Rockfish Blog

Foursquare Explore: The SoLoMo Search Engine

Posted by Laura Gardner on Wednesday, January 25, 2012 in Digital Innovation

This article was written by Rob Reed, CEO of Momentfeed and originally posted at iMedia Connection
  

Foursquare Explore is a social search engine for the real world, and it can be optimized.

Foursquare has made its previously mobile-only Explore recommendation engine available for the web. The feature provides personalized recommendations based on a user's check-in history, the histories of their friends, their current location, and other preferences. Not only does the Explore feature considerably increase Foursquare's value proposition for users by facilitating the discovery of new places, it significantly changes the value equation for brands as well. Indeed, Foursquare Explore is the first SoLoMo search engine.



I wrote about this potential in November of 2010 in a post entitled "Why the Hell Would I Do That? Four Reasons to Check-in."

"The promise of intelligent recommendations is the feature that gets me most excited. Based on the data I volunteer through checking-in everywhere I go, whether it's a public or private check-in, location-based services can use their aggregate data to accurately recommend other places I'll like."

Foursquare Explore is powered by algorithms that intelligently recommend places to consumers based on a broad range of criteria. These recommendations ultimately drive foot traffic (and sales) just as Google Search drives web traffic. As such, brands need to optimize their locations for search, discovery, and engagement in this new medium.

With the introduction of Foursquare Explore, as well as its counterpart with Facebook Recommendations for Place Pages, it's crucial that brands optimize their locations on these platforms. This goes well beyond simply claiming or registering them.

Optimizing a brand's locations is an ongoing process, much like that of search engine optimization (SEO). In fact, there are many parallels. Following are the three primary areas of optimization:

1. Venue Registration & Optimization
: This is a multi-step process, whereby a brand's locations (venues) are claimed and registered on Facebook and Foursquare. By taking ownership of these venues, the brand unlocks valuable data about its customers and how they're engaging. The first objective, however, is to optimize the venues for search and discovery. Much of this has to do with accurate venue metadata such as the geocodes (lat/long), street addresses, and descriptions. In SEO terms, these are akin to having proper tagging structure and keywords. It is relatively straightforward, but with hundreds or thousands of locations, it's easier said than done. Above all, the geocode must be pin-point accurate for each location. As we've found, proper venue optimization alone can increase location-based engagement (LBE), including check-ins, by 100%.

2. Engagement Campaigns
: LBE has tremendous value. Each engagement represents a customer sharing their brand experience from a smartphone at the point of sale. Each is distributed through one or more social feeds, and each provides insightful data about that customer. With the introduction of Foursquare Explore and Facebook Recommendations, these engagements serve yet another objective: increasing the likelihood of a referral or recommendation. In SEO terms, LBE is like fresh, original content and inbound links from highly ranked sites. It is the currency of the SoLoMo economy. The more engagement a brand earns, the higher it will rank and the more incremental foot traffic it will drive.

3. Competitive Intelligence
: Competitive benchmarking is now possible at the local level on a one-to-one basis. Through the MomentFeed platform, one can track and measure individual competitor locations relative to their own. In turn, these data can be analyzed at the regional and global levels. This provides valuable insight about how competitors are performing within the LBE platforms, from which other metrics such as sales and foot traffic can be inferred. With the introduction of Foursquare Explore and Facebook Recommendations, these data also signal the likelihood of one location being recommended over another. The reality is that multi-location brands don't compete at the national level. They compete at the local level and should be measured and optimized accordingly.

Rob Reed is Founder and CEO of MomentFeed, the first location-based marketing platform for the enterprise. MomentFeed brings together Facebook, Foursquare, and Twitter as a holistic solution for increasing customer engagement at the point of sale. Reed recently authored The SoLoMo Manifesto - Or, just about everything marketers need to know about the convergence of social, local, and mobile. It is now available as a free download.

 

 

Three takeaways from CES

Posted by Laura Gardner on Wednesday, January 18, 2012 in Digital Innovation

CES took over Las Vegas again last week and over 150,000 bright-eyed techies showed up to see what the world's technology companies have been toiling away on over the past year. Since not everyone at Rockfish could attend, we rely on those who did to bring back the latest and greatest that's happening in digital. Chief Growth Officer Michael Stich was able to breakdown his experience at CES into three notable themes for Rockfish and our clients. 

Connected Everything – UnitedHealth Group had a huge presence in the Digital Health area, focused on using digital to drive health (vs. just insurance). WPP partner agency RLM Finsbury did a great job with MSFT to bring this up. With more connection points, our clients need to think about both newly-connected experiences (car, TV) and resulting partnerships (Google, Apple, etc..) as a new lens for their digital plans.




Gesturize Everything
– Panasonic had a booth with full gesture-based menuing for iTV. Apple TV (later this year) will have Siri integrated in. We’re in front of voice recognition, gesture-based interfaces and underlying AI - it's going to pay off soon. 

 

Windows 8 – This is still to be determined. The $1M question to me will be how consumers take to the UI. Phones / pricing / unified platform experience will all be there, but will consumers prefer the navigation vs. iOS/Android? This is worth keeping up to speed on. Security is also better so I’m expecting a regular refresh cycle for business, assuming cloud-based OS stays at bay for now.
 



If your curiosity is piqued, check out the articles below for more on CES. 

 

how to be awesome at twitter

Posted by Laura Gardner on Tuesday, December 13, 2011 in Digital Innovation

By Laura Gardner, Marketing & PR Manager, Cincinnati 
@lauramgardner

In the most general sense, there are three different types of users when it comes to Twitter: Regular users, those who avidly use Twitter to connect, communicate and explore; lackadaisical users, those who have an account, but rarely post and interact over the platform; and non-users, those who need a little explanation and a lot of experimenting to understand the meanings of “@” and “#”.

For the latter group, there are a few ways to break it down. I used to point to the example that likens Twitter to a bar, telling them “you don’t want to be that obnoxious guy talking loud on his cell phone and blowing cigar smoke around the joint, do you”? With some additional detailed description this works for many, but it’s nice to have an online reference that clearly explains EVERYTHING. I haven’t found one that is as easy to understand and just plain fun as this one by @princess_misia. This Slideshare entitled “How To Be Awesome At Twitter” serves as both an introduction for beginners and a good reminder to those of us who are super users, but may have gotten a bit lost along the way. 

 

 

your customers are mobile, are you?

Posted by Laura Gardner on Wednesday, November 16, 2011 in Digital Innovation

VP of Mobile, Mike Yonker, was recently interviewed at Ad:Tech NY about why brands need to have a mobile strategy. 

 

 

Join our Roundtable on the Future of Digital Marketing

Posted by Laura Gardner on Tuesday, November 08, 2011 in Digital Innovation

By Dave Knox, CMO  

@daveknox  -  E-mail  -  Linkedin

cell: 513.658.0868

This week I am taking part in a fun experiment with a new startup called Roundtable. Roundtable describes itself in the following way:

At Roundtable we’re all about empowering meaningful conversations – between thought leaders, between friends, and between curated communities of strangers.

It is a really neat concept and one I became interested in after reading a Roundtable on Startup Funding that was hosted a few weeks ago.  I decided to jump at the chance to have Rockfish host a Roundtable on the Future of Digital Marketing.  After all, we call ourselves a “Digital Innovation Partner” so it is a topic that is at the heart of what we do.  

My goal was to bring together Marketers, Venture Capitalists and Startups to discuss and debate on where Digital Marketing will go in the next few years.  We were able to pull together a really world-class group of digital thought leaders including:

What is really neat about Roundtable is that anyone can join in the commentary with this great group of all-stars. So please take the time to head over to our Roundtable this week and share your thoughts on the Future of Digital Marketing.

 

This post originally appeared on Dave's blog - Hard Knox Life

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