Friday, March 18, 2011

An Alternative to FBML


On March 10th (Thursday), Facebook is deprecating its popular FBML application, which is how many users added custom content to their Facebook Pages in the past.

To help brands cope with this change, Involver has launched our new Static HTML For Pages application, which allows users to customize their Facebook tab with either an image or static HTML code in a few quick steps.

The Static HTML app from Involver is the simplest way to customize your Page, and it’s free to use!

If you’re using FBML now, or just want to add new content in the new Facebook iFrame environment, Involver’s Static HTML app is a great way to incorporate your HTML images and designs to Facebook without any hosting or investment. Here are some great ways to use this new application:

• Add a customized image on your Facebook fan page

• Render static HTML code, within the framework of Facebook’s current guidelines

• Customize your tab name

• “Fan gate” your page, requiring users to Like your page in order to see other content

Installing is simple, just like any other Involver application. Visit our application gallery to install the Static HTML application (or more than 10 other apps) in less than 60 seconds.

Involver powers more applications on Facebook than any other company (over 250,000 apps are hosted on the Involver Platform), and is better equipped than anyone to handle massive scale and rapidly changing requirements. This means you never have to worry about your application being inaccessible.

Click here to install or find out more about our new Static HTML app. Tune into our blog, our Facebook page, and our Twitter stream to get the latest updates. And feel free to contact us with any questions about our full suite of applications and other Involver products.


View the original article here

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Facebook Drops FBML in Favor of iFrames – Advantages & Challenges

One of the big questions that’s arisen around the changes to Facebook Pages is: How will it affect applications that were built using FBML? FBML, or Facebook Markup Language, was designed to enable users to build applications that deeply integrate into the Facebook experience. Several months ago, Facebook announced that they were in the process of deprecating FBML, and in their February 10th announcement of changes to their Pages they confirmed that FBML will be discontinued after March 10th. While existing FBML applications will continue to work, it will no longer be possible to build new applications using FBML.

iFrame Advantages
Instead of FBML, users can now build applications for Facebook tabs with HTML iFrames, enabling limitless integration of standard open web technologies without sandboxing or modification by Facebook’s servers. An iFrame or “inline frame” is simply an HTML code that allows users to embed any web page within another web page, in this case Facebook. In practical terms, this means that brands can continue to benefit from the tremendous viral capabilities of Facebook, and create more visual consistency between their web site and Facebook, as well as being able to redeploy existing assets. They’ll be able to run Javascripts on page loads and deeplink to highlight specific content as it appears in their streams. Facebook offers the following diagram of how it works.

Source: Facebook

All this makes it easier for you to incorporate all the rich content you use on your site into Facebook. You can also now engage certain basic analytics off your site to track page views and Facebook ad conversion.

Revising Tab Capabilities
But the change also means that certain other tab functions, which were easy for site admins to implement, now require the capabilities of a developer. Fan-gating, for example, a powerful way for brands to build their fan base by requiring visitors to Like their page in order to access applications, now requires a complex process involving JSON objects and Boolean code to set up.

So while the new Facebook Pages promise a future in which brands can create more consistency between their web site and Facebook profiles, and applications will  function at a higher level, it’s also clear that implementation for some of the most basic functions will now require developer support.

Facebook no longer offers a static FBML app to take care of hosting, which means brands need to provide their own server infrastructure or utilize some of the solutions offered by companies like Involver, which can provide hosting, application support, and insulation from any future changes Facebook makes.

Involver will continue to support existing FBML applications, and make it possible for our customers to combine increased application functionality with the power of Facebook to interact directly with customers and grow audience. We can help you render your Pages in HTML as you continue to access our core suite of applications.

If you have further questions or would like to speak to one of our experts, feel free to get in touch with us here or comment below.


View the original article here

Understanding Facebook’s Iterative Process

In our blog post last week discussing the New System For Facebook Wall Posts, we suggested that “…not every change Facebook makes is right. And if this one proves unfeasible it won’t be the first time Facebook has tried something then made adjustments to accommodate users.” Sure enough, very likely in response to the backlash at the removal of reverse chronological order as the default for Wall posts, Facebook has added a Most Recent filter in a very visible place at the top of Fan Pages, so that users can again view posts in the way they’re used to viewing them.

End of story? Not really. The fact remains that, as passionate as its users are about the platform in its current state, Facebook is almost surely going to continue making updates and, as we stressed last week, it’s important to try to understand how the changes they make might be an improvement, even when it turns out they are not.

We’ve been hearing quite a bit about how difficult it is to keep up with all the changes on Facebook, and one of the important roles that a company like Involver can play in this is to insulate our customers from these changes, which is why we make it as simple as possible for users to deploy our applications without having to worry about changes on Facebook. But we also think its important to help our customers understand what it is that drives a company like Facebook to keep tinkering with something which, as far as most of its 500 million plus users are concerned, works just fine.

Agile Development
One of our working practices at Involver for software development, and now our marketing department (also see Involver & Agile Marketing), is something called “Agile.” Agile is based on the idea of product evolution through iterations or small experiments, as opposed to a few large bets. This style of working is especially suitable to the software industry, where few products arrive on the market fully baked, and the input and feedback of users (from beta testers to customers to fellow employees) allows producers to evolve and improve their products to meet the ever-growing expectations of a demanding and competitive market.

It’s not surprising that Facebook, with a CEO who is also a developer, would operate in a similar fashion, launching new versions, changing settings, and absorbing ideas and functionalities from potential competitors. Google certainly does this, as does Apple and just about every other successful technology company. It may be more annoying on Facebook, because people’s own identities are so deeply integrated with the platform.

Another principal of Agile is that it’s okay to fail, just don’t do it twice in the same way. So was this a failure? Perhaps, but if we think about what Facebook was trying to accomplish, it may be more properly viewed as a misstep or possibly even a step that users simply weren’t properly prepared for. Facebook’s intention, clearly, was to improve the way in which Wall posts are viewed. What they missed was to include a simple way for users to choose to view posts in the way they had before–in reverse chronological order. Users reacted, and Facebook made an adjustment to accommodate them.

If there’s a benefit in this entire exercise, and we believe there is, it’s that we now understand more fully that, just as with email or documents on our desktops, there are lots of different ways to view Wall posts. And just as we, as individuals, like to set our defaults or toggle between the options, Facebook, in its two-steps-forward, one-step-back way, is somehow on its way to finding a better way to allow us to do that.


View the original article here

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Involver & Agile Marketing – Video Blog from VP of Marketing Jascha Kaykas-Wolff

Agile is about understanding all the work that you’re doing, having it defined to a very specific time frame and making sure that all the people that are on your team understand their roles and are executing against the things you’re trying to execute against.

What’s really exciting about Involver is we sit in an industry that’s experiencing a tremendous amount of churn and fluctuation, and I mean that in a very good way. Involver as a company sits at the tip of the spear in social marketing. The products we build serve a need that customers have to actually operate in this space.  So for us, using Agile Marketing is incredibly important.

Defining the Sprint Process
The sprint is really a defined time period, where you understand the amount of work that you can accomplish and you define, as a team, the different tactics you’re going to execute during that time frame. What’s really important about the agile process and the sprint that exists in the agile process is that it’s a much shorter time period than exists in the traditional waterfall model.

So historically, if I wanted to create a campaign for the rebranding or relaunch of a new product, I’d have a six-month plus campaign planned, and I’d be planning to launch that campaign for maybe a quarter or two in advance of that. The difference with the agile model is that you say, “I’m going to execute against the first pieces for that campaign, and I’m going to do that over a two-week period, and then I’m going to identify what the interactions to those pieces are, and then I’m going to make changes to it from there.”

Involver & Our Customers
One of the things we’re always happy to do as a marketing organization is to spend time with our customers and prospective customers, and talk about the way that we run our business. We don’t think that we’re perfect, but we think we have a model that works incredibly well in this space, that’s efficient, and that’s effective.

One of the reasons that we are successful and seeing success as a team operating in agile is because we’re aligned philosophically as a company with the principles we’re trying to operate against, and that’s from the top-down. That doesn’t happen because your CEO says go figure out a new way to do business.  It’s because your CEO and your executive team understand and empathize with the way the market has to operate and they empower you to be able to do that, and in turn, there’s no friction in the organization,and the marketing team to try and figure out ways to work to the CEO.

It’s kind of a really magical combination of an industry and of a time and a team that has a company that’s building a product where the Venn Diagram of those four pieces has 80-90% overlap.


View the original article here

iFrames Are Here and So Is Involver

Beginning today, Facebook is no longer supporting the deployment of new applications on business pages using FBML. In their place, Facebook is allowing support, within the constraints of their terms of service, for iFrames. The look and functionality of fan pages has also changed, as we’ve described in previous blog posts.

What does this mean for you?

If you’re an Involver customer, your apps will be running as you should expect. Better, in fact. One of our of biggest priorities at Involver is to insulate our customers against these kinds of changes. We maintain greater than 250,000 applications on the industry’s most robust server infrastructure. We handle integration of the latest APIs and services, so our customers can focus on their priorities: brand-building and engaging with customers.

We also keep you up to date with the latest industry info, and help you prepare for changes like the one that just happened. For further info on what those changes entail, please read Changes to Facebook Pages – A Quick Guide.

Social media may still be in its formative stages, with the only constant being change itself, but our customers are already doing amazing things, with fan bases in the millions and an unprecedented level of engagement with their customers. They need to know that when Facebook decides to deprecate FBML in favor of iFrames or change its guidelines for image size, they’re not going to have to go back to the drawing board to redo all their pages.

Involver Apps Improve With the Changeover
We’ve been hearing a lot about pages and applications breaking down. Of course we do not wish that on anyone, whether they’re our customers or not. But we do think that when brands invest their time and money in a campaign, they have a right to expect things to hold up, no matter how big the campaign or what the changes to Facebook.

Over the course of this most recent Facebook “refresh,” we’ve added several new features to our apps, including the ability to add Like buttons to individual media within our applications. Here’s a before and after shot of what that looks like in our Flickr app:

Involver Flickr app before iFrames

Involver Flickr app after iFrames

And we’ve even created a new app to specifically address the changes to Facebook. In response to Facebook’s deprecation of its popular FMBL code, Involver launched a Static HTML app, which offers easiest way to render HTML in a Facebook iFrame and configure a fan page in just minutes. You can read about it in our blog post, An Alternative to FBML or download it by clicking here.

All in all, we’re excited about the changes to Facebook and we hope you are too. There’s never been a better time or a better way for brands to engage in the kinds of two-way interactivity that makes products stronger and customers more-satisfied. We hope you’ll continue to engage with us and our products, and keep sharing your questions and comments.


View the original article here

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Involver Apps Keep Pace with Facebook iFrame Switch

As many of you will know from this blog and recent announcements, Facebook is replacing FBML with iFrames as its default mode for tab applications. While the change will enable users to create more consistency between their existing HTML web site designs and their Facebook fan pages, it does create a few challenges for brands switching over from FBML-based apps.

To ensure that our customers are able to meet this challenge and enjoy the benefits of the move to iFrames, Involver has taken the opportunity to improve the look and functionality of our applications created in SML™. We’ve also updated the application settings pages to make them easier to use.

Our roll out of upgrades will take place over the next couple of weeks, so don’t expect everything to change at once. Among the highlights:

•  Improved look and feel for all Involver apps. Easier access to a greater number of apps.

• A self-serve version of our Promotion Gallery app will be available at the Professional level. This app allows users to create a gallery of fan pages ranked by Likes to cross promote pages. 

• A new app called Scribd, which combines the functionality of Slides and PDFs.

For further information about iFrames and the changes on Facebook, which go into effect for all Facebook pages this Thursday, March 10, please refer to Facebook Drops FBML in Favor of iFrames – Advantages & Challenges and other recent blog posts. And continue to follow us here and on Facebook for more updates.


View the original article here

New System For Facebook Wall Posts – How It Works

Among the many changes to Facebook Fan Pages is the removal of chronological order as the default setting for Wall posts. What does it mean? Is there any wisdom to it? Are there advantages?

As with many Facebook changes, people are still catching up, and many who were satisfied with things as they were are upset with the removal of a system that seemed to make intuitive sense. Obviously, not every change Facebook makes is right. And if this one proves unfeasible it won’t be the first time Facebook has tried something then made adjustments to accommodate users. However, as most recent Facebook changes have been successful and clearly their intentions with this change were to improve the experience for users, it’s important to understand how it works first and explore the ways that it could actually be an improvement.

In a recent response to questions about the removal of chronological order on their developer forum, Facebook described the new system as “an algorithm determining popular and interesting content. Factors include how many friends are commenting on a certain piece of content, who posted the content, and what type of content it is (e.g., photo, video, or status update).”

Their use of the term algorithm brings to mind Google’s system for aggregating search content, and is perhaps an indication of where Facebook wants to go with this. Chronology clearly still plays a role, particularly for users visiting other Fan Page walls, where posts often still appear in a form very close to reverse chronology, with the occasional exception.

Options For Visitors & Page Admins
With so many different variables, it can be hard for users to understand how the logic works. This can be especially difficult for brands. Without accurate and timely notifications on posts, page moderation is INCREDIBLY difficult and cumbersome. While Facebook does provide email notifications to page admins when users post or comment, a more sophisticated way to manage a high volume of posts across multiple Fan Pages is to employ a tool such as Involver’s Audience Management Platform, which allows you to respond chronologically to comments/posts regardless their position on the Wall.

When using Facebook as your Page, there is still a way to toggle back to reverse chronological order for your News Feed. From your Home page, choose between Top News and Most Recent (see below).

The other new feature to Facebook Wall posts is the ability to choose between Everyone and Posts by Page, which means that as a visitor you can view only posts made by the Page admins, or from Everyone posting to this Wall (see below).

Admins can limit the ability of visitors to see other postings by choosing Only Posts By Page in their Wall Tab Shows under Manage Permissions, where they can also set filters for comments, media, age and profanity.

To change the settings for your Facebook Fan Page Wall, go to Manage Permissions:

For admins using Facebook as individuals, find this by clicking the Edit Page box that appears on the top right of your Fan PageFor admins using Facebook as their Page, find this by clicking on the top right of your Profile (not home) Page

Click the Edit Page box at the top rightMake sure you’re on the Manage Permissions page (highlighted in gray)Here you’ll find a range of filtering capabilitiesNext to Wall Tab Shows, choose between Everyone, and Only Posts By Page


Hopefully soon, Facebook will make it simple to access a complete range of view-by options as easily as we do on our desktops, windows or email programs. And while it’s difficult to understand and even more complicated to navigate this new system, think of this as a step in the right direction.


View the original article here

Facebook’s Sponsored Stories – What it is and How it Works For Brands

Facebook’s Sponsored Stories – What it is and How it Works For Brands

by Tyler Willis

Sponsored Stories is a new ad unit from Facebook that allows brands to extend the distribution of existing activities that users undertake with them on the network.

Let’s say you check in at a Starbucks; some of your 130 friends will see that. In most cases, the ones who see it will be the people who interact with you most frequently. If the update is popular and generates a large number of likes and comments, a higher percentage of your friends will see it.

Facebook’s new ad product allows Starbucks to pay for that same message being distributed inside of an ad unit to all of your 130 friends. The goal is to provide wider distribution and visibility to the updates and actions that you’ve taken, and allow that to hopefully influence your friends.

Basically, Starbucks wants to say: “Hey, people love going into Starbucks. They’re checking in on Facebook; they’re liking our updates.” Now they can actually buy ads from Facebook to highlight this. Historically, a brand could only put videos or content they created inside of ads – now they can leverage the true social conversation by highlighting content from users. Ads can have better social proof.

So now a brand can go to Facebook, buy a spot, and fill it with whatever actions their fans are taking. And it’s predicated on that action already existing in the network. This is not a new piece of content.

Facebook Sponsored Stories shows up inside of an ad unit on the right hand side of the page that is clearly marked as an ad unit, but contains the content of the actions you and your friends have taken.

Source: Inside Facebook

So if I checked in at Starbucks with a couple of my co-workers and wrote, “Man, really need a caffeine burst at 4 pm, love this Starbucks,” that could show up inside of an ad unit but only to people that already have a relationship with me on Facebook; only my friends would see it.

Opting Out

The question of opting in and out has caused a lot of friction in the media. There is no ability to opt out of having your actions used in Sponsored Stories, and this has drawn the ire of many commentators.

One vitriolic comparison being made is to Beacon, Facebook’s failed ad product from a few years back. Beacon reported users’ actions on the web back to their friends. For example, if I rented a movie from Blockbuster online, that could be pushed back into my Facebook news stream.

The comparison is an apt one, both products focus on helping brands use a consumer’s existing actions to reach their friends. But Sponsored Stories differs in that it is promoting a Facebook action, an interaction model that they’ve introduced and that you’ve used gets distributed to your friends.

One example of the distinction between the two ad products is that no one checks into a diamond store  unless they want their girlfriend to see that they are planning to propose.

When I write a status update, I’m putting that content out for my friends to see by default. The brand is simply amplifying distribution so more of those friends see it.

I understand the negative reaction some people have to that, and no doubt we’ll hear more about that in the press – but that reaction happens with almost every ad product, and I don’t think it will de-rail Sponsored Stories’ success.

And while currently there is no way to opt out; I think Facebook may introduce one in the future – they have little to lose by allowing an opt-out option that most users won’t know about.

The Involver Perspective

At Involver, we built our brand on relationships with our customers, and now have over 150,000 companies and brands that use our platform. We’ve built our company without much paid advertising and very little traditional marketing. Instead, we’ve focused on creating content that engages people and connects them through word of mouth.

Prior to exploring Sponsored Stories for ourselves, we observed that while people like our Facebook Fan Page, leave great comments, or check in at our headquarters, it doesn’t really go as wide as it possibly could. A few of their friends might see a check in, depending on how close they are to a person, but that doesn’t make it very visible.

We started using Sponsored Stories as a way to amplify how people interact with us, because we know that when we tell that story at large, it’s going to make people want to work with us more, and learn more about our company. We see it as a really powerful tool to amplify content that already exists. It’s working very well for us.

If you’re considering Sponsored Stories for your brand, you want to first get some intelligence on how people are interacting with you in order to understand the message you’re amplifying. Because you don’t get to pick and choose just the positive reactions or just certain stories, you’re basically saying that any time someone has this type of interaction with you, you’re going to broadcast it out. And it doesn’t matter who it is, or whether the comment they wrote was, “Love this Starbucks,” or “Man I hate this place.”

Presumably, you already have some organic, interesting content, and people are already interacting with you in a positive way. We use our Audience Management Platform to gauge this. It’s a powerful way to monitor content, track sentiment, and add alerts to understand when people are posting spam or obscene content to our wall.

But more importantly, it allows us to track the tenor of the conversation. When people check in or  write something, what are they saying? Is it positive?  How do they feel about our brand? How do they feel about what we’re producing? We checked out sentiment reports from the last couple weeks and saw a very good engagement, very good numbers there, and that gave us the confidence to run Sponsored Stories.

Right now, to actually run a sponsored story, you have to contact your Facebook account manager or sales rep to set it up. However, it does appear that Sponsored Stories will be made available as self-serve, at least that is the word on the street, so even a smaller business or someone that doesn’t have a direct sales relationship with Facebook will be able to make use of it.

Choosing Which Social Actions to Amplify

Once you’ve selected which type of action you want to amplify (likes, check-ins, etc.), you decide how many impressions you’re going to buy and you’re done. From that point on, any story that meets those criteria will be amplified.

As a brand, the key thing to understand is that you have to monitor what content is being created, and know that you might end up amplifying some of the wrong brand messages, but as long as you’re keeping track of the trend and the overall tenor of the conversation, you can still move the needle incredibly effectively in a positive direction.

We live in a social world now and brands need to be comfortable with the fact that people are creating relationships with their friends, with brands, and with all kinds of ideas and concepts mixed in between, and the messaging can run the gamut from positive to negative. By tracking it, and learning the tools to properly amplify the channels with positive messages, brands can build massive social proof and social credibility.

Note: to succeed in this world, you have to actually create the positive messages first.

Facebook’s Mission & the Conversation “Out There”

You hear this phrase a lot: “People are already talking about your brand.” It’s probably the summary of 90% of talks given at social media conferences. “There’s a conversation out there about your brand, so you have to pay attention to it.” It is true, if not incredibly actionable.

With that said, we have some customers who enter into this world and find that the tone of the conversation going on about them isn’t positive. They might be a great company and providing a good service, but the primary reason people interact with them is to complain, to talk about customer service issues, or to highlight something they don’t like about the company’s practice.

It can be a struggle to figure out how to use social media when the conversation is negative. You may want to use all these cool tools, but you have to build the latticework first.

Sponsored Stories is an example of a tool that rewards companies who have taken the necessary steps to build good feeling — you need good social proof before you can use it inside of an ad unit. And honestly, that’s what Sponsored Stories is; providing social proof inside of an ad unit.

Sponsored Stories gives us a look into what future Facebook ad products will look like. Facebook’s stated mission is to connect people with more information and to make information more transparent. Sponsored Stories is a pretty good blending of that mission with the reality of needing to make money. This type of advertising rewards businesses who invest in things like building relationships with their customers, and good customer service.

A Final Note on Beacon

There are elements of Beacon that have kind of been torn apart and remixed into Sponsored Stories, and while Beacon was a failure, it’s original mission was  a step in the right direction. I think Sponsored Stories is going to be a clear winner, risen from Beacon’s ashes.

As we start to explore the types of actions that can be fed into this type of ad unit, such as liking open graph outlets on a website, or leaving a comment on a Facebook comment stream in a widget or blog post, I think we’ll see more and more natively social actions work their way into those sidebars, and I think we’ll see Facebook continue to innovate in this area, including rolling Sponsored Stories out in a self-serve manner.

Small businesses, pay attention to that last line. When that happens, you will benefit disproportionately because you are already operating under a LEDRR marketing model that creates the types of relationships that easily translate to online social proof.  Also see Tyler Willis, Slideshare, A Brief History of Marketing.


View the original article here

Monday, March 14, 2011

Changes to Facebook Pages – A Quick Guide

Facebook announced major changes today to its Pages, bringing them closer to individual user profiles in their look and functionality. We’re excited about these updates, as they will improve the ability of our customers to connect with audiences. The changes impact the user experience visually, giving a more compelling look and feel to Pages; functionally, allowing brands and companies to operate more the way individual users do; but also by greatly increasing your ability to build richer application experiences using iFrames. In addition to having applications that perform better, brands will also have greater flexibility in the way they name them.

The changes go into effect for all Facebook Pages on March 10, which gives you four weeks to preview the new format and switch over at any time before then. The changes will certainly enhance the visibility, access to, and effectiveness of Involver applications, but it’s important to learn how they work in order to make the most of this exciting new look and feel. Below is a map of the new features, followed by an additional summary of the changes, many of which we expected:

1-Photo strip above the Wall (with the most recent photos you posted or tagged) TIP: To optimize your photos size them to 96x67px in order to fit in the space provided and plan for them to be in random order.
2-Tabs move over to the left panel, in the form of a list (maximum of 6 above the fold)
3-Profile picture reduced from 200 x 600 pixels to 180 x 540
4-Blurb box that was below the Page picture moved to info tab
5-Pages can Like other Pages, not just favorite them
6-Featured Pages and Admins
7-Page category
8-Choice for Wall posts between “Everyone” and Page posts only
9-Mutual Friends and Interests section
10-Ability to interact on Facebook as your Page
11-Ability for admins to post and comment around the site under their Page’s alias
12-News feed of updates from Liked Pages
13-Pages can now feature iFrame tab applications
14-Email notifications when users post or comment

Note, very important: at the top of your Page is a prompt, which allows you to preview the new layout first but once you upgrade, there is no way to revert back to the old design.

Photo Strip Instead of Tabs Above the Wall
The replacement of tabs with the photo strip at the top adds a dynamic, colorful element that will significantly improve the look of the average Facebook Page. The photos are drawn from the most recent ones you posted to your Wall and those you tagged, but does not include photos posted by fans. Users can hide undesirable photos. The new left nav placement of tabs also allows for longer tab names.

Expanded Functionality For Fan Page Admins
By enabling Fan Page admins to comment in the name of the page itself and to interact with other Fan pages, Facebook has finally made it possible for brands to truly engage in tremendous interactive engine which powered its growth among individuals. Your power as a page administrator is increased in a number of other ways, including the ability to set filters on your Wall so that visitors see relevant posts first, and to view all the content and get notices whenever someone posts to your wall.

Involver Customers
Overall, the changes announced today represent a huge advance in the ability for brands to create rich, individualized experiences for their audiences. For Involver customers, this means enhanced functionality in all the applications you’re used to using and a far more engaging experience on Facebook overall. Still, we recommend that you preview the new look by clicking preview at the top of your Page before making the changes, as you will not be able to go back once you’ve made the update.

Finally, you should review the new policies. While many applications like Flash will now function better on your Page, Facebook’s restrictions require you to limit their functionality until a user interacts with it. As always, should you have any concerns about these changes, please do not hesitate to contact us.


View the original article here

Involver Announces Improvements to the Analytics Features in Our Audience Management Platform

Involver is proud to announce some stunning new improvements to the analytics capability of our Audience Management Platform. Thanks to the very diligent work of our engineering and product development teams, users can now access a rich array of information on messages published both by and about their brands, and monitor trends across numerous categories, including Fan Pages, individual Facebook applications, messaging on Twitter and the Open Web.

We’ve focused on making your data actionable with interactive graphs, the ability to drill down into the data and to compare data sets. Users can graph out 20 individual metrics related to publishing, monitoring, applications and page content. Watch a quick demo of the upgraded analytics experience below:

As the video shows, you can now access data in a range of new ways, make month-by-month comparisons, compare daily changes, and get instant access to specific metrics that are highlighted beneath the main graph with quick links and spark lines.

This is just the beginning of a series of analytics improvements that we’ll be launching in the next few months. Next up will be an expanded set of application analytics. As before, it still possible to export to third party analytics tools.

We’ll be rolling this out to all our accounts over the next two months, starting with Enterprise clients. If it hasn’t been rolled out to your account and you’re at the Enterprise Level, please feel free to drop your account manager a note.

We look forward to your feedback. Stay tuned for more feature updates.


View the original article here