Facebook Places arrives to Canada – location based drive to bricks & mortar is here

September 24, 2010

Facebook Places in Canada

Location, location, location means so much more these days – with Foursquare making a drive to retail a real thing and now with Facebook Places – launched today in Canada.

I’m pretty big fan of foursquare  – I personally like seeing where my network checks in, getting rewarded for being a mayor, rallying my coworkers for the mayorship at JWT (outgoing mayor has to by the new mayor Tim Horton’s breakfast) and  trying to get that elusive foursquare swarm badge (50 people check in at the same place, at roughly the same time). 

Its often seen as a game for goal oriented people.  But lately, I can only see Foursquare for the opportunities to stimulate social commerce – that is making a connection between location based social activity and in-store commerce. 

Social commerce is a pretty hot thing these days and I’m fortunate to have some connections that are following this stream closely.  About six weeks ago, I narrowly defined social commerce as f-commerce or selling over facebook.  But now I can see how social commerce is a broader theme – how can you use location based marketing to drive to commerce.  As anyone who has faced the old ‘how do I get social media ROI question’ (which can be answered albeit hard) – I look forward to definitely answering this with social commerce.

Facebook Places launched today in Canada.  It allows me to check in, tag friends who are with me and see where other friends are [more here].  It can clutter up my facebook wall pretty fast.   I don’t immediately see social commerce in Facebook places yet - time will tell how adopted places become.  But its definitely worth watch the US adoption rates.    


The new home page of 2011 is the tab in Facebook.

September 8, 2010

There is a new kind of home page and its not where you’d expect – check out the best new facebook landing pages that introduce mashups of corporate social presence, address audience segmentation, and are as rigourous as any home page you’d see on a corporate website.

American Red Cross is my new favorite page.  

The landing page is the default for first time visitors, after which, on repeat visits, you end up on the wall post page.  [I didn't know you could set cookies on facebook].    This page is definitely informed by an information architect/usability specialist  – see the top utility menu and e-mail prompt for alerts, clear alignment, great labelling, rss news feed capabilities, maps, integration of other social medias – clearly making all the digital assets work very hard, very integrated all on one page.

Strategically – this is an exceptional play.   Facebook continues to capture a large portion of internet time away from the long tail of the web [that is - all other websites including most corporation's branded sites]. With the decentalization of the net, companies with strong facebook assets have ample opportunity to create hard working facebook pages to meet their customers where their customers spend the most time.

Understand the facebook consumer behaviour: If, when a visitor comes to a facebook fan page landing page instead of the traditional ‘wall post’ landing page – they will often go to the wall page anyways. The wall post page is, after all, the heart of company led and consumer led conversation fused together. And so – to introduce a landing page default can make for a more effective use of a visitor impression.

Now make that landing page a home page like American Red Cross.

I haven’t seen this in Canada yet – but noted that Coca Cola has something similar.


Uproar on Facebook Privacy & New tool to set your privacy

May 20, 2010

There is another wave of facebook privacy concerns – driven in part by the new ‘instant personalization’ feature that Facebook is now offering.

In general, Facebook is allowing websites to tailor their online content by showing what your facebook friends like and share.   This is explained far better by Liz Gannes in a recent post about Facebook Instant Personalization. As Liz explains Facebook is also allowing deep sharing with three partners Microsoft, Yelp and Pandora – which is cause for upset.

I have seen a number of new privacy options by Facebook – finally, I can control who sees my crazy wall posts but the changes happen so rapidly that most users have facebook ‘default’ privacy settings.    My other personal privacy complaint is that I can not control who sees which fan pages I’ve joined.  When I join a fan page, for instance, most of my friends get blasted with this update.  No controls on this yet.

Fascinating is today’s public reaction with several well known tech profiles publicly announcing quitting facebook over privacy concerns.   Not to mention that google searchs for “how to delete my facebook account” is at an all time high.    For the record, I am not quitting facebook – I use it too much and I’ve narrowed down my privacy settings.  I do restrict my foursquare access now to friends only.. but I digress.

And then there is MYOPENBOOK.org

Openbook is a new site that allows any online surfer to search key terms like “divorced”, “dna test” or “cheated” and get publicly available facebook wall posts by individuals with loose privacy settings.  The site is created by individuals who want to outline what information is now public  (see the green learn why this is bad button).

Fortunately Openbook also provides a link to Reclaimprivacy.org, a great new scan tool for understanding how private your facebook settings are.    (note:  to drag the tool to your bookmarks toolbar – you have to make sure that it is a toolbar that is active and viewed.  Go view, toolbars and ensure bookmarks toolbar is checked off).


Ouch! A brand removed from its purchasers’ Facebook fan page community

February 22, 2010

I just witnessed an social media assassination this week as a real estate developer was forcibly removed from its purchaser formed Facebook fan page – a page formed by and for the buyers of a specific condominium.  [read on for the actual letter below].

To the defense of the developer, their removal was a very difficult decision by the admins.  Although they valued the contributions of the developer, they also recognized that their very presence hindered the community from free speech.  And so the developer got the boot.  And whereas this may  be a tough pill for a developer to swallow – it does not close the door of social media opportunities facing them.

For those who haven’t bought a new condo in Canada, the time from purchase to occupancy can be 2 – 3 years as the developer gains the percentage of sales required to proceed with the build.   Much of the developer communication during that 2-3 year period can be legal – leaving enthused purchasers starved for more information.  They can not wait for ‘meet the neighbour’ night to learn about how to navigate their purchase.    Indeed, having mapped the customer experience for home/condo buying from my recent past, the best areas for engagement go well beyond the actual purchase – which is, unfortunately, the stage where many developers stop spending money on their marketing communications.

Truthfully, lean developers are not easily involved in social technologies and customer engagement.  The process of buying of home – in the sky or on the ground – is woefully complicated and much of the marketing communications is well guarded to protect against unforeseen legalities.  Many companies (indeed some that I’ve consulted with in healthcare) are so afraid of client privacy and regulation that they avoid social networking.   And yet, there is always a route to market.  I’d rather see a well researched, thought out social networking strategy that says ‘do nothing’ then ignore the rising needs and behaviours of the market.

Social networking is wonderful option to bridge the gap but, as many brands have discovered, wading in these waters can be very difficult.   There is a right approach to social media and, as much as I love Facebook corporate fan pages, this isn’t the only place an organization can participate.   Online video, twitter, RSS feeds and the very underestimated corporate blog as plausible options for a developer – and I say this with experience.   Of course, establishing the facebook fan page before your purchasers do is an option that would have to happen well in advance of the first condo sale, I suppose.  But stopping purchasers from forming their own safe haven may be unpreventable.  What is clear – is that the community is alive, wired and engaged and so more marketing engagement would resonate well with this group.

On the side of the community – I do admire the admins below for what must have been a very difficult decision.  The role of the admin is to create a comfortable place for the community to grow.  Usually that means deleting a lot of wall page self promotion but in this case, the stakes were much higher.  And in rejecting the developer, I think the admins send a strong message to their community as well as lessons for the rest of us who manage facebook pages.  A reminder to hold true to the goals of the community and to always keep them in check.

So for those who want to learn more, the assassination went like this… [names removed, page protected]

We wanted to let you know that after much consideration (months) and many messages from group members, we have come to the conclusion that [John Doe] as Sales and Marketing Manager for [noname developer]  and their participation in the group increasingly conflicts with the purpose of the [noname condo development] and Facebook Group by creating a power dynamic, loyalty, and ethical dilemma that is only fixed by their removal.

Many members expressed that they feel the exchange of information is extremely lopsided and that the direct presence of our developer on the Facebook page discourages honest discourse among members for various reasons – including fear of reprisal. With this change we hope all members feel free to contribute to the discussion by posting on the wall and getting involved. In the past week alone, there has been a ton of new information posted on how to save tons on electric bbq’s vs buying from [noname], amenity spaces, group buying of window coverings and of course, discussion about occupancy dates. With pdi’s hopefully starting in x followed by Closing sometime next x, this forum will become even more essential and the ability to discuss issues that are at odds with the developer, in a private group setting, will become extremely important.

We want to stress that this was nothing personal against [noname] and has nothing to do with anything they posted. It is simply a matter of purchaser privacy and the ability to exchange information freely.

We have communicated our thanks and appreciation for all of the information and photos they have contributed to the group and told them would very much like to continue adding their contributions – in the form of photos, updates, upgrades or marketing materials and will gladly post any information they send us on the site.

Sincerely,  The Admins


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