vrijdag 22 juni 2012

Understanding of people is very different from asking people to fill in a survey

Technology is breeding a new generation of people that are becoming increasingly difficult to attract into the traditional business funnel. Media companies have the last few years learned the hard way what they have to do business in a different way; they have learned that they need to adapt their (combinations of) business models and to deliver real time business processes to enable people to get what they want, on the devices they prefer, in the format thay want to consume it and a price point they'll accept. But the question is how? How should media companies do business tomorrow? Mass social relationships are a relatively new phenomenon and nobody is really sure how to monetise them. Understanding of people is very different from asking people to fill in a survey, or making assumptions about them from their behaviour. This marketing eco system, that's in permanent flux, requires every media company to find the right balance to exploit the present (make money today), but also explore (do things never done before) in order to grab hold of opportunities and have a healthy business tomorrow. * What business are media companies in? * What's the media company's sustainable point-of-differentiation? * Who is the media company competing with? * Who should the media company work with, cooperate with, trust...and who should the media company walk away from? * And finally, where is the money going to come from? Successfull companies have one thing in common, they're clear about three things: 1. Who they are 2. What they are 3. What they do 4. Why it matters It is this total clarity that makes running these successfull companies a breeze (strategy by simple rules) making every day decisions, settling internal arguments, identifying relevant partnerships, allocating resources, deciding on where and how to invest and who to hire. How well media companies in the marketing eco system adapt the learnings about agile thinking and open content to their own business models will be the deciding factor in how the next digital decade plays out for them too.

donderdag 14 juni 2012

Smart m-Commerce by Bol.com

Bol.com, the largest online retailer in the Netherlands and Belgium, which features books, movies, music, games and more, has placed an enormous amount of its catalogue on Layar. Covers over 25,000 items, the top sellers, are now recognizable by Layar.

So what does this mean? It means when shopping in a store, or when a friend shows you that new book or movie he's obsessed with, Layar can automatically fetch the price and availability of that item from bol.com.

woensdag 13 juni 2012

In the fluid Marketing Eco System tomorrow belongs to the ones who: 1. Ensure 150% clarity 2. Build in flexibility for adaptability 3. Keep learning, keep growing 4. Ignore competition 5. Exploit and explore 6. Unlock extreme value 7. Create an army of fanatics 8. Collaborate!!! 9. Embrace ‘citizentricity’ 10. Work with mavericks 11. Are brave

Content, in the right context, is ultimately king

Effective commercial communication and conversation is no longer about eyeballs and impressions, but instead about premium offerings and meaningful engagement. Storytelling, advertising, and technology are beginning to intersect.
Brands must look beyond traditional marketing and experiment with great (transmedia) stories to connect with people in their channels of relevance (paid, owned, and earned media).
This video explores current state and future of brand stewardship, content marketing and monetization models, and what it takes to engage with connected consumers.

About the author

Manager Marketing Intelligence Sales, Sanoma Media Netherlands david.deboer@sanomamedia.nl www.twitter.com/daviddeboer