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Monday, January 8, 2007 |
Everyone seems to be talking about it. Nice to see these perspectives in the context of brands and products. I read this at Brandchannel today: "What if anything and everything you owned, knew, thought, created or used was
negotiable at any point in time? What if you could sell off your junk, get compensated
for your opinions, or lend, borrow and bet without the need for banks or governments?
What if your creative product had a larger audience than corporate networks?
What if your lone
dissident voice couldnít
be silenced even
by the rich and powerful?" And here's another paper found at Brandchannel from Dec 2006 - How To Crash The Consumer-Controlled Party. And Not Get Thrown Out .... (pdf file)"At first, it may seem strange to think that you could be on the same level playing field as a multinational corporation, but just consider how business and customers co-exist in networked spaces. As of now, we both get our basic queries and network trend data from the same place. Pending the Net Neutrality power struggle and censorship issues of the moment, the deeper resources of the Internet will likely become available to everyone as well. Given the probability of that reality and the other factors previously mentioned what do we do to use this shift to our advantage both as individuals and as companies? Enable the empowered. Marketing is no longer about messages. Itís about motivation. If you want to motivate the new sovereignty, reach them by the tools they will use to refine their participation power. That means be available as choices for personalization on start-page like environments where choosing your brand of service is a self-defining action. For example, if you deliver travel services, then the new sovereign citizen is both your traveler and your travel agent. If you sell art then the new sovereign citizen is your art promoter, using your art in experiential ways to define their personal spaces." 1:06:21 PM ![]() |
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Copyright 2009 Dina Mehta
