See how Airbnb took advantage of #SochiProblems to help users... and itself. Get the latest on Twitter's redesign. And find out how Mark Jacobs turned social currency into a living, breathing brand experience. It's all a hop, skip, and a skim away.
On being a sport. The Canadian Institute of Diversity and Inclusion made waves when it released a quick-witted yet heart-warmy message supporting gays during the Winter Olympics at Sochi. The video's gotten over 5.2 million views, but the institute is hardly the only one waving the banner for gay rights; Google produced a Doodle toting the importance of fair treatment in the Games.
Got #SochiProblems? Responding to rampant reports about the underwhelming hotel situation at Sochi, Airbnb's begun promoting its Sochi listings—both generally and to complainers. Airbnb agency Pereira & O'Dell's Marisa Quiter calls this "a great opportunity for Airbnb to offer influential people a bit of humor and a warm, comfortable, safe place to stay—a vacation from their hotel." Airbnb has yet to close any deals with Sochi journalists, as far as we know, but this is a good lesson in keeping your eyes open for moments when influencers (or just people) need a helping hand. And whatever you think, you can't say Airbnb doesn't know how to sweeten a deal:
.@bruce_arthur We found your hot water & it has new friends: a heated towel rack & a cozy apartment https://t.co/0GvxjnF7aX #SochiProblems
— Airbnb (@Airbnb) February 7, 2014
This looks familiar. Today in perpetually coalescing social networks, Twitter's testing a huge Facebook-esque redesign. The revamp was spotted by Matt Petronzio of Mashable, who noticed an update to his Twitter page: The main picture and bio were scaled to the left, the header photo scaled wide like Facebook Cover Photos, and information streams down the middle, like a slightly less-organized Wall. If the features go live, expect images and video to take more priority among viewers.
Fight the fake Likes! The video, below, by Derek Muller went viral this week for illustrating how Like fraud works. According to Muller, even when you legitimately "buy" likes by advertising on Facebook, you may be reaping more harm than good: The more "fake" fans you have, the less your "real" fans are likely to see your posts, which hurts you in Facebook's algo. (Yes, you can still get fake likes via Facebook ads—tons!) AllFacebook suggests resisting the urge to eschew ads entirely, but to focus less on Likes (a vanity metric if there ever was one) and more on building engagement with your core fan base. That's right: There's no way out of relationship-building, especially in the social realm.
In more encouraging news, here's a cool way to build engagement: social payments! Now passengers of KLM Royal Dutch Airlines can book tickets via Facebook.
Don't ever ask how much Smosh makes. The answer will only hurt you. But if you ever wondered what the top 25 YouTube creators' channels generate in income, an infographic from Social Blade gives you an idea. Don't run off and quit your day job, but this is a good chance to sift through some of the world's finest content creators and see what makes them so darn sticky.