Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Social Media. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

The Early Art and Science of +K

I have been running a series of experiments with +K and @klout recently. As the @kloutperks program continues to ramp up, I expect the value of topic clarity to start to sink in. Since it is relatively new, let me explain. +K doesn't up your @klout score, it increases the accuracy and potency of the topics you are considered influential about. @kloutperks are dependent upon what topics you are influential in, so this really matters. If you want the best perks, better figure out the right topic and get relevant. Here are some ways +K can increase you overall score.If you religiously engage with your followers so you know who to give @klout to, your rate of interactions will increase and your @klout will rise. I suggest a new +K best practice: I always tweet it when I give someone +K and I tag onto the end the actual reason I am giving it to the person. Here are some examples of recent tweets about +K that I gave.
I gave  +K about  on  for typing up that interview with Sera Gamble!
With that tweet I am alerting my Supernatural audience that I reward efforts in Fandom, that Wimfambusiness contributed something to the community thereby letting people know about her work and alerting people to content that is available, something they will find valuable. I think this is a wonderful way to use @klout.

I just gave  +K about  on  for working on votespn.tumblr.com

With this tag on ending I am thanking an influencer for  helping with the campaign while also re-posting the link for the still ongoing poll. Often recipients of Klout Retweet these so odds are good that while you are expressing your gratitude, you are also spreading awareness.


I just gave  +K about films on  for supporting The Tree of Life. It influenced me.


I include this tweet because it was a spontaneous one that I wrote after seeing the film, but it was seen by over 200,000 people thanks to Retweets by Fox Searchlight and a few others who worked on the film. I added quite a few followers in an industry I have an acute interest in thanks to it. Never underestimate the power of goodwill.

I've also tried other experiments. In a recent social media campaign to garner 10,000 individual IP votes in 48 hours, I decided to see if people would Re-tweet for @Klout.

I tried two variations:

Want ? RT This: Supernatural National Guard Activate 
Want ? Name your topic if you RT This: Supernatural National Guard Activate 
Using SproutSocial I was able to see which of the two was most effective. Conclusion: People wanted to choose their own topic. The second tweet was RT'd twice as often.

Earlier I had used a strategy of diminishing awards for a better return. It was very effective.
I will give  to the next 5 people who retweet one of my Vote for Supernatural NOW at  tweets
This seems to have been a good way to go, so I will likely combine the 2 more successful approaches next.

I plan on running additional studies using a different target audience. I hypothesize that my rates of return will be much higher if I perform a campaign aimed at @klout aware followers. To date my campaigns have targeted people who had yet to check-in to @klout but who were influential in the target area. Even so, I did get responses.

The early result of my testing proves to me that @klout already has perceived value, even among people who have never checked in. As an online influence currency, its potential can only grow provided the @kloutperks program continues to evolve and begins to make its presence known.


Monday, June 27, 2011

The Currency of Influence



It’s no secret that the latest tool in the marketer’s toolkit is Social Media. The only fly in the ointment so far has been how to prove to the companies that are footing the bill for these initial programs that their money was well spent. They can count “Likes” on a Facebook page or see how often a viral video has been viewed, but until recently no one has been able to really quantify the “Twitter effect.” Now there are scores of tools that are trying to provide all kinds of insight to companies to help them understand what is happening, moment by moment and day by day and how it might be affecting their brand.
This is important for a number of reasons. The first for me being that the more we understand about a medium, the more creatively and effectively we use it. Second, I think it’s imperative that Twitter keep growing and for that they need funds. Using tools to demonstrate its value in ways that corporations understand can only help that continue to happen.
The mainstream media is already beginning to take notice of the two biggest  influence measures out right now, Klout and PeerIndex. Each of these tools looks at your online activity and scores you from 1-100. The higher the score, the more influence you have over others. To put it another way, if your score is high then when you speak  more people listen. Klout and PeerIndex are using slightly different algorithms to measure your activity. I have been using both for a while now and while my numbers are similar, they are not the same. They both keep track of topics that they believe you are influential about. In PeerIndex’s case, this seems to be a longer list and slightly more accurate, though you can only display five on your profile. Klout on the other hand appears to be based on what other people talk to you about. They seem to choose topics based on those topics that are most re-tweeted or liked on Facebook, which means you can suddenly find yourself to be influential about the subject in a joke tweet that has been re-tweeted often rather than say humor, which is what people actually experienced. This is a small problem I hope they will figure out. It handicaps one of the strongest offerings they have, the +K feature.
Similar to the Google +1 feature, this allows you to give out 5 +Klout a day to the people on Twitter who influenced you the most. This is a wonderful feature and the mind leaps ahead to what widespread adoption can and will do to it.  i.e., the first  5 people who RT my x tweet will get +Klout for today. Weeks away at most. There just hasn’t been enough adoption for it to become a currency yet, but soon, very soon. So herein lies the problem. Someone influences you by telling a joke. You go to their Klout page and they are either influential about nothing or influential about something completely unrelated. What do you do? Make a note and hope they get humor as a topic soon, or just give them +K in whatever is available? If nothing is available it defeats the whole purpose, right? So topics definitely need work.
It’s an interesting experience to install the Google Chrome Klout and PeerIndex apps and then venture onto Twitter. This allows you to see each user’s scores simultaneously. It’s early days yet, so PeerIndex uses an estimate for many people. If you hover over the little yellow number, you’ll see more about the PeerIndex score. It will give you the breakdown of Authority, Activity and Audience along with the 5 topics they are displaying. If it only provides zeros, you know that the number you are seeing is an estimate. People actually have to check in to PeerIndex or Klout to get the most accurate read. The Klout app will simply show you the number. If you click on either it will take you to their profiles on either site.
Once you start looking at the numbers it will surprise you how much it helps you decide who to follow, who to forgo. I say this because Klout not only looks at the ratio of follows to followers, it looks at the quality of them. If you only follow 10 people but you are followed by 100,000 super active twitter users who spread every thing you say, you are going to be in the 80ish Celebrity range. Alternately if you follow 10 people and have 100,000 followers who are people who are never active, who ignore you and generally only shill ads, you are not going to get very far.  As in everything in life, it is quality, not quantity you are looking for here.  Numbers are great, but they need to be qualified numbers to get the most out of Twitter. That applies to individuals, small businesses and even large brands and celebrities.  I un-followed a large chunk of people after discovering this, many were inactive or weren’t even people and saw my Klout score rise.
When someone follows me, my follow backs are decisions. I’m now committed to reading what this person puts out there, interacting with them, re-tweeting them and having them “on-staff” at St.Jon’s Super Stylin’ Live Magazine. I’m the editor in chief and I can hire the best writing talent the twitter world has to offer in any field. I get my news before most anyone else with footage that rarely makes mainstream media. I read notes from the cameraman of my favorite show on TV, the bodyguard of one of my favorite celebs and interact with other fans from around the world. One great actor I follow is such a great tweeter he plays games with his followers and tweets frequent candid photos and video clips. His followers re-tweet every tweet. Some of the best writers of comedy, film and television muse, howl and generally vent to my great amusement and sympathy and I read their travails and sympathize as I sit and write alone. Yet I don’t feel that I am.
This is just the beginning of what is possible with Twitter.  Tools like PeerIndex and Klout can help eliminate some of the chaff that already has started to clog the system. The relentless marketing spam and the hunt for greater and greater numbers of followers. As measurement become more widely adopted, my hope is that some of those practices will fall out of favor. They don’t work, and they are incredibly pointless.
Right now @Klout seems to be the clear leader in the field and at the rate of adoption I am seeing it will be the gold standard. So check in, see your score and find out how influential you are.
In an upcoming post I’ll talk about how Twitter can be useful and effective for a brand without relentlessly marketing itself into oblivion.http://www.klout.com