Posted by: laurenstuart712 on: May 24, 2010

We’ve all been there.
That feeling of frustration when you pull that last $10 bill out of your wallet. The stomach flip you get after looking at your bank statement and seeing your ever-decreasing funds. The buyer’s remorse that hits you once you get the bill in the mail for that credit card shopping spree you took back in April…
Again, we’ve all been there. Some of us are there right now.
But before you go and sell that right kidney, take a look at these four social media websites that can help you save some cold hard cash.
1. eDivvy - Do you have a friend’s graduation party coming up? A wedding? A birthday? A Bat Mitzfa? Whatever the celebration is, eDivvy will make the gift giving portion easy and affordable. How does it work? As eDivvy.com states, the website allows you to “select the perfect gift, invite people to contribute, and keep track of the entire process.” EDivvy will even handle the messy, uncomfortable parts of group gift giving, like asking for money, sending out reminders, and making sure the right gifts are bought and delivered on time. This way you won’t have to break the bank spending $300 on the stainless steel, jewel-encrusted espresso machine your sister has just been dying for – you can get the whole family to chip in!
2. CheapTweet - Twitter has become a modern day social media Swiss Army Knife. Its uses are endless. You can use it to avoid traffic jams (CommuterFeed), lose weight (TweetWhatYouEat), track packages (TrackThis), and even find love (FindLoveOnTwitterverse). Twitter is also a useful tool when it comes to saving money. CheapTweet, as it says on its website, “finds the coupons, sales and discounts people talk about on Twitter.” CheapTweet makes it easy to find deals catered to your interests by organizing all of the deals, discounts and coupons into several categories, including apparel, tech, food and travel.
3. GradeFund – This is a special one for all you struggling college students – Lord knows there’s a lot of us out there. While college can be an absolute blast, it can also be quite an expensive time for you and your family, depending on who’s paying for your education. Scholarships are often hard to find and even harder to win. Taking out loans may help temporarily but can leave you in debt for years. Working a part-time job can help put a little more money in your pocket but often comes at the expense of your grades. GradeFund wants to help. GradeFund’s goal is simple – as it says on its website, “We want to help all students with a service that encourages them to pursue higher education and focus on doing well while in school.” GradeFund works in just four easy steps:
The money you receive from your sponsors will either go to the tuition office or straight into your pocket. All you have to do is get those A+’s – GradeFund will handle the rest.
4. Plastic Jungle – Plastic Jungle is a nifty website that allows you to sell, buy, exchange and donate gift cards. This way, instead of wasting that $100 “Vegan Surplus Store” gift card Aunt Suzy gave you for your birthday, sell it to Plastic Jungle for 92 percent of the balance or trade it in for a great gift card to the store of your choice. Plastic Jungle also allows you to buy gift cards at a great, discounted rate. For example, a $50 gift card to Restaurant.com is currently on sale for only $15.
I hope you will take some time to give these websites a once-over. I’ve already signed up for GradeFund, bought a gift card off of Plastic Jungle and created an eDivvy group for my friend’s upcoming wedding. Oh social media, what would I do without you?
-Lauren
Posted by: laurenstuart712 on: April 13, 2010
Hello there! My name is Lauren Stuart and I am studying public relations and communication studies at the University of Oregon. I have an unhealthy obsession with Diet Coke, I believe that John Mayer’s music holds the solution to all of life’s problems, I am head over heels in love with my Yorkie, Bella, and I am incredibly fascinated with and passionate about public relations.
One of the areas of PR that interests me most is social media. I have user name accounts with so many social media websites that I have to write them down in order to remember them, I get more excited about a new iPhone app then I do about a party on a Friday night, Mashable.com has become my new home page, and I sometimes have internal debates about whether 15 Tweets in the last hour is socially acceptable.
I figure that it is about time my (somewhat ridiculous) obsession with social media be put to good use. For that reason, I’ve decided this blog is going to focus on new, useful topics in social media from a public relations perspective, as well as ways social media can individually help PR professionals market themselves and their clients. Maybe I’ll even throw in a post about how social media can save the world (since I thoroughly believe it can). So sit back, relax and allow me to help you find the ME in social MEdia.