Archive for category Administrative

Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-08-08

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 8 August, 2010
  • Searched Google for Canberra Times weather. Third result? Canberra Raiders. Yes, footy is for all types of Canberra weather… #
  • Just a reminder about @rccamp Canberra bit.ly/9efdJO Please attend. :D #rcc uc #
  • Retooled my non-wikified version of resume a bit. It still doesn't look right. Meep. #
  • Out of town next week. Lots of stuff going on that I'm going to miss. :/ Still: Vacation! Yay! Not learning as much? Boo. #
  • AFL sentiment by location: Where are fans the happiest and saddest? : bit.ly/bc715c #afl #twitter #sentimentanalysis #

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-08-01

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 1 August, 2010
  • Been playing with Twitter #ausvotes election data all morning. Painful. If doing map, will take more than a day to fix. :( #
  • Alexa rank for Australian leagues and clubs: bit.ly/94mO4H #afl #nrl #a league #
  • Most popular Australian clubs and teams on Twitter : bit.ly/bSmc0x #
  • Also, is there an AFL or NRL player more popular than @LoteTuqiri ? Confused as to why he's so popular… #
  • Most popular #AFL and 3NRL teams on Facebook : bit.ly/bIXQUV #
  • Interesting on that list: Anti-Richmond group most popular AFL club related page. AFL #1 Queensland Maroons #2 Socceroos #3 Broncos #4 #
  • Super productive! I've written 150 words on my methodology section today. :D #

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-07-25

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 25 July, 2010
  • RT @BrianGainor: 40 Ways Sports Teams Can Utilize @Foursquare ow.ly/2d4AX #Sports20 #
  • Australian elections: The geography of Twitter: bit.ly/cp6cdi #
  • Use of #ausvotes appears to have peaked last night around 7pm: bit.ly/a7xJT0 So right before #masterchef :) #
  • youtu.be/WOveCFQ1WFk The extent of my ability to make animated movies. Should be titled: "Swans can't play AFL footy." #
  • RT @anthonyalsop Looking Back at Digital Sport Summit – 5 key learnings bit.ly/b7K8Y7 #dss10 #
  • Been sitting on it since June, posting now: Impact of Akermanis’s Comments on the Western Bulldogs’s Fanbase bit.ly/bbHR2K #
  • I problematically switch between @purplepopple and @ozziesport as I treat each like its own filter and get confused with replies. #
  • I think I found a tool which should make it easier for me to get a list of locations of where people follow an account are from. #
  • Though ug. :( Limit of 100 people. :/ #
  • Not sure how useful sentiment analysis would be for sport… Lots of neutral reporting or views buried inside links. #
  • I have about 3,000 AFL related tweets saved. Would love to share with some one who will write an interesting analysis for me to read. :) #
  • I feel like I could almost make a sentiment analysis map re:AFL footy. Just would take a bunch of days and don't have enough tweets. #
  • Rather than do what I'm supposed to do, I'm making a sentiment analysis map of AFL related tweets. #
  • Is it the nature of sport to have more happy words than sad words? #
  • AFL fan community sentiment: Are fans happy or sad? bit.ly/d7Jc50 #

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Australian elections: The geography of Twitter

Posted by Laura on Monday, 19 July, 2010

I wanted to create a map of where people who were following Australian political candidates and/or tweeting about the Australian elections were living. I’ve been getting similar data for Australian sport teams and this feels like a natural extension. I’m not doing an analysis of this data and these maps because while I feel I know enough about Australian sport to draw conclusions, I don’t feel comfortable with Australian politics. If some one else wants to do that or use my raw data, please feel free.

Just as a caveat, this is a limited data set that was collected on the morning of July 19, 2010. I used a tool to mine this and the amount of data included was based on what that tool gave me.

Data Collection Methodology

  1. Identify the major candidates in the Australian elections on Twitter (Tony Abbot, Bob Brown, Julia Gillard) and some of the more popular search phrases and hash tags used by Twitter users (#alp vote, #aus2010, #ausvotes, #laborfail, #myliberal, #nocleanfeed , #qanda, Abbott-Gillard, asylum boat, Gillard, Greens Canberra, Krudd Labor, Labor Liberals, Rudd Liberals, Tony Abbott, Truss LNP, Warren Truss, WorkChoices)
  2. Go to http://www.searchtastic.com/ , run a search for those phrases and accounts. Export results to an Excel spread sheet. (Total tweets picked up: 27,506)
  3. Create a new sheet. Copy and paste only those Tweets by people that list a location. (Total tweets included: 26,198)
  4. Using location information from profiles, try to determine the city, state, country that the person lives in. Example: Melbourne = Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. ChiTown = Chicago, Illinois, United States. Brizzy = Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. 32.38504,-83.647406 = Perry, Georgia, United States. Oz = Australia.



View full map

Methodology: Gillard, Abbot, Brown, Truss

  1. On Excel, turn AutoFilter on.
  2. Filter the Tweet column to contain one of the following terms: Gillard, Abbot, Brown, Truss
  3. Copy and paste the City, State, Country columns to a new worksheet. Select those columns on the new worksheet.
  4. Sort data by city. Remove all locations that do not include City information.
  5. Go to Advance Filter. Copy the Unique Records to Another Location.
  6. Using a COUNTIF formula, count the number of tweets that mentioned the term by city.
  7. Go to http://www.batchgeo.com/ and copy paste the city, state, column, count in the box for step 1. Click on the Map Now button.
  8. When Geocoder is finished running, select the Show Geocode button, and copy and paste that data to an Excel worksheet. Save each politician’s tweet references on its own CSV file.
  9. Go to http://finder.geocommons.com/ and import each csv file. Finish processing each file using latitude and longitude coordinates.

Go to http://maker.geocommons.com/ and create one map for all four politicians. Use visual theme, sizes.

Please note this map is based on total tweets by location. It is not total individuals who tweeted with the selected keyword.



View full map

Methodology: Labor, Liberals, Greens, National Party
This methodology is a repeat of the previous except the names of the politicians are replaced with the names of the parties.



View full map

Methodology: Education, Work Choices, Asylum
This methodology is a repeat of the previous except the keywords are: Education OR Schools, Work Choices OR WorkChoices, Immigrant OR Asylum, NTB or Broadband, Environment OR Global Warming, Health OR Doctor, Afghanistan OR Diggers.

Other: Follows
I’m planning on adding two maps to this post tomorrow. One shows the location of followers for Tony Abbott, Julia Gillard and Bob Brown. The other map will include location of tweets relating to certain issues.

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-07-18

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 18 July, 2010
  • Digital Sport Summit: Nick Marvin, Alana Fisher, Panel Discussion : bit.ly/92gwUc #dss10 #
  • Digital Sport Summit: Harry O’Brien: bit.ly/9TocdK #dss10 #
  • Social Media Middlemen: The Missing Link Between Brands and Consumers: bit.ly/9dMC5B Great read. Written by Dachis Group. #
  • Why does act4gws.com.au rank on Alexa in India but not rank in Australia? :/ #gws #
  • Ooooh! An excuse not to work on my methodology section. #
  • Or yay! Let's celebrate being off task! (or rather, on task on something not involving writing my thesis.) #
  • I need to stop sending e-mails from one account and then sending replies from another. #
  • Methodology: Draft/Free writing (part 1): bit.ly/axge0z #
  • I cannot get ACT 4 GWS to show up on a Facebook search… This is weird. #gws #
  • A map of Team GWS on Facebook: bit.ly/a4Il3E #teamgws #afl #
  • Fun to read about other people's experiences with culture shock and Ikea shopping abroad: bit.ly/cnMwRf #
  • In the process of putting together a map of where #teamgws fans on Twitter are from, & it isn't Greater Western Sydney. #
  • #ucniss #ucvuvu no wireless signal. Ustream coverage up by the end of the day. #worldcup #
  • Twitter and Facebook have different geographic audiences for Team GWS: bit.ly/d7CLPr begins to give an idea of where. #
  • bit.ly/q7qf0 is an awesome Twitter tool. Not a complete data set but easier to get location out of it than other methods. #
  • Do people respect the @westernbulldogs more for being willing to lose by not allowing Jason Akermanis to play? #
  • I like to spend 2 to 3 days putting a packet together before speaking to a team. Spent less than 1 for team meeting with today. Embarrassed #
  • So many things to do but I really want to create a map of tweet locations for AFL teams: Where do people live that mention specific teams? #
  • An hour talking to the AFL people in Canberra! Loads of fun. :) live talking sport and social media. #
  • Tomorrow, when not doing @rccamp organzing, doing that AFL Tweet reference geo map because now I wants to know. To know a lot. Cause data! #
  • It looks like Argentinians tweeted more about that Boca Juniors game vs. Melbourne Victory than Australians. #
  • So any Aussies have polis come to your door yet? Green party rep dropped by during the St. Kilda match. #
  • AFL team related Tweets by location: bit.ly/cGjjNY #gosaints #geelongcats #melbournedemons #afc #brisbanelions #carlton #

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Methodology: Draft/Free writing (part 1)

Posted by Laura on Tuesday, 13 July, 2010

One of the ways I learn best is by talking through a problem.  I compare and contrast things.  I ask people their opinions.  I read things to people.  I get into in depth conversations about practices.  I ask questions.   Write now, I’m in the process of writing my methodology.  At this point, I feel like what I’m really doing trying to outline the current practices in social media research, explaining how they are done and giving examples.  Once that is done, I can justify using a population study as the analysis process to help answer my research question and then go into a bit more depth regarding that.  Outlining the available methods seems important because the processes can be a bit different than traditional sociology methods.  Or at least, it feels that way.  This will be updated as I go along.  How often that happens depends on my motivation to write.

Methodology

When conducting social media research, there are ten general methods that can be used to gather and analyze data.  These are:

1. Individual case studies for how a business uses social media and the web,
2. Search and traffic analytics analysis,
3. Sentiment analysis and reputation management,
4. Content analysis,
5. Usability studies,
6. Interaction and collaboration analysis,
7. Relationship analysis to try to determine how people interact and to identify key influencers, and
8. Population studies
9. Online target analysis of behavior and psychographics,
10. Predictive analysis.

Each of these methods offers insights into various aspects of the web and its population.  The type of analysis used is often specific to the purpose of the research, involved blended approaches from traditional analysis types, and different methods are often used in conjunction with each other.  These methods often blend quantitative and qualitative analysis.  Choosing the correct method of gathering analyzing data can be one of the biggest hurdles for being able to measure ROI and understand how a community works.
This section will provide a brief summary of each type, explain how to conduct this type of research and give examples that used that methodology.

Predictive analysis
A search on 13 July 2010 on SPORTDiscus had three results for “predictive analysis.” A search on the same date on Scopus had 605 results, 275 of which were in engineering, 132 in computer science and 102 in medicine. Predictive analysis is probably one of the least used analysis methods, especially in social media and fandom.
What is predictive analysis?  At its simplest, it is identifying a future event or events, monitoring selection actions that precede the event and seeing if those events can be used to predict the outcome of similar events in the future.  If a predictive value is found, an organization can monitor behaviors to help make more informed decisions.
An example of this type of research is “Predicting the Future With Social Media” by Asur and Huberman (2010).  Their goal was to determine if tweet volume and sentiment on Twitter prior to a movie being released could be used to predict how well a movie performs at the box office.  Their methodology involved identifying movie wider release dates that took place on a Friday, creating a list of keyword searches related to those movies, and using the Twitter API to collect all tweets and aggregate date that mention those keywords over a three month time period.  The authors then compared the tweet volume to box office performance.  They concluded that social media “can be used to build a powerful model for predicting movie box-office revenue.” (Asur & Huberman, 2010)
This type of research can be used in conjunction with other methods.  It can be used along side a population study to see if certain actions will result in demographic changes.

References

Asur, S., & Huberman, B. A. (2010). Predicting the Future With Social Media. Social Computing Lab. Retrieved from http://www.hpl.hp.com/research/scl/papers/socialmedia/socialmedia.pdf



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Digital Sport Summit: Harry O’Brien

Posted by Laura on Monday, 12 July, 2010

Harry O’Brien; Footballer, Collingwood Magpies
This was a presentation I enjoyed even as I boggled.  Part of me is an extremely cynical American who on the face of it took parts of his talk to be: I’m all about promoting myself above anything.  The other part of me found him very genuine and thinking he probably did a lot of good work, promoted a lot of worthy causes and didn’t flaunt his efforts to make those charities about himself.  There was a RMIT journalism student sitting at my table who was a huge fan of O’Brien.  He asked O’Brien for his autograph and O’Brien was really nice about it.  If you get the chance to hear O’Brien speak on this topic, it is worth it.  He was asked to speak about social media from the athlete perspective.

  • Denying social media is denying the multitude. Social media is a vehicle for sharing the message that you want to share.
  • Why should athletes use social media? To share the message that you have. Harry was asked by Web Guru to contribute to the Collingwood site. This developed into his website, Harry’s World.
  • Social media can effect positive change.
  • If social media is good enough for Barack Obama and Julia Gillard, then it is good enough for him.
  • Harry did his first interview in December 2004 after he was drafted. He used the interview with The Age to share is ideas and beliefs. He stands for sharing hope through positivity.
  • Players complained to him about their privacy being violated. He thinks fans just want insight, glimpses into his life in a controlled manner.
  • People started uploading pictures of him all over Facebook. He ran out of friends. He was overwhelemed. Then he moved to Twitter. He now loves Twitter. Then he started his own website, which was his dream: Having people here what he has to say.
  • Social media is unfiltered. It gives you the essence of a person. He’ll always have insight into the Collingwood Football Club. He can share pictures, videos and eventually merchandise.
  • People want Harry to speak! Social media allows him to share his message.
  • Harry O’Brien doesn’t really follow sport stars on Twitter, but is aware of what they are doing. He has his own style and doew what he feels is right based on guidelines and a path.
  • People are made u of energy. Science has proven it.
  • Some one dated $50,000 to one of his charities after hearing about his work. He uses social media but he is not always aware of the real world impact of it.
  • Harry O’Brien doesn’t care about other players ranting about service they get. O’Brien studied sociology. Just because you’re a sport person and society values that, it doesn’t mean you should be treated special. You should be proactive, not negatively complaining about bad service.
  • O’Brien says football is his profession. Football is like the bait, so he can share his message. His football comments are so general that the club doesn’t have a problem with his activities. If the club wanted to use him more for inspiration, good luck to them as motivation should come from with in.

And that’s it. Those are all the presentations.

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Digital Sport Summit: Nick Marvin, Alana Fisher, Panel Discussion

Posted by Laura on Monday, 12 July, 2010

Alana Fisher; Manager, Digital and Social Media (FIFA World Cup Bid), Football Federation Australia
This was another one of those presentations that I really found insightful as it explained how an Australian sport organization handled it. I was also able to contrast it with two of the state bodies that I’ve some familiarity with from having talked to their W-League representatives. There were some numbers that were really impressive but then put into the context of membership appeared less so. This doesn’t appear to a problem unique to the FFA though as an AFL club representative said that when you looked at the number of people who fan/like the team and then hide them from their feed, it can be shockingly high. I just didn’t take that many notes for this session as some of the numbers were a rehash.

  • COI : Cost of Inactivity.
  • You need a community manager. Community managers deal with content and moderation.
  • They have over 160,000 people supporting their World Cup bid fan page.
  • They have around 100,000 fans for the Socceroos on Facebook.
  • They have a policy similar to that of Essendon regarding moderation.
  • A good post has 250 comments.
  • The coach decided to not allow players to use social media during the World Cup. FIFA also has their own guidelines for social media usage by players.

Nick Marvin; Chief Executive Officer, Perth Wildcats

I wasn’t expecting to take as many notes during this presentation as I did. The organization seems very on the ball with what they are doing. I really enjoyed this presentation.

  • Marvin is not a sport guy. It is not his background.
  • He has a sporting model based on the business model:

Top of triangle:
Member
Customer
Advocate
Fan
Prospect
Bottom of triangle.

  • Winning isn’t everything. Engagement and tribal belonging are more important.
  • Converting fans into paying customers: Specia deals on Twitter, discount codes. Target Perth Wildcat fans using e-mail.
  • 51% of Facebook fans are likely to buy. 67% of Twitter followers are likely to buy.
  • 35% of women are looking for deals online.
  • CRM to SCRM: Need to move that way.
  • Broad traditional media campaign is important to run but it is important to run that parallel to a social media and e-mail strategy.
  • Going through social media, it allows:

1) Real time,

2) Direct/No intermediaries,

3) More authentic,

4) Less noise,

5) More frequent, and

6) Appropriate length.

  • Social media allows real time feedback.
  • The Perth Wildcats players sign a contract with the team for ethical behavior and community work.
  • You need to monitor your brand.
  • BackType and Social Mentions are two tools to help you monitor your brand.
  • The Wildcats hire for character first. Character helps to build a brand.
  • The Perth Wildcats use social media to monitor staff welfare. One person who the CEO saw tweet about feeling ill he talked to and suggested they go home if they are not feeling well.

Panel discussion: Nick Marvin, Jonathan Simpson, Jeramie McPeek, Alana Fisher

This was interesting but not as much interaction between panelists as there could be. It was at times more of a dialog with the audience. Still, lots of interesting things to learn from the panel.

  • The Wildcats have increased their ticket prices 35% just to decrease the demand.
  • The AFL is watching the NBA is doing and checking their own policies for online broadcasts as it relates to radio/audio.
  • Steve Nash does his charity work quietly, without broadcasting it.
  • Essendon has the best merchandising sales in the AFL. Essendon has a good situation as many advertisers approach them directly to cut their own deals, unlike other clubs who are hamstrung by the Telstra deal.
  • Essendon encourages players not to look at comments. The club has talked with players about managing Facebook, and educating players in how to deal with social media.
  • The Suns get in contact with Twitter people when people impersonate players and management.
  • The AFLPA is working on snuffing out fake accounts on Facebook as they can be problematic.
  • The Perth Wildcats CEO sat down and talked to a player who was slagged in the blogosphere.

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Twitter Weekly Updates for 2010-07-11

Posted by Laura on Sunday, 11 July, 2010
  • Yay! Ticket situation sorted! Back through Yass, not Cootamundra. #
  • Anyone attending #dss10 want to do lunch or dinner tomorrow? I'm in Melbourne w/o much to do. #
  • Penguin time! Or why I stayed in st kilda. #
  • Au ikea inferior to USA. Makes me sad and homesick. #
  • An interview with Georgie Herbert from the Melbourne Victory of the W-League: bit.ly/aNogPx #
  • What is the tram to get to MCG? #dss10 ? #
  • #dss10 why lots of americansinterested in blogging monetization? My perspective? Awful economy. #
  • Totally loved meeting people at #dss10 ! Great event. Blog write up by Sunday. #
  • Back in Canberra. Tire from train trip and thinky thoughts. Must deal with e-mail and #dss10 follow up stuff tomorrow. #
  • Foursquare frustration: They decide to merge #worldcup venues during the quarter finals? #
  • World Cup, through quarter finals: #Foursquare and #gowalla checkin totals : bit.ly/axIAhq #worldcup #ger #esp #uru #ned #
  • Thought I had posted this earlier:Methodology for Measuring Monetary Value per Social Media Fan Interested in a Brand : bit.ly/93YGaq #
  • Ooooh. Facebok ads bit.ly/Pb9F now allow targeting by Aussie state! Yay! #
  • Digital Sport Summit: Awesome event! : bit.ly/aS7ptc #dss10 #
  • How big is the Loopt and Google Latitude community in Australia? #
  • Neither Google Latitude nor Loopt allow for any data collection to monitor patterns. Boo. :( #
  • Digital Sport Summit: Ed Wyatt and Jeramie McPeek : bit.ly/b1zpZK #dss10 #
  • RT @AussieDiamonds: Netball CEO's take on coverage of women's sport bit.ly/a3p2La #
  • Open Data Pointers from the Pitch by Allie Perez : bit.ly/bxmWtO #
  • What I should do is drop @fandomnews and basically do a sport only version on ozziesport.com . #
  • Digital Sport Summit: Jonathan Simpson, Anthony Harrison, Peter Jakulovski, Finn Bradshaw, Darren Rowse : bit.ly/dr8cpH #dss10 #
  • 7 more pages of notes. I think I'll put this off to tomorrow. Feel good getting the notes I did typed up. #
  • On my Foursquare WC checkin ladder, Uruguay fell to second behind Ghana. Germany average dropped but not enough to effect rank. #

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Digital Sport Summit: Jonathan Simpson, Anthony Harrison, Peter Jakulovski, Finn Bradshaw, Darren Rowse

Posted by Laura on Saturday, 10 July, 2010

Jonathan Simpson; Digital Marketing Director, Essendon Football Club

I was really keen to hear from an AFL team about how they handled social media and fan engagement as this pertains to my research topic. It was one of the three presentations that I found most useful.

  • Social media needs to be a long-term strategy. Essendon created an action learning group specifically to address this issue.
  • Essendon has a virtual connection strategy group and a match day engage action learning group. Match day engagement was important considering the issue of venue sharing.
  • People need to be able to be multilingual, be able to explain ROI, know how to speak to and listen to fans. They need to be able to explain these issues to different audiences.
  • Essendon has 60,000 Facebook fans. Essendon has a department of Fan Develop. They brought in all the departments in the club and explained what this meant to them in order to get a corporate buy in across the system.
  • Essendon has been about allowing fans to follow them on the platform of their choice. That can be Facebook, Twitter, etc.
  • Social media is 24/7. You’ve got to be on it at all times. It gives voice to fans and as a member of a sport organization, you need to understand why this is important, why you’re doing that. It is a great opportunity to get feedback from fans.
  • You have to make money with social media and the web. It isn’t just about money though. It is about building sustainable long-term transactions and relationships with fans.
  • Facebook contests: Try to run them. Include forms for people to fill out. Use the data from Facebook contests to monetize the data.
  • Essendon has used Google Ad Words. It has an advantage that the results are trackable and much easier to manage in terms of ROI.
  • Essendon is the only team with an independent website.
  • The team has worked on trying to make it their multiteam stadium more personal and dedicated to their team. They do need an offline presence as community development works hand in hand with fan development.
  • In order to do social media in sport, you’ve got to love what you do.
  • Just get out there and do it. Roll with it. Try new things and measure the ROI. Then continue with what works.
  • Essendon was big with developing fan strategy.
  • 6 or 7 people worked on the development team.
  • Social media needs to be more than just press releases.
  • Essendon shut down the Facebook fan page that was run by a fan. They had repeatedly try to contact the fan but they did not get a response. They felt that they had no choice but to take it over in the best interest of their fans.
  • Attempts at selling merchandise on Facebook have not been that successful.

    Anthony Harrison; Digital Marketing Manager, Cricket Victoria
    To be honest, I wasn’t that interested in mobile content and Harrison’s presentation. I can’t really get population data off of most of it. I can’t really track growth. It just doesn’t connect as much with what my interests are, except as platforms connect with places where I can get data.

  • There is 115% mobile penetration in Australia: People often have multiple phones.
  • There is 80% Internet penetration in Australia.
  • The Bushrangers find it a struggle in the Melbourne Market as it is really footy centric.
  • It is important to know your customer.

    Peter Jakulovski; Managing Director, AFL Dream Team
    This presentation was more interesting than the one on mobile content. I’ve just found it problematic at time to mine data from these types of sites and interest in fantasy football isn’t something I’ve always found translates into interest in a team. So for this speech, more notes than the last one but still not that many.

  • 350,000 people are playing in the AFL Super Coach Fantasy Football League.
  • They play in head to had leagues, based on salary caps. Fans do not play using a draft style.
  • 32.5% play fantasy sports to socialize with like minded sport fans.
  • 52.3% play to compete.
  • Fantasy sport fans are male.
  • 26% of players are under 18.
  • Fantasy sports is expanding to mobile platforms.
  • Two of the major fansites for fantasy AFL are fanfooty.com.au and dreamteamtalk.com.
  • Fans love interaction. They’ve been really successful with their iPhone application, which they sell for $3.99.
  • Super Coach and Dream Team can co-exist.
  • Finn Bradshaw; Chief Online Editor Sport and Racing, Herald Sun
    This was a really interesting presentation from the perspective of a company that is trying to monetize interest in sport for their own purposes.

  • One guy originally looked after the Herald Sun and Super Footy websites. The attitude since the early website days has really changed.
  • Herald Sun sport are trying to get its reporters on Twitter and other social media sites.
  • Is technology killing newspapers? No. In the past, this may have been more true but not any more.
  • Super Footy gets 50% more traffic than the Age. Some of this is because people who are working for Super Footy really support the site.
  • For journalists, it really is about getting validity. Social media and the web can spread that along. Breaking news can be on a site quickly, as fast as 10 minutes.
  • Management needs to equip journalists with thick skins. 98% of people are nice but 2% are hugely problematic. Expectations need to be managed.
  • Break news and credibility are one thing that newspapers are good for. They are also good for a newspaper’s traffic.
  • You can’t sell your stories hard enough! Let users know what is there and why it is exciting.
  • Herald Sun traffic is growing.
  • WSJ has like a million subscribers.
  • Backing your own brand is very important.
  • US provides more opinion in the sport pages. Australia provides more information on players. The AFL gives more player access.
  • If teams/clubs can engineer unique content ideas, then the media may pick it up if they think the story can become viral. This is something important for smaller clubs and leagues in bigger, more congested media markets to realize.

    Darren Rowse; Pro Blogger
    A lot of this presentation was about monetization. When I went through my “Let me try to make Fan History into a legit start up!” phase, I learned a lot about this sort of thing. As a result, it felt like a lot of a rehash. Added to that, I found it a bit generic and not that applicable to most sport organizations. People I talked to really found it helpful though so my perspective may just be a bit jaded.

  • You don’t need credentials to be a blogger.
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