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What were the main strategic positions for Joseph Lee in 2004? If Lee chooses to act, what three key questions must he answer? In one sentence: what does the Long Tail theory state? What do you think of InnoCentive? And why have you heard about this company before?. Question:. Web 2.0:

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  1. What were the main strategic positions for Joseph Lee in 2004? If Lee chooses to act, what three key questions must he answer? In one sentence: what does the Long Tail theory state? What do you think of InnoCentive? And why have you heard about this company before? Question:

  2. Web 2.0: Beyond the Blog Phenomenon

  3. Web 2.0: Beyond the Blog Phenomenon Blogs Messaging Social Software Folksonomies Wikis Semantic Web Web Services (x)html RSS/Atom Service-Oriented Architecture Web 2.0 VoIP P2P Next Generation Internet

  4. First: We blog The New Yorker, July 1993 The New Yorker, September 2005 Something has changed in the Web during this decade of online history… At the beginning it was all about being online; now it’s about socializing the online environment.

  5. We blog Blog:noun [short for Weblog] (1999) : a Web site that contains an online personal journal with reflections, comments, and often hyperlinks provided by the writer.(Merriam-Webster online Dictionary) Blog: A blog or weblog (derived from web + log) is a web-based publication consisting primarily of periodic articles (normally, but not always, in reverse chronological order). Although most early blogs were manually updated, tools to automate the maintenance of such sites made them accessible to a much larger population, and the use of some sort of browser-based software is now a typical aspect of "blogging".(Wikipedia)

  6. We The Media The citizen’s assault to Main-Stream-Media • Participatory Journalism: is living its renaissance powered by the “credibility breakdown” of traditional media (MSM) • Media 2.0 • Journalism 3.0

  7. Conversations The social side of this ‘blogging’ equation: The conversation as the ‘atomic’ element to be analyzed within the blogosphere. The hyper textual interactions that take place in the Internet supported by networked posts, comments, links and trackbacks add human (social) significance to the Web. The Manifesto try to make us remember that “markets are conversations” and in a two-way World Live Web were people can recognize the human voice among the crowd, corporations must enter the conversation – and talk with human voice - to be heard.

  8. Corporate (1/3) It seems that some corporations want to enter the conversation… So they’re adding corporate blogging to their communication/PR tools, using the blogosphere as an information repository to be mined, or as a meme amplification machine.

  9. Corporate (2/3) But blogs are not only useful as PR tools. Corporate Blogging seems to be “the next big thing” in the Internet… and, as a matter of fact, we can find corporations like Sun, IBM or even Microsoft defining their positioning within the blogosphere. External communication and branding are the corporate areas where blogging finds its way more easily. Collaboration and Knowledge blogs are still waiting their opportunity.

  10. Corporate (3/3) The Blogging Business: Nanopublishing: Examples like Weblogs Inc. try to leverage the “credibility crisis” of corporate and MSM communication. Consulting: Usually enterprises need external knowledge and expertise to take advantage of new technologies. E.g., services that mine the blogosphere, especially of marketing experts or consumer experts. Personal branding & freelance activity: The “e-lance” professionals – borne with the Web Bubble – has a powerful tool in the blogosphere for building a reputation, offering their abilities and knowledge or launching their projects. Enterprise-grade services: Blogging services (Six Apart) or Social Software (SocialText).

  11. Wikis: the ultimate collaboration tool A wiki is a web application that allows users to add content, as on an Internet forum, but also allows others (often completely unrestricted) to edit the content. The term Wiki also refers to the collaborative software used to create such a website. In essence, the wiki is a vast simplification of the process of creating HTML pages, and thus is a very effective way to exchange information through collaborative effort. (Wikipedia) The read/write Web: a universal, emergent and growing repository of human knowledge without boundaries. Another innovation wave that get us a little bit closer to the original idea of an actual World Live Web…

  12. Social Software Social Networking: Keeping your contacts online trough a web interface with a useful representation of them. Social Calendaring: Shared agendas for events arrangement and meetings planning. Social Bookmarking: Your links and references to different kinds of resources live online. Social Tagging (Folksonomies): An unintentional, collective effort of categorizing the Web, with added social significance. ··· Socialware: del.icio.us, de.lirio.us, BlogMarks, Wists, LinkedIn, eConozco, Orkut, 43Things, flickr... always in “permanent beta”, offering open APIs and keeping certain level of ‘hackability’ as an enabler for improving USER INNOVATION.

  13. The Socialization of the Web It’s not about technology:the addition of human (social) significance to our online interactions is driving the emergence of a real (cyber)social environment, that extends seamlessly to the “real world”. It’s about peopleand their social (networking) activity going online to be expanded and amplified by network effects, and the viral nature of the information flowing through the Internet.It’s about social networkswhich we are getting linked to, making The Network itself more social (humane).

  14. Blogging Tagging Sharing Messaging Networking Blogs Wikis Folksonomies Podcasts Socialware WS, SOA XML, XSLT, ... RSS, Atom xhtml AJAX RDF, OWL A layered Visualization Collaborate Share USER INNOVATION Conversate INNOVATING INNOVATIVE Apps&Services Technology INNOVATION

  15. comments are not collaboration facilitate: Collaborative websites do require that a large number of information be created upfront in order to attract new visitors. Adapt your brand to world of openness and transparency Avoid talking about your products Be reactive and spontaneous Flow of information It’s all about content Adopt Web 2.0 culture free software, collaborative design, creativity meetings and collaborative meetings (barcamps and all the variations on the theme) Main characteristics of web collaboration on the Internet

  16. User Communities

  17. fun, enjoyment, and intrinsic motivation that arise through engagement in the task and community. NOT the profit principle! As a marketer, what do you make of this motivation? Motivation

  18. user-community in which information, assistance, and innovations are freely shared. Open source communities (Apache, Linux, Apple) Innovation communities: Kitesurfing, Kitesurfing Brand communities (Miller, Harley Davidson, LEGO, or Barbie) User Innovation

  19. Why do these communities form? To induce improvements by others Help others To find questions And answer them Have fun Innovative Communities

  20. Lindberg believes: A brand may pass through several stages before it reaches the COMMUNITY STAGE. the classic Unique Selling Proposition (USP stage) where we find Hyundai. Emotional Selling Proposition (ESP) which Coke and Pepsi are working in. Organizational Selling Proposition (OSP) where he places Nike. Brand Selling Proposition (BSP) such as Harry Potter, Pokamon, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. Product pretty irrelevant. Ex.: seven Harry Potter books have been published to date, yet over 3,000 related products have been released! Me Selling Proposition (MSP) is the pinnacle of brand-building success. At this altitude, consumers assume ownership of the brand and do most of the communication work for you as part of the community. Brand Community

  21. http://www.obtainium.tv/ Miller Man Law

  22. The multitude Superiority in design, ideas, and functionality Leverages the playful element of consumers (emotional attachment) Effect of Consumer Collaboration

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