i just saw one of your text posts on pinterest i was like omg. i follow them irl
i should quit my job and be a pinterest influencer
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i just saw one of your text posts on pinterest i was like omg. i follow them irl
i should quit my job and be a pinterest influencer
I will create board and pin as a pinterest marketing manager
Castle hunting is always fun. . . . . . . . . . . . . #Hvar #Croatia #Pinfluencer #webstagram #vscocam #Vasco #instagramhub #instadaily #visitcroatia #instagood #instahub #instagramer #instatravel #travelnotes #traveler #traveling #travelgram #travelguide #wanderer #wanderlust #egyptiantraveler #traveldiaries #potd #photooftheday @croatiafulloflife (at Hvarska Tvrdava Spanjola, Hvar (Ilyian Fortress - 6th cen. AD)) https://www.instagram.com/p/B2NESEIFneQ/?igshid=3pjesenc99y2
Colorful Streets in Old Town Phuket. Do you know some other rainbow streets in the world I can visit? I love everything with colors. . #phuketoldtown #thailandstreetphotography #beautifuldestinations #pinfluencer #beautifuldestination #blogueuse (à Phuket, Thailand)
New Post has been published on Tech News
New Post has been published on http://projectopenhand.biz/pinfluencer-is-now-piqora-as-it-preps-to-add-tumblr-twitter-and-more-to-its-social-marketing-net/3117
Pinfluencer Is Now Piqora As It Preps To Add Tumblr, Twitter And More To Its Social Marketing Net
Pinfluencer, one of the many sites that have sprouted up to help companies track Pinterest usage, is today announcing a rebranding to Piqora, a move that the company says fits with its wider strategy to mine information not just from Pinterest and Facebook, but other image-based social networks like Tumblr, Polyvore and Twitter. To go along with its longer term social marketing ambitions, it is also spreading its product wings with the launch of Gallery, which lets brands, retailers and other businesses take products that get pinned elsewhere and aggregate and show them on their own sites.
The two moves come as Pinterest slowly gears up to take more commercial control of its massive data stream of consumers pinning branded content, and brands and other businesses trying to use the wildly popular social network to push their products.
The change to Piquora, says CEO Sharad Verma, was for a couple of reasons. First, it brings to mind “pics”, short for pictures, as well as “pick”, reminiscent of the curating role that many play on sites like Pinterest.
On the other hand, he says it was also made to set itself apart from the number of other pun-tastic, Pinterest-referencing branded companies in the bunfight for offering analytics, marketing services, influence/sentiment analysis and more, and to also get the company itself away from being too tied to Pinterest by association. “There are a lot of companies in that bucket whose names start with ‘pin,’ and we don’t want to be confused with being a ‘Klout for Pinterest,’” he told TechCrunch. “But also, eventually we are going to be a multi-platform company.”
That multi-platform strategy, he says, will see the company go beyond sourcing data from Pinterest and Facebook and extend to other social media sites organized around images. First up, he says, will be Tumblr, Twitter and Polyvore. Eventually, other social networks will also be added, Verma says.
The reason for the aggregation of multiple social networks is because Piqora is also expanding its product set.
Today sees the launch of a new Gallery mode that businesses can put on to their own sites, showing users what products of theirs are getting pinned on Pinterest (and tagged elsewhere) and giving users one more way of discovering them directly on those brands’ sites — and eventually buying them.
This is all-important because it is one more sign of how companies are trying to “close the loop” between discovering a product, finding out more about it, maybe passing on the information to others, but most importantly — actually buying it.
It is also a mark of how, no matter how much marketing budget these companies are ploughing into sites like Pinterest and Facebook, they are still interested in spending more on their own turf — a trend highlighted by a recent survey from Gartner, which found that companies’ own websites still got the lion’s share of marketing budget above and beyond what companies were prepared to spend on other highly-trafficked sites.
Gallery, Piqora says, will be optimized for tablets and effectively becomes the new public facing-product of the analytics that the company had already been providing to brands (customers include Overstock, Sephora, Zappos, Etsy, Z Gallerie, Orbitz, and Steve Madden).
It charts not just what’s getting tagged and trending with consumers, but then also adds more retailer-specific data such as stock availability and purchasing links. This also puts Piqora more in direct competition with companies like Lyst, which also provides a similar level of detail about where to buy products.
Here’s how one gallery looks, on World Market:
While Pinterest has yet to release an API, companies like Piqora have been picking up relevant data for its service by crawling publicly-available Pinterest pages. For now Pinterest is totally fine with this, it says, because many of these companies are providing services that Pinterest is not.
As Pinterest’s product manager Cat Lee said to me at the time of its Analytics launch last week, the company is “super glad” that businesses like Piqora exist now. In part this is because they help brands keep the faith in using Pinterest as a platform now and in the future. “We hope that these businesses continue to provide services that we don’t have plans to add at this time,” Lee said.
Two of the key examples she gave me: those who help businesses run contests and promotions and then measuring the level of engagement on these; and those helping companies manage email campaigns that feed into Pinterest traffic.
So whether the new aggregating business takes off, and regardless of how Pinterest’s own moves into analytics may pose problems for those third parties that offer the same thing, this puts Piqora into a good position going forward because at least one big part of its business falls squarely into those areas where Pinterest says it has no interest to play for now. Piqora says it has powered some 100 contests and sweepstakes to date, with up to 25 million impressions per contest and 20 pins per participant, “saving marketers hours of manual work by automatically tracking user eligibility.”
Retailers have struggled to effectively monetize social media. Here's one place to start.
Photo: H&M
The Perks of Being a Northern Californian
When you grow up around something you don't always see what the tourists see. What I'm getting at is that Kokomo may sound grand when you listen to the Beach Boys song, but if you've always lived there it's just home. But then, I've never been to Kokomo so don't take that assessment at face value.
iPhones and Androids and Intel chips are used internationally and have had (this will probably sound like an understatement) greatly affected how we operate in modern society. Without getting into the laundry list of ways that statement is true, it's almost funny when you see tourists photographing the hell out of Stanford's Palm Drive or getting flustered and excited to get a glimpse of the Google HQ.
A few weeks ago I discovered a tool called Pinfluencer, which could be described as what Hootsuite and Radian6 are to Twitter. Pinterest has taken off immensely so it was only a matter of time until someone came up with a way to measure success with it. And yay for that, because as a social media manager I'm always looking for ways to reassure myself I'm not failbombing at keeping folks engaged.
Plus, it's free. Smileys all around.
So I was pretty darn glad to see that Pinfluencer is a few towns away and that they were holding a Women 2.0 Founder Friday event! I went last night, got to meet one of the co-founders, and found out that she's friends with one of my own coworkers. As I like to say, sweet happenings!
My conclusion is that we Silicon Valley peeps are lucky geese. Only a few months ago I saw Zuck walking around on the Facebook campus and a few months before his passing a friend of mine saw Steve Jobs in line at Starbucks. You never know who shares a zip code with you and what they're working on to change the world of tomorrow (sorry if that sounded cheesy).
Another cool thing that happened is that I met a woman who had just moved here from Mongolia. Not only had she heard of my company, Talenthouse, she was familiar with the story of a winner we had who won a campaign with Adidas. And then he won two more. And the prize money he scored was equivalent to a year's salary in Mongolia.
Once again, as I like to say - sweet happenings.