Recommended Reading
- The move to the cloud will impact MSFT… Interesting… :: “In five years, 50 percent of our Exchange mailboxes will be Exchange Online,” said Capossela, who expects a portion of Exchange Online customers to come from customers switching from International Business Machines’ Lotus Domino system. According to research firm Radicati, Exchange will run about 210 million corporate e-mail accounts in 2008, growing to 319 million mailboxes in 2012.
- Here’s a post on how hard it is to make advertising on Facebook work. I’ve seen opposite results in some of the campaigns I’ve run using the same thesis. Perhaps the notion to challenge here isn’t the effectiveness of the platform in driving clicks but rather if traditionally presented and produced ads work. What if this was more inviting for the community? What if it encouraged participation? Better still, what if it rewarded participation? As this fella says: Instead, we need to challenge the impression-based advertising model and create marketing that consumers actually want to engage with. Now that’s a marketing model worth the hype, and certainly an improvement for both marketers and their consumers. Bottom-line is, bad ads deliver bad results irrespective of the media – but when misplaced or in not appropriate for the media, they absolutely deliver bad results. George Colony at Forrester has some great counterpoints to the belief that advertising will continue to drive business models. Jon Fine at BusinessWeek reports more on how making money on YouTube will take longer than expected. And Chris Anderson at The Long Tail reports that broad interest targeting is working better on focused networks through Ning.)
- Got a chuckle from this post on the The Steinbrenner Method of Management – from HarvardBusiness.org. There are ways to motivate and there are ways to demotivate. What Hank Steinbrenner, a senior executive with the New York Yankees, did the other day is decidedly in the latter category. “We’ve got to forget about all the injuries and start playing our butts off,” Steinbrenner told the New York Post. “These players are being paid a lot of money and they had better decide for themselves to earn that money.”
– Andy
Recommended Reading
- The move to the cloud will impact MSFT… Interesting… :: “In five years, 50 percent of our Exchange mailboxes will be Exchange Online,” said Capossela, who expects a portion of Exchange Online customers to come from customers switching from International Business Machines’ Lotus Domino system. According to research firm Radicati, Exchange will run about 210 million corporate e-mail accounts in 2008, growing to 319 million mailboxes in 2012.
- Here’s a post on how hard it is to make advertising on Facebook work. I’ve seen opposite results in some of the campaigns I’ve run using the same thesis. Perhaps the notion to challenge here isn’t the effectiveness of the platform in driving clicks but rather if traditionally presented and produced ads work. What if this was more inviting for the community? What if it encouraged participation? Better still, what if it rewarded participation? As this fella says: Instead, we need to challenge the impression-based advertising model and create marketing that consumers actually want to engage with. Now that’s a marketing model worth the hype, and certainly an improvement for both marketers and their consumers. Bottom-line is, bad ads deliver bad results irrespective of the media – but when misplaced or in not appropriate for the media, they absolutely deliver bad results. George Colony at Forrester has some great counterpoints to the belief that advertising will continue to drive business models. Jon Fine at BusinessWeek reports more on how making money on YouTube will take longer than expected. And Chris Anderson at The Long Tail reports that broad interest targeting is working better on focused networks through Ning.)
- Got a chuckle from this post on the The Steinbrenner Method of Management – from HarvardBusiness.org. There are ways to motivate and there are ways to demotivate. What Hank Steinbrenner, a senior executive with the New York Yankees, did the other day is decidedly in the latter category. “We’ve got to forget about all the injuries and start playing our butts off,” Steinbrenner told the New York Post. “These players are being paid a lot of money and they had better decide for themselves to earn that money.”
– Andy
Back On Deck…
Been out of the blog for a week or so. Preoccupied by a ton of exciting work. We announced a new CFO yesterday and are gearing for D next week.
Jawbone is out with a new range of unbelievable headsets. I’ve been a big jawbone fan for ages. These are simply gorgeous. Love the touches like the leather ear-hook. They also work better than any headset I’ve ever used.
And I just ordered one of these. This will remove the perpetual battle to prioritize the NetFlix cue… Roku looks brilliant…
We talk a lot about The Connected Era here at Dell. Nortel is out with a survey on the Hyper Connected. Looks interesting. Big takeaway here is that while we engage as members of the hyper-connected, the rest of the US is largely passive. Thanks to Steve for the pointer.
All of this data is consistent with what Charlene Li and Josh Bernoff talk about extensively in their new book, Groundswell. If you play with Forrester’s Technographic profile tool, you can zero in on just how wide the divide is within your target audience. They peg 52% of the US online population as largely passive.
Bob @ WOMMA
Bob kindly stepped in for me at WOMMA … I owe you one… Some great overviews of his keynote… and here…
Recommended Reads
- Gladwell on innovation…
- Dell vs. HP… conversations really do matter… good work Richard!
- Top Gurus…. including Michael