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Rescooped by roberto toppi from Surviving Social Chaos onto Social Media (network, technology, blog, community, virtual reality, etc...)
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Should You Use Twitter? This Flowchart Has The Answer

Should You Use Twitter? This Flowchart Has The Answer | Social Media (network, technology, blog, community, virtual reality, etc...) | Scoop.it
We're all already using Twitter it seems. But should we? This flowchart answers the big question: should you use Twitter?

Via Gust MEES, donhornsby
Gust MEES's curator insight, January 14, 1:02 PM

Great Infographic, FlowChart...

 

Ed Bonhaus's curator insight, January 14, 1:43 PM

After following this flow chart, I've discovered that I should continue using Twitter.

Randi Thompson's curator insight, January 14, 1:47 PM

What you want to know about Twitter.

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Rescooped by roberto toppi from SOCIAL MEDIA, what we think about!
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Music, Film, TV: How social media changed the entertainment experience - Brian Solis

Music, Film, TV: How social media changed the entertainment experience - Brian Solis | Social Media (network, technology, blog, community, virtual reality, etc...) | Scoop.it

Today everybody should know that social media are much more than a mode effect. This excellent post will convince you, if you aren't yet. [note mg]

 

Social media is more than a digital water cooler for TV and movies. The global conversation that takes place around events and the experiences people share based on what they watch teaches us about consumer preferences. More importantly, their activity influences behavior. Behavior counts for everything. Studying it is just the beginning of course. In order to understand and eventually steer behavior, we must translate activity into insights and in turn, translate insights into actionable strategies and programs.


The Hollywood Reporter recently published an exclusive poll about social media led by market research firm Penn Schoen Berland. As the report opens, THR notes, “There’s a sea change afoot in how Americans discover and consume entertainment.”

 

According to the study, 88% of respondents view social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook as a new form of entertainment.

 

Read more: http://bit.ly/JRgjbp


Via Martin Gysler
John van den Brink's comment, May 15, 2012 4:56 PM
Thank you Martin!
Martin Gysler's comment, May 15, 2012 7:00 PM
You're welcome John! I'm back... :)