Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Twitter. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Google doing what Google does best.

Google has really struggled to develop a social media presence. However, Google has really up'd the anti with social search feature.

Now, not only are websites that have been 'shared on Twitter' by colleagues, acquaintences, and Google connections highlighted on Google search, but now websites visited too. 

This new search feature advances 'Google search' towards its own 'recommended' social search engine. Combined with the power of Twitter search, real time search and now recommended search, Google is dominating the search engine landscape, even though Bing has Facebook search integration.

 

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A great example of recommended search by Google.

Posted via email from Jayson Bryant

Friday, May 27, 2011

NZ Election Law and Social Media

With the run up to the New Zealand election, 26th November, there appears to be a section of the 'Election Broadcasting Advertising Law' that will plague all political parties, candidates, and their supporters, that use social media platforms. The law clearly states Here that Television stations, billboards, flyers and radio networks are deemed the only channels of broadcasting significance. Where does this leave the internet?

With platforms such as Youtube, Twitter, and facebook dominating the 2008 US presidential elections, New Zealand seems set to embrace these platforms for the November election. Are These channels already covered by law? If they are, as I suspect they will be, NZ politicians need to clearly understand the do's and don'ts  of social media electioneering.

Also are the use of social media platforms going to be included under the 'Electoral Finace Act 2007'? If so, the both of these bills will significantly inhibit the use of Social media for all parties and supporters leading up to the election.

Broadcast election advertising terms

The Broadcasting Act 1989 refers to "election programmes".  This definition includes advertisements by electoral agencies and station community service announcements.

This guidance uses the term "broadcast election advertising" to refer to advertising by political parties, candidates or other groups with an election-related message.  Broadcast election advertising includes:

  • advertisements relating to parties, or candidates, or both.
  • 'positive' and 'negative' messages e.g. 'Vote for X' and 'Don't vote for Y' (although candidates may not run negative advertising).
  • advertisements of election meetings.
  • broadcast visual images, whether or not combined with sounds, that consist predominantly of alphanumeric text (eg, Teletext). 

"Broadcasting" covers radio and television, including subscription services but not pay-per-view channels.  A "broadcaster " is a person who broadcasts programmes, but does not include a transmission service supplier unless they have some control over what is broadcast.  The "broadcaster" will generally be a station or network manager.

Users of this guidance should check the legal definitions and their applications when appropriate.

Electorate candidate broadcast election advertising

 

Electorate candidate advertising must promote the electorate vote only, although the party name and policies may be mentioned.  Electorate candidates cannot run negative advertising.  All advertising must be paid for (although an advertising schedule may contain bonus airtime contingent on a spend level), broadcast between writ day and midnight on the day before election day, be authorised in writing and contain a promoter statement.  The cost must be included in the candidate's return of election expenses, even where that cost is not paid by the candidate.  Unless paid for from a party allocation, electorate candidates may not share broadcast election advertisements with other candidates (unlike non-broadcast advertising).

 

Registered political party election advertising

Registered party advertising may advocate for or against a party.  When it advocates for an electorate candidate then authorisation and expense apportionment requirements may apply.  All advertising must be: paid for from an allocation made by the Electoral Commission, broadcast between writ day and midnight on the day before election day, be authorised in writing and contain a promoter statement.  The cost of placement paid for out of an allocation of money from the Commission is not included in the party's return of election expenses.  If a party places advertising from its own funds, then this expenditure must be included, despite it being an offence to spend party funds in this way.

 

Other election-related advertisers covered 

Individuals or organisations who are not parties or candidates (including third parties) may broadcast an advertisement which relates to an election, such as advocating for or against a policy, but it must not name or directly advocate for or against a party or candidate.  Such advertisements must contain a promoter statement, Electoral Act 1993 s204F and s.221A.  A promoter statement including the promoter's name and full street address of where the promoter usually lives or any other place where he or she can usually be contacted between 9am and 5pm on any working day to ensure that the rules around promoter statements are met.

Non-partisan, community service, station announcements (eg, free listings of candidate meetings, encouragement to enrol or vote) may be broadcast and must contain an authorisation statement giving the true name and street address of the home or work of the person authorising it.

Official advertisements placed on behalf of the electoral agencies are not restricted but must identify the agency that authorised it.

Third party campaigns

The Act made it illegal for anyone to spend more than NZ$12,000 criticising or supporting a political party or taking a position on any political matter, or more than NZ$1,000 criticising or supporting an individual member of parliament, without first registering with a state agency, the Electoral Commission.

The Bill as introduced required that unregistered third parties file statutory declarations before publishing election advertisements.

The Bill originally limited the spending of registered third parties on political advertising to $60,000, but this was later increased to $120,000 by the Select Committee.

The regulation of third parties also extends to their finances. The Act requires that third parties disclose all donations they receive over $5000. Anonymous donations that third parties receive over this level must be given to the State.

Regulated period

The Act extends the "regulated period" for election campaigning from the previous 90-day period to the period starting on January 1 of election year - from three months to around ten, depending on the timing of the election. During this period electoral advertising by candidates, political parties and third parties must follow election rules, and spending limits apply

 

 

 

Posted via email from Jayson Bryant

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Twitter - Live Chat with Labour Leader Phil Goff

A great start and use of social media by the Labour Party. There are two fundamental problems with this strategy. The timing, 3.30pm, is far too early and generally in company time for viewers. Time lines for such events are key. The key to Mr Goff's election would be to shift the middle ground. The iddle ground tens to be at work at 3.30. This would have been suited toa time slot of 7.30-8, after the kids have gone to bed, people are more relaxed and in front of their computers, have finished work etc.
Secondly the Use of Twitter should have been combined with the use of U-Stream TV for live Q & A with Facebook and Twitter streams for engagement.
Had, and I hope he will use these tools more than once, executed this strategy he would have garnered more engagement and potential support.
On a more positive note, he's one of the first NZ MP's using the platforms available to him, also the amount of the population using these tools remains smal, albeit influential.

Posted via email from Jayson Bryant

Friday, April 22, 2011

The potential influence of using Twitter

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And the answer

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A quick response was needed, but the trust factor was key. I'd chatted to him for a while and built up a level of trust in me that he felt comfortable enough to ask me for a recommendation.

 

Posted via email from Jayson Bryant

Sunday, April 17, 2011

YouTube's share button options

Recently Youtube decided to upgrade its video share options panel. They have now decided that the 'Embed' feature should also be included under the share button.

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When you click on the share button you are now faced, on the surface, with a limited number of platforms on which to share. I'm curious as to why they chose Bebo as a top share platform and not Twitter. 

It's not until you click on 'show more' that you get to see the other share options.

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This would seem that YouTube still values Bebo as a platform with a bright future, and not the dinosaur that we all believed it was.

 

Posted via email from Jayson Bryant

Thursday, September 23, 2010

NZ wine marketing and apps.

After reading Rick Bakas' review of wine apps and marketing it became apparent that so few wineries in New Zealand put reviews of their wines on sites such as Cork'd and Snooth, Why wouldn't you?

For a start, personally go on the site and review wines and also add your own, narcissistic for sure, but it's a great way to reach a new audience when linked to social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook.

With the advent of Snooth's new smart phone app it is now possible to take a photo of a bottle and locate the nearest store from which to buy it.

It also acts a a reference and wine library storing the history of the wine you have consumed, and if enough Kiwi's start using both Cork'd and Snooth they'll end up having a regional profile for NZ.

Below is the new look Snooth smart phone app.
Searching for the nearest wine shop to your present location. Taking a photo of the wine you are drinking in a restaurant. Searching through the database. It has identified the winery It has identified the wine and you can now see other peoples reviews or add your own. Additional information.  

Posted via email from Wine Marketing

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

The Attention and Engagement Economy

If you give me attention I'll give you my custom!

From our earliest memories we seek attention.

We are bombarded with information, advertising and other various stimuli. All of these act on our conscious and sub-conscious trying to get our attention. 

An airline pilot must be able to multitask, speak to air traffic control, take in the visual environment, operate and fly the plane and make a rational priority list of what is most important to them at a particular time, and then react accordingly to emergency warning signals.

Each individual does this on a day to day basis subconsciously, Companies are vying for our attention all the time, so what makes us give it to them?

Are we becoming immune to advertising?

Do we seek more from the companies that want our business?

Traditional media advertisers followed a model that suggested consumers went through a linear process they called 'AIDA' - Attention, Interest, Desire and Action. Attention is therefore a major and the first stage in the process of converting non-consumers. Since the cost to transmit advertising to consumers is now sufficiently low that more ads can be transmitted to a consumer than the consumer can process, the consumer's attention becomes the scarce resource to be allocated.

With the advent of integration media such as Facebook and Twitter we are seeking greater engagement from brands that once just fed us what they wanted us to hear. The traditional model has changed for many businesses and agencies are seeking ways in which to make their ads more interactive.

The buzz word for the past 2 years has been all about Social Media, i.e Twitter, facebook, Bebo, Myspace, YouTube, but these platforms really serve as being part of a social media strategy and are not the stand alone business tools that is claimed by many Social Media Gurus.

What I want from a brand/company maybe very different from what you personally want, we all want different things at different times. So what can a brand do to placate all of these variables?

Well for a start they can engage with the audience, long gone are the days when the company knew best. Democracy has arrived and it's called New Media. If I get bad customer service or don't like a product of yours then I can tell the world. I can shout it from the roof tops, only if I have an audience that is willing to listen.

This is not only my chance to tell people what I do and don't like, about your brand, but also your chance to listen to my concerns and engage with me. Don't take offense, merely take pleasure that I am talking about your brand and am ready for your attention and engagement.

If you're not going to give myself your attention I'm going to seek it somewhere else, I'm going to shift my potential loyalty to your competitor. Perhaps I'll stay with my new found brand, perhaps I won't. If they are willing to listen and interact with me then at least I feel I'm getting the attention that I want and most companies want to have with me.

My attention needn't be bought, isn't necessarily captured on Facebook, Twitter, nor YouTube, my attention is where you seek it and I seek yours. Social Media isn't the be all and end all of advertising/marketing but sure does help get my attention and upwards of 650 millions others.

So come on what have you got to say to me?

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

Posted via email from Jayson Bryant

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The Wine Vault Social Media

The Wine vault, a specialist wine store in Auckland, is using social media tools like facebook and twitter to complement their in-store one to one sales approach. They pride themselves on offering outstanding service and advice, not only with their customers but their suppliers too. They’ve established many relationships with New Zealand wineries, and much of that engagement occurs through social media.
See how Jayson Bryant at the Wine Vault is driving customer service and success with social media.

Posted via email from Jayson Bryant

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

New World Wine Idea of Terroir!

Every second wine bottles back label reads something like this "*insert name and grape varietal here* is a contemporary expression of terroir from *insert region*".
The expression/term 'Terroir' a French word, for which there is no direct translation, is about every facet that directly influences the grape throughout its growing season. These factors include temperature, soil profile, native yeasts, amount of rain and sunshine, country where grown etc. you get the point. It still baffles me to read these wine labels that profess to have terroir driven wines when a) they irrigate the vines b) they inoculate juice with cultured yeast.
Throughout the whole of New Zealand there are few vineyards that do not irrigate their vines. Irrigation dilutes the terroir characters that are drawn from the soil in any given season. 
The inoculation of grape juice guarantees completion of the fermentation process but negates all of the terroir characters that the wine marketers use so evocatively on the back label. Don't be fooled by what they say on the back label unless it says 'Native/wild/indigenous yeast'!

Posted via web from Wine Marketing 101

Friday, April 30, 2010

Social Media: A Missed Marketing Opportunity For New Zealand Wineries

Jayson Bryant
My Website · My Articles
Posted: April 30th, 2010
Are New Zealand wineries missing out on a great marketing opportunity that other countries have garnered?
Although Social Media (SM) is a widely talked about subject within the New Zealand media, very few wineries are using this medium to convey their message to those who want to listen. There are 600+ wineries in New Zealand and yet less than 30 wineries are using Twitter, even fewer using it on a regular basis. Most wineries that are using Twitter have made less than 200 Tweets. More wineries are utilizing Facebook but still less than 10% have a regularly updated Facebook page.
Are these wineries missing out on advertising their brand to where their customers are? Or are they correct in not wasting their time? There are many stories of wineries world wide using SM that have increased their sales but more importantly their profile on a world platform.
For those wineries that are not using SM they are likely not to hear what is being said about them and even less likely to know what isn’t being said about them. Wine is inherently a social lubricant and well matched to Twitter where the conversation is immediate and in real time. New Zealand has always been very technically advanced yet remains in the Social Media dark ages. There is a real reluctance for wineries to get involved and start a conversation about their wine/brand. Many wineries suggested it was not worth their time or money to get involved and wanted to know what the Return On Investment (ROI), whereas I prefer to call it ‘Return On Involvement’.
Your return will grow over a period of time; nothing is immediate. Most of the wineries thought that Twitter and Facebook were for kids, but that simply is not the case. Even if it were, they are the next generation of wine consumers.
New Zealand is isolated geographically but the Internet has brought us closer to the rest of the world. Social media has made it very easy for wineries to display their wares and get people, globally, talking about them. Most wineries still believe that it’s not for them and the actual number of New Zealanders using SM is relatively small – so why bother? There are millions of people using it overseas where their wine drinkers are. With so few New Zealand wineries using Social Media, it is allowing those that are a great advantage. These wineries are one step ahead of the game and have already recognized what rewards Social Media plays to their business plan. It’s not only those wineries that are using Social Media but those people who tell others, that do not use it, about the wine/winery.

Posted via web from Wine Marketing 101

Monday, April 12, 2010

Timed Blog Postings on Twitter and Facebook

When trying to reach a maximum audience with your blog post, try considering the time globally. 
If your target audience is in the US and you're in NZ then work out the time zones and publish accordingly. There is little point posting blog updates on Twitter when your audience is asleep! 

Posted via web from Jayson Bryant

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Don't Just Say It, Do it!

There are so many businesses right now that are all saying the same thing "We're scared to do social media because we can't control the conversation" 
Well let me tell you something, the conversation has already started and either engage now or be lost, or as Brian Solis has said "Engage or Die"
You have more more chance of controlling, if that's your goal, the conversation if you are on the platforms where your customers are! 

Posted via web from Jayson Bryant

Monday, March 1, 2010

CAANZ Social Media in Business 11th March.

Social Media in Business Forum

Social media is becoming the communications channel of choice for an increasing number of consumers, and most New Zealand businesses believe it is a key tool in increasing customer engagement and loyalty.

Despite this, many businesses plan to allocate less than 5% of their marketing budgets for social media activities – a large discrepancy.

In light of these findings, the Digital Leadership Group is holding a forum, Social Media in Business, to help organisations harness the commercial power of social media.

When:

Thursday, 11 March

Where:

Rendezvous Hotel Auckland

Time:

1.30pm - 5.30pm, drinks to follow

Investment:

CAANZ/ANZA/
AmCham members $145 + GST
Non-members $195 + GST

Register:

Click to download Registration Form

Tickets to this event have now sold out. Email your registration form tolauren@caanz.co.nz to be placed on the shortlist.Keynote Speakers

Using Conversation to Drive Business Success

Andrew Lark, Vice President, Global Marketing Dell

Hear how Dell embraced participatory social strategies to fundamentally reshape their business. Learn about the approach, the challenges, the risks and rewards from the architect of their radically different approach to marketing.

Flying the Social Media Flag

Duncan Blair, Head of Brand & Communications Orcon

Sometimes, it’s better to ask for forgiveness than permission. Hear how Duncan Blair put his neck on the line to prove the value of social engagement to his organisation. Learn from is experiences going far above and beyond his job description to become the social media voice of the brand.

From Passion to Profit, One Man’s DIY Adventures in Social Media

Jayson Bryant, Owner The Wine Vault

There’s a lot to be said for just rolling your sleeves up and having a go. For a small retailer in Auckland, embracing social media has led to some unexpected business and personal opportunities. Jayson shares some remarkable insights from his continuing journey that will be of value to any business, regardless of scale.

Lessons from a Breakthrough Social Media Campaign

Chris Chambers, Director of Digital Marketing Tourism Queensland

Chances are, you’ll have heard of the Best Job in the World campaign run by Tourism Queensland last year – either as one of the 8 million visitors to the site, or through the hundreds of minutes of additional media coverage the idea generated. Chris Chambers takes you under the hood of the campaign that generated unprecedented interest and opportunities for Queensland, while tourism across the rest of the country was in decline.Proudly supported by:      in association with:               

Posted via web from Jayson Bryant

Monday, September 7, 2009

Is Twitter just the new CB radio?

I have often sat here looking at the twitter screen and pondered it’s place in society.

I grew up with the fad that was Citizens Band (CB) Radio and now twitter is doing pretty much the same. Twitter has connected many strangers, and some friends, around the globe that would otherwise never had contact before. It is great if you are in a remote location, providing you have an internet connection, or are lonely stay at home person to connect with others. The folk on Twitter regularly warn each other of traffic events, shows, police speed cameras, good restaurants etc, just as they did back in the 1970’s and 80’s.

Twitter is nothing new just a different skin!

New Zealand's most passionate wine guy, star of Wine Vault TV. Video blogger and all round nice guy.

Posted via email from The Wine Vault