Posts filed under 'web2.0'
Wheel of Marketing Misfortune
I loved this article by David Armano and his Wheel of Marketing Misfortune. It’s a fresh way to exhort everyone in the digital marketing business to just, you know, chill out a bit.

Read the whole thing here.
1 comment July 9, 2008
Stating the obvious: Online Social Media generate awareness, influences opinion.
Okay, sometimes I have to repeat stuff I’ve already said before, even if it is the equivalent of stating the obvious. I do this usually when I find a study with an air of scienctific credibility that supports something that is being talked about, but lacks the digits.
In this case, I stumbled upon an article in Adweek which states that a new study was release proving that some of the most desirable consumers use the opinions of others from blogs, and social media applications to make their purchasing decisions. In fact, 74% of people polled do this. Of course this means that the brand message and promise seems to be becoming less important than what other people say about the brand and customer experience they have had. Which in turn means, that mass media advertising is becoming less important. Thanks for the statistics, but as I said, it’s still a “duh-moment.”
Still, I like it when marketing people are quoted with something that is a Heureka moment to them. Here it is:
“This study indicates that there is a growing group of highly desirable consumers using social media to research companies,” said Ganim Nora Barnes, a senior fellow at SNCR, in a statement. This demo includes adults 25-55 with a college education, making over $100,000 a year. “These most savvy and sought-after consumers will not support companies with poor customer care reputations, and they will talk about all of this openly with others via multiple online vehicles. This research should serve as a wake-up call to companies: listen, respond, and improve.”
Yeah. Stop making advertising to generate awareness if you cannot listen, respond and improve. Otherwise you will get grilled and served with a slice of lemon on a nice “ineffective traditional advertising sampler platter.”
Add comment April 24, 2008
Facebook Decline
First signs of a decline in social networking interest is becoming aparent, according to this Financial Times Article
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/490e8502-e40e-11dc-8799-0000779fd2ac.html
1 comment February 27, 2008
Updated Shareaholic Tool out for Firefox
Social bookmarking tool Shareaholic has just launched its latest release, which now supports Tumblr, Mixx, Simpy, and FriendFeed. Additionally, Shareaholic is now compatible with Firefox 3+. We mentioned Shareaholic a few months back when the site first launched. It works as a Firefox browser extension that lets you submit items to various social bookmarking tools across the web. It’s tools like these, that work with Firefox, that make it more difficult for social browser Flock to gain significant market share.
via Mashable
Add comment January 21, 2008
Network Value Test
As a form of promotion for its social networking platform, XING introduced the network value test, which gives you a number in Euros on what your network value (money you could make in the next 10 years based on your network) is. It also compares you to the average and top 10 percentile of network values other people have. It is an interesting idea to try to affix a numerical number to your networking behavior, size of network, frequency of exchange etc. However, it is not quite transparent (at first sight, anyway) of how this is calculated, or even what it actually means.
Also, what is really strange, is that you have to re-enter all the information, although it could be read right out of your Xing profile, which would limit the number of errors and increase accuracy. Also, changing just a few variables really does make a real difference, which leads you to wonder how accurate you entered your data, or how to understand the questions given. Try it out and see for yourself.
Add comment December 19, 2007
Nowpublic.com
So I finally had some to time to sign up for a nowpublic.com account. Nowpublic is a promising social media tool where people create news from around the world, can upload video, photos, or just text from any mobile or stationary device. I am still figuring it out, but what I find very interesting how it connects to your blog via their “highlight” tool. The highlight tool basically lets you comment on things you find on the web, automatically proposes tags, and connects your entry to nowpublic.com to your own blog, thereby actually driving traffic to your own site. Pretty smart way to popularize the concept in the blogosphere. Check it out and let me know what you think.
Add comment December 18, 2007
Heavy TXT’ed: SMS contexting
Yet another example of stealing with pride for the blog. The Lab at St. Edmonds has some interesting stuff for sure.
Contexting SMS or twitter in live events isn’t new, but putting words in people’s mouths during an advertising award show filled with narcististic personas to make fun of is an interesting twist. Check it out!

For more, check out:
http://lab.netx.com.au/?p=84
Interested in more? Also check out these interesting TXT sites:
http://www.txtualhealing.com/
http://www.simpletext.info
http://www.chatwall.de/
1 comment December 7, 2007
Facebook “Social Advertising” plans already generating backlash responses
It’s not surprising that right after Facebook announced that they would open up Facebook to more to advertising, taking advantage of the referral-based nature of the web, true web freaks are responding harshly.
To me, “Social Advertising” is an oxymoron at best.
If Advertisers can’t change their mindsets from mass media messaging to conversations, including their brand management and marketing process, they will never be able to join social networks with a meaningful conversation with their customers.
It’s time to realize that within the Customer Life Cycle, generating Awareness is more an more something people do among each other and by themselves. It works not because, but despite all the mass media advertising out there. Advertisers so far are just reducing brand intimacy by trying to join the fray with their mindsets unchanged. And yes, Facebook is risking losing its credibility to its users, too.
What marketers should worry about way more, is to invest time in understanding human behavior, improve their products and start owning the brand experience people have with their products. If you provide meaningful experiences people will do the advertising for you. Duh.
http://www.techcrunch.com/2007/11/07/the-facebook-ad-backlash-begins/#comment-1739221
2 comments November 8, 2007





