Facebook Testing Feature to Reduce Email Notifications





Facebook has begun testing a new feature that lets active users group their email notifications into summary emails.

"We're testing a feature for people who are very active on Facebook and receive lots of email notifications from us," the company said in a post on its wall. "We'll provide a new summary email and turn off most individual email notifications. If you want to turn them back on, there's a control in your account settings."

The feature, available to a small group of users in their account settings, is ideal for users that receive dozens of daily friend requests or are frequent participants in Facebook conversations. A daily summary is something more users will be abl… Continue reading...

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Facebook Fail: Posting via Other Apps Can Cut Likes & Comments by 88% [STUDY]





Does posting to Facebook via third-party apps make any difference to how engaged your fans are? Does Facebook's algorithm discriminate against content management apps?

The people at Applum, creators of Edgerank Checker, decided to find out. They analyzed more than a million Facebook updates on more than 50,000 Pages in order to test the theory that posting to Facebook via third-party apps simply doesn't generate as much engagement as posting directly on Facebook.

The results were surprising. Applum found that posting via one of the top ten third-party APIs gave you an average of 88% fewer comments and likes, compared to posting directly to Facebook yourself.

Applum's speculative r… Continue reading...

More About: Facebook, facebook apps, hootsuite, tweetdeck

Facebook Begins Testing Friend Filters in News Feed [PICS]





Facebook has begun testing a slew of changes to the News Feed, including friend list filters and Smart Lists that automatically categorize your friends.

The changes seem to be aimed at making the content within the News Feed more relevant. These changes, as far as we can ascertain from screenshots sent to us, show that Facebook is dividing the News Feed into lists, much like Google+ has done with Circles. "Feed filters make it easy to see a selected set of friend's updates in one place and share exclusive with them," Facebook's guide to the new feature states.

A Facebook spokesperson declined to comment on this story.

One of the most interesting aspects of the revamped News Feed is… Continue reading...

More About: Facebook, Facebook news feed

Facebook Adds Clinton’s Former Chief of Staff to Board


Facebook has announced that former Clinton Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles has been added to its board of directors.

Bowles served as President Bill Clinton’s head of the Small Business Administration in 1993 before becoming deputy White House chief of staff in 1994 and chief of staff in 1996. Before that, Bowles founded his own investment bank and co-founded venture capital firm Kitty Hawk Capital and private equity firm Carousel Capital.

Bowles is also the president emeritus of the University of North Carolina system and is currently co-chair of President Barack Obama's National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform.

"Erskine has held important roles in government, acade…
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More About: Facebook, erskine bowles

Storyteller App Turns Facebook Posts Into Sponsored Stories [PICS]


Social brand marketing service Wildfire has launched a Facebook App focused on creating better content for Facebook’s Sponsored Stories.

Facebook launched Sponsored Stories in January and pitched it as a more social and engaging ad format. Brands can turn user activity such as checkins, wall posts and likes into a small advertisement that appears to the right of the Newsfeed. If your friend checks into a Starbucks via Facebook, his or her checkin could make an appearance as a sponsored post the next time you open up your Facebook account.

We’ve heard good things about Sponsored Stories, but it does come with issues. The biggest one is that advertisers don’t control the content that appears in an advertisement. The problem is that most Sponsored Stories are boring. Seeing someone “like” the Starbucks Facebook Page is far less engaging than a Facebook status update talking about how much he or she loves the Starbucks Chai Tea Latte.

We suspect that’s why Facebook asked Wildfire to develop an app to make Sponsored Stories more engaging. The result is is the Wildfire Storyteller App, a Facebook application focused on turning user feedback and opinions into not just Newsfeed stories, but Sponsored Stories as well.

The application allows brands to add a new tab to their Facebook Pages. On this tab, brands can ask their fans to answer a question or provide an opinion (e.g. What’s your favorite thing about Mashable?). Users can then share those answers with their Facebook friends and post it onto their walls. These wall posts can be customized to include images, videos and descriptions the brand wants to include. A film would be able to share a promotional poster and a description in every single wall post generated from the app.

That’s not what makes this app special, though. The app’s real purpose is to generate engaging Sponsored Stories ads from all of those user responses. By asking the right question, brands can create far more engaging social ads. My friends are more likely to click on a Starbucks Sponsored Stories ad if it says “I love the Starbucks Chai Tea Latte!” than if it just says I checked into my local Starbucks franchise. Storyteller also comes with filtering options so negative comments don’t appear in Facebook ads.

Wildfire Interactive CEO Victoria Ransom says that ads generated via the Storyteller app are four times more effective than traditional Sponsored Stories. While the traditional Facebook had has a 3.3% conversion rate, Storyteller-generated ads have a 17% conversion rate. Ransom warns that Sponsored Stories are more effective with larger brands, since smaller brands simply don’t have the reach to make Sponsored Stories effective.

What do you think of Wildfire’s new Storyteller app? Is it something your company would use? Let us know your opinions in the comments.


Storyteller Tab




The user will see something like this when he or she clicks the Storyteller tab. It lets users post feedback, reactions or opinions to their Facebook walls.


Storyteller Admin Panel




Managing a Storyteller campaign is relatively straightforward.


Storyteller Sponsored Stories




Storyteller syncs up with Sponsored Stories. This makes it possible to run ads with engaging content from users, which increases the conversion rate of the ads.

More About: facebook, facebook stories, Storyteller App, wildfire

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Storyteller App Turns Facebook Posts Into Sponsored Stories [PICS]


Social brand marketing service Wildfire has launched a Facebook App focused on creating better content for Facebook's Sponsored Stories.

Facebook launched Sponsored Stories in January and pitched it as a more social and engaging ad format. Brands can turn user activity such as checkins, wall posts and likes into a small advertisement that appears to the right of the Newsfeed. If your friend checks into a Starbucks via Facebook, his or her checkin could make an appearance as a sponsored post the next time you open up your Facebook account.

We've heard good things about Sponsored Stories, but it does come with issues. The biggest one is that advertisers don't control the content that app…
Continue reading...

More About: Facebook, Storyteller App, facebook stories, wildfire

Facebook To Launch Music Platform With Spotify, MOG & Rdio





Facebook intends to launch its long-rumored music service next month with Spotify, MOG and Rdio as three of the company's launch partners, Mashable has learned.

The music and media platform will be announced at Facebook's f8 developer conference on Sept. 22. It will allow users to listen to music from within Facebook.com. Evidence of Facebook's music platform first surfaced in the code of Facebook's video chat service.

According to two sources familiar with the matter, Facebook will not directly host or stream any music or media. Instead, it will rely on partners to provide the content. This is in contrast to Apple, Google and Amazon's strategy of hosting music content on their servers… Continue reading...

More About: Facebook, Facebook Music, MOG, rdio, spotify

Are We Approaching the End of the Daily Deals Era?




The golden age of daily deals, led by the unprecedented growth of Groupon, seems to be coming to its end.

That's not to say daily deals won't be sticking around for a long time -- clearly there is a business in it -- but when two major players...

More About: Column, Facebook, Facebook Deals, The Social Analyst, daily deals, groupon, yelp

Facebook Kills Off Deals, Its Groupon Competitor


Facebook has decided to shut down Facebook Deals, its four-month-old Groupon competitor.

"After testing Deals for four months, we've decided to end our Deals product in the coming weeks," Facebook told Reuters in a statement.

The product, which launched in late April, was an attempt to bring the popular daily deals phenomenon to Facebook's 750+ million users. It launched in San Francisco, Austin, Dallas, Atlanta and San Diego, but quickly rolled out to other cities.

The market for daily deals has become more competitive in recent months, however, and many are questioning the entire business model in light of Groupon's questionable financials.

"We think there is a lot of power in…
Continue reading...

More About: Facebook, Facebook Deals, daily deals, groupon

Facebook Kills Off Deals, Its Groupon Competitor


Facebook has decided to shut down Facebook Deals, its four-month-old Groupon competitor.

“After testing Deals for four months, we’ve decided to end our Deals product in the coming weeks,” Facebook told Reuters in a statement.

The product, which launched in late April, was an attempt to bring the popular daily deals phenomenon to Facebook’s 750+ million users. It launched in San Francisco, Austin, Dallas, Atlanta and San Diego, but quickly rolled out to other cities.

The market for daily deals has become more competitive in recent months, however, and many are questioning the entire business model in light of Groupon’s questionable financials.

“We think there is a lot of power in a social approach to driving people into local businesses,” Facebook said in its statement. “We’ve learned a lot from our test and we’ll continue to evaluate how to best serve local businesses.” We have reached out to Facebook for more information.

More About: daily deals, facebook, Facebook Deals, groupon

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