Remove Badge Remove Company Remove Klout Remove Mobile
article thumbnail

Guess Who is Back on Foursquare

Ari Herzog

Forrester Research recently surveyed 37,000 mobile users and in its report issued this month, a mere 2% of those users had Foursquare accounts. To what extent do geography and demography play a part in Foursquare users and companies? How are social influence sites such as Klout and PeerIndex involved? Was the second camp right?

article thumbnail

Know What’s Working on Social Media: 26 Free Social Media Analytics Tools

Buffer Social

is the Top Tweet/Top Post badge that pops up when an update goes above and beyond the average performance. Working with your profiles and pages across the major social channels, Klout puts together a score from 0 to 100 on your influence on social media. My favorite feature—and one I’m always stoked to see!—is Twitter analytics.

Analytics 111
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Here are 10 Utah Entrepreneurs You Need to Know

Stay N' Alive

Allan is now in his own startup, I believe as co-founder, this time starting a new, up-and-coming social commerce company called Piick. As a result of that, the majority of the Church's mobile apps have been developed by volunteers, and many other technologies have also resulted from this volunteer effort.

Mobile 103
article thumbnail

Best Internet Marketing Posts of 2010

Techipedia: Tamar Weinberg

Local/Mobile Search. How to Develop a Social Media Strategy: A Roadmap for Integration (Very Official Blog): Shannon Paul did an amazing job on this post that presents questions and answers that will help companies consider their goals for the creation of a social media strategy. Web Development and Website Strategy. SEO: Strategy.

Marketing 279
article thumbnail

The 2011 #Nifty50 Top Twitter Men Reprise

Webbiquity SMM

Penenberg’s ( @Penenberg ) Fast Company article: “Social Networking Affects Brains Like Falling in Love” examines research by neuroeconomist Paul Zak that suggests social networking triggers the release of the generosity-trust chemical in our brains: Oxytocin (known as the cuddle chemical). Marty Weintraub – @aimclear.

Twitter 196