August 20, 2010 at 09:59 AM in Advertising, Business, Finance, Innovation, Interactive Marketing, Management, Marketing, Media, Modern Marketing, P2P, PR, software, Technology, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
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August 11, 2010 at 02:13 PM in Advertising, Business, Cherkoff, Community, Finance, Innovation, Interactive Marketing, Management, Marketing, Media, Modern Marketing, Open Source Marketing, P2P, Social Software, Technology, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
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Eric Raymond’s seminal essay The Cathedral & The Bazaar remains one of the most powerful analogies for the world of media and marketing today. In case you aren’t familiar with Raymond’s work, he explained how in the world of software design, for many years, engineers spent long periods locked away creating huge operating systems in institutional settings that were then wheeled out into the real world for people to admire and to obey. However, the open source movement changed all that with online systems much more like global street bazaars allowing programmers to gather in informal networks and collaborate on technical projects in an organic manner, adding a little stitch here and a patch there, and always feeding their knowledge back into the main market, which remained forever in public ownership. For many years Big Brands operated in exactly the manner of Raymond's Cathedrals, building towering spires that required Brand Architects and Guardians to maintain their sanctity. However, in the shadows of these vast edifices grew global online Bazaars made up of people who found they could organise themselves around their passions, as oppose to the demographical pews ordained by the marketeers. And gradually the flocks flocked out of the Mainstream Media Cathedrals into the hustle-and-bustle of these online markets. However, this was just the beginning and people quickly realised that they could not only hang out in the Bazaars but could also bring their own soapboxes along in the shape of blogs. And eventually, as these little soapboxes grew into giant social networking sites like Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook, the Bazaar morphed into a global conversation. One where people trashed the Big Brand Cathedrals as they pleased, or even helped build new ones, ignoring the pained grimaces of the Brand Guardians and Architects who could only see desecration wherever they looked.
However, that’s now all changed. Big Brands have come our from behind their lecterns and are fully signed-up...
August 04, 2010 at 02:34 PM in Advertising, Business, Co-Creation, Community, Entertainment, Finance, Innovation, Interactive Marketing, Management, Marketing, Media, Modern Marketing, Open Source Marketing, P2P, Social Software, software, Technology, Television, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
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May 27, 2010 at 11:58 AM in Advertising, Business, Community, Entertainment, Finance, Innovation, Interactive Marketing, Management, Marketing, Media, Modern Marketing, Open Source Marketing, P2P, PR, Social Software, software, Technology, Television, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
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A couple of months ago I had the good fortune to hear Douglas Rushkoff expound his ideas about the changing nature of money and how private currencies could shift the way in which society organises its resources, loosening the grip of MegaCorps and even BigGov. It was inspirational stuff and all very timely coming fresh on the heels of a financial meltdown driven by tricky derivatives traders and faceless ratings agencies plundering the goodwill of widows and orphans. However, at the end of the talk Rushkoff, maybe suspecting his sober Swiss audience weren’t entirely convinced, found himself pressing that these ideas weren’t just pie-in-the-sky. Now, while I don’t expect the world’s currency exchanges and the pound in your pocket to go anywhere soon, I was very happy to raise my hand and offer the room a few examples of where I thought Rushkoff’s private currencies were in action – albeit at a micro-level. Firstly, I mentioned the Chinese Q coin, which is used by the 300 million users of the QQ instant messaging site to buy virtual goods. Tencent, the owners of QQ recently revealed that 'internet value-added services,' or virtual goods, made up 78% of the company’s total revenue at the end of last year. Enough to raise the company's international ambitions, including buying a stake in DST, the Russian company that owns a chunk of Facebook. And Q Coins are now being accepted in exchange for ‘real’ goods on 3rd party sites, sufficiently broadly to raise the concern of the Chinese government. I also highlighted the Second Life economy wrap-up that reads like a surreal corporate annual report, including tracking Linden Dollars and their transformation into ‘real money’ through the exchanges, LindeX or the Xstreet SL Exchange.
And, while not operating private currencies, I pointed to Etsy, Zopa and Betfair as examples of private marketplaces that are challenging the traditional corporate structures that Rushkoff believes will come under pressure. These marketplaces range wildly in scale and nature. Etsy is a giant P2P flea market where people sell each other about $22m of (often beautiful) homemade items, such as soaps they’ve made in their garden sheds. Betfair is a vast £300m peer-to-peer gambling exchange. Whereas Zopa is a P2P lending service. All tiny in comparison to the industries in which they operate. However, all very successful and growing like topsy. And now we have Facebook Credits, the attempt by Mark Zuckerberg to create a currency in his world, that as it approaches 500m users is more populus than most countries. Once again it’s all very early days. At its outset, Facebook Credits is a way to unify...
May 19, 2010 at 10:02 AM in Advertising, Business, Community, Finance, Innovation, Interactive Marketing, Management, Marketing, Media, Modern Marketing, Open Source Marketing, P2P, PR, Social Software, software, Technology, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
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There are powerful online trends at work sweeping away anonymity as a default position, creating many commercial opportunities for those with a light enough touch. Firstly, there's Facebook, the web’s 800lb social gorilla. Zuckerberg's service has given four hundred million people around the world an online identity and the norm is for users to provide 'real' information. And it's an identity that increasingly follows you around the web, thanks to Facebook Connect. Then there's the booming mobile web. While PAYG allows people to disguise themselves, anyone using a contracted service instantly ties their data habits to some type of billing system, thus allowing certified transactions to occur.
Another mega-trend that will encourage people to 'get real' online is Rupert Murdoch’s decision to throw up paywalls around his online content. Previously, people have been allowed to read the Digger’s content for free – and without flagging who they are. However, now everyone behind the News International paywall will be attending a party where names badges are checked on the way in.
Then there’s ever faster broadband and the continuing march of Moore’s Law, making YouTube-style and webcam communication increasingly common, thus letting people see each other all too clearly.
And finally, but perhaps most powerfully, the law, in the UK at least, is swinging behind the anti-anonymity drive. Lord Mandelson’s much-derided Digital Economy Bill may be heavy-handed in the eyes of many, but one effect it has is to batter the walls of the ISPs where, to date, anonymity has been standard fare.
All of which creates a self-reinforcing norm. Transparency and genuine online identity becomes widespread, brushing aside the previous default so perfectly captured by Peter Steiner’s famous cartoon, ‘on the internet no one knows you’re a dog.’ This in turn creates an environment where people feel comfortable adding ever-more revealing layers of information to their online identities. Including location, financial habits and information that, even a few years ago, would have seemed positively reckless to publish online. As John Battelle writes, the Database of Intentions is extending beyond, ‘What I Want’, to ‘What I Buy’, ‘Who I Am’, ‘Who I Know’, ‘What I Am Doing’, ‘What’s Happening’ and ‘Where I Am’.
Of course, digital consumption habits have always linked to an IP address making it theoretically possible to identify who was snacking on what binary bytes. However, this world was murky, with plenty of ways to conceal who was who, including floating IP addresses.
So what does this new transparent world mean for the marketing industry? Well, increasingly, the vast oceans of data that flow around the web...
March 30, 2010 at 10:45 AM in Advertising, Business, Finance, Innovation, Interactive Marketing, Management, Marketing, Media, Modern Marketing, Open Source Marketing, P2P, PR, Social Software, software, Technology, Television, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack (0)
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For a long time the marketing industry closed its eyes to the impact of networked media. And while it looked the other way, Messrs Brin & Page ate its lunch and built the largest media company in the world. Over the last year or so, however, possibly because of the Google experience, the marketing industry has done a U-turn and the consensus is now that the world has indeed changed forever. So which view is right? Unsurprisingly, the reality is somewhere in between. A thread of my client work over the last few years has been challenging the notion that the maturing web means we should forget everything we’ve ever known and start again. Forget the idea of brands, stop using TV as a medium, assume that the customer has morphed into a new type of being, accept that complete transparency is the only choice, believe that the only workable price point is free. Only a total reboot will do, some claim. However, this binary view of the world overlooks that while much has changed, more has stayed the same. Corporations are still operating in markets where consumers are looking for value and trustworthy suppliers. People are still motivated by the same needs – keeping up with the Jones’, caring for their families, exploring the world, self-expression, ambition, fun. It’s just that the markets they use to find satisfaction have been rewired. ‘The problems which are not changing are human problems - which remain the same,’ noted Eric Schmidt, CEO, Google last year. Take for instance, the social net de jour - Chatroulette. It’s a perfect example of the many new wonderful and unexpected things that are emerging as a result of open networked media and widespread broadband access. Built by an individual, using powerful distributed technology that now sits in bedrooms all around the world, it offers a P2P-experience that undermines traditional views of private and public identity and drives new types of social interaction. And what is this remarkable bleeding-edge innovation used for? Letting young men check out hot girls! Whizzy new kit, same old motivations. However, that's not to underestimate the ingenuity and scale of the new markets that people will build when they find their needs unmet. I was lucky enough to meet Douglas Rushkoff last week and hear him speak about his belief that...
March 26, 2010 at 09:14 AM in Advertising, Business, Co-Creation, Community, Finance, Innovation, Interactive Marketing, Management, Marketing, Media, Modern Marketing, Open Source Marketing, P2P, PR, Social Software, software, Technology, Television, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
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John Battelle updates his seminal idea - The Database of Intentions: "Search was a pristine signal, an eruption of oxygen in the anoxic
ocean of the early web, and an entire ecosystem grew in its bloom. The
first implication was already manifest: Google had launched AdWords and
AdSense, Overture (later to become Yahoo Search Marketing) was
thriving, and a burgeoning paid search ecosystem was in the early
stages of becoming a multi-billion commercial expression of the
Database of Intention's power. But as anyone who's been reading this site already knows, web search as a pure signal has been attenuating of late
- overwhelmed by the sheer magnitude of data on the web, for one, and
secondly by our own increasingly complicated expectations. Nature abhors a vacuum, and so does the Internet. In the past year
I've come to the conclusion that "web search" was just the first of
many fields in the Database of Intentions. For those of you who are not
database geeks, and to further pad the metaphor, a field in a database
is colloquially defined as a specific type of information in that
database. Sets of fields are called records, and sets of records make
up the database. My mistake in 2003 was to assume that the entire Database of
Intentions was created through our interactions with traditional web
search. I no longer believe this to be true. In the past five or so
years, we've seen "eruptions" of entirely new fields, each of which, I
believe, represent equally powerful signals - oxygen flows around which
massive ecosystems are already developing. In fact, the interplay of
all of these signals (plus future ones) represents no less than the sum
of our economic and cultural potential."
March 08, 2010 at 11:03 AM in Advertising, Business, Finance, Innovation, Interactive Marketing, Management, Marketing, Media, Modern Marketing, Social Software, software, Technology, Television, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
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I have moths in my house. They are a real pain and as the Spring appears I know they will be making a reappearance after the cold winter months. For the last couple years I have become involved in a Holy War against these little critters that has involved escalating levels of tit-for-tat violence. They take out a treasured cashmere sweater. I up the number of traps, sprays and any other type of micro-ordnance. And guess which retailer has become my greatest friend in this battle against the pesky garb-munchers? Rentokill? Pest Control? Mothball Express? Nope, my accomplices in the clearance of my foe is Amazon. A comrade that not only provides me with a wide range of munitions, but is also my accomplice, suggesting tactics and new devices 'used by others' to help me seek-and-destroy. Now I’ve long been aware that Bezos’ empire was growing beyond books, but it was my battle against these flying clothes-gobblers that brought home the changing nature of retail in the networked media era. Just 1-Click™ and my house is free of meddlesome midges. What does this have to do with modern marketing, you ask? In short, that most crucial aspect of markets and marketing, the
Point-Of-Purchase (P-o-P) is changing quickly and in some very surprising
ways. In doing so, this shift is throwing light on some long-standing weaknesses of the marketing industry, whilst throwing down new challenges. For example, I have a client who is fascinated by the fact that Apple now holds 100m active credit cards, primarily through iTunes. The client in question runs a very significant online business himself, with about two million UK customers. So he is fully versed in the value of those billing relationships that Apple has garnered. He also has a theory that Murdoch’s insistence on a paywall for his online media is motivated by a similar vision to that which Apple has intentionally or accidentally executed. If The Old Digger can use juicy new media content to gather micro-payments and therefore credit card details, it won’t matter if the newspapers are profitable or not. They will become giant magnets for billing info, allowing Murdoch to sell wine and insurance products to the readers of The Sunday Times. Even the forward-looking games sector has been surprised by the skewing of the P-o-P. In his must-see presentation at this year's DICE, Jesse Schell, a game design professor at Carnegie Mellon University, summed up the rapidly changing nature of transactions. He explained how the games development industry has been caught completely off guard by...
March 05, 2010 at 08:32 AM in Advertising, Business, Finance, Innovation, Interactive Marketing, Management, Marketing, Media, Modern Marketing, Open Source Marketing, PR, Social Software, software, Technology, Television, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: advertising, innovation, management, marketing, media, pr, strategy, trends, virtualcurrency
For brands, advertising has always involved finding a third-party shop and letting the young guns rip on a riveting, inspirational concept that can be worked up by the art-crew into a striking visual nugget and blasted out across the mediasphere. Central to that process has been the relationship a Marketing Director has with his Agency. The effectiveness of which can easily determine the future wage-packets, postcodes and kids' schools of everyone concerned. However, like many others aspects of marketing, that’s changing. ‘The unwritten rule used to be three decent TV campaigns and you’re on the Board,’ an ambitious brand manager from an FMCG Mega-Corp whispered to me last year, under cover of his cappuccino. ‘But not any more,’ he said with the glint in his eye of someone who has realised the goal posts have been moved but that not everyone has noticed. So what’s the future for the upwardly mobile brand manager? And indeed, the ambitious Agency Chieftan? Will the pivotal relationship between the two survive as the media landscape shifts?
As ever, it’s a question of balance. Third-party suppliers will always be a vital part of the marketing industry. If only because the economics make it sensible to use an agency that’s beating media owners over the head with a bigger stick. Or wise to buy into a PR company’s network or a creative hotshop’s spark.
However, the growth of networked media may well start a shift away from branding created by third party suppliers to marketing driven by internal teams. In networked markets customers don’t want to talk to the brand, they want to be heard by the business. And that might be difficult to achieve when the customer hotline goes through to a PR company in Soho. For marketeers, the way to the top table could then be more about smart investment in new assets that sit on the company’s balance sheet (even if they are white-labelled from GoogleBook). And less about buffing up the agency’s awards cupboard. Indeed, P&G’s Tremor network, a product sampling platform, is not only shifting goods but is rented out to other companies as a service, thereby adding to the bottom line.
Of course, the future will always be about results and who can deliver. However, even the vast media players will admit they don’t have the iron-like grip over the new media barons such as Brin, Page & Schmidt, whose revenues are largely made up of thousands of smaller direct customers, as they did over the old guard. ‘We used to show up at ITV and say if we don’t sign this cheque, you are going out of business’, a Media Grand Fromage once told me. ‘You can’t do that at Google,’ he added pointedly.
Furthermore, Google’s Adwords system has educated the marketplace in the ways of media self-service, a development that Facebook...
Continue reading "Talk To The Brand, Because We’re Not Listening" »
February 24, 2010 at 11:57 AM in Advertising, Business, Finance, Innovation, Interactive Marketing, Management, Marketing, Media, Modern Marketing, PR, Social Software, Technology, Television, Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (6) | TrackBack (0)
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