March 7th, 2008 by Sterling Hager
You may recall this post from long ago at this site. It was about a vision I had involving companies hiring bloggers to write whatever they want about the company with immunity, for a year. Now it looks like eBay is about to do it. Here's the story.
I happen to think it will become a trend, so I hope this effort is successful.
Share This
Sphere: Related Content
Category: Corporate Blogging, Anti-Establishment, Social Media, AgencyNext |
No Comments »
Trackback│
Permalink
Related Posts:
March 4th, 2008 by Sterling Hager
Short note today… wicked busy. It's raining. I want to get home and watch the primary election returns. Been here since 6am. Meanwhile, for you other political junkies and social media fanatics like me, here's a story to hold you over. By Josh Catone at ReadWriteWeb, it is entitled, "How the Barack Obama Campaign Uses Wikis to Organize Volunteers."
Couple of questions for you: 1.) How is it that politicians get this stuff ahead of most corporate types? 2.) Do pollsters factor in this sort of online organization when calculating potential outcomes? 3.) If I can go take a look at this site via the link provided in the story by Mr. Catone, can Mr. Obama's political rivals go in and roam about, too, and, if so, does anyone care?
This is the most interesting national primary campaign season I can recall ever, and I go back a ways to when Warren Harding was running. Remember him?
OK, have to run. But if you have any answers to these questions, come forth and be heard.
Share This
Sphere: Related Content
Category: Anti-Establishment, Social Media, AgencyNext |
No Comments »
Trackback│
Permalink
Related Posts:
March 3rd, 2008 by Sterling Hager
In this article in BizReport by Helen Leggatt entitled, "Marketing agencies lack social media know-how," there is this quote by Jim Nail, chief marketing and strategy officer at TNS Media Intelligence/Cymfony: "You get the sense that agencies talk a good game… They put up a good presentation about what social media is, but when you get to implementing campaigns, the day-to-day management skills are not meeting the marketers' expectations."
You can say that again. I owned an establishment firm once. I know how to talk a good game. As long as the agency has that skill, it can keep talking the good game to bring new clients in through the front door at a rate more or less equal to the the count of disgruntled clients exiting out the back.
A more important concern or question — and one I've been trying to figure out for some time now– is why are the traditionalists so slow to the fair? My leading theory so far: for a traditional agency to master social media is akin to a pharma company inventing an over the counter remedy to their own, leading, expensive, perscription drug. Much of social media can be DIY (or DWA, as in, Do Without Agencies).
The article is actually about the risk of having an agency faking it on your behalf. Summarizing the feeling of a range of corporate types, Ms. Leggatt writes: "…by applying old models to social media, traditional agencies could do more harm than good." In my experience, that happens to be very, very true!
Share This
Sphere: Related Content
Category: Anti-Establishment, Social Media, AgencyNext |
No Comments »
Trackback│
Permalink
Related Posts: