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Beverly Macy

Beverly Macy

Posted: March 22, 2011 05:05 PM

Will Twitter Drive Social TV?


As of January 1, 2011, Twitter had reached nearly 200 million registered users who post an eye-popping 110 million tweets per day. And it turns out that a large portion of these tweets are about TV as it happens. Not bad for a 5-year-old.

In fact, Twitter has gone from goat to hero in a few short years. It wasn't long ago that Twitter was dismissed as frivolous, with people saying, "Who cares what you ate for dinner?"

Now Twitter -- and the power of real-time social media -- is feeding the headlines and stories of worldwide news outlets. On NBC's Dateline last week it was reported that the Japanese tsunami and earthquake coverage was 'supplemented' and even 'validated' by trending topics on Twitter.

Viewers are ferociously participating in the TV that matters to them in new ways as well. In May 2010, the MIT Technology Review said this about Social TV:

The viewership for live television broadcasts has generally been declining for years. But something surprising is happening: events such as the winter Olympics and the Grammys are drawing more viewers and more buzz. The rebound is happening at least in part because of new viewing habits: while people watch, they are using smart phones or laptops to swap texts, tweets, and status updates about celebrities, characters, and even commercials.

These real-time shared experiences may hold the secret to bringing back the 'must see TV' audiences the networks have lost over the last 15 years. Social viewing is the new campfire experience; the you-are-not-alone experience. It is the gravitational center that has the power to pull in 20, 30, or 100 million viewers to a single TV experience. Whether it's Dancing with the Stars, MTV's Jersey Shore, or the NCAA, or worldwide breaking news, people want to be connected by contributing to the story in real-time. An additional bonus, these real-time TV experiences can and do affect ratings.

Indeed, one of the hottest topics on tap today, Social TV is generating as much excitement as coupon sites, check-in apps, and mobile pay architecture. After all, there's a $90+ billion pot of advertising gold at the end of the TV rainbow that tech companies, social media firms, TV hardware companies, mobile carriers, and everyone else under the sun would like to get their hands on.

Companies and brands that understand and leverage the real-time social media openstream will be the winners. Viewers are using social media to connect with the TV that matters to them. Then, as the MIT study shows, they are engaging in massive conversations around those shows. Learning to be a part of that conversation is still the sticking point for most networks.

It's an open field for the competition to harness this new market demand. Who takes home the pot of advertising gold? Will it be Twitter? Or will a new social architecture emerge that includes some combination of Twitter, coupons, shopping, mobile pay, and check-in apps? Stay tuned. The show has just begun.

Beverly Macy is the CEO of Gravity Summit, Inc. the Co-Author of The Power of Real-Time Social Media Marketing, published by Mc-Graw Hill in January, 2011. She also teaches Executive Global Marketing and Branding and Social Media Marketing for the UCLA Extension in Westwood, CA. Follow her on Twitter @beverlymacy; @PowerRTM; @GravitySummit or email her at beverlymacy@gmail.com

 

Follow Beverly Macy on Twitter: www.twitter.com/beverlymacy

 
 
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02:32 PM on 03/24/2011
From a UK perspective we have a new tv service coming out in 2012 called Youview. Its a project between several tv channels and companies including BBC, BT and ITV and combines on demand tv (iplayer, etc.) with real time tv. Social media is supposed to figure heavily in that with Internet connectivity.
04:59 PM on 03/23/2011
Timely post Beverly. There's an interesting market of social TV apps out there like Philo, TVMate and others trying to tap this opportunity by engaging people around shows, rewarding them with badges and offering special campaigns. What we see here is as technology becomes more device-aware (your TV recognizes your tablet or phone) and more people can actually afford these things; the social TV market will get way more in-tune. Kind of like a SAHM who would get a coupon sent to her phone because her phone knows she's looking for dinner recipes that night.
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Beverly Macy
Author, Speaker, CEO Gravity Summit LLC tm
08:09 PM on 03/23/2011
Love it! Are you working with clients currently in the Social TV space? would love to chat sometime!
02:34 PM on 03/23/2011
Great Article Beverly!
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Beverly Macy
Author, Speaker, CEO Gravity Summit LLC tm
03:31 PM on 03/23/2011
Thanks, Jeremy! That means alot coming from you :)
07:24 PM on 03/22/2011
Twitter turns 5 and I've only been on it for about a year now. Before, I saw twitter as a website where tweenagers would tell the world what they were doing every waking second - didn't care to know - but now, twitter has become one of the, if not THE most reliable source of up to date news. If I want to know the truth about a new issue, I'll check twitter and there will be hundreds of tweets producing links to multiple sources of information, eventually revealing the truth. It's a revelation in social media and news media, combining more entertainment mediums than ever. It will be interesting to see the convergence of social media and television, like @beverlymacy says... "The show has just begun".
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Beverly Macy
Author, Speaker, CEO Gravity Summit LLC tm
11:47 PM on 03/22/2011
t wiese
Thanks for your comment! What's your twitter handle and I'll follow you...