Wednesday, February 10th 2010

Twitter - what is it good for?

Lets face it, you can’t ignore Twitter – its everywhere these days. Rather than me banging-on about how Twitter works or why you should follow a pidgeon, Big Ben or Stephen Fry, I thought I would briefly show you some stats from our website.

There’s a few of us here at ICM that tweet regularly; some for gaining knowledge and information, some to network and some just to have a laugh.

In terms of driving traffic back to the ICM website in numbers, Twitter is fairly average, but as the graphic below shows, visitors from Twitter spend more time with us and view more pages (this is a snapshot from a single day):

I guess its because Twitter users are already in the process of ‘reading’ and taking in information.

Every day Twitter is starting to feel like less of a passing craze and is becoming more of a tool, I suppose only time will tell how powerful a tool it may become…

Read the rest...

Posted by Richard Peacock on Wednesday 10th of February 2010 at 1:30pm

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Wednesday, January 27th 2010

Follow that path...

This month is Bubble-wrap’s 50th Birthday.

First invented by Marc Chavannes and Al Fielding, they weren’t looking for the solution to packing fragile items, they were creating textured wallpaper.

A classic case of searching for one thing but discovering something else. Sometimes losing sight of your goal can have a happy result.

The official licensed manufacturers of Bubble wrap, Sealed Air, have global revenues of over $4bn.

For an amazing insight into the world of Bubble wrap you should really ‘pop’ over to Virtual Bubble Wrap.com where you’ll learn about methods, etiquette (such as ‘Don’t pop someone else’s bubble wrap without permission’) and various methods to get the most out of your Bubble Wrap experience.

You’d never have that much fun with textured wallpaper now, would y…

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Posted by Richard Peacock on Wednesday 27th of January 2010 at 3:45pm

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Friday, January 15th 2010

Tweet sensations

I said to a friend of mine the other day ‘you’d really like Twitter’, he’s always on Facebook updating his status and interacting with others via status comments, effectively like a mini Twitter stream…

‘I’m no good at Twitter’ was his reply, ‘I’ve tried’.

No-one is good ‘at’ Twitter, but you can be good ‘on’ Twitter.

One of the big catchphrases of recent times when marketing anything is Return on Investment. When it comes to social media methods I much prefer the term Return on Engagement – what you get back from the time and effort you put in.

For me, Twitter really works when you interact, be it with a brand or an individual. Talking to a complete stranger is alien at first, but over time becomes quite natural within the medium of Twitter. Often its the time element that people, including my friend, struggle with. You wouldn’t walk into a room full of people and expect them to turn around and start having a meaningful conversation with you straight away.

Over the past year of Twitter use I have given feedback (positive and negative) to brands that I use, have found new friends within my industry, kept in touch with old friends and colleagues, won competitions, and have met new friends I wouldn’t have networked with in a more ‘normal’ situation.

All this shows (for me) a good Return on Engagement – taking time to interact; replying to questions, thanking people for retweets, asking questions, forwarding important news, and so on…

It’s not about how many followers you have, it’s not about what Stephen Fry says, its how you use it.

Have some fun, use it your way – there are no hard and fast rules. Oh, and as is usual at the end of these blog posts; you can follow (and interact with) me at twitter.com/richardpeacock or twitter.com/icmrichard...

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Posted by Richard Peacock on Friday 15th of January 2010 at 10:28am

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