By Daylin Mantyka
As a regular feature, we provide our readers with a roundup of some of the best articles we have read in the past week. On the podium this week are memeburn, ReadWriteWeb, TopRank Blog and Fast Company.
Meaningful social measurement: A lesson from the underpants gnomes
Sam Beckbessinger looks at why measuring follower counts on social media is a meaningless metric that’s quickly falling out of favour. Instead, she proposes four more meaningful metrics that offer greater insight into the community you’ve created around your brand.
Bootstrapping Your Startup: 7 Hard-earned tips from real entrepreneurs
Raising money to scale your startup is one path to follow on the road to growth. Bootstrapping — startups who intentionally avoid taking on cash from investors — is another. Scott Gerber talks with seven experienced bootstrappers who share the benefits they’ve seen with being lean and what other startup founders need to watch out for.
The best marketing investment you’ll ever make
Inbound, content, social, mobile, converged, omni-channel, transmedia. The list of marketing channels and strategies vying for our budgetary attention goes on and on. Lee Odden looks at what methods attract the most attention that may also influence purchasing decisions.
Using social media to make offline products more meaningful
The digital world has successfully infiltrated our every day lives — especially with the advent of location-based technologies such as Foursquare, Yelp and Google Street View. Despite the 24/7 connection, Kealan Lennon writes that “Our lives are coming back offline” in an insightful piece about using social media to bridge the real and digital worlds.


/// COMMENTS
One Comment »Nick Stamoulis
May 03, 2013 1:46 pmThe article “Meaningful social measurement: A lesson from the underpants gnomes” hits all the right notes. Besides the fact that half of your followers could be bots, or spam accounts, Twitter updates so frequently that your Tweets will probably only be seen by a percentage of your followers. Look at Twitter visitors in your Google Analytics report to measure how many visitors come from Twitter – to gauge how you can change your Twitter strategy.