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Posts Tagged ‘sharing’

The Social Nature of Human Beings + Sharing 2.0

In Digital Media, Social Media on 09/10/2011 at 5:37 pm

Social context shapes the human behavior and sharing information is innate to who we are.  We’ve been sharing information for centuries as a means to communicate, entertain, and pass on our cultural values from generation to generation. Today, as we are no longer bound by the physical realm (pencil and paper), the Information Age allows us to share more content, more often with more people, and more quickly.

In order to understand and take advantage of the two-way dialogue between brands and consumers today’s social media technologies enable, it is crucial to understand why people share, the different personas of online sharing, and most importantly, how we, marketers, can influence this sharing of information and generate earned media about our brands and products.

A recent three-phase study, titled “The Psychology of Sharing,” published by The New York Times Customer Insights Group explores the answers to these very questions.

Why do people share?

  • to bring valuable and entertaining content to others
  • to define ourselves to others
  • to grow and nourish relationships
  • for self-fulfillment
  • to market causes or brands

Six personas of online sharing: 

Altruists are helpful, reliable, and thoughtful.  Many altruists stay connected with email and pass along information in attachments and links. 

Careerists are intelligent web users who have been quick to see the immense value of social networking.  Careerists use websites like LinkedIn and FaceBook to build professional profiles and relationships. 

Hipsters are young, popular, creative, and prefer the cutting edge of technology.  They’re less likely to email, opting for newer, quicker methods of communication, like text, Twitter or Skype message.

Boomerangs share content for validation and reaction.  Empowered with information, Boomerangs use social websites like Twitter and Facebook to post thoughtful questions and comments to engage other users.

Connectors are creative, thoughtful, and relaxed.  They are likely to make plans via email and Facebook, hook up online discounts, and take advantage of freebies and promotions. 

Selectives are resourceful, thoughtful, and careful about the information they share.  Someone who is a Selective sharer may prefer to send an email or private message to communicate, rather than a social update or post.  These intelligent sharers understand the permanence of everything posted to the web, knowing that every message is indexed, even if you delete it or move it to your desktop trash bin.

Key factors to influence sharing:

If you appeal to the motivation to connect with each other — not with just your brand — you will encourage sharing.  Here are some tips to remember when soliciting replies, posts, or other online content. 

  • keep it simple
  • have a sense of humor
  • create a sense of urgency

Once you determine what online sharer persona your target audience is and understand what and why they share information, you can create more relevant and appealing content that will inspire ongoing sharing and word-of-mouth buzz.

Download the complete study here.

Social Media Experienced Strong Growth in 2010

In Social Media on 01/16/2011 at 2:02 pm

When consumers need to find solutions, they actively seek content to find answers to their problems. It’s content that supplies those answers, in the form of text, video, audio, and social media – and consumers have almost unlimited ways to get that content. The difference today is that consumers are finding those answers coming from their peers, favorite brands and the media.

Everyone is a media company. Everyone is a publisher. If you publish online content to a blog, a microblog (Twitter), a social network, or a photo- or video-sharing site like YouTube and Flickr, you are a publisher. Today there are billion pieces of content all over the Internet. A recently released Royal Pingdom “Internet in 2010 in numbers” report demonstrates social content publishing continues to grow at a fast pace. Here are the latest social media growth numbers:

  • 152 million – the number of blogs on the Internet
  • 25 billion – the number of sent tweets on Twitter in 2010
  • 175 million – people on Twitter as of September 2010
  • 600 million – people on Facebook at the end of 2010
  • 30 billion – pieces of content (links, notes, photos, etc.) shared on Facebook per month
  • 2 billion – the number of videos watched per day on YouTube
  • 35 – hours of video uploaded to YouTube every minute
  • 186 – the number of online videos the average U.S. Internet user watches per month
  • 5 billion – photos hosted by Flickr (September 2010)

Read the complete report.

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