Whitepapers & studies on social media, public interest, Internet use and mobile
We believe businesses, start-ups, nonprofits and grassroots organiazations shouldn’t need to spend thousands of dollars purchasing research reports. Socialbrite.org has assembled the following list of free reports bearing on the social media, public interest, technology, Internet use and mobile.
The first section, Social media & social networks, is below. Use the tabs or click through this list to see the reports in the other sections. And please add your own pointers at the bottom of any section:
Social media / Social networks
Nonprofits / Public interest
Media
Internet use
Mobile
Compiled by Hanna Hager
Online Content Manager
IQPC
8 pages, 2013
At the 2nd Customer Analytics & Intelligence Conference, researchers, marketers and customer experience professionals explore all the latest research methods to drive a business forward. Topics include big data, understanding consumer choice, mobile insights, neuroscience, consumer psychology, social media listening and customer centricity.
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Pew Internet Project
Berkman Center for Internet & Society
107 pages, May 2013
The findings in this report tell us that teens are sharing more information about themselves on social media sites than they have in the past, but they are also taking a variety of technical and non-technical steps to manage the privacy of that information. Despite taking these privacy-protective actions, teen social media users do not express a high level of concern about third parties (such as businesses or advertisers) accessing their data; just 9% say they are “very” concerned.
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Will Valverde and Cameron Lefevre of M+R Strategic Services
Annaliese Hoehling of the Nonprofit Technology Network
44 pages, March 2013
This is the seventh edition of the eNonprofit Benchmarks Study from M+R Strategic Services and
NTEN. They’ve included as many of the most useful, most relevant, most valuable
findings as possible for the nonprofit sector. The data represents information generously provided by 55 nonprofits of various sizes that have helped the authors create a snapshot of their online performance in 2012.
Download study (PDF) after you register
by Maeve Duggan, Joanna Brenner
Pew Internet & American Life Project
14 pages, February 2013
A late 2012 survey by the Pew Research Center’s Internet shows that young adults are more likely than others to use major social media. At the same time, other groups are interested in different sites and services. These readings come from a national survey conducted on landline and cell phones and in English and in Spanish. The results reported here come from respondents who are internet users.
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Erik Qualman, Socialnomics
12 pages, January 2013
Corporations, small businesses and other organizations exhaust exorbitant amounts of manpower and money to ensure that their social media presence is top tier. Yet much of the potential from these efforts isn’t fully realized due to a misunderstanding of social analytics. Most believe that “social analytics” is merely listening in on social media for specific brand terms, but this is merely scratching the surface. The purpose of this paper is to help organizations advance their understanding and capabilities in social analytics.
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HootSuite
6 pages, November 2012
This whitepaper is designed to help you tap into the vast number of social media leads awaiting you and your business. By the time you’re through, you’ll better understand the tactics you should use, the metrics you should measure, and how to tie each of these to top-line organizational goals in order to close the loop.
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Adobe
11 pages, November 2012
Adobe has released the results to the 2012 Digital Marketing Optimisation Survey. This survey focuses on the key areas where digital marketers need to excel in order to ensure online marketing success: personalisation, social media, mobile and customer experience. Download the full report for in-depth analysis, best practices and recommendations from leading marketing experts.
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Ethofy, Kurryer
11 pages, November 2012
Successful selling requires effective communication through a number of channels, and the same is true when it comes to driving sales through social media, or social sales enablement. The opportunity is all around you –virtually everyone is developing an active social network. Your employees are socially connected to other people and organizations with a possible interest in your products or services–an interest that could become an opportunity. This whitepaper lists five reasons your team members may be blocked from achieving maximum social reach for your company and how to overcome these obstacles.
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Sysomos
6 pages, October 2012
A social media influencer is someone who talks positively about your brand and products on Twitter, Facebook, Google+, Pinterest or any other social media platform. He or she can be anyone from a mom on Facebook who likes to mention her favorite products to a big-name blogger in your industry. How do you bring them into your circle and get them talking positively about you? This whitepaper will give you six tips on how to get social media influencers talking positively about you.
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Sysomos
7 pages, October 2012
Social media has changed the way our entire world works. Everyone has an equal voice and immediate access to vast networks of friends and followers. More companies are integrating social media into their overall marketing plans. Their goal is to take advantage of the incredible opportunities available in the social space. This whitepaper will give you eight tips that Sysomos recommends to help build your brand with social media.
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Clearvale by BroadVision
7 pages, October 2012
After the swift and ubiquitous adoption of social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter among consumers, many businesses have been moving to recreate some of that success within their enterprise. Enterprise social networks are the result. The goal of these networks is to leverage social communication and sharing to increase collaboration and productivity with customers, partners, and employees. This guide identifies some of the pitfalls to avoid when making this social business transformation and gives a step-by-step adoption process for those deploying enterprise social networks in their enterprise.
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HootSuite
14 pages, October 2012
Walk your business through the parameters for social organizing to set up solid foundations. Learn how to organize teams, establish centralized control over social tools, discover which teams own social and why and strategize around best practices. This whitepaper is designed to take enterprises at any stage of social media maturity to the next level of organization.
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HootSuite
6 pages, October 2012
Social media use is maturing; once a playground on the peripherals of the Internet, now this space has become an important hub for business. There is a tendency amongst businesses and organizations seeking to engage in social media to dive right in without any thought to collaboration, security, engagement or measurement of their efforts. Here are the steps you need to take to roll out your organization’s social media.
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HootSuite
7 pages, October 2012
The future of business engagement on all levels, whether it be from a sales, HR, customer service or marketing standpoint, is inherently social. Your business is becoming social, and understanding how is the key to success. This paper will outline the path to success in eight simple steps that you can use to implement and evaluate social within your various teams and departments.
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Charles Tsai
Knight Foundation
51 pages, October 2012
This report is an exploration of key topics that emerged at the Technology for Engagement Summit held at MIT in May 2012.
Download report (PDF).
Wildfire Interactive
10 pages, September 2012
The marketing industry has always touted the importance of identifying and engaging a brand’s most influential fans. These are the fans that not only advocate on behalf of your brand, but whose recommendations are also weighty enough to get friends and family to take action. This report will present to you the the results and analysis that Wildfire conducted to find out the statistics behind these advocates.
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Wildfire Interactive
15 pages, September 2012
While most marketing channels have standardized methods for calculating ROI (return on investment) or value, other channels, like social media, can be harder to quantify. We compiled this report to help you better understand how social media delivers on real business objectives, and how to get the most value, and highest ROI, from your social marketing efforts. Within this paper, we discuss the threephase social media cycle for brands, and focus on how to unlock the potential of earned media, extended reach and higher conversions in social. We’ll also review the unique approaches six brands have taken to reaching a common outcome of positive ROI in social.
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Awareness, Inc.
41 pages, Sept 2012
The State Of Social Marketing Report: 7 Major Findings & In-Depth Analysis dives into the numbers to detail 7 items with important business value:
• Misalignment Between Business Objectives, Measurement Methodologies and Social Marketing Investment
• Tighter Integration between Social and Rest of Marketing and Business Overall
• Social Marketers Are Starting to Measure What Matters
• Marketers Are Yet to Tap into the True Potential of Social
• Social Marketing Budgets and Resources Insufficient to Drive Value
• Top Social Platforms: The Big 3: Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn Still Dominate
• Limited Outsourcing
Discover where the industry is and where it is going; download this report.
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Erika Jolly Brookes
Oracle Corporation
10 pages, August 2012
This whitepaper draws from a recent Facebook survey to investigate the demographics of Facebook fans; how fans are acquired, discover pages, and engage; and best practices on how brands can optimize social strategies.
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Susan Etlinger with Jeremiah Owyang and Andrew Jones
Altimeter
27 pages, July 2012
As social media matures, new approaches to social media measurement will emerge to provide businesses with a greater level of insight. In research for this report, Altimeter Group identified six primary top-down and bottom-up approaches and developed three case studies that illustrate how organizations measure the impact of social media on revenue. The report aims to identify and describe — based on business, product, media and customer type — the most effective “recipes” for measuring the revenue impact of social media that we have seen adopted to date.
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Crowdtap
11 pages, July 2012
Influencer marketing is one of the hottest topics in marketing today and is unlikely to go away. The advent of social media has created an environment where far more people’s voices are now heard, democratizing information and increasing the potential power of every individual to influence behaviors. This paper will explore:
• The history and current state of Influencer Marketing
• Why Peer Influencers are the key to any Influencer Marketing strategy
• 5 critical tips for developing a successful Influencer Marketing program
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Gleanster
8 pages, July 2012
This Deep Dive analyst report uncovers seven best practices for creating a social media engaged sales engine. These practices don’t extol social media as a fluff tool, useful in creating warm fuzzies among customers and prospects. Instead, they outline the use of social media for selling and closing business, and they can be tested against revenue, average deal size, lead conversion and bid-to-win ratio metrics.
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Bazaarvoice
8 pages, July 2012
Today’s top brands put consumers at the center of the business. Chief marketing officers can lead the consumer-focused revolution by harnessing first-person data created by online consumer conversations. The smart CMOs elevate to Chief Consumer Advocate when they share these insights across the entire organization. In this whitepaper, the top CMOs share: how social data impacts decisions for nearly all CMOs, how CMOs use data to drive smarter decisions beyond marketing, and, how CMOs believe social reveals consumer sentiment and improves brand awareness.
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McKinsey Global Institute
184 pages, July 2012
In this report, the McKinsey Global Institute traces the growth of social technologies, examines the sources of their power, assesses their impact in several major sectors of the economy and analyzes the ways in which social technologies create value. They explore social technology risks and obstacles to adoption as well as the enabling capabilities and conditions to create value using social technologies.
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Wildfire Interactive
24 pages, June 2012
Did you know you reach only a fraction of your fanbase every time you post a branded message on Facebook? Whether your fans receive your content in their newsfeeds depends on a Facebook algorithm called EdgeRank. We partnered with the experts at EdgeRank Checker to uncover what makes EdgeRank tick – and how you can use it to your advantage. This report will analyze the best performing content by vertical, and provide tips for improving your EdgeRank score based on the trends that have been uncovered.
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Wildfire Interactive
24 pages, June 2012
As a marketer, you have likely dipped your toes into “social” waters, and developed a branded presence and audience. But have you mastered the art of moving that audience into action, or tapping into the incredible population of users interacting on social networks that have not yet joined the ranks of your brand’s community? In this report, Wildfire offers you a framework for understanding how users interact with paid and owned content on Facebook, Twitter and Linkedin, and how to pay for the kinds of ads now that will lead to additional “earned media” later.
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SIM Partners
12 pages, June 2012
On May 30, 2012, Google announced the roll out of Google+ Local in a blog post titled “Local-now with a dash of Zagat and a sprinkle of Google+.” The new Google+ Local page will be used across search, Maps, mobile and Google+.
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IBM Corp.
28 pages, June 2012
This report surveyed more than 350 marketing professionals across a wide range of industries and geographies. In the study, 51 percent of respondents who identified their companies as high-performing indicated they have good relationships between marketing and IT, 10 percent higher than other companies. Some results from the survey include: how marketing and IT lack integration and a unified vision,how marketers ignore social media insights and how marketers fail to turn data into action.
Resolution Media and Kenshoo Social
29 pages, June 2012
This report is the first in a series looking at global trends in social media and identifying actionable insights and metrics for brand advertisers. The research covered in this paper focuses on interaction with Facebook Marketplace Ads (not to be confused with the Facebook Premium Ads offering) across various ad types and targeting criteria.
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Adobe
11 pages, May 2012
How will trends in search, mobile and social media impact your marketing strategy this year? This comprehensive report analyzes data from brands and their fans to examine how emerging media trends are changing the way that marketers connect with customers, and learn about:
• How tablets are driving today’s search spend
• Why the Bing/Yahoo ROI advantage no longer exists
• How the new Facebook Timeline increases fan engagement
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Tracy Stokes
with David M. Cooperstein, Corinne Madigan and Matthew Dernoga
Forrester
14 pages, May 2012
Social media has fundamentally changed how consumers interact with each other and with brands. As a result, marketers tell us that they now consider this new channel to be a critical component of brand building. In this report, Forrester identifies three ways in which social media can help marketers’ brand building efforts by 1) building a relationship to become more trusted; 2) differentiating through an emotional connection to become more remarkable and unmistakable; and 3) nurturing loyal fans to become more essential.
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Princeton Survey Research Associates International for the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project
5 pages, May 2012
This report finds that 74% of smartphone owners use their phone to get real-time location-based information, and 18% use a geosocial service to “check in” to certain locations or share their location with friends. Also, almost one in five teen smartphone owners (18%) uses a geosocial service such as Foursquare.
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Andrew Lipsman, Graham Mudd and Mike Rich, comScore
Sean Bruich, Head of Measurement Research, Facebook
24 pages, March 2012
This whitepaper offers an in-depth analysis of how social media brand impressions reach fans and friends through Facebook, as opposed to just on brand fan pages. The study profiles three major brands – Starbucks, Southwest Airlines and Microsoft Bing – to show the impact of these impressions on fans and friends and help illustrate how brands today need to be thinking about their social marketing initiatives. The research examines the nature of the reach and frequency of branded content on Facebook and also includes insights from Facebook’s internal analytics platform.
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Measurement Geniuses at Argyle Social
11 pages, March 2012
The biggest problem around social media ROI is attribution. Social media ROI is hard to measure because it is hard to link your social media marketing efforts to business outcomes. If social media marketers can’t directly attribute revenue, retention, savings, etc. to their social media marketing efforts, then they’re not going to get the budget, resources and promotion that they deserve. This is a big problem for social media marketers. This report will discuss the insight into the fundamental issues behind the problem and some clever thoughts about how to address them.
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Edited by Magdalena Georgieva
44 pages, March 2012
Pinterest isn’t just another social media network. What appears to be the fastest-growing social media site ever has become a huge traffic referral for all businesses. The trick to succeeding on Pinterest isn’t necessarily about showing off your products or services directly. It’s about finding creative ways to show how those products and services fit into the lifestyles of your target audience. Download this free, 43-page ebook and learn how to increase traffic, leads and sales by reaching more than 11 million people on Pinterest.
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Curated by Rebecca Corliss
55 pages, March 2012
In HubSpot’s newest ebook, five LinkedIn specialists provide key insight into how you can use LinkedIn to successfully grow your network and business. This ebook will provide tips that should prepare you to take charge of LinkedIn and make it one of your most fruitful channels. The five LinkedIn specialists will discuss the importance of completing your profile, ways to expand your network and how you can use this social platform to market yourself and your business, and more.
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Lee Rainie, Pew Internet Project
Paul Hitlin and Mark Jurkowitz, Project for Excellence in Journalism
Michael Dimock and Shawn Neidorf, Pew Research Center for the People & the Press
8 pages, March 2012
The 30-minute video released by the San Diego-based group Invisible Children calling for action against Ugandan warlord Joseph Kony provided striking evidence that young adults and their elders at times have different news agendas and learn about news in different ways. Special polling and social media content analysis by the Pew Research Center tracks how the Kony 2012 video and information about it reached so many Americans in a relatively short period of time, and the critical role social media played, especially for adults under age 30.
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DoSomething.org
34 pages, March 2012
To the best of our knowledge, this is the first comprehensive national survey of teens and volunteering that incorporates respondents as young as 13 – 15 years old. Ninety-three percent of teens say they want to volunteer; but a far smaller percentage of young people actually do volunteer. This index exposes why some teens and college students volunteer and why some don’t and gives insight into how to close that gap.
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Michael Silverman
Managing Director, Silverman Research
18 pages, February 2012
The Social Media Garden is an open-access research project than uses the wisdom of crowds to generate insight about the barriers organisations face in adopting social media practices in the workplace and solutions to overcome them.
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Mary Madden Senior Research Specialist, Pew Internet Project
20 pages, February 2012
This report addresses several questions about the privacy settings people choose for their social networking profiles and provides new data about the specific steps users take to control the flow of information to different people within their networks.
Report overview
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Lee Rainie Director, Pew Internet Project
Amanda Lenhart Senior Research Specialist, Pew Internet Project
Aaron Smith Senior Research Specialist, Pew Internet Project
30 pages, February 2012
This survey of adults was conducted in order to compare adult experiences on social networking sites to teenagers’ experiences. The Pew Internet Project reported the teen findings in November 2011.
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Keith N. Hampton, Associate Professor, Rutgers University
Lauren Sessions Goulet, Ph.D. student, University of Pennsylvania
Cameron Marlow Facebook, Head of data science research
Lee Rainie Director, Pew Internet Project
40 pages, February 2012
Some of this report is based on the findings of a national survey on Americans’ use of the Internet and computer logs of how people use Facebook as provided by Facebook, Inc.
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Bazaarvoice
9 pages, January 2012
This generation has come of age being advertised to more than any generation in history. They’re connected and endlessly curious about what others are doing, and it flows right into how they shop. Millennials make their own rules of commerce, and it’s time for brands to catch up … or perish. In this whitepaper, millennials experts uncovered groundbreaking insights about how millennials and boomers use social to shop.
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Aaron Smith
Senior Research Specialist
Pew Research Center
10 pages, November 2011
More than half of all U.S. adults now use social networking platforms such as Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn, and a new report by the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project finds that users value these sites primarily as tools to stay in touch with friends and family members. More than six in 10 users cite staying in touch with family members and connecting with current friends as a “major reason” why they use online social networks. Reconnecting with old friends and acquaintances also plays a significant role, as half of social media users say that connecting with people they’ve lost touch with is a major reason behind their use of these sites.
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Buddy Media
16 pages, November 2011
With the widespread adoption of social media across markets and demographics throughout the world, brands have increasingly turned to social media platforms to generate and increase revenue via social commerce. In this whitepaper, learn effective strategies to use Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and social sharing in an effort to power commerce and drive sales.
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Financial Executives Research Foundation & Grant Thornton LLP
24 pages, October 2011
For many companies, social media is the proverbial double-edged sword: It offers both opportunities and risks. Social media cuts across many areas of a company, therefore any policy surrounding it should be the result of a multidisciplinary approach. Grant Thornton and the Financial Executives Research Foundation, Inc. developed a 23-question online survey and conducted in-depth interviews with a range of executives to produce this report. This report is based on the findings of both the online survey and the in-depth interviews.
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Nielsen
15 pages, 2011
As the influence of social media, and those using social media continues to grow, it’s crucial for traditional media, retailers, brands and advertisers to understand how different consumer segments use and share content. This report presents a snapshot of the current social media landscape and audiences in the U.S. and other major markets.
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Ignite Social Media
193 pages, 2011
2010 was a rocky year in the social network space and many sites closed their doors, including Propeller.com and Team Sugar, to name two. Others continued their decline into yesterday’s news as we see more social network users consolidating their social profiles. Undoubtedly, Facebook’s continued growth worldwide has led to this as it becomes the de facto source for social networking.
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Cisco
67 pages, September 2011
To demonstrate the role of the network in our lives, Cisco commissioned an international workforce study of nearly 3,000 people. The study revealed that one in three college students and young professionals consider the Internet to be as important as air, water, food and shelter. The study also found that their desire to use social media, mobile devices, and the Internet more freely in the workplace is strong enough to influence their future job choice, sometimes more than salary.
John Gordon, Vice President of Digital
Hugh McMullen, Account Executive
18 pages, July 2011
Today many communications professionals are convinced of the importance of social media like Twitter but are trying to force methods and thinking from a traditional broadcast world into tools designed for a world where information flows. Twitter can do so much more than help you “push” messages and content. When used effectively as tool for listening and monitoring, Twitter can be a lens through which you can observe the flow of information and culture. You can not only receive information, you’ll also perceive where information came from, where it’s going and where it might go tomorrow.
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Sean Corcoran and Christine Spivey Overby
Interactive Marketing Professionals
20 pages, June 2011
Customers and employees are becoming increasingly empowered by social technologies, dramatically changing the way they communicate and collaborate. Find out how to succeed in this new social world by making fundamental changes to resources, skills, tools, processes and culture.
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The Story of Tripwire and the Security Industry
David Spark
Founder, Spark Media Solutions
11 pages, June 2011
This whitepaper addresses reporting on conferences and trade shows from the editorial viewpoint of the client. This is the story of how one client, Tripwire, and my colleagues worked together to build relations and content with and for the leading voices in the IT security industry.
Wilneida Negron
LawHelp.org/NY
42 pages, 2011
This toolkit will provide information to help you maneuver around the challenges and launch Internet marketing strategies to take advantage of the opportunities. The toolkit will show you how to get started on low-cost, high-impact search engine optimization strategies, how to develop a robust keyword list, how to implement an organic link building strategy and more.
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How Marketers Are Using Social Media to Grow Their Business
Michael A. Stelzner
Founder, SocialMediaExaminer.com
41 pages, April 2011
To understand how marketers are using social media, Social Media Examiner commissioned this report to look at the “who, what, where, when and why” of social media marketing. Some 3,300 social media marketers provided valuable insights such as the top 10 social media questions marketers want answered; how much time marketers invest with social media; the top benefits of social media marketing and how time invested affects results.
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The Knight Foundation and Monitor Institute
55 pages, April 2011
This essay highlights groups that are creatively connecting citizens who are making a difference today and explores how technology might impact public participation and leadership in the future. The pages contain useful examples and lessons about how networks are unlocking assets in communities to support open government, care for the elderly, help disaster victims and advance women’s rights.
David Spark, Founder
Spark Media Solutions
7 pages, March 2011
Is there a formula to be a trending topic on Twitter? The author put together a guide after some successful experiences with clients pared with public data on trending topics. Most of the advice is focused around energizing people during events.
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Contributors:
Dave Brock, President and CEO, Partners in EXCELLENCE
David Tyner, Director of sales, KinetiCast
Ben Bradley, Managing director, Macon Raine
Charles Green, Founder and CEO,Trusted Advisor Associates
Cheryl Hanna, blogger, serviceuntitled.com
Esteban Kolsky, President, thinkJar
J.D. Lasica, CEO, Socialmedia.biz
24 pages, March 2011
This ebook will help you make informed choices on selecting and leveraging a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) solution that boosts your company’s bottom line.
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Clare McDermott, Solo Portfolio
Michele Linn, Content Marketing Institute
11 pages, February 2011
Last fall a report titled B2B Content Marketing Benchmarks, Budgets and Trends showed how B2B marketers are using content within their marketing mix. The Professional Services Industry Report takes a more granular look at how marketers at B2B service firms are using content marketing — and how they differ from their peers in other industries.
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32 pages, 2010
This document is useful to webmasters who are new to the topic of search engine optimization and wish to improve their sites’ interaction with both users and search engines. Although this guide won’t tell you any secrets that’ll automatically rank your site first for queries in Google, following the best practices will make it easier for search engines to crawl, index and understand your content.
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Merkle, Inc.
11 pages, February 2010
This whitepaper outlines key elements necessary for your organization to sustain competitive advantage in the new digital world.
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Converseon
20 pages, 2010
A new generation of listening solutions (Listening 2.0) are evolving to help meet challenges that organizations need to address in order to use social media at enterprise scale. This whitepaper clarifies how leading brands address these key challenges as they evolve toward enterprise social enablement.
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William J. (Bill) Comcowich, CyberAlert
26 pages, 2010
This whitepaper provides information about how to choose the most effective and least costly media monitoring approach for your organization. It covers both news monitoring and social media monitoring and includes guidelines for using free media monitoring services.
Radian6
12 pages, December 2010
Radian6 created this ebook, which is chock full of ideas that they’ve seen turn into “social media rules” over the course of 2010. Those rules encompass social media application from the beginning stages of listening and information processing to the more advanced stages of community engagement, and they’ve been organized into the categories of Listening, Measurement and Engagement for easy browsing and reference. The goal of this ebook is to provide food for thought that gets you truly reviewing the social media programs you’ve put in motion thus far, and give you some tips for better adhering to these rules.
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Kathryn Zickuhr, Pew Research Center
29 pages, December 2010
This is the second report by the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project exploring how different generations use the internet. The Pew Internet Project’s “Generations” reports make the distinction between Younger Boomers and Older Boomers because enough research has been done to suggest that the two decades of Baby Boomers are different enough to merit being divided into distinct generational groups.
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Aaron Smith, Senior Research Specialist, Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project
Lee Rainie, Director, Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project
20 pages, December 2010
Eight percent of the American adults who use the Internet are Twitter users. Using Twitter is particularly popular with young adults, minorities and those who live in cities. This is the first-ever survey reading from the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project that exclusively examines Twitter users.
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M86 Security
7 pages, December 2010
This paper provides guidance on how to update an Acceptable Use Policy to accommodate the increasing popularity and use of social media in the business environment. It identifies some of the complexities involved in creating and managing an AUP, especially with evolving Web 2.0 technologies, and demonstrates that a successful AUP is more than a simple list of dos and don’ts.
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Zach Hofer-Shall
with Suresh Vittal, Emily Murphy, and Michael J. Grant
13 pages, July 2010
During the past year, listening platforms continued their evolution beyond basic brand monitoring tools into integral technologies that inform a variety of marketing and business functions like campaign measurement, market research, customer support and sales enablement.
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Janna Quitney Anderson, Elon University
Lee Rainie, Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project
27 pages, July 2, 2010
The social benefits of Internet use will far outweigh the negatives over the next decade, according to experts who responded to a survey about the future of the internet. They say this is because email, social networks, and other online tools offer low‐friction opportunities to create, enhance and rediscover social ties that make a difference in people’s lives. The Internet lowers traditional communications constraints of cost, geography and time; and it supports the type of open information sharing that brings people together.
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Osterman Research, Inc., and M86 Security
12 pages, June 2010
This whitepaper focuses on both the benefits and risks associated with the use of the Web, Web 2.0 applications and social networking tools. It discusses the recommendations for improving an organization’s security posture with regard to use of these tools.
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Survey by The Social Customer & The Society of Consumer Affairs Professionals
Analysis by Brent Leary
37 pages, June 2010
As part of their effort to provide readers with information to enhance their customer service/engagement activities, a survey was conducted to gain insight into how organizations use social channels to engage customers from a service perspective. This whitepaper shares the results of the June 2010 survey of community members.
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By Caroline Fox, Abi Reynolds, Dr. Stephan Weibelzahl, Javin Li
Mulley Communications
35 pages, June 2010
This report presents the findings of a research study looking at how people in Ireland currently use Facebook. By observing the participants’ general use of Facebook, then using eye-tracking data, they analyzed participants’ behavior when they were engaged with advertising and media within this environment.
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Reaping the Benefits of Social Networking Applications in a Secure Manner
Palo Alto Networks
3 pages, 2010
This report is a practical guide for how to safely enable Facebook while still protecting the business. You’ll learn the ins and outs of Facebook; the benefits of safely enabling applications and how to enforce the proper policies and stop threats.
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Aaron Smith
Pew Internet
47 pages, April 27, 2010 (Recommended)
As government agencies at all levels bring their services online, Americans are turning in large numbers to government websites to access information and services. Fully 82% of Internet users (representing 61% of all American adults) looked for information or completed a transaction on a government website in the 12 months preceding this survey. Most of these “online government users” exhibit a relatively wide range of behaviors: the typical online government user engaged in four of these activities in the past year.
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Elisa Camahort Page
BlogHer co-founder and COO
25 pages, April 2010
BlogHer and iVillage teamed up with co-sponsors Ketchum and Nielsen on the 2010 Social Media Matters Study, which explores the use of social media by women.
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By Jeremiah Owyang, Altimeter Group
John Lovett, Web Analytics Demystified
With Eric T. Peterson, Charlene Li and Christine Tran
27 pages, April 22, 2010 (Recommended)
The document presents recommendations by Web Analytics Demystified and Altimeter Group for measuring social media. The goals for this work are to elevate awareness and activity in measuring social media by offering a working framework. By setting reasonable and realistic expectations, clients and companies around the world can begin to make better, more objective decisions regarding their own investment in these emerging channels.
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Jon Gibs, The Nielsen Co.
Sean Bruich, Facebook
12 pages, April 2010
This study surveyed more than 800,000 Facebook users. Results showed an increase in ad recall, brand awareness and purchase intent when users see friends who have become fans of the brand in the ad. The authors suggest that social ads perform better because they are a more personal, useful and trusted form of advertising. The research also revealed the high impact of campaigns that leverage a combination of paid media and earned media (i.e., ads drive users to become Facebook fans, and in turn users who become fans drive their friends to become fans).
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Jacques Bughin, Jonathan Doogan and Ole Jørgen Vetvik
McKinsey & Co.
April 2010
This article looked at the impact of word-of-mouth-marketing for businesses and how companies can take better advantage of buzz. The article also shows how many marketers are spending millions of dollars on elaborate advertising campaigns when often what’s really needed to help influence consumers is a “word-of-mouth recommendation from a trusted source” which “cuts through the noise” of traditional marketing methods. Register to read this article
R “Ray” Wang and Jeremiah Owyang
Altimeter Group
With Charlene Li and Christine Tran
22 pages, March 5, 2010
This document serves as a starting point, checklist and reference guide to real-world entry points for Social CRM projects. The use cases represent an amalgamation of over 100 conversations with organizations pioneering Social CRM initiatives.
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Janna Quitney Anderson, Elon University
Lee Rainie, Pew Internet & American Life Project
48 pages, Feb. 19, 2010 (Recommended)
A survey of nearly 900 Internet stakeholders reveals new perspectives on the way the Internet is affecting human intelligence and the ways that information is being shared and rendered. The Web-based survey gathered opinions from prominent scientists, business leaders, consultants, writers and technology developers. This publication is part of a Pew Research Center series that captures people’s expectations for the future of the Internet.
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Razorfish.com
65 pages, 2009 (Recommended)
The Razorfish Digital Brand Experience Report explores how consumers interact with brands online. Their findings will provide a new perspective on how technology is fundamentally altering the evolving relationship between brands and consumers, mostly for the better.
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David Spark
20 pages, Dec. 10, 2009 (Recommended)
Each day, users of the social web post more than 230 million pieces of content. They’re sharing videos, pictures, tweets, Facebook status updates, blog posts, comments, reviews and more with their immediate community and the greater social web. Given the short lifespan of much of this information, traditional search engines have historically ignored publishing a significant portion of this content. This gap in search engine reporting has opened up new opportunities for real-time search and discovery engines. On a minute-by-minute or even second-by-second basis, these new search engines digest and make sense of what people are talking about across the social web. But their autonomy from the traditional search engine players is about to dissipate. The real-time search landscape is changing as both Google and Microsoft’s Bing form real-time search partnerships, expanding their definition of searchable content to include the publication of dynamic social web content.
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228 pages, Dec. 7, 2009
This report documents Cisco’s corporate social responsibility (CSR) efforts. It sets forth Cisco’s CSR philosophy and describes the progress the company has made in initiatives directed at improving the health, welfare and sustainability of the communities Cisco is involved with worldwide. The report incorporates data and feedback received from employees, shareholders, customers, private, government and nongovernmental organizations Cisco partners with and other stakeholders.
The Rise of the Real Mom
Marissa Miley and Ann Mack
28 pages, Nov. 16, 2009
This Advertising Age and JWT whitepaper explores what multiple generations of American women want when it comes to family, work and life in the 21st century. It focuses in depth on Generation X (ages 30 to 44) and millennial (ages 18 to 29) mothers and how they differ from their older counterparts. It also examines how marketers can and should improve communications that target this demographic.
Jennifer Leggio
ZDNet
9 pages, Oct. 27, 2009
The author asked members of her social network to predict what would happen in social media in 2010. The predictions are meant to provoke thoughts and come from a mix of thought leaders, entrepreneurs, and folks who get their hands dirty every day dealing with social media for their companies. Predictions range from general social media to enterprise 2.0, government 2.0, security, public relations and location-aware social networks. The overarching theme of most of the predictions say that 2010 is the year that social media will just be, rather than serving as a shiny new toy.
Susannah Fox, Kathryn Zickuhr, Aaron Smith
Pew Internet & American Life Project
16 pages, Oct. 21, 2009
Nineteen percent of Internet users now say they use Twitter or another service to share updates about themselves, or to see updates about others. This represents a significant increase over previous surveys in December 2008 and April 2009, when 11 percent of Internet users said they use a status-update service.
This ebook is intended to help you develop the right strategy, discover the best sites for your industry and use them to get the results you want. Topics include closer relationships with your customers; more qualified traffic; ability to test market a new ideaeedback from the public; reputation control and improved ROI.
Ross Mayfield
11 pages, September 2009
Knowledge workers find themselves drowning in email and interrupted by IM, yet spend one day per week searching for people and information within an organization. It’s hard to ask questions when you don’t know who to ask; and hard to get answers without interrupting others. But over the last two years, a new model of communication and knowledge discovery has emerged on the Web. Microblogging, as popularized on the web by Twitter, is increasingly deployed as an enterprise solution, private for companies. This whitepaper provides an introduction to microblogging, how it is adapted for private enterprise use, how it is different from email and IM, how to foster adoption and the benefits of implementation.
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Third Annual New Media Academic Summit
18 pages, September 2009
Edelman convened more than 100 professors of communications, journalism, business and public relations from across North America and Europe in Washington, DC, in June 2009 to discuss how companies, organizations and media effectively engage their stakeholders through social media. The sessions were led by more than 50 practitioners who guide digital communications strategies within leading organizations. This report provides best practices and actionable insights into how to engage employees, consumers, investors, regulators and media.
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Kimberly McCabe
Oshyn
33 pages, September 2009
Many companies are aware that social media has become critically important to engaging audiences and promoting online “presence” while some wonder how to approach their C-level executives and prove that it is not all hype. With so many ways to engage in social media, how can they get buy-in and begin execution with so many different venues and tools available? Staying on the sidelines and becoming a latecomer might make it more difficult to create a convincing social presence. Put the options aside and see how B2B can step into the world of social media by developing a simple strategy and using a few simple tools.
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Eric Schwartzman, iPressroom
Tom Smith, Trend Stream
Don Spetner, Korn/Ferry International
Barbara McDonald, Public Relations Society of America
13 pages, Aug. 10, 2009
This report provides insights into the specific strategic and tactical digital communications skills that employers are seeking from public relations and marketing job candidates. The research report is intended to help public relations, corporate communications and marketing professionals better understand and appreciate how organizations are integrating online communications into their business practices, and what online communication skills they need to acquire to be competitive in today’s job market.
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Christopher Carfi, Leif Chastaine
Cerado
13 pages, August 2009
What is social networking? Why does it matter? Isn’t “social networking” just for high school kids? How can my organization get closer to customers/members using social networking? The report offers examples of how financial services firms, associations and other organizations are using social networking today.
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David Spark
6 pages, Aug. 10, 2009
Looking to run a contest, but you’re worried nobody will participate? Or worse, that something could go wrong? The author reached out to five contest production specialists Natalie Aldern, ibeatYou; Anne Heestand, Brickfish; Alex Linebrink, Tweet-A-Prize!; Giancarlo Massaro, AnyLuckyDay; and Linda Neumann, Brilliant Marketing Ideas for their advice on how to run a successful social media-enabled contest.
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Eric Schwartzman
Schwartzman & Associates
Aug. 10, 2009
Public relations professionals are taking the lead in managing the organization’s use of social media communications channels, and social media skills are nearly as important as traditional media relations skills when searching for and hiring public relations professionals.
David Spark
Spark Media Solutions, LLC
6 pages, Aug. 9, 2009
Looking to run a contest, but you’re worried nobody will participate? Or worse, that something could go wrong? This article provides great tips from experts on how to run a successful social media-enabled contest. Download the report to learn their prize winning formulas.
Bob Thompson
CEO, CustomerThink Corp.
9 pages, July 2009
Social media initially changed how we communicate with friends and family, but now it’s becoming clear that it also affects how we interact with customers. In addition to using external social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and YouTube, companies can run public and private online communities to help create a more collaborative experience. In this whitepaper, you’ll learn what you need to compete in the Social Economy.
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Charlene Li, Altimeter Group
Ben Elowitz, Wetpaint
19 pages, July 2009 (Recommended)
Wetpaint and Altimeter Group go beyond surface case studies to measure the true financial value of social media. The researchers conducted their study based on the world’s 100 most valuable brands as measured by BusinessWeek / Interbrand “Best Global Brands 2008” rankings. The writers evaluate how well they are engaging their consumers using social media and how that engagement correlates with their most important financial metrics: revenue and profit. Finally, the authors introduce a playbook for how the best are succeeding in social media so that you, too, can engage and succeed.
David Spark
Spark Media Solutions
16 pages, July 12, 2009 (Recommended)
Get inspired to capitalize on social media for your business with these successful tales of building industry voice.
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Razorfish
58 pages, July 2009 (Recommended)
What you say or your agency says about your brand or your product matters less than what your customers say about you. And what matters most to them is what your brand does. Does your product delight them? Does your service annoy them? Are you useful and new, or boring and
difficult? Forget the funny tagline or the award-winning TV spot what does your brand do for your customers? If you’re interested in brand innovation, then read this forward-looking report.
Report page (click the PDF icon to download a copy for printing)
Steve Paxhia & Bill Trippe
Gilbane Group
148 pages, May 29, 2009
Digital technology has revolutionized many sectors of the media business. Apple’s iPod has changed the way that people buy and listen to music. Google has drastically changed the way that people find and consume information. YouTube enables both individuals and organizations to bring their messages and products to the masses in a much more vivid fashion. WebMD brings new ways for consumers to access medical information, while PubMed presents a comprehensive index of biomedical articles for practitioners and scientists. Book publishers are now at the threshold of a similar revolution as they plan their next generation of products, and the building blocks for change are largely in place. This study surveyed a wide range of book publishers and related service companies from all market segments including trade/children, reference, professional, school, and higher education.
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Marketing Operations Partners
16 pages, May 28, 2009
YouTube, MySpace, Facebook, Linked-In, blogs, podcasts and more. Today’s social media marketing landscape is growing at an exponential rate. This guide helps you navigate it effectively. From definitions of common terms to social media marketing best practices, this whitepaper focuses on the nuances of measuring Web 2.0 technologies.
Michael Stelzner
WhitePaperSource Newsletter
26 pages, March 2009
This report polled 900 marketers to determine how marketers are using social media today. In this report you’ll find the top social media marketing questions marketers want answered; how much time marketers are investing in social media; the benefits of social media; the top social media tools, and more.
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Cece Salomon-Lee
PR Meets Marketing
31 pages, February 2009
The purpose of this ebook is to provide a quick guide for using social media. The ebook offers a quick guide to get you started and shows how to enhance your public relations and marketing programs.
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Michael Lewis, Awareness, Inc.
13 pages, February 2009
Chris Brogan, president of New Marketing Labs, sent out a survey asking those involved in social media a few questions about their current corporate social media marketing initiatives. More than 600 people participated, and along with the help of Mike Lewis, VP of Marketing at Awareness, Inc., an ebook was created from the survey results as well as from interviews of some key companies successfully using social media.
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Suresh Vittal, Zach Hofer-Shall, Christine Spivey Overby and Emily Bowen
Forrester Research
12 pages, Jan. 23, 2009
Visible Technologies was among the select companies that Forrester invited to participate in its study. In this evaluation, Visible Technologies was cited as a “strong performer.” The findings were based on vendors’ current offering, strategy and market presence.
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Razorfish
180 pages, January 2009 (Recommended)
A wide-ranging set of essays from the Razorfish team on the outlook for social influence marketing in the new digital economy. Chapters include “Digital Ad Spending,” “Search Outlook 2009,” “Email Marketing” and “The Future of Retail.”
Report page (click on GET REPORT to download)
Christopher S. Rollyson
9 pages, Jan. 17, 2009
A report from the 2009 Miami Social Networking Conference, showing diverse enterprise adoption and success of social media initiatives at such companies as Microsoft, Opera, IBM, Ford, SAP, Dow Jones, Salesforce, jetBlue, Sun Microsystems and others.
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Blog post
David Armano
Critical Mass
7 pages, Jan. 8, 2009
What’s the return on investment for a particular initiative your organization may be contemplating? Right now, companies that have served as pillars of financial growth are finding themselves in situations we could have never predicted years ago. This points to a flaw in the predictive model — that it’s not easy to predict a likely outcome, and yet we try to predict the return on investment for initiatives to determine what gets funded and what doesn’t.
OneUpWeb
9 pages, January 2009
Search has changed, and this whitepaper argues that incorporating social media into your search marketing efforts is no longer a luxury but a necessity if you want to be found online. Download this free paper to read about the new age of online marketing, where search and social media are one in the same.
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Amanda Lenhart
Pew Internet & American Life Project
17 pages, January 2009
The share of adult internet users who have a profile on an online social network site has more than quadrupled in the past four years — from 8% in 2005 to 35% now. Still, younger online adults are much more likely than their older counterparts to use social networks, with 75% of adults 18-24 using these networks, compared to just 7% of adults 65 and older. At its core, use of online social networks is still a phenomenon of the young.
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Jesse Torres
70 pages, December 2008
The Community Banker’s Guide to Social Network Marketing addresses social networks, user demographics and the role of social networks within the greater sphere of social media. Also addressed at length is the development of viral marketing programs, consumer advocacy, conversational marketing, metrics and common pitfalls. Torres is president and chief operating officer of Security Savings Bank in Henderson, Nev.
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Awareness, Inc.
12 pages, 2008
This whitepaper explores the many ways social media marketing can play a part in how your brand survives and thrives throughout tough economic times. The report describes how you can leverage social media and social networking to improve your marketing, build your brand and build better customer relationships.
Report page (registration required)
Razorfish
84 pages, Oct. 28, 2008 (Recommended)
Are widgets the TV sets of the future? Does social media impact consumer purchasing? Do people really use Twitter? These are just some of the questions FEED: The Razorfish Consumer Experience Report addresses.
Awareness, Inc.
10 pages, 2008
This whitepaper makes the case for using social media marketing during tough economic times. Interactive and social media marketing strategies will play a part in how your brand survives and thrives. The report describes how you can leverage social media such as blogs, forums, ratings and social networking media to improve your marketing and build better customer relationships regardless of the economy.
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Society for New Communications Research
42 pages, August 2008 (Recommended)
Marketers and public relations professionals are confronted with an astounding array of new communications channels. Internet-based social media tools like blogs, podcasts, online video and social networks are giving voice to the opinions of millions of consumers. While mainstream media continues to play a vital role in the dissemination of information, even these traditional channels are increasingly being influenced by online conversations. The “new influencers” are beginning to tear at the fabric of marketing as it has existed for 100 years, giving rise to a new style of marketing that is characterized by conversation and community. This report examines how influence patterns are changing and how communications professionals are addressing those changes by adopting social media.
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Philip Sheldrake
Racepoint Group
105 pages, July 1, 2008 (Recommended)
This ebook gives a brief overview of the characteristics of the Social Web, but that’s not its primary purpose. The ebook is an introduction to Social Web Analytics, how it can be applied, the key vendors and their services, and considerations for your organization’s procurement of analytics services.
Geoffrey Bock and Steve Paxhia
Gilbane Group
123 pages, June 2008 (Recommended)
This report shows how social media, based on “Web 2.0″ technologies, is approaching the tipping-point. First generation tools now in widespread use, such as text-oriented email, web sites, and shared workspaces, are soon to be supplemented by social media applications that incorporate blogs, wikis, social bookmarking, rich media, and other innovative technologies. The Gilbane research report predicts the transition from horizontal applications to vertical solutions, and offers a number of strategies to help companies with the transition. The report combines a national survey of marketing executives with in-depth case studies of ten companies and a comprehensive vendor catalog.
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Geoffrey James
4 pages, April 2008
How to use Web 2.0 technologies to help salespeople reduce the cost of sales, buyer risk and the amount of time necessary to close a deal.
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Chris Brogan & Julien Smith
10 pages, March 7, 2008
We are suspicious of marketing. We don’t trust strangers as willingly. Buzz is suspect. It can be bought. Instead, consumers and business people alike are looking towards trust. We want our friends to tell us it’s good. We want someone we know to say we should look into it. Marketing spend might start at awareness, but in the Trust Economy, communities are king, and ROI stands for Return on Influence.
Bill Ganz
More Media Group, Inc.
227 pages, March 2008 (Recommended)
The 227-page manual pulls from numerous resources and puts the information into an easy-to-comprehend guide that will help companies develop their strategic plans and tactical maneuvers. The research manual contains information regarding how to monetize a social network; how to understand a C2C & C2B relationship; how to empower your brand evangelist; the 10 most beautiful social networks; user-generated psycho-graphic profiling, and more.
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Linda Briggs
5 pages, March 6, 2008
Social networking sites aren’t just for fun. In what may be the future for college recruiting efforts, some 300,000 students now use a social networking site called Zinch specifically to network with colleges. On Zinch prospective students can enter a personal profile that gives colleges in-depth information well beyond grades and test scores. From the other side, Zinch says that more than 450 colleges and universities are using Zinch as a high-powered recruiting tool. Here’s a QA with Brad Ward, electronic communication coordinator for Butler University, on new methods for reaching prospective students.
Universal McCann
80 pages, March 2008 (Recommended)
With Wave 3, Universal McCann’s global research into the impact of social media, the company surveyed 17,000 Internet users in 29 countries. Its findings were widely reported, especially around patterns of online usage, such as China having more bloggers than the United States, emerging markets leading the takeup of social media and the Japanese shunning photo sharing. (Universal McCann moved this report and now it can’t be found on its site; the slideshow is still available.)
Steve Borsch
Marketing Directions, Inc.
55 pages, Feb.11, 2008 (Recommended)
A high-level trend overview for strategists, leaders and marketers on why the Internet and a new wave of Web applications have been embraced by a tech-savvy generation and spawned a culture of participation. The report offers a full range of examples of social media in use, explanation of the Internet as platform, participation applications, thoughts on what’s next and resources.
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Chris Brogan
CrossTech Media
7 pages, Feb. 11, 2008
Social media and social networking can be a tricky thing for businesses and organizations to consider. If you’re looking to show your organization how to get into social media and social networking, here’s a downloadable document on starting points to open up the conversation.
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Message Labs
4 pages, January 2008
Learn the pros and cons of employee social networking, including how to forge new customer relationships. Also learn how social networking is raising new challenges for enterprise security, as online criminals are exploiting social networking’s openness and free-flowing information to launch highly targeted attacks on corporate networks.
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Jonny Bentwood, Edelman
16 pages, January 2008
This whitepaper outlines the thoughts and views of some key stakeholders who met in 2007 to discuss the issue of measuring online influence.
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Antony Mayfield
iCrossing
36 pages, Jan. 8, 2008
Here’s a good overview of the definition of social media, why it’s important, and what some of the main iterations are (blogs, wikis, etc).
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David Meerman Scott
34 pages, January 2008
In this free ebook, which the author expanded into a full book, Scott explores how “word of mouse” spreads your ideas for free. Along the way he offers tips on how to use YouTube videos for viral marketing and how to optimize your website.
Blog post
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David Spark
10 pagesThe guide offers advice for event producers on how to extend the functionality of a live event by using the Social Web to create a content network with Web 2.0 tools and enabling conversation around it. In addition, it includes a checklist to make sure you haven’t forgotten anything. Spark Media Solutions provides end-to-end solutions for capturing and archiving live events through video and rich media.
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Jonathan Naylor
Shoosmiths
6 pages, November 2007
Shoosmiths Solicitors and MessageLabs combine to bring you this legal guide to reducing the risks of online social networking. The whitepaper highlights some of the problem areas that cause employers most concern and provides guidance on how employers can take practical steps to avert the dangers.
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Fabernovel Consulting
48 pages, Oct. 3, 2007
This paper aims to provide better insight into Facebook, ranging from facts and details about the website’s growth to information about advertising, studies on its users’ behavior and suggestions of metrics for social media.
Summary page
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Also available on Slideshare
New Media Consortium
9 pages, 2007
This whitepaper touches on concepts and ideas that are well established within the academic community. It deals not only with new technologies that have mediated communication in countless ways but also the very ways we communicate. Social networking is changing the ways in which people communicate both online and offline.
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MySpace / Fox Interactive Media
68 pages, 2007 (Recommended)
After a nationwide “listening tour,” the study’s authors summarized their top-level finding with the phrase “never ending friending,” which describes a world where frictionless attraction makes forging meaningful relationships easier and more rewarding than ever before. “We learned that social networking is a quantum change in how we interact with each other, with bands and brands, and with the entire media landscape. We also learned there are indeed a set of best practices that will govern behavior in this new world.”
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National School Boards Association
12 pages, July 1, 2007
This study, commissioned by the US National School Boards of Association, discusses student social networking through technology including: the positives of student social networking and the gaps between student networking and the school policies surrounding it; the educational expectations and interests of adults, including parents, teachers, and school boards; and guidance for school board members on social networking policies. The recommendations for further consideration of school policies take into account that 96% of internet users in the age range studied reported ever having used a social networking technology (such as chatting, text messaging, blogging, and visiting online communities), and also reported that education is one of the most common topics of virtual conversation.
by Techrigy
5 pages, June 2007
This whitepaper highlights some of the liabilities that businesses have to consider when designing social media usage policies.
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Robin Fray Carey
SocialMediaToday
9 pages, April 21, 2007
This case study was written to demonstrate how a company can create a social networking platform that not only achieves its tactical goals of pushing company content to its target audience but also broader, strategic purposes aligned with the company’s corporate profile and brand. The study will look at technologies used to develop the SDN and the BPX networks, the quality of the user experience and metrics achieved as well as issues related to maintaining and growing the network. Finally, the author speculates on how the success of the combined networks could lead to further revenue growth and enhancement of current corporate communications.
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SAP Staff
9 pages, April 21, 2007
This case study was written to demonstrate how a company can create a social networking platform that not only achieves its tactical goals of pushing company content to its target audience, but also broader, strategic purposes aligned with the company’s corporate profile and brand. The study looks at technologies, quality of the user experience, metrics achieved, and issues related to maintaining and growing the network.
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Paul Anderson
Intelligent Content Ltd., JISC TechWatch
64 pages, February 2007 (Recommended)
Stephen Downes says about this paper by the UK’s Paul Anderson: “This is a very good report capturing some of the main ideas behind Web 2.0 and looking into some of the implications. If you are new to Web 2.0, this is an excellent introduction. The author depicts Web 2.0 not simply as a new set of technologies but also as the emergence of six major ideas: individual production and user generated content, harness the power of the crowd, data on an epic scale, architecture of participation, network effects and openness.”
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Razorfish
41 pages, Dec. 5, 2006 (Recommended)
The report discusses in detail the topics of media analytics as well as web site analytics and CRM issues. The media analytics section suggests “measurements and analyses that allow you to determine challenges ranging from allocating marketing spend across media to creating the right mix of brand and direct response marketing.”
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Steve Borsch
55 pages, Nov. 25, 2006
A high-level trend overview for strategists, leaders and marketers on why the Internet and a new wave of Web applications have been embraced by a tech-savvy generation and spawned a culture of participation. The report offers a full range of examples of social media in use, explanation of the Internet as Platform, participation applications, thoughts on what’s next and resources.
Download the report (PDF)
Jennifer Mankoff, Deanna Matthews, Susan R. Fussell, Michael Johnson
Carnegie Mellon University
10 pages, September 2006
What role can social networking websites play in supporting large-scale group action and change? The authors propose to explore the use of social networks in supporting individual reduction in personal energy consumption. This paper summarizes some existing uses of social networking on the Web and proposes an approach that integrates feedback about ecological footprint data into existing social networking sites and Internet portal sites.
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Tim O’Reilly
O’Reilly Media
Sept. 30, 2005 (Recommended)
Tim O’Reilly promoted the term Web 2.0 in 2003 and by 2005 develops his ideas further on business models for the next generation of software.
Shane Bowman and Chris Willis
New Directions for News/American Press Institute/iFOCOS
Edited by J.D. Lasica
Sept. 21, 2003
66 pages, July 2003 (Recommended)
What is the role of the storyteller in the new era? How will an informed, connected society and its right to know be shaped? How does the world look when news and information are part of a shared experience? This ground-breaking report explores the changes confronting news, information and media as the authors help frame a conversation about the promise and pitfalls of citizen-based, digital media in an open society.