Earlier today, the 1000th entry was posted on this blog. Aiden Choles, a regular contributor and member of the TomorrowToday team, was the one who did it.
A big thanks to all the contributors up to now. This blog is truly something to be proud of.
An outlet for musings, observations and futureneering from the company helping you to transition into the connection economy
Earlier today, the 1000th entry was posted on this blog. Aiden Choles, a regular contributor and member of the TomorrowToday team, was the one who did it.
A big thanks to all the contributors up to now. This blog is truly something to be proud of.
A few interesting articles around the increasingly accepted practice of corporate blogging (whether as marketing devices or internal communications tools) are finding their way into conversations on the Web at the moment. The first, one CNN Money’s site (but originally a Fortune editorial, I think) is entitled Do’s and don’ts of corporate blogging.The article reasons that some of the intitial hesitation shown by many corporates around blogging, in any capacity, has roots in what we were taught about communication back in ‘varsity:
For the last couple of weeks I have been milling with a question in my mind.
Are there rules for blogging?
People that are being communicated to, how do they receive information?
Sometimes in life all you need is half a sentence, other times a couple of hours to get the message across and then there are times the audience just does not understand/grasp what is being conveyed to them.
Continue reading ‘Blog Communicating’
So has Google’s purchase of AOL for $1Billion brought it it into the fully capitalist fold, thereby undermining its “Do No Evil” motto? Matt Asay would have us believe so in this post at InfoWorld’s blog.
December 17, 2005
Google sells its soul for a mess of pottage
So, Google got the Time Warner deal. For what? $1B and its soul, according to the New York Times:
Google, which prides itself on the purity of its search results, agreed to give favored placement to content from AOL throughout its site, something it has never done before.
The lesson? Never, ever trust a capitalist who pretends to be otherwise. “Do no evil” was a catchy slogan for Google, but one that it was willing to sell for a few bucks.
For all those who thought Google was somehow different, I’m sorry. I can hear your idealism dying from here. For those who knew better, there’s not much to cheer about in this, is there? Google has just opened the floodgates to a very profitable, “happy to do evil” business.
Follow this link for some great comments & conversation InfoWorld Blog
I recently got in touch with Jackie Huba of the Church of the Customer blog following a comment I made on the blog about her already infamous Apple Vlog. Jackie is an influential business speaker, trainer and writer. She recently co-wrote Creating Customer Evangelists (buy at Amazon.com) with Ben McConnell and received rave reviews from both the New York Times and Harvard Business School. Together, they pen regular columns for MarketingProfs.com and speak frequently at industry, association and company conferences. They also facilitate the creation of customer evangelism plans inside organizations.
In the course of our conversation I asked if she’d be willing to grant a short interview on her subject of expertise. She graciously accepted, and you can read it here:
Today, TomorrowToday.biz hosted a blogging seminar. To be honest, it went further than blogs to social software.
Newbie (to TmTd and presenting), Mike Stopforth did a great job. So did the old lads, Barrie and Graeme (if I say so myself). “And a fun time was had by all”. Some of the legends of SA blogging were there, too.
Check out the real time blog we created during the seminar: http://bloggingseminar2005.blogspot.com/
Tagging is the practice of collaborative categorization using freely chosen keywords (Wikipedia). Tags are descriptors that individuals assign to Web “objects”. Think of a tag as a simple category name. People can categorize their posts, photos, and links with any tag that makes sense to them. These tags get collected in one space, with their assigned objects (posts, bookmarks, photo’s), and can be searched, shared and resourced.
Bloggers use tags to categorise their posts using tools like Fintan’s Technorati Tag Generator, which automatically generates the necessary HTML code for tags that are listed on Technorati’s tag page (Technorati is a blog search engine). You’ll need to follow the instructions on Technorati to get an account, claim your blog and insert code into your template in order to facilitate the transfer of information between you and the search engine. It is a lot easier than it sounds…
Other Web users searching via Technorati’s tag facility for all blog posts on leadership, for example, will automatically pick up on your post or posts categorised with ‘leadership’.
Flickr is an web-based photo-sharing application that allows you to upload your personal pics, or any pic you find online, for free, and assign tags to them for easy reference and sharing.
A post with the title, Mind the Conversation Gap at Steve Rubel’s Micro Persuasion caught my eye today, not only because TomorrowToday.biz uses a framework with a similar title (see Mind the Gap), but because in the post he has supplied solid emperical backing to the school of thought that encourages companies to think long and hard about possible opportunities to connect with customers and stakeholders via blogs on the Web.
To generate the data, one needs to employ the services of blog trend tools (like IceRocket’s Blog Trend Tools), and the process can be a little cumbersome, but the results are staggering.
A report in Biz Community (1 Oct 2005), looks at targeting the Millennial Generation with websites. The report starts, “Internet AdSales reveals that the internet could seriously affect your bottom line when marketing to the youth of today.
They’re mobile, trendy, streetwise, technologically; brand and lifestyle savvy, have plenty of disposable income. They are highly developed, active key influencers, trendsetters and are using the internet on a daily basis.
Generation Y - renowned as the first internet generation; into multitasking and consuming media simultaneously - whether it’s blogging, chatting, shopping, dating, researching, downloading…
Previously ignored, as it was a challenge for marketers to keep up with this fast changing generation but not for much longer!”
I’m sitting with the crew from SABC’s Business focus, doing a spot on corporate blogging.
Feel free to interact as part of the shoot!
Maybe not in Africa, but Reuter’s reports that Weblogs Inc., Jason Calacanis’ blog network, has been purchased by AOL. The sale marks the first major deal signed between a blog network and a mainstream media corporation.
The pricetag? USD25 million. Not bad going.
But why would AOL take interest in a blog network? Well, let’s take a closer look at Weblogs Inc. Jason Calcanis has networked more than 80 blogs in categories ranging from business and tech, to wellness, gaming, and more. The network caters for:
?ic@TomorrowConnecting.biz is a blog dedicated to understanding HyperNetworking Technologies (blogs, wikis, RSS, etc.) and their impact on society and business.
This week we’ll be running a Blogging 101 series - specifically designed to unpack (in plain English) what blogs are, how they work and why they are worth taking note of. Refer a friend, email a colleague, invite a family member. It will be a worthwhile exercise!
Can the current licensing structures around software, etc actually make it impossible to improve your lot in life without risking HUGE fines? The following is an extract from a post on The GripeLine by Ed Foster.
“A few decades ago, a man could still ‘pull himself up by his bootstraps’ — meaning all it took was some hard work and determination to improve your lot in life. If you already had money and means, you could easily afford the tools and education that it required to move from one station in life to another. If you didn’t have the tools or the education, you could legally obtain them by borrowing them from a neighbor. Even the government was more than willing to give you a hand-up in doing what needed done.
Today it is not necessarily the case, especially in a digital world.
Continue reading ‘Piracy, the Digital Divide, & Improving Our ‘Lot’’
I think BlogMaps - where blogs meet maps - are fantastic tools (thanks to FeedMap.net for the free service). Using BlogMap you can geo-code your blog using ordinary geographical coordinates, browse already geo-coded blogs and search for blogs. It is a great way to watch your local blog community growing, and to pick up on some like-minded local thinkers!
One of the finest “Neighblogs” I’ve discovered through my BlogMap is The Future Bank Blog - the brainchild of Herman Singh and Dave Glass.
The former recently posted an outstanding article highlighting his concerns about the future we are building for our children, in the light of the phenomenal advances we are witnessing in technology, connectivity and automation.
The mileage our monolithic proprietary friend has gained out of its new human persona, attributable to the 2,000 or so registered Microsoft employee blogs, not to mention the now-famous Robert Scoble (of Scobleizer), is suddenly being tainted by a self-proclaimed Microsoft Deep Throat.
“Who da Punk”, as he refers to himself on his Blogger-hosted Mini-Microsoft site (ha ha - Blogger being Google’s free blog hosting service and all) is an anonymous Microsoft employee who “pretty much ‘tells all’ about too many meetings, sagging morale, the slow schedule of new releases, etc. (He) also mocks CEO Steve Ballmer’s relentlessly upbeat, non-answers to BW.” (See the recent BusinessWeek Ballmer interview).
Debbie Weil comments, “Interestingly, the anonymous blogger insists that he loves his juggernaut employer and only wants to make it a “lean, mean, efficient customer pleasing profit making machine.” But then Mini (he admits he’s a man; that’s the only identifying detail we get) agrees to meet with a BW reporter at a Starbucks in Seattle.”
Continue reading ‘Microsoft, Mini-Microsoft and the Talent Exodus’
My friends over at Jo’blog have posted an entry showing how customer-oriented SAA are, despite their recent bad press (see Graeme’s previous entry).
When are SAA going to learn that consumer-generated media holds weight? When are they going to start responding? Or are they simply too big to bother?
Companies simply cannot afford to sit back and ignore citizen journalism anymore. Rich…! shows us how a digital camera (or camera phone), a quick blog entry and a few links can turn into a PR nightmare.
Do you know who’s talking about your company?
BusinessWeek Online, who brought us Blogspotting and other fantastic business blogging resources, have added a new string to their blow.
The MBA blogging community (still in beta version) allows users (MBA students, alum or recruiters) to start their own blogs under the BusinessWeek umbrella, and according to the site users will be able to share their ‘journey’, exchange ideas, build a network, post photo’s, rate fellow bloggers in the network, and much more.
From the links and previews on the site it looks to be pretty popular already.
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