JC Penney Pretends To Be Totally Wasted at SuperBowl, Marc Jacobs Shop Accepts Cash, Credit and TWEETS, Facebook Helps Us Cut Out The Middleman and Launches Paper App – What You Missed On the Internet from MasonInteractive.com.

JC Penney just wanted you to think they were drunk tweeting during last night’s SuperBowl. They admitted stunt was a total success, if by total success you mean a completely inorganic “Oreo moment” that will be forgotten in a week, then yes, it was a success … [BuzzFeed]

Apparently, social media does pay off: You can go into NYFW Marc Jacobs Pop-Up and receive a free MJ gift with purchase fragrance products by sending a tweet (or facebook Tweeting, Instagraming or Facebooking. You know what brands should totally give away their products for free? Neither do we. [Fashionista]

Platform News Alert – Facebook Announced last week Website Custom Audiences for Facebook Ads. This feature will allow brands to target website visitors and mobile app users WITHOUT having to use FBX 3rd Party Partners. [AllFacebook] In related news, Adroll & Perfect Audience are like, totally, not speaking to Facebook right now. Facebook Launched it’s free gesture-driven mobile newsfeed app Paper yesterday… for more details check out our review of Facebook Paper [MasonInteractive]. 

After downloading, and poking around Paper, I can definitely say with confidence that once you try this app, you wont go back. Most of what you can do in the regular Facebook app, you can do in Facebook Paper (plus: it’s basically the visual equivalent of a warm glass of milk…all those soothing, animated panoramas).

Admittedly, I downloaded the app with pretty low expectations but the sleek and simplified design coupled with the high-definition, animated panning image-rich newsfeed got me hooked. Let’s go over some of the basics: What Is Paper, Really: A newsreader app on steroids.

Why Should I Want It? (1) The app interface and (2) the sections of news organized by topic. Interface Facebook’s usual design elements have been completely abandoned including the company’s trademark blue trim and emphasis on lots and lots of vertical scrolling for a sleek, minimalist-inspired aesthetic. Paper makes liberal use of white space to draw your eye towards photos or text, and images are often full-bleed, taking over your entire screen. If you swipe up on a card, a web view of the linked article folds open, Flipboard-style. When you’re finished reading, you can pull down on an article to close it like an envelope. With the addition of themed news sections combined with the absence of ads, makes us like Paper even more. Of course, we don’t expect Facebook Ads to never surface in Paper, but for now it’s quite nice to be ad free.

Sections = Multiple News Feeds Facebook organizes each ‘newsfeed’ around a particular theme. I’ve counted 19 so far. With a large content panel on the top, smaller horizontally-scrolling ones on the bottom, lots of big images and loads of fluid animation effects, everything’s been made visually cleaner. As far as I can tell, everybody who chooses to browse a section gets exactly the same feed, chosen by human editors rather than a fancy algorithm that knows I like to read about fashion trends but don’t care much about beauty tutorials etc. So the sections don’t feel especially “curated” to my ‘interests’.

Battle of the Apps: Facebook vs Paper – The inevitable decision between old and new comes down to what features you use: If you use lists, apps or events frequently (which I don’t), you’re likely to stay with your existing Facebook App. Paper retains the features/newsfeed items we’ve come to expect from Facebook (pithy news headlines, BuzzFeed links, photos, etc.) and none of the features we hate i.e. the Ads. For me, it’s not even a choice—Paper is the only Facebook app I’ll be using to “browse” Facebook on my phone. However, even my enthusiasm over this new app doesn’t fill me with enough confidence to completely abandon the regular app. I imagine most of us, myself included, will use both apps until the time comes where Facebook has proven the staying power of Paper. However, building users’ trust, especially with Facebook’s shoddy track record launching apps in the past, will only happen over time.

Pros of Facebook Paper App by Mason Interactive – Aesthetically Pleasing, Responsive News Feed, Items Are Bookmark Enabled (Pockt, Instapaper, Pinboard, and Safari’s Reading List). Multiple Newsfeeds Organized by Theme.

Cons of Facebook App Paper by Mason Interactive – Content chosen is not customized to my Likes, Favors Certain Major News Outlets (All Condé Nast Publications, National Geographic, NYT), Ambiguous News Categories (like Glow, Well Lived, All City etc.).

#MarketSmart Quotes: Great quotes that inspire us to be better advertisers, communicators, innovators and content creators for our clients! Topics include: advertising, client relations, creativity and innovation. Invest in Storytelling at MasonInteractive.com

#MarketSmart Quotes: Great quotes that inspire us to be better advertisers, communicators, innovators and content creators for our clients! Topics include: advertising, client relations, creativity and innovation. 

A look at SEO through the last 4 years, and the tactics that still work today

SEO Myths Busted by MasonInteractive.com, Head of SEO. Ladies and gentlemen, we’ve been saying it for years. There is no “quick fix” when it comes to Search Engine Optimization (SEO). It’s a gentle process we’ve honed, and hold so dear to our hearts at Mason Interactive. There is no golden ticket, no downloadable software, no Agency that will get you to the top of Google tomorrow. The process and the industry is ever-changing, but there is one consistent theme: credibility. Before our lesson on ethics and credibility, let’s learn a little history, shall we?

Although changes to Google’s Algorithm dates back to its inception in ‘98, a few of these major updates essentially shaped the way SEOers function (and why my team here is not obsolete–yet): December 2010: Social Signals Tweets, Google +1’s, Facebook shares and the like, (pun intended) were added into the organic ranking factors. So, the more users engage with your brand socially, the more likely your website will be in top positions in Google. Cue influx of Social Media management jobs. February 2011: Panda About 12% of search results were affected during the Panda update. Google penalized sites performing shady SEO tactics: article spinning, link farms, and other low quality maneuvers. These “quick fixes” hurt thousands of websites, many of which resulted in being completely blacklisted. April 2012: Penguin Despite another adorably named update, this one involved even more mass penalizations. Also known as the “webspam update”, Penguin targeted sites with even shadier SEO methods than Panda, like keyword stuffing, link schemes (paying someone for links), sneaky redirects, “doorway” pages, and purposeful duplicate content. August 2013: Hummingbird This update wasn’t targeted at the shady SEOer, rather it aimed to help the user experience. Queries in Google started becoming more advanced, for example, searching: “where is there a Starbucks within 18 feet in New York that still serves breakfast at 12pm?” – a far cry from “coffee in nyc”. Hummingbird aimed to cater to these ‘conversational’ searches.

So – what do all these updates have in common? You guessed it… Credibility! SEO Credibility Cycle: 1) Social Signals So we know now, in order for your website to rank higher, you need to be more active on social platforms. The only way users will engage, share with friends, and come back for more is if you supply them with what they are looking for – or in some cases, something interesting they didn’t even know they were looking for! The more shareable content you supply, the more your social footprint expands, the more your network grows, the higher your page rank, and the cycle repeats itself. You’re welcome. 2) Panda & Penguin Don’t be shady, Google will always find out. If you owned a Bakery in 2008, your website could have a homepage that said “come to NY for the best bakeries in town. The best NY bakery ever. Find a NY bakery and contact the best bakery in NY and you’ll find a bakery that serves chocolate cake, cake, cookies, chocolate cookies, the best cakes, best cakes in NY, find cookies in NY today” – and you’d probably rank in first position for “find a bakery in NY”! Ah, the good old days. 3) Hummingbird Everyone has a smartphone. Everyone needs answers. Now. Catering to long-tail ‘conversational search’ can be done by… what? Providing relevant niche information to your potential visitors! Yay credibility!

In conclusion, I don’t mean to over-simplify a day in the life of an SEOer – I won’t bore you with the job details, but it is N-E-R-D-Y. Organic marketing does truly boil down to giving the audience a reason to keep coming back to see what you have to say. If you’re not finding out what your ideal customer wants, creating content about those topics, distributing the content on all social platforms, then you my friend, will never catch up to your competitors. A static website will never win. You have to be in it to win it. Content is key! Yay puns!

Pinterest Reads Our Minds, Historians Weigh In On the Selfie Phenom, Gamers Prove Stereotype… What You Missed On the Internet from MasonInteractive.com – Pinterest wants to get to know you better: Pinterest adds a page that will predict your interests (think amazon’s recommendations but with better pictures). [The Next Web] You can (loosely) trace the ‘selfie’ back to a historical start date…. which still doesn’t stop anyone from making fun of you. [Vulture]

A Kansas man-child runs into burning house to save his dog, wife, kids… x-box. That’s right, a man, ran into a fire to save his xbox machine, proving once again that gamers are the inevitable downfall of our civilization. [Digital Trends] More proof: Japanese adult gamers act like small children by playing game meant for little girls, refusing to share. [RocketNews24] Also, check out this video of how a conference call would go down, if we ever–God forbid–had to do these meetings in person… watch the hilarity/recognized misery ensue… [Buzzfeed]