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Facebook Timeline Cards by Moo.com

by Armando Alves. 0 Comments

Great idea (and partnership with Facebook) by print-on-demand service Moo.com, using the new Timeline view to create business cards.

Using your Cover Photo, Timeline layout and typography, Moo’s application can turn your Timeline into a pack of business card with your primary details using Facebook’s API. On the back, you can add your own quotation or sentence about yourself.

To make your own Facebook cards just go to your http://www.facebook.com/yourfacebookusername/info and hover on the business card on your contact info – the first 50000 ones get printed for free :)

via Ana Mendes

Market to the friends of (true) fans

by Armando Alves.

If you’re still not convinced with the Facebook fans fallacy, perhaps a quote from the source will enligthen you:

We’re still seeing the fans and followers arms race — businesses trying to gather as many fans as possible. But I think that’s fundamentally wrong. It’s more important to focus on quality, not quantity, of connections.

For example, many brands run competitions on social media platforms. You have to “Like” or “Follow” that business to enter. So the question is whether they are making connections with advocates of their brand, or with people who simply love competitions. If it’s the latter, then they’re filling their social media interactions and data with noise.

As I mentioned earlier, people are often most influenced by their closest friends. So only make connections with true advocates of your brand, and market to the friends of those fans.

Paul Adams, Global Brand Experience Manager at Facebook

The Facebook Fans Fallacy

by Armando Alves.

One of my favorite bloggers, Jonathan MacDonald, has a regular category on the subject of fallacies. While not half as smart, I’ll try to write about a question posted on Quora, a common trap some marketers are prone to believe in: that what matters on Facebook is the number of fans (or more awkwardly, likes).


cc licensed flickr photo shared by jlz

Let’s start with a selected quote by someone (video below for RSS readers) who knows a bit about these things:

“It’s worthless to have a lot of friends on Facebook, because they’re not really your friends. They’re just people who don’t want to offend you by pressing the ignore button” — Seth Godin

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0h0LlCu8Ks

For Facebook Pages, with a low friction to press the Like button, a brand can easily create the illusion that fans = consumers = sales. If you think that makes sense, better choose other career than marketing. And don’t even consider mentioning that PR stunt about the value of a Facebook fan.

“If numbers are your strategy to win at this thing, you’ve already lost. This thing is not a game. There is no winning. There is only mattering. If you don’t understand that, you aren’t making a difference.” — Jeffrey Zeldman

Zeldman puts it best, it’s the relationship that matters. The amount of influence you can have on your fans, the power to affect their behavior, and ultimately drive their purchase intentions, are achieved when you care about your fans and not by a shallow, quick fix numbers race.

Face to Facebook: how brands are seen by Portuguese users

by Armando Alves.

With Facebook reaching over 3 million users in Portugal, it’s increasingly important to understand how users perceive brands on Facebook. Research company Netsonda has just released their 2nd study Face to Facebook, with some new data regarding portuguese users:

  • More than half (58%) of users “liked” brand pages to receive regular updates;
  • Over 2/3 of users visit liked brand pages;
  • 91% of users trust brand pages they “Like”;
  • 78% of users visit Facebook at least once a day;
  • 58,2% of users spend more than 1h per day on Facebook.

Worthy of notice, the fact that non-profits are amongst the favorites, with brand or product pages attracting 55% of users (a considerable increase from 37% back in June).

More about the research at Netsonda.pt or by email at sales@netsonda.pt.

Disclaimer: Netsonda is part of Fullsix Group.

Don’t tag me on Places, bro.

by Armando Alves.

Facebook Places launched last week, exploring their big chunk of mobile users, while establishing a weird sort of coo-petition with location startups GoWalla and Foursquare.

In a worrisome pattern for Facebook the usual backlash followed, again regarding privacy concerns. This time they got it half-right, by sharing location check-ins only to friends (and not everyone), but the big concern seems to be about the tagging. Facebook Places lets your tag you by default, but doesn’t offer any opt-in. Why is this troublesome? Let me give you an example:

- You go out with a few friends for a boys night out
- Your girlfriend stays at home, finishing some late report
- One of your friends checks-in at the restaurant. Your girlfriend likes the status on Facebook.
- After a few drinks at the bar/restaurant, one of your friends decides to check-in at the strip bar next door, even if you’re all heading home.

Well, good luck giving a reasonable explanation to your girlfriend. Even if you can remove the tag later, the harm is done.

Yes, i know they could do the same on Twitter, but there’s a big difference: On Facebook, your status becomes instantly visible, while on Twitter one has to perform a direct search, which requires a lot more effort (aka stalking). Furthermore, you might not be pleased at all to know there’s no full opt-out feature from Places.

As weird as it seems, Facebook could use some lessons from Orkut, who rightfully asks: ”You’re not always the same person. Why should it be any different on the Web”, something already explored by Paul Adams at Google.

We surely need to solve the filter failure problem.

The Social Network movie

by Armando Alves.

It’s only the poster, but a sign of things to come on the upcoming David Fincher movie of young Zuckerberg and his 500 million nation, loosely based on Ben Mezrich’s novel titled The Accidental Billionaires, premiering next October.



Facebook will never be the same. (insert cheesy movie line here)