barack obama

Top online media stories of 2008

What were the top online media stories of the year? As 2008 draws to a close, here’s our take on the top five trends to which AIMGroup readers should be paying attention (inspired by a post on the MediaShift blog).

1. Barack Obama and social media

There’s no question that the entire game has been changed in terms of how political campaigns will be conducted in the future. Barack Obama’s use of MySpace and Facebook (where he amassed 3.5 million supporters, far more than Facebook’s 5,000 friends limit) helped get younger voters involved. His custom social network MyBarackObama.com further demonstrated the President-elect’s understanding of new media.

Already copycats have sprung up around the world. In Israel, for example, with national elections coming up in February, Likud-leader Benjamin Netanyahu copied Obama’s Web site nearly pixel for pixel. And the right wing religious Shas party has plastered “Yes we can” (in Hebrew) posters on buses across the country.

2. Print newspapers crater, push readers online

We’ve reported extensively how the print side of newspapers are in big trouble, from The Christian Science Monitor to the Detroit metro papers, all pushing readers online. Newspapers still haven’t gotten their online acts together yet (see our story about the need to add more niche social networking mini-sites), but with the advertising crunch, the more innovative papers will be poised for success.

3. Twitter becomes an important news source

Twitter has been much bemoaned by newspapers who don’t yet see the appeal of the obsessive micro-blogging community. But increasingly, Twitter is scooping mainstream journalism. The terrorist attacks in Mumbai are the best most recent example. AIMGroup staff comb Twitter daily for reports from our favorite tech and social media writers. Newspapers need to get on Twitter immediately to disseminate news and push their authority in the new media.

4. Recession speeds ad moves online

Advertising was already increasingly moving online. The recession is only speeding that trend. There are different predictions on online spend in 2009. EMarketer analyst David Hallerman says total U.S. Internet ad spending will increase to $25.7 billion in 2009, an 8.9 percent growth rate and more than all other types of media. Online video ad spending, he adds, will rise 45 percent in to reach $850 million in 2009. Zenith Optimedia puts online advertising worldwide up 18 percent next year.

5. New models for newspapers and journalists

As newspapers face increasingly tougher times, several interesting alternative models have cropped up. VoiceofSanDiego and MinnPost tried to raise funds by following a non-profit donation model. Spot.us (covered by us here) launched to support freelance journalists with “crowdfunding” micro-donations. Can newspapers jump on the alternative bandwagon?

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New Facebook feature could boost Google ranking big time

Facebook has quietly launched a new feature that has the potential to significantly increase the page rank data that Google uses to track Web sites, potentially resulting in much higher placement during searches on Google for Facebook members and marketers.

The change was a simple one. Google searches Facebook’s “public listings” which up until now included a user’s name, profile picture, network and a few friends photos. Facebook has now added “pages” of which a user is a fan.

What that means in practical terms is that if a user is a fan of The Gap, U2 or Barack Obama, for example, that information is now a part of the user’s public listing. That in turn results in more links to the manufacturer or organization’s Facebook fan page which is what leads to more prominent placement in Google.

Here’s how that’s played out so far: The Gap’s Facebook Page just scored 12,000 new links, 188,000 links came in to U2, and a whopping 3,100,000 internal links lead to Obama’s Facebook Page.

Facebook describes the update to users as a way to make it easier for friends to find you in search results, but clearly it’s the marketers who will reap the true benefits.

Considering that Facebook turned on links to fan pages from about 120 million profile page public listings, the number of new internal links is estimated to have increased in the hundreds of millions.

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Yahoo, IAC execs on presidential transition team

Two execs from the world of interactive media are on the lineup for President-elect Barack Obama’s Agency Review Teams, which is intended to gather data on all federal agencies and the White House in order to “make strategic policy, budgetary, and personnel decisions prior to the inauguration,” according to a note on Change.gov, Obama’s transition Web site.

Among the 13 individuals named to the Reviews Team Working Group is Louisa Terrell, who previously served as Vice President-elect Joe Biden’s deputy chief of staff, but is currently on leave from her position as senior director for Yahoo’s public policy office.

Also on the team: Julius Genachowski, a former IAC/InterActiveCorp executive who also served as Reed Hundt’s chief counsel during his tenure at the FCC.

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Latin America report …

Digital classifieds are growing in Latin America -- a mixed landscape of traditional media companies and intercontinental giants that are finding new opportunities.

The 64-page report, for sale here, is a compilation of analyses our clients have already received as recipients of Classified Intelligence Report.

(Clients can receive a copy for free -- just drop us a line.)

Gentle reminder…

Clients' passwords change with every PDF issue of Classified Intelligence Report -- basically, once every other Thursday. Look in your latest edition for the newest password.

Not a client yet? Drop us a line about becoming one.

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