Updates from September, 2010

  • Link Your Brightcove Players Correctly = Grow Your Web Traffic

    Mat Giordano 8:57 am on September 17, 2010 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: analytics, , growth, web traffic

    So I filled out a Brightcove customer satisfaction survey a while ago, and gave some feedback about a feature I thought would be really cool: an intuitive way to share your video links and have them point back into the page they originated from, as opposed to going to link.brightcove.com.

    Earlier this week I started chatting with Jeremy Merle, the product design and user experience director at Brightcove via email about the feedback I left. We set up a call for this morning at 10 AM EST, so I could clarify what I meant.

    In the meantime, Brightcove rolled out Studio 4.2.1. In this release came a whole new level of analytics that’s available to everyone, including Attention Span analytics (which are really eye-opening) and other goodies like Engagement and Unique Viewers. The one I want to touch on here is Top Domains.

    I was looking at this and thinking “Hmmm…Brightcove.com is accounting for almost 1/4 of our video web traffic. There has to be a better way to dump those visits and pageviews back into our domains.”

    In essence, we’re sort of hemorrhaging web traffic because when people are sharing our videos via email, links, etc. from the players they end up at brightcove.com instead of back at our sites. One of our top referrers is Facebook; imagine if we could get all those views back to home base.

    I brought up this point to Jeremy this morning on our call, since it was essentially what I was wondering when I gave my feedback initially and he did some research and helped me out on how to fix it.

    Before I wrote this I went and looked at some other Entercom markets’ web properties and every one I saw was linked to link.brightcove.com, so I can assume a large chunk (if not all) of our markets need to make this fix. It’s as simple as going into the Publishing Module, clicking on the player you want to edit, changing the hosting URL back to the page you have the player embedded in, generating the code and replacing the embed code you already have.

    It gets a bit hairy there, though, since you want to make sure you are putting the embed code inside the CSS div in Vortal (and not deleting mobile/iPhone code), plus local webmasters don’t have access to the homepage template holding the chromeless player (and the Watch landing page is a Drupal page) so I’m assuming the Digital team would have to get involved at some point to help adjust this stuff. I know I’ll be putting in a request to get it done here.

    We’d really like to monetize our video content better in market here, and I think a little fix like this across all the players will grow our stats (and web traffic overall) quite nicely to make a stronger case to potential advertisers.

    To see an example of how it will work, I have published the updated player in our Froggy 101 video page. Just click “Get Link” within any video and see how the link generates a URL direct to that video inside of the player on the site.

    Merry Friday!

    UPDATE (9.20.10): As Dan M. noted in the comments below, you don’t actually have to go in and change your embed code after updating your ‘Publish Module’ settings; they update automatically. Check out  Dan’s comment for browser caching information.

     
  • 9 Social Media Topics that Need to Die

    emarti 2:13 pm on March 25, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags:

    1. Getting More Followers and Fans

    Unless you can tell me what the hell they’re going to do for you, how you’re going to mobilize them, and what you’re going to give back to them that makes it worth their while to grant you their attention and continue to give it, who cares? People aren’t marbles, and you don’t get any points for collecting a bunch of staring eyeballs that are waiting for you to do something significant. Attention only matters if can move people beyond noticing, and into investing their time and energy. (More …)

     
  • 2010 Trust Barometer, Image File Types, IKEA?

    Mat Giordano 9:55 am on February 4, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: edelman, facebook, ikea, image type guide, , transparency

    Every year PR firm Edelman releases a trust and credibility report called the Edelman Trust Barometer . It’s still just a survey, but a great global point of registration for corporate responsibility. Interestingly enough, the 2010 survey shows trust and transparency now steering corporation’s global reputations just as much as quality of product. See the survey here.

    Unfortunately social media took a backseat in these results (sitting second to last, next to corporate advertising *eeek*). These are neat things to look at considering the world of internet radio, where we have our tentacles firmly attached into a bunch of these different compartments. How can we make a difference using online strategies to make our individual local brands more transparent and trusted? Probably some combination of personalities really embracing the web as a transparency platform & severely straight-forward business practices.

    Not to drone on and on about this stuff, I’m just a true believer in transparency. And I think it can help. This is just a survey though, so take it with a grain of salt:

    “The 2010 Edelman Trust Barometer survey sampled 4,875 informed publics in two age groups (25-34 and 35-64). All informed publics met the following criteria: college-educated; household income in the top quartile for their age in their country; read or watch business/news media at least several times a week; follow public policy issues in the news at least several times a week.”

    Anyhoo, on other graphic-ey webby stuff, don’t you always want to have a neat handy guide for rolling through image file types and figuring out which is best for your target? Here’s your handy image file type guide (from .TIFF to .PNG, .GIF & beyond).

    Doubling back on the social media front for a positive spin this was a brilliant, simple campaign for an IKEA store opening in Malmö, Sweden using Facebook tagging as a way to generate business on a budget. How could digital peeps in our markets apply this strategy easily to a campaign for a client? Quick video:



     
  • Drupal Gardens & Cupcakes.

    Mat Giordano 8:34 am on January 27, 2010 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: cupcakes, Drupal, drupal gardens

    As I figure out my plan of action for the day to stay uninformed about the Apple Tablet and just watch the keynote on my iPhone when I get home later (sounds much easier in theory) I thought I’d share a quick couple nuggets with everyone.

    Until now, we’ve really only seen Drupal as a service that requires us to download the core and run the code from a server. The beta launch of Drupal Gardens is possibly the Ning/Wordpress solution to that issue. Not as much a standalone web solution as it is a way to quickly set up microsites that are socially powered for promotional purposes, it presents itself as a really great tool for corporations such as ours to have in-market solutions for fast deployment.

    Plus it’s free until the end of 2010 – peep the demo below and then grab your invite here:

    Also in totally irrelevant news, these brain slug cupcakes by Alicia Traveria are Futurama-awesome. Carpe diem!

     
  • Banksy, Tweeting from Space, & the ABCs.

    Mat Giordano 9:47 am on January 22, 2010 | 1 Permalink | Reply

    Happy Friday everyone. Thought I’d share some inspirado from this week.

    I thought this ABCs of Branding poster series was really brilliant:

    ABC Branding poster design

    You can see the full collection over at Logo Design Love.

    This week also brought us our first tweet from space! I’m a dork so I thought it was super neat.

    Also, if you have a minute check out this trailer from now-famous London street artist Banksy’s new film that will be at Sundance next week:

    Hope everyone has a great weekend!

     
  • Keeping up with the Tweets!

    Tracy West 4:18 pm on January 20, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply

    In our last conference call Emily showed us a really good way to have our Twitter posts post on our webpages by using HootSuite.com.  And it is a pretty cool program.  But I was already in the process of working with Intertech to build a widget that shows our Tweets.  Fawad came up with a perfect widget that was easy to set up through either a station Twitter account or a personal Twitter account.  You can see an example here:  http://www.newsradioword.com/ .

    tweets_screenshot

    It’s really easy to set up, you can choose your colors for the widget, the height and width, and once you’ve set up your list in your Twitter account, you just add the list to the widget.  Plus, once posted it’s easy for listeners to click on your Tweet and get to the persons account so they can start following!

    If any one wants help with this I know Fawad would love to help and I’m more than happy to explain it to folks.

    Tracy

     
  • 4 Tips for Tweeting: Get Zen + Get Productive!

    emarti 12:41 pm on January 19, 2010 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: tips,

    4 Quick, Easy Tips that even a seasoned Tweeter should take a look at. Or if you’re just beginning, these are great points to start with!

     
    http://mashable.com/2010/01/12/zen-socia...

    1. Approach With a Beginner’s Mind


    meditation image“In the beginner’s mind, there are many possibilities; in the expert’s, there are few.” – Zen Master Suzuki Roshi

    It seems that more and more people are claiming to be experts of one kind or another, and many of them are using social media. In fact, recent reports suggest that there are now over 15,700 people claiming to be social media experts on Twitter.

    There is nothing wrong with experts. I am sure many who claim to be are quite skilled and knowledgeable. However, the question is not only how much we know, but how much are we willing to learn from our time on social media?

    The person who thinks he “knows” or is an “expert” is often less open to new learning. In the age of social media, things change so fast that what we knew about a subject yesterday may not apply to today. What matters is less about what we knew in the past, and much more about how open we are to learning today. This applies especially to social media.

    Lesson: Rather than focus on what you know when engaging in social media, focus on what you can learn.


    2. Give What You Want to Receive


    baton imageZen student asks, “I am very discouraged. What should I do?”” Zen teacher responds, “encourage others.”

    There are countless ways that social media can help us with everything from our business to our social life. However, while there is much to gain from social media, we could also say there is much to give to social media too. From a Zen perspective, it is important to give what we wish to receive. Want to find more customers for your business on Twitter (Twitter) or Facebook (Facebook)? Help others find customers for their business. Feel like you deserve more praise online? Praise others more. Want more people responding to your tweets? Respond to their tweets more. Tired of reading meaningless tweets? Make the effort to post meaningful ones yourself.

    If we approach social media focused exclusively on what we can gain or what we think we should get, we set up a division in our relationships, one that often ends up preventing us from receiving the very thing we seek. When we give what we want to receive, it changes the dynamic such that, ironically, we are more likely to get what we seek.

    Lesson: Focus not only what you can gain but also what you can give.


    3. Only Add Useful Content


    speak no evil image“Do not speak unless you can improve on silence.” — Zen saying

    The tools of social media give us countless ways to share content with people across the world. They do very little, however, to ensure that content is useful or purposeful. There is often the belief that to be active and effective on social media one has to post consistently, letting people know throughout the day what we are doing and thinking.

    However, just as great music is in part the relationship between sound and silence, we could say that for Twitter and Facebook updates, what matters is not just the content of our posts, but also the amount of space between them. I am sure we all likely follow people on Twitter who may not tweet everyday, but when they do, we are excited to read what they post. It is the quality of their tweets that matters more than the quantity of them.

    Lesson: Post not to fill empty space, but to add value.


    4. See Differently


    vision image“Look out from the frameless window of a long pause. Let the images come to you rather than chasing outward after them…. If you want to see differently, you’ll have to look differently.” — Ji Aoi Isshi

    A key element to Zen is to focus not only what exists in the external world, but to also be attentive to the internal lens from which we view it. If a cup is filled half way with water, one person could see it as half empty, another as half full. The cup, however, is what it is.

    In the same way, we can have a million followers on Twitter, then look at Ashton Kutcher who has over 4 million, and think, “I am way behind” and approach the service with the desire to “catch up.” Or we can have 20 followers, and think, “Cool, twenty people want to read my tweets,” and engage with Twitter from a positive state of mind. The number of followers we have often has little to do with the positive or negative attitude with which we approach the service. What matters is less about our number of followers, and much more about how we “see” or “look” — the mental approach we take.

    Lesson: Focus more on the mental approach you take, and less on comparing yourself with others.

     
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