Facebook Offers Identify Verification to Members With Lots of Subscribers

February 20th, 2012

TechCrunch recently announced that Facebook is inviting users with the most subscribers to verify their accounts and display a preferred nickname.

In addition to establishing trust with new Fans, verification is also intended to help facebook members find verified accounts more easily. Verified users will be able to change their displayed name to a pseudonym.

While no verification badge will be shown, verified users will appear in the Facebook Subscribe suggestions more often:

facebook-verify-my-account

This new verification feature is not available to everyone; Facebook is targeting members who already have lots of subscribers, and verification invitations started going out last Thursday.

Facebook members can get verified by uploading a color copy of one of the following:

  • Passport
  • Drivers Licence
  • Work/Military ID
  • School or Work ID

If you don’t have the above documents, you can get verified with two of the following documents:

  • Library Card
  • Credit Card
  • Birth Certificate
  • Social Security Cards

Upon verification, members can also set their alternate name:

facebook-verify-upload-id

Share
Posted in: Governance, Product Development
No Comments »

Meet Me at SXSW 2012

February 8th, 2012

I’ll be at SXSW again this year, and happy to connect with marketing leaders about measurement, strategy and governance of social media.
sxsw
I live in Austin, so I am here year-round, but my colleagues from Converseon will also be in town for SXSW, including Rob Key, our CEO.

Looking forward to connecting with new folks in Austin.

Share
Posted in: Governance, Legal and Regulatory, Product Development, Scaling Social Media, Team Building
No Comments »

Common Mistakes in Social Media Policies

January 26th, 2012

As the FTC increases its enforcement of its Guides, social media policies are getting a lot of attention, marketing attention from law firms, and blogs that offer bad or incomplete advice. Here are a couple of mistakes I’ve seen in recent blogs about social media policies:
smirk
Stating “This is my personal blog. All views expressed here are solely mine and not those of my current or past employers.” — which is stating that the opinions you express are your own — is the opposite of disclosure. An example of disclosure would be writing an opinion about a magazine’s publisher, and then disclosing to readers that you get paid to write for the magazine.

The FTC requires that brands and their agencies maintain and train their people on social media policies that ensure compliance with FTC guides. As a brand, your policy responsibilities extend to your agencies, so make sure they are meeting their obligations.

In fact, the FTC recently published guidance a framework for brands to ensure they are doing the right things, which I describe in this post.

Share
Posted in: Governance, Legal and Regulatory
No Comments »

FTC Tell Brands What to do With 3Ms

January 25th, 2012

The FTC recently clarified brand responsibilities for social media policies, in the form of Three Ms, as follows:
traffic cop

  1. Mandate a policy that’s in compliance
  2. Make sure people you work with (or on your behalf) know what is in compliance
  3. Monitor for compliance (reasonable systems must be in place). The FTC does not seem to accept affiliate agreements alone as evidence that companies are policing their affiliates.

When the FTC says Monitor, they mean that you should audit and spot check your processes. They are not suggesting that you use a social media monitoring tool to track every mention of your brand or campaigns.

Share
Posted in: Governance, Legal and Regulatory
No Comments »

How Job Seekers Use Social Media to Find a Job

January 23rd, 2012

According to Jobvite, one in six job seekers found their last job through a social network, and more than half of job seekers in the U.S. have used social media to look for work in the past year.

For people who used social media to find their last job:

  • 88% used LinkedIn
  • 71% used Twitter
  • 63% used Facebook

For the most active users of social media, 28% found their last job through social networking, and 85% of those did so via Facebook.

Infographic below from Jobvite:

social-job-seekers

Share
Posted in: Team Building
2 Comments »

WOMMA Releases Privacy Guidance — Encourages Transparency

January 23rd, 2012

On Jan. 19, the Word of Mouth Marketing Association (WOMMA) released the WOMMA Guidance on Privacy, a set of self-regulated privacy guidelines that focus on social media and the use of consumer Personally Identifiable Information (PII).
womma
Referring to recent FTC settlements against Google and Facebook, WOMMA applauded recent FTC efforts to raise the issue of privacy, and for making transparency a key point.

Along with some major brands and agencies, WOMMA and its board of directors agreed upon core principles for protecting privacy across all marketing and communications channels. WOMMA’s Guidance on Privacy are aspirational core principles to follow, and are not mandated or required guidelines for the industry.

WOMMA stated on their blog, that, while privacy is a multi-faceted issue, WOMMA believes that transparency and choice are at the heart of establishing and sustaining the meaningful connection between brands and consumers.

Excerpts from WOMMA’s Perspective on Privacy:

  • Brands should be open and honest about PII that they are collecting, using and sharing from consumers.
  • Brands should use PII collected from or about consumers for the purposes that they have clearly communicated.
  • Brands should collect PII that is relevant and necessary to accomplish the specified purposes.
  • Brands should not retain PII for longer than necessary to fulfill the specified purposes or to otherwise meet legal requirements.
  • Brands should employ relevant and reasonable measures to protect PII.
  • Brands should be accountable for complying with these principles, by providing consumers with a readily accessible means to express concerns or complaints.

“In the relationship between the advertiser and customer, sensitive information can be transmitted, whether financial or personal,” said Anthony DiResta, Partner at Winston & Strawn and WOMMA General Counsel. “It is the sensitivity of that information that creates concerns about privacy, and WOMMA believes that transparency and choice are at the heart of establishing and sustaining the meaningful connection between companies and their customers.”

“Privacy is becoming an increasingly important topic for both brands and consumers,” said Paul M. Rand, President/CEO of Zocalo Group and WOMMA Immediate Past President. “The principles set forth in WOMMA’s Guidance are meant to educate our members and the industry as a whole on key privacy issues, and we look forward to continuing the discussion.”

In disclosure, I serve on the WOMMA Member Ethics Advisory Panel.

Share
Posted in: Governance, Legal and Regulatory
No Comments »

The Complete List of Verified Twitter Accounts

December 31st, 2011

Verified Accounts on Twitter are Twitter’s attempt to clarify the authenticity of accounts for famous people or brands. In fact, only Twitter partners and advertisers are allowed to request verification.

twitter-verified Here is the list of accounts who have completed the Verification process.

Twitter says they are developing a system to replace Verified Accounts, but those who received a Verified Account badge are allowed to keep it in the mean time.

Share
Posted in: Governance
No Comments »

How Moms Use Smart Phones

December 24th, 2011

52% of Moms use their smartphone within 5 minutes of waking in the morning, and 28% of Moms say they would not give up their smart phone in exchange for pay — even for a day. Moms use Android phones more than 3 times as often as iPhones, (although the survey provides no insight across different demographics). More interesting insights from Life360 in the infographic below:
moms-smartphones

Share
Posted in: Product Development
No Comments »

U.S. Judge Says Twitter Stalking is Not Real Stalking

December 22nd, 2011

The FBI brought William Lawrence Cassidy to trial for sending more than 8,000 distressing tweets over 2 months, to a leader of a Buddhist group. During that time, he threatened her life and wrote tweet haikus containing disturbing images of violence. His efforts scared her so much that she refused to leave her house for 18 months, but the judge overseeing the case ruled that Cassidy’s tweets were protected speech under the First Amendment, as they appeared on a public bulletin-board-like forum.
peek
The judge said:

“…while Mr. Cassidy’s speech may have inflicted substantial emotional distress, the government’s indictment here is directed squarely at protected speech: anonymous, uncomfortable Internet speech addressing religious matters.”

According to the New York Times, the judge compared Twitter to communications during the colonial period:

He said, “A blog is like a bulletin board that a person of [the colonial period] might have planted in his front yard. If one colonist wants to see what is on another’s bulletin board, he would need to walk over to his neighbor’s yard and look at what is posted, or hire someone else to do so.”

With Twitter, he went on, news from one colonist’s bulletin board could automatically show up on another’s. The postings can be “turned on or off by the owners of the bulletin boards,” he wrote. In other words, one can disregard what is posted on a bulletin board. “This is in sharp contrast to a telephone call, letter or e-mail specifically addressed to and directed at another person,” the judge concluded.

Share
Posted in: Governance, Legal and Regulatory
1 Comment »

Hyundai Escapes FTC Sanctions Because of Its Social Media Policy

December 21st, 2011

The FTC recently closed an investigation on Hyundai, with no sanctions against the brand, after one of their agencies gave bloggers gift certificates as an incentive to “… incline links to Hyundai videos in their posts and/or to comment on . . . forthcoming Super Bowl ads.”  The FTC provided two reasons for closing the investigation, as follows:
heisman

  1. Hyundai did not know about the incentives in advance.  They were offered by an employee of Hyundai’s marketing agency.
  2. Offering an incentive to post about or endorse a Hyundai product violated the social media policies of Hyundai and the agency.

While the FTC decision seems to encourage adopting a social media policy, the FTC hasn’t generally accepted affiliate agreements as substantial evidence of a brand policing its affiliates.  And we are all still waiting to see the FTC take action against celebrities who violate the terms of the Guides.

View the FTC’s closing letter.

Share
Posted in: Uncategorized
No Comments »