Posts Tagged ‘twitter’

Six Reasons Why Corporate Australia is a Social Media Laggard

September 25th, 2008 by Daniel Young | No Comments | Filed in Public Relations, Social media

Where the bleeding hell are you?

Where the bleeding hell are you?

OK, I want to start this post with a disclaimer. There are plenty of companies operating in Australia that are active in social media. I have seen some great case studies…

Examples include – wikis at Janssen-Cilag, BlueTube for the Victorian Police Force and the ever present case study: Now We Are Talking.

And I have worked with companies in this sphere.

As a side note: It seems to me that Telstra entered the social media space with a very specific agenda (T3) and objective. The approach delivered value and has since permeated other areas of their business in a positive way.

For the purposes of this post, I want to focus on externally facing social media projects by Australian corporates.

Laurel Papworth recently posted on the topic of CEOs that use twitter, as a follow up to a BusinessWeek story about tweeting chief execs in the US. The list is made up by the leaders of web 2 and tech companies on both sides of the Pacific.

Talk to any PR in Australia and they’ll tell you that the corporate sector remains unwilling to dip its toe into social media in a meaningful or strategic way. Maybe that’s an exercise in PR business development, either way I’d like to suggest a few reasons why this might be the case.

1. A small corporate sector which remains well connected via traditional offline networks
That sense of the old boys network in Australian business still feels very prevalent to me. That concept of mateship and personal connections comes through quite strongly. The people that run Australian businesses are not using social media as a prmary means of communication.

2. The retail sector has not led the way
Amazon and eBay were the Web pioneers in many ways. Their success gave the Web a lot of credibility in a market (the US) which has a very rich catalogue mail order retail culture. The Australian retail sector on the other hand has been very cautious and reticent when it comes to establishing an online presence, resulting in a lack of leadership.

Too many cultural stereotypes for one post?

Too many cultural stereotypes for one post?

3. The old chestnut: Australia the follower
Why would we expect Australia to lead the rest of the world or even be up there when history tells us that this market is typically a follower? Corporate Australia is watching to see what happens in the US and Europe before it dives in.

4. Abscence of high speed national broadband
Internationally, Japan leads the way when it comes to national broadband speeds. The NBN project in Australia has a long way to go still – a nationwide broadband network in Australia is five years away, at the very least. This has impacted the sophistication, the uptake of Web applications, interaction etc. Australia is way down the rankings in terms of broadband quality, as this study shows.

5. There has been no high profile reputational crisis on the Web in Australia
Corporates will only recognise the power of the Web when they see one of their peers suffer major reputational damage as a result of online activity. Until then, corporates will sit back and focus on the risk of getting involved.

6. Corporates aren’t being sold on the benefits effectively
Marketers, consultants, PRs have to accept some responsibilty for the current state of affairs. It’s their job to educate decision makers. It’s their job to prove the business case. Marketers and communicators in Australia aren’t strong on this stuff.

As I said at the beginning, there is activity out there. It’s happening but Australia continues to lag behind the rest of the world. My sense is that the multi-nationals operating in Australia are leading the way. It can only be a matter of time until we see the large corporates follow Telstra and usurp the telco as the outstanding Australian corporate in social media.

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Oracle Listens – Update/No Update

September 16th, 2008 by Daniel Young | No Comments | Filed in Public Relations, Technology

Yesterday I posted on the Oracle Listens projcet.

Today I noticed this update from Justin Kestelyn.

Update (1:49PM PT, Sept 9) - still putting the finishing touches on this after additional last-minute testing; there may be a possible short delay.

But it is September 16 and no change to Oracle.com.

I tweeted Kestelyn but no response – although he did start following me.

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Users Clammer for Yammer but will Corporate IT Follow?

September 13th, 2008 by Daniel Young | No Comments | Filed in Blogging, Public Relations, Social media, Technology
We're Yamming at work, yamming til the break of dawn

We're Yamming at work, yamming til the break of dawn

Yammer is the hot Web 2.0 application of the week – having been recognised at TechChrunch50. This service is very similar to Twitter; its a micro-blogging application. The functionality is almost identical.

The big difference here is that Yammer is aimed at the Enterprise; and they have done a very clever thing. Groups are created around email domains, which means that Yammer is piggy backing off of enterprise IT environments.

Yammer is providing a private company networks as a managed service. You can’t sign up for the service with a personal email address.

The Yammer private network facilitates internal communications within individual companies. For a fee (1 dollar per user), corporations can opt to ‘Claim Their Network’, which entitles them to the following services:

Manage Content and Members – Remove a member from the network or delete any message.
Password Policies – Determine the minimum character length and complexity for passwords.
Session Settings – Require email confirmation when logging in from a new browser.
IP Range – Assign an IP range for your network, restricting access to your office network or VPN.
Custom Logo– Brand your network by uploading your company logo to appear at the top of every page.
Assign Administrator Privileges – Grant additional administrative privileges to any user on your network.

This is an ingenius business model but it remains to be seen whether it will generate much goodwill for the company. As with many Web 2,0 applications, Yammer provides users with control, at the expense of Corporate IT. This has been a great thing for innovation and time to market for new technology within business. But the Yammer approach is effectively holding potential customers to ransom. Corporate IT has the easy option of shutting access down altogether. Naturally, business leaders will be concerned about internal messages and company information residing on the servers of a third party and a start-up at that.

My team of seven jumped onto Yammer mid-week and found it useful as a means of sharing links between our small group, sharing updates, chasing deadlines, maintaining morale :-) As with Twitter, users can opt to follow individual members to ensure that they are only on the receiving end of information that is relevant to them.

It seems pretty obvious that the business model helped get Yammer over the line at TechCrunch50 given the fact that this technology already exists and has been relatively well adopted. It will be interesting to see how this goes down and how transparent Yammer is in the coming weeks and months about enterprise adoption. I’d question the suitability of the name – Yammer – for the corporate sector.

Finally, just wondering, is an individual message a Yam. Did I just yam? Or am I yamming?

Micro-blogging for the enterprise

Micro-blogging for the enterprise

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YouAre overwhelmed by social networks

July 16th, 2008 by Daniel Young | No Comments | Filed in Blogging, Social media, Technology

I recently blogged on the plethora of social networks. In recent weeks, there has been lots of chat about the threat that FriendFeed poses to the Twitter community and many high profile bloggers have moved from Tweeting to FriendFeed.

I feel that FriendFeed represents a big threat to Twitter.

I found out today about the launch of a new network; ’YouAre’ from Spain. I applied for beta access today. 

This is a micro-blogging platform with aspects of LinkedIN, del.icio.us and others combined with a secret sauce, which hasn’t been revealed as yet. Screenshots available here.  

I am keen to trial the new service and will cover it here. I have been told that my access will come through in a few weeks.

The beauty and irony of the social networking is that I found out about YouAre on FriendFeed via Duncan Riley’s post. That would be like the Sun newspaper in Britain running a story on the launch of the Today newspaper and suggesting I check it out or me placing a classified ad in the window of my local newsagents suggesting that passers by check out the newsagency down the road. 

Consolidation in this space is inevitable. We’ve seen it in most industry sectors, take the ERP market in recent years. Most industries mature before they consolidate but the social networking sector will get there much more quickly surely.

The issue of monetization is one spanner in the works still.

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What happened to the blogroll?

July 8th, 2008 by Daniel Young | No Comments | Filed in Blogging, Social media

Duncan Riley asks; What’s happened to the blogroll?

I have also noticed that bloggers are dropping their blogroll.

Here are my thoughts on why this might be:

  1. The blogroll has been superceded by Twitter and FriendFeed as the easiest and most information rich method of tracking and associating oneself with others that are active, interesting and influential in social media
  2. Blogrolls were removed because they made it too easy for PR firms and marketers to identify bloggers and networks of bloggers. This means that those that want to influence bloggers actually have to participate. The blogroll in this context is the equivalent of an organisation publicising its top tier media list.
  3. Blogrolls are simply too hard to maintain.
  4. Blogrolls drive traffic away from people’s blogs.

I’d say that number 1 seems to be the most likely but it’s interesting that this trend has just occurred.

There doesn’t seem to have been an anti-blogroll conspiracy, as such.

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This digital life*

April 9th, 2008 by Daniel Young | No Comments | Filed in Life, Social media, Technology

I signed up for Twitter today and added the app to my blog, which you can see in the top left hand corner. I then added the Twitter application to Facebook and Plaxo and registered my phone for SMS updates. I sent a few ‘tweets’ (a slightly cringe worthy term) out and added some contacts that I know, and know of, as people that I will follow. The ‘know ofs’ included Robert Scoble and Steve Rubel. I downloaded twhril – a Twitter desktop client. I added my LinkedIn profile to my Twitter account and synced Facebook and LinkedIn with Plaxo. I sent my first mobile tweet from Mansions Hotel in Kings Cross while I ate my tea. It was the poker night. I had mushroom sauce. I tried to add a Google Map to this post – doesn’t seem to be working. I learnt about tinyURL.

I watched a bit of TV and saw Richard Branson talking about the environment. He said that all Virgin Atlantic profits for the next ten years would be invested in research into clean fuels. I did a Google search but couldn’t find anything on this – did he just announce it? Surely not. Not on Australian TV!

Let save this and see if the Google Map worked…


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