Best Buy: I Spy Twitter – Social Media Efforts at Best Buy and My App ‘spy’ Featured in the Pioneer Press!

Julio Ojeda-Zapata technology writer and columnist at the St. Paul Pioneer Press and author of twitter means business: how microblogging can help or hurt your company wrote a nice piece today in the Sunday Pioneer Press titled “To twit or not?” [Update: PDFs here] about three Minnesota companies finding some success on Twitter excited to see one of them was Best Buy.

Julio captures well a few of our early efforts namely @BestBuyTulsa221 and other folks in our stores Tweeting to help customers, @jbweb using Twitter to find others in the company passionate about projects she is working on crossing existing hierarchies effortlessly and @BestBuyCMO shows the power of open thinking and openness to feedback all the way at the top. Really exciting stuff, and I love the sub headline “Best Buy: I Spy Twitter” couldn’t be more perfect!

I am personally excited Julio specifically calls out the ideas behind my work on the application ‘spy’ (more on why I created ‘spy’ here) and how we used it to display Best Buy buzz on in the “Hub” of our headquarters, exposing everyone to the Social Media conversation and it’s relevance to our business. I believe, especially in economies like today’s, finding new ways to tune into the conversation around your company can only help you focus on the right things and solve customers problems more quickly.

Thanks to Julio and the Pioneer Press for great coverage of our early efforts hopefully there will be more fun to report as this whole space moves forward, I know I am not stopping here.

This may be a bit self promotional but capturing Julio’s ‘spy’ coverage here:

Ben Hedrington, a Web developer for the company’s BestBuy.com division, is such a Twitter fanatic that he created a new way to troll the twitterverse — along with other “social media” services such as FriendFeed and Flickr — via a built-from-scratch search engine he has christened “Spy” (spy.appspot.com).

Though fashioned in Hedrington’s spare time, Spy became an instant Best Buy hit. At one point, a big screen in Best Buy’s vast main lobby had Spy displaying the latest Best Buy-related buzz on Twitter. Spy has come in handy for Best Buy-related events, too. A screen behind the speakers is typically present, displaying a rolling series of event-specific tweets so staffers not physically present are able to chime in on discussions by using their Twitter accounts.

Even Barry Judge, Best Buy’s chief marketing officer, has Spy running in his office so he’ll know what is being said about his company on Twitter. Judge, a recent Twitter convert, said the service complements his blog and is a good way to gauge customer sentiment while speaking directly to his clientele in a way that feels genuine.

When Best Buy recently botched a phased rollout of a rewards-card program (meant to initially target 1,000 folks, it was e-mailed to about 7 million instead), Judge used his “BestBuyCMO” Twitter feed as well as his blog for mea culpas.

“Full transparency was helpful for maintaining trust,” Judge said. “Twitter gave me that visibility.”

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How To: Install and Browser Test Your Site With Google Android Right on Your PC

Update: Post on how to install Android 2.0 on Mac OSX is here.

This post is for Android SDK versions 1.1 and under.

Browser testing is critical to any web developer, designer… really any web professional. You need to know how your users or customers are seeing your work through the multitude of browsers and devices available to them, new ones become available every day. I wasn’t able to find a quick answer to browser testing on the new Google Android mobile platform so I blazed a trail, captured and boiled down the steps so anyone can follow and get Android up and running on their Windows PC quickly and painl.

Installing the SDK and Browser

  1. First things first visit the Android SDK download page and download the Windows version of the SDK.
  2. Create a folder under C:\Program Files called “android-sdk”
  3. Un-zip the contents of the Android SDK you downloaded into this folder.
    Continue reading
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Reading Age of Conversations 2: Why Don’t They Get It? – Great Format, Great Content

Thanks to a quick lead via Chris Brogan I ran across in my FriendFeed I picked up the eBook version of Age of Conversations 2: Why Don’t They Get It?… now I never do this… I am not big on “real” books, I mean I read all day and night on the internet blogs, code, documentation but books, it’s not me…

So, you are saying to yourself, is this a book review from a guy who doesn’t read books? No… I am only 14 pages in but damn if this isn’t the most engaging a sharply pointed of anything I have read recently…. I needed to put down some thoughts and maybe engage possibly one other person to pick it up.

Different… How?

I tell you this is truly different, the “book” is written by 237 bloggers in digestible pieces on topic and on point, slicing through their points if view in a page or less, blog post style. Continue reading

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Paving a Path to the Truly Mobile Web: Mozilla Fennec Alpha 1 Released

My back story: I recently got into a friendly argument with some Mobile experts on a RWW Live: Mobile App Development call, I threw on my rosy colored glasses and spoke of a time where the Mobile web browser has access to device features like GPS, Contacts, etc we could leverage what we learned on the web and build even cooler more contextual and helpful Mobile Web apps that worked everywhere… and was told maybe… someday… but for the foreseeable future we’ll be building our apps 20+ times and asking carriers permission to do so (listen to the MP3, really!)… well the news today strikes me well, the glasses are rosy again!

Mozilla has the Vision

Today Mozilla fires the first shots across the bow of the future Mobile web Continue reading

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Can Making Social Media a Spectator Sport Move it to the Mainstream? – Why I Created spy.appspot.com.

There is much conversation among bloggers lately about targeting early adopters versus the mainstream, as Scoble would say the passionates versus the non-passionates, should we be excited when the early adopters love our product or service but the masses don’t understand it?

No, we shouldn’t we need to find ways that show the value of what we do to the mainstream otherwise we’ll be here talking to ourselves for years… how can we create that passion, or at least show ours?

The creation of my Google App Engine project ‘spy‘ has created a wave of conversation Continue reading

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Responsible Corporate Laptop Stickering!

So lets say you are a web guy at a big mid-western corporation and you at the Web 2.0 Expo this year and pick up a handful of cool stickers, then you see folks like Scoble (Mac, PC) and everyone up in the Blogtropolus with their laptops stickered end to end… you need to use those stickers… Continue reading

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The Mobile Web may just may drive forward the web of tomorrow. – Thoughts from Mitchell Baker’s (Mozilla) Keynote

I wanted to capture my thoughts intermixed with quotes from Mitchell Baker, Chairman, Mozilla Foundation at the recent Web 2.0 Expo keynote entitled Opening the Mobile Web, it was truly a great concept and conversation and eye opening for me to see there is real commitment to making the browser (which Mitchell would say is a poor metaphor, but that’s another story) the true platform of the web regardless of the device. Video: Mitchel Baker: Opening the Mobile Web

Your Mobile experience just may be your web experience of tomorrow…

Seems counter intuitive huh? it did to me at first… Continue reading

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I’m ready to build for the “cognative surplus” – thoughts from the Clay Shirky – Web 2.0 Expo Keynote

Shortly after the keynote by Tim O’Reilly at the Web 2.0 Expo in San Francisco last week we were treated to a talk with Clay Shirky author of Here Comes Everybody, his talk for me crystallized why the phenomenon of social interaction, sharing and co-creation is thriving on the web today and why this “little” emergent concept might just be getting started changing the world.

Thankfully the talk was captured on video by NewsBlaze.com: Clay Shirky at Web 2.0 Expo (Video 17 minutes) and just now transcribed by Clay himself.

Foundation

Clay began foreshadowing this story with a story from the early industrial revolution as we put our collective minds and “civil surplus” to use creating libraries and museums, education for children, and electing leaders; that massive change from rural to urban and industrial ways of life taxed the minds of everyone involved… he told us the “cognitive heatsink” in that time was gin, dissipating the brain cycles and complication of changing from overwhelming our minds.

Fast forward to the 20th century Continue reading

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Returning from Web 2.0 Expo – Going to start writing…

Just returned from the Web 2.0 Expo, learned a lot, talked to and heard many smart folks talking about what is going on today on the web and where we believe it is all going. By writing this I am committing to distilling much of what I heard in order to better build my context for my work and join the conversation rather than being an observer.

Me:
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