Thursday, April 22, 2010

Love Game




After reading a few of Mercy's posts and the replies about anonymity on the Internet and gender roles as well as Eva's posts about how the Internet facilitates connection and builds bridges, I have decided to write my last post about online romance.

Have any of you found a love online? How about a strong friendship or keeping a long distance relationship alive? Well I have and as you can imagine it's not easy.



When most people think about online romance, online dating is usually the first thing that comes to mind. We can meet people on almost any social networking site or if we are bold enough, we can join an online dating website. Online dating site E-Harmony boasts that 2% of American marriages are as of a direct result of their match making website. I see that number increasing ten-fold within the next couple of years as the mobility of the Internet increase allowing people to spend longer hours online.




Many of the websites that have come into fruition because of Web 2.0 allows netizens to develop an online love life.
Facebook
Skype
Weblogs
Online Chat rooms

Eva's post "Social Media Customer No 1" notes that 29% of the 18-34 demographic think they may meet someone to date online via social media. A quick Google search of "online dating" results in 48,600,000 links, with www.match.com.au, www.eHarmony.com.au/Sydney and www.AdultMatchMaker.com.au in the top 3. I was hoping to find advice, articles and even feedback but this did not start appearing until page 5. Upon entering e-Harmony's site it is so easy to state incorrect information, how does this and how will this affect consumers?

With all the horror stories we hear about meeting people online, why is it that this industry is continuing to grow? Is it a direct result from Hollywood movies such as Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan's 1998 "You've Got Mail"? Are brands becoming more credible? Are people using this tool as just another form of entertainment? Is it really working? Is this the future of romance?





I guess I say this now but I have no need to use the Internet to look for love, for me websites such as Skype, MSN chat and Facebook are the best tools to help keep a bond with that special someone.

Kellisa

The Old and the New



What do you see when you look at this picture?. You may say a old computer but when a person in their late sixties-seventies they see confusion and stress. Its not the technologies that is the biggest problem its how it is portrayed and delivered to the elderly. Sometimes change just for the sake of change is not the best. Change at a controlled pace can be. How to we approach this is the real question. Do the young have the answer as they seem to be the ones controlling the pace.

Tom

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Clear view despite Volcanic Ashes – no excuses thanks to Social Media


The ash cloud caused by the eruption of the volcano in Iceland has caused enormous chaos in numerous European countries and the whole world. Airports have been closed, flights are grounded, passengers are stranded — and many meetings are being missed.
But at least for the meetings there is a solution: ”If you’re grounded this week, give these apps a try — they’re all available for very low cost (and some of them are free).” Simon Mackie blogged on webworker daily on April 19, 2010.

Mackie (2010) calmed down stranded ones, who were about to miss important meetings by offering them tricks, hints, links, and descriptions on how to access the meetings even if they were miles away from home.
The list included:

Skype – we all know what that is
Dimdim — For larger meetings, when you’ll need a more robust web conferencing tool than Skype. Dimdim has got a great feature set for a good price. Other tools available include WebEx and GoToMeeting.
SocialText — Corporate social networking tools are useful for communicating with colleagues and keeping them up-to-date with what you’re working on. SocialText is very full-featured (it’s kind of like Facebook for businesses), but there are other, simpler tools, such as Yammer and present.ly.
5pm — A good project management tool can go a long way toward keeping stakeholders informed about the progress of a project, reducing the need for update meetings. I like 5pm as it’s well-designed, but other good options include Basecamp and Wrike.
OffiSync — The latest version of OffiSync (a nifty little program that allows you to sync Office documents using a Google Docs account) allows for document co-authoring — which means that two or more people can work simultaneously on the same document. While it’s never going to be as good as being in the same room with your co-workers, if you need to collaborate on a document remotely, it’s worth trying. Free.
Tungle — Need to reschedule your meeting? Free app Tungle will help you find a time that’s convenient for everyone.

So, as you can see, there are no excuses to miss a meeting anymore - even if you are caught in volcanic ashes. Social Media connects, connects and connects. Thank you. But
isnt´t it sometimes really exhausting!?


Eva (evesaintlaurent)

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Time to put on those thinking caps




As the blog progresses and we uncover how people around the world of different races and cultures use the Internet, I began to think about my class. This semester our cohort is a lot bigger and unlike last semester where the majority of students were International, this year more Australians have joined the course. This enthusiastic cross section of students have one thing in common - the desire to be professional communicators. Although we all come from different backgrounds our choice of advanced study is the common thread between all of us although our ages range from early twenties to mid forties.

This academic lifestyle that we have chosen to be apart presents us with new opportunities of knowledge. As we go to the web to collate research and information for our classes, we also look to the Internet for jobs, industry updates and general knowledge about the field regionally and internationally.

If I use myself as an example, below are a few websites that I visit or I am member of that allows me to gain access to industry information.
I have recently joined business social networking site LinkedIn
I visit Australian Marketing site Mumbrella daily
I also receive daily updates from WARC - World Advertising Research Centre

This morning's visit to Mumbrella coincides with my post.




It is a new initiative from supermarket chain Aldi as they aim to hire 200 graduates over the next four years. The campaign entitled "Think Smart" is designed to drive graduates to the website in order to gain new or more information about Aldi's Graduate program. The campaign in being supported by print media, search advertising, careers fairs and targeted emailing.

http://mumbrella.com.au/aldi-launches-think-smarter-graduate-recruitment-drive-23259

I like the idea and initiative of this program from a brand building (loyalty/strengthening/identification) as well as consumer (purchaser/student) point of view. What I thought most interesting about it is how Aldi has incorporated education (CSR) into their communications plan as most students or professionals would be looking at a different outlet for such opportunities.

References:

Aldi launches ‘think smarter’ graduate recruitment drive. Retrieved April 21, 2010 from, http://mumbrella.com.au/aldi-launches-think-smarter-graduate-recruitment-drive-23259


Kellisa

“On the internet, nobody knows you are a dog”- Peter Steiner




This statement struck me especially because of the anonymity that is assumed by use of computer mediated communication. CMC has provided opportunity for many people that face-to-face interactions would otherwise not. For example conferencing without physical contact would give people a sense of equal opportunity without the prejudicial judgment of color or race or age or gender. It is natural for people to prejudge on a face to face conversation.

People communicating via the internet can easily assume anonymous status giving them a sense of security and confidence. This is particularly witnessed in dating websites where many users assume personas that they are not, thus the heading. Women can be men, men can be women and children can be adults.

So why do people hide under a mask when communicating online? I think maybe the most obvious answer would be social reasons. Because we are brought up a certain way, and both societal and environmental predispositions condition us to think how we think. This gives us our gender roles and when we are not conforming, we get uncomfortable and we lie. Men lie that they are well toned, rich and successful so that they can attract someone and women lie that they are skinny and sexy so that they can attract someone.


Mercy

Monday, April 19, 2010

Internet Builds Bridges


The current Iceland volcano issue, as Kellisa stated in her blog post "When disaster strikes" is an interesting example about how the Internet informs but also connects people who are locally separated by natural catastrophes.

Think about all the people sleeping at airports far away from home and don´t even know when they will see their relatives again. The Internet builds bridges in times people are separated locally.
And even after a catastrophe: How do you get together with your family again? How do you know who is alive? Today: via Internet, via Social Media.
Social Media and the WWW do not only build bridges between countries and seperated people, they build bridges of emergency and help.

A case, showing this power of the Internet together with Social Media as the new emergency media, were the Australian bushfires in 2009.

Some web 2.0 tools were used to assist communication, but a model for strengthening their use as part of operational planning is currently being devised by the emergency services. The key principles that inform the communications approach still make for compelling reading, however.
They include:

• An approach that is based not on spin, but providing information communities need to put in place safe behaviours
• Messaging that builds on the 9/11 model used by Rudy Giuliani:

What we know
What we don’t know
What we are doing
What we want you to do


• Ensuring messages use a ‘call to action’
• Being realistic, real‐time, disciplined and two‐way in communication
• Taking the view that resilient communities are informed communities.


Amber Brodecky, Director Communities and Media Relations, for the Victorian Office of the Emergency Services Commissioner (2009) said that Social media were an important link in emergency management chain and they were viewed as partners, rather than a group that need to be managed. Similarly, local communities were also viewed as partners, playing a key role in their own safety planning.

The emergency services were also transparent in updating the public on fatalities and losses, with the view that an open, honest approach is best.


Eva (evesaintlaurent)



Reference:

Pearce, C., & Frost, G. (2009). Frocom’s 2nd Annual Crisis Communication & Social Media Summit 2009: Conference report. Retrieved, April, 10, 2010, from https://www.frocomm.com.au/cc2009/pdf/Frocom_CRISIS_09_D8.pdf

The Aged and Cost of the WEB

I have been looking at the WWW.WEB . and I am amazed at the level of information that is available. I for one have not use the WEB to its ability. The fact that you can just type a small part of a sentence and there you have multiple selections to choose from is amazing. I feel that the only hold back is the training in how to use the applications, in less then ten years all people will have grown up with the computer age/ WWW . With the constant change of techno gadgets that are placed in front of us so we can say yes I need that. People over sixty five will still not be using the net on a daily basis but as time and selection is phased out such as a local bank or post office closing so they will have to do business on line. In light of this I why is there a monopoly on the cost of the machines and access to this. Do you not think that the Government should be giving some sort of incentives such as a aged discount to alleviate the burden of cost.

Cheers
Tom

When disaster strikes



This year like every other year mother nature speaks to us in ways that are unimaginable. In essence she disrupts the everyday lifestyles of many across the world. Over the last few months Haiti, China and most recently Iceland are feeling and will continue to feel the affects of these natural disasters. My posts divulge the psychographics of netizens- the lifestyles of these demographics; but what happens when our lifestyles unexpectedly change, does the Internet play a significant role, if so how?

My decision to post on this topic has come about as one reoccurring communication tool has become ever present during these natural disasters - the Internet.
In the past we received information about these disasters on the radio, on TV or even via word of mouth, but increasingly our knowledge of these occurrences happen right in the palm of our hand. But where are the images coming from? Well, it's coming from those affected, those living in the moment or as CNN considers them "i-reporters". A recent Associated Press report notes that Facebook and Twitter have played a big role in helping Haiti - the first images were Tweeted by a citizen.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnyRwPZzaqA&feature=related

Our blog seeks to find out who uses the Internet - but I think it is clearly obvious we all use this 24hour mode of communication. Websites target children to the elderly, teeny boppers to businessmen and women, businesses to consumers. We use it for the same reasons and while at the same time we use it for different reasons. I believe that because the Internet's reach is so broad those in critical situations have realised it's power in time of need.

Do you think the use of the Internet through mobile technology really assists those affected?











References:
Twitter, Facebook Play Big Role in Helping Haiti. Retrieved April 18th 2010 from, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tnyRwPZzaqA&feature=related

Haiti Earthquake mobile. Retrieved April 19th, 2010 from, http://images.google.com.au/imgres?imgurl=http://inapcache.boston.com/universal/site_graphics/blogs/bigpicture/haiti_01_18/h33_21756295.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.aeromental.net/2010/01/19/haiti-70-earthquake-2010-extreme-photos-a-week-later-200000-dead/&usg=__AYDFs81ZD6GsKxQL-4_wY6fR4dY=&h=660&w=990&sz=278&hl=en&start=1&um=1&itbs=1&tbnid=QnFRdwbIV39DsM:&tbnh=99&tbnw=149&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dchina%2Bearthquake%2B2010%2Bmobile%2Bphone%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dsafari%26rls%3Den%26tbs%3Disch:1


Kellisa

Sunday, April 18, 2010

World Wide Wait

Frustration over congestion issues in the Internet infrastructure and the high latency that results in slow browsing has led to an alternative, pejorative name for the World Wide Web: the World Wide Wait Speeding up the Internet is an ongoing discussion over the use Other solutions to reduce the World Wide Wait can be found where?. The ideal Web response times are
• 0.1 second (one tenth of a second). Ideal response time. The user doesn't sense any interruption.
• 1 second. Highest acceptable response time. Download times above 1 second interrupt the user experience.
• 10 seconds. Unacceptable response time. The user experience is interrupted and the user is likely to leave the site or system.

Now if we go back a few years 10 seconds to wait for a task was acceptable, now however we are in hurry for the next task. This has nothing to do with age accept with age you have more knowledge and the knowhow how to use it with care.



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia 18 apr 2010

Why Web Performance Declines With Age

Why Web Performance Declines With Age
Two factors cause the 0.8% increase in task time. For each additional year of age, users:
• spend 0.5% more time on each page, and
• Visit 0.3% more pages per task.
In other words, the biggest factor is that older users need more time to understand pages, scan the text, and extract the information. A smaller — but still substantial — problem is that people have more trouble navigating websites as they age.
It's not surprising that users need more time to use websites as they age, even within the mainstream group of 25–60 year olds. The human aging process starts around age 25 and causes erosion of cognitive resources, loss of visual acuity, degraded reaction times, and reduced dexterity. People need more time for the same mental operations; they have less memory capacity and take longer to process the same perceptual input.
All of these elements of human performance impact the speed with which users can get something done on a website.
There's also a covariant, the age at which people started using the Web. Because the Web is relatively new, a 50-year-old might have started using it at age 40, whereas a 30-year-old might have started at age 20. In contrast, by 2050, a 50-year-old will have used the Web since age 5, and thus benefit from 45 years of experience. A 30-year-old user in 2050 will have only 25 years' Web experience. This added experience might eventually allow older users to catch up and somewhat reduce the 0.8% gap. Although we obviously can't predict the future, my guess is that the age penalty will drop to around 0.5%/year. Still, this doesn't matter much for your Web strategy over the next 10 years: the 0.8% level is where we're at and where we'll remain for some time. So as we get older we get slower. That’s the way it is and can not be stoped or can it?.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Middle Aged User Declining

Middle-Aged Users' Declining Web Performance
Between the ages of 25 and 60, people's ability to use websites declines by 0.8% per year — mostly because they spend more time per page, but also because of navigation difficulties.
Why is this so? Based on usage on the Web usability guidelines for young children, teenagers, and senior citizens. Each of these age groups have specific characteristics that designers must understand to attract young or old users to their sites.
But what about people in the middle? We don't even have a real name for them — they are usually just called people between 25 and 60 years old "mainstream users." This is by far the most important age group for several reasons:
• There are more of them than in the young or old age groups. In the U.S., 49% of the population is between 25 and 60 years old (35% are younger and 16% are older).
• Mainstream users have all the good jobs; they're the richest, and they spend the most money online.
• Almost all sites target this age group. This is especially true if we extend the "mainstream" definition to include people up to 65 years old; beyond that, we officially start calling them "seniors" in our usability research.
• Virtually all intranet users fall within this group, especially if we extend the age range to 65.

How will this change and will this be for the better?. I feel it will only change when WWW.WEB sees money to be made it it.

Social Media Customer No 1


New research introduced by Penn Schoen Berland (2010)reveals that 6 in 10 Americans believe that the fast-growing social media space will become more integrated into their lives in the future. And that means big changes are afoot when it comes to making friends, finding jobs, and dating.

The survey shows that social media is reaching a saturation point, though participation still skews young and tech-savvy. 74% of respondents report having created a profile on a social network, including 92% of 18-34 year olds.
People who use social media expect their participation in such networks to impact their lives in a number of ways:

56% believe they may make new friends
47% think they may find a job
29% think they may meet someone to date
21% think it’s possible they’ll lose friends
16% think it’s possible they’ll lose a job

Beyond family, friends, and the workplace, social media is also impacting the behaviour at the cash register of social media users. 31% have made purchases based on social media recommendations and 68% of all respondents believe that such recommendations are the same or better than traditional recommendations. In a key trend, 33% of 18-34 year olds believe that recommendations they receive through social media are better than those they receive through other means. (Lester, 2010).

Consequenly, if brands understand the possibilities of social networks they are then able to harness the power to increase sales and awareness.

Have you ever purchased a product on the net? Was it a very expensive or rather cheap product? Did you buy because of a Social Media recommendation or was you purchase related to an online advertisement? What makes up the difference for you?


Eva



References:
Penn Schoen Berland. Press Release. Consumers believe social media will become more
integrated into daily life, survey shows.
Retrieved, March 17, 2010, from, www.psbresearch.com.

Friday, April 16, 2010

The aging Face of the Internet Age


While in recent years it was mostly young people using the internet, today we realize a shift of age, above all in Social Network channels.

Social networks online started out amongst the younger audience. However, as the networks have become more mainstream with the passage of time, it isn’t surprising to see the audience becoming broader and older. According to Nielsen (2009) "This shift has primarily been driven by Facebook, whose successful formula opened up the possibilities of social networking to a much wider audience. In terms of sheer audience numbers, for example, the greatest growth for Facebook has come from people aged 35-49 years of age (+24.1 million). Furthermore, Facebook has added almost twice as many 50-64 year olds visitors (+13.6 million) than it has added under 18 year old visitors (+7.3 million).
Consequently, people under 18 years old are making up less of the social network and blogging audience, whereas the 50+ age group are accounting for more of the audience." (Nielsen, 2009, p.5).

What does this shift, the aging face of the internet demographics, mean for us as PR professionals?
We have to target another age group via social networks than we used to.
This might be an advantage as, for instance mums and generally people aged 35-40 are more likely the ones who have purchasing power.


Eva


Reference:
Nielsen Company (2009). Global Faces and Networked Places: A Nielsen report on Social
Networking’s New Global Footprint. Retrieved, March, 17, 2010, from,
http://blog.nielsen.com/nielsenwire/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/nielsen_globalfaces_mar09.pdf

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Internet use and women (Mercy)






Demographic variables such as economic status, lifestyle, location and gender have a great impact on internet use and adoption practices. Schell and Dodge (2002) argue that men are more likely to have access to internet at an earlier age and to be more interested in programming, hacking and cracking. However, we are increasingly witnessing this gender divide diminishing as the variety for internet use increases.

Women are taking a proactive approach in accessing the internet all around the world. However internet use and access relating to gender is still highly dependent of issues such as location, cultural factors, economic status and religion.

Despite its military origins and its enabling capacity for all sorts of new cultural formations- including highly misogynistic ones-the internet is far from being coded as a predominantly masculine domain. (Spender 1995;van Zoonen 2002)

Several studies support this and have revealed that the internet is currently being dominated by women who are using the internet at different stages in their lives.

There are varied and a range of subjects that attract women to the World Wide Web; information, communication, fashion, family, beauty,relationships, sex and even careers.

I might be wrong in assuming that the internet is the next best thing that has happened to women. I find it liberating and informative- if you look in the right places. Coming from a culture that was mainly patriachal, with mostly men dominating positions of power, the internet has given me an edge to equip myself with information that has given me a lead in every aspect of my life.

With simple clicks of a button, I can communicate to my friends around the world, I can shop online for my family and compare prices and get a good bargain, I can conduct my study research and I can know the latest trends in fashion.

The World Wide Web is a companion, it gives women who are stay at home mums an opportunity to entertain themselves and inform themselves.

As a medium of consensus, cooperation, conversation and social networking, parallels have been drawn between the internet and the earlier coding intrinsic uses of telephone based communication as feminine. This is one way in which the internet has been reclaimed as an expression of femininity. (spurgeon)

I wonder if this is the internet is a big catalyst for closing the gap in this male dominated world where women have to continually prove themselves at all odds? COuld it also be to our detriment that we are more exposed via the internet thus more vulnerable?


References:

Schell, H. B. (2007) The Internet and society: a reference handbook. USA. Library of Congress

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

The big Picture of Nations on the net


You want to get the real big picture of Nations using the net? The following link shows you.

Internet World Stats

Have a look and find interesting figures about your home country, including the world internet penetration rate by geographic regions (2009). You can also figure out who´s the internet distributer no 1 in the world.

Surprised?


Eva
The Web,s biggest strength is also its downfall. Just about everyone you know is on the social networking sites, and more likely than not, those people are your “friends.”
That can be a good thing you can easily share all of your messages, photos and videos with everyone in your network. But it can also be a headache to assign people to different groups and slog through the Web site’s 40-some privacy control settings to parse who gets to see what.
And if you want to post a status update reminding guests about a surprise party for your best friend — but prevent the birthday girl from seeing it — good luck figuring out how to do that.
All of that is about to change, Facebook. The company will be overhauling its privacy controls to make it easier for users can share as much — or as little — as they want with whomever they choose. Is this a good thing I ask and who will benefit from this I am not sure. Is this just the business society keeping more information on us ?
It just might be me but I feel that the young are not asking enough questions before the give away their rights of choice. Who says the old have all the answers.

Think About It
Cheers
Tom

The new York Times. Times People the net. 15 Apr 2010

Did you know?

This is how we are using the Internet.
Do you think it explains who is using the Internet?



Kellisa Belgrave

Reference
Get Ready. Retrieved April 13, 2010.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QbjfAPbSxis
As of May 2009, over 109.5 million websites operated.[64] Of these 74% were commercial or other sites operating in the .com generic top-level domain. This shows that people of all ages are using the www.web. Were will it stop.

Cheers
Tom

Monday, April 12, 2010

The virtual community (Mercy)

Social Identity Theory was developed by Tajfel and Turner in 1979. The theory was originally developed to understand the psychological basis of intergroup discrimination. Tajfel et al (1971) attempted to identify the minimal conditions that would lead members of one group to discriminate in favour of the in-group to which they belonged and against another out-group.

Borrowing from the social Identity Theory, it is clear that different social groups cluster together and form ingroup/ self-categorization and enhancement in ways that favour the in-group at the expense of the out-group. Many websites and social networking sites require users to join and become members, only then can you post your photos, post messages on discussion boards and ask experts questions. The examples (minimal group studies) of Turner and Tajfel (1986) showed that the mere act of individuals categorizing themselves as group members was sufficient to lead them to display in-group favouritism.

A case in point is Women of child birthing ages who have effectively forged relationships to build a virtual community of mothers. The geographical boundaries in cyber space are loose and shapeless, thus accommodating to women of all walks of life. The community of mothers transcends age, race, religion and economic status. Women here have the same agenda; wanting the best for their children and themselves. These social networking sites offer solace, help, advice on parenting, health tips, shopping tips and emotional support.

Communication technologies expand human social reach (Horrigan, Boase, Rainie, & Wellman, 2006). Social networking sites are constantly being modified to make them more efficient. Most people understand the demanding nature of motherhood, with the ‘just a click away’ phenomenon, the internet has proved to be a much more lucrative and seductive option for many mothers.

Social networking sites allow users to send and review messages when it is convenient, hence reducing barriers to communication, such as being in the same place at the same time. It allows users to have a reference where messages can be stored and reviewed repeatedly and to review other messages pertaining to the same topic across different sites.

References:

Rubel, S. (2006) http://www.webpronews.com/blogtalk/2006/06/16/mothers-all-over-social-networking. Retrieved on 08/04/2010

Drucker, Susan J., & Gary Gumpert. (eds.) (1998). Real Law @ Virtual Space: Communication Regulation in Cyberspace: USA. Hampton Press

advert-I-sing

As advertisers explore new portals to reach their target audience the on going question becomes more prevalent - are the messages reaching and influencing audiences, are they changing behaviours?

We receive messages via the newspaper,radio, television, billboards and online but as our online presence increases so does the quantity as well as quality of messages. Online advertising comes to us in many different forms, these include texts ads, display ads, pop up banners, video ads, email ads and the list goes on. According to www.webadvantage.net brands target consumers according to:

user behaviour
geographical location
context - ads relating to the websites we are currently surfing i.e sports ads on sports web pages

Using these three methods advertisers can shape and disseminate their messages with a lot more accuracy providing the consumer with relevant messages. According to David Scott (2007) author of New Rules of Marketing and PR "...the most effective Web strategies anticipate needs and provide content to meet them, even before people know to ask. Marketing on the Web is not about generic banner ads designed to trick people with neon color or wacky movement. It is about understanding the keywords and phrases that our buyers are using and then deploying micro-campaigns to drive buyers to pages replete with the content that they seek.”
.

With the recent launch of the iPad, Apple is set to launch a new advertising mobile service as through the iPhone and iTouch they have recognised the niche for mobile advertising. iAd will be launched with the next generation iPhone, Steve Jobs Apple's CEO explains that "64% of iPhone owners regularly access the mobile internet via their handsets, while the average customer also spends 30 minutes a day on various apps."


The launch of this new platform speaks to the increase of consumers "on the go lifestyle" - advertising is now literally following us everywhere we go! Below is a demonstration video at a recent Apple forum showcasing how the iAd works on the iPhone.



So as the online drive increases through the computer as well as mobile phones are advertisers remembering the "I" in advertising- are they remembering you and me


References

Scott, M. D. (2007). The new rules of marketing and PR :how to use news releases, blogs, podcasts, viral marketing and online media to reach your buyers directly.Hoboken, N.J. : John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Apple plots mobile advertising revolution. Retrieved April 12, 2010 from
http://www.warc.com/News/TopNews.asp?ID=26556&Origin=WARCNewsEmail

Apple's iAd platform called a 'billion dollar opportunity. Retrieved April 12, 2010 from,
http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/10/04/09/apples_iad_platform_called_a_billion_dollar_opportunity.html

Types of online advertising. Retrieved April 13, 2010. Retrieved from, http://www.webadvantage.net/internet-marketing-services/online-media-buying-planning/types-of-online-advertising


Nike iAd demo iPhone 4. Retrieved April 12, 2010 from, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=COYWHpl0aLU


Kellisa Belgrave

Flying high with multicultural Online PR strategies


Who else should look at the different cultural audiences than airlines? Flying from Spain to Greece to South America and the Emirates. Every country has its different passenges, cultural backgrounds and meal wishes.
As air travel continues to rise, the multicultural segment, too, is growing - American Airlines, for instnce, was working on different marketing strategies to involve the diversity of its customers.

According to Iacono (2007) the airline developed cultural-specific campaigns, such as:

Power lunch series
AA works with securing a respected lifestyle expert in the African-American community to record podcasts on such topics as work-life balance. This year's effort featured author Michelle McKinney Hammond and offered visitors to the site the chance to win free airline tickets.

Media days
Targeted to Asian-American, African-American, and Hispanic communities, these events gather specific groups of journalists to educate them about AA's general offerings or surround a specific product launch or new service.

Community events
AA supports events, such as Puerto Rican Day parades in various cities and Chinese New Year celebrations, and groups like LULAC, La Raza, and the NAACP.

Similarly, Czech Airlines selected a global Advertising Strategy for its U.S. Campaigns.
The multicultural campaign targets Central and Eastern European-Americans and consists of "in-language" print advertisements in U.S. markets where these populations are concentrated, notably New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. The campaign, "Letter from Home," began in early May and will run through the end of August.

Why not use social media to target cultural diversity.
How do you think American Airlines and Czech Airlines could enhance their multicultural approach with Social Media??


Eva (evesaintlaurent)


References:

Iacono, E (2007). Diversity's high fliers. Brand republic. Retrieved, April 12, 2010, from,
http://www.brandrepublic.com/InDepth/Features/626588/Diversitys-high-fliers/?DCMP=ILC-SEARCH

Market Experts (2004).Czech Airlines Selects Global Advertising Strategies for U.S. Campaigns; Ads Target...
http://www.allbusiness.com/marketing-advertising/market-research-analysis-market/5663613-1.html

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Aim, Fire, but who is the target?

As we continue the search of what demographic the www is reaching, I have been receiving a wealth of information on different brand campaigns that are developing around the world.
Some the campaigns are cool but not all speak to me - so who are they speaking to, are they receiving the messages and what are they doing with this information?

Below are a few campaigns and strategies that I've been introduced to over the last couple of months. Most of these campaigns utilised both traditional and new media platforms in order to reach their target audience.

So again I pose the following questions to you:
Who are the ads speaking to?
Is the target audience receiving the messages?
Is this information relevant?
What are they (target audience) doing with this information?

Coca-Cola Happiness



Greenpeace vs Nestle



D and AD Inspirational Channel




References

Coca-Cola Australian Summer Commercial 2009/2010, Open Happiness
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nlpZRK2Yfd0

Nestle Killer - Greenpeace
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v7SZyidY7mQ

D and AD partners with YouTube to showcase creative work around the world
http://mumbrella.com.au/dad-partners-with-youtube-to-showcase-creative-work-from-around-the-world-22560#more-22560


Kellisa Belgrave

McLaks vs. Greek Mac - Multicultural Online Marketing = M2.0

As already examined the Internet is able to distinguish time and place but also cultural aspects.
There are manifold cultures out there, which want to communicate with each other.
And companies can use this fact for their own purposes and interact with their customers interpersonally.

Before Web 2.0 companies already developed their products and communication strategies specifically for different markets.
In Germany Mc Donald´s sells more veggies than in Australia for instance- and at certain places you can order beer as well. In India , there are no Big Macs because the Hindu people don't eat beef. However, they have the Maharaja Mac, which is a Big Mac made of lamb or chicken meat. There is also a vegetarian burger, the McAloo Tikki. In fish-loving Norway , they have the McLaks, a sandwich made of grilled salmon and dill sauce.


All these product variations are due to different wishes and needs of the customers.

Today, the Internet provides a new basis to speak to various nations, cultures and diverse customers. And the question is now: Is there a general Internet communication strategy for all the diverse customers and suitors? Or should marketers and PR professionals develop different strategies for different ways of communication according to different countries and needs?

Developing a diverse customer communication on the web takes more than simply providing websites in different languages. It also requires a long-term commitment and a willingness to adjust interpersonal communication to meet the special circumstances, also of minorities. Therefore enterprises can bridge this gap and increase sales to the multicultural market by educating themselves on the differences.

According to ethnoconnect (2010)there is manifold differences in how people of different cultures communicate with each other. "Immigrant men from the Middle East often shake hands with a slight nod or bow and then exchange kisses on both cheeks. Traditional Muslim men may shake hands and then touch the right palm of their hand to their heart as a sign of friendship. Men from this country generally do not shake hands with women. They often do not introduce women who accompany them nor is it expected that you shake hands with her."
All these differences have to be borne in mind when developing an online marketing strategy.

What should PR professionals know about your home country when developing a Multicultural Online Marketing (M2.0) strategy?

Do you know of any PR measures that might be suitable for your home country but not for other cultures?


Eva (evesaintlaurent)

The young and the Old

According to a Google As of May 2009, over 109.5 million websites operated. Of these 74% were commercial or other sites operating in the .com domain. You need ta ask yourself “who is using the net and Why.” Thee WWW.WEB is now a must part of our lives.

Cheers
Tom

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Who's out there and why?

It goes without saying that the Internet's audience is massive and is continuously growing. As mentioned in the first post, the Internet has made distances shorter and has made the world feel a lot smaller as it allows for global unison.

According to Nielsen’s ‘2010 Internet and Technology Report’, the average Australian Internet user spends 17.6 hours per week online. These results indicate a 9% rise in the past year and a 28.5% lift from 2007. So why are we going online? What is driving us there? What is keeping us there? and How is the Internet helping us? Small business web consultant Jim Kukral explains very simply why we use the Internet - to solve problems and to be entertained.

Catering to netizens from the upper class to the lower working class, users are grouped according to variables such as social class, lifestyles, personality, values, attitudes, interests. Throughout the world we all have different lifestyle patterns and our behaviour may change as we pass through different stages of life. As a tool the Internet supports our opinions, interests and hobbies and therefore the longer we stay connected the more it becomes part of our life and our daily lifestyle.

Here's a brief list of what a female might search for online.

Online shopping
Maternal websites
Online dating
Health and Wellness
Hair and Fashion
Food and Leisure
Education
Music
Real Estate

As the blog progresses, our posts will observe how brands are connecting with users on a personal level.

References:
Australian Internet usage breaks records
http://www.marketingmag.com.au/news/view/australian-internet-usage-breaks-records-1969

2 Reasons why we use the Internet
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LGvJroTssXw


Kellisa Belgrave

Friday, April 9, 2010

United Colors of Internet?

The Internet is a symbol for unity.
The medium we can communicate with our friends and family even if we are hours and miles away from home. And moreover, we can talk to people we don´t know – all over the world, in all different places and of various different races and cultures.


Today we might sometimes tend to see the www just as an everyday tool. We can´t imagine to be without it as it has become a ‘normal’ part of our communication.

Isn´t it sometimes worth to step back, take a breath and just think about who is also there – in the wide space of the www? On the platform that unites us all - Australia with the US, with Germany, with Sweden, with Canada with Malaysia with Barbados with whatever place in the world we don´t even know it´s there?
Take a breath and think about it. Can you feel it?

In 1985 Meyrowitz already reported about the power of electronic media, which re-territorialize ‘sense of place’ and the spatial, political and social conditions of this sense of place.
"They do this by their cross-contextuality and reach, the way in which they can asymmetrically bring together extremely diverse groups who are otherwise separated in cultural focus, in space, and perhaps also in time. Media, especially electronic media, make possible arbitrary relations between a concrete space and a sense of place. By undermining ‘the traditional association between physical setting and social situation' the constraints of embodiment such as being in one place at the one time disappear." (Meyrowitz, 1985, cited in Holmes, 2005, p.42).

The phenomenon of distinguishing time and place but also cultural aspects has become more powerful than ever before – thanks to the Internet. And with Social Media and all the manifold platforms, networks and channels we can communicate through, the phenomenon peaked. According to Nielsen (2009) Social Networking has been the global phenomenon of 2008. “Two-thirds of the world’s Internet population visit a social network or blogging site and the sector now accounts for almost 10% of all internet time. ‘Member Communities’ has overtaken personal Email to become the world’s fourth most popular online sector.” (Nielsen, 2009).

So where to get a better idea of all the different races and faces using the Internet than on Facebook? “Facebook is the second largest ‘country’ in the world: With more than 310 million members, it recently surpassed the U.S. in total ‘population.’“ (Farwell & Kashatus, 2010). But also facebook´s brothers and sisters MySpace, LinkedIn and all the other member communities have to be regarded.

According to Nielsen (2009) the strongest growth of member community has come in Germany where the sector now reaches 51% of Germans online compared to 39% a year ago – an actual increase of over 12 percentage points. Large growth has also occurred in the UK, Spain, Italy and Switzerland – the sector reaching 10% percentage points
more of the online population in each of these countries than it did a year ago.


This increase in popularity is only half the story when it comes to the social networking phenomenon – the time people spend on these networks is also increasing dramatically. The total amount spent online globally increased by 18% between December 2007 and December 2008. In most of the countries monitored the share of time accounted for by ‘Member Communities’ has more than doubled. In Switzerland, for example, the share of time has tripled from 3% to 9.3%. A year ago ‘Member Communities’ accounted for one in every 15 online minutes globally – now it accounts for one in every 11. In Brazil alone, ‘Member Communities’ accounts for almost one in every four minutes. In the UK they now account for one in every six minutes (up from every 13 minutes a year ago) and in Italy one in every seven (up from one in 14 a year ago).

However, if we regard the Internet, its faces, cultures and races participating the net-conversations, it comes to a point where we should raise the question:
“Who is not there?”


Is the Internet really a symbol for unity or is it, on the contrary, a phenomenon that further separates certain countries from the rest of the world? What about those who don´t have access due to isolation? What about those who are not allowed to see the entire ‘reality’ of the Internet, as it is censored by the government?

United Internet or Internet Isolation?



Eva (evesaintlaurent)


References:
Nielsen (2009). Global Faces and Networked Places. A Nielsen report on Social
Networking’s New Global Footprint. Retrieved, April, 9, 2010, from, http://blog.nielsen.com/nielsenwire/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/nielsen_globalfaces_mar09.pdf

Holmes, D. (2005). Theories of broadcast media. In Communication theory:
media,technology, society (pp. 20-43). London: Sage.

Farwell, H., & Kashatus, K. (2010). Social Media: The New Frontier of Corporate Reputation Management. Retrieved, January 21, 2010, from www.wcsr.com/filefolder/Stratcomm_socialmedia.pdf

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

www.demographic.commence

It goes with out saying that the Internet has become an integral part of our everyday lives. The world wide web offers users the opportunity to gain information, stay connected with family and friends, do business and access various forms of entertainment.

This blog will explore the secrets of the demographics using the internet - the www demographics - as there is a new world order thanks to the world wide web.

We will discuss age, gender, cultures and psychographics of "netizens".

Please feel free to join and comment on our blog.