Showing posts with label Connect. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Connect. Show all posts

Sunday, November 25, 2012

SocialWire Combines Organic Sharing, Facebook Advertising With Connect, Amp


Facebook advertising platform SocialWire believes its combination of organic sharing and paid advertising results in a unique offering for marketers on the social network, and a host of investors apparently agree to the tune of $2 million influx of seed funding.


The funding round was led by First Round Capital, with other participants including Dave McClure, Ariel Poler, Brian Sugar, and Joi Ito (director of MIT Media Labs).


SocialWire’s two-pronged approach is comprised of SocialWire Connect, which allows marketers to add Facebook open graph functionality to their websites, and SocialWire Amp, which helps them share the resulting activity by Facebook users.


Men’s apparel retailer Bonobos is an early SocialWire client, and the company said it is currently adding more customers for Connect and Amp, as well as rolling out a self-service offering.


Founder and CEO Selcuk Atli and Chief Revenue Officer Bob Buch spoke with AllFacebook about SocialWire Connect and SocialWire Amp, saying that their goal was to create an advertising platform that functioned more like a recommendation engine, relying on content shared by Facebook users via open graph actions, rather than traditional advertising on the social network. Buch added:


One of the biggest differentiators in the market — it’s becoming more and more of a crowded space — one of the things we’ve done differently is combine a product for Facebook organic growth with a product for Facebook paid growth, boosting organic growth with paid media not with promoted posts, but by integrating open graph sharing across the site.


SocialWire refers to the content created by its clients and Facebook users as action spec sponsored stories, noting that these types of ads cannot be purchased directly through Facebook, and must occur through the social network’s ads application-programming interface.


Action spec sponsored stories provide marketers with more contextual advertising, which presumably leads to higher click-through rates and conversions, as Facebook users are more likely to click on links shared by their friends with personal messages than on conventional ads. “Your shoppers are doing the work,” Buch added.


Atli said in a press release announcing the funding round:


There is so much more to Facebook marketing than building fan pages and paying for likes. It’s now time to harness the real power of Facebook open graph for user acquisition.


When an action is shared on Facebook, typically, fewer than 12 percent of a user’s friends see those actions. SocialWire Amp lets marketers promote those actions to all a user’s friends, and control the targeting, timing, and device: desktop or mobile. These ads appear on Facebook news feed and drive users directly to the advertiser website. This is an evergreen advertising channel that requires minimal effort to create and maintain for marketers.


Buch added:


SocialWire Connect is like search-engine optimization for Facebook. Integrating SocialWire Connect enables sites to turn any action — such as a purchase, wish list, or product review — into a story shared on Facebook that drives traffic back to the site in a contextual way. We have created a best-practice implementation of Facebook open graph for online marketers, which offers built-in privacy controls to end-users so nothing is shared without their permission.


Readers: Would you be more likely to click on a link advertising a product or service on Facebook if it was shared by a friend and contained their personal message?


Tuesday, November 20, 2012

BandPage Connect Plugs Bands Into Promoters, Fans, Facebook


BandPage, which allows bands to easily manage their online and Facebook presences, has made it easier for musicians to share music and information with their fans and for promoters to post information about bands they’re hosting. Through BandPage Connect, musicians can instantly share their information with major social music platforms free of charge. This way, a band can easily post information to Facebook, a WordPress blog, Earbits, Pledge Music, and other sites in a way that draws people to engage and listen.


BandPage has already earned kudos from Facebook for its use of open graph technology, which has its fingerprints all over BandPage’s platform. The company’s platform hosts the online presences of roughly 500,000 bands and artists across the world, including Taking Back Sunday, Jason Mraz, and Lady Antebellum.


Now, with one click, bands that have a presence on Facebook and other sites such as WordPress, Guitar Center, Midem Music Festival, StoryAmp, Pledge Music, WeDemand, and others can update information. It makes it easier for promoters, as they don’t have to search for biographies or photos — they’re all right there, and it’s already the message that the band wants to deliver.


Say a concert is about to get rained out. Instead of rushing to update in various places, a band can manage its online accounts in one place — BandPage — to alert fans who follow them via different pockets of the Internet. It also allows bands to post songs and videos, as well as give fans a chance to interact through Facebook. Facebook users can share music, as well as easily post that they’re going to a certain concert by clicking “I’m Going,” which creates a news feed story using open graph technology.



BandPage Founder and CEO J. Sider talked with AllFacebook about how BandPage Connect will make life much easier for musicians, promoters, social music sites, and fans:


The band can make it look and feel any way that they want to … It’s just having the security and comfort of knowing that any time you have this information, it’s up to date, as long as it’s connected to BandPage. More than that, anytime you connect BandPage to your different presences across the Web, it’s putting in that social element so people are able to find out about you more often because of the timeline and open graph actions.


Readers: If you’re a musician, has BandPage helped you?