Blogs On the BBC
Great story on blogging over at the BBC. While essentially a short primer it reinforces my view that participatory journalism and the growth of social networks on the web change everything.
“We are entering one era in which the technological infrastructure is creating a different context for how we tell our stories and how we communicate with each other. “
Andrew Nachison, Director, Media Center
Current growth rates are just stunning ~
US research think-tank Pew Internet & American Life says a blog is created every 5.8 seconds, although less than 40% of the total are updated at least once every two months.
Also, Dan’s last column at the Merc runs today. We’ll miss his reporting on all things tech at the Merc but I am sure see more from him here.
Gartner Buys Meta
And the consolidation continues as Gartner buys Meta. Wonder what probability we should assign to the likely success of this one… and the the value of the combined information?
Stunningly, Gartner valued Meta at $162 million on $122 million of revenue. Wonder how they get there given the nullifying of duplicative services by customers?
Anyway, good luck to all my friends at both.
A Wing & A Prayer
Dan comments on the airline debacles over the weekend. (Actually, he breaks the news as far as I am concerned – didn’t read this anywhere else.)
Having just spent an unreasonable amount of time travelling between San Jose and Kansas City I have little sympathy for troubled airline employees. They are the root cause. Lousy service, lame marketing and appalling attitude come together to make this possibly the worst service experience one can pay for.
While checking in, my bag made it all the way to the conveyer and was heading nicely to the plane. Now my wife had filled it with Christmas loot so it was pretty heavy (Thomas Keller’s new book, Bouchon, weighs a ton). Anyway, I pointed out to the AA employee at the desk that she might want to tag it with one of those heavy labels – I didn’t want anyone getting hurt lifting it. She promptly grabbed it and pointed out that I need to pay $25 more due to the weight. That’s the Christmas spirit! That’s the way to treat a multi-million mile, Exec Platinum member! That’s the way to treat someone who is actually looking out for you. That’s the way!
Tom also points to the fact that few of these employees show any kind of initiative.
I’m thinking that what we need is a virtual fine system. You can select your airline and virtually fine them for their behavior. Other players would watch that the fines are reasonable and the system isn’t being manipulated. Then we announce each month the worst violators. Anyone want to help me code it?
The good news is that two market forces are at play – choice and convienence. Two signals of commoditization. Now that the big airlines have lowered the bar so much there is little to keep me from fleeing to Jet Blue and Southwest (and soon Virgin – yeah!) other than all my miles. But here is the rub with them. Once you get as much as I have, you actually don’t care.
If the Government inisists on bailing out airlines, lets also throw out the execs that got them in this mess. And let’s take a hard look at the Unions protecting such appalling employee performance. Better still, lets suffer through a period of time in which Darwin gets to swing the axe and this mess gets well and truly sorted out.
It’s time for a change.
Ten Ways Communications Will Change In 2005…
I’ve taken a shot at a few predictions for 2005 – with a particular bent towards communications and blogging. These are more a list of thoughts (some a tad repetitive), in no particular order, that I’ve been noting over the past couple of months. Here goes:-
1) Blogs become a prime-time communications vehicle. (Thought I’d start with an obvious one.) Communicators begin to grasp that blogging isn’t about ‘reach’, it’s about participating in and facilitating the building of communities. Community building becomes the new mantra for communications professionals.
For the present, most still miss this point but generating Opportunities To See (OTS) via traditional media is increasingly considered against the backdrop of the ability of blogs, RSS and direct content feeds to speak to audiences in a more meaningful way and set the news agenda.
All that talk about the death of advertising and rise of PR… it’s true. Blogs are effectively tipping fuel on this fire. A recent article on Sun said it well ~
“Opening the company up to external scrutiny by launching a raft of blogs, for example, is doing more for the company’s image than any ad campaign ever could.”
Audiences are thought of in new terms resulting in 10-20% of big budgets shifting to viral campaigns and the blogsphere. As ad budgets shift, so do communications budgets. Communicators recognize the effectiveness of cascading information from informed influencers to the mass market. A new set of ‘Super Blogs’ force communicators to invest time with rock-star bloggers.
Comms teams fund bloggers – some inside their company, some outside – to blog events, shows and happenings (happening today in some places).
And… Blogging becomes the new must-have ingredient in communications plans. Blogs break at least three of biggest stories in Tech, much to the chagrin of online sites and big media. Blogs are increasingly used to level the playing field by reporting corrections to inaccurate reporting. Blogs start to be used for the posting of interview transcripts and notes.
2) Media and audience fragmentation continues to accelerate. Podcasting. Webisodes. Blogging. Everything changes more. Traditional media’s power to reach audiences continues to be diluted by new technologies which more effectively reach target audiences. Skills transfer becomes important as communicators in all sectors start paying more attention to their colleagues in political comms and lobbying who have deep experience of grassroots communications. More big revolts happen in the blogsphere as the manipulators turn-up the noise. Less savvy communicators continue to stumble around drawing the wrath of bloggers.
3) Managing how news is triangulated becomes as much of an issue and managing the news itself. Communicators struggle with how to use, manage and monitor news aggregators who are pulling together content using either people, machines or algorithms as all the news that isn’t fit to print reaches hundreds of millions of eyeballs.
4) Company news sites become massively content-rich and important distribution vehicles. Company blogs will aggregate to the corporate news page providing stakeholders and media with a direct view of what’s going on inside. Video costs will continue to plummet driving richer content to the web. Sites start to feature streaming audio and ‘podcasting’ as a news distribution tool. Communicators start building content assets.
5) The revolution in communications procurement and supply chains continues. Agencies and consultants face more law suits related to billing. While most of these are as unreasonable as those occurring today, they force the industry to double-down on supply chain management and reporting. Dynamic bidding will become a component of 90% of all major contracts (and agencies will put up futile resistance). Agencies continue to struggle with differentiation at the highest level.
6) Measurement sophistication increases. The shift to understanding the impact of communications over the output continues. Output equals OTS while impact equals business outcomes, changing minds, influencing decisions, and moving markets. Energy shifts to the latter. The first communications dashboards start to hit the market.
7) More people get fired for blogging. But more get hired. If you are posting outside of guidelines, without consent, or without commonsense, you are asking for trouble. Debates rage over whose responsibility it is to monitor internal blogs. Dealing with blog related issues takes-up an increasing portion of corporate communicators time. More corporations create official blogs. Then they start enabling customers to blog. And, if you’re good enough, the customers even start making your advertising for you, or paying for it – expect more of this. Unfortunately too many will be “flobs” – fluffy marketing hype masquerading as blogs.
8) The First OpenSource Analysts emerge (both industry and financial). Smaller niche analysts, CIOs, sys-admins and developers start to aggregate their smarts and intelligence, providing insight, advice and content once only available from the big three. Rather than projecting the wisdom of the firm, these blogs focus on drawing knowledge out of the IT community.
9) Brand Experience becomes a major consideration for all communicators. Not branding, brand experience. Communicators will increasingly come to grips with how a company’s communications are a defining element in determining brand experience. In effect, communications is part of the product. Virgin gets this, AA doesn’t. Bad brand experiences manifest themselves more quickly and visibly in blogs and recommendation engines posing a new communications challenge for all marketers. A friend relayed a great example of this. Apparently reviews of the Ford Windstar as reported by new mothers (citizen journalists) on the Palo Alto & Menlo Park (PAMP) mothers web site are terrible – mothers telling mothers, “don’t buy one”, with all the authority of Car & Driver. The local Ford dealer is probably wondering what the hell is going on and pouring more money into advertising – all to no effect? Macro communications issues manifest themselves in micro environments courtesy of the web.
And here’s a counterview – brands become more important. As technology drives conveinence, brands have more appeal than ever. Call them what you will – lovemarks, brands, passionpoints… (yuk)… there will be more of them and more of our decisions will be driven towards them.
10) OpenSource Publishing will continue apace. Communicators will look to harness the power of their communities, aggregating blog content into a powerful, sponsored publications – some will challenge the traditional trade-media news dynamic by breaking news and providing deep insight. Long relegated to ‘last call’ status, communicators are forced to pay real attention to local media and citizen journalists backed by online-publications that give their voice a real reach. Media call-down lists will start to include bloggers.
Big prediction. We have entered the era of Participatory Communications. The ability of big media or the PR elite to control communications is on the decline. Communications power has begun to shift back to communities and will only accelerate in 2005.
So, this is a starter list – I’m also thinking through one on the technology shifts that will change the way we communicate (little more geeky). Give me your thoughts and comments. Would be great to continue building out the list.
Watch The Persuaders
Frontline have posted the full show. A must watch for all communicators.
My only gripe was with the assumption that PR people were too scared to participate. So, someone approaches you with an idea that is clearly going to be less than favorable to your industry… but the good news is that you get to set it all right. Um, Yeah, Ok. Or, as the delightful student at Starbucks said to me today when I pointed out she had made me a Late and not a Cappuccino – “Like, whatever”.
Maybe the PR folks actually heeded their own counsel. Now that’s a first! And a few of the ad folks would have been smart to seek PR counsel.
Anyhow. Entertaining viewing.