Social Media

Start A Fire Helps You Take Credit When You Turn Stories Into Viral Hits

If you’re the kind of person who shares TechCrunch articles on social media, a) thank you, and b) do you ever wonder how much traffic you’re bringing us?

Oren Barzilai, co-founder and CEO of Israeli startup Start A Fire, presented a more-or-less analogous situation to me. He said that when someone who has tens of thousands of Twitter followers, they may “generate huge value” for the publisher when they share a story. Yet even if their tweet or Facebook post helps the piece go viral, “no one will ever know.”

Well, that’s not entirely true — there’s a kind of credit that comes if you get a lot of retweets or likes. But what about people who saw your post, then shared it on their own, and then people who shared after that, and so on?

That’s why Start A Fire has built a product that helps you take credit whenever a story gets shared from your initial post — all the way throughout your sharing lineage, if you will. It allows you to share custom links on social media and in your email newsletters. Then as that link gets passed around, a badge reading “Shared by YOUR NAME HERE” stays with it — so if you’re the original sharer who turned something into a viral hit, a lot more people will know.

Does that seem like a weird thing to take credit for? Well, it kind of is, but consider that curating news stories is something people have built businesses around. And, more relevant to Start A Fire’s strategy, consider the brand perspective: This kind of sharing can be important part of their content marketing strategy, giving consumers another reason to follow them on Twitter or Like their page on Facebook or subscribe to their newsletter.

 Customers can also insert their own content recommendations into that badge. Barzilai pitched this as an alternative to content recommendation widgets like Outbrain and Taboola — except that with Start A Fire, the recommendations are coming from someone who’s shared something that interested you. At least in theory, there’s a good chance those recommendations could be high-quality and somewhat related to what you’re already reading.Start A Fire also offers analytics about the success of each post and connects with social sharing/marketing services Buffer, HubSpot and Oktopost.

The startup says it’s already being used by 150 brands, including CB Insights, inVision, Sequoia Capital and OpenView Ventures. It’s currently in invite-only mode, but it’s accepting invite requests on its website.

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You can now connect Instagram to your Tinder profile

BY KARISSA BELL

Tinder

You may see a lot more information the next time you swipe right on Tinder.

User profiles on the dating app now include support for Instagram and more shared interests and mutual connections, the company revealed Wednesday. The update marks the first time the dating app known for its swipes has given user profiles a major overhaul since it launched.

 The goal of the changes is to make it easier for users to get to start conversations with potential matches, says Tinder’s president and cofounder Sean Rad.

“It will help you better understand who the person is that you’re talking to,” Rad told Mashable. “When you’re able to asses the degrees of separation between you and an individual it adds a lot of value in the form of context, trust and everything.”

Profiles with connected Instagram accounts will display the most recent 34 recent images, which also link to the main Instagram app. Notably, those with private Instagram accounts can also choose to display photos on their profiles without changing their Instagram privacy settings.

Tinder profile

The new Tinder profiles will connect with users’ Instagram accounts and display more shared interests and mutual friends.

The new profiles also display more information about the people you know. The app now shows what Rad calls “second degree connections,” or friends of friends with whom you have connections in common. Previously, the app only showed if you and a match had mutual friends but you can now see if a potential match may be in your wider social circle.

Tinder is also expanding profiles’ interests section so users can see all of a match’s interests, rather than just the ones you share with someone. The new profiles will appear for Tinder’s free and paid users, though the app may expand its premium features in the future.

Rad also said the company has already created an app for the Apple Watch, which will be “launching soon.” Rad said the wearable app will have much of the same functionality as the current mobile app but will have a few features specific to Apple’s wearable. Tinder already has an Android Wear version of its app, which includes a feature that notifies users when potential matches are nearby.

Twitter really doesn’t want its top users to share Instagram links anymore

Twitter has a message for its top users: Stop sharing Instagram links.

The social network sent out prompts Thursday to a batch of its high-profile users, nudging them not to tweet links to Instagram photos, and instead post photos directly through Twitter, according to a copy of the prompt obtained by Mashable.

 The prompt (screen grabs of which you can see, below) was sent out to a group of notable users in media, entertainment, sports and other categories, according to a source close to Twitter. That same source characterized the prompt as an educational effort to show the service’s celebrities and influential users how to use the native photo function to boost engagement.

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IMAGE: SCREENGRAB, MASHABLE

The move comes a little more than two years after Instagram first disabled support for displaying images in tweets, which was around the same time that Twitter introduced native photo-editing and filters. Since then, Instagram continued to increase in popularity, thanks in part to its acquisition by Facebook, and likely recently overtook Twitter in monthly active users.

Many Twitter users have continued to share links and screengrabs of their Instagram photos as a workaround, but certain celebrities simply tweet links to Instagram posts without any images:

Like Facebook, Twitter continues to push for more native multimedia content on site, with reported plans to launch a native video tool this year. With that in mind, it may be as good a time as any to make sure its most influential users set the right example by sharing photos natively.

Transform your Instagram photos into mini tattoos and pocket printed albums

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Skype for iPhone Adds Enhanced UI Improvements and Pre-Release Feedback Program

by Mitchel Broussard

Microsoft today announced the release of an updated version of its Skype iOS client app bringing a few tweaks to the dial pad and chat picker alongside a new pre-release feedback program.The first major user interface overhaul focuses on the dial pad, streamlining the process by automatically detecting matching numbers as soon as the user begins inputting a phone number. The update to the new chat picker further expedites the process of starting a chat or a call, letting users scroll through a quick list of their contacts, making them all a tap away from a video call or voice chat.

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Perhaps most interesting in the 5.9 update, however, is Microsoft’s introduction of the new pre-release program for the iOS Skype app. The company states it is currently looking for “enthusiastic Skype users” who can provide feedback on the chat program’s iOS app to “shape and enhance” the program in the future.

Those willing to sign up will gain access to early versions of Skype for iOS in the future, provided they agree to update the company with “regular feedback” as each update is rolled out to them. Applicants must also be 18 years or older with a valid email address and Skype or Microsoft account.

You can help us shape your skype experience by:
-Trying out some new or upgraded features (don’t worry we’ll let you know what’s new) and tell us about your experience after doing so
-Giving us feedback and suggestions on what you would like to see in the app in the future
-Letting us know of any issues that you run into while using this previewed version

The new version 5.9 is available now, and those interested in the pre-release program, which the company promises has limited availability, can sign up on Skype’s official website. Skype for iPhone is available for free from the App Store.

Twitter lets you share public tweets in your direct messages

 

 

by Chris Velazco

 

Well, that was fast. Twitter casually mentioned at its Analyst Day festivities last week that it’d soon give users the ability to share public Tweets in private conversations, and now a new update to its apps and web clients means you can do just that. Either a long-press on a Tweet or a quick pop into the ‘More’ menu in Twitter’s mobile and desktop versions respectively will let you dump that micro-missive into a Direct Message conversation, where it’ll pop up in a tiny card for light speed perusal. We can hardly contain our excitement either.

Fine, it may not be the most thrilling update you’ve ever heard of — we haven’t heard many people at all clamoring for this — but it’s still a part of Twitter’s slow crawl toward becoming a platform for richer, deeper discussions. A crucial component of that shift is expanding on how people can actually share and discover what’s going on around them, be it through a new video push that encourages users to capture and edit video from right inside Twitter’s apps, or a pre-filled timeline that greets newbies to a fire hose filled with their interests. Whether or not all that stops haters from harping on the company’s fortunes remains to be seen, but hey — Twitter’s taking it one small step at a time.

Everything you need to know about Ello, the latest trendy social network

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Microsoft’s new iOS app lets you keep up with news from your favorite celebs

 

 

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by JON RUSSELL

 

Are you into celebrity news and the owner of an iOS device? If so, Microsoft has you covered with a new app that quietly launched.

Snipp3t is a celebrity news app for Apple devices that lets you follow your favorite famous people to get news of their latest activities as it happens. To get started, simply follow the celebs that you want to keep up with… and that’s about it. News is presented in a timeline-style format that mixes updates from those you subscribe to with general “trending” stories from other famous folks.

Microsoft has put a lot of emphasis on media here. Each news event includes multiple media reports, images, high-profile tweets, and even related YouTube videos. The app appears to use data from Bing — as The Verge points out — so Snipp3t may be another test of the company’s capabilities, following its So.cl social network, which landed on iOS and Android last December.

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The app hooks into Facebook, allowing you to sign in, share stories to the social network, and also find friends and see which celebs they are subscribed to. You can navigate as a guest instead, if you prefer.

The app has been released for iOS first, and only for those in the US. It isn’t clear if/when it will come to Android and Microsoft’s own Windows Phone platform.

We’ve reached out to Microsoft for further details about Snipp3t and its plans for the service.