Tagging & Currupting Conversations

I finally got to spend some time on Beet.TV and wow!  Found some fresh, insightful video interviews with influencers like Steve  Rubel (, Om Molik (GigaOM), Peter Rojas, Shel Isreal and tons more.

Found this posted by Andy Plesser, who I had the pleasure of meeting over a year ago at a new media breakfast hosted by TheNewsMarket.com (broadcast quality video download services used by Intel’s GCG).  In this interview you get a good sense for the importance of tagging and the benefits of allowing your readers to tag your posts/content.  The most telling reaction here is that people who are paid to comment on blogs are currupting conversations.  A strong opinion for which I feel is limiting.  The sense I got from the ending of this interview: the real power resting in the potential of Internet, not particular tools people will create to make money off it.  

Jeff Jarvis the vlogger! With his great video coverage of Davos under his belt, I asked him to handle some interviews for Beet.TV at the AlwaysOn conference in Manhattan this week.

Here Jeff has a talk with Harvard’s David Weinberger, one of the co-authors of the ground-breaking Cluetrain Manifesto.

David is an author of an upcoming book about folksonomies and tags called “Everything is Miscellanous.”

Jarvisalways

Here’s the rising videoblogger Jeff Jarvis (l) in action, interviewing David Weinberger at the AlwaysOn conference.

P.S.  Note — we are providing transcriptions of our interviews on Beet.TV — the lag is about 5 days since the the transcriptions are done by real human beings who understand and write real English!  So, you should check back at this post to find the transcription in a few days.  Here is our Beet.TV transcription blog.

Technorati’s Peter Hirshberg in WSJ on Ogilvy Alliance

On Valentine’s Day, The Wall Street Journal did a “Questions For…” piece in its The Advertising Report section (B3D) that was all about love.  Smart love.  A marraige based on building out open communication.

“Minding the Blog Is the Next Big Thing in Managing Brand,” read the subhead.  I carried this article in my man purse for a week before reading it.  Glad I got to it!

One evening a while back, I saw that Technorati and Ogilvy North America had created an alliance to provide new services for clients interested in reaching consumers…consumers who are spending time creating videos and blogs rather than watching TV or reading news created by traditional media.

I really dig a great soundbite.  Here’s one from Steve Hayden, Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide vice chairman & chief creative officer (now there’s a title!):  “Our whole industry for 200 years has been focused on talking  or broadcasting.  We need more listening.”

Here are some gems from Technorati Chairman and CMO Peter Hirshberg. 

  • If you went to a cocktail party and heard everything everyone was saying about you all the time, and took it all really seriously, it might drive you nuts.  You need to use judgment.  But it turns out that if you read what people are saying, you very quickly get a sense of how you are playing. 
  • Marketers need to be careful to not overreact.  Is there something you could learn (from a blog, a comment, or consumer-generated content)? 
  • The important thing is to read this stuff (blogs, comments) and consider it.
  • Marketing organizations really ought to have somebody on board whose job is to listen to, converse with and ensure the company is engaging with its customers, whether they are on blogs, MySpace, YouTube, whatever.
  • These people, the new 24-year-old person you will hire, you will be amazed by the knowledge they bring to the table.
  • You should respond if someone (online) says something inaccurate.  You should go on to the blog that day and correct it.  If someone says something great, you should thank them. 
  • If a brand pays attention to its customers, wonderful things happen.
  • Prestige, high-concept brands, brands that really put a lot of time into curating and polishing every aspect of it, take longer to get on board, because they think there is more to lose.  In fact, there is more to gain.
  • Until maybe last summer (2006), when you said “the blogoshere” to a brand: it ducked.  The basic reaction was, “I hope they don’t say bad things about me.  I’m not sure I want to advertise on a blog, because I can’t control it, and I’m very nervous about letting my users talk about my brand online because that would be giving up control.”
  • This is until about nine months ago (summer 2006).  Then all of a sudden, I think brands saw an emerging growth of MySpace, of YouTube, and the blogosphere.
  • The brand people got over the control issue.  They actually realized that the next generation of branding involved listening to and including the audience in marketing and building a dialogue.
  • The most interesting action in the blogosphere is really in the hundreds of topic areas where communities coalesce and people are having conversations.
  • Blogs are just one form of user-generated content.  There are Podcasts, video, pictures.  All of this stuff is growing.  We’ll probably see a lot of growth in areas that aren’t blogging, but the blog isn’t going away, because it really does give the audiences a voice. 

Makes me wonder.  There was a time when broadcast was not essential to Intel’s PR department.  But some progressive, forward-thinking people gathered enough insight and momentum to convince the right people it was time to treat broadcasters as a key audience.  Building good relationships with broadcast professionals has been important to Intel for decades now.  We’re now very fortunate to have the opportunity to build helpful relationships with a whole new set of people.  We the interested people.

Social Media Insight from the Geek & the Gatherer

Here are “marketing voices” that make you ask — are there really any remaining good reasons why people, companies and organizations ought to step slowing into Social Media?  I’m sure there are many, but possibilities seem to trump potential harm.

From the Terry Gross of Social Media, PodTech’s Jennifer Jones give us these great interviews:

Dave Sifry, CEO of Technorati, is the recognized authority about what is happening on the Web at any one moment. He tells how Technorati is changing the news cycle. One way to think of it is this way: instead of a 24-hour turnaround between an event and its coverage (and longer for analysis), it’s more like a 60-second turnaround. Technorati indexes what people post within one minute of its posting. The site tracks 67 million blogs in total, and 1.5 million blog posts a day. It has already changed the landscape of marketing, and it definitely alters what companies that care about “listening” need to do.

[podtech content=http://media1.podtech.net/media/2007/02/PID_001948/Podtech_MV_Dave_Sifry_CEO_Technorati.mp3&postURL=http://www.podtech.net/marketingvoices/marketing-voices/1251/technorati-the-focus-group-for-the-web&totalTime=1245000&breadcrumb=3F34K2L1]

The best company cultures that work for social media are just like people who embrace conversations and two-way interactions — they are open, trusting and talkative. Jennifer McClure, executive director of the Society for New Communications Research talks to Marketing Voices host Jennifer Jones about corporations like IBM that embrace the idea of blogging employees (more than 25,000 IBM bloggers attest to this) and are willing to talk directly with their customers and employees. McClure also discusses how she would assess a company’s readiness for social media. Fear used to reign in corporate cultures, but McClure sees fear waning, as trust becomes more prevalent in Fortune 500 environments. [podtech content=http://media1.podtech.net/media/2007/01/PID_001922/Podtech_MV_Jennifer_McClure.mp3&postURL=http://www.podtech.net/marketingvoices/marketing-voices/1249/building-a-corporate-culture-for-social-media&totalTime=884000&breadcrumb=3F34K2L1]