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2015/10/01

Video content on YouTube has more longevity than Facebook

Twitter gives its "buy now" button a broader rollout | Snark-tagged videos still a boon for Chinese brands | Will the "Yelp for people" catch on?
Created for ignoble.experiment@arconati.us |  Web Version
October 1, 2015
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The Big Story
Twitter gives its "buy now" button a broader rollout
Social media site Twitter
(Bethany Clarke/Getty Images)
Twitter is opening its "buy now" button to all US businesses that use Shopify, Demandware or Bigcommerce products to run their e-commerce operations. "We have gone from testing this with hundreds of merchants to millions of merchants," says Nathan Hubbard, Twitter's head of commerce.
The New York Times (free-article access for SmartBrief readers) (9/30) 
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Connecting & Collaborating
Snark-tagged videos still a boon for Chinese brands
Young Chinese Web users increasingly are watching videos in "danmu," a bullet-screen format that peppers the display with snarky comments from previous users. That can be a valuable source of online engagement for brands with a thick skin, says Sharon Ho of BBDO Proximity. "You have to be very open-minded and accepting, not to focus on the positive or negative of what people say about you -- the key thing is they are talking about you," Ho says.
Advertising Age (free access for SmartBrief readers) (10/1) 
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Will the "Yelp for people" catch on?
Mobile application Peeple is stirring up controversy by letting users post reviews of other individuals, without the subject's consent or ability to veto off-color comments. The concept is to "spread love and positivity," says co-founder Julia Cordray, but some say the service could encourage online bullying.
The Washington Post (tiered subscription model) (9/30) 
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Marketer Moments
How GoPro builds buzz with high-octane video clips
GoPro's marketing relies heavily on adrenaline-pumping first-person video clips produced by extreme sports stars. It's easy to recruit contributors, says human-flight specialist Neil Amonson, who attended a recent boot camp for the company's content producers. "What maybe separates us from some other people who do the same sports is, there's a certain element of -- I don't know if 'showmanship' is the right word, but we like to share," he says.
Bloomberg (9/30) 
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Platform News
Facebook brings GIFs to user profiles
Facebook profile photo
(HAZEM BADER/Getty Images)
Animated GIF-like videos can now serve as Facebook profile photos. The social network also is enabling temporary profile photos that revert to the original photo after a set time. "It can be a visual status update to let your friends know what's going on in your life today, or it can be your statement of solidarity for a cause you feel strongly about," Facebook's Aigerim Shorman and Tony Hsieh wrote in a blog post.
Fortune (9/30) 
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Measurement Matters
Video content on YouTube has more longevity than Facebook
Consumers are more likely to view older content from brands on YouTube than they are on Facebook, Visible Measures reports. Around 55% of the views of a brand's YouTube videos are of previously uploaded content, compared to 5% for Facebook. "YouTube is really search-oriented, and Facebook is really discovery-oriented," Visible Measures' Brian Shin said.
The Wall Street Journal (tiered subscription model) (9/30) 
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Social Shareable
Ants are secret ingredient for Venezuelan hot sauce
Tourists are getting a taste for Venezuela's kumache hot sauce, which is made from termites and ants. This video demonstrates the process of finding, catching and cooking up batches of the bugs.
YouTube/National Geographic (9/24) 
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One does not have to stretch far to imagine the distress and anxiety that such a system would cause even a slightly self-conscious person.
Caitlin Dewey, writing about Peeple at The Washington Post
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 Andy Sernovitz, Editor at Large
Andy Sernovitz is the New York Times best-selling author of "Word of Mouth Marketing: How Smart Companies Get People Talking" and the blog "Damn, I Wish I'd Thought of That!" He runs WordofMouth.org, where marketers and entrepreneurs learn to be great at word of mouth marketing, and SocialMedia.org, the community for social media leaders at the world's greatest brands.
 
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