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The power to influence...

So.  Here we are.  My ingredients for measuring the power to influence.  This has taken a good couple of months, consultation with a number of clients, third party organisations, books read, blog posts read.

This is the thinking behind what needs to (and in 2008 I believe, will be able to) be measured in order to understand the power to influence in individual online sources and constituents that make up the staging posts for memes that travel across socialised media networks.

What's clear to me is that as well as these measures, the content and editorial control need scale in order to measure the different responses from readers. It also means that different types of sites need modelling, and then individual sites can be measured against that model to see how it differs.

I'm sorry that you can't make comments without registering for etribes.  I think this is a fault of this particular network.  However, if you email me at justinkhayward at googlemail dot com on topic, I promise to update this site with feedback. 

 

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11 days - first prediction comes true...

And it had to be Nicholas Sarkozy.

In the IHT, as highlighted by BoingBoing, he proposes taxing the Internet.  Well, who'd have thunk?

 

My top 5 list of useful resources...

Aside from my standard RSS feed readers which I'm sure everyone knows about, the following I find useful/interesting in terms of visualising and dissecting conversations online: 

 
Blogpulse - I think this is an excellent resource for raw material to check out the conversation meme, who is referencing whom and the frequency of posting - almost so good, it must be illegal!!  Check out the beta elements such as Profiles

Digg Labs; Swarm - Mesmerising but a great model to see how topics are starting and growing in popularity within a minority - a great visualization which could equally be applied to comments on mainstream media sites, deli.cio.us and other sites

Walk2Web - not brilliant but a useful way of looking at which sites are linking to which 

AddThis - Need to keep up with all of the ways of social tagging but just don't have the time?  AddThis!

Silobreaker - Excellent news service for current affairs which auto-summarises news as well as presenting a number of different ways of visualising the who, what and why of a story - Insight as a Service 

The Dark Side of the Moon

Here's my response to Jeremiah Owyang's Corporate Membrane theory - the Dark Side of the Moon.

Enjoy!

Happy New Year...

It's been a while.  But hey, New Years provide new leaves to turn over.  So here are some short-term and longer-term predictions to delight and deride:

  • There will continue to be high-profile issues surrounding transparency in marketing with well-known companies in 2008 who still try to embrace social media activity without focusing on the conversation rather than marketing
  • Actions will become more important in the development of brand and brand affinity in the consumers eyes.
  • People will begin to tire with social networking sites and will move back to sites that allow them to keep in touch with their own social graphs (friends and connections)
  • Big brands that 'get it' will become more successful in drawing people into their own content - whether it be the development of their own online worlds or sites - and some consumer companies will start to become experience companies
  • IP will become increasingly more important for all companies as a) ingredients will become more scrutinised b) proof of things working as advertising becomes more regulated and people complain more about false advertising become more easy and c) there is an increasing move to being able to manufacture things in the home using home fabrication units. Not in 2008, but in a couple of years time, the ability to download schematics and create things in the home will change the shape of the world economy even further. Micro-manufacturing will change the way in which organisations are structured
  • Content but also the ability to have conversations with your customers and personalise their experience will change the shape of organisations and distribution channels
  • People will continue to want the choice of buying things, but more will happen over the internet than ever before
  • New jobs, including online engagement and evangelism, revenue generation in virtual environments and R&D customer collaboration roles will develop as feedback becomes ever more important to brand reputation
  • Internet addiction will become a mainstream illness
  • Google search will become less dominant as new services with analytics built in will divert people away from unstructured results. However, Google maps will become more important as it becomes a channel for offline adverts driving people to real-life retail opportunities as Google maps for mobile becomes more pervasive
  • Governments will start to consider charging a tax on internet usage or data travelling across networks as revenues decline as more people turn to the web for television programming as well as other content

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Oh dear...

How long does it take commentators in the UK mainstream media to catch up with terms already coined and used by many millions?

Quite a long time I guess...

All quiet on the social front...

Well, I've been quiet for around about the same time that 'Umbrella' has been number one, if not longer, so I thought I'd better give an update.

Over the past few weeks I've been mulling.  Not just mulling about nutting mind you.  A while ago I was discussing with a research company how to develop a system to evaluate social influence online and we agreed that it would be important to establish the ingredients - or levers - to measure.  But how to do this?

I had already met with a professor from the London School of Economics to discuss what this might look like, but the research team suggested reaching out to colleagues in a couple of Universities to see how this might be done.  After a couple of weeks of scoping, the following came back:

"I’ve had a chat with my contacts at various psychology departments about the potential of researching what we discussed. They all independently suggested the same potential way forward however this was not by looking at social influence. I’ve written a briefing document outlining the general outcome of the conversation and summarised the potential way forward. Be interested to see what you think."

Independently, all those this was discussed with agreed that a definition that would accurately encapsulate the idea of social influence would be extremely difficult to achieve.

To me, this was part of the problem; that psychologists would not consider the development of social influence a possible activity.  Instead, they wanted to see how people reacted to specific stimulus - thus adding to the research coffers. 

I wasn't concerned with the need for ongoing study.  I was however much more pleased with Elliot Smith, Indiana University, Department of Psychology's paper which called for cross-departmental study.  However, on contacting him, the same academic nose in the air attitude came back; none of these people are interested in the application of study, only the pursuit.

In mulling all of this over, I came across a book, The Science of Social Influence, which has some very smart thinking about social levers perhaps being arranged in a periodic table format.  An email has gone to the author, Anthony Pratkanis, to find out if this is in existence.  He has identified 107 tactics for social influence as well as 18 techniques for gaining credibility, and I think we might just be on to something here...I'll keep you posted.

Random Timberlake...

Another post by way of Seamus McCauley for no particular reason except for the fact that he has summarised some of the postings regarding the NYT article by Duncan Watts on cumulative advantage.  What is measured, matters.  What matters is measured.  Just because there's not enough money in the world nor the ability to get an honest answer as to why people believe what they do consciously or subconsciously does not mean that it can't be measured and that there wasn't a reason why people changed their minds, either singly or collectively. 

Is life art on the underground...?

Seamus McCauley makes an excellent point of example about context and content and the value attached to the optimum offering causing people to pay a premium for it, but it could equally be taken in a different way.  It reinforces what is fashionable amongst different groups and what is out of fashion in one environment may well be vogue within another.  It's about picking the right contextual background in which to make the most valid contribution and at the same time understanding that people within that environment will take a different opinion or experience away.  It's about picking the right networks for the audience you are looking to connect with.  It's not about money, or commoditisation, it's about art and relevance.

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