Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category
New York Fashion Week: Front Row For All!

It’s that time of year again in New York City. The trendy restaurants are booked solid, there are black Escalades everywhere and the white tents are up in Lincoln Center. It’s Fashion Week, and this year for the first time, fashionistas everywhere are given real-time access to the runway thanks to Maybelline New York, the official makeup sponsor of Mercedes-Benz Fashion Week.
Throughout the seven day fashion extravaganza connoisseurs who aren’t lucky enough to have a press pass (or volunteer pass for that matter) can tune into the Maybelline New York YouTube channel where 30 runway shows are being streamed live. The live video is supported by a #liverunway Twitter aggregator that pulls in consumer conversations about the live show, and is wired with Facebook and Twitter Connect for easy content sharing.
The Fashion Week access that Maybelline is providing consumers through social media is unprecedented. Never before has a regular gal like me been able to see the latest looks and designs of Monique Lhuillier and Christian Siriano at the same time as Anna Wintour and Nina Garcia. Thanks to social media, a coveted seat under that white tent, which by nature is so exclusive, is suddenly so attainable. An excellent case study of how brands can use social technology to provide consumers with exclusive access to the content they crave, thus further establishing and strengthening the consumer/brand connection/relationship.
Maybelline’s decision to provide consumers with exclusive Fashion Week access is no accident. Over the past year Maybelline has taken an extremely editorial position in the marketplace, providing consumers with trend reports, make-up lessons and more through their digital and social properties. The Fashion Week initiatives are an extension of this stance, deeply engaging consumers with fashion and New York, two pillars of the Maybelline brand, up close and personal.
Bloom and Zucker Socialize the City ‘berg to ‘berg

If 3,029,062 people “Like” Mark Zuckerberg on Facebook, could 18,976,457 people “Like” New York City? Rumor has it Mayor Michael Bloomberg just had a powwow with the world’s most popular dweeb to discuss pushing the Big Apple into the social realm (which is really the least Zuckerberg could do to redeem himself for that painful SNL cameo.)
The NY Daily News reports that while Big Mike has been somewhat vague about the details of the meeting, he believes “there’s a lot of potential” in NYC having its own Facebook page. Bloomberg’s even gone so far as to hire a Millennial to man the helm as Chief Digital Officer – 27-year-old Rachel Sterne (<< follow her!) There has been some criticism that Sterne doesn’t have enough experience for the position or its reported $115,000 salary, but I beg to differ.
What does her resume look like? Our new CDO is founder and CEO of citizen journalism site GroundReport, and was named one of America’s most promising social entrepreneurs by Businessweek, at age 25. Rachel’s also an adjunct professor at Columbia Business School, despite the absence of her own graduate degree. AdWeek even claims she’s “a bit of a darling in New York’s digital scene“. So, what else do you want? Social and digital is a relatively new space for city government to play, and I believe it takes a fresh and eager mind to understand, embrace, and stay on top of it all.
Equipping the Big Apple with a social media presence will do more than give New Yorkers a greater sense of city pride, it could be an efficient way for NYC to both communicate and collaborate with those of us who live here. I’m curious to learn more about Zuckerberg’s plan for how New York can use Facebook, and what our new CDO will bring to the table. What’s your social media strategy for your city?
Mr Youth Goes Back to School

As the name may imply, here at Mr Youth many of us are not that far removed from college and often find ourselves immersed in the culture as part of the job. Via our RepNation influencer platform, we spend a lot of time on college campuses working with students and studying youth trends. Whenever I find myself on campus, I can’t help but reminisce about the good ol’ days and it always surprises me to see how much social media and technology has influenced college life in the short time since I left.
The Notes:
(Then) Paper and pen. Many of my professors frowned upon students having laptops in the classroom as they felt it was a distraction. I didn’t own a laptop until my senior year of college, and even then I rarely took it to class.
(Now) Studies are being done at colleges like the University of Notre Dame that analyze the pros and cons of using modern technology in the classroom. In this study, iPads were provided to a group of students, intended to be used as an e-reader, but over the course of the semester students found the iPads to be more useful as an aggregation tool rather than a replacement for a textbook. They reported that the devices are hard to take notes on and the majority felt the $499 price tag was just too expensive for their beer and ramen noodle budgets. Still, when asked how they felt about giving up the device at the end of the study, 65% said it would be hard to relinquish the iPad.
The Courses:
(Then) Looking back on my college curriculum, my major in Strategic Communications was largely focused in Public Relations – writing press releases and learning how to gain PR through traditional news outlets. I can’t help but wonder how much the curriculum has changed in these few short years since I graduated, as I naturally assume a large focus must be on non-traditional media like Facebook, Twitter, blogs and the like.
(Now) Interestingly enough, I spent a little time on my alma mater’s website and it doesn’t look like much has changed in terms of the courses required to graduate with a BA in Strategic Communications. I’m going to guess that social media is interwoven into the current curriculum, which brings up an interesting question: Can social media really be taught, or is it something you can only really learn through practice?
The Phones:
(Then) Having a brother who works for a wireless provider, owning the latest and greatest cell phone has always been an obsession of mine. I vividly remember walking into college sophomore year with a hot pink Motorola flip phone with photo, video and texting capabilities, and wondering how it could ever get better than that.
(Now) Fast Forward to 2011, a recent study revealed that 49% of all college students own smart phones and this figure has nearly doubled over the past year. I would estimate that about 90% of the students we work with though RepNation equip themselves with iPhone, Droid and Blackberry devices which result in an expectation of near-immediate response time. It makes me wonder – in another 5 years, will students no longer have the luxury of reading emails and taking time to come up with a thoughtful and strategic response, in an effort to respond as quickly as possible? And, if this begins to become the norm so early on in one’s professional career, how will this affect the way we do business in the “real world”?
At the end of the day, I find the changes all very exciting, yet slightly terrifying at the same time. With endless potential it’s going to be hard to keep up with it all, but with the possibility of lectures being held via hologram, how can you not want to try?
Internet Blocked As Unrest Escalates in Egypt
Today the world waits as reports are rolling in that Egypt has put a lock down on Internet and SMS, creating a blackout that has prevented internet traffic from entering or exiting the country as of 12:30am.
The unprecedented move was made by the Egyptian government in an effort to silence voices of dissent against the regime of President Hosni Mubarak, just hours before a new series of major protests were planned. Before the blackout, Egyptian activists were utilizing hashtags such as #Jan25 to communicate.
As we’ve seen in Iran and Tunisia previously, Facebook, Twitter and other social media platforms are key communication tools used by political protesters to organize large-scale gatherings and rallies. By blocking these sites, the regime has stripped its people of something much more important than a tweet or a status update—the fundamental right of equal access to knowledge and ideas.
Speaking on the importance of social media, President Obama stated, “There are certain core values that we believe as Americans are universal: freedom of speech, freedom of expression, people being able to use social networking and other mechanisms to communicate their concerns; and that is no less true in the Arab world than it is in the United States”.
While we cannot predict the ultimate political and cultural significance of the outage, our thoughts are with the people of Egypt today.
Exploring Mobile Trends For 2011: Social Scrapbooking

This article originally appeared as part of MediaPost’s Engage:Teens Publications.
Nearly everyone is pointing to 2011 as the year of mobile, but it’s time we start getting more specific about what this means to better capitalize on this new form of interaction. I’ve been taking a look back on 2010 to see what we can learn about how people are using their mobile devices, from texting to the web to apps. The first stop in this exploration took me to “social scrapbooking”: the potent mixture of mobile, social, and photo-sharing. This is going to be big for teens in 2011, and here’s the why/how of it:
It’s obvious that mobile has taken on a life beyond simple communication with a friend or family via voice or text. The combination of mobile and social sharing has put a powerful broadcasting tool in the hands of teens. It’s a world in which the on- and offline worlds are constantly bridged. This is a game-changer for the teenage mindset. Teens, who, as Frank O’Brien articulated on the Engage:Teens blog back in October, are primarily concerned with crafting and maintaining their image among social circles, now have the ability (if not also the social pressure) to constantly broadcast the defining elements of their lifestyle and image to their social networks.
Marinate on that while sprinkling in some data from the likes of Pew, Neilsen, and other 2010 studies that have told us one of the top uses of mobile devices among teens is the taking and sharing of photos. There’s no simpler way to offer up a rich slice of your life than by sharing a photo on your social networks for all to see, like, comment on or retweet — or even by sending a mass MMS to your inner circle. Every photo shared is an opportunity build ego and define one’s self in the eyes of one’s friends.
So this social scrapbooking trend has a lot of potential, that much is clear, but can we point to any tangible results or specific instances of how these habits are being capitalized on? I explore a few over at the Engage:Teens blog, jump over there to read on!
Promoted Accounts, Tweets and Trends

Twitter has just announced a new site feature called Promoted Accounts that allows brands to gain visibility within Twitter’s “Who to Follow” feature. This new promotional outlet is only a small part of what has come to be a larger ad-servicing platform created by Twitter as a way to monetize its service. Brands now have the ability to promote their account during sign-up, promote their tweets in your feed after sign-up and promote fabricated trending topics to drive conversations around their brand.
To the everyday user these advertising outlets won’t be much of an intrusion; however, I can’t help but think that Twitter is taking away some of the authenticity of the site. Twitter built its brand on the notion that consumers power the content. With dormant accounts growing and login and activity rates shrinking, Twitter may be looking for new ways to improve value coming from the site by pushing brands to users rather than expecting users to find brands themselves.
Twitter recently announced that promoted tweets have a 5x greater click-through than standard web display ads. Whether or not that success will transfer to promoted accounts is still TBD.
Would you like to see promoted content on Twitter? Or would you prefer it be organic?
Visualizing Your Foursquare Addiction

This week, the Twitterverse has been buzzing about a new Foursquare visualization tool, Weeplaces. And with 100 million check-ins under their belt, it’s about time Foursquare found a way to visualize them.
How does it work? Blue circles represent places you have visited and even bigger circles with numbers represent places you visit frequently. A time series chart below the map shows how long you have been a Foursquare user. Once the animation begins to play, a yellow line connects all your check-ins and the timeline at the bottom follows along.
One of the best features of the visualization is the shaded regions, as places in the areas that you often frequent show up lighter than places you haven’t been. This way you can see which neighborhoods you’ve been neglecting. @VishalSapra (shown above), for example, seems to have something against the Upper East Side.
All in all, I’m always looking for a new way to impress my friends with my check-in prowess. Thank you Movity for thinking of a way to reinvigorate my Foursquare addiction.
Planes, Trains and Mobile Devices

Well, well, well. NYC is finally moving forward with a $200 million project to bring Wi-Fi to the underworld in the next 2-6 years. This project has been approved since 2007, but (as with other NYC undertakings) did not have funding until recently. Transit Wireless and Broadcast Australia get credit for fronting the cash; the question is do we thank them or not?
There are many reasons I am glad I do not have service in the Subway:
1. Convenient excuse to end a phone conversation
2. I read more books that way
3. Time spent disconnected from the world – which they say is good for you
4. People are irritating when they don’t pay attention to where they are going, and this would expose them to the dangers of texting while walking
There are also times I wish I had service on the Subway:
1. When I forget which stop I want
2. When I am late(r than usual) and need to call my blind internet date… er… friends
3. When someone asks me a question and I don’t know the answer
4. When I think of something brilliant to Google
5. when I open Facebook on my phone just to be reminded that I cannot
On the whole, it is an attractive and practical idea that will result in more meaningful, engaging advertising content. It’s surprising it took this long to come to fruition, really.
Can you imagine being able to meet friends on a specific train car or play live online trivia with the plasma TVs that will definitely be installed by then? Cross your fingers the world doesn’t end in 2012 because I definitely want to be here for this.
What does the future of marketing on subway cars look like to you?
Scoutmob Delivers Instant 50% Discount At NYC Restaurants/Bars
If you’re anything like me, you spend 72-85% of your “going out to dinner in NYC” time looking for a location that’s equal parts NOM-licious and affordable. Those of you familiar with the New York gastronomic scene know that “affordable” is the more fleeting variable in this scenario.
That’s why Scoutmob, the newest platform to jump on the Groupon/Woot bandwagon seems pretty spot-on to me. Bridging the gap between two of the hottest trends right now, geo-location enabled mobile apps and daily e-coupons, Scoutmob serves up hand-picked deals in NYC and Atlanta (usually 50% off) and delivers them right to your iPhone. The clincher? Unlike its web-based predecessors, there’s no purchase required for the adorably quirky Scoutmob. Simply present the app at your restaurant or bar of choice, and you have instant access to the 50% discount.
Did I mention the deal is valid on ANY combination of items on the menu? Guess I know where I’m eating tonight…
Facebook’s New Functions (and How to Leverage Them)

This article first appeared as part of iMedia Connection’s Social Media: In Focus
More than a fan aggregator
With its recent F8 announcements, Facebook has again one-upped the world as we thought we knew it. Brand marketers need to start looking at Facebook as a much deeper and broader solution than one that purely amasses a fan base. As Facebook rolls out new functionality, brands have the opportunity to act immediately in a variety of ways. In addition, it’s important for brand managers to re-imagine their brands by leveraging social enhancements.
Brands need to be able to take immediate advantage of features such as the “like” functionality, but they also need to be visionary in how they can build their brands for the future and become truly social. While I encourage brands to take part in these new advancements, we also need to make sure that we keep an eye on the Facebook future and build with this future in mind.
So, in the quest to make your brand truly social, uproot your assets and think of new ways to infuse them through Facebook integration and by adding key social layers to the brand experience. Look toward the future and start evaluating the role that Facebook can play at retail, on the ground, and across every channel your brand touches. Not all opportunities will be a fit, but one thing is for sure: If you only look at Facebook as a place to have a fan page, you are missing the greater offering and will likely be sitting on the sidelines when the future arrives.
Get the full article here to take a look at some of Facebook’s new and evolving functionalities, as well as what they mean for your marketing efforts.
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