A Metaphor for the Sales Pitch in Social Media (a.k.a. I’ll find any excuse to flatter Doug, the orange hand puppet)
Social media is part of my day job. At night and on weekends, I am a poet, which means I am always on the lookout for good metaphors. Just between you and me, I will confess I even embrace cheesy metaphors from time-to-time. And since I have confided in you now, and that makes us friends, I will warn you I cannot vouch for the metaphor I am about to impose on you. I do, however, stand behind the idea it represents. While reading news from my RSS feeds recently on my Dell flat-screen monitor and listening to the Lynyrd Skynyrd channel via the Pandora radio app on my iPhone, I found a brandchannel article on product placement in a children’s show. Product placement. It can be blatant, like a logo plastered across a character’s costume in the cartoon referenced in that article. It can be slightly sneaky, like the first sentence of this paragraph. Or it can be ingenious and well-received, as it is in the popular TV show “Mad Men” (also mentioned in the brandchannel article). I spend a lot of time reading about social media and how brands struggle with when and how to make sales pitches. Those without conscience (and those bound to get voted off the island) bombard fans and followers with advertisements. The only thing they know how to say is, “Buy this now!” Most companies understand how inappropriate that is in the social space and genuinely want to mix the sales pitch with the right amount of engaging content.
In our increasingly smartphone-entrenched world, the mobile application extensions of our social networking-entangled lives can make or break a user experience. Twitter as a network depends on the user development of mobile and desktop applications to keep participation thriving. In some cases, app developers attempt to provide a seamless brand experience between the desktop and mobile world, while often the very best apps focus primarily on the screen for which they are developed. For mobile Twitter users, custom design for ease of use is paramount. Beyond the individual, an organization’s conversation managers need to be properly equipped, connected and ready to go.
No matter the platform, there are literally dozens of apps to choose from, making it a painful finger stroll through any given app store. To make things a bit easier for you, we’ve compiled some of our thoughts on a few of the Twitter apps currently available.
At Media Logic, we decided it would be a good idea to begin offering overviews of mobile apps that interest us. These apps may have marketing implications, or they may just be cool, fun apps that grabbed our attention. For our first app review, we’ll be talking about Foursquare.