Catchin’ Up with Social Computing Tenents

Encapsulating the essence of why social media tools are evermore meaningful to more people — young and old — these are some highlights from Forrester Research’s April 2007 report on social computing trends by Charlene Li:
clipped from www.forrester.com
Individuals increasingly take cues from one another rather than from institutional sources like corporations, media outlets, religions, and political bodies. To thrive in an era of Social Computing, companies must abandon top-down management and communication tactics, weave communities into their products and services, use employees and partners as marketers, and become part of a living fabric of brand loyalists.
The exponential growth of processing power and storage capacity puts unprecedented computing power into the hands of users.
The social impact: The mainstream populace, not just the wealthy or educated, can tap into technology’s power to change social mores
Social Computing: 1) innovation will shift from top-down to bottom-up; 2) value will shift from ownership to experience; and 3) power will shift from institutions to communities
multiple email addresses, and thousand-member networks will be the norm — even as these youth settle down, have families, and pursue careers.
  blog it

Blog, Feed & Socialize

I just read a nifty report released on February 6 by Forrester’s social computing wise Charlene Li — “How Consumers Find Web Sites: Social Tools Play A Significant Role For Youth.”
Often we “know” what we ought to do today to build for tomorrow, but seeing results of surveys and hearing recommendations based on those findings gives us fodder we need to influence people and convince them to support our efforts.
Here are some things from Charlene’s report that I’m seeing happen already inside Intel…things that we are working to refine and disperse as best practices to other groups as they become more active with their online audiences/communities.
clipped from www.forrester.com
Blogs help with search rankings in several ways: Comments on blogs provide more content to index; frequent updates mean that the search engine’s Web crawlers come more often; and inbound links from other blogs and sites mean higher relevancy scores in algorithms.
Services like FeedBurners’ FeedFlare and Bazaarvoice’s ShareThis automatically insert links into blog posts, content pages, and product pages, making it simple to tag or share on sites like Facebook, Digg, and del.icio.us.
Investments in MySpace.com and Facebook will reach not only a quarter of the online youth population, but also support natural word of mouth and email, which are top sources of site referrals for youth. The key is tracking where traffic originates — for example, from a note posted on Facebook — as well as the channel, be it from a blog, email, or word of mouth. Use services from providers like Hitwise and Compete to map traffic patterns of your target customers.
  blog it

Find Social Media Jobs & Make Connections

Jeremiah Owyang not only helps show us how to use new communications tools and how to measure social media, he let’s us know who’s movin’ and shakin’ in this blog post.
clipped from www.web-strategist.com
How to Connect with others:
Submit an annoucement
If you know folks that are moving up in the social media industry, leave a comment below, or if you’re feeling shy (it’s cool to self-nominate) send me an email.

Seeking Social Media Professionals?
If you’re seeking to connect with community advocates and community managers there are few resources

  • Start with my community manager group in Facebook
  • Check out Jake McKee’s community portal for jobs
  • See Chris Heuer’s Social Media Jobs
  • SimplyHired aggregates job listings, as does Indeed
  • Hiring? Leave a commentt
    If you’re seeking candidates in the social media industry, many of them are within arms reach, feel free to leave a link to a job description (but not the whole job description, or I’ll delete it.

      blog it

    Video Upload Once, Syndicate to Many with TubeMogul

    I stumbled upon TubeMogul and set up a free account. I haven’t tested out the services yet, but would like to learn from others who have tested or are using the service. Please let me know what you think.

    tubemogul.giftubemogul.gif

    From the TubeMogul site:

    Features

    Stunning Charts – easily create charts that track videos and/or video publishers.
    Powerful Analysis Tools – create custom groups of videos, video publishers and online video sites, and receive analytics by group.
    Universal Upload – Upload your videos to all major video sharing sites in one shot!
    Aggregated Analytics – track online video analytics across online video sites including Google Video, MetaCafe, MySpace, AOL, Yahoo!, Revver, YouTube and more!
    Communication Tools – effortlessly email charts to the recipients of your choosing.
    Data Export – exports charts and other data to Excel.
    Ease of Use – enjoy TubeMogul’s intuitive user interface and easy to understand charts.
    Advanced Features – TubeMogul also provides advanced custom reports, viewership demographic reports, and multivariate video testing upon request. Email us at comments@tubemogul.com for more information.

    The benefits of using TubeMogul include:

    • Save Time – uploading videos to each site in your distribution is no longer necessary – upload to TubeMogul and let the Universal Upload tool do the rest. Then you can login to understand your viewership across online video sites in one place.
    • Increased Reach – with your videos on more sites at no extra effort, your opportunity to gain viewers multiplies! Users of Universal Upload have witnessed up to 3x more views per video.
    • Improved Understanding of Viewer Base – better understand your customer base to create more targeted and relevant content or products and services.
    • Track Trends & Buzz – create groups of videos important to you or your industry and track spikes in viewership to identify trends and monitor the pulse of online video viewers.
    • Assess Marketing Efforts – assess the effectiveness of your marketing efforts by analyzing spikes and trends in viewership across any range of time.
    • Competitive Intelligence – see what’s working for your counterparts and competition and compare and contrast viewership trends with your own.
    • Share the Intelligence – send and share data and charts with colleagues or friends.

    Improving My Blogging

    Some good tips and comments in this DailyBLogTips post from January 18, 2008.
    clipped from www.dailyblogtips.com
    Productivity itself is pretty unimportant. It’s what productivity allows us to do that matters. A productive blogging habit means more posts and more quality, and we all know what that means: more links and more traffic.
    Productive blogging can also affect our day-to-day lives. It allows you to accomplish more in less time. That means: more time spent with the people that matter in your life.
    Many bloggers, myself included, struggle to balance the needs of this hobby with the needs of our loved ones. Being productive can make that task a little bit easier.

    • Write more than you publish.
    • Turn off auto-notifiers.
    • Check emails less often, but deal with more when you do.
    • Write as much as possible when you’re feeling creative.
    • Use your feed reader as an all-in-one inbox.
    • Process different types of tasks in batches.
    • Work out a ‘To Post’ list.
    • Spend less time reading feeds.
    • Sketch posts before filling in the detail.
      blog it

    Reboot Shows Blinged-Out Solid Gold PC with Intel Core 2 Duo $3/4Million

    [podtech content=http://media1.podtech.net/media/2008/02/PID_013360/Podtech_The_Reboot_Ep_12.flv&postURL=http://www.podtech.net/home/4906/the-reboot-wii-want-rock-band&totalTime=139000&breadcrumb=e7a232f835684d509be5a6ec008872b0]

    Rio Pesino of PodTech has a short, nifty episode of his gaming show, “Reboot” that spotlights a Japanese company selling PCs covered in solid gold ($750,000) or silver cases covered with diamonds ($560,000). Sure the bling is the thing, but it’s that Intel Core 2 Duo inside that make me sing!  See it here:

    Solid Gold Bling PC

    Connected Agencies & Corporate Marketing Change Agents

    I just skimmed Forrester Research’s report “The Connected Agency” from their Interactive Marketing Professional team. This is great stuff I’m going to read again and map out how I feel and where I fit in their scheme of things.
    UPDATE: I got a nice call from Forrester this morning (2/11/08). Here is how you can access the full report:

    The link we discussed (www.forrester.com/connectedagency) now directs visitors to the main report page, where Forrester clients can log in and download the report, or non-clients can purchase a copy for $279.

    As an corporate communications dude, I see how things are changing inside. Silos are coming down. People with skills are connecting with people on different teams to get advice, maximize resources and share learnings.I see agencies and vendors evolving quickly too. They’re racing to capture talented people, participate in key communities (for their industry and for the benefit of their clients) and they’re mastering new tools.There is an healthy pull pulling both corporate communications/marketing and agencies/vendors up to new heights, faster and faster. And along the way more people from both sides are participating online, testing and improving new Web 2.0 tools. We’re also learning a lot and getting better at making sense of data and sharing it quickly, broadly. Those abilities will improve in 2008.One thing I’d like is to start pulling in what Forester pegs to happen in 2013 “the agency is part of the community.” I believe we’re actually seeing “the agency promotes the community” in some cases right now. But I do think Forester has it right here:

    * 2008 to 2009: The agency involves the community. Even in 2007, agencies and marketers began to reach out to consumers: Chanel worked with viral agency BuzzParadise to tap select bloggers for participation in special events and to receive insider brand news; Publicis launched a blogger advertising network, with the twist that amateurs create the ads. Agencies need to keep consumers involved consistently and begin to build a specialization in specific target markets or with communities based on the brands with which they are working. Where’s the money? Brands will pay a premium for the high conversion rates that the agency can guarantee based on its community insights.

    * 2010 to 2012: The agency promotes the community. Agencies focus dedicated teams on creating direct relationships with tightly defined communities. At shops like Leo Burnett, job titles shift from account manager to community animator. Media fragmentation, communities embodying multiple personas, and niche brands offer a rich opportunity for agencies to compile distinct portfolios of closely knit consumers, uncovered by disparate data sources. Much like a talent or sports agent, the community animator will begin promoting its own communities to compatible brands, rather than the reverse. Agencies will take the place of gatekeeper to those communities, and brands will need to pay to get in. By 2010, brands like BMW will have realized that mass marketing is over and that access to influencers is the way forward.

    * 2013 on: The agency is part of the community. Agency staff will draw closer to the communities they interact with and ultimately become part of the community itself. Fast-forward to the future: The successful agency has intimate involvement with community members as an external mouthpiece and internal catalyst. This bond allows the agency team to “age” with its community, brokering relationships with new brands as the community’s needs change. Large groups like JWT will scale by managing a kaleidoscope of different consumer groups, introducing and handing off appropriate brands as communities evolve. Advertisers will consolidate business with agencies that can adeptly accompany brands throughout their life cycle within diverse consumer communities.

    clipped from www.forrester.com
    The Connected Agency
    Marketers: Partner With An Agency That Listens Instead Of Shouts
    by
    Mary Beth Kemp, Peter Kim

    Today’s agencies fail to help marketers engage with consumers, who, as a result, are becoming less brand-loyal and more trusting of each other.
    A new definition of “mass media” is emerging. Content Creators comprise 13% of the US adult online population and 11% of online Europeans.(see endnote 8) Communities can now find and consume media that speaks directly to niche interests, published by other community members. The new mass media is made up of a collection of communities. While many consumers are involved, each individual community is small, fragmenting the market further. As more consumers become involved in Social Computing, these platforms will grow and eclipse today’s mainstream media.
    New players compensate for left-brain deficiencies.
    Pull dominates push; quality trumps quantity.
    Creative talent resides inside and outside the firm
    The agency promotes the community
      blog it

    BlogTalk Radio — IT Pros from Intel’s Open Port Community

    UPDATE:  Pasting BlogTalkRadio player code directly into this post:

    <embed src=’http://www.blogtalkradio.com/mediaplayer.swf?displayheight=&file=http://www.blogtalkradio.com%2fopenport%2fplay_list.xml&autostart=false&shuffle=false&callback=http://www.blogtalkradio.com/FlashPlayerCallback.aspx&volume=80&corner=rounded&#8217; width=’180′ height=’152′ type=’application/x-shockwave-flash’ pluginspage=’http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer&#8217; quality=’high’ wmode=’transparent’ menu=’false’></embed><img style=”visibility:hidden;width:0px;height:0px;” border=0 width=0 height=0 src=”http://counters.gigya.com/wildfire/CIMP/Jmx*PTEyMDI2MDc5MDQxOTYmcHQ9MTIwMjYwNzkxMjU3MSZwPTEyMzIwMSZkPSZuPQ==.jpg&#8221; />

    I tried embedding the BlogTalkRadio player here, using the embed feature (Gigya technology), but the player hasn’t showed up here yet. The title arrive on my blog, no problem and I also see player code in my code section…but now player. What gives? I’ll try other ways.

    When this gets up and running, this BlogTalkRadio show “Open Port Radio” will be great for my enterprise tech pals at Intel. They’ve been hosting a community for IT pros interested in bringing the latest IT supported technologies into their businesses. I’ve seen some of the most brilliant passion and can-do energy from this team as they try new ways to share insight and connect experts with one another. Here’s a recent conversation they explored on Open Port.

    In a big company like Intel, users get their software in a variety of ways – on their desktops, delivered over a network, or some combination of those. Catherine Spence, an enterprise architect with Intel IT Research and Technology Development, studies alternate and emerging compute models for enterprise operations. In this audio podcast, Spence discusses what her group learned through a recent study on the effects of streaming and virtual hosted desktop computing models on server and network utilization. On-demand software, or Software as a Service, is one of the emerging software delivery models showing benefits in boosting productivity and lowering costs.

    [podtech content=http://media1.podtech.net/media/2008/01/PID_013344/Podtech_IT@Intel_SAAS.mp3&postURL=http://www.podtech.net/home/4890/itintel-software-as-a-service&totalTime=411000&breadcrumb=83ae8f58fe3744cba6cb2e62178ea911]