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New Niche App for Sharing Love of Food: Foodspotting (#Tourism)

28 Sep

Foodspotting
Apps like Yelp and Foursquare let you take pictures and leave reviews at restaurants, but unlike those and other apps, Foodspotting is completely devoted to food and pictures of food. Like many other apps, you can hook Foodspotting up with your Facebook and Twitter accounts and start following friends through there, but where Foodspotting really differs (and really shines) is in the ability for you to follow not just friends, but places (specific restaurants) or foods you love (pizza, burgers, etc.). Think about that for a minute – you can follow specific foods through Foodspotting. If your favorite food in the world is a breaded tenderloin pork sandwich (if that’s true, then you really need to come to Indiana) you can follow tenderloin sandwiches and find the places near you that have the best ones.

Also, similar to the way Gowalla allows users to create Guides, Foodspotting also lets users to create Guides like Taste the Vintage in Bucks County - created by the Bucks County Conference and Visitors Bureau. This particular guide looks great on both the mobile app and on the website and it details some great wineries throughout the county. As a bonus, you earn a badge once you visit all the wineries within the Guide.

As a tourism office, you’re in the unique position to be the curator for great food in your area. Like Bucks County did, you could created Guides for great wine, great burgers, great ethnic food or anything else food-related for visitors and residents to complete and add to. The more people that jump on the platform and add their favorite foods, the more useful and robust the app will become.

Check out the screenshots below for examples of the Footspotting mobile app (Foodspotting is now available for iPhone/iPod TouchWindows Mobile and Android devices right now – a Blackberry app is coming soon). Have you used Foodspotting before?

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Interview: Troy Thompson of Travel 2.0

3 Sep

Travel 2.0

Welcome to our series of interviews with local (and sometimes national) leaders in the social media and technology industry that will be featured on Social Mediarology. Today’s interview is with Troy Thompson of Travel 2.0, a Denver-based blog and digital consulting company focused on the travel and tourism industry

Travel2dot0.com
@Travel2dot0

Troy Thompson – Travel 2.0

Troy ThompsonTroy has been involved in interactive marketing for the past 13 years. After starting his career at NASCAR in Florida, he was integral in launching their interactive department in the late ’90s. After nearly a decade with NASCAR, Troy moved to Arizona to become the Advertising Manager for the Arizona Office of Tourism. During his time at AOT, Troy headed up the social media division and recently moved to Denver to manage Visit Denver‘s interactive marketing department, including social media, mobile, SEO and more. Earlier this year he decided to break out on his own and dive into tourism technology consulting.

The Travel 2.0 blog started while Troy worked for Arizona Tourism as regular email updates about interactive marketing to the AOT staff and quickly evolved into a blog that could reach people far beyond the Arizona Office of Tourism. Now, thousands of people throughout the world read the Travel 2.0 blog each week and Troy is considered a thought leader in the interactive travel and tourism community.

The consulting arm of Travel 2.0 launched in June, 2010 and focuses on social media strategy/social media audits, mobile strategy including iPhone applications, statistical analysis, training and tourism marketing plan development.

What are some current and upcoming trends in the travel industry as it relates to technology?

The two trends we’re in right now that are still progressing are mobile and location based services (LBS). They certainly go hand in hand, but mobile feels a lot like it did in the late ’90s and early 2000s, when everyone realized the web wasn’t going away so they started to shift more budget and create functional websites. I see this a lot within the mobile space. It’s following a very similar pattern where people are saying “I think this mobile thing is going to stick around, I think the iPhone is going to be a solid platform to build on” and they’re shifting some dollars over to address that need. The challenge is that you don’t want to fall into the same trap we all did when we built our first websites – looking for the cheaper option, just doing the basics and not thinking long term. I think a lot of us built a website in 10 years ago and have had to rebuild the site every couple of years, and I think we’re now getting to the point where people are thinking more long term and more strategically about what the site is and what it needs to be. I’m hopeful that we’ll start to take that same approach with mobile – thinking long term rather than short term. While I think there will be a lot of transition within the mobile space in the next decade or so, building a good base at the beginning will help set you up for success in the long run.

As far as location-based services go, Foursquare seems to be the media darling of LBS.

If 2009 was Twitter’s year, it’s fair to say that 2010 is shaping up to be the year of Foursquare. I think with the recent launch of Facebook Places, LBS’s will just become more important, particularly for the travel industry.

The fact that you’ll be able to have geographic information about your visitor while they’re in your area becomes very powerful. Right now, while the tools aren’t there to completely take advantage of that, those tools will surely come about soon. Taking advantage of a one-on-one communication with someone visiting your local Art Museum will be just as easy as setting up an email campaign or a Google Adwords campaign.

The final trend I’m seeing is tracking. It’s been the big demand of everyone, not just within the travel industry, but everyone who’s been involved in the mobile or social media field. How do we track all of these these things and connect the dots between websites, SEO, mobile marketing, social media marketing, and how do we get the accurate tracking to be able to quantify the ROI that we’re putting into these new spaces. I feel like that’s coming along. It depends on how much information the consumer wants to give out about themselves, but I think that’s an area where we’ll see some more big strides over the next two or three years.

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Interview: James Burnes of Mobiltopia

12 May

Mobiltopia LogoThis is the first in a new series of interviews with local leaders in the Social Media and Technology industry that will be featured on Social Mediarology. Today’s interview is with James Burnes of Mobiltopia, a mobile website and app company in Indianapolis.

Mobiltopia
317.426.0865
getstarted@mobiltopia.com
 

James Burnes – Mobiltopia

James Burnes has been working in the digital space for more than 13 years at various companies, including publicly-traded newspaper and television companies as well as private firms specializing in digital communications and development.

James recently launched Project Brilliant – a strategy and business incubator focused in digital space. Project Brilliant assists organizations in developing and planning strategies for utilizing internet technology to grow their business. The goal is to work with companies who need help and assistance putting digital plans in place and, in some cases, help launch those initiatives.

Mobiltopia is a venture launched by Project Brilliant that focuses on Mobile technology, websites, and apps for iPhone, Blackberry, Android and other smartphones.

Why Mobile?

For the last two years I’ve been watching very carefully as the digital space has evolved. We’ve seen a major shift to social media and a focus of businesses of all types to[ward] look[ing] at social media as a core marketing strategy. I identified fairly early on in my career that things change too quickly to just be focused on what everybody’s talking about right now, and to always spend a lot of time looking to what’s next; and mobile has been on my radar for the past two years.

About a year and a half ago, the focus on mobile really started coming to my attention, because I realized it was where social media had to go to be effective. Within the past six months I’ve watched the sale of smartphones grow at a rate that show that we will soon live in a world of screens. There was a definite need within the marketplace for there to be a company focused on specializing in mobile devices.

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Sharing, Retweeting and Mentions on Facebook and Twitter

19 Apr

Twitter and Facebook have changed the way that many of us communicate. Not only do we communicate with our friends and family differently now, but we consumer news and other media differently. We interact with current and potential customers differently. We get breaking news from Twitter and Facebook, not from the evening news. It’s because of this that it’s so important to know how to best share that information. Twitter and Facebook are the two largest social media sites in the country and each site has created simple ways to communicate important information with your friends or people who follow you.

Sharing on Twitter: Retweeting

On Twitter, there are a few different ways to share, or Retweet, information. The first way to do it is through what I’ll call the “classic retweet.” Seen below, the “classic retweet” simply consists of copying and pasting the message that someone else posted, and adding an “RT @username” to the beginning of the message to let people know you’re sharing someone else’s message. In this case, both @VisitIndy posted the message and @TCMIndy retweeted it before we did:

Twitter Classic Retweet

This “classic retweet” has been around nearly as long as Twitter has and was a practice that grew organically from Twitter’s users. Recently, Twitter implemented an official Retweet function, seen in the image below:

You can see the underlined Retweet link in the image above. If you wanted to retweet the message that @ThisIsIndiana posted, simply click on the Retweet icon and you’ll share that message with your followers.

You can see the Retweet icon () next to the status update. In this case, @VisitBtown clicked on the Retweet link to share @IIB‘s message with their followers.

However you choose to share information on Twitter, retweeting is a useful way to share important updates with your followers. You can use these retweeting techniques to spread the word about different events going on in your area, sales going on at local establishments or state-wide promotions to help inform your followers about what they can see and do in Indiana.

Sharing on Facebook: Shares and Mentions

Sharing information on Facebook isn’t always as easy as clicking a Retweet button and being done, but in some cases, it can be!

If you like Visit Indiana on Facebook (see Quick Update below), you can easily share any of our photos, blog posts, links and anything else that has the share link as seen below:

When you click on the share link, you’ll be presented with an overlay window like the one seen below. You can then insert your own message and when you click the Share button, the message and link/image/post you shared will show up on your wall.

Sharing content in this way is extremely easy and can dramatically increase the reach of your content. Once your page has 10,000 fans (I know, that’s a lot of fans!) you’ll be able to see detailed sharing statistics in addition to the information you can currently view with Facebook Insights.

One last feature I’ll talk about is the use of Facebook Mentions. Similar to the way you can mention @VisitIndiana in your tweets on Twitter, you can also now mention people you are friends with or organizations you like through Facebook.

Quick update – Right when I was in the middle of writing this post, Facebook changed the way they refer to organizations’ fans. From now on, you can “Like” pages rather than become “A Fan”. This appears to be merely a semantic difference, but we’ll start referring to our fans as people who “like Visit Indiana”. For consistency’s sake, we’ll also refer to “Fan Pages” as simply “Pages”

In the image below, you can see I mentioned both Tastings Indianapolis and Conrad Indianapolis. This message was posted on our Visit Indiana Page, but since it mentioned Tastings and the Conrad, it also showed up on each of their pages! This is a great way to spread the word from your official page, rather than from your personal profile.

The only caveat here is that in order to mention an organization, you have to personally “like” their page. In other words, if you manage the Madison Indiana Facebook Fan Page, buy you haven’t personally “liked” the Visit Indiana Fan Page yet, you won’t be able to mention us.

It’s really easy to mention another organization or person in your status updates. Simply type the @ symbol then start typing the name of the person or page and a list will pop up for you of all people you’re friends with and all pages that you “like”. You can see in the status update below that it’s very easy to include mentions in your Facebook status updates.

It’s really easy to share information via Twitter and Facebook and these techniques will give you even more flexibility to share the information you want with the people you want.

Bing to Integrate Foursquare Data into Maps

25 Mar

Microsoft just announced that Bing Maps is undergoing a spate of upgrades this spring. Among the most exciting for those in the tourism industry is Bing’s optional Foursquare layer. It seems that much like FourWhere, which I talked about in my last post, the Foursquare layer of Bing Maps will provide the user with real-time data that will allow you to see user’s tips as well as “who has unlocked specific badges, where and who has been crowned mayor of certain locations making it easier to explore any city in the world as if you were a local” (Bing.com).

Bing Maps with Foursquare Integration

While the Foursquare App isn’t live for everyone just yet, you can visit Maps.Bing.com and click on the Map Apps button (If you can’t see the button, click on Try It Now within the Explore the new Bing Maps button on the left side of the page) and load up their Twitter App to get a feel for how the Foursquare App will work. This kind of integration of location and user generated content is invaluable for tourism. Imagine you’re planning a trip to the Seattle’s Queen Anne neighborhood; simply point your browser to Bing Maps, load up the Foursquare App and you can plan your trip confident that you’re getting suggestions from the people who frequent the attractions, hotels and restaurants in the area.

Location, Location, Location…

22 Mar

Foursquare

It’s common knowledge that the three basic rules of real estate are location, location, location. You can have the most beautiful house in the world, but if  it’s located in a bad area of town, it won’t be worth nearly as much as it would if it were beachfront property.

Social media, and the web in general, has been slowly moving toward being more location focused for the past few years. Hop over to Google for a second and type in food and you’ll be presented with a map of restaurants in your area. Google is able to tell your general location based on the IP address of your computer. With the recent proliferation of iPhones, Blackberrys and other internet-connected mobile devices, location will only become more and more important in social media.

In addition to Google, big social media sites like Twitter and Facebook are adding location-aware code to their sites that allow you to let your followers know where you’re sending your updates from. To be honest, I think they’re trying to catch up with newcomers Gowalla and Foursquare. Gowalla is similar to Foursquare, but I’ll stick with the latter in this post.

Foursquare started out in March of ’09 as a game of sorts in several US cities. Users would create accounts and “check in” at different locations around town. Users would earn points and badges with each check in and if they had more check ins than anyone else at a particular location, they would become the “Mayor” of that place.

Foursquare offers users a great way to let their friends know where they are right now. One great example of how this information can be used is to take a look at this year’s South By Southwest (SXSW) music, film and technology festival that just wrapped up in Austin, TX. The festival has been going on for decades and in the past, several big-name bands would play secret shows, using an alias. In the past, the only way to even attempt to catch the big-name band was to check out some of the lesser known bands, but you’d never know for sure if you’d find that secret show or not. With the advent of Foursquare, people started posting immediately where they were when a secret show broke out. They were also able to let their friends know if a particular show, film or session was worth dropping in on. This immediate feedback provides users with so many more choices now.

While it began as a game, Foursquare has some amazing business uses, especially for the tourism industry. Foursquare encourages you to leave a tip when you check in at a location. For example, Julie checked in at the Hilbert Circle Theatre in Indianapolis and left a tip for where to park: “Park in Express Park on Market & Penn and follow signs through the garage to go in the back entrance of the theatre.” If you were visiting Indianapolis, isn’t that the kind of inside information you’d love to know about the theater? You’d never find that information on the theater’s website.

One of the best uses I’ve seen for Foursquare in tourism is FourWhere.com. Click the image below for a larger version or visit the site and search around for tips about attractions, restaurants, lodging facilities and more in your area. Most of the Foursquare data is larger cities, but more information is coming to smaller cities and towns as more people start using Foursquare. Just think if you integrated an app like this into your website’s map. Not only will you allow users to find driving directions to your attraction or city, but you’ll be able to give them real, unvarnished tips from people who actually visit those locations. Think of it as a mix of TripAdvisor and Twitter.

FourWhere, a mashup of Google Maps and Foursquare

You can create a Foursquare business account that allows you to offer users deals and special discounts for checking in at your location. Foursquare has a business page that shows all companies that are running “Mayor discounts”. Simply put, if you’re the “mayor” of one of these business, they’ll give you something special. For example, Pizzology – a gourmet pizza restaurant in Carmel, IN has a deal where the mayor gets a free pizza and the Carrabba’s Italian Grill in Mishawaka, IN  gives their mayor a complimentary dessert with the purchase of an entree. These deals don’t cost a lot of money, but they give incentives to customers to keep coming back! These types of incentives will only become more popular as more people start using Foursquare and other location-based applications.

The potential business uses for Foursquare and other location-based applications is nearly limitless and while they haven’t hit he mainstream yet, I wouldn’t recommend waiting too long before embracing these technologies. Even if Foursquare and Gowalla aren’t around in 5 years, the geolocation principals that they are built upon will be an important part of web marketing in the months and years too come.

Have you started using Foursquare for your business? Do you think this location-based trend has legs?

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