My Friends Killed the Newspaper Editor

Posted by Jordan Raynor
Mon, 2010-03-01 10:07

The latest report from Pew Internet confirms what many of us have known for a while now – our friends and socialgraphs are slowly diminishing the influence of the once all-powerful newspaper editors. In the study, Pew found that 75% of Americans who consume news online discover their news through social networking sites or through forwarded e-mail, and 52% of them share news with others through these channels.

This study confirms suspicions we have had for some time – our Facebook news streams and Twitter feeds are becoming our “homepage” for news consumption. NYTimes.com or CNN.com are no longer our browser’s homepage; and if they are, they are not likely the central hub for where we consume our news. The same Pew study found that only 7% of those surveyed are receiving information and news from a single media platform. Our news sources are more diversified than ever, but what’s more important is how we are being driven to this news content.

Before mass online news consumption, we were forced to consume whatever newspaper editors and TV producers decided we should read and watch. In the early years of online news consumption, news aggregation was not a necessity, as our sources for quality online news were slim. In these days, we could set our browser’s homepage to NYTimes.com and be satisfied with the flow of information we were receiving from the newspaper’s site editors. Today, we have the ability to create our own personalized news aggregation services from the news sources we trust most – our ‘friends’ and socialgraphs.

Gone are the days when a single newspaper’s website was the hub for all of one person’s news consumption, linking to various stories within that single hub of news. Today’s news consumption follows a hub-n-spoke model in which social networks are the hub that direct us out to the spokes of various news sources linked to by our friends and trusted news aggregation ‘editors’.

As more Americans rely on social networks as their primary source of news consumption, it will be increasingly important for news organizations, political campaigns and brands to find creative ways to convince individuals to spread news on their behalf. Newspaper editors will continue to have nearly exclusive influence over what is printed by their publications, but their power over driving eyeballs to this content is now in the hands of the masses. Every one of our friends is now a news aggregation ‘editor’ with the power to drive us from our social news hub to the various spokes of trusted news content.

Why @JebBush Joining Twitter Matters

Posted by Jordan Raynor
Wed, 2010-02-24 08:44
If you have ever e-mailed former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, you know exactly why his joining Twitter yesterday is significant. During his time as Governor, Bush was notorious for personally responding to all e-mails sent to him within 24 hours. Bush understood and embraced a concept that few politicians of his time understood – direct media (a term coined by TechRepublican founder, David All). Before Twitter and Facebook became widely adopted platforms for politicians to directly communicate with voters and vice-versa, Bush understood the essential concept of direct access and transparency.
 
Even with the boom of politicians setting up Twitter accounts and Facebook pages, few are using these social platforms to personally engage directly with voters and constituents. If Jeb Bush’s previous history with e-mail is any indication of how he may use Twitter, he could serve as a standard-bearer amongst politicians using the platform effectively.
 
Bush has had a Twitter account (@cgables43) set up since March 11, 2009, but had never tweeted until yesterday when he announced that he would be moving to a new Twitter handle - @JebBush. As word leaked out of Bush’s new account and the legitimacy of the account was confirmed by Bush’s staff, @JebBush’s following exploded to 1,000 followers in one hour. As of 7:30 a.m. this morning, 15 hours after launching the new account, Bush has surpassed the 2,000 follower mark.
 
As with any move Jeb Bush makes, politicos inside and outside of Florida can add this latest Twitter maneuver to the growing list of more public appearances the former Governor has made in the past few months - moves sure to create buzz for a Bush 2012 candidacy.

Jeb Bush Blackberry

Bush has yet to tweet from the new @JebBush account, but hopefully the move to the new Twitter handle is a sign that Bush is ready to embrace Twitter.  Jeb Bush has seemingly always been a tech-geek of sorts, whether it is sporting off his new Kindle to Tucker Carlson in an Esquire interview, or featuring his beloved Blackberry in his official portrait which hangs in the state Capitol. If Bush applies the same principles he applies to other forms of electronic communication, I am confident that @JebBush will quickly become one of the most effective and popular tweeting politicians.
Cross-posted to JordanRaynor.com

An Alternative Facebook Friend Diet

Posted by Jordan Raynor
Tue, 2010-02-16 12:52

The Heritage Foundation's Director of Online Strategy, Robert Bluey, published a piece a few weeks ago calling for a Facebook Diet of sorts.  Bluey cites a recent tweet from David All in which All claimed he was "going on a Facebook Friend diet for 2010" with a goal of being "under 1,500 by July 4th."

I share Bluey and All's concern and desire to make their Facebook networks more personal and to rid their Facebook news feeds of Blingee Book and Mafia Wars.  After all, the social network was built be a place where you could connect with your "friends".  But with all due respect to these two online strategists far more brilliant than me, I would argue that eliminating your current Facebook friends or refusing to accept friend requests that come in the future is not the best solution to this problem.

In his blog post, Bluey says that his wife will ask "why a total stranger is remarking about a personal item" such as a picture of their son.  A good question indeed.  I ran into similar annoyances when friends of my parents started joining Facebook 3-4 years after I had been on the
network.  My parents and their friends suddenly had access to everything I was doing with my life online, and people who I had not seen in a decade were suddenly giving me life advice via my Facebook status.  Talk about obnoxious.  But un-friending these people or not accepting their friend requests was not the answer.  There were times when I had information that I wanted to share with these people, whether it was news of my engagement, wedding plans, or career moves I was making.  If I had made the decision to deny their friend requests or un-friend them, I would have lost the ability to communicate with them via Facebook.

Over the past week, I have received an average of 6 friend requests per day.  Almost all of these people I have never heard of before, but upon inspecting our "mutual friends" it is clear that these people want to connect with me professionally (or, perhaps more likely, simply increase their Facebook friend count for reasons beyond my understanding).  While I do not want to give these people access to everything I post on Facebook (especially personal status updates), why would I turn down someone who has initiated a relationship that could be beneficial to me professionally?  More than 15% of the traffic to my blog comes directly from Facebook, and increasing my footprint on Facebook will allow me to drive more traffic to that content and make connections that could be mutually beneficial to me and my "friends" in the future.

So how can I keep these two worlds of Facebook "friends" separate?  The rarely-talked-about, yet incredibly effective Facebook Lists tool.

Facebook Lists - 1

Every time I receive a friend request on Facebook from someone I do not recognize, I check to see what friends I have in common with the requester ("mutual friends").  99 times out of 100, the "mutual friends" will be politicians, journalists and other "professional" connections I have made on Facebook.  By simply clicking the "Add to List" drop down menu underneath the name of the friend requester, I can choose what previously created list I want to add this new friend to.  If they are someone I think will be interested in the political content I post to Facebook, I add them to my "Professional" list.  If the person is someone I know in the offline world that has no interest in politics, I place them in the "Personal" list.

Once these lists are set up, I can determine which lists see which status updates and links I post to Facebook.  For example, this blog post would not interest my personal friends on Facebook, but if I wanted to drive my professional network on Facebook to this post, I could because I have a created a list of my professional friends.  By clicking the drop-down menu to the left of the "Share" button, I can manually select exactly who I want to see my Facebook status update or link. 

Facebook Lists - 2

In this example, I want my entire professional list to see my link, so I select "Professional" and save my setting.  Once I click "Share" only my professional contacts will be able to see my link, sparing my personal friends from my political ramblings.

Facebook Lists - 3

Facebook Lists can also be incredibly effective for political campaigns at the local and congressional level.  If a candidate is using a Facebook profile instead of a Facebook page, they have the ability to segment their friends into many different messaging niches.  Let's say Candidate X for State House posts a Facebook status update regarding their position on property taxes.  If 35 people "like" that Facebook status, Candidate X can be relatively certain that those 35 people agree with their stance on that issue.  If property taxes are an important issue to Candidate X's campaign, why not segment those 35 people into a separate Facebook List and target future messages regarding property taxes (especially fundraising pleas) to those people? 

This principle of segmenting your message is a timeless one that has been made simple in other online mediums such as e-mail.  But it admittedly requires much more effort on Facebook.

Facebook has evolved a great deal since its launch six years ago, and those of us that have been a member of the network for a number of years have seen our network of friends evolve with it.  For those of us who continue to use Facebook and other forms of social media to promote our candidates and causes, we will always be confronted with the challenge of keeping our personal and professional lives separate online.  This alternative Facebook Friend Diet, though tedious, has immensely helped me segment my Facebook network instead of purge it.  I hope it will do the same for you.

3 Tips for Optimizing Videos for Search

Posted by Jordan Raynor
Mon, 2010-01-25 09:02

When Facebook began rolling out its Twitter-like tagging feature in September of last year, I decided to launch an experiment in search optimization for YouTube videos.  With my very primitive video editing software and skills, I quickly put together this simple and relatively unimpressive video:

 

Nothing special, but it got the job done.  Instead of focusing a ton of time on creating and editing a high quality video, I decided to focus more on optimizing the video for search, to see if the video could achieve viewing longevity on the world's second largest search engine - YouTube. Optimizing my video for search, I followed the following 3 simple steps, which I hope you will be able to use for your own online videos:

  1. Include major keywords in the title of the video.
  2. Use the 'Description' section to your advantage.  You are able to include a lot of text in this section and if you use it as an opportunity to repeatedly plug in your keywords, it can go a long way in optimizing your video for the search keywords you are trying to target.
  3. Tag and tweak. When you launch your video, be sure to tag the video with the appropriate keywords, just as you do with your title and description.  But your search optimization is not done yet!  Be sure to monitor your video and others with similar keywords.  If you notice that another video is performing better than yours, try copying some of that video's keywords and adding them to yours to try to compete on the same keywords.  Adapting your video tags can be one of the best ways to keep your video alive via search.

The results of my experiment continue to surprise me today.  After the initial promotion of the video on my Facebook profile, Twitter and my blog, the video views predictably spiked to a high of 214 views in one day.  Nothing too impressive.  But as the graph below displays, unlike most videos, this video did not die out 24 hours after its creation.  The video has received a steady amount of views over the past 4 months.  At the time I publish this post, the video has been viewed a total of 3,847 times - 77% of those views have been discovered through search related entry-points (Related videos, YouTube search and Google search).

YouTube video view discovery graph

Round-Up of MA Senate Online Politics Stories

Posted by Jordan Raynor
Wed, 2010-01-20 09:52
Scott Brown's incredible victory in Massachusetts has produced an onslaught of stories this week about how the GOP is surpassing Democrats in online politics/organizing.  With numerous links  to these individual stories across the internet, I thought I would do my best to compile them all in one easy-to-navigate round-up:

If you know of a MA Senate online politics story not included above, please leave a link in the
comments section below and I will do my best to include it on this list.

Ignore Influential Twitterers At Your Own Peril

Posted by Jordan Raynor
Mon, 2010-01-18 08:38

Your campaign has targeted newspaper reporters for decades and bloggers for years.  But what about individual Twitter users?  Can an individual Twitter user reach a large enough number of opinion leaders, activists and voters to make it worth your while?

I have long wondered if there is a way to compare the reach of one's Twitter account to that of a blog.  Blog and website traffic is easily measured with free services such as Google Analytics and other more sophisticated programs used by most web publishers.  These services tell web publishers exactly how many impressions their site is serving and where that traffic is coming from.

Twitter is much more difficult to measure.  Many URL shorteners provide detailed analytics on links posted on Twitter (see bit.ly and awe.sm), but aside from link tracking, there is no universal way to measure how many "impressions" you are serving with your tweets - in other words, how many of your followers are actually reading your tweets.

A few weeks ago, I posed the following question to my Twitter followers:

Is there any way to accurately compare impressions served between a Twitter account and a blog (assuming you have traffic data on the blog)?

Not surprisingly, no one had a solution to my dilemma.

After doing a little more digging of my own, Klout.com CEO and Co-Founder, Joe Fernandez reminded me of a statistic the free service provides that may be the best answer to this issue yet - "True Reach".  Fernandez (who was gracious enough to consult with me on this piece) explained to me that True Reach allows you to, "...look beyond the follower count and understand how many people are actually paying attention to your content."

If you are not familiar with Klout, put simply, Klout measures influence across the social web.  Klout is the only influence measuring Twitter app featured on Twitter.com's homepage and has been cited by leading social media gurus when comparing the influence of various Twitter users.

Klout's "True Reach" statistic is the most unique and accurate statistic I have found to date to compare a specific Twitter user's following to a website's "Absolute Unique Visitor" statistic.  Klout defines "True Reach" by the following:

This is the size of your engaged audience. This number will be smaller than the number of followers you have because we subtract spam followers and inactive accounts. Klout calculates influence for each individual relationship, so we also subtract the people who you have little influence over. For example, if you are followed by a person who follows 5,000 other people and you two have never interacted, share
very few common friends, and generally don't tweet about the same topics, it's likely that your tweets are barely seen by this person, and you probably have little to no influence over them. On the other hand, if a person takes the time to put you on a Twitter list, it means they really value the content you produce, and will increase the
influence you have over them.

True Reach is broken into the following subcategories:

Reach

  • Are your tweets interesting and informative enough to build an audience?
  • How far has your content been spread across Twitter?
  • Are people adding you to lists and are those lists being followed?

Demand

  • How many people did you have to follow to build your count of followers
  • Are your follows often reciprocated?

Factors measured: Followers, Friends, Total Retweets, Follower/Follow Ratio, Followed Back %, @ Mention Count, List Count, List Followers Count.

So how can Klout's True Reach be used to compare impressions served between a Twitter profile and a website?  Let's look at an example:

According to my Klout profile, my True Reach score is 1,005, meaning that Klout calculates that 1,005 of my Twitter followers, on average, are reading my tweets (a relatively small number compared to other users with much larger followings).  This number, I believe,  is comparable to an "Absolute Unique Visitor" number a traditional website publisher might report.  On average, I tweet 15 times a day (excluding @replies which are viewed by a smaller universe of people).  Multiplying my 15 tweets by my 1,005 True Reach number, my Twitter account serves an average of 15,075 impressions every day.  By comparison, the St. Petersburg Times' Buzz Blog, widely considered the most popular blog in Florida politics, serves an average of roughly 14,285 impressions per day.

This analysis gets even more interesting when you take into account that Klout's True Reach statistic does not take into account retweets of your original tweet - the most viral aspect of Twitter.  For example, a single tweet I posted a few weeks ago reached 8,263 unique Twitter users through retweets, according to TweetReach.com - that's more than 8 times Klout's True Reach number.

As Twitter continues to expand as a primary blogging platform, it will be increasingly more important to measure the reach of influential Twitter users and compare them to the reach of off-Twitter blogs.  This model, while admittedly flawed, seems to be a good start.  Communications
professionals inside and outside of politics would be wise to take a hard look at the True Reach of Twitter's most influential users important to their campaign or cause.

I have been impressed by a few political campaigns and committees who have reached
out to me and other Twitter users on a regular basis as part of their press outreach - namely Rob Simmons, Marco Rubio, Gus Bilirakis and the NRSC.  These few are the exception, far from the rule.

It is no longer an option (or at least a wise one) to ignore Twitter users in your blogger/press outreach for your campaign.  The numbers don't lie.  Campaigns that ignore influential Twitter users do so at their own peril.  Influential Twitter users with massive reach can be just
as, if not more influential than off-Twitter blogs and websites.  Hopefully you can use the above model to determine who those users are and incorporate them into your campaign's communication outreach.

Is your donate button lost?

Posted by Jordan Raynor
Sun, 2009-12-20 21:22

Last week, Google unveiled the latest must-have tool for every online campaign operative - Google Browser Size.  Upon entering the URL of your choice, Browser Size pops up an interactive overlay showing you what percentage of web browsers are able to view which sections of your site.  This comes in very handy when your campaign is trying do decide where to place a donate button, an email sign-up box or a highlighted video.

To demonstrate the power of Browser Size, I analyzed ChuckDeVore.com using the Browser Size tool:

By plugging ChuckDeVore.com into Browser Size, we are able to determine that DeVore's email sign-up box fits completely in 95% of browsers without the user having to scroll. 

Clicking through the splash page onto DeVore's homepage, we find that the "DONATE TODAY" pop-up button falls slightly down the page, viewable in 90% of browsers without scrolling:

Both DeVore's email sign-up page and donate button appear to be in easily viewable locations, increasing the likelihood that his supporters will submit their email addresses and/or donate to his campaign. 

As Browser Size can show you, moving critical components of your campaign's website just a few hundred pixels can have serious implications.  Take a look at Alan Grayson's campaign website, which has undoubtedly received a great deal of traffic ever since his "Die quickly" moment in late September:

Browser Size shows that less than 40% of Grayson's website visitors can see the entire "CONTRIBUTE" button.  If 100 people visit Grayson's site, 60 of those 100 can't see his contribute button!  That's an astounding number that should alarm any candidate, but since it's Grayson, I'm not too concerned.

What percentage of your website visitors can see your donate button?  Find out at browsersize.googlelabs.com.