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Noah King is a social strategist, designer, and programmer. He earned his master’s degree from NYU’s Interactive Telecommunications Program and has an undergraduate degree in industrial design from Pratt Institute.
Known on the interwebs as Digital Noah, he strongly identifies as a hybrid: someone who is both creative and technical. Whether writing about the ever-changing social web, building websites, or coding data visualizations, Noah is the kind of dude who loves making things. This passion extends to the kitchen where he cooks classic french cuisine, bakes homemade bread, and wields a sashimi knife like an extension of his own arm.
Noah has lived all over the northeast and currently resides in the suburbs of Boston. He and his wife, Beth, are proud parents of their rescue dog, Magnolia, with whom they spend a great deal of time outdoors chasing squirrels.
2011 Timeline of Social Media Milestones
In an effort to make sense of the rapid changes in social media, we took an entire year’s worth of links and announcements from some of the key players and wove them into a simple linear narrative.
What began as hundreds of blog posts and stories has been distilled down to 65 of the most memorable milestones. Our intent was to provide a glimpse of the progress and innovation that took place in the past year across six social media platforms. If you care to go a bit deeper, click any individual story to link to its source article.
We’ve had a lot of fun putting this timeline together and hope you enjoy it as you relive the key highlights of 2011.
Social Media Hotsheet - Week of 1/13/2012
Back by popular demand is the Earned Media team's Social Media Hotsheet. In this installment, the battle for social ads heats up while the debate between image-based content and text-based content continues. Let us know what you think in the comments.
Brands Embrace Pinterest
A Whole New World for Google Search
Facebook Fights Back with New Ads
Good Content is Shared More Than Images
Social Media Hotsheet - 2012 Preview
2011 was a monumental year for social media. To summarize these events and look forward to another amazing year, our Earned Media team has put together a list of the top ten biggest trends and predictions. What do you think 2012 will bring?
Social Music Will Continue to Grow
The New Facebook and You
Mobile Will Crest in 2012
Google Plus: No Longer the New Kid on the Block
Influence Heats Up, Privacy Concerns Arise
Easy Image Sharing Proves to be Recipe for Success
Design Continues to Matter
Personal Data Showcased as Personal Experiences
As Seen on TV: YouTube in 2012
Amateurs’ Hour to Shine
Adding Custom Javascript and HTML to Textile Blog Posts
Here at The Barbarian Group, we use Textile for our blog to help make publishing fast and easy. But occasionally there are blog posts in which you want to have more control over the markup or you want to embed more sophisticated web objects than simple text and images. After struggling with several tough posts, I’ve spent some time learning how to work around these limitations. In this post, I’m demonstrating how to embed custom javascript code into a Textile blog post.
What happens if you simply add javascript to your post?
It won’t work, because any time Textile encounters a less than (<) or greater than (>) sign, it treats it as an html tag and acts accordingly. Fortunately, you can encapsulate your markup within <notextile></notextile> tags, and your code will remain entirely unadulterated by Textile.
It won’t work, because any time Textile encounters a less than (<) or greater than (>) sign, it treats it as an html tag and acts accordingly. Fortunately, you can encapsulate your markup within <notextile></notextile> tags, and your code will remain entirely unadulterated by Textile.
To demonstrate this, below is an example of a simple bit of code that toggles the visibility of text sections using javascript.
Finally, an Awesome Social Media Analytics Tool
Back in April I wrote a blog post about how effectively measuring the success of social media campaigns was frequently sought after but seldom achieved. Fast forward only eight months and it appears that a noble contender has finally arrived on the scene with the promise of delivering the social media analytics we’ve all only dreamed of. What’s this truly awesome company called? Actually, it’s called awe.sm.

If you’re familiar with bit.ly, the popular url shortening service, then you’ll easily understand how awe.sm works. Essentially, awe.sm creates and tracks custom, shortened urls for links that get broadcast on social media networks. Maybe it’s a link to your new blog post, new product landing page, or the download page of your latest software release. When people click on this link, in addition to getting forwarded to the full-length URL on your site, awe.sm tracks all the information of the interaction and stores it. After the tweet or facebook post or tumblr share has been shared over and over, these recorded interactions leave a breadcrumb trail that tells the entire story of who did the sharing, when it happened, and most importantly, what the effects were.
To get a sense of what a huge improvement this is, take a look at the paltry amount of information you get from a bit.ly tracked link. We launched an awesome screen saver earlier this year with a custom bit.ly link, and here is the page with the tracked statistics of how the link performed: https://bitly.com/l6vsHH+ Sure, there’s some information there, but not enough to draw any real conclusions.
Awe.sm takes link analytics about twenty steps further, providing true insight on a digital campaign. Awe.sm claims to map how a message spreads across a network and even show a social media campaign’s added value as an actual dollar amount. Can they really do all that? I’m not sure, but I’m willing to try the 30-day free trial to find out.
Pepper-Spray Hits the Big Time
Police brutality is not a laughing matter. But internet memes certainly are. The casual pepper-spraying cop image has spread across the internet faster than you can say nyan cat. But the funniest part is that it has made it to the customer contributed images on the amazon page for a pepper spray product.
As far as I know, this is the fastest and farthest a meme has ever grown. And frankly, some of the images are absolutely, gut-busting funny.

Instagram Photo-Journalism
Two posts on the Instagram blog make me think that what Twitter did for journalism, Instagram might do for photo-journalism. The first post shows a collection of photos documenting the New York City marathon two weekends ago. The second post shows a collection of photos documenting the Occupy Wall Street eviction in New York City earlier this week. All of these photos were shot by ordinary people on an iPhone, but the collective story that these sets of photos tell is nothing short of incredible.

The marathon spanned 26 miles of the city, spreading from corner to corner of a giant metropolis. But every Instagram user was given a voice to express her individual perspective and tell the story of what happened on his block or from where she was standing. These unique views got collected together through a common hashtag, allowing the world to feast on the beautiful aggregate.

The Occupy Wall Street eviction was a contentious event, to say the least. The police made it very difficult for the press and photographers to document the event, but ordinary people with iPhones were able to capture what unfolded and were able to communicate the tone of what it was like to be there. When citizen journalists are equipped with a powerful creation and distribution tool like Instagram, it’s impossible to censor the collective effort.
These two events both happened in New York City, but similar news-worthy events are happening all the time. As the Instagram community continues to grow, the collective power of it’s users will grow with it. And as the density of users in other communities rises to that of New York City, it will be possible to receive aggregated accounts of events from all over the world. That’s why I’m a huge fan Instagram and can’t wait to see all the stories it helps its users tell.
Understanding Social Behavior: Innovation Fatigue
One of my favorite creepy moments in film is the opening scene to The City of Lost Children, by Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro. In the scene, a small boy is delighted to find Santa come down his chimney on Christmas Eve and present with him with a magical little toy. But when more and more santas keep coming down, the boy gets confused and overwhelmed, and soon his dream becomes a nightmare. Too much of a good thing can certainly be tiresome, and I feel that society as a whole has become inundated with new technology and is beginning to fall victim to innovation fatigue.
We now live at a time when the pace of innovation is staggering. If it’s your full-time job to keep up with all the new platforms, and apps, and sites, and devices, it’s completely exhausting, and there are still things that slip past your radar. While professionals are struggling to keep up, most ordinary people have simply stopped trying and have settled for what they’ve already got because they don’t want to start fresh again with something new. I think this feeling of innovation fatigue explains why no new offering has dethroned Facebook as the giant of Social Media. After moving from Friendster to Myspace to Facebook, and each time starting from scratch, no one wants to rebuild a new social network. Even if it’s brilliantly designed and extremely easy to get on board with, like Google+. The same is true with apartments when you live in New York. At some point you just get so tired of moving that you stick with your current apartment; it’s not because it’s necessarily the best apartment, but rather because you already live there.
So what does this mean for brands, marketers, and other professionals creating innovative new experiences for their customers? For one, it means that your audience isn’t as receptive as you’d like. And it means that reaching your audience is only half the battle; even if a loyal customer is convinced that your latest offering is a must-have, they still might not go out and get it. This explains why Apple fell short of its quarterly goals earlier this month. Customers anticipated that an even newer model was coming out soon, so they simply didn’t buy any iPhones all summer. And now that they’ve waiting this long, what’s another few months?
I think the secret is to empathize with the average consumer and to be patient. Feel their frustration. Feel their fatigue. And find ways to break through the apathy and disappointment to show them that your brand and your service is here to make their life better. Demonstrate that you’re listening and you care. When you’ve had a long day, the last thing you want is a salesman showing up at your door. Instead, be the friend that comes by to lend a listening ear.














