aug 09

Google has acquired third-party social media applications developer Slide for a reported US$228 million.

Pay-Pal co-founder Max Levchin started Slide in 2004. The company’s value peaked in 2008 when it was estimated to be worth $500 million.

David Glazer, engineering director at Google, wrote on the company’s official blog, “While we don’t have any detailed product plans to share right now, we’re thrilled to welcome Max and his very talented team to Google.”

According to TechCrunch, a source close to the acquisition said Google agreed to pay US$182 million to acquire Slide plus US$46 million extra in employee retention bonuses, bringing the total investment up to $228 million.

In 2007 Slide was the largest Facebook app supporter with big hits including Top Friends and SuperPoke.

The digital industry assumes Slide will help Google boost its current business direction towards stronger social media capability. Despite pulling the plug on social networking service Google Wave last week, the company is still rumoured to be working on social media platform Google Me.

Source: campaignasia.com

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aug 03

Looking for an expert to give you some great social media pointers?

Look no more - this week WhatTheFuckIsMySocialMediaStrategy.com launched! (PR agencies and social media experts across the web, watch out!).  WhatTheFuckIsMySocialMediaStrategy.com can a tell startups to “identify relevant and compelling hooks”, “humanise the brand by driving the audience conversations”, and combine a bevy of many other pleonastic words to forge taglines that are utterly and completely devoid of meaning. Free of charge!!!

The site works by jumbling a few verbs (facilitate, foster, leverage) and nouns (‘word of mouth’, buzz, ‘branded utilities’) into a sentence that sounds impressive but means absolutely nothing.

The site is inspired by the similarly titled WhatTheFuckShouldIMakeForDinner.

Source:  Techcrunch

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jul 21

Hmm I actually didn’t know that Facebook was initially bank-rolled by one of the co-founders of Pay Pal or that the second most popular Facebook Page is that of Homer Simpson, right behind Michael Jackson? Or that the overall amount of time spent on Facebook each month is 8.3 billion hours?

Here is your chance to get all the Facebook facts you didn’t know that you wanted to know - Enjoy!

Facebook: What You Probably Didn't Know

Source: Online PhD Programs for Mashable

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jun 17

HubSpot has just compiled 27 statistics, soundbites, and slides from a variety of sources, including marketing thought leaders and research institutions.

The Social Media presentation includes 27 slides on:

  • Social Media Marketing Statistics
  • Definitions and Explanations of Social Media
  • Free and Paid Social Media Tools
  • Social Media ROI Statistics

See the report online here or download the entire presentation as a PPT file or PDF file for your own use.

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apr 28

Not that much to say - just a really nice graphical overview of the users on Social Media:

Source: Ethan Bloch, Flowtown

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aug 27

Looking through a whitepaper on Facebook and reading an article ‘if it makes sense to purchase Friendster’ I found some interesting points that I wanted to share. I also made me thing about the future of the different social media networks and

At the end of 2004, Facebook had over 1 million users; today, the number has increased to over 250 million active users. And, while once the social network was limited to college students, today over two-thirds of Facebook users are not in college. In fact, those 35 and over are the fasting growing age group. Facebook reports that the average user has 120 friends on the site; there are over 5 billion minutes spent on Facebook each day worldwide; over 30 million users update their statuses at least once a day; and over 8 million users become fans of Pages each day.

According to Nielsen NetView, in April 2009 the total minutes spent on Facebook in the US reached almost 13.9 billion, a nearly 700% growth over April 2008, and resulted in Facebook being the number one social networking site for that month, far surpassing MySpace, which held the top spot a year ago.

Looking at Friendster (One of the world’s first social networks with strength in Southeast Asia, that at this time is actually looking for a buyer) - Matt Sutton, Managing director at Aktiv Digital commented on it’s potential:

“… Friendster’s largest penetration is in Asia, the world’s largest digital playing field. It actually has very high penetration in large markets with currently low digital spends — namely, the Philippines and Indonesia. This represents a short-term challenge and a long-term opportunity. Friendster is a big brand with huge reach and in this market advertisers tend to cling on to those offline hooks, attributing advertising with buying profile — the ‘if it’s famous I will be too’ approach. But that’s not a long-term defendable proposition, and things get a little more complicated when you look at it from a micro level. Facebook’s huge number of column inches has made it the kid on the street with the hippest trainers. It will find it easier to attract attention. All the big social network players can swallow huge budgets in one booking, so they need to be able to justify the spend they receive against each other. Friendster can co-exist here but it will need to differentiate its audience. The question is, can it do this?”

It made me think about something I heard at AD:Tech earlier this year;

Ian Stewart, Friendster’s Head of Asia said that there in the future of social networking will be a place for every network - each network for each target group. He described the role for the four biggest social networks this way:

This was backed up by a Forrester Research analyst that said, “If MySpace is about your entertainment life, Facebook is about your whole life.” Facebook which touts itself as helping you “connect and share with the people in your life,” appeals to broad range of consumers. MySpace on the other hand has a younger audience and tends to be more associated with entertainment and music.

So the future seems to bring segmentation and coexistence… Further down the road it will also bring integration and trends like aggregators will grow. In the end when everyone has a profile on several social media platforms there is a need for social media search engines as well as aggregators to make all of it more accessible:

What do you think the future will bring?

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