The Daily Telegraph is in the middle of a 20-week serialisation of an online book created by author Alexander McCall-Smith, his first such project. New Media Knowledge caught up with the organisers to discuss ‘Corduroy Mansions’.
moreGoogle has announced it will incentivise advertisers on its video properties as well as launching research programmes into how Web users consume Internet video material. New Media Knowledge spoke to a number of industry players to gauge their views on where the video advertising market is going.
moreA social network aimed at providing information for ex-pats living in London has been established. New Media Knowledge met the site’s co-founder to find out more.
moreA social network aimed at providing information for ex-pats living in London has been established. New Media Knowledge met the site’s co-founder to find out more. more
Virgin Atlantic was forced to take action this month when staff reportedly criticised safety standards and passengers’ class status on social network, Facebook. As more businesses look to engage social networking, what are the potential dangers they should look out for? New Media Knowledge spoke to a lawyer to find out more. more
LinkedIn, the social network for professionals, launched its LinkedIn Intelligent Applications (InApps) platform this week, which the company says will make business-focussed applications available to its 30 million-plus users. more
With belts tightened, and so many self-styled social media consultancies out there, how can marketers know who to trust? New Media Knowledge looked at the important things to consider when looking for a social media consultancy. more
African nations were urged this week to engage with new media to attract more visitors. New Media Knowledge looked for examples of new media success in the travel sector. more
The lines have been drawn in the social networking realm, as both Facebook and MySpace announce plans for their new advertising platform that uses the information the social networking sites have on their members. Tim Hoang reports.
Facebook has introduced Facebook Ads, a system that allows businesses to target more audiences more effectively and efficiently. Using the unique characteristics of social networking sites, the ad system will allow businesses to build their own pages, while facilitating virally spread messages and providing an interface that will analyse activities of consumers. Facebook Ads launched with three separate sections that according to Facebook’s founder and CEO, Mark Zuckerberg will ‘represent a completely new way of advertising online."
Companies can now create their own unique Facebook page starting with a blank canvas and the option of adding many of the large number of widgets already developed. These can enable customers to book reservations, provide reviews or purchase tickets. "The core of every user’s experience on Facebook is their page and that’s where businesses are going to start as well. The first thing businesses can do is design a page to craft the exact experience they want people to see," said Zuckerberg.
Organisations will be able to purchase SocialAds for users who have shown an interest in the brand and a unique endorsement will appear on the user’s profile page. Advertisers will be able to purchase social ads through auction-based systems based on the demographics of different groups. According to Zuckerberg, "social actions are powerful because they act as trusted referrals and reinforce the fact that people influence people. It’s no longer just about messages that are broadcasted out by companies, but increasingly about information that is shared between friends."
The final part of Facebook’s new product was Insight. This will provide advertisers with an interface that allows detailed analysis of how successful a campaign is progressing allowing advertisers to adjust campaigns as necessary. "For the last hundred years media has been pushed out to people, but now marketers are going to be a part of the conversation. And they’re doing this by using social graph in the same way our users do," said Zuckerberg.
This follows the news earlier in the week of MySpace launching its own advertising platform in early 2008. SelfServe, the social networking site’s rival to Google AdSense and Facebook Ads allows small business users, brands and politicians to purchase, create and analyse its own advertising on MySpace. Users can also carefully target audiences based on a range of factors including age, geography, and interests. According to Michael Barrett, chief officer for Fox Interactive Media SelfServe "translates our massive amounts of self-expressed user data into highly targeted, interest-based segments, enabling us to better serve the exact right ad to the right person at the right time."
However, some groups have questioned whether social media sites should be able to share the data it has on its users. Days earlier, the US Federal Trade Commission expressed concerns that marketers and Internet companies might be infringing on people’s privacy in the way it targets demographics using online data. "People should have dominion over their computers," said Jon Leibowitz, an F.T.C. commissioner. "The current ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ in online trafficking and profiling has to end."
Kathryn Montgomery, author of the book Generation Digital: Politics, Commerce, and Childhood in the Age of the Internet agrees. "Despite all the assurances that the industry gave to regulators and the public, it sounds as if their business plans sort of fly in the face of promises to operate without exploiting young people. If you are hanging out with your friends and talking about who you are, what rock stars you like, and so on, you don’t assume that someone is sitting there and taking down every word you’re saying and putting it into some kind of algorithm."
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