Scott Clark Interviews Twellow.com Lead Developer Matthew Daines
Filed under: Interviews, New Marketing, Shiny New
25
2008
Twellow.com is a new Twitter directory that gives everyone a single place to explore hundreds of thousands of Twitter members in dozens of communities easily and efficiently. The site was launched in Alpha this week and I took some time to chat with lead developer Matthew Daines about Twellow’s challenges, ideas, and future plans. It’s always fun to give some Lexington props! (more…)
What Jane Goodall Knows about Social Networking
Filed under: Ideas
23
2008
In 1960, Jane Goodall went to Eastern Africa (one of the first women ever to venture into an African forest, risking malaria or injury) to start what would become the most intimate and insightful collections of research ever done on chimpanzees. Her discoveries filled volumes, including:
She found the first animals besides humans to use tools.- She discovered that chimpanzees have wars, and that they adopt unrelated children.
- She discovered they ate meat.
- She forced us to reconsider what “man” means.
Goodall didn’t force her way into the group. She spent months sitting in a spot she called “the peak” learning by watching with her binoculars. From this distance, she noted patterns, such as the hierarchy of the community and slowly earned the trust of the skittish Gombe chimps.
One day a male chimp approached the camp, leaping, screaming, and running in circles. It was terrifying, and most of us would have either ran or taken a defensive posture. But Goodall had learned enough to see through the dramatic display and stayed calm. After a few tense moments, it became clear why it was there. The male chimp only wanted a banana that had been hanging in the camp. Goodall gave it to him, and history was made.
The rest of the community saw what the first chimp had done, and that Goodall had not harmed them, and the trust spread. Over the following years, she became the only known person to be fully accepted into a Chimpanzee community. If she and her team had been assertive, insensitive or clumsy, the community would have sounded a warning cry and a very tall wall of defense would have been erected.
The “Goodall Effect” allowed integration into the social fabric of the Gombe community, and could be a good metaphor for educating traditional brand managers about integrating into the fabric of social networks.
Listen first, learn, offer something of value, learn the culture, and never ever betray the trust.
Photo taken by user:Jeek in w:Hong Kong University, Hong Kong on 24 October 2004.
Internet Radio Listeners Almost Almost 2x As Likely to Be Social Media Users
Filed under: Changes Online, Podcasting, Research
21
2008
I was really surprised by the new study by Arbitron, called “Infinite Dial 2008: Radio’s Digital Platforms” showing 33 million Americans age 12 and older listen to web radio, a growth of 14% over 29m last year.
- Thirteen percent of Americans age 12 or older (an estimated 33 million people) listened to online radio in the past week.
- Nearly 25% of all Americans age 12 or older have a profile on a social networking Web site such as MySpace, Facebook or Linked-In, nearly two-thirds (63 percent) of online radio do.
- One-third of online radio listeners with a social network profile visit their social networking site nearly every day or several times per day
- The top social networking Web sites among online radio listeners are MySpace and the business professional networking service Linked-In.
- Twenty-eight percent of online radio listeners have a MySpace page.
- Twenty-four percent have a profile on Linked-In.
From an advertiser’s perspective, this means that social media participants, often the sneezers in social media, are listening online. While I’m not advocating interruption marketing strategies, one could make a strong case for participation in talks shows, podcasts, and other web media events held on web radio srouces.
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