Friday 2 August 2013

Facebook Introduces Embedded Posts

Introducing Embeddable Posts

Facebook announced that users will soon be able to embed Facebook posts into their websites and blogs.

Embedded posts contain all the information and interactivity that they have on Facebook: pictures, videos, and hashtags; share, like and comment buttons and totals; as well as the name and category of the page it was originally posted on.

Hashtags, call to action buttons and the original page name can all be clicked on and interacted with. Longer posts which have to be edited down to fit within the embedded posts template will have a ‘See More’ option at the bottom which, when clicked, takes viewers to the whole post on Facebook. Only public posts can be embedded online.

Twitter users have been able to embed tweets for a while, while Instagram and Vine recently enabled the embedding of videos and images. As with the embeddable content on Twitter, Vine and Instagram, embedded Facebook posts will improve the quality of content on news articles and blog posts, and drive traffic to Facebook.

Facebook are trying out the feature with a number of journalism sites before releasing it worldwide, including CNNHuffington Post, Bleacher Report, PEOPLE and Mashable.

Are you excited by the new Facebook embedded posts feature?

Monday 29 July 2013

Selling on Social Media [INFOGRAPHIC]

With people spending a significant amount of time on social networks, companies are also flocking to the different available platforms. This is as simple as businesses going to where people are, hoping these people will listen to their message and eventually buy products.

This infographic from Top Web Design Schools says, however, that not all social media platforms are created equal for marketing to audiences.

Nonetheless, 79 percent of marketers say that they have integrated social media into their traditional marketing activities. Furthermore, 86 percent of marketers say that social media is important for their business.

What, then, are the social networking platforms used by marketers?

“Companies use a wide range of types of social media, from Facebook to Pinterest, but Facebook is still king of social media,” the infographic notes. Twitter with 80 percent followed by LinkedIn with 70 percent.
Next on the list is blogging which has 58 percent of marketers saying they use the platform. This is followed by YouTube, the video sharing juggernaut by Google. Another Google property, Google+, is next with 42 percent.

Google+ is followed by Pinterest at a close 41 percent. There are more platforms used including photo sharing platforms (e.g. Instagram – 18 percent), social bookmarking (e.g. StumbleUpon – 10 percent), podcasting (5 percent), question and answer sites (4 percent), and daily deals (4 percent).

Social media marketing and social selling

Meanwhile, when it comes to single most important platform, marketers overwhelmingly choose Facebook when asked (49 percent). Next are LinkedIn (16 percent) and blogging (14 percent) followed by Twitter (12 percent).

The infographic notes that 4 percent of marketers say YouTube is the most important social media platform for them. 2 percent choose Google+ while Pinterest, forums and others all got 1 percent.

When it comes to reasons cited by marketers for their use of social media, increasing exposure takes the lead at 89 percent. This is followed by increasing traffic (75 percent), providing market insight (69 percent), developing loyal fans (65 percent) and generating leads (61 percent).

Other reasons include improving search rankings (58 percent), developing business partnerships (54 percent), reducing marketing costs (47 percent) and improving sales (43 percent).

According to this infographic, 62 percent of companies that spend 40 or more hours a week using social media earn new business through their efforts.

Just six hours a week can make a difference as more than 92 percent of marketers indicated that their social efforts increased exposure for their businesses.

At least 61 percent of businesses with 10 or fewer employees agreed that social media reduced marketing expenses while only 38 percent of businesses with 1,000 or more employees said so.
However, only one in four marketers can directly measure return of investment for their social efforts, the infographic says.

Learn more including what the future holds and how much each popular social platform increased their usage from the Top Web Design Schools infographic below.

Social media, marketing, social marketing, infographic,