Posts tagged as:

Forrester

Good reads for Feb. 8, 2010

by drm on February 8, 2010

Welcome to the new week.

First, a handful of posts that look at the employment numbers from last week. Then a couple of interesting media focused reads. And finally, The Super Bowl ads, because you’ve got to be current and up to date.

The Big Picture turns to pictures to put some perspective on the employment numbers: A collection of 10 charts that show show bad the job situation has been, how it has leveled off and where some of the bright spots are.

C57C0D47-008E-42E7-A645-F2E993B0270A.jpg

If we need credit to ease up to help drive new job creation, then we’ll need banks to start behaving differently. Business Insider shows, in 13 slides, how the bank market is consolidating, reducing lending to businesses and consumers and increasing purchase of government securities.

One of the interesting wrinkles in the overall employment picture is how resilient the market for college-educated workers has been. Americans with a BA or higher have just a 4% unemployment rate. (via BusinessInsider)

Jeff Jarivs has spent time with a lot of local media people over the past couple of weeks and published an important post that synthesizes a lot of what he’s been hearing and puts it in the context of the deep experience he has with Internet media. The conclusion: Don’t sell scarcity, sell service and results. The thinking is very compelling and important to read.

In the context of Jarvis’ comments, Barry Ritholtz’s dissection of the economics of his recently published, well-reviewed book is very instructive. The book doesn’t make you money; the footprint that the book gives you can create the overall value of your personal brand. But you’d better have a strategy for making money off that personal brand.

If you don’t have that kind of strategy and you write, you’ll find yourself in the position of working for virtually nothing, as Tony Silber of Folio: strongly observes.

The last little media tidbit: Josh Bernoff writes about Forrester’s recent decision to require its analysts to blog on Forrester’s platform and not build a personal digital footprint that competes with the corporate brand. It’s an interesting problem. If the economic value of content is diminishing because of the Internet dynamics, and people who have skill at writing need to be more distributed in how they earn a living, then can media enterprises — even high value enterprises like Forrester — reasonably demand exclusivity in terms of digital footprint?

And, finally, here are all the Super Bowl ads.

Share

{ 2 comments }

Good reads for Jan 25, 2010

by drm on January 25, 2010

The drop in home sales wasn’t entirely unexpected, with the buyers pushing to close deals in November before they expected the tax incentive ran out. Market conditions are better than they were, but there are unanswered questions still ahead in the Spring. (via CalculatedRiskI

The financial markets reacted uncertainly to Obama’s proposal to remake the financial industry. Here’s a detailed explanation of what the reforms can mean. (via Economist’s View)

With social media moving up on the priority list, the PR/communications function has the potential to become more important and strategic within the corporation. (via SteveRubel)

MediaNews Group has been the model for tight financial management combined with solid newspapering skills. The company is restructuring its debt for more financial flexiblity, with entrepreneur Dean Singleton keeping control, reports say. (via PaidContent)

“Weak connections” can be valuable in driving your digital networking; don’t feel compelled to connect only with those people you can maintain a relationship. (via SocialMediaToday)

For publishing types, a good case study of implementing Drupal as a publishing platform and driving traffic and engagement. (via eMediaVitals)

We’ve all seen Forrester’s Technographic’s Ladder. Ed Boches suggests that a focus of your social marketing should be to attract the Creators, so that your brand will benefit from a broader content footprint. Interesting targeted strategy. (via CreativityUnbound)

The active core of Twitter is growing. Something about the service takes root. (via eMarketer)

Apartment shoppers go online at different times than home shoppers during the week. What’s that all about? (via BeingPresent)

Share

{ 0 comments }

The demographics of online social behavior

September 10, 2009

I missed this a couple of weeks ago and wanted to get it up on the site as a reference point. Forrester released their Third Annual Technographics Profile and the data points of a broadly evolving series of social interactions across social media.
The eye-catching headline is that four out of five adults online in [...]

Related Posts with Thumbnails
Share
6 comments Read the full article →