Bookmarked (in a real book)

Social-Media-Metrics-186x300I was thrilled to discover that a 2008 post from this blog about using delicious.com as a PR measurement tool found its way into a new book about measurement: Social Media Metrics: How to Measure and Optimize Your Marketing Investment, by Jim Sterne. (Mark Greenfield tipped me off to this fact. He just finished reading the book and promises to blog about how Sterne’s ideas apply to higher ed.)

Sterne cites my post in a section called “Are You Noteworthy?” In it, he discusses how organizations can use various social media bookmarking tools — Delicioius, Digg, StumbleUpon, Reddit, etc. — to measure aspects of their social media presence. “The metrics here are refreshingly simple,” he writes:

  • How many shared a link to your content?
  • How many links have been shared?
  • How many people clicked through to it in a given time span?

While I’m very honored that my post made it into Sterne’s book (and — from my PR guy perspective — happy to see our university named there), I’m also pretty surprised. Using Delicious in the manner described in that post was something we just stumbled upon (heh). Actually, a colleague, Mindy Limback (@limbackm), is the one who first suggested that we use Delicious as a sort of electronic clips report for media hits. We use it for that purpose to this day — more so than for measurement. Still, it’s a good measurement tool, and I’m glad Jim found that post noteworthy (and bookworthy).

College football: The political game-changer

go-team-pennant-cake-mainAs nasty and divisive as national politics has become lately, isn’t it refreshing to know there’s one thing political candidates can all agree on during this time of year?

I’m talking, of course, about college football.

No matter where politicians stand on political issues — or important policy issues such as funding for higher education — you can always count on them to root, root, root for the home team.

Here in my home state, the two candidates for the U.S. senate seat — Republican Roy Blunt and Democrat Robin Carnahan — are firmly on the same team when it comes to Missouri Tigers football, as evidenced by their recent rah-rah tweets on or just prior to today’s season opener against the University of Illinois.

Carnahan staked her claim to fandom first with this tweet on Friday:

@RobinCarnahan Enjoyed being on campus yesterday and meeting with talented faculty and staff at University of MO. Go Tigers!

But Blunt got on board earlier today with a pre-game tweet that even name-checked Ol’ Mizzou’s quarterback.

@RoyBlunt @BlaineGabbert returns to his hometown to make it 6 in a row. Go Tigers! #Mizzou

How refreshing to see politicians set aside the mud to cheer their state’s biggest football program on to victory. They stand side-by-side with thousands of other fans, many of them registered voters.

College football is indeed a political game-changer — at least on opening day.