Friday, May 28, 2010
Week 6 - Wrap-up
Wednesday, May 26, 2010
Week 6 - Charlie Rose and Google CEO, Eric Schmidt
Week 6 - Second Life Podcast
Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Week 6 - Advertisers Face Hurdles on Social Networking Sites
Week 6 - Why Advertising is Failing on the Internet
Week 6 - Promotion within your community
Monday, May 24, 2010
Week 6 - Advertising in Video Games
Sunday, May 23, 2010
Week 6 - Googlenomics & Kick-off
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Week 5 - Wrap-up
Wednesday, May 19, 2010
Week 5 - Virtual Reality Kimberly Clark
I think virtual reality was such a breakthrough that never evolved that much. At the end of the day you couldn't really touch anything, but you could look all around your virtual world. This is truly an advancement. There is no need for heavy goggles and you can actually move around the virtual store. Kimberly Clark really invested a lot into this interactive simulation. It was amazing to see what data they could track and use to change their branding of each product. It seemed like one session with one virtual customer would lead to thousands of data points to analyze their marketing effectiveness. And then 30 minutes later they can analyze another virtual customer's experience and gain an additional data set that helps tailor their product displays to attract their ideal customers. It does seem a little futuristic.
Tuesday, May 18, 2010
Week 5 - Web Analytics Reading
We are discussing the data involved with Web 2.0 and its effectiveness in Marketing this week, and we finally have a winner for nerdiest material. This reading was very boring and not too enlightening. This was a 12 page pdf document (23 pages of a book) that only talked about three things: make sure you are asking the right questions, hire really good web people, and centralize your decentralized web analytic group.
- . This section was not helpful for most readers, unless they didn't have a good job description posting for a Web Analyst.
Monday, May 17, 2010
Week 5 - Advertisers and Smartphones Article
Sunday, May 16, 2010
Week 5 - A Brief History of the Internet
Week 5 - Kick-off & Numerati
Week 4 - Wrap-up
Thursday, May 13, 2010
Week 4 - 5 Business Models for Social Media
Week 4 - Copyrights and Business Models
Wednesday, May 12, 2010
Week 4 - Disrupters eCommerce
Week 4 - Will Twitter Ever Make Money?
Week 4 - Economics of Giving it Away
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Week 4 - Kick-off & Business Models
Saturday, May 8, 2010
Week 3 - Wrap-up
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Week 3 - Charlie Rose and Twitter
Week 3 - Ted Talk - Social Media becomes the News
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Week 3 - Making the Transition to the Social Web
Monday, May 3, 2010
Week 3 - The Long Tail
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Week 3 - Origins of Social Media
Saturday, May 1, 2010
Week 3 - Kick-off & iPad content
Week 2 - Social Marketing Playbook / Wrap-up
Week 2 - Google Security
Week 2 - Digital Engagement
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Week 2 - Groundswell
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Monday, April 26, 2010
Week 2 - Brand Communities Podcast
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Week 2 - Kick off / Crowdsourcing
Threadless.com is a perfect example of letting the customers choose what they want. What a perfect business model! You don't really need to forecast when your demand comes prior to the final vote of the top t-shirts. Your marketing is all viral and is based of the success of the previous week(s). How do you lose? I must be missing something, but for a simple product that doesn't need physical revisions and adaptations this works so well. The customers don't have to be educated in T-shirt making or design to create a great t-shirt.
Contrast that business with the shared computing or user forums also talked about in the reading and you would expect a failing business model, but this is not the case. The SETI@Home project is brilliant. If you are passionate about Sci-Fi, you don't have to be a scientific wizard to help the real scientists find signs of extraterrestrial life. I myself have participated from time to time in the Folding@Home project through Stanford which helps map the human genome by using your computer's process
ing power when you aren't using your computer.
I loved the comment from the Crowdsourcing reading about Toffler being right that people want to be apart of something and help create their products and help others. I didn't even realize I was really apart of this type of sharing when I use some specific car websites, discussion forums, etc. to get help with replacing items on my car or even offering tips to how to get something fixed after I have done it. I figure I should help because someone helped me get to where I was with the car. I am not even that big of a car buff or a good mechanic, but I like to save some cash and find it fun at times. I think we will see more and more of this in the future. Especially as the teens get older. The older generation now are not used to this type of help and resource availability. We will see more people using open source software and helping build the next best "whatever" because they are passionate about it and have built a community around it. This was a very eye-opening reading.