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Reasons Why? FourSquare Posted 3,400% Growth Last Year

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Reasons Why? FourSquare Posted 3,400% Growth Last Year

Posted on 28 January 2011 by Adviction

Okay, double-digit growth is usually something to celebrate … but quadruple-digit growth? That’s pretty impressive. So, it’s hardly surprising that FourSquare is thumping its chest a bit on its corporate blog. After all, the young company’s 3,400 percent growth in 2010 justifies a bit of bravado.

So, how did FourSquare pull this off? Let’s take a look at five factors that drove the company’s meteoric ascent:

1. More check-ins than Americans: of course, FourSquare is a global social media application (I picked up a few mayorships when I was in London last week, for example); there have even been check-ins from North Korea! Nonetheless, 381,576,305 check-ins in 2010 is pretty impressive. There was even one from outer space!

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Ways to Market on Foursquare Without a Location : Instant Hit

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Ways to Market on Foursquare Without a Location : Instant Hit

Posted on 29 December 2010 by Adviction

Savvy marketers and business owners have flocked to Foursquare to take advantage of their 4.5 million members for one simple reason: Foursquare requires action. Conversations on Twitter and fan engagement on a brand’s Facebook Page can be valuable pieces to a successful social media marketing campaign, but user activity at the point of sale is the ultimate objective for us marketers and business owners. We ultimately want action, and geolocation networks like Foursquare deliver the goods.

The marketing opportunities for retail stores on Foursquare are obvious. Users physically check in to a location and if you offer a special, they can redeem it. But even without a special, Foursquare leads to foot traffic, and foot traffic leads to revenue. Pretty straightforward.

But what if you’re aren’t a retail store? What if you don’t have a physical location at all? Can Foursquare still help you market your business? Absolutely. Foursquare has already partnered with several large brands without traditional locations such as Bravo and the History Channel. These partnerships were heavily publicized and came with specially customized badges, but they also cost big bucks.

In a world of limited budgets and low-traffic locations, businesses must creatively approach Foursquare’s already available options. Here are a few options your business should consider.


1. Acquire Friends, Not Checkins


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Being an active user is one way to build relationships and create awareness, but understand that Foursquare isn’t much for conversation. Don’t waste too much time running around town and randomly checking in to every location possible expecting your brand to get traction with Foursquare users. Being active can be important, but most of your Foursquare friends or others checking into the same location won’t pay much attention to a brand’s check in activity or shouts.

There’s more value for you to acquire friends, but like any social media network, your friends should be targeted and strategically selected. Bastard Jeans has done a great job acquiring more than 60,000 friends on its user profile. Now the company has an easy way to get its tips in front of more users.


2. Add Relevant Tips


Adding tips is the easiest and fastest way for a location-less brand to market using Foursquare. The tips you create will be available for any Foursquare user to see, but an additional benefit to adding “friends” is that friends of your account will have your tips pop up when they check in at or near one of the locations where you’ve left them. So the more targeted friends you acquire, the better chance they’ll see your tips.

Tips should be informational, create user value and align with your brand. Don’t just leave a spammy message, adding little value and no relevance. If your tips aren’t providing value, you create the opportunity for backlash.


3. Branded Pages


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Unlike a user profile, a brand with a page does not check in or acquire mayorships or badges, it only leaves tips on other locations. There is also a difference in how users connect with branded pages. Foursquare users “follow” a brand’s page, rather than becoming “friends” with them. Branded pages also have more customization options with their header images and description boxes. For larger brands, this is the preferred option. There are many brands with well done pages such as IFC Channel and Time Out Chicago.


4. Add Your Own Unique or Quirky Location


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Just because you don’t have a traditional location doesn’t mean that you can’t add something quirky or creative to market your business. Coke Australia began adding Coke Machine locations that users can check in to, and, in some cases, receive unique specials. Urban Ministries of Durham started adding locations like “tent under the overpass” and “abandoned warehouse” to help spread awareness about homelessness. As long as the locations you create align with your brand or campaign, this can be a successful strategy.


5. Mayor Takeovers


If you don’t have a location, take over somebody else’s by becoming mayor. Granted, you’re going to want to make sure the location of your mayorship is strategic and those checking in are relevant to your business. Take advantage of your title and challenge users with freebies and giveaways when a user unseats your branded account. Have some fun with it.


6. Badge Parties


Few brands have the marketing dollars of Starbucks to create their own personalized badge, but that doesn’t mean you can’t take advantage of pre-existing badges that Foursquare users want. Partner with a complementary business that has a location and select a badge that users want but may be difficult unlock. For example, the Swarm Badge (50 people), Super Swarm Badge (250 people), and the recently released Super Duper Swarm Badge (500) and the colossal Epic Swarm Badge (1,000) are unlocked based on a large number of people checking in at one place at the same time.

An event designed for participants to unlock sought-after badges makes Foursquare users happy, you create publicity by hosting the event, and the location you’re using will get an influx of foot traffic. Additional promotions and publicity can come from the hundreds and potentially thousands of extra people who see the checkins when users post to Facebook and Twitter.

While Foursquare and other geolocation networks may seem like a no-brainer for retail outlets and food venues, don’t discount your own opportunity to market your brand and products. Make sure you have a solid strategy in place that offers value to the Foursquare user community. The options are already available on Foursquare. Now it’s just up to your creativity to unlock them.

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Foursquare Introduces Badges.

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Foursquare Introduces Badges.

Posted on 29 December 2010 by Adviction

Foursquare “Super Swarms” of 250 people or more are now so frequent that the location-based startup is rolling out new badges to award users who convene in more massive quantities.

Beginning today, when 500 or more Foursquarefoursquare members are gathered together at the same venue (and checked in, of course), those users will be rewarded with a Super Duper Swarm badge. There’s also an Epic Swarm badge to commemorate events where attendance on Foursquare pushes past the 1,000 mark.

“When we made the original Swarm badge we thought, ‘What are the odds of ever getting 50 Foursquare users together?’ And then we did the same with Super Swarm for SXSW. ‘Will anyone ever even unlock these?’” explains Foursquare co-founder and CEO Dennis Crowley. “And now they are unlocked on a regular basis — baseball games, concerts etc. So we needed bigger.”

So what happens when 500-and-1,000-person swarms become commonplace? That’s a question even Foursquare is not prepared to answer. “In our internal badge meetings, we’re thinking, ‘What’s after this?’ We have no idea,” says Crowley.

Though the badges themselves are pure novelty, they do represent the ballooning growth of Foursquare’s user base and highlight just how much activity the startup is capable of generating around offline venues.

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Cheaters never prosper. Foursquare

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Cheaters never prosper. Foursquare

Posted on 29 December 2010 by Adviction

Cheaters never prosper. Except in the realm of Foursquare, perhaps, where false checkins can sometimes garner mayorships. Well, those days are over, according to the geolocation service, which is announcing this week that business owners now have the ability to oust mayors who have come by their positions wrongly.

Several months ago, Foursquare aimed to put the kibosh on cheating by using your mobile phone’s GPS location to verify your whereabouts, thereby rewarding only those that happen near the actual place in question. That way “armchair mayors” would be foiled, and only the worthy would reap the benefits of mayordom. Sadly, however, said precautions don’t prevent people from checking in nearlocations in question rather than in those places.

Well, now Foursquare is putting the power in the hands of the business owners, who likely know their “regulars” better than your phone’s GPS does. According to the company: “If a Mayor is flagged by a business owner, they’ll be removed from office immediately and the next user in line will take over as Mayor. We’re still in the very early stages of experimenting with this feature and will most likely be tweaking it based on feedback from business owners.”

The addition of moderation will likely be a welcome addition for businesses — including Mashable HQ, whereBrett Petersel has been sitting on the mayorship for months now. Better watch your back, Petersel…

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