Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Klout Quietly Launches Cinch, a Companion Q&A App

Klout Quietly Launches Cinch, a Companion Q&A App | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Klout really wants to make you care about your online influence.


That’s in part why the company has, with little fanfare, pushed out Cinch, an iOS application that pairs questions asked by users with other “experts” on certain topics, based on their amount of knowledge of the area in question.


The idea is basically leveraging the value of Klout’s flagship product, which purports to rank people in terms of their influence in certain areas. I, for instance, tweet a whole bunch about Facebook and Twitter as companies, so it would make sense for a product like Cinch to pair a person’s Facebook-related questions with my answers....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

 Quora-like iOS app launch for the social-influence startup Cinch. Keep an eye on it for relevance in finding experts.

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What Your Klout Score Really Means | Wired

What Your Klout Score Really Means | Wired | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Last spring Sam Fiorella was recruited for a VP position at a large Toronto marketing agency. With 15 years of experience consulting for major brands like AOL, Ford, and Kraft, Fiorella felt confident in his qualifications. But midway through the interview, he was caught off guard when his interviewer asked him for his Klout score. Fiorella hesitated awkwardly before confessing that he had no idea what a Klout score was.


The interviewer pulled up the web page for Klout.com—a service that purports to measure users’ online influence on a scale from 1 to 100—and angled the monitor so that Fiorella could see the humbling result for himself: His score was 34. “He cut the interview short pretty soon after that,” Fiorella says. Later he learned that he’d been eliminated as a candidate specifically because his Klout score was too low. “They hired a guy whose score was 67.”...

 

[Hmmm. Do you have clout or Klout? - JD]

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