Showing posts with label YouTube. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YouTube. Show all posts

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Social Media, personified

If your favorite social media site were a person, who would they be? An artist? Engineer? Troublemaker?

In a fun post "
Internet University Cast" by artist and DeviantArt contributor elontirien, social media sites are brought to life with personalities inspired by a short story.

A common question in the branding process has always been something along the lines of giving a brand a personality: "if your brand were a fictional character, who would it be?" Such an exercise allows us to identify personality traits and emotions that the brand is intended to produce.

And while I find the Google character a little uptight for my imagination, the others appear spot-on. I especially like the young Twitter character, that seems to underscore the fact that Twitter shares a narcissism and self-importance common of a 'tween'.

For another similar post regarding the Obama and McCain 'brands', click here.

What is your brand? An researcher like Jonas Salk? A granddad like your own? A revolutionary?

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Tuesday, June 09, 2009

The Rules Of Business Still Apply

Twitter Vs. Facebook Which Reaches More People?

Remember the dot-com days? When profits didn’t matter, and the new currency was ‘click-thrus’ and ‘page views’? The bubble was built by the general public’s fascination with this new thing, ‘the Internet’, and e-commerce companies along with their telecom counterparts (installing ever-greater capacity) rode the bubble toward a sudden and inevitable burst.

Social Media is beginning its shakeout. MySpace is struggling. YouTube is gaining traction as watching video online becomes a standard media, and Facebook is seeing continued growth, but much of it outside the U.S. as this market becomes saturated and curious Boomers drop off the site. LinkedIn integrates a number of useful applications and solidifies its position as a professional’s social media rolodex.

Now comes Twitter, off its highs of the CNN / Ashton battle for a million followers, a month after an Oprah mention, a curiousity to most and not yet monetized. Studies have indicated that most new visitors stop visiting after a month, and now a report that May’s growth on Twitter was anemic, although, importantly, the time spent on the site (by its active members) grew substantially.

So what’s next for Twitter? I’m not certain, but it is critical to recognize that Twitter’s celebrity users are essentially spokespeople and pitchmen for the site, not a business model in and of themselves. According to the rules of business where a company has an established and vocal ‘tribe’ of followers in its niche, the focus should be to provide value to its most loyal customers (visitors). This may mean perhaps, more integration with the hordes of third-party Twitter applications being developed, recognizing its role not as an interactive medium but a broadcast medium and provide services accordingly, and determine the best way to monetize the platform without alienating a customer base that is not used to be ‘pitched’ with advertising. It is then that Twitter can begin to expand and regain interest among businesses and individuals who will leverage the platform and applications using methods tested and proven by the early adopters.

‘The Oprah Effect’ will only get you to the lip of Geoffrey Moore’s chasm. The rules of business still apply as Twitter attempts to cross it.

Full disclosure: www.twitter.com/jimgardner

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Friday, April 17, 2009

Know when to fold 'em.

The Pirate Bay logo

I know. With that title, I've put a tune in your head you'll not get out for some time. Still, you could do worse than a 70s classic from Kenny Rogers. In any event, my point, and I do have one, is that that lyric has never been more appropriate in a business context than it is to the changes made possible by today's electronic media.

The Pirate Bay case (click here if you are not familiar) came to a conclusion today, complete with jail time and seven figure fines for its founders. So now the entertainment industry has a win in their column based on foggy reasoning, short-sighted strategy, and a desperate effort to hold on to their buggy whip business plans. Now they just have to leverage that surprising win by filing the same suit against thousands of copycats.

Good luck with all that.

The newspaper industry is no different. Teetering on extinction, there has been no shortage of attempts – legislative and otherwise – to support the newspapers' clearly flawed business model. Think of the effort to start a newspaper today with new investors: The ten-second pitch for venture capitalists? "We deliver news and opinion late, in a cumbersome and environmentally suspect format to individuals whose iterative feedback takes days and requires postage."

Well, sign me up!

From efforts to reduce regulation (rarely a bad thing in my mind) to subsidize newspapers through tax policy (rarely a good thing in my mind) the concept of a newspaper is so central to our culture, or so it is argued, that its simply 'too big to fail'.

Like banks. Or car manufacturers.

It's long past time to simply face the reality that newspapers, records, movies and other media are competing not just with new media, but in a brand new context. Traditional distribution methods for everything from news to music to movies are obsolete, and there isn't a tort or an injunction or any lawyer in the world that can stop it.

One of my favorite quotes on the subject is from US Army General Eric Shinseki: “If you don't like change, you're going to like irrelevance even less."

Or perhaps more succinctly put by that other sage, "You gotta know when to walk away, and know when to run."

Susan Boyle

UPDATE 4-23: Excellent opinion piece regarding Susan Boyle sensation that indicates that the amazing viral nature of the clip has yet to monetize for YouTube or ITV as a result of the battles between old, new, and newer revenue models.

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Sunday, February 22, 2009

Marshall McLuhan and Social Media

Cover of "The Global Village: Transformat...

Skype, Facebook, MySpace, Match.com, Vonage, eBay, YouTube, Craigslist… the connection between them is the connection between us, and all rely upon the Internet – or IP protocol – to operate.

It occurs to me that a few years ago the promise of the Internet was in the democratization of content and the free exchange of ideas. So today I'm not certain the cause of the hand-wringing over the growth of Social Media. Cynically I could suggest that our collective hand-wringing is simply in the fact that we don't accept Social Media as a valid tool (or proper use of our time) because we haven't yet monetized it properly. (44% of all web visits are to Social Media sites but only 5% of all revenue from the internet is driven from them.) All things, it seems, are accepted in time as we learn to make money with them.


While I understand the concerns regarding the lack of privacy of our youth's postings and the banality of photos posted by exuberant parents, it seems to me that Social Media – and similar applications of the medium – are simply the latest stop on the train to Marshall McLuhan's Global Village. It is, after all, the goal of an increasing number of projects such as One Laptop Per Child to bring the information and interactivity of the global web to remote, more impoverished parts of the world.


A JPMorgan survey from last November revealed that half of online social networkers were there to connect with old friends, while still more were there to interact with their current friends, sharing music and photos. There is a big time-waste with Social Media, say the critics – yet it is important to note that it is at least an interactive medium, unlike television.


The ultimate realization of the promise of the internet will be in its social aspects – connecting, sharing, even buying and selling. Whether in twenty years it will look like Facebook or appear more as holographic avatars in a room of mirrors is incidental. The thing that matters is that we all continue to communicate, regardless of the media.


Now if you excuse me, I need to research how to make money with Twitter


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