at least for when he’s on the web.

“I’m kind of old school. I use Tweetie on the iPhone. I also use Summizer, a dedicated trends tool. If I’m in line at the supermarket, I find myself using it all the time. Other than that, I use SMS and the Twitter.com web site,” he said.

How about others in the Twitter office. Is there any predominant tool or method used?

“It’s all mixed up,” he said, noting the person he sits next to with uses Tweetdeck but all the panels it shows kind of freaks him out. “I think a lot of folks are liking Tweetie around here,” he added.

SMS Is Growing, The Future, Not The Past

Being an iPhone user, it simply never occurs to me to use SMS to access Twitter. But Stone said usage is growing, and that it’s very important.

“For me, SMS is this extra cool thing. It’s not just where we started but it’s also the future. There are 4 billion phones that are Twitter-ready, and Twitter is just as useful on them. That people can use it for access to this real-time network is really inspiring to me,” he said.

The Kogi Korean BBQ taco truck that tweets where it will be in Southern California is a well-known example of Twitter’s real-time network being used by a business, but plenty of others do, such as a bakery in New York that keeps people updated on what’s out of the oven, he said. And SMS can help others do the same.

“Street vendors in India could do it, or places where they aren’t going to have internet access any time soon,” Stone said.

He noted that Twitter struck a deal to bring SMS to Canada a few weeks ago and that overall, “SMS usage is growing like crazy,” especially as more people are getting unlimited SMS packages. Twitter, of course, has also been looking at tapping into some of the SMS fees for revenue, though it doesn’t actually charge users directly for them.

Search Ads “Make Sense”

Last week, a Reuters article quoted Stone saying that the company wasn’t pursuing advertising for a variety of reasons, including that “it’s just not quite as interesting to us” and him noting that “there are no people at Twitter who know anything about advertising or work in advertising.”

That caused many to assume that Twitter either didn’t like ads or wouldn’t do them, which in turn produced an official Twitter blog post saying that Twitter doesn’t hate ads but that taking traditional banners ads is low on the list of ideas.

The reaction to his quote caught Stone by surprise. He’d assumed people understood he was talking about banners.

“People are always asking us, ‘Are you going to put banner ads up?’ We’ve been saying over and over that we’re not going to put those ads on the site. I came to work and saw all these new articles [suggesting Twitter would take no types of ads at all] and said ‘That’s not what I meant. I clarified and said, ‘There’s tons of good opportunity. If you’re on Twitter and looking for something, we’d want to do it in some smart, relevant interesting way.”

So any leading candidates on where ads might go, and how they look?

“The one thing that might make sense are search results pages, but I’m not sure we know exactly yet what that might look at,” Stone said, though stressing there are no immediate plans to ad these.

Twitter Search Versus Integrated Search

Back to search, how have the changes been going? Personally, I find myself constantly going to the dedicated search.twitter.com search page, since until recently, I didn’t have search integrated to my Twitter pages. I also like the cleaner page and bigger search box there. But now that Twitter Search is built into Twitter, are people doing more at Twitter itself?

“We’re still at the beginning of it. People who had been using Twitter use it in a certain way,” Stone said, noting that he has tended to go to Twitter Search himself. “I’d trained myself. But the truth is that there will be more people that join Twitter this year than are on Twitter now. The decisions we make now will have a huge impact going forward.”

Not “What Are You Doing” But “What Do You Want To Find Out?”

This led to Stone’s observation that Twitter’s home page isn’t prepping new users for the service as well as it could, something he hopes may change soon — though he also stressed there’s no set date for this.

“Our front page still says keep up with your friends and family. But Twitter is the place for sharing and discovering right now. I think there’s crazy room for improvement. ‘Welcome to Twitter, what do you want to find out?’,” Stone said.

Indeed, it’s been well noted that plenty of people are turning to Twitter itself, in addition to Twitter Search, to find out information (see How We Search With The Twitter “Help Engine”? for more on this). And that ability to discover things is often the hook that helps people “get” Twitter, rather than the concept that they can Twitter things themselves.

“We had to learn that lesson over again. At Blogger, we used to demo the Blogger UI to people [the control panel to create blog posts and manage blogs]. People wouldn’t get it. Then we thought, ‘Wait a minute, what if we show them blogs first?’ We’d get a reaction like, “Oh, I have a bakery, could I make a blog for that?’,” he said.

Search As Key To Understanding Twitter

With Twitter, it’s the same. People see the Twitter interface and don’t really get it, he said.

“Then you show them search. ‘What do you want to know is going on? What’s your business? What do you do?’ We show them that, and they say whoa, this is crazy. Wait, I disagree with this guy. How do I talk to him?’,” he explained. “We need to reposition the product in a way that’s more relevant to people. That’s just obvious. We’ve focused so much on dealing with the popularity and the technical scaling needed that we didn’t have time for the forehead-slapping part,” he said.

But while Twitter might be repositioned to stress the ability to share and discover, Stone also says it needs not to define itself too much.

“There’s actually a certain awesomeness to not putting too much fidelity on twitter early. To say use it for this is to block out a whole realm of possibilities. We got lucky because we built an API early, and that blossomed into an ecosystem,” he said. “One of those key sentence [of what Twitter is] is that we don’t know. We need to leave in some mystery and the concept of emergence. A big mistake would be to think we’ve figured it all out.”

In the video below, Stone talks more on the subject — better positioning the home page to users and repositioning Twitter as:

  • A place to share
  • A place to discover
  • The “don’t know” mystery aspect
  • A platform with an extended ecosystem of tools and services

Finally, after the interview, attention was focused on Louis Gray’s article about problems with Twitter Search — how sometimes tweets are delayed in appearing or won’t appear at all if date-range filters are applied. I asked Stone about the issues, and he replied that Twitter’s aware that problems happen from time to time and is looking at the issues.

“Sub-second indexing is brave new world, and we’re in the trenches inventing it as we go,” he said.

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Good and Old: Why Twitter will change the way business communicates (again).

Posted in Case study: Businesses using Twitter on June 1st, 2009 by 2above – Comments

On Dec. 19, 2007, Fastcompany published an article by Robert Scoble, analyzing why twitter will change business communication. 17 months later, we are experiencing this in a big way. I thought it’s good time to take a look at where we came from. (note some information are outdated)

Hard to believe that only 10 or 15 years ago we interacted with coworkers and colleagues with memos and phone calls. Email and instant messaging changed all that. Now there’s a new communications revolution coming. These services mix contacts, instant messaging, blogging, and texting, and they’re poised to make email feel as antiquated as the mimeograph.

The best known of the new services is Twitter. Since its debut last spring, it has been one of the fastest-growing apps in the history of the Internet. The best way to describe it is as a microblog service in which you tell people what you’re doing or thinking at any given moment. The hook is that you’re limited to 140 characters. “It’s strangely addictive,” says NBC videographer Jim Long. “Evidently, people are interested in what I’m doing, and I genuinely care about what they’re doing.”

Twitter’s basic idea has proven so popular that others have copied its premise and added features. Jaiku lets me include blog posts, my link blog, and more along with my mini posts. Pownce users can send files to one another, as well as calendar events. At Facebook, I can add such information as my favorite music and the syndicated Web feeds I’ve shared in Google Reader.

All this adds up to a new way to share information about yourself. Although the content of the messages can vary wildly from voyeuristically interesting to terribly dull, a frequent stream of updates can strengthen your brand. My 4,000-plus Twitter “followers” can get my blasts online or via text message, and each one is also its own Web page, which means that Google can see it and let people search for it. When you’re traveling frequently and working from coffeehouses or the backseat of a cab, these services are great to keep in touch with coworkers back at the office and with customers nearby. “I post where I travel and arrange user meetups,” says Betsy Weber, an evangelist with software firm TechSmith.

The professional intimacy these services create–hey, if you know someone’s whereabouts and musical tastes, you’re halfway home–can also win you clients. “People won’t do business with you until they like you or have a sense of trust,” says Cathryn Hrudicka, a consultant who uses Facebook, Jaiku, and Twitter. She has already gotten referrals from people she has met online because she has shown she’ll be available when clients need her.

Sales and marketing are lagging in seeing the potential here. When I used all these services to tell the world that my wife and I were expecting a child in September, I anticipated hearing from the world’s largest consumer-products companies begging me to try their latest diapers, food, car seats, and financial instruments. What came back? Nothing. Where was Procter & Gamble? Given what it and other companies spend acquiring new customers, there’s an untapped gold mine in Twitter and Facebook because we’re volunteering so much information about what we’re doing right now, whether it’s working on a project or eating a chicken-salad sandwich. Learning how to tap it correctly–both to sell to me directly and in seeing major trends in the millions of daily public posts–will be the next major challenge for these companies.

If we revisit this conversation again in three years, I suspect that we’ll have found all sorts of little uses for these services, and they’ll simply become what email is today: something we must do just to participate in the heartbeat of business.

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See how this hotel prospers on twitter/facebook

Posted in Travel & Leisure on May 19th, 2009 by 2above – Comments

Hotel/Resort Lake Placid, published a LONG comment to a great article about how businesses benefit from twitter.com, which I shall re-post in the near future. Take a look at how this resort takes advantage of social medias.

We are a Hotel and Resort in Lake Placid, NY that began a Twitter and Facebook Specific promotion on 4/22.

In brief – The Adirondack High Peaks is not only the name given to 46 mountain peaks over 4000ft in the 6 million acre Adirondack Park of New York but they are also the namesake of our hotel-the High Peaks Resort.

For 46 straight days we are offering a special rate for 46 minutes each day based off the elevation of one of the 46 High Peaks. For example a rate based off the 4867 foot elevation of Whiteface Mountain will be $48.67.

Each day between 9 and 5 we alert friends, fans and followers only through our Twitter Profile and Facebook Page to when the daily rate will be available. After the update is posted the “elevated” rate of the day becomes bookable for 46 minutes on our website.

In the first 26 days of the promotion we’ve gained 550 new Facebook fans, 350 new Twitter followers and have averaged just over 12 reservations and 25 room nights per day.

But more, we’ve experienced such positive feedback from guests grateful for a chance to have a getaway at a time when they thought they just couldn’t afford it.

The promotion has helped us educate others about the High Peaks region around Lake Placid, establish why we are named the High Peaks Resort, give folks a chance to getaway to Lake Placid and to stay at our resort, but most importantly it creating impressions and relationships with guests that will hopefully last a lifetime.

I can’t think of another platform other than Twitter and Facebook that this would have been as successful for us!

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See how these businesses use twitter

Posted in Case study: Businesses using Twitter on May 16th, 2009 by 2above – Comments

In an article published on CIO, a few business executives raised good points using twitter to their advantage, take a look:

Catching the Eyes of Business Users

Twitter has also led business executives and managers to think about how they might take advantage of the service to improve and streamline internal communications. Drewe Zanki works for Rio Tinto, a British mining company and oversees an IT group in its minerals division in Denver. He heard about Twitter by reading some of his favorite blogs and immediately became interested. He joined just a few weeks ago.

When he first signed on, he noticed that there was a lot of chaos in the amount of communication occurring, but he saw some potential business value.

“Often, the e-mails I get from CFOs or IT directors are half a line anyway,” Zanki says. “Being able to get your business case through in 140 characters or less could be very valuable for everyone’s time.”

Tim Davis, CIO of Popeyes Chicken & Biscuits, a fast-food chain, says that he joined Twitter back in April after making a commitment to stay more informed about social media.

“This spring I decided I needed to get educated as social media is just taking off and I couldn’t continue to shun it without investing the time to figure it out,” he says. “I also wanted to figure out how this all fits into business models.”

He began following the updates of bloggers, social media gurus and even found other Twitter users who shared his passion for cigars, a hobby for Davis.

Like Zanki, one problem Davis immediately experienced was some Twitter users overusing the service and dominating his cache of messages. “I had to quietly drop Scoble because he would spew out eight tweets within three minutes,” he says, referring to the technology blogger, Robert Scoble, who, at the writing of this article, has 28,336 followers. “Personally I don’t think that is the right use of Twitter,” Zanki adds.

David Elwart, CIO of South Carolina Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism, says that he has experienced similar problems since joining the service. “There can be too much noise,” he says. “Some of them you quit following because of it. But some people are really interesting and can turn you on to new things.”

For instance, Elwart began following a woman in California whose specialty was state parks and recreation. The messages the two exchanged over the service led to South Carolina state officials, at Elwart’s behest, inviting her to speak at their annual conference on tourism so the state could learn from her insights.
….

For businesses, there would need to be more specific controls, says Davis of Popeyes Chicken. He says “the verdict is still out” on what a Twitter-like service could mean to his company. “I could see a company setting up a few Twitter accounts for specific types of communication [such as] system-outage notification and disaster notifications,” he says. “It would have to support hierarchies so that you could send one message to a team, a group made of several teams or higher levels. These groups could be departmental or geographically based.”

Popeyes Chicken started a user profile on Twitter to engage in conversations with other Twitter users about its core product. One tweet on June 19 asked another Twitter user, “Take a look at popeyes.com. It is REAL chicken marinated from the inside out. Not that chewed and glued processed stuff!”

Elwart of the South Carolina parks says he can see how his employees—spread out among the state’s 47 parks—may find such a service like Twitter helpful for broadcasting short messages that people have to see but don’t need to fill up e-mail inboxes.

“The welcome center of a park could say on Memorial Day that ‘traffic is heavy,’” he says. “It’d be a lot quicker to post [via microblogging] than writing an e-mail.”

The other upside, he says, is that the technology can be utilized easily on mobile phones since it relies so heavily on SMS text.

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Simple business outreach using twitter

Posted in Case study: Businesses using Twitter, Twitter intro on May 15th, 2009 by 2above – Comments

An article on FoxNews.com brought up a few introductory tips for businesses using twitter. The key points are following:

1) Use an application: Twitter.com is just one way to access Twitter updates. Applications like Twhirl, Tweetdeck and Twitterrific give you a lot more control over what you see on the screen and keep your contacts and topics organized and characterized. Twitter will make it faster and easier to post your own items as @replies, direct messages, and web links. It is very efficient to link your Twitter account with other social networking pages like Facebook.

2) Get followers through common interests or industries: During signup, Twitter will let you scan your e-mail address books to see which of your friends are using the service. Since the key to having a good experience is following the updates from people you care about, this is a vital step to getting started. Pay attention when Twitter suggests following several popular celebrities — you might not want to hear all of their tweets.

You can find followers who are related to your business and special interests through Twellow.com, TweetFind.com, and search.twitter.com. For example, a publicist who is a beginner can engage in conversations through the #journchat (simulation twitter chatroom).

3) Break through the clutter and make yourself attractive: This is very important. When you engage, comment, retweet and share links you become more memorable than handing out your business card. Unlike other social networking services like MySpace, Facebook and LinkedIn, Twitter should NOT be a “who has more friends” contest. The key is to build quality lists of business contacts who are trusted advisors and potentially a source of business referrals.

4) Ten to one rule for business expansion: No more than 10 percent of your tweets should be self promotion. For example: Don’t miss @IACEZ on FOX News. Ninety percent should be about personal thoughts or ideas, marketing relevant information and engaging with your Twitter community. We briefly touched upon hashtagging and retweeting. When you first join, look at the public timeline or special interest groups for information that would be of interest to your constituents. Respond to or ReTweet 4 or 5 of them a day. For example:

RT@TheNYTimes Chrysler and Union Agree to Deal Before Federal Deadline http://bit.ly/otvXT

#followfriday in honor of SaaS:@iacez @crakowitz @benkepes @sunir @cloudworks @dobesv

5) Beware of Privacy issues and public disclosure: It is urgent to remember that Twitter is an open forum: Everything you type can be seen by anyone who follows you, and by default anyone who wants to follow you. Your tweets are also catalogued through Google. You can, however control access to your updates:

— If you want to block random users from following you, you can set your account to “protected.” Then when users want to follow you, you’ll have to approve them.

This is useful if you want to use Twitter as a private communications medium, but you shouldn’t over-control your Twitter account.

If you have something you want to say and you don’t want the Twitter world to see it, put it elsewhere. Twitter works best when you join its larger community.

— There’s a protocol on Twitter for replying to particular user’s updates. If you want to comment on something someone else said, write@and then their name in your post (or “Tweet”). For example, “@IAC_Heather, Interesting point.” Then the user will see what you said even if they are not following you, and anyone else who sees the update will know it’s a reply to another user.

— Direct messaging or (DM) is a way to send someone on Twitter a message that they will only see. In order to use it, preface your post with D, for example “D IAC_Heather Please call me at 212-222-2222 accounting emergency.” However you can only DM someone who is following you, so if you want the person you’re messaging to be able to DM you back, make sure you’re getting their updates. Type F (for follow) and then the user’s name. I.e.: F IAC_Heather. A follow command will be recognized by Twitter but won’t show up in your list of updates as a post.

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