Oct 042011
 

 

 

Naomi Robbins, the consummate modernist, spends her presentation extolling clarity, objectivity, and a form follows function philosophy that comes with a number of simple guidelines to follow. DO: make the data stand out, eliminate unnecessary dimensions, or try a dot plot instead of a bar graph sometime. DON’T: use novel shapes that are difficult to compare in size, have too many zeros, or add ornament just to be attractive. Through a crystal goblet of statistical graphics, we should see nothing but the facts.

Robbins makes a point of distinguishing more technical graphics from art. While data art may not really inform, the examples still evoke ooh’s and ahh’s from a knowledgeable, statistically literate crowd. There is beauty in truth, and a few of the later speakers explain how it’s a truth that can be bent, or at least used expressively.

Noah Iliinsky, of Complex Diagrams and Designing Data Visualizations, takes our focus from the clear and factual to good storytelling. While data has its properties that need to be honored, he places equal emphasis on knowing your audience and being able to state exactly what it is you want to convey. In terms of design advice, Iliinsky is slightly less explicit about established rules. He borrows a quote from Moritz Stefaner, that “position is everything, color is difficult.” No one wants to see arbitrarily chosen, confusing color schemes, but it’s no reason to shy away from it completely.

via Strata NY 2011 [Data Visualizations] – The Subjectivity of Fact – information aesthetics.

Sep 232011
 

Companies that must grapple with whether to maintain their Facebook pages in-house or outsource them to firms – thus adding another line item to their budgets –  are finding the decision harder to make.For while Facebook is indeed enhancing its own features for DIY users, third-party providers are also beefing up their own offering. The latest example of the former is new functionality Facebook appears to be testing that gives page administrators “per post” data.

via DIY Facebook Page Management: The Choice Gets Harder – MarketingVOX.

Sep 232011
 

 

The applications that grew the most on our emerging list by monthly active users this week included some love quizzes, the German Phrases app, a few Page tab apps, video, greeting cards and more. The apps on our list grew from between 147,600 and 613,900 MAU, based on AppData, our data tracking service covering traffic growth for apps on Facebook. We define “emerging” applications as those that ended with between 100,000 and 1 million MAU in the past week.

via Love, Phrases, Page Tabs, Videos, Cards and More on This Week’s Top 20 Emerging Facebook Apps by MAU.

Sep 222011
 

If you have even a vague recollection of the era that these ads represent, it’s well worth clicking through these pages. Come for the 8x CD-ROM Drive for $149 and the 33,600 bps internal modem from $139, stay for the Apple inkjet printer for a staggering $379 and the Sega Genesis, which was apparently some ancient gaming device, for an equally staggering $122. All this and more, in the gallery below.

via Best Buy ad from 15 years ago reminds us how far we’ve come | DVICE.

Sep 212011
 

Orabrush can thank a $28 Facebook ad buy for helping get its $5 tongue brushers into 3,500 Walmart stores. The retail partnership, announced today by Salt Lake City-based Orabrush, seemed in peril just a few months ago as the brand’s marketers felt the big box retailer was icing them.

“We were talking with Walmart, but then they kind of blacked out on us,” Jeffrey Harmon, Orabrush’s CMO, told ClickZ News. “They stopped returning our emails. For weeks and weeks, they weren’t responding. And we didn’t want the thing to go cold.”

That’s when Harmon bought ads on Facebook’s self-service platform targeting college graduates in Bentonville, AR, where Walmart is headquartered. The ad copy stated that Walmart employees had bad breath.

via How Orabrush’s $28 Facebook Ad Buy Won Over Walmart | ClickZ.

Sep 212011
 

 

 

“Reseau Ferre de France” is a film promoting a railway infrastructure company of the same name (RFF). The movie displays tilt-shift technique and other visual effects. It was directed by Thierry Poiraud and cinematography by Patrick Messina.

via Playing with Planes, Trains and Automobiles – Illusion – The Most Amazing Creations in Art, Photography, Design, Technology and Video..

Sep 202011
 

 

 

If you are owner of one of these branded pages or if they fall in the area of your industry benchmark, take a look at this interesting distinction, which in easy numbers outlays the difference between these two social influencers.

via Do Top Facebook Brands Top Twitter as Well? – Socialbakers.

Sep 202011
 

 

 

Facebook will add new feedback buttons to stories in the news feed, according a TechCrunch source. Starting with “Read”, “Listened”, and “Watched” buttons, users will be able to indicate that they’ve already consumed a piece of content. This will allow them to provide more specific information about how they’re related to different types of content, which could help Facebook refine the news feed to show them more of similar types of content. The tip matches with the tagline “Read, Watch, Listen” which AllThingsD heard will be used for the f8 conference.

via Facebook’s Rumored Read, Listened, and Watched Buttons: A Money-Making Fit With Broad Category Ad Targeting.

Sep 192011
 

Facebook posts made by retail brands during the overnight hours of 8 PM to 7 AM drive 20% more user engagement, in terms of like and comment rates, than posts made between 8 AM and 7 PM, according to a new report from Buddy Media. It is the latest of a series – a large, ever-expanding series – of data points offered up to the marketing industry about the best time to send a campaign.

via The Many Arguments to Timing a Campaign – MarketingVOX.

Sep 162011
 

Google is giving preference to single-page versions of a web page as opposed to component pages that contain only a portion of the information, forcing the user to click to “next” and load another URL.

Paginated content, in other words, can be counted as another factor it likely considers in search rankings.

via Google’s Gripe Against Paginated Content – MarketingVOX.