Submitted by Singapore:
Obama
Hillary as she travels the world on behalf of the U.S.
Steve Jobs
Bin Laden (would be eye-opening for sure to see what he reads)
Tiger Woods
Madonna. (Read More)
: @greghollingsworth Glad you chimed in on this!I thought about adding more people beyond the ones that clipped this first,but my GPU went down, and it's hard to post.I'll be sure to include you in the future(like it or not)! lol
Submitted by Robdiana
from Google Reader:
I spent a good portion of Sunday and Monday thinking about social media measurement and proving return on investment or ROI. Many of the sessions at PRSA International in Detroit were about social media, web-based communications strategies and the requisite question of how do we report success. Fortunately for PRSA (Public (Read More)
Submitted by Avi:
Whenever someone asks me about social media marketing, my first question is if that person is immersed in the space. Because without that, all that comes afterwards may as well be Greek to them. Gary Hayes and Laurel Papworth put together a useful visual to help explain how things would progress from that starting point. (Read More)
Delicious hotlist
Your boss thinks you โplay on Facebook,โ all day. Your co-worker who is jonesing for the same promotion is monitoring the time of day you post to Twitter. The guy from across the hall sips black coffee through his brown teeth and laughs, โMet the man of your dreams on Ebay, yet?โWhat a nimrod.Take it from someone who knows. (Read More)
: Very nice article. It explored many things about social networking. Good tips to know the value and importance of social media and to follow. Thanks @robdiana. :-)
Submitted by Warrenss:
Social proof is also known as herd mentality or the bandwagon effect. People tend to follow the crowd without evaluating the true merits for themselves, especially when the merits are ambiguous. (Read More)
Submitted by Hutch
from Google Reader:
The way I see it, social media isn't putting PR in jeopardy, but it has exposed a weakness in PR that was always there -- too much focus on dialing for dollars and not enough focus on making PR stretch to support real business initiatives. (Read More)
: "The way I see it, social media isnโt putting PR in jeopardy, but it has exposed a weakness in PR that was always there โ too much focus on dialing for dollars and not enough focus on making PR stretch to support real business initiatives."
: "One more point: the online community where Bob was trying to share this information went crazy when they heard Bob was there. They were thrilled that the company was taking a direct interest in their conversations around their products. In short, the customers, the ones with the money and the interest in buying all this stuff, were clamoring for Bob."