Paul Stonier

Where Klout will be by 2014

Branding, Business, Social Media

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Klout has become a force to be reckoned with when it comes to social data. To those who understand the social platform, your Klout score has been something that is a quick, but interesting part of the conversation. It gives individuals a rough (usually “good enough”) representation of how you are performing in creating content that is relevant to your audience. That is…for the consumer and brands engaging in social media.

However, as a business, Klout also works as a marketing tool to those using Klout. You’ll see the “perks” page on Klout where business are able to provide deals to Klout users. From what I’ve seen, this is currently the only way they are monetizing. Previously, they did it by using the freemium model by only letting you see part of your profile for free. This can’t last very long.

As they continue to bring in more social networks, like they’ve recently done with LinkedIn, 4square, Tumblr, Instagram, YouTube, LastFM, Blogger and Flickr, they are continuing to build an extremely valuable database on consumers. Especially, technology savvy ones. The information in all these profiles are enough to make companies drooling and eager to get their hands on. From what all this data brought together, you could easily query your way to finding what makes each target segment tick and market to them more effectively. This will be a touchy subject when this happens, but it will make Klout a very interesting purchase by Salesforce, Nielsen or even Google. That’s not to say these companies aren’t trying to get this data themselves, but in this area where customers are willingly linking their profiles together, it’s going to tie be able to compete on a level that Qwerly and Rapleaf never could have.

What makes this a touchy subject for consumers, is that eventually, many will feel like their being watched too much and pull out. This could even be what gets the ball rolling in the wave of privacy.

Will the privacy wave come or will it pass just as the facebook and google+ privacy concerns come and go?

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The Synthesis of Design & Business

Business, Design Thinking

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Roger Martin of Teknion talks about the relationship of business culture and design. By embracing design as a problem solving method, you can achieve more innovative solutions.

“You can only prove things that have happened in the past. A business person wants innovation has to be open to the logic of what might be, not just the logic of what is.”

Design Thinking: Combining Analytical thinking with Intuitive Thinking.

via Maury Postal

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This is very important.

Branding, Business

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more about "This is very important.", posted with vodpod

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Small Town Hero or a Fish Too Big For Its Own Pond?

Business

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In a small gathering of business owners and entrepreneurs that I was part of last week, I was especially intrigued in a part of our discussion. The owner of a company who understands the importance of professional design and branding, brought up that now that their newsletter looks professional, it no longer feels like they are a small town company. His fear is that his client-base of the small town is being turned away by the idea that the company is too big.

The small town customer comes to the small town company often because of the fact that they are a small town company. But what happens when the company doesn’t look like a small town company? Can it actually bad for a company’s brand to look professional? Even if the company provides a higher level of quality in service while remaining a small town company?

It seems to me that there are two ways to approach this conundrum. One way is to refocus the brand in a way to not necessarily pull back in quality, but shift the message providing a strong focus on the town and the people being affected. The other way would be to actually reach out and grow to a size that is accurately being represented.

But where did this correlation of size of a company and the level of professionalism in the design of a company’s materials come from? When did this happen? Did this actually come from larger company’s having the budget to pay a designer or a studio to create their materials rather than a neighbor’s daughter who has photoshop? I’m very interested in what your thoughts are.

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Coudal Partners: Jay Ryan 2003

Business

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Jay Ryan is an amazing character. I met him 2 springs ago when our AIGA RIT student group brought him in for a lecture and screenprinting demo. I have two of his posters; I love and cherish them. He is also bass of Dianogah. That’s them playing in the background. Check him out at The Bird Machine

Watch the video here…

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Gary Vaynerchuk on the Importance of Engaging and Caring About Your Community

Business, Social Media

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Gary Vaynerchuk: Jets Fan and Thunder Bringer

Business

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Gary V
I came upon the world of the Vaynernation through using Cork’d to find a review of a wine. It was a pretty nice site. It got the job done. Then on there I saw a link to WineLibraryTV, a video blog where Mr. Vaynerchuk tastes a few wines each today. One video was all it took to get me hooked. Over the past several months, I’ve been religiously watching each episode. It’s a great way to learn about a subject that I knew a little about and wanted to know more. Over the past couple weeks, I began actually following Gary a bit more closely through Twitter and chatting on UStream. It was then that I realized how smart he was in taking advantage of these resources to keep in touch with his fan-base. He can post on Twitter that he’ll be on a show and hundreds of people will log on to chat with him. Doing so has done a variety of this to develop his personal brand that is further expressed at GaryVaynerchuk.com, where he provides his thoughts and advice on building a business and personal branding.

I highly recommend you follow Gary. You’ll definitely be entertained and you might just learn a thing or two.



P.S. Kerry Rhodes ftw.

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