Esther Dyson on where new value is going for advertising

February 27th, 2008 by Kathleen Gilroy

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB120269162692857749.html

The new model creates a more trusted environment for reaching high-value, frequent purchasers, whether of airline tickets, electronics, clothes or other items. Where does that leave the less-frequent purchasers? Probably looking to their friends rather than to advertising for advice. I’m an expert on travel; my friends may look to me for hotel choices. When I’m in the mood to buy a book or a new computer, I’ll check out what my friends on Facebook are doing.

This does not mean that traditional online advertising will go away, just that it will become less effective. Value is being created in users’ own walled gardens, which they will cultivate for themselves in real estate owned by the social networks. The new value creators are companies — like Facebook and Dopplr — that know how to build and support online communities.

Creating Passionate Learning Experiences

February 17th, 2008 by admin

Tim O’Reilly has a great interview with Kathy Sierra about her philosophy of creating passionate users.

Kevin Marks: Nice overview of thinking behind Open Social

February 9th, 2008 by admin

Video of Kevin Marks of Google describing the background behind the Open Social API.

Tim Berners Lee: a cloud around connections between computers and web documents.

New set of complexities. New social sites being built all of the time.

We assume email is part of the web and part of your default experience. Younger people hate email. They only use email to talk to us. We think of email being us. But they think of their social network as being them.

All these things on the web we think of us as documents are actually people. People have links between them. Links between web sites that are people are expressing relationships. XFN and FOAF.

Social Graph API: finds web sites that can be treated as people (blogs and social network profiles) and returns the links between them. These are the publicly declared links on the web. The Social Graph API allows you to find out the friends they have and have already expressed.

The Social Graph API puts a cloud around finding me and finding my friends on the web. These connections can be discovered and used in other places. Open Social abstracts out these relationships and enables you to build this into your application. The cloud is people friends, actions and data.

Present like Steve Jobs

January 28th, 2008 by admin

Carmine Gallo does a great job of summarizing why Steve Jobs gives such a great presentation:

1. Set the theme. “There is something in the air today.” With those words, Jobs opened Macworld. By doing so, he set the theme for his presentation (BusinessWeek.com, 1/15/08) and hinted at the key product announcement—the ultrathin MacBook Air laptop. Every presentation needs a theme, but you don’t have to deliver it at the start. Last year, Jobs delivered the theme about 20 minutes into his presentation: “Today Apple reinvents the phone.” Once you identify your theme, make sure you deliver it several times throughout your presentation.

2. Demonstrate enthusiasm. Jobs shows his passion for computer design. During his presentation he used words like “extraordinary,” “amazing,” and “cool.” When demonstrating a new location feature for the iPhone, Jobs said, “It works pretty doggone well.” Most speakers have room to add some flair to their presentations. Remember, your audience wants to be wowed, not put to sleep. Next time you’re crafting or delivering a presentation, think about injecting your own personality into it. If you think a particular feature of your product is “awesome,” say it. Most speakers get into presentation mode and feel as though they have to strip the talk of any fun. If you are not enthusiastic about your own products or services, how do you expect your audience to be?

3. Provide an outline. Jobs outlined the presentation by saying, “There are four things I want to talk about today. So let’s get started…” Jobs followed his outline by verbally opening and closing each of the four sections and making clear transitions in between. For example, after revealing several new iPhone features, he said, “The iPhone is not standing still. We keep making it better and better and better. That was the second thing I wanted to talk about today. No. 3 is about iTunes.” Make lists and provide your audience with guideposts along the way.

4. Make numbers meaningful. When Jobs announced that Apple had sold 4 million iPhones to date, he didn’t simply leave the number out of context. Instead, he put it in perspective by adding, “That’s 20,000 iPhones every day, on average.” Jobs went on to say, “What does that mean to the overall market?” Jobs detailed the breakdown of the U.S smartphone market and Apple’s share of it to demonstrate just how impressive the number actually is. Jobs also pointed out that Apple’s market share equals the share of its top three competitors combined. Numbers don’t mean much unless they are placed in context. Connect the dots for your listeners.

5. Try for an unforgettable moment. This is the moment in your presentation that everyone will be talking about. Every Steve Jobs presentation builds up to one big scene. In this year’s Macworld keynote, it was the announcement of MacBook Air. To demonstrate just how thin it is, Jobs said it would fit in an envelope. Jobs drew cheers by opening a manila interoffice envelope and holding the laptop for everyone to see. What is the one memorable moment of your presentation? Identify it ahead of time and build up to it.

6. Create visual slides. While most speakers fill their slides with data, text, and charts, Jobs does the opposite. There is very little text on a Steve Jobs slide. Most of the slides simply show one image. For example, his phrase “The first thing I want to talk to you about today…” was accompanied by a slide with the numeral 1. That’s it. Just the number. When Jobs discussed a specific product like the iPhone, the audience saw a slide with an image of the product. When text was introduced, it was often revealed as short sentences (three or four words) to the right of the image. Sometimes, there were no images at all on the slide but a sentence that Jobs had delivered such as “There is something in the air.” There is a trend in public speaking to paint a picture for audiences by creating more visual graphics. Inspiring presenters are short on bullet points and big on graphics.

7. Give ‘em a show. A Jobs presentation has ebbs and flows, themes and transitions. Since he’s giving his audience a show instead of simply delivering information, Jobs includes video clips, demonstrations, and guests he shares the stage with. In his latest keynote, the audience heard from Jim Gianopulos, CEO and chairman of Fox Filmed Entertainment, and Paul Otellini, CEO of Intel ((INTC). Enhance your presentations by incorporating multimedia, product demonstrations, or giving others the chance to say a few words.

8. Don’t sweat the small stuff. Despite your best preparation, something might go wrong as it did during the keynote. Jobs was about to show some photographs from a live Web site, and the screen went black while Jobs waited for the image to appear. It never did. Jobs smiled and said, “Well, I guess Flickr isn’t serving up the photos today.” He then recapped the new features he had just introduced. That’s it. It was no big deal. I have seen presenters get flustered over minor glitches. Don’t sweat minor mishaps. Have fun. Few will remember a glitch unless you call attention to it.

9. Sell the benefit. While most presenters promote product features, Jobs sells benefits. When introducing iTunes movie rentals, Jobs said, “We think there is a better way to deliver movie content to our customers.” Jobs explained the benefit by saying, “We’ve never offered a rental model in music because people want to own their music. You listen to your favorite song thousands of times in your life. But most of us watch movies once, maybe a few times. And renting is a great way to do it. It’s less expensive, doesn’t take up space on our hard drive…” Your listeners are always asking themselves, “What’s in it for me?” Answer the question. Don’t make them guess. Clearly state the benefit of every service, feature, or product.

10. Rehearse, rehearse, rehearse. Steve Jobs cannot pull off an intricate presentation with video clips, demonstrations, and outside speakers without hours of rehearsal. I have spoken to people within Apple who tell me that Jobs rehearses the entire presentation aloud for many hours. Nothing is taken for granted. You can see he rehearsed the Macworld presentation because his words were often perfectly synchronized with the images and text on the slides. When Jobs was showing examples of the films that are available on the new iTunes movie rental service, one poster of a particular film appeared at the exact moment he began to talk about it. The entire presentation was coordinated. A Steve Jobs presentation looks effortless because it is well-rehearsed.

Advertising on the new web.

January 27th, 2008 by admin

Tim O’Reilly writes about a panel he is moderating at Davos on “Tomorrow’s Ads” at Davos. He raises some issues about new forms of advertising that we are using in Swift, our web 2.0 platform for conference organizers, which opens for demos next week. (If you would like a demo, please email me kathleen - at - ottergroup.com.)

Swift integrates with Facebook and enables users to identify what conferences they are attending and then have those conferences appear in their Facebook minifeed. This feature has been quickly picked up on by our first customers as a great new market development tool and it fits with Tim O’Reilly’s point about creating and harnessing viral marketing:

How do ad agencies, publishers, and advertisers take advantage of the conversational nature of the internet, where word of mouth may carry more power than even the best crafted ad campaign? How do you create and harness “viral advertising”?

Swift also encourages users to add content to conference pages with tagging. This gives the pages much more relevance without being intrusive:

Given the breakthrough that Google’s attempt to select advertising for relevance rather than simply for reach, with a model of pay per click rather than pay per impression, how are you rethinking the basic model of intrusive advertising? Will other media also need to adopt the relevance model rather than the intrusive model? How will they accomplish this technically?

And this kind of tagging boost the natural search results for the conferences pages (something most conference web sites do very poorly).

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iGoogle shows dramatic growth

December 23rd, 2007 by admin

Tech Crunch reports that iGoogle has been the fastest growing app in the Google family:

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Adobe Connect Web Conferencing

December 21st, 2007 by admin

I am just about to renew my first year’s subscription to the Adobe Connect web conferencing platform. Adobe Connect is a competitor to Web Ex built on Flash, which is already installed in 97% of browsers. I’ve been using the platform for a year now and find it to be a very cost effective way to do web presentations and training. I have the plan aimed at small business which costs $500 per year. For my renewal, Adobe has upped the number of people I can host in a conference from 15 to 150. I have Adobe Connect linked to a discounted audio conferencing system from Premier Conferencing. It is very simple to schedule a meeting on the platform. All I need to so is fill in a form and the system generates an email to the participants with the log in and call in information.

The platform is elegant and simple to use. It has modules that allow you to capture video from your camera so you can bee seen by a group; I can share any application on my mac; chat with participants; so simple polls.

I use Adobe Connect a couple of times a month to do presentations and demos and people on other end really seem to like it. It has been a great investment for me.

http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobatconnectpro/productinfo/features/

web 2.0 is about the shift from software to data

December 20th, 2007 by admin

Tim O’Reilly is always interesting and so insightful. I have written up some notes from an interview that he did at web 2.0 in Germany:

http://uk.intruders.tv/Web-2-0-Expo-Berlin-Fireside-chat-with-Tim-O-Reilly_a242.html
In this interview and in recent posts about the social graph, Tim O’Reilly really clarifies what is at the heart of successful web 2.0 applications:

http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/11/opensocial_social_mashups.html
#It’s the data, stupid. (Formerly “Data is the Intel Inside”)

This means applications that can use data from multiple social networks.

# Small pieces loosely joined

This means aggregating relevant data from its source rather than requiring the data to be moved from one application to another.

I agree with Tim that these are the two key principles of any successful web application and they are at the heart of our new web app for conferences: Swift.

Here are my notes:
“The best 2.0 companies are collecting really assets in data: flickr, del.icio.us, and cddb. Find new areas where there is unexploited data. Facebook tapped into building the social graph as a new domain asset.

Once you have a really large data set, people are not going to want to start over. That is where you have your advantages.

The point is to put me the user back at the center: I don’t want to see their tweets; I want to see their photos and with somebody else I want to see where they are right now.

We have all of these great datasources and they are not interoperable yet.

What is really has the potential to change things is when somebody says you are in charge of your data and you are able to delegate and say my family tree is at genie.com; my books are at amazon; and use that data please.

I’m excited about the new user interface metaphors in the iPhone.

Lead Generation with Web 2.0 Tools

December 6th, 2007 by admin

I gave a talk to Sun’s marketing group yesterday on lead generation with web 2.0. Here is the gist of it:

In the web 2.0 world where applications are built around individuals, marketing is done one-to-one as people share information with one another or find it through aggregators, referrals, and search. Groups are out. Email blasts are out. Traditional direct marketing is out. Web 2.0 social tools are organized around individuals and what Stowe Boyd calls their “networked self-expression.”

With the publishing tools in blogs, podcasting, and Facebook, you don’t need to belong to groups to share.

So how then do you reach and influence people?

You must tap their existing networks by creating information they need and want to share. Find the influencers and hubs and integrate into their networks.

For the presentation, I shared a couple of screen shots of Swift for Facebook, our application that enables sharing of information and intention at conferences and events. With Swift for Facebook, you are able to share events you are attending and your intentions for them. When you add an event or update your status in Swift, a notification is sent to your Facebook mini-feed. You can share your events and conferences with your friends and with other attending a conference.

Sun Best Practices Final 12:3.011
(We’ll be previewing Swift for Facebook later this week so if you want to be on our list of early testers, please email me kathleenceo at gmail.com.)

Through the peer to peer network around an event, a new network of highly qualified people is convened.

Podcasting can be another means to generate leads with web 2.0 technology. We have had great success with building a highly qualified audience for our Negotiating Tip of the Week podcast series. To date, we have had over 1.2 million downloads are we are now averaging about 3,000 downloads a day.
Ntow Feedburner
Now that we have built this base, we are doing dynamic ad insertion to promote a newsletter for the Harvard Program on Negotiation. You can listen to the ad by Bill Ury by going to Negotiating Tip of the Week on iTunes and sampling any one of the podcasts. The ad is dynamically inserted into the podcast without any manipulation of the underlying MP3 file. With podcasting you can very efficiently create high quality media to serve niche audiences. And with ad insertion you can build specific calls to action within that media.

The next phase of the Swift platform will bring podcasting and Facebook networking together. With Swift you can record your meetings in digital media, publish them to Swift as podcasts, dynamically insert messages into them and use Facebook to network around this media.

I closed with a short discussion of blogging and lead generation. Blogging is another way to build a niche audience that can be tapped for leads. I am also an advocate of creating thought leadership blogs with multiple authors on expert topics. This has been done very successfully by Francois Gossieaux and Hylton Joliffe for the Fast Forward Blog. Francois and Hylton assembled a really smart group of bloggers writing on the topics of enterprise search and new enterprise technologies. Bloggers cross published in the Fast Forward blog and on their own blogs. (See this post from Bill Ives as an example.)

Web 2.0 tools have the promise to greatly reduce the cost of B2B business development. At yesterday’s meeting at Sun about half of the group had Facebook pages and many were on Linked In. We will certainly see more and more tools that serve this function in the coming year.

Google’s Open Social

November 6th, 2007 by admin

The blogosphere is abuzz with the initiative announced last week by Google — Open Social — a system that allows application developers to create applications that work across all of the social networks.

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This means that our new service for managing conferences –– Swift (in development) –– can be integrated into any social network using the Google API. This is good for us but also good for users in that your conference information can be shared across social networks.

And as Devin writes on his Quantum Creative blog, Google has developed a new Social Network in partnership with Carnegie Mellon, called SocialStream. SocialStream allows users to “seamlessly share, view, and respond to many types of social content across multiple networks.”

SocialStream is a research project and it is worth reading about the research and user studies done by the team to put it together. Here is a good articulation of what people need in terms of a social networking service:

* To access information with little effort
* The ability to communicate with all contacts, regardless of the sites or services they use
* To keep informed about someone through updates about their recent activity
* To have someone perform a task on someone else’s behalf
* To feel in control of what they are doing and their information
* To not have to go through redundant steps for routine tasks
* To have easy and understandable sharing

To get a good feeling for how SocialStream works, you need to download the demo movie.