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Tag Archives: social networks

Twitter needs to worry about Google+ – Not bloody likely.

Posted on July 5, 2011 by Steven Hodson
3 comments
googleplus

Google+ is only five days old at the writing of this post and hasn’t even through its trial by fire as it is still in limited field trials, and yet we already have the social media pundits writing ad naseum about how Twitter, and Facebook (but that’ll be another post), need to be watching their backs.

Really?

After only five days of being tested by the geekiest of tech geeks, bloggers, and reporters, we’re already claiming that Google+ is a threat to Twitter.

You people need to get a grip and instead of writing vaporous odes to Google+ and the imminent demise of <take your pick of social media network> do your readers a favor and get a cup of coffee and look at what you are talking; or pontificating, about.

Regardless of what Google+ does down the road it isn’t a threat to Twitter. Period.

As I wrote on Google+ a couple of days ago the only threat to Twitter is Twitter itself because of their own incompetence and the constant slapping around of their dwindling developer community.

Read more …

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Categories: Opinion, Social | Tags: Facebook, Google, social media, social networks, Twitter

Brand Power?

Posted on July 2, 2011 by Steven Hodson
4 comments
confused

It is inevitable I guess but it seems that every time a discussion about social networks and social media takes place the phrase build your brand invariably comes up. With the launch of Google+ this past week brand once more becomes a talking point especially in regards to the validity of Google’s efforts with G+.

There is no doubt that Google+ has set off a pro and con discussion about this third effort to come up with a viable social network but that isn’t what this post will be discussing, that will come later. Rather I want to visit this concept of individuals as brands, brands that need to be marketed, because this idea of individual brands seems to be a major component of what social media is suppose to be.

First though let’s understand exactly what the word brand, or concept, means. From Wikipedia we get the following:

A brand is the identity of a specific product, service, or business.

The American Marketing Association defines a brand as a “name, term, design, symbol, or any other feature that identifies one seller’s good or service as distinct from those of other sellers. The legal term for brand is trademark. A brand may identify one item, a family of items, or all items of that seller. If used for the firm as a whole, the preferred term is trade name.” [2]

A brand can take many forms, including a name, sign, symbol, color combination or slogan. The word branding began simply as a way to tell one person’s cattle from another by means of a hot iron stamp. The word brand has continued to evolve to encompass identity — it affects the personality of a product, company or service.

Now let’s understand what a person, or individual, means; and again from Wikipedia we get:

Person - In philosophy, the word “person” may refer to various concepts. According to the “naturalist” epistemological tradition, from Descartes through Locke and Hume, the term may designate any human (or non-human) agent which: (1) possesses continuous consciousness over time; and (2) who is therefore capable of framing representations about the world, formulating plans and acting on them.

Individual - An individual is a person or any specific object or thing in a collection. Individuality is the state or quality of being an individual; a person separate from other persons and possessing his or her own needs, goals, and desires. In his statement Cogito ergo sum (“I think therefore I am”), René Descartes posits the notion of the individual subject, distinct from the world around him or her.

At no point does person or individual ever equate to being a brand, just as a brand doesn’t equal being a person or individual. Yet in our modern Internet world we are constantly told, especially when it comes to social media, that we need to protect our brand, that we need to get our brand out there.

Why are we suddenly placing more value on a thing instead of us as a person?

Read more …

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Categories: Opinion, Social | Tags: brands, social media, social networks

Robert Scoble interviews OneSocialWeb architect

Posted on May 22, 2010 by Steven Hodson
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There is a lot of talk given the news about Diaspora and the desire for a lot of people to get out from under Facebook’s blatant abuse of the user about open social media platforms. One of those is OneSocialWeb and the work they are doing on building a federated open social network.

Robert Scoble managed to tie down one of the architects, Laurent Eschenauer, behind the project for a really interesting interview about the project.

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Categories: Technology | Tags: Diaspora, OneSocialWeb, social networks

Google is too smart to do something so stupid

Posted on February 14, 2010 by Steven Hodson
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smart_cat There is a lot of buzz about Buzz – the Google version not Yahoo’s – this past week. A fair number of very smart people have called Google to task over what they consider a really stupid assumption about people’s privacy concerns.

Granted, Google has back-tracked in amazing short order to fix this supposed gaff that arose because they made everyone’s contact list in Gmail automatically their friend in Buzz.

Yup, an amazingly fast change around.

Here’s the thing though – what if this damage control was a part of the original release plans for Buzz. After all, if they could escape the Beacon Effect the upside is enormous. However if the uproar looked like it could gain momentum they already had the plan, and I would bet the code, in place to quickly rectify the situation.

In either case it would be a win-win for Google. If the possible backlash never gained momentum they stood to have the biggest social network within a very short period of time. If though the backlash went beyond the tiny bubble of the early adopters Google’s quick reaction would be a PR bonus.

Google has enough good-will still in the bank that it could survive, and possibly come out smelling like roses, any backlash. So in their eyes the potential windfall was worth the risk as long as they had all their pieces in place just in case.

There is a lot more to the reasons behind Buzz than just Google trying to recover from previous failed attempts in the social arena – we just aren’t seeing them yet. It is those reasons that made taking this risk worthwhile.

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Categories: Uncategorized | Tags: Google Buzz, social networks
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