Today with the amount of information flowing our way our obvious choice is to simply disregard the ordinary.
In this talk from TED, my favourite marketing guru Seth Godin spells out why bad or bizarre ideas are more successful than boring ones :-)
Today with the amount of information flowing our way our obvious choice is to simply disregard the ordinary.
In this talk from TED, my favourite marketing guru Seth Godin spells out why bad or bizarre ideas are more successful than boring ones :-)
Should corporations try to join or build social networks like Facebook, Linkedin etc. in order to brand their products? The discussion really took off in December and Doc Searls have some interesting insights into the subject.
"First, I’m not sure a “brand” can get social at all. The term was borrowed from the cattle industry in the first place, and will never escape that legacy, now matter how much lipstick we put on the branding iron.
Second, the notion of “brands” either “building” or “joining” social networks strikes me as inherently promotional in either case, and therefore compromised as a “social” effort. Speaking personally, I wouldn’t join a social network any brand built, and I wouldn’t want any brand trying to join one I built."
I quite agree with Searls. Corporations should not try to strategize about how a certain social network is to be used as a vehicle for their branding. Such an effort will fail because social networks are not a traditional dumb marketing channel. They consist of people and people are clever -- well, most of them anyhow ;-)
It is my bet that a network will quickly call the bluff and see the branding effort for what it is; a conceptual thing thought out by a marketing department.
In stead companies are much better off allowing their employees to freely join any network they want and blog about any subject that they might find interesting. In this way employees become ambassadors for the brand.
Searls says:
"[...] Most companies would benefit from having their employees talk about what they do. Yet there are still too many companies where employees can’t say a damn thing without clearing it somehow. And in too many companies employees give up because the company’s communications policy is modeled on a fort, complete with firewalls that would put the average dictatorship to shame. If a company wants to get social, they should let their employees talk. And trust them."
Allofmp3.com is now closed for good and the same thing seems to be the case for the replacement site www.mp3sparks.com. Apparantly mp3sparks.com has bounced back (as of July 12th) and seems to be up and running once again.
According to media reports both sites had been closed by the Kremlin following a demand from the US that Russia cracked down on the two sites if the country wanted a chance to join WTO.
It's kinda strange that the US singled out only one Russian mp3-site, when there are so many others out there still in operation. One is now left to guess which site will be the allofmp3 successor.
The crack down on the immensely popular online mp3 vendor also raises an interesting question for the recording industry: If consumers want music files from popular artists in a (DRM free) format that can play on any digital player or sound system, where are they to go?
Jellyfish.com now offers a feature called Smack of the Day. It works like this: Every day an undisclosed quantity of an item (e.g an ipod, a camera etc.) will be put up for auction. Starting out at its regular price the items keeps getting cheaper every few seconds.
Marshall Kirkpatrick at TechCrunch describes it like this:
"Users watch the price fall, torn between letting it fall lower and buying the item at the current price before the mystery quantity is sold out [...] On the first day the event was held, 10 people got Apple 2GB iPod Nanos for free. On Friday 50 SD-P1700 Portable DVD Players were sold in the Smack, some for as low at $60. Thursday’s PowerShot SD450 Digital Camera never fell below $100."
To me it sounds like a tremendous idea when it comes to the drive to site-factor that is so important for any web site. I don't have to buy anything. It's amazing to just sit and watch the psychology of buying as it unravels during the auction.
Today a Danish judge ruled that Tele2 (an ISP) is to block the DNS for Russian music site
allofmp3.com. The ruling is controversial mainly because it makes ISPs responsible for what is accessible via the Internet.
The case was brought to court by the Danish chapter of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) who argued that ISPs have a responsibility to block access to the Russian site.
So far Danish authorities have been reluctant to call the Russian web site illegal.
Tele2 has decided to try todays ruling at a higher court.
I think the whole thing stinks. Shutting down access to parts of the web by way of the infrastructure is so wrong. It is in fact an attack on the notion of the web itself.
If the record labels find that the russian site is infringing on their business they should move against the business itself. Not the web. Come on now.
Read more about the case (in Danish); http://www.computerworld.dk/art/36251?a=fp&i=1
Take a look at the list of the 10 dumbest (but also quite lucrative) online business ideas ever.
Gotta love Doggles. Goggles for dogs. Or how about a fake (plastic) wishbone?
Thanks to weirdtechnewshub