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trends-on-tuesday-are-mobile-devices-the-center-of-social-universe |
2014-06-24 15:28:59 -0400 |
Trends on Tuesday: Are Mobile Devices The “Center” of Social Universe? |
Mobile devices are moving closer to the center of the social universe, according to this Sproutsocial article. Platforms like Instagram, Pinterest and Twitter are overwhelmingly used on the go. Comscore predicts that there will be increasing monetization via social in the coming years. In the banking industry, where data shows many people have stopped going to |
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{{< legacy-img src="2014/06/600-x-600-Background-social-TCmake_photo-iStock-Thinkstock-185175604.jpg" alt="A swirling social media universe" caption="" >}}
Mobile devices are moving closer to the center of the social universe, according to this Sproutsocial article.
Platforms like Instagram, Pinterest and Twitter are overwhelmingly used on the go. Comscore predicts that there will be increasing monetization via social in the coming years. In the banking industry, where data shows many people have stopped going to brick and mortar banks, tying mobile and social together is critical. Organizations are increasingly adopting a SoLoMo approach in which they leverage the interplay between social, local and mobile. Generally this approach includes targeting mobile users by enticing deals based on their location.
Government agencies are adopting their own version of SoLoMo. Zeshan Khan and Katie Steffy found government agencies are including social media in their [mobile apps and websites in three ways]({{< ref "2014-06-12-three-ways-agencies-are-using-social-media-in-mobile-products.md" >}} "Three Ways Agencies Are Using Social Media in Mobile Products"). While agencies are including social media accounts in their mobile products, they say the innovators in government are using crowdsourcing both to engage users to help advance mission effectiveness—see Department of Transportation’s [SaferCar]({{< ref "2014-06-19-dot-safercar-app-goes-android.md" >}} "DOT’s SaferCar App Goes Android"), USDA’s Save Our Citrus and [NOAA’s Dolphin and Whale 911]({{< ref "2013-10-24-dolphin-and-whale-apps-from-noaa-fisheries.md" >}} "Dolphin and Whale Apps from NOAA Fisheries") for examples.
Of course this is only a drop in the bucket because SoLoMo will become standard practice with better data. Treci Johnson from the Corporation for National and Community Service noted last week that geo-location data is improving to the point that soon your mobile device [may deliver ads for goods and services within 100 yards of your location]({{< ref "2014-06-17-trends-on-tuesday-mobile-location-data.md" >}} "Trends on Tuesday: Mobile Location Data Improving").
For government the potential is endless as we move towards the [Internet of Things]({{< ref "2014-04-08-tell-us-your-internet-of-things-challenges.md" >}} "Tell Us Your Internet of Things Challenges"). Gwynne Kostin recently described a [emergency weather alert “flash mob”]({{< ref "2014-06-10-digitalgov-irl-6-ways-to-get-it-right.md" >}} "DigitalGov IRL: 6 Ways To Get It Right") she experienced when she and other people around her had their mobile devices ringing in unison with the alert. She said this type of innovation is not just about the mobile device, the social or even better data—it’s about combining these aspects of DigitalGov in user-friendly ways.
Maybe instead of mobile being the center of the social universe, it’s the user becoming the center of the DigitalGov universe.This article is part of this month’s editorial theme on Social Media. Check out more articles [related to this theme]({{< tmp "deadlink" >}} "Recent Monthly Themes").