For the love of Tumblr! Experts weigh in at Social Media Week

tumblr limzj8FjYw1qzwof2 900 0 resize 520x245 For the love of Tumblr! Experts weigh in at Social Media Week

“For those in the audience who don’t know, Tumblr is somewhere between Twitter and WordPress,” explained Amy Vernon, a Tumblr expert and former journalist. She is also known known far and wide as The Bacon Queen (and is also a writer for The Next Web!).

In January, we announced that Tumblr serves 120 million people and 15 billion pageviews every month. Clearly, this is a platform that everyone in digital media and the world over is paying attention to.

Last Friday, at Social Media Week in New York City, Vernon moderated a panel titled “Let’s Get Ready to Tumblr: Building community by reimagining and redistributing your content” with rock star Tumblr users including BuzzFeed’s Lindsey Weber, Flavorpill’s Russ Marshalek and The Atlantic’s Jared Keller.

Lindsey, who’s been spreading viral content around the Internet since lasers were invented (pictured below), posed the question: “What about Tumblr makes it perfect?”

Screen shot 2012 02 22 at 9.59.24 AM 520x442 For the love of Tumblr! Experts weigh in at Social Media Week

“It’s all about observational humor,” she says. “Also, it’s very easy to make a Tumblr. Unlike Twitter, you don’t have to make up a new email address.”

“Single-serving personal Tumblrs are the best!” chimes in Russ. “Like Gordon Ramsay and Das Racist lyrics.”

“Or my Fuck Yeah Fig Newtons,” adds Jared. “But it only has 5 posts.”

“Or pictures of Lisa Simpson reading,” Lindsey adds. “That’s what’s so great. You can just throw up a photo or three and be done with the Tumblr, whereas with Twitter, you have to keep going with it. I think the ease of access to Tumblr is the biggest draw.”

In the 2 years Russ has been managing social media at Flavorpill, traffic to the culture blog has increased 200%. But, funny enough, Russ is relatively new to Tumblr, having moved over late in the game from LiveJournal.

In our interview with Russ last summer, he explained his magic: “When we use Tumblr, we avoid only posting our own content or reblogging what thousands of people have already seen. We take great posts on Flavorwire or an interesting event on Flavorpill and translate that to Tumblr. We also post a lot of weird art. The weirder, more obscure art pieces that always bear a 2nd, 3rd or 4th glance.”

Screen shot 2012 02 22 at 10.06.53 AM For the love of Tumblr! Experts weigh in at Social Media Week

Jared, an Associate Editor at The Atlantic runs all the magazine’s social media platforms including for The Atlantic Wire and The Atlantic Cities. When he created a Tumblr for The Atlantic, he did it as a personal project and didn’t mention it to anyone at the office.

“Suddenly, we started getting a huge amount of traffic from Tumblr! And no one even knew we had one!” says Jared.

The Atlantic launched in 1857 as an Abolitionist Magazine, and re-imagining a stuffy media outlet for the digital age hasn’t been all cat photos and lasers. ”The way I approached The Atlantic Tumblr was, ‘What if it had been started instead in 1980 as a zine? What would it look like?’ That was the aesthetic and voice approach I took to the Tumblr,” he explains. ”If content is smart and inquisitive, we reblog it.”

tumblr lzrbydFzIW1r530luo1 1280 520x346 For the love of Tumblr! Experts weigh in at Social Media Week

Russ and Jared both said that The Atlantic and Flavorpill are seeing social as a much bigger draw for traffic than search today.

It’s not all cats and lasers at Tumblr

If there was one theme that kept bubbling to the surface of our love of Tumblr teacup, it was that Tumblr isn’t perfect. For all the raging traffic on the social platform, it lacks an analytical background. Platforms like Reddit and StumbleUpon have paid media buying programs because they can provide traffic figures, Tumblr doesn’t. In essence, there’s no way to find out who’s looking at your Tumblr. For a marketing team, this is hell.

“From an operational and editorial standpoint, we adore Tumblr but from a business standpoint it’s hard to go to someone in corporate and ask for more money for the platform when we can’t even show them real analytics,” says Jared.

Tumblr, like many startups out there today, focuses on their user first and isn’t worried about a business model just yet– after all, traffic is simply insane. Rumors are swirling, however, that Tumblr is hiring someone to create an analytics dashboard. “They basically need to hire someone to figure out what the hell they’re doing,” one of the panelists joked.

“When Facebook began, it didn’t really have a business model. And Twitter still doesn’t. It just seems to be the status quo,” says Jared.

And yet, Tumblr isn’t just a platform for experiments in memery or an additional social media arm, notes Lindsey. Plenty of book deals have come from Tumblr like Look at This Fucking Hipster, My Parents Were Awesome and This is Why You’re Fat.

i2dw5nf19m3fvvdoCJ3BKJFco1 500 For the love of Tumblr! Experts weigh in at Social Media Week

Velveeta Fudge Squares

 

And in addition to traffic, Tumblr has even boosted The Atlantic’s sales of its print magazine. “We’ve even been hooking younger kids with our Tumblr,” says Jared. “Many teenagers have written to say that they’ve purchased the magazine because they loved the content on our Tumblr so much.”

So who is really rocking it out there in the Tumblrverse? The panelists ended with a list of their favorite Tumblrs. Check them out here:

Love Tumblr? So do we! Check out our column Tumblr Tuesday, where every Tuesday we celebrate our love of Tumblr!

Bienvenido, Rdio – Digital music startup invades Spotify’s turf, lands in Spain and Portugal

Photoxpress 13019696 520x245 Bienvenido, Rdio   Digital music startup invades Spotifys turf, lands in Spain and Portugal

Rdio this morning announced that its on-demand music subscription and discovery service is now available to users in Spain and Portugal.

For the US-based startup, which was created by Skype and Kazaa founders Niklas Zennström and Janus Friis, this marks its second and third expansion to Europe after debuting in Germany in January 2012.

It also means Rdio is entering a country where Spotify – arguably its main rival globally – is available after the latter’s (late) debut in the United States, where Rdio had been available long before Spotify.

For the record, the free version of Spotify is available in Spain but not (yet) in Portugal, although I gather Portuguese citizens with credit cards or PayPal accounts can sign up for the premium version.

Rdio is now available in the US, Canada, Brazil, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Australia and New Zealand. In the launch blog post, the company notes that “this is just the beginning”.

The service lets users access a catalog of roughly 12 million songs, charging €4.99 per month for Web-only access and €9.99 per month for Unlimited (Web and mobile) access.

Rdio is available on the Web, Mac and PC desktops, the iPad, iPod touch, loads of smartphones (iPhone, Android, BlackBerry, Windows Phone 7) and at home in the Sonos wireless audio system.

rdio Bienvenido, Rdio   Digital music startup invades Spotifys turf, lands in Spain and Portugal

Storify launches a slick iPad app to open its story-building service to a new audience

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Storify is today announcing a brand new app for the iPad, bringing its drag and drop curation of Tweets, videos and other web links to the tablet. The experience looks smooth and carries over the core features of the web app.

Storify is a service that lets you combine links from Twitter and other sharing services at large into cohesive stories, something that we love to do here at The Next Web, as we did with the story surrounding the death of Steve Jobs. It’s a great, and fast, way to collate a bunch of links, bits of media and Tweets into something coherent and fluid and much easier to read.

“Whether you’re at a conference or at home, you can mix social streams to create simple, beautiful stories to share and remember the moments in life that matter,” said Xavier Damman, Storify co-founder and CEO. “You now have storytelling at your fingertips.”

Photo Feb 21 7 58 19 PM 520x390 Storify launches a slick iPad app to open its story building service to a new audience

The iPad app keeps the process of creating new stories simple, allowing you to pull from five specific and very popular services including Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube and Flickr, as well as the web. Once you fire up a story, you choose a service on the right and flick your way through items that are divided out into easily grabbable sections.

To build a compilation, you just grab an item on the right and drag it over to your story on the left. It actually feels quite a bit like you’re an editor preparing an edition of a magazine or newspaper, moving, organizing and curating content to craft your story. It’s a pretty interesting experience and one that actually makes a lot of tactile sense.

With easy access to the various services you can grab video of an event, your Facebook friends’ shots, your own Instagram shares and Tweets around the event’s hashtag to whip together an easily shareable experience that you can publish out to Storify. It’s honestly a far better experience for me than the Storify web app.

Yes, the iPad version does lack some of the granularity of the web version, and it doesn’t have all of its features, but it delivers the core experience well. It also gives you one additional feature: the ability to Tweet right from inside the app.

Storify iPad 2 520x390 Storify launches a slick iPad app to open its story building service to a new audience

As with the standard version of Storify, once you’ve finished your story you can publish it out to the website and choose to share a link on Twitter or Facebook. You can also notify anyone mentioned in the story that you’ve used something that they’ve posted or said.

There isn’t a way to grab embed code here, so if you’re looking to quickly Storify something and then post it right to your blog in an iPad app you’ll need to jump out to the web interface to grab it.

Photo Feb 21 7 56 08 PM 520x390 Storify launches a slick iPad app to open its story building service to a new audience

The process is smooth and has a satisfying feel, but there are a few niggling issues with the interface that will hopefully be worked out soon. I would really like to see a slightly lower activation time when you tap and hold an item, so that grabbing and dragging feels more immediate. There is also a bit of pane confusion at times when moving back and forth between various sections. This has to do with the way that Storify layers a browser pane on top of a tapped link. I’d also like to see the web pane stay on the last page you were looking at, rather than defaulting to Google.com.

Photo Feb 21 9 37 41 PM 520x390 Storify launches a slick iPad app to open its story building service to a new audience

Having links remain live in your story view would also be nice, as it would allow you to bounce around through linked pages within Tweets. There also seems to be no reason why the app makes you grab an item by the right edge to change its order, grabbing an item directly as well would be a good option to have. But these issues are comparatively minor when compared to the rest of the app.

The iPad app’s focus on a select number of services and direct sharing to Twitter and Facebook are indicative of the company’s desire to make Storify something that ‘regular’ users, not just social media addicts or bloggers, use regularly. It’s making itself into something that you might use to easily share all of the various bits of media from your vacation in one cohesive story form with friends or relatives.

Storify for iPad is a great first step towards expanding the service outwards from its niche service position and it’s a highly polished first effort. Whether you’re creating stories around tech news or your favorite foods, Storify wants to be your tool. It will be interesting to see if this effort pays off in the long run, but even this initial stage of the plan it’s well worth trying out.

Storify for iPad is available now on the App Store.

NASCAR racing team turns to Google+ Hangout to prep fans for Daytona 500

3661936544 1b5f37195c z 520x245 NASCAR racing team turns to Google+ Hangout to prep fans for Daytona 500

We’ve seen quite a few genius uses of the Google+ Hangout feature, including a question and answer session with President Barack Obama and 24-hour concerts from musician Daria Musk. For those who are doubting Google’s social features, the Hangout feature is getting traction from some interesting figures and brands and it’s becoming harder to deny that Google has a hit on its hands.

It’s also hard to deny that coming face to face with your favorite public figure beats out any other social medium we have at our disposal and NASCAR has taken notice and one of the more popular teams is holding two live “hangouts” on the Google+ platform.

Roush Fenway Racing is hosting the live event with five of its drivers; Carl Edwards, Greg Biffle, Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Matt Kenseth and defending champion Trevor Bayne. At 7pm ET tomorrow, the five drivers will be hanging out and taking questions live from their biggest fans. Not only is the Roush team popular, it’s the winningest team in NASCAR history.

5driver NASCAR racing team turns to Google+ Hangout to prep fans for Daytona 500

If you have a question to ask the drivers leave it on this post as a comment and you might get invited to join the live broadcast to ask your question “face to face”. The race team will also be holding two other Hangouts leading up to the Daytona 500 on Sunday. The guest on Saturday will be driver Trevor Bayne and team owner Jack Roush will hold a Hangout the day of the race.

If you’re a fan of NASCAR this type of interaction is probably a dream come true for you. As more brands start utilizing Google+ features, the bigger the events will become. Can you imagine a day when Kobe Bryant leads his team to a win and then holds a Hangout from the locker room? It might not be that far off in the future if Google has anything to say about it.

Watching the Hangouts product evolve has been fun to watch and I can’t wait to see it integrated into Google TV at some point in the same way that Xbox has done with its Kinect product.

Roush Fenway Racing

Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog “Technically Crunchy”

shutterstock 61065361 520x245 Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog Technically Crunchy

Welcome to our twenty-sixth Tumblr Tuesday, where every Tuesday we celebrate our love of Tumblr by interviewing the mastermind behind a new blog. Tumblr, a New York City based startup, is like the FFFFound for the rest of the world. It’s as shareable and fast-paced as Twitter but populated with more in-depth text and rich images.

In January, we announced that Tumblr serves 120 million people and 15 billion pageviews every month! But Tumblr’s founder and CEO David Karp admits that one area the blogging network hasn’t performed well enough at thus far is content discovery – which is what our weekly column Tumblr Tuesday is all about.

Screen shot 2012 02 21 at 10.22.17 AM Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog Technically CrunchyJust six days ago, the Tumblog Technically Crunchy popped up on our radar after the author blogged about Robin Wauters leaving TechCrunch to join The Next Web, and the “thinly veiled gritty re-boot piece” from TechCrunch’s Editor-in-Chief Erick Schonfeld. There’s a lot of back and forth banter (that often bubbles down to bullshit) in the tech industry, and Technically Crunchy is proving to be a witty–if not slightly offensive– observer.

While the author chooses to remain anonymous, the least I can say is that the man (or woman?) has a wry sense of humor, refers to his/her mom as “mum” and eschews the “zed” character in favor of English spellings such as “sanitised” and “realised”. Find out more about the mysterious expositor below…

Screen shot 2012 02 21 at 10.28.17 AM Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog Technically Crunchy

CBM: Who the hell are you? 

Technically Crunchy: A carefully sanitised finger of truth in the eye of tech babble.

CBM: Where in the world might you reside?

TC: Betwixt the Silicon Gyratory and Cupertino.

CBM: And what do you live in? An apartment, house, treehouse, man cave?

TC: A subterranean smart cloud.

Screen shot 2012 02 21 at 10.26.53 AM Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog Technically Crunchy

CBM: On average, how many hours a day do you spend in the nude?

TC: Subtracting our meatspace nudity from our virtual nudity and then halving it, I’d say 10.

CBM: What particular moment in time inspired you to start this Tumblr?

TC: After voraciously consuming every tech blog for days on end without food or water, we awoke in a desert and realised it was time to shine this genuflecting hot sun on the people who wrote about it.

CBM: How would you describe the current state of the technology journalism?

TC: Like someone trying to insert their own head up their rear fundament, with some success.

CBM: For the record, how do you define “tech news”?

TC: Has to contain the words ‘tech’ , ‘news’ and ‘bungling’ in it.

CBM: Who’s your favorite tech journalist/blogger/reporter/editor on the Internet? 

TC: My Mum is on the internet, does she count?

Screen shot 2012 02 21 at 10.34.02 AM Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog Technically Crunchy

➤ Technically Crunchy

Hope you enjoyed this! Also, check out our Tumblr Tuesday from weeks’ past:

Konstantin Sutyagin via shutterstock

Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog “Technically Crunchy”

shutterstock 61065361 520x245 Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog Technically Crunchy

Welcome to our twenty-sixth Tumblr Tuesday, where every Tuesday we celebrate our love of Tumblr by interviewing the mastermind behind a new blog. Tumblr, a New York City based startup, is like the FFFFound for the rest of the world. It’s as shareable and fast-paced as Twitter but populated with more in-depth text and rich images.

In January, we announced that Tumblr serves 120 million people and 15 billion pageviews every month! But Tumblr’s founder and CEO David Karp admits that one area the blogging network hasn’t performed well enough at thus far is content discovery – which is what our weekly column Tumblr Tuesday is all about.

Screen shot 2012 02 21 at 10.22.17 AM Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog Technically CrunchyJust six days ago, the Tumblog Technically Crunchy popped up on our radar after the author blogged about Robin Wauters leaving TechCrunch to join The Next Web, and the “thinly veiled gritty re-boot piece” from TechCrunch’s Editor-in-Chief Erick Schonfeld. There’s a lot of back and forth banter (that often bubbles down to bullshit) in the tech industry, and Technically Crunchy is proving to be a witty–if not slightly offensive– observer.

While the author chooses to remain anonymous, the least I can say is that the man (or woman?) has a wry sense of humor, refers to his/her mom as “mum” and eschews the “zed” character in favor of English spellings such as “sanitised” and “realised”. Find out more about the mysterious expositor below…

Screen shot 2012 02 21 at 10.28.17 AM Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog Technically Crunchy

CBM: Who the hell are you? 

Technically Crunchy: A carefully sanitised finger of truth in the eye of tech babble.

CBM: Where in the world might you reside?

TC: Betwixt the Silicon Gyratory and Cupertino.

CBM: And what do you live in? An apartment, house, treehouse, man cave?

TC: A subterranean smart cloud.

Screen shot 2012 02 21 at 10.26.53 AM Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog Technically Crunchy

CBM: On average, how many hours a day do you spend in the nude?

TC: Subtracting our meatspace nudity from our virtual nudity and then halving it, I’d say 10.

CBM: What particular moment in time inspired you to start this Tumblr?

TC: After voraciously consuming every tech blog for days on end without food or water, we awoke in a desert and realised it was time to shine this genuflecting hot sun on the people who wrote about it.

CBM: How would you describe the current state of the technology journalism?

TC: Like someone trying to insert their own head up their rear fundament, with some success.

CBM: For the record, how do you define “tech news”?

TC: Has to contain the words ‘tech’ , ‘news’ and ‘bungling’ in it.

CBM: Who’s your favorite tech journalist/blogger/reporter/editor on the Internet? 

TC: My Mum is on the internet, does she count?

Screen shot 2012 02 21 at 10.34.02 AM Tumblr Tuesday: Meet the mind behind the satirical blog Technically Crunchy

➤ Technically Crunchy

Hope you enjoyed this! Also, check out our Tumblr Tuesday from weeks’ past:

Konstantin Sutyagin via shutterstock

ThingLink’s image-tagging technology now makes Facebook Pages more interactive

Facebook2 520x245 ThingLinks image tagging technology now makes Facebook Pages more interactive

Finnish startup ThingLink has announced the latest feature for its image-tagging platform, with ThingLink Tabs for Facebook letting users create an interactive Page from any photo.

We first reported on ThingLink last March, when it announced a partnership with SoundCloud which enabled audio to be embedded within otherwise static images on websites. A few months later, we checked out its new rich media tagging technology, allowing for greater interaction with external media platforms such as social networks and video-sharing websites. This meant that users were able to consume more external content from within an image itself, rather than it simply linking to external content, and covers content held on YouTube, Vimeo, Google Maps, Spotify and more.

Later in 2011, ThingLink partnered with Eventrbrite, to enable event tickets to be sold through an image, and then at the Wired event in London, the startup announced it was taking its technology into the physical world with Rich Media Notes, a tool to create printable versions of ThingLink images using Near Field Communications (NFC)-enabled rich media tags, which are readable by smartphones and other enabled mobile devices. So it was a pretty busy year for company.

Now, however, ThingLink Tabs for Facebook, lets anyone from artists to small businesses host and share their content inside a single image on a Facebook Page. “Facebook has a billion users, which means if you’re a business of any size doing anything online, your audience is there,” said ThingLink’s chief marketing officer Neil Vineberg. “ThingLink Tabs for Facebook turns any Page into an interactive Web experience that drives engagement.”

ThingLink Tabs is available with ThingLink’s new PLUS ($5 a month) and PRO ($20 a month) accounts. The former includes one Facebook Page and 500 image uploads, while PRO includes five Facebook Pages and unlimited image uploads.

The new feature has been used by a handful of Pages already, including NME music magazine and Alan Partridge, as you can see here:

room ThingLinks image tagging technology now makes Facebook Pages more interactive

ThingLink images are compatible with all websites and devices, and can also be published and edited on any Tumblr, Blogger, WordPress.org, and WordPress.com (VIP).

We’re big fans of ThingLink here at The Next Web, and you can expect to be hearing a lot more about this startup in the months and years ahead.

ThingLink Tabs for Facebook

Women are ‘more likely’ to make your social media campaign go viral

menwomen 520x245  Women are more likely to make your social media campaign go viral

uSamp has just published a study that gives a little insight into what kind of information men and women are willing to share on social networks.

Surveying 600 adults in the UK this past January, the survey revealed that 78% of women were happy to share what brand they preferred, compared to a slightly lower figure of 74% among men.

For both men and women, home addresses and phone numbers were off limits for the most part. 3% of women and 12% of men said they were willing to share their phone number online, while 3% of women and 7% of men were willing to share their physical address.

SocialMedia uSamp  Women are more likely to make your social media campaign go viralThe difference in figures for most topics, as seen in the table above, weren’t vastly different, but with women more willing to talk about or share the brands that they like, it makes them more likely candidates for picking up on social media campaign buzz.

Gaelle Normand, MD of uSamp in Europe says:

“This is good news for retail brands trying to harness social media as a marketing tool. Those targeting a female audience are likely to see more success with viral campaigns, as women recommend their favourite products to friends and followers more readily. Those brands with a male following might find it slightly harder to create a buzz through social channels.”

A recent Social Media Week event in London,  Men are from Foursquare and Women are from Facebook, revealed that women in Europe are in fact more active on social media sites than men.

The event also revealed that women are more likely interact and engage, while men are more interested in giving their opinion.  More importantly, it also revealed that women are more likely to follow brands for discounts and offers, with 64% of women taking to social media to get a good deal, in comparison with 52% of men.

From a marketing standpoint, this is in line with uSamp’s survey. If women are more likely to follow, interact and take note of what’s going on around them in social media, they’re also more likely to share something that they saw on a friend’s page – an essential factor for any campaign to have any hopes of going viral.

Women are ‘more likely’ to make your social media campaign go viral

menwomen 520x245  Women are more likely to make your social media campaign go viral

uSamp has just published a study that gives a little insight into what kind of information men and women are willing to share on social networks.

Surveying 600 adults in the UK this past January, the survey revealed that 78% of women were happy to share what brand they preferred, compared to a slightly lower figure of 74% among men.

For both men and women, home addresses and phone numbers were off limits for the most part. 3% of women and 12% of men said they were willing to share their phone number online, while 3% of women and 7% of men were willing to share their physical address.

SocialMedia uSamp  Women are more likely to make your social media campaign go viralThe difference in figures for most topics, as seen in the table above, weren’t vastly different, but with women more willing to talk about or share the brands that they like, it makes them more likely candidates for picking up on social media campaign buzz.

Gaelle Normand, MD of uSamp in Europe says:

“This is good news for retail brands trying to harness social media as a marketing tool. Those targeting a female audience are likely to see more success with viral campaigns, as women recommend their favourite products to friends and followers more readily. Those brands with a male following might find it slightly harder to create a buzz through social channels.”

A recent Social Media Week event in London,  Men are from Foursquare and Women are from Facebook, revealed that women in Europe are in fact more active on social media sites than men.

The event also revealed that women are more likely interact and engage, while men are more interested in giving their opinion.  More importantly, it also revealed that women are more likely to follow brands for discounts and offers, with 64% of women taking to social media to get a good deal, in comparison with 52% of men.

From a marketing standpoint, this is in line with uSamp’s survey. If women are more likely to follow, interact and take note of what’s going on around them in social media, they’re also more likely to share something that they saw on a friend’s page – an essential factor for any campaign to have any hopes of going viral.

Brand pages on Google+ growing 4x faster than on Twitter, but Facebook is still king

google plus.top  520x2451 Brand pages on Google+ growing 4x faster than on Twitter, but Facebook is still king

Last week, we took a look at a report that showed that the most popular pages on Google+ were becoming more consumer-focused. Now, according to a recent report from Socialbakers, those brand pages are growing faster on Google+ than on Twitter. The analytics site is measuring that growth by the number of followers a page has gained in one month.

Google+ introduced brand pages in November, while Twitter made the move, in an official manner in December, albeit limited to a few heavy hitters. But Twitter’s official brand pages are really a moot point here, because marketeers took to Twitter, capitalizing on the existing audience long before Twitter afforded them unique features that enhance the brand experience. In reality, Twitter has been home to brands far longer than Google+.

The fact that Google+ brand pages have only been around for four months could be part of the explanation as to why the growth has exceeded Twitter’s. On Twitter, out of the top 5 growing brands, H&M has seen the most growth with over 88,500 new followers in one month.

409 pic1 520x216 Brand pages on Google+ growing 4x faster than on Twitter, but Facebook is still king

On Google+, H&M snags the second spot, after having added 287,000 new followers. The fastest growing brand on Google+ is Angry Birds, adding over 350,000 new followers in one month.

409 pic2 520x216 Brand pages on Google+ growing 4x faster than on Twitter, but Facebook is still king

Continuing with H&M as an example, looking at the total number of followers, on Twitter, the company has just over 816,000, while on Google+ the number sits just over 530,000.

There appears to have been a surge in growth on Google+ in December, according to a report published a few days ago by BrightEdge Social Share. As Simply Zesty point out, none of these brands have hit the 1 million follower mark despite the significant growth of 1,400% in the past couple of months.

There are certain factors that always need to be taken into account when looking at these figures. For example, could it be that the very same people who already follow H&M on Twitter are heading over to follow them on Google+? The fact that Twitter has been around longer means that the growth may have plateaued a little in comparison to Google+, a relatively new social network.

Looking at the Bright Edge report, we also see that most of the growth has been among the top 10 brands. H&M, Samsung, Pepsi, Coca-Cola, Starbucks, Sony, Intel, eBay, Google and Amazon together account for more than 3 million of the 3.1 million fans following the top 100 brands.

More importantly, however, is the matter of engagement. All the followers in the world aren’t really much use if they’re not coming back to your page, or aren’t engaging with your brand.

The H&M Twitter account fields a lot of questions, and as seems to be the trend on Twitter, it is serving more of a customer service function. On Google+, on the other hand, there are photo albums of the latest collections, contest announcements, and videos from launch parties. Some of these links have been posted on Twitter but are lost in the midst of replies and retweets. Users don’t need to follow the brand account to get the most out of great customer service on Twitter.

On the other hand, it’s far easier to look at a Google+ page and see the number of shares, +1s and comments a post has received. On Twitter, good luck trying to find all of the manual retweets or replies. The only thing you’re going to find with any ease are Twitter’s native retweets – and H&M isn’t getting any. The most recent posts on Google+ are getting between 40 to 70 +1s, 10 to 30 comments and around 10 shares.

The nature of Google+ is far more in line with what a brand may expect when it comes to interacting with users, and so should the real comparison here be with Facebook? If that’s the case, taking a look at Socialbakers’ figures, there really is no comparison. According to the BrightEdge report, “Google+ still has less than 1/100th the number of total consumers interacting with the top 100 brands that Facebook has.”

The fastest growing brand on Facebook, Angry Birds, gained a whopping 4 million new fans in one month. And looking at H&M’s own growth on Facebook, the page has added 730,000 fans in the past month, for a total of 9.9 million fans. As far as engagement is concerned, the numbers follow the same trend, with interaction with brands on Facebook far exceeding anything seen on their Google+ counterparts.