All Archived Posts in Category: Social Media

January 21, 2010

Ten trends that will drive Social Media in 2010

Manpreet.jpg

Dataquest published my article 'Back to the Future' in their last issue, on Social Media trends to expect in 2010 for India. Reproducing the content here:

Back to the Future
Ten trends that will drive social media in 2010

The year 2010 will be about social media coming of age, albeit in select ways. Some relevant trends:

  1. Social Media For the Enterprise: 2010 will be the year where the enterprise looks towards social media for providing internal solutions for interaction, learning, fun! By 2010 end, internal e-mails should be passe, with people/ organizations sharing news, information, and updates through their internal social networks
  2. Search Will Open Up: If Facebook opens itself to search, that in itself would be the single most revolutionary development in the social media environment for the year 2010. Google may also bring its social search out of the labs as a service, which again would shift the paradigm back in favor of Google as the enduring, preferred search mechanism. Real-time search will gain ground
  3. Greater Focus On Tracking and Monitoring: Rigorous social media monitoring will emerge as one of the key focus areas for brands and organizations, in addition to their outreach and engagement initiatives over the social web, a symptom of maturing digital campaigns. While social media monitoring has relevance for several other sectors like governance, e-journalism, etc., it will be interesting to see if its potential gets tapped in 2010
  4. The Year of the Mobile, Finally: While for the last two consecutive years, we've been beckoning the arrival of the mobile as the next big thing, 2010 looks like the year that mobile will get third-time lucky. While it is already a ubiquitous device, the mobile itself is increasingly becoming the first tool for social media consumption, making it seamless and instantaneous. People would publish, consume, and share on the go!
  5. Collaboration Among Social Media Stakeholders: One of the crucial trends that 2010 will see materialize is the coming together of the various stakeholders within the social media landscape for sharing, learning, collaboration as well as fun. (There are immense possibilities of this vibrant coming together - to name a few, mutual notes-exchange, enhanced business value, cross-sector partnerships, global alliances, et al. One such step has been initiated by Blogworks in IndiaSocial™, with a case-studies series, the India Social wiki and a large-format flagship event in the current pipeline.) 2010 will see this coming of age of the Indian social media scene through such collaborative initiatives

  6. Convergence Across Media: Increasingly, all media are coming together - textual, audio, visual. Google Wave is one such example - a cross between chat, wiki, and email. Convergence would gain credence and adoption across platforms, and even in social advertising!
  7. Augmented Reality: The much touted phenomenon of augmented reality, only witnessed in science fiction, may not entirely materialize, but will surely develop further. While we already rely on LinkedIn and Facebook to profile/ sample people before we meet them, or meet over Twitter before a real-life face-off, extensive social profiling is something to look forward to. For instance, foursquare is a well known location-based network. This is also convergence in the sense that offline and online identities eventually come together, where the hitherto separate persona and the person come together as one
  8. Social Gaming: Farmville and Mafia Wars have only shown the tip of the iceberg in 2009, and this potential of purely fun-based engagement on the social web will be tapped further this year
  9. Interest Based Tribes Mature: Just like anything that comes of age, social media would also become boring in general. However, there's respite in the fact that specific interest groups, as they mature, could become even more intensely active. However, these enhanced tastes imply that while 2009 was the year of un-friending, well gradually move to the year where people will un-join communities and un-fan pages that lie dormant on their social circuit. Brands will have to provide value to be on peoples social radars
  10. Revenue For Twitter: Twitter, the shiny object having lost its sheen by now, would be relevant for its use-value, and not just its glamor quotient. This in turn also means that 2010 is the one for Twitters growth as a business offering, it having fared well at the numbers growth in 2009

  11. What are your thoughts? Would love to hear if you agree or otherwise.

August 3, 2009

Twitter tools you're going to love

Manpreet.jpg
Twitter, the fastest growing social network in the world (it grew 1448 percent y-o-y between May 2008 and May 2009), invariably comes up in every conversation about communication or new-media. Vice-versa, every event of any consequence (or otherwise) makes its way onto the Twitter-sphere. Something that was developed to send out short status messages (status was, in fact, the working title of the product) has found itself such differentiated value.

Much of it is due to its simplicity, but equally the result of the variegated effect that many of the services built around its core offer. Here are some of the applications and services enhancing the Twitter experience that you may want to try out as well:

Twitter Clients - Using Twitter's API, these clients let you access the service the way you want. Multiple iterations allow you to choose the interface and the functions you prefer:

  1. TwitterFox runs as an extension on the Firefox window itself, with Twitter updates from friends popping up at set regular intervals
  2. TweetDeck is still in beta, but hugely popular, for, it lets you see all you need to on one page, for faster and easier twittering
  3. Destroy Twitter allows you to operate multiple accounts, and runs on Adobe AIR, with great functionality making it a one-stop web application for Twitter
  4. Dabr often called Twitter on steroids, is the most-loved Twitter application for the mobile. Being an application that incorporates user-feedback at the bat of an eyelid, this isn't surprising at all!
  5. Finding followers & friends - You can build your Twitter-stream based on various criteria, like people who match your interest levels, those who live near you, thought-leaders from your sphere, etc.:

    1. WhoShouldIFollow helps you find people with interests similar to yours as showcased in your respective tweets
    2. Twellow and WeFollow are two self-serve twitter directories where people list themselves based on their interests and can so be found accordingly. Each interest tag lists out all the people in that category, charted popularity-wise
    3. Twubble adds to your social-graph by listing out people who many of your existing friends may be following. It also has a locality filter to better the sorting process
    4. TwitDir is a Twitter directory that simply gives you the top 100 people at any given point
    5. Search & Track - Track and listen in on conversations happening around current events & happenings, your brand or simply your favorite music-genre:

      1. Hash-Tags make your keywords search-friendly and allow you to track keywords of your choice, while TweetScan charts all conversations happening on Twitter live, which can then be further segmented by hash-tags/keywords
      2. Other than the classic Twitter-Search, TweetActive and Twibuzz graph the activity on your keywords in real-time, which can then be compared with other keywords over time as well
      3. Twistori tells you (quite literally) what people are loving and hating, thinking or feeling in real time!
      4. Happn is a localized search which shows you what people of your city are tweeting about. It only covers Mumbai as of now from India, but it's a cool application anyhow!
      5. Share - Share photos, audio/video, files and links with friends:

        1. AutoPostr shares your Flickr photos every time they are uploaded if 'autopostr' is added as a photo-tag photo, whereas Twitpic lets you post pictures directly on Twitter, along with a message, while also keeping track of how many views and responses it receives
        2. Bit.ly and Tweetburner shorten and share links and tracks views. They also let you customize links.
        3. Twitsay shares audio clips, and Twitddeo is for video-sharing. Twitcam and Qik let you live-stream videos
        4. TweetCube and FileSocial allow you to upload and share several kinds of files on Twitter, like mp3, avi, ppt, doc, zip files, plug-ins, pictures, etc.
        5. Analyze - Interpret your activity and see where you're going, to understand the service and its potential better, or just to have some fun!

          1. TwitGraph gives a visual progression of your statistics, while TweetStats shows bar-graphs of your ongoing weekly activity
          2. Tweet Beep tracks your specific tags, etc. on a regular basis whereas Twemes tracks all active tags in one place
          3. To judge volume of conversation on Twitter, Tweet-Volume tracks and compares volume for different keywords
          4. Twitter-Grader and Twinfluence grade your influence based on your power, reach and authority. They employ several logarithms including factors like number of followers, follower/following ratio, power of followers, frequency of updates, engagement, etc. to reach their conclusions
          5. Twitter-Friends analyses all the above, and more, and presents your engagement in a visual, interpretative manner for you to compare and analyze
          6. Twitter Plus - There are several of these innovative services that let you do more in the same old 140 characters:

            1. GroupTweet and TweetKnot are services that allow you to create Twitter groups where friends can be invited for sharing messages in a more focused manner
            2. With Twitchat and Tinychat, you can create your own chat-rooms of your twitter friends for exclusive discussions that you may not want spilling over to your entire stream :P
            3. AutoDMer and TwitResponse send an auto-response to every new follower, or even set updates at a regular frequency
            4. Twitter backgrounds has a whole array of backgrounds to pick for your Twitter account, and also offers specific paid customization
            5. Write-up lets you share longer text through a link in a Tweet, while LinkBunch clubs multiple links for you to share at one go
            6. This list is not exhaustive, merely a selection that as a combination, works best for most of my needs, and hopefully will help you too. There are several places that link to exhaustive listings of tools and applications, like Mashable, Twitdom, et al. Which Twitter-tools have you found useful? Do add them to the list!


              Happy Tweeting!

March 29, 2009

Old Buyers, new markets

This is the piece I wrote as part of the Exchange4Media and Blogworks "India Social Media Survey 2009" Report Document that we revealed released on 28 March 2009. It summarizes the gap I see amongst the marketing/ communication fraternity in their understanding of the connected consumer and social media. The gap was obvious on many occasions at the India Social Media Summit 2009 indicating that we are all still just learning the rules of this new game.

Here is the piece:

The game has changed, and for a change, it's not the marketers who are in the driver's seat. The Consumer is...

Meet the 'new and improved' Consumer 2.0. She and her peers (they) are coming together on social networks, blogs, content communities and forming tribes, sharing opinion and voicing their concerns on a variety of social issue, customer service, brand experiences, politics - life.

When Mumbai is attacked, they don't just report live in a perpetual stream, they also take the government to task; when Ram Sene dictates that women belong within the four walls of their homes, smiling they send Pink Chaddis to Sene bosses; Not just are they creators and editors of news, they also take head-on battles with mainstream media from time-to-time.

Mainstream media itself is evolving, integrating social media, to stay relevant to the times. Not the types to be left behind, celebrities and politicians too have joined the social media space engaging stakeholders.

Social media has forever changed the dynamics of how the Internet is consumed - from predominantly being a work tool, to becoming a tool for personal expression & connections

Conversational marketing

Marketing and communication ought to change too, for, marketers now have the opportunity to narrowcast messages; to change the tone from greedy sales pitches, to personal conversations.

How are the marketer's responding? The focus is still on the tool...

Have you seen a child play with a toy? He fumbles with it, turns it around in his hands trying to figure out how the damn thing works; once figured, he plays with it for a bit, gets bored; a new toy appears on his limited horizon - his neighborhood friend - that's what he wants now.

Social media play for most marketers is no different: "Mummy, mummy mujhe bhee apna social network chahiye."

So you got yourself a fan page on Facebook? Also a video up on YouTube? Even an account on Twitter? Great! So?

Have you really thought through why you are doing, whatever you are doing? Are you listening to what the consumers are saying? Do you know where you really want to go?

The rules of the social media game are a little different, they are being written by the community and the game is evolving so rapidly that if you turn away, just for a minute, the scene has already changed.

Why are most marketers lagging behind?

  1. Marketers are scared of the unknown and aren't prepared to jump in
  2. Marketers have never spoken face-to-face- they get the agencies to front and want to continue doing so
  3. Marketers are plain lazy
  4. All of the above

Social media is like masturbation, you have to participate 'yourself' to get anywhere.

What is clear though...

  1. Social networks are where media will be consumed, besides content being created
  2. Brands will be discussed
  3. People want to talk brands when they want to, not when we want them to
  4. They are equally vocal about brands/ experiences they love/ hate
  5. Social media influences purchase decisions
  6. Negative comments allow for an educated purchase, besides helping marketers improve the product/ service
  7. Social media can't wipe off inefficiencies, or poor quality

So what to expect?

  1. Social media credibility is going up, as it attains critical mass and more & more thought leaders join in
  2. Social media impact on marketing will only get stronger
  3. Social media will seamlessly merge into mainstream media
  4. Meaningful blogging, with thought leaders joining in
  5. Micro-blogging
  6. Breaking news moves away from television, to citizen journalists
  7. Social networking will continues to surge
  8. Anytime, any device consumption and creation of content
  9. Social noise- with so many voices saying so many things- making it difficult & important to separate noise versus signals/ meaning/ insights

Savvy marketers are also evolving: going beyond mere buzz aspects of social media, to draw real time insights and feedback to improve product/ service; the focus is shifting to engagement; social media is becoming central to marketing.

All is well in my world.

March 28, 2009

"India Social Media Survey, Brands and Corporates" Edition 1 - Some findings from the Report.

The Survey we unveiled released yesterday at India Social Media Summit 09 brings out valuable insights and trends. Results and Analysis will help understand how our peers, from across India, view social media impact on marketing communication. This allows the industry to benefit from shared insights, and makes for educated decisions.

Sharing some of the charts with you here.

The full study is available for Rs.1500/- and is being sold by Exchange4Media team, who we partnered for the initiative. If you want a copy, write in at Survey (at) Blogworks (dot) in:


Picture1.jpg


Picture4.jpg


The Indian Social Media Scene is in a state of positive ferment. With 90 percent of the respondents believing that Social Media has impact on Brands, the study results are a clear indicator of the markets waking up to a new age consumer. And not just her, Brands and Corporates are now addressing, through Social Media, a whole array of stakeholders.

As these conversations diversify, Indian Marketers are beginning to feel the need to step into this new-media Jungle and get their boots dirty! 55 percent of respondents have seen brands getting influenced by Social Media, while 33 percent have seen impact on their own brands. There is a call to engage, influence and track - especially the more intense pockets of conversations.

While Brand awareness and positive buzz tops the chart of Social Media deliverables, a size-able majority of them also recognize Social Media's influence on purchase decisions. Select handfuls have well rounded campaigns paying rigorous attention to insights and engagement as well.

Picture2.jpg

Picture3.jpg

The engagement and measurement matrices are in place, as we'll note in the detailed
survey findings, albeit still at a developing stage. There still remains a gap to be bridged - to supplement the use of the tool with a deep know-how of the macro-environment and an adequate fore-sight of its impact.

81-85 percent of respondents believe that Indian marketer and corporates have just cursory or no understanding of Social Media, the need for education and learning continues to remain big. Agencies appear better off on Social Media understanding, with 47 percent respondents believing that agencies have only a cursory or no understanding of Social Media.

The motto of the times therefore, as can be culled from the survey findings, is an enhanced focus on strategic approaches to Social Media engagements, possibly even leading to bifurcation of the services into strategy-specialists and operations-agencies.

Do pick up a copy of the findings.

May 7, 2008

HT Tech4U focuses on What Blogging Did Next. My piece "Micro-blogging, anyone?" - also the longer, unedited version.

hindustantimes_logo_new(2).gif
Today's Hindustan Times Tech4U page focuses on "What Blogging Did Next" and features 2 main pieces on the subject.

In the first piece, titled Hum Blog, Twilight Fairy of Delhi Bloggers Bloc talks about the blogging scene in general and Delhi in particular, online and offline.

The second piece, written by me talks about Twitter.

You can find the newspaper version here.

My longer, unedited version, is below. Choose whichever, but do leave your thoughts:

“Mirror, mirror on the wall who is the most viral of them all?” I asked.

“Twitter, O dear sir!” answered the magic mirror without doubt.

Twitter , the service that lets you stay connected with friends, colleagues and family through exchange of short message updates, sharing “what are you doing right now?” has achieved almost cult following among its users, many of whom are celebrity bloggers and internet influencers from across the globe.

So what really is Twitter?

I could tell you that Twitter is a micro-blogging platform (messages can contain a maximum of 140 characters) and a social networking site (connect with and friends and make new ones). I could also say that it is blogging on the go and lets you disseminate and receive messages using the web interface, an internet messenger/ desktop client or your mobile phone. All of these are correct.

However, think of it as a café, people keep coming, conversations are perpetually on, someone leaves, and someone else joins in. You chat with your friends and acquaintances regularly and ever so often you also meet one of their friends. You join into their conversations and make new friends in the process. Someone you didn’t know earlier reaches out to connect; you do the same when you want to reach out. This café is virtual, but the people are real and they do meet up often – at work, at parties, at Tweet ups (offline group meets of Tweople, or Twitter users).

Like someone said so beautifully on a Social Media Today podcast “Twitter is like talking to friends on way back home from school, reading their blogs is like reading their homework.” No wonder Twitterholics prefer Twittering over even singing ;).

But what makes Twitter so special, so viral?

To understand this, it’s important to understand the genesis of Twitter for the service is based on some powerful insights:

  1. The Always on internet environment has less dependency and focus on a web page and that the desktop, widgets, IM are gaining importance.
  2. Mobile is quickly becoming the ubiquitous converged device and is increasingly married to the internet.
  3. Bloggers, already addicted to posting, were/ are looking for ways to disseminate content quickly, on the go and without having to spend a long time in crafting it. That they were/ are also looking at ways to share their content across multiple platforms.
  4. Successful services will be those, which allows users to find unique and multiple uses for the service and that to do so, it would be important to:

    - Becoming the enabling layer

    - Allow other developers to use the Application Programming Interface (API)

    - Create a network but also use other networks to reach larger mass of users/ consumers


The result is a service that lets you use its web interface to push the message, but you could have easily have used your G Talk client or simply sms’d the message instead, using your handset to now an India short-code (5566511).

twitter_india_shortcode.png

The moment you did so, the message would be received by people ‘following’ your feed, on their preferred device – mobile handset, IM, or simply their Twitter web-page. You could, similarly, get their messages if you too were following them.

Powerful, you’d agree, but it doesn’t end here. You could display yours and your friends’ messages on your blog using a Twitter widget, let the message be seen as your status update on Facebook (which is where more and more of your friends are) and so on. Add to this many dozens applications and mash-ups developed by 3rd party developers (find them at here) and you have one of the most visible and sticky service on the internet today.

So how are people using Twitter? Honestly, new uses are coming up every minute. Here are a few:

Continue reading "HT Tech4U focuses on What Blogging Did Next. My piece "Micro-blogging, anyone?" - also the longer, unedited version." »

December 31, 2007

Internet Trends 2008 - Contributory Piece for 'Mint'

Mint.jpg
Today's Mint has a special year-end edition of their marketing & advertising/ management & strategy supplement featuring opinion from a few people on summary of this year and what to expect in 2008.

I was invited to share my thoughts on Internet Trends in 2008. I am putting a part of the text today (will perhaps put the full text tomorrow), but you can read the complete piece and more here.

Here we go:

Each year, a few trends gain momentum and reach tipping point. The mobile phone is one such change of recent times. Will 2008 be the year of the Internet? It promises to be an interesting year as a lot of the hype around blogs, consumer-generated media, Web 2.0 settles down; as the lines between the mobile and the Internet blur; as technology seems less overwhelming to the masses. The great thing that 2007 did was take away the fear of technology from many. Thanks to networking websites such as Orkut, people who would never venture beyond their email boxes are “poking” each other on Facebook.

So, what to expect in 2008? Here’s my list:

  1. Internet marries the mobile: Affordable handsets allowing EDGE and WLAN connectivity, combined with huge penetration of mobiles, would likely ensure that more and more people are consuming the Internet on the go.
  2. Always-on Internet: High-speed connectivity through mobile, exponential increase in Wi-Fi hot spots and talk about rapid deployment of WiMax, all promise always-on Internet connectivity.
  3. Life shifts online: We are romancing the government with online filing of tax returns; applying for passports online; meeting friends online and enjoying peer-to-peer gaming. What’s more, the Internet is fast becoming the new operating system—you don’t need software, just a device to access the Internet.

Continue reading "Internet Trends 2008 - Contributory Piece for 'Mint'" »

December 12, 2007

So, where are you going? A piece I wrote for Hindustan Times

socialmediacar.jpg

Today's Hindustan Times carried a piece written by me. You can read it on the HT epaper: 12 December 2007, Delhi Edition, HT2, Tech4U Page. In reverence to the editor, here is the final text as appeared in print:

So, where are you going?

A few day ago, I was chatting on the phone with someone from Mumbai, who had called to discuss 'use of blogs and social media tools for internal knowledge management by organisations' and the talk swerved "Is a blog is better than a forum or vice-versa?".

I was reminded of times when - very young - my younger sister and I would often gather available pillows to create a square/ rectangle, which was our 'car' and using an imaginary steering wheel, made appropriate driving noises. Only, obviously our car shell was going nowhere, for, it didn't have wheels or an engine for that matter.

So the question is: Now that you have got yourselves a car called social media, do you know where are you going?

As is expected with anything that’s surrounded with intense hype, as has been the case with blogs & social media, the focus is on the TOOL with relatively less thought on THE NEED. A mere shell (blog/forum/social networking site or whatever) is not enough. The car is surely not going anywhere without an engine and an ongoing supply of fuel! It's also good to remember- the car cannot drive itself.

Hindustan_Times_-_Know_the_rules.jpg

Organisations/ marketers in India are finally beginning to look at adopting social media and blogs, but, given that the concepts are relatively new, the emphasis seems to be on continuing traditional marketing thoughts/ logic into the neo-environment. However, Participating in this neo-environment is not about following tradition, here the rules are different - the rules are being written by the consumer, the community. In fact, many believe that the moment you attempt to 'sell' on social media, you have lost the users attention - focus has to be on conversations, on adding value to the user.

Given all that, here are points to consider, which can act as a checklist for you to figure out what a blog can do.

  1. What is the need?

    No, I mean what is the REAL need that can be met by adopting blogs & social media? Just because another brand or organisation has adopted/ is adopting the tool is not a good enough reason for you to adopt it too. Remember there is a cost of engagement.

    Yes, many, if not most, of these tools cost very little themselves but as a brand/ organisation the costs to consider are not to the ‘monetary’. There are associated cost in terms of time, content generation, outreach & promotion and like there is a cost of engagement, even more importantly there is a cost to disengagement - mostly on your reputation. Think this through, for, an abrupt withdrawal may not be an option later.

  2. Message is your car's engine.

    Which stakeholders are you trying to reach through your social media initiatives? Are they users of the Internet? Of course there is increasing indirect impact as messages get picked by mainstream media/ influencers but are your stakeholders 'direct users' of these tools, communities? Which ones?

    What is the message that you wish to share with your stakeholders? Figured your message? Now be prepared to let go of control, evolve the same, for, on social media, it is the user/ community that partly controls the message.



  3. Content is the fuel.

    What is it that you are sharing with users that will keep them engaged, keep them coming back for more? It's important that you have clarity of purpose, and stakeholders, which in turn will help you determine content.
  4. So, who is driving?

    The initiative; the content - are you looking at a corporate blog written by many stakeholders or a CEO blog? Maybe set-up a community generating user generated content of interest to your customers?

    Who is in charge of content? No one/everyone doesn't work, like we may have witnessed elsewhere.

  5. Look into the side mirror, often.

    Are you tracking what the competition is up to? While you are busy doing your own thing, the competition maybe close by (or ahead for that matter). Look around, but don't copy their moves.

  6. Do you know the rules?

    Don't get caught on the wrong foot. The social media space is a relatively new. It's important to know the basis, but evolving rules.

    Punishment can be swift and severe, and witnesses have been… mighty giants & countless individuals, who forgot.



  7. Show some reverence, please.

    Sure blogs can be a free tool, so is uploading content on YouTube, as is setting up communities on Social Networking Sites... but hey, your brand/ organisation is very valuable! While adopting social media, do show YOUR BRAND/ YOUR ORGANISATION some reverence - your brand has a personality, an identity, an image, a reputation – so doesn't your 360 degree apply to blogs and social media?

November 22, 2007

"CEO's guide to blogging." - piece I wrote for HT

CEOs_guide_to_blogging_-_Hindutan_Times.jpg
Yesterday's Hindustan Times carried a piece written by me. You can read it on the HT epaper archives: 21 November 2007, Delhi Edition, HT2, Tech4U Page. My version of the text, a couple of words here and there :), is also pasted below:


CEO's guide to blogging.

How often does a new recruit in a company share transparent feedback with a CEO and get away with it? Well, if the CEO writes a blog, potentially everyday! For, transparency and conversations are the foremost values enshrined in a blog.

  1. Engage, youngsters first!


    In fact, depending on whether they are amongst the audience you want reach, you would be urged to actively engage the younger readers first. Talk to them through the blog, address their issues and encourage them to participate.

    It has been my experience that youngsters, who traditionally haven’t had direct access to the top leadership, may sometimes find it a bit daunting to open up to a CEO (or a senior business leader). On the other hand, it is they who are exposed to blogs, social networks and the digital medium most. If you can get them to open up, chances are so will the rest.

  2. Tell me some stories…


    Keep your audience engaged - weave a story; embed your message therein. Your blog should reflect you, keep the personal touch. Today’s internet technology allows easy embeds of pictures, audio and video. Embedding a Podcast isn’t very difficult and makes the content even more interesting- Bill Marriott’s blog at features many of them because he, admittedly, doesn’t know how to use a computer and prefers to talk into a dictaphone.

  3. Collaborate


    Even though it may be a business need; or as many would claim, a tool to stay relevant in the new business environment; writing a blog can be demanding on time. Also, you may not want to voice all aspects of the organization directly. Consider a collaborative blog with participation from, not just, your leadership team. You will find evangelists at many levels - make them your ambassadors.

  4. Where’s the delete button?


    Most corporate blogs are, and should be, moderated but do refrain from using the reject button on comments, unless there was good reason to. Blogs are a trust tool where transparency & feedback are encouraged and indiscreet use of the ‘delete’ button can take these away.

    Do pause to think if the intent is indeed malicious. Do not, however, allow profanity or personal slander – not even of a competitor.

  5. What’s really the need?


    Having said all this, does your organization really need a blog? Take time out to think through your strategy. What’s the identified need (that a blog can fulfill); for which audience; what are the costs attached (not just money); is your company’s culture supportive of transparent conversations; any legal implications you need to consider; how would you measure success?

    Only when you have the answers for these, is it time to log on!


Do share your thoughts:

May 25, 2007

Today's HT piece

HT-Tech4U.jpg

Today's HT - Tech 4 U (Delhi Edition) has a piece, written by me, probing if blogging is for you, and if yes, how you could get started. You can also see the piece here: http://epaper.hindustantimes.com/default.aspx (See under HT 2)

Off to Mumbai now, where I have a talk to deliver, but will try and put the text here tomorrow.

UPDATED at 7.37 a.m. IST, 26 May 2007.

Here's the text as I submitted and is slightly longer than the print edition; the structure too is a bit different . The piece was originally titled You Blog? . If the piece reads different from my other blog post, please remember that it was written with 'print' in mind and for a larger, diverse reader group. Do share your inputs and feedback.

Here we go:

Even though this piece appears on the technology page, it has really less to do with technology and more with conversations, though enabled by today’s Internet technology.

By now of course all of us know about blogs – that they are diaries on the web; that they are easy to write and manage; that thanks to thousands of free templates you will never need a designer (only partly correct  ); that they are the Internet live and ticking; also that they are big and are seemingly here to stay.

Truth also is that, even as a there is a new blog launched every second, majority of them end up dead, soon after launch.

So we won’t delve upon how big the blogosphere is and all that stuff, instead, let’s try and figure out whether indeed YOU need to blog and if yes, how could you ensure that once you have set one up, it doesn’t end up, like perhaps a majority from among the 71 million + that are listed on Technorati.com (www.technorati.com) already are – dead!

The answer to this can be really simple:

Continue reading "Today's HT piece" »

March 15, 2007

India PR piece - Experiments with Social Media

India PR has a loyal readership among the public relations agencies and Hobbit, who runs the blog (and does a phenomenal job of it and does so remaining anonymous) requested me to do a piece for the site and I wrote something for a relatively younger audience.

Here are the excepts from the piece "Experiments with Social Media":

"Last month a client of ours, in the online publishing space, was complaining about staff spending time on Orkut while in office. He wanted this to stop…

We recommended, as part of our strategy, that it be made a part of the KRA for the team to spend time - every day- on not just Orkut but on other social networking and book-marking sites - participating & gaining insights from conversations they pick up; creating, managing relevant & synergetic communities.

The initial shock from both parties however led to quick adoption..."

and;

Continue reading "India PR piece - Experiments with Social Media" »

January 19, 2007

'Blogs- Power to the People' - so much has happened

"How can 'this' piece not be on the blog!" I had silently exclaimed to myself. After all 'this' is where it all started. A session in the office, an informal prompt and I had penned this first, with my limited understanding, for the company newsletter and it was then republished byExchange4Media.com in Jan 2006. It's been there since. In the interim, so much has happened...both for me and for the overall social media space.

I am adding the text below as the e4m story didn't carry links - they help. Do leave your feedback...

Continue reading "'Blogs- Power to the People' - so much has happened" »

© Rajesh Lalwani 2006 -2009. All rights reserved. Read our Terms of Use