Mar 092012
 

pinterest trafficIn a recent study by Shareholic it was established that Pinterest actually drove more traffic to blogs in the month of February than Twitter did. This is an amazing fear as the relatively new social network only has an estimated 11.7 million active users compared to Twitter’s 100 million or so users.

Shareholic’s sharing widgets are used by more than 200,000 online publishers, most of which are independent bloggers who altogether reach about 270 million unique visitors every month.

February saw a little less 50% of all the traffic coming from Google, Facebook generating just over 6%, Yahoo (1.61%), StumbleUpon (1.29%), and Bing (1.21%). Pinterest came in at 1.05% and Twitter only at 0.82%.

In January, Pinterest fell into line just behind Twitter and so it is clear that Pinterest is definitely growing in popularity. The biggest beneficiaries of the growth seen in the new social network have been women’s lifestyle, home décor and cooking magazines amongst others.

Would your brand or company benefit from being on Pinterest? If so, it would serve well to make sure you are on this new social network.

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Mar 062012
 

digital marketingIn the discipline of digital marketing, it is imperative to be aware that the industry is changing every day. If you want to reach consumers, you need to be increasingly mobile, engaging, and aware of the contexts in which you will be able to reach the consumer. While many claim which devices/apps and social networks are the next revolutionary tool in digital marketing, there are the following very specific tools you should at least be making use of:

1. Location-based Services

There are many consumers who want you to find them, understand them and make their lives easier. Location-based social apps such as Foursquare, Ban.jo and Path are goldmines of important consumer data. Many of these features are starting to be embedded into mobile devices, which will lead them from leading edge products to mainstream products.

2. New Ad Formats

It is imperative that marketers explore new advertising formats that are user-initiated and respect the consumer’s time as well as interests. Brands need to look beyond the clutter of banner ads and pre-roll video ads that are “forced views”. Throwing money at the industry won’t help but online video and mobile platforms are attracting a lot of attention and this market needs to be used effectively while still respecting the average consumer and meeting them at their need.

3. User-Generated Curation

The reason Pinterest has received such a great response from consumers and marketers is that it has demonstrated what personal curation and relevance can do for engagement with brands. This means content producers and brands can provide information feeds, and the consumer can tweak them to suit their interests, filter the data and only receive the information that they specifically want to receive. Other apps such as Pulse, Foodspotting and Flipboard can also be of use in user generated filtering of data.

4. Advertise by Format

There is so much potential with the mobile format of advertising. Using mobile apps to advertise your brand or products, you have to be extremely innovative if you want to really engage with the consumer. It is necessary to get creative and realise that there are dozens of new possibilities and using the same display strategy as you use online will not necessarily gain the consumer’s attention. Learn how to use the platform to its full potential and make use of the unique format mobile and tablet platforms create.

5. Integrated Marketing

Your customer and being relevant to them is the most important thing within the new digital marketing strategies. If you can integrate your marketing strategy across mobile, TV and online marketing, you will be able to increase brand recall significantly – according to Google.

The profound advancement within the media and technologies available to us is changing the way we interact with marketers as well as other peers. We filter the messages we want to receive and a smart marketer can engage consumers with trends that are resonating with the new consumer profile of today.

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Feb 082012
 

Pinterest web designPinterest’s design elements have been popping up everywhere since the startup went mainstream last year. You may not have visited the social bookmarking site but you may recognise the layout in many other websites you may have visited since its start.

The entire concept of Pinterest’s web design is to put web content into block format which users can organise onto pinboards that fill the entire browser screen. Most of each block is filled with a photo, as well as the ability to “like”, “repin”, or comment at the bottom. It makes each block look almost like a mini web page and flattens the information hierarchy normally found on traditional websites.

The social bookmarking website has been gaining popularity, along with its unusual design, and although the company is keeping user numbers to itself, a quick study of the site by Mashable shows that it, in fact, drives more traffic to websites than Google+, YouTube and LinkedIn combined.

While Pinterest didn’t invent the look and feel of this basic design structure, it has moved the layout to the top of the “cool” list. Most designers use the layout plugin called jQuery Masonry when describing the look of the Pinterest site.

This also allows designers to organise information without having to use reverse chronology, which is favoured by most websites, including Facebook and Twitter. The Masonry pluging was launched in February 2009, by designer, David DeSandro, in order to create vertical layouts such as that of Pinterest.

After Pinterest showed that they could use this way of organising information in a structured way without scaring away users, the design really caught on with many companies following suit, wanting their websites to be almost as cool.

Since most internet users read information online in a non-linear way, it almost makes sense to present your information in a non-linear fashion.

What do you think about the Pinterest web design layout and would you want to incorporate this into your company website?

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Jan 062012
 

Pinterest ServiceWith claims from within the industry that Pinterest will explode in socialmedia in the future, we take a look at this article from Don Resinger from The Digital Home – CNET to see whether these claims are founded. Unfortunately, far too many services with plenty potential endu up falling short.

by Don Reisinger January 5, 2012 6:12 AM PST
Original Article here

I’m always cautious when I hear that a particular service is the “next big thing” in social media.

The industry is littered with the remains of services that seemed to have potential, only to fall short before long. But a well-known serial entrepreneur is willing to wager that Pinterest might just succeed where so many others have failed.

In a blog post yesterday, Elad Gil took a deep look at how Pinterest’s so-called “social curation” fits into a trend that has developed across the social landscape. He points out that around the turn of the century, long-form content via blogs was all the rage, but over time, short-form content has taken hold with services like Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr. This year and beyond, however, Gil thinks “push button and curation” will reign supreme.

Pinterest, of course, sits at the crossroads of that. The service, which is currently invite-only even though it launched in 2010, lets users take content they care about from around the Web and organize them into “boards.” The company cites examples of people using boards to sort content for their wedding or a recipe book. Think of it as scrapbooking on the Web.

Pinterest isn’t necessarily unique. There are currently several sites across the Web that offer a similar service, including Snip.It and Quora, which launched its “boards” last month.

However, Pinterest so far has been the only company to distinguish itself. Late last month, Experian Hitwise, a company that monitors consumer behavior on the Web, reported that Pinterest had 11 million visits during the week ended December 17, jumping 4,000 percent compared with six months earlier. The massive bump catapulted Pinterest to the 10th spot in Experian’s listing of the most popular social networks, just behind Yelp.

Experian also discovered that Pinterest has found a loyal following in women. In the past three months, women have accounted for 58 percent of its userbase, and nearly 60 percent of those women are between the ages of 25 and 44.

Opinions are mixed over why Pinterest has been able to attract such a large audience. Is it the service’s solid design? Is it the attention it has received from media outlets shocked by its growth? Is it, perhaps, the fact that it recently raised $26 million from venture-capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, giving it bundles of cash to play with? It could be all that. But Gil thinks it might also have something to do with its ease-of-use.

“Pinterest was one of the first sites to take push button content generation (via bookmarklets and ‘re-pinning’) and structure it into sets of curated content called ‘boards,’” he wrote on his blog. “This allowed users to collect content from across the Web, as well as from other users on the site.

“In some sense it took what a site like Tumblr had been doing but transformed blog-like streams into structured, curated collections users could share,” he continued. “Importantly, it was easy for new users to consume these sets of content visually as structured sets, and to share these sets with others.”

It’s hard to argue with the logic. But Pinterest has yet to offer its service publicly. And once it finally moves beyond its invite-only phase, the company will be truly tested. Can it save itself from buckling under the increased pressure placed on it by the deluge of users that might come in? And perhaps more importantly, will the mainstream Web user who typically joins the social game after early adopters pick up their invites, find value in it?

Chances are, we’ll get the answers to those questions later this year.

Pinterest did not immediately respond to CNET’s request for comment.