Saturday, October 3, 2015

Boiler - pilot light on but won't fire up.

Hello, I wonder if someone can help.
I know I have an OLD boiler but it's never caused a problem. I'm hoping this is an easy fix.
The pilot light went off tonight. I got it back on but the boiler will not fire up.
I hope someone can help.
I can't seem to attach pictures but it is a STELRAD GROUP Ideal Elan 2 boiler
Thanks in advance

Council’s den of snakes put their interests ahead of voters: James


Ranked balloting gets shot down before it even had a chance.

How to Do Social Media On-the-Go: The Best Strategies and Workflows of the New Buffer iOS App

We’ve been studying and learning the best ways to reach a social media audience on mobile—where 60 percent of social media time is spent!

How does one go about implementing mobile into a social media marketing plan?

To really get to know the best strategies and workflows on mobile, we asked. A half dozen Buffer for iOS users were so kind to share how they go about mobile social media, using Buffer’s app for iPhone and iPad (newly updated to version 5.0!).

We’d love for you to have a look at these wonderfully efficient workflows (it’d be fantastic to hear yours in the comments), and check out the big improvements and updates to the latest version of the Buffer app.

Buffer mobile iPhone

The all-new Buffer app for iOS 9

New: Brand new design for iOS 9

We’ve redone the design of the app, ncluding a new layout for the composer. See everything you’re sharing right within a single view.

Buffer iOS for iphone 1

New: Video upload, schedule, and share

We recently launched Buffer support for videos, and it’s now available on your iOS device too. Upload video right from your Camera Roll and schedule to post natively to any connected profile.

New: Buffer from your wrist!

That’s right, we’ve bundled in a brand new Buffer app for the Apple Watch so you can keep up to date on how many updates are in your Buffer accounts and even top them up using dictation.

Buffer for Apple Watch 1

New: Support for the awesome iOS 9 iPad multitasking

Now you can Buffer alongside the article you’re sharing or while viewing your favorite cat gifs.

Additionally

  • You can now connect Pinterest accounts directly from within the app when you’re on our Awesome plan.
  • The app uses the brand new Safari browser to make viewing your links a joy, along with the ability to share them to your other favorite apps!
  • You can now change plans and upgrade from within the app.

How to do mobile social media with Buffer

Inspiration for how to schedule and share on-the-go

We’re so grateful to have been able to ask a great group of Buffer iOS users for their insights into their daily workflows and strategies. (If you’d like to join our group of beta testers, we’d love the chance to learn from you!)

Here are some of the great stories and strategies of how it works to share to social media on-the-go.

 Mara Averick – @dataandme

Circa 2008, the Batpig entered my world:

batpig

(Technically, the Batpig’s a French Bulldog, but I find it hard to believe that he and my lab are the same species— so he’s a batpig). The absurd, and adorable moments of life with the Batpig yielded the occasional share-worthy photo. And behold: a blog was born.

Soon after, my fun little hobby of posting cute pictures of Frenchies on Facebook and Twitter had an audience who, among other things, were sending me lots and lots of cute Frenchie photos.

The secret sauce of keeping myself, the Batpig, and his adoring fans happy is my Buffer workflow.

  1. I peruse the Frenchie photos sent to Batpig & Me and/or from our other Frenchie friends on social media etc. at my leisure (usually lying in bed in the morning, or on the subway on the way to work)
  2. I put my favorites into Buffer, add a (sometimes) witty caption, and cite my source (because I’m not a monster)
  3. Said photos fly off to Facebook and/or Twitter three or four times a day, as per my Buffer schedule.
  4. I drag and drop/re-order photos to mix things up (god forbid there were three fawn Frenchies in a row, or puppies only without a fully grown dog in sight— again, yes, people actually complain about these things).

I do a lot of “Share Next”-ing. Usually, whatever I’ve just seen seems imminently important (read: especially cute), and I want it at the top of my queue.

Sometimes there are “topical” posts (e.g. football jersey-wearing Frenchies) that I’ll either schedule for a specific time (if I’m feeling generous), or keep at the bottom of my queue until the right moment arrives. On rare occasions, I’ll do this through manually re-ordering, but my affinity for adding to the top makes this a bit impractical.

***

 Ben Brausen – @BenBrausen

To make my messages stand out, I try to include images with almost every one. Tweets with images receive 18% more clicks, 89% more favorites and 150% more retweets. It’s clear that including them in your social mix is a must.

When I find an image I want, be it on the web or in an app, I simply use iOS sharing to send it to the Buffer app. Thanks to Extensibility added in iOS 8, there’s no longer a need to save the photo to my Photos first. Just select the share button and send it to Buffer in an instant. Then all I need to do is add the text, a link if I like, and I’m set to send it to my Buffer.

Jumping into the analytics, Buffer 5.0 makes it easier to see what went well, and what may need some massaging for better performance next time. Rescheduling past performers is now quicker too.

Managing more than than a dozen accounts in Buffer is a snap now that I can simply slide the account screen in from the side. It makes choosing the right account(s) for a message fast and easy. It also makes it easy to see which have plenty in queue and which I should look to fill.

***

 Alex Beaton – @alexbeaton

I use the Buffer app for lots of things! I create posts natively within the app on occasion, but more often than not, I create new posts using the Safari extension. I’ve found that to be my favorite feature by far!

I also manage social accounts for several different companies, each with different teams. I travel a lot, and use my travel time to approve contributions from different member of each of the companies. I can quickly approve posts, rearrange the publishing order and edit on the go. It’s a huge time saver!

***

 Miro Sarkissian – @itsaMiro

Working as a social media and content manager in the entertainment industry in Los Angeles means I’m always on the go and prepping for and covering events. From pre-production, promotion, and actual execution and activation at events, I rely heavily on Buffer to manage and excel on our social platforms. While on the run, the iOS app is vital in making sure posts go out on time and making quick edits while away from my trusty laptop.

More importantly, the iOS app is vital for live tweeting and covering events.

Just two weekends ago, I covered a massive music festival in Las Vegas, and couldn’t have done it without Buffer iOS app. I was able to attach pictures and videos in my posts, and schedule them out. I was able to schedule similar posts for later in the week, as well as re-buffering the popular posts—and of course, access all the stats and analytics.

***

 Tom – @Tomleejr

We use Buffer App and website primarily at this point to add feeds to our multiple (eight and counting) Twitter accounts, managed for industrial (Oil & Gas) business clients.

In our example all of the client’s industrial websites get their corresponding Twitter accounts so managing across different content feeds is challenging. Nice aspect of Buffer is we can cross-post from different feeds in the event they are relevant for different website/Twitter accounts.

This allows us to get them started with content marketing until we can help them develop original material.

Full support for Android users, too!

In addition to mobile sharing on iOS, Buffer for Android can also make social media on-the-go easy and efficient for Android users.

Download the free app here –>

Over to you

What are your favorite mobile social media workflows?

What can we work on to help make sharing on-the-go even easier for you?

We’re excited to keep improving all our mobile apps and build out more and more awesome features for you. Any ideas? Let us know!

Image sources: PlaceIt, IconFinder, Pablo

The post How to Do Social Media On-the-Go: The Best Strategies and Workflows of the New Buffer iOS App appeared first on Social.

Thursday, October 1, 2015

What 1 Million Tweets Taught Us About How People Tweet Successfully

Given 140 characters, how can you make the absolute most of every single word, hashtag, and link in a tweet?

We’ve been excited to test and experiment with answering that question by trying out headline ideas, power words, psychology, science, and more.

Now we’re happy to share the quantitative numbers—based on 1 million tweets from Buffer users—about what seems to drive the most clicks, retweets, and engagement on Twitter!

how to tweet

tl;dr

The top takeaways from Buffer’s study on ideal tweets

We’ll dive deep into all the Twitter data and findings below. Up top, I’d love to share the overall takeaways that we discovered when looking at the success of Buffer users on Twitter.

  • For tweets with images, shorter tweets of 20 to 40 characters did best
  • For tweets without images, longer tweets of 120 to 140 characters did best
  • The most popular tweet length was 110 to 120 characters
  • Tweets with images received more engagement than tweets without images
  • Tweets without links got more retweets, favorites, and replies than tweets with links
  • Engagement for tweets with hashtags seems to rise steadily all the way to 4 hashtags per tweet.

We are so grateful to have partnered with Lemonly on creating the infographics and charts for this research. Here’s the beautiful design the Lemonly team came up with:

See below for more detail on each of these findings.

A note about engagement and data

In this study, we define engagement as the sum of retweets, favorites, and mentions divided by the number of followers of the account.

We chose to exclude clicks from our engagement measure because clicks were only recorded for tweets that included links (around 70% of the dataset), and we wanted to be careful to not skew the effects of our independent variables by giving so much weight to the link factor.

The dataset includes more than 1 million tweets sent between February 1 and February 17, 2015, in the Pacific time zone. (Toward the end of the article, I’ll share some of the limitations and caveats that a dataset like this might entail.)

Now to the results…

How long are the most engaged tweets?

What the data says about tweet length and engagement

You may have heard that the best practice regarding the length of a tweet is to use 100 to 120 characters, plenty long to get your message across while leaving room for others to add their own comments when retweeting you.

As Twitter has evolved, we were curious to find out if that recommendation still holds true.

From looking at the Twitter data, we noticed a couple of interesting trends:

  1. For tweets with images, shorter tweets tend to receive more engagement.
  2. For tweets without images, longer tweets tend to receive more engagement.

(We defined engagement as the sum of retweets, favorites, and mentions, divided by followers. We excluded clicks from engagement as the data included both tweets with links and tweets without.)

tweet research length

For overall tweet engagement by length—regardless of whether a tweet had an image or not—we looked at the results from all 1 million+ of the tweets we analyzed.

twitter research length

(This scatterplot chart shows the relationship between engagement per follower and character count, and the blue line running through the data is a smoother, to better visualize the relationship between tweet length and engagement per follower.)

You might notice here that although there seems to be a slight rise in engagement when the character count is less than 40 or greater than 120, the increase isn’t significant enough to quite warrant a claim that tweets with less than 40 characters are best.

In terms of raw numbers, tweets with 20 to 40 characters get around 60 percent more engagement per follower than tweets in the 60- to 80-character range.

We’re a bit hesitant to fully claim that 20 to 40 characters leads to more engaged tweets, due to a number of extraneous factors that could be influencing engagement also. For instance, one of the most significant factors to consider here is how many of these shorter tweets include an image. And it’s possible that fewer tweets have these shorter character lengths so the averages are more volatile.

So how many characters do tweets usually have?

Generally-speaking, most tweets are 80 characters or more.

From our Twitter data, the volume of tweets started rising steadily just after the 40-character length, and the volume peaked between 110 and 120 characters (the long-held idea for best length), with another spike just below the 140-character limit.

Buffer_Microcontent_091715-03

In another look, we cleaned the text field by removing hashtags, punctuation, URLs, and empty whitespace. We thought this might help better represent the true message of a tweet, minus the branded/business elements.

After cleaning the text we can see that the character count is more normally distributed around 60 to 80 characters.

Buffer_Microcontent_091715-04

Our best ideas about what this means

The first thought that comes to mind:

There are many factors that might influence the amount of engagement a tweet gets (e.g. sentiment, tone, multimedia, etc.). It can be tough to say if one tweet length is better than another, so we definitely recommend testing and seeing what works for your tweets.

To try to get a sense of what else might be affecting engagement, we can look at the top performing tweets where engagement tends to be higher in the data above.

Top Tweets by engagement per follower

Here’s a list of some of the top tweets we found in the study (and a thought or two on what makes these great).

What’s great about this: A fantastic, funny image that acts as the focal point of the tweet (the update text here amounts to a really great caption).

What’s great about this: The content is timely (our Twitter analysis was pulled during February, which included the Super Bowl), entertaining, and visual. Again, like above, the image and the text go together to make the joke. :)

What’s great about this: Dogs! The subject matter probably helped quite a bit. It’s also benefitting from the animated image and the funny factor.

And here’s a quick chart of all the top tweets:

My first thought when looking at the top tweets here is that almost all of the tweets include images! The number of tweets that included links (12) wasn’t too different from the number that did (8), but 18 out of 20 of the top tweets included a photo.

Which brings us to …

How does including an image affect engagement?

One of our favorite Twitter tips is to include images with your tweets. We’ve noticed a significant increase—sometimes as much as 150 percent more retweets—when we’ve tried this with our @buffer Twitter account.

Does this advice hold true for all users?

In our dataset of roughly 1 million tweets, around 42% of tweets included an image and roughly 58% did not.

Buffer_Microcontent_091715-06

How did the amount of engagement compare for tweets that included images and tweets that did not?

Tweets with images consistently received more engagement than tweets without images.

Buffer_Microcontent_091715-07

The above chart looks at engagement per follower, which is a way to analyze the data comparatively for those with tons of followers and those with less.

Tweets with images receive approximately 22.8% more engagement than tweets without.

We also ran the higher-level numbers here on average engagement in total. It’s possible that the stats here could possibly be skewed by bigger accounts or outlier results, though in this case, the charts seem to tell the same story – and maybe even to a slightly greater degree – as the one above.

Buffer_Microcontent_091715-08

Does including a link mean more engagement?

We know that including a link leads to more clicks (as there’s nothing to click without the link). But what is the effect on retweets, favorites, and mentions?

We found: Tweets with links tend to receive less engagement than tweets without links.

Around 70% of tweets in our dataset included a link, and the remaining 30% did not.

Includes Link-

What does engagement per follower look like for these two types of tweets?

Tweets that do not include links received approximately 25.1% more engagement, on average, than tweets that did include links.

Buffer_Microcontent_091715-10The average engagement per follower suggests that tweets without links tend to receive more engagement, and just in case you were wondering about what the average of total engagement looked like:

Buffer_Microcontent_091715-11

Our best ideas about what this means

Seems a bit counterintuitive, right? Tweets without links get more favorites, retweets, and replies than tweets with links.

I was fortunate to have the eyes of my Buffer teammate Tom on this data, and he had a really great thought as to what might be afoot here.

My hunch is it could be partly related to how behavior differs across various Twitter accounts.

I have a feeling that businesses and brands might use Twitter moreso to promote external content through the use of links while personal accounts might be more conversation-focused.
Thinking how this might work on Facebook, for instance, if a company with 1,000 followers posts out a promotional link, it might get 10-15 likes while a personal post to 600 friends might get 50-100 likes.

We took this idea and explored a bit further. What is the breakdown of tweets with links vs. tweets without links, based on different follower tiers?

Tweets With Links

It’s really fascinating that large accounts do post links in the vast majority of their tweets (around 70-80% of all tweets for accounts with up to 16,000 followers), yet the huge accounts—16,000 followers and up—post a relatively large amount of tweets without links!

Could it be that some of the huge accounts are having more conversations than smaller accounts?

It’s an interesting theory and a good reminder that the data we’ve explored here includes everything from everyone who shares with Buffer—both brands and individuals.

A couple extra thoughts:

  • Should brands start composing tweets without links? It’d be a good test to try. My best guess is that there’s likely a lot of factors that would be hard to predict. For example, are people less likely to engage with a conversational tweet because it’s from a business vs. from a friend?
  • It might also be interesting to mention that tweets with images were less likely to contain links than tweets without images. Since we learned from the earlier takeaway that image tweets get great engagement, it’s possible that images could play a big role in the engagement effect of tweets with or without links, too.

Can including a hashtag improve the amount of engagement you get?

We’ve mentioned in past articles that hashtags help your tweets. We’ve highly encouraged you to give them a try.

Does our new data support this?

Yes!

This plot below shows the average amount of engagement per follower for tweets by the number of hashtags included. It’s fascinating to see a clear positive relationship here. The positive effects of adding more hashtags seems to rise steadily all the way to 4 hashtags per tweet.

Buffer_Microcontent_091715-13

So how many hashtags do people usually use?

The majority of the tweets in our dataset, roughly 500,000, don’t contain any hashtags, and slightly less than 200,000 contain just 1. It’s interesting that there seems to be a clear positive relationship between the number of hashtags and the amount of engagement, yet most tweets don’t quite take advantage!

Buffer_Microcontent_091715-12

Further notes about methodology

In addition to the way that we went about measuring engagement (retweets plus favorites plus replies), one might also be tempted to give more weight to retweets because they are often considered to be more valuable than favorites or replies. An engagement measure like (2 * retweets + favorites + mentions) / followers could account for this difference in value, for instance. The challenging part was thinking about exactly how much more valuable a retweet is than a favorite or mention. Is a retweet really worth two favorites? We decided to try to keep the measure simple and minimize the number of underlying assumptions and estimations.

Reflecting on our engagement measure, we thought of other factors that might skew the amount of engagement that a tweet gets. The first such factor that came to mind was the number of followers that an account has.

If we think of engagement as retweets + favorites + mentions, then large Twitter accounts are naturally likely to receive more engagement than smaller accounts, even if the smaller accounts follow the best practices of tweeting. :)

To control for the effect of followers, we used a similar approach used in Dan Zarrella’s awesome study of hashtags, measuring engagement per follower. Using this as a measure of engagement, rather than just retweets + favorites + mentions, helps control for different follower counts and levels the playing field for smaller Twitter accounts. :)

Further notes about the data

It was fun to look at a slice of tweets from the U.S. West Coast set of Buffer users. Here’s why we chose this particular dataset:

With 1 million tweets we were able do a lot of manipulation quite quickly with a sufficiently large sample size. (Most of the analysis was done on a single computer, and analyzing many millions of tweets on one machine could get quite slow. ) We would love to include many more millions of tweets in the dataset, so we’re looking into using some advanced technologies (Spark and the SparkR package) to scale the analysis. Stay tuned. :)

Among the limitations that occur with a dataset of this particular size and scope:

  • All results will be skewed toward the sharing habits of U.S., West Coast users.
  • Seventeen days of data provided a sufficiently large sample, though in the bigger picture it’s somewhat of a short timeframe. It’s possible that other takeaways could have been found if looking at a different or longer set of dates.
  • We did our best to analyze the data to account for differences in the size/following of a profile. We weren’t yet able to distinguish between different industries or topics (which we imagine could be quite a helpful next step for future studies).

Over to you

We’re incredibly grateful to share this data with you (and to have Lemonly’s help with the graphs and graphics), and we’re eager to hear your great thoughts.

Our previous data study had such amazing reactions in the comments. I’d love to be available to bounce around some ideas with you here as well.

What questions does this data bring up for you?

What insights might you take away?

What can we help to clarify or explain?

I’ll be hanging out in the comments along with our data scientist Julian to help with anything we can. Excited to chat this through with you!

Image source: IconFinder, UnSplash, Pablo, Lemonly

The post What 1 Million Tweets Taught Us About How People Tweet Successfully appeared first on Social.

Ontario looking for 313a apprenticeship

Hello,
My name is kenji and i currently have my gas technician 2, ODP and 636 certificate. I'm slowly exhausting my resources trying to find someone who will indenture me as an apprentice. I live in the Greater toronto area and am having a hard time finding a 313a apprenticeship. If there are an Torontonians here that could give me a lead I would be ecstatic. I just want to get working and learning right now.

Regards,
Kenji

10 Stylishly Spooky Home Decor Ideas

Whether you’re an Ãber-fan of October 31st or just someone who enjoys getting into the holiday spirit, we’ve got 10 ways to haunt up your home for Halloween. Who knew skulls, shrunken heads and spiders could be so stylishly spooky? &helli...

Installing a curved shower bar

Trying to install one of these curved shower bar.



In my case I do not have a walk in shower, but a tub. So it needs to be a specific height off the floor so the shower liner would not be too low or too high. It also has to be a specific distance horizontally from the opposite wall...which means the two ends need to be mounted at a fairly specific location on the wall.

Problem is I do not have studs at that location. I have wall tiles but that goes to about 72" off the floor, so the shower arm would be mounted on the sheet rock above that. I don't feel secure using just drywall toggle bolts or plastic anchors.

Any idea how I can mount it securely?