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Social Media

3 New Media Tools You Should Consider

As new tools and services constantly spring up on the web, I’m often evaluating the ones that look promising and incorporating them into my Digital toolbox. I’ve developed some new habits around 3 tools that I want I share with you, and hope you’ll find them as useful as I do.

Posterous - Posterous officially labels itself as “the dead simple place to post everything”. It can be used a lifestreaming platform, like Steve Rubel does, a simple blog, or as I use it, an aggregation and distribution service for the media that I create and share. Like many of you, I participate in a disparate collection of social media outposts (Twitter, Friendfeed, Facebook, Blogs, etc..). I spend a great deal of time reading, commenting and sharing the interesting media I find with others in my network that I think could benefit from it. However, this can become burdensome and time consuming, as I’m forced to constantly copy/paste/edit links, text, and media to get it right way before sharing it on a particular network. Rinse & repeat for each social network. This gets old fast.

Posterous solves this problem, and quite efficiently I might add. My media sharing is now “1 stop shopping”. Posterous supports virtually all of the most popular social platforms, and integration with your accounts is simple and straightforward. Once setup is completed, you can use email or bookmarklets (for advanced users that want to customize the html) to autopost your shared item. Posterous supports a wide range of media types, which allows you to share photos, music, videos documents, and links with your other networks.Instead of manually sharing media & links on each of the networks Iparticipate in, now I send it to Posterous, and they take care of the rest of the distribution. It also has some useful features like custom domains, integration with Google Analytics for tracking, and some native reporting (views, comments, favorites).

Go ahead and see Posterous for yourself. I’ve been using it regularly at http://kenburbary.posterous.com

What the Hashtag – This service is specific to one social network, so if you’re not using Twitter then skip this section. If you are using it, you’ve probably come across hashtags (Read here for a explanation of what hashtags are). “What the Hashtag” aims to do one thing, and does it well. It provides you with the ability to easily group and follow all conversation with a unique tag. For example, I missed blogchat last week. Blogchat is a weekly discussion on Twitter, started by Mack Collier, to discuss blogs and blogging best practices. Using “What the Hashtag” makes it easy to catchup on the conversation. What was said, who was what, and when it occurred. This is useful because there are often very informative, and relevant conversations around events, conferences, webinars, etc.. that I want to follow but may not be able to due to other commitments. “What the Hashtag” solves that problem for me. It’s my own personal Twitter time machine. I get to quickly and easily cycle back to that conversation, follow what was discussed, and identify who I may want to follow up with after the fact or take further action.

View the #blogchat page on “What the Hashtag” and see for yourself:  http://wthashtag.com/Blogchat

Vitrue Social Media Index – This is a social media measurement service. It attempts to provide an easy to understand measurement of a brand’s share of online conversation. It uses a proprietary set of technologies & algorithms to generate an index score for each brand. The index score itself is ok, but the real reason I use the tool is because it provides a quick answer about which channel online conversation is occuring in the most. For example, let’s say I wanted to know how much of the online conversation about Ford Motor Company is on blogs, versus the other channels (social networks, video sites, etc…). Vitrue provides this for you. All you need to do is supply the search term (brand name) and you get immediate results. This information is useful because it can get you started in the right direction. Then you can use other monitoring & analysis tools like Techrigy SM2 to take a deeper dive into the area of interest.

Vitrue provides a free and directionally correct answer to validate a theory or idea you may have for your brand/client’s brand. This is much quicker, not to mention cheaper, than paying for a commercial monitoring tool to get the same answer. To be clear, use the right tool for the job. Vitrue provides quick and dirty snapshots that can be used for research and/or some decision making, but be sure to use other tools if more detailed information is required to make a decision.

  • http://detroit.fwix.com Jamie Favreau

    Thanks for the reviews… I will think about using some of these!

  • http://detroit.fwix.com Jamie Favreau

    Thanks for the reviews… I will think about using some of these!

  • http://detroit.fwix.com Jamie Favreau

    Thanks for the reviews… I will think about using some of these!

  • http://www.thatdamnredhead.net thatdamnredhead

    Thanks for this, Ken. I had wondered what all this buzz was about Posterous and so I registered for an account and got the basic gist of it but hadn't really had time to play with it much. Maybe I'll do that soon. My only beef so far is that I don't like the yellow theme and I couldn't find anywhere to change the colors of it.

    I use WTHashtag once in a while because I'm always forgetting about BlogChat, JournChat, and esp. PR2.0chat, but not familiar at all with Vitrue at all. I might need that soon for a certain project.

    I get so bombarded with info on this or that new tool or service, it's nice to have friends who can recommend stuff they've already vetted. :)

  • http://www.thatdamnredhead.net thatdamnredhead

    Thanks for this, Ken. I had wondered what all this buzz was about Posterous and so I registered for an account and got the basic gist of it but hadn't really had time to play with it much. Maybe I'll do that soon. My only beef so far is that I don't like the yellow theme and I couldn't find anywhere to change the colors of it.

    I use WTHashtag once in a while because I'm always forgetting about BlogChat, JournChat, and esp. PR2.0chat, but not familiar at all with Vitrue at all. I might need that soon for a certain project.

    I get so bombarded with info on this or that new tool or service, it's nice to have friends who can recommend stuff they've already vetted. :)

  • http://www.thatdamnredhead.net thatdamnredhead

    Thanks for this, Ken. I had wondered what all this buzz was about Posterous and so I registered for an account and got the basic gist of it but hadn't really had time to play with it much. Maybe I'll do that soon. My only beef so far is that I don't like the yellow theme and I couldn't find anywhere to change the colors of it.

    I use WTHashtag once in a while because I'm always forgetting about BlogChat, JournChat, and esp. PR2.0chat, but not familiar at all with Vitrue at all. I might need that soon for a certain project.

    I get so bombarded with info on this or that new tool or service, it's nice to have friends who can recommend stuff they've already vetted. :)

  • http://mikethoughts.com miketempleton

    Thanks for putting in a good word about What the Hashtag. It seems that many people are using it as you do, as a “Twitter time machine” as you said in your post. We are very proud of the transcript feature and the way it helps people keep up with what they missed.

  • http://mikethoughts.com miketempleton

    Thanks for putting in a good word about What the Hashtag. It seems that many people are using it as you do, as a “Twitter time machine” as you said in your post. We are very proud of the transcript feature and the way it helps people keep up with what they missed.

  • http://mikethoughts.com miketempleton

    Thanks for putting in a good word about What the Hashtag. It seems that many people are using it as you do, as a “Twitter time machine” as you said in your post. We are very proud of the transcript feature and the way it helps people keep up with what they missed.

  • http://www.kenburbary.com Ken Burbary

    Thanks for dropping by with the kind words. You've put together a handy service that many of us benefit from. Kudos and thanks Mike!

  • http://www.kenburbary.com Ken Burbary

    Thanks for dropping by with the kind words. You've put together a handy service that many of us benefit from. Kudos and thanks Mike!

  • http://www.kenburbary.com Ken Burbary

    @Jamie @thatdamnredhead – Glad you found the tools useful. Please share any other uses/features that I have neglected to point out.

  • http://www.kenburbary.com Ken Burbary

    @Jamie @thatdamnredhead – Glad you found the tools useful. Please share any other uses/features that I have neglected to point out.

  • Pingback: 3 New Media Tools You Should Consider | Fashion e Music Blog

  • http://ariherzog.com Ari Herzog

    Heh. It's amusing how both you and Chris Brogan (he, earlier this month) attribute Steve Rubel for the Posterous learning curve; whereas my emulation is Guy Kawasaki when I began using Posterous 10 months ago: http://ariwriter.com/posterous-between-twitter-…

    I use it like a simple blog… for those times I am on the road and want to say more than is allowed on Twitter, usually with a picture.

  • http://www.kenburbary.com Ken Burbary

    We can't all be bleeding edge like you Ari! ;)

  • http://twitter.com/Turner Turner

    Great post.

    I'm a huge fan of Posterous, exactly for the reasons you mention. Photos and videos, immediately posted to Twitter, Facebook, another blog, Flickr, or any combination based on a personalized email address. The solution is very well implemented.

    I've heard of What The Hashtag before but clearly didn't give it enough attention. I'm glad you called it out.

    -mjt

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