Showing posts with label social search. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social search. Show all posts

Saturday, February 6, 2010

From Mashable: Facebook Homepage Redesigned for Search


As of now, my Facebook UI hasn't changed yet to the new design which gives me design-envy. Oh well, it will change pretty soon I guess -- Usually for the better. But I'm expecting another backlash from users up until they get used to it. What's new? Facebook. :P

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Facebook’s Major Redesign Emphasizes Search and So Much More


Facebook is celebrating its sixth birthday today with a dramatic redesign of the homepage that millions of people see when they log on every day.

We’ve already seen images of this new design in the past, and all the things we said to watch for are included. It places a new emphasis on search and lets you sort through much more information without ever leaving the homepage. You can even send messages without navigating away.

Facebook confirmed to us that the redesign is already rolling out to users. Everyone will get access to the new homepage shortly, and Facebook plans to post an update to its blog announcing the changes later today. In the meantime, the lucky few who have the new homepage are posting pictures on their blogs, Twitter, and elsewhere. The best repository we’ve seen is Matthew Sanders’s Posterous; it’s where we got the images in this post


A More Powerful Homepage


The pics show a much larger and more prominently placed search bar, which is just another example of how Facebook means business with search.

Facebook added real-time search features several months ago, and many of its recent privacy changes were made in the hopes that users would make some of their updates public so others could search for information just like they already do on Twitter and some other networks.

Many of the items (like groups and events) that were kept in the Applications menu in the bottom left have been moved back to the left sidebar on the main page. Rather than taking you to a new page, these now open within the main window where the feed usually appears.

UPDATE: Though you won’t see Friends lists in the screen shots, they still exist for the purposes of the privacy features for updates and profile info, and as sorting options for the news feed. The lists will expand if you click on “Friends.” Thanks to our readers for pointing this out.


Easier Messaging


Instant messaging and the e-mail-like message inbox have been moved out of the periphery as well. Not only can you check your inbox from a dropdown menu at the top, you can send messages from there as well — again, all without leaving the front page. Your IM contact list is no longer hidden in a popup menu in the bottom right; it’s now in the left sidebar.



Friday, February 5, 2010

From Mashable: Google Social Search


I've already had an online discussion about this with a good friend and former collegue, Paulo del Puerto, on this topic. Social Search is the next evolution of search -- combining the power of search with the power of social networking to bring greater relevance to search results. The premise is that you are more likely to value search results that are actually from people closer to you vs. total strangers online. I like the fact that Google provides it as an option rather than as a standard, so you can switch back and forth from traditional search and social search. I think there's value in both.

Check out the video below which is typically Google. Love it.

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Google Social Search is a standard search results page add-on that displays socially relevant content from people in your online social circle, as determined by your Google Profile.

With the beta release, Google’s also integrating social search into Google Image searches, which means you can scroll down to view pictures matching your query that contacts from your circle — friends and friends of friends — have shared online.

With the beta release Google is also introducing new UI elements to tie the social search experience together. So two additional links will appear next to the “Results from your social circle” heading, with “My social circle” and “My social content” taking you to pages that display your social circle in address book format and the content for your own results, respectively. The experience seems focused on information over design, so don’t expect any frills here.

We think the beta rollout to all English searchers is more significant than the initial labs feature, as it exposes the contextual search results to a mainstream search audience. While it’s officially a beta product today, the Google Social Search rollout will occur over the next few days. If you don’t have Social Search already, you can expect to start seeing the social results fairly soon.

For a demonstration of Google Social Search check out the video below:

Monday, February 1, 2010

From AdAge: 'Friendsourcing': Search Gone Social


Why Marketers Should Care About Your Friends' Interests

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Eric Swayne
Eric Swayne

If "Wisdom of Crowds" has been the dish of the last decade, Google has been its greatest chef. After all, who else could serve up a culinary delight of perfectly algorithmic search results? It's mathematically ideal: the entire internet is cached, indexed, scored and "interrogated" to find who says which sites are most relevant for a given search term. Search engine optimization and marketing has also become a crucial element of the Marketer's toolbox, as we game this math to keep our clients' sites a part of Google's master recipe.

And while this has served us well so far, it also has its flaws. In its purest state, Google's page pank algorithm serves up the ideal result for everyone, but it's the same ideal result for everyone. My wife and I are having our second child soon (a girl!), so when I search for "family hauler," Google will always display the Edmunds article first, and all other sites will move no higher until the ranking factors realign. But how do you know that Edmunds article is the right result for me? Here's a treasure trove of information: If you knew five of my friends have tweeted or posted on Facebook rave reviews about their Toyota Sienna, wouldn't you push that listing higher? Sure you would, but it's impossible to ask me questions about every topic I'm searching for. If every search result came with a questionnaire, we'd lose the entire essence of Google: simplicity, accuracy and speed. Of course, there is a better way to get to the same result, and it takes us back to the "Wisdom of Crowds" -- in this case, my crowd.

If it were possible to ask all my friends what they thought of "family hauler" you'd probably rank the Sienna or a number of other specific vehicles higher. And not just because I seek out a more "minivan" kind of crowd -- my friends and I happen to share similar geography and circumstances for the most part, which causes some amazing similarities. Moreover, I am much more likely to trust my friends' opinions than those of strangers. Anyone that's recently been on the search for a good doctor or dentist or accountant knows intimately how important it is to get recommendations from those you trust. Instead of crowdsourcing, this is "friendsourcing" -- the concept that people I know give better and more reliable answers for me than the world can as a whole.

All of this was nice and theoretical until we saw a flurry of action from the major search engines late last year. Bing announced deals with Facebook and Twitter, then Google got in the mix with a full unveil of its social search product. Google has also started integrating real-time, public conversations with hot, trending keyword searches. (Go take a look at what they show for "red cross Haiti donations" or "stroke" and you'll see what I mean.) If you want to start using friendsourcing right now, check out this video from Google's search-quality spokesperson, Matt Cutts , to see how social search works, and how to get started.

To say this means we're on the edge of something big is a catastrophic understatement, but marketers have only started to scratch the surface of what this means for them and their clients. At very least, we've got three fundamental paradigm shifts to deal with:

What brands say and do in social media has an increasingly direct effect on how they will appear in search engines, both in search results position and in description.

The more friends in my social circle (aka my "social graph") talk about your brand, the more likely I am to see your brand, click on your brand's listing and become another voice talking about your brand.

Many brands have recognized that their impact in social media is both powerful and tangible, but now that impact will easily spill over into other channels. "Social" isn't just a silo in your channel mix anymore, and the lines will be increasingly blurred with mass media, CRM, SEO/SEM or other channels.

The good news is that it's never too late to stake a new claim in social media for your brand, and that dramatic change can happen very quickly. Another news story that got a bit buried at the end of last year was DARPA's Red Balloon Challenge -- an experiment in how fast social networking can align and mobilize people world-wide. Ten large, red weather balloons were anchored and raised aloft in separate locations across the continental U.S. on Dec. 5, 2009. The winning team to find all 10 would win $40,000 -- and a group from M.I.T. did just that, in under nine hours. So to get your team or your clients started, here's some quick first steps:

Listen, record, observe and compare. There are a million tools on the market for searching or filtering social media conversations, and many of them are free -- Chris Brogan has anexcellent list of the ones he uses here. Most organizations are doing this already, but it's usually in a vacuum from other marketing efforts. Instead of just looking through your "ego feeds" (conversations about your company), start checking on the conversations around your search engine marketing portfolio of keywords, or use Google's keyword tool to analyze your site and start your own list. It's often interesting to see the gap between what people say about you and what they say about your product or service -- this can lead to ideas for new content on your site or places for your social media team to try to change conversations. For extra credit, start comparing the trends on these terms to your offline media: are my mass communications moving this needle? Did my latest direct-mail piece with the killer offer spark some new conversation?

Start holding everyone responsible, but make someone accountable. Your organization's social "footprint" can't be managed as a hobby. Large or small, it's time to take this seriously, because the impact will be felt from cyberspace to the cash register. Almost all marketing units are affected by (and will probably have an opinion on) social media, so it's often good to start with some kind of a "task force" comprised of representatives from each. However, the business needs to make a decision of exactly which person will own its social presence. This person doesn't need to be the one running it day-to-day, but they need to be able to speak to it fluently and have the power to make a difference.

Create a social media "lodestone" within each of your marketing efforts. Even with a cross-functional team or steering committee, it's hard to keep the social media conversation from gravitating to just a couple of marketing functions. To be truly effective, each discipline needs to know how they intersect with social media, and needs to define that in a way that attracts and excites new projects. PR, for example, can own reaching out to specific voices and generating influential conversations. CRM, however, has the opportunity to focus on longer dialogues with individual customers.

Ultimately, friendsourcing will give us a better internet experience -- one that knows us better and gives us what we're looking for, because it will be based in the human experience. The catch for marketers, then, is to get as good at playing to the right crowd as we are at gaming the right algorithm.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Eric Swayne is senior digital strategy manager for Rapp. An award-winning web designer, developer and writer, he has worked with clients across verticals, including SuperValu, Best Buy, Bank of America, American Airlines and Texas Instruments.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

from Adage Digital: What You Need to Know About Facebook's Buying FriendFeed

How Turning a Frenemy Into a BFF Could Make Social Searching a Snap
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David Berkowitz
David Berkowitz
FriendFeed, the social-identity aggregator that never seemed to gain much market share beyond early adopters, is suddenly hitched to one of the biggest digital growth engines: Facebook. Marketers and consumers have a lot to cheer about Facebook's acquisition.

After a late 2008 growth spurt, FriendFeed's audience leveled off, according to Compete data, hitting 902,000 unique visitors in January 2009 and attracting 918,000 in July 2009. During the same span in 2009, Compete says Facebook added 54 million U.S. visitors. That growth has led a lot of marketers to ignore FriendFeed, and it's hard to blame them for fishing where the fish are.

Aggregating social identities
It's a shame, though, because FriendFeed is a valuable service, and it will only be more valuable as consumers participate with more social-media properties. On FriendFeed, users can aggregate updates from 58 services including Facebook, Twitter, Digg, SlideShare, Pandora and Amazon. Those users can follow each other across the range of those services to get all of their updates in one place.

Another View:
Is FriendFeed Facebook's Twitter Killer?
Ian Schafer: This Move Is About Social-Media Conversations

For marketers, aggregating identities is just one part of the value. Some have used it well, such as the Travel Channel, which pulls in updates from six different services, including Delicious, Digg and Mixx. The New York Times has also used it well, reaching nearly 1,600 followers -- but a mere one-thousandth of the reach it has through its main Twitter account.

The bigger part of FriendFeed is its search functionality. A marketer, without even registering on the site, can search every FriendFeed user's updates from the site's home page. It's not a fully representative search, as FriendFeed reaches only a niche audience. But it can be a great way to search users' updates across dozens of services so that the marketer won't wind up searching each network individually. Marketers have a hard enough time remembering to search Twitter, so this is a great way to get a taste of what certain consumers are talking about.

The Travel Channel's FriendFeed
The Travel Channel's FriendFeed
Facebook, meanwhile, has been making it easier for its users to share updates from other sites. It wants to be more of that aggregator, a social portal. It doesn't exactly need FriendFeed to make this happen. What it's doing instead is stressing the importance for consumers and marketers to have a way to share all of their digital and social updates in a single place.

Real-time social search
Hopefully, through the FriendFeed acquisition, Facebook will make it easier to search these updates. It's hard enough to search for anything on Facebook, though the network has indicated that it plans to focus more on that experience. Now imagine if on Facebook you could search what consumers are publicly sharing anywhere; that search functionality would make Twitter Search seem like a kid's plaything.

Steve Rubel, director of insights at Edelman Digital, was an early FriendFeed user and thinks it could change the way consumers search as well. Last summer he wrote about that aspect of FriendFeed in these virtual pages:

"Social contextual search addresses Google's Achilles' heel: superfluous content. When users scour the web, they can't easily separate content they trust (i.e., content that has been created by their friends) from everything else. ... However, if you can just search what your friends think and prioritize it over everything else, you have a very powerful recommendation engine."

Smaller opportunities
Lastly, this acquisition is a reminder for marketers that there's a lot more going on in smaller places on the web. Go to
usernamecheck.com to see dozens of such examples. All of these places present opportunities for brands. When there's not a reason for a certain brand to take part, those brands should still seek to secure their trademarks and identities to make it harder for consumers to hijack those brands.

The web's much bigger than Facebook, and Facebook knows that, which is why it wants to incorporate updates from wherever consumers and brands live on the web. Now it all goes back to Facebook, which should grow even more useful for marketers thanks to the acquisition. And if FriendFeed improves as a destination in the process, all the better.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
David Berkowitz is director of emerging media for 360i. He blogs regularly at Inside the Marketer's Studio and 360i's Digital Connections. He also contributed to the just-released Social Marketing Playbook.

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