Conferences
#followfriday #afn
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 06/12/2009 - 10:15@ericawilliamsdc @SenSherrodBrown @lessig @daviddonnelly @robertgreenwald @mrdaveyd
Last week, for my weekly FollowFriday blog post, which gets cross posted to Twitter, I highlighted people that I met with at the America’s Future Now conference in Washington, DC. Most of the people from last week were people that I got into discussions with. For me, that is an important part of Twitter. This week, I’ll highlight people that have something important to say that I don’t know as well and are less likely to get into a conversation with.
Starting off the list is @ericawilliamsdc, Erica Williams. She is the Deputy Director and Policy and Advocacy Manager at Campus Progress. She was one of the best speakers at the conference, a powerful authentic voice. She quoted Hemingway, “The world breaks everyone, and afterward, some are strong at the broken places”.
@SenSherrodBrown, United States Senator from Ohio also spoke at AFN and announced he would be on Twitter. So far, he hasn’t updated much. Perhaps he needs to take lessons from Sen. Claire McCaskill, @clairecmc or @senchrisdodd
If you aren’t following Lawrence Lessig, @lessig on Twitter, as well on his blog, in his books, and so on, you should be. Whether you are concerned with Creative Commons, the Remix culture, or Fair Elections. Prof. Lessig is a voice to listen to.
@daviddonnelly is the National Campaigns Director for the Public Campaign Action Fund, and if you like what Prof. Lessig has to say about clean elections, then you want to follow what Mr. Donnelly is doing to help bring them about.
@robertgreenwald is the founder of Brave New Films, @bravenewfilms They use new media and internet video campaigns to very effectively get their message out.
@mrdaveyd I first heard about Mr. Davey D at the National Conference on Media Reform in Memphis back in 2007. Van Jones commented that we need Davey D on the FCC and called him ‘a hip-hop historian of the first order’.
So, that’s my list for #followfriday on June
Numerati, Creatives and the Human Condition
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 06/09/2009 - 17:00Yesterday, Stephen Baker, author of the book Numerati spoke at Digiday:Target, a conference in New York City about targeting online advertising. As he started off, he was given the challenge to find the individual in the mountain of data. He spoke about how if you put people in enough different buckets and then tried to find people in specific combinations of buckets, you could probably get to the individual. He compared a chain of these buckets to the genome. Each bucket is common with many people in them, but a specific combination of buckets can be used to uniquely identify someone.
For example, if you target fifty year old white males of a specific education and income level in Woodbridge, CT that own a dog, a cat, a hybrid, and have children in gifted education programs, I suspect I may be the only hit, even though there are plenty of dog owners, cat owners, hybrid owners, and so on in Woodbridge.
If you do find an agency that is targeting people in the demographic I just described, have them call me. It is probably something I’m interested in. This illustrates another point about targeting. Mr. Baker suggested that if you talk about targeting people, they will feel invaded, but if you talk about customized service, they feel rich. Anyone trying to hit a demographic as precise as I just described has to be offering a customized service.
For others, this level of targeting could raise some privacy issues. However, this isn’t a level of targeting that most ad agencies are interested in. Mr. Baker noted that there just aren’t enough creatives to do one-on-one advertising to 100 million people.
Yet this is where I think a lot of targeting breaks down. The other day, my seven year old daughter went to a local art museum. She was intrigued by a portrait of a woman that no matter where she stood, the woman looked directly at her. I am sure that the creative that painted that picture wasn’t targeting suburban seven year old girls.
In other sessions, speakers noted that too often false assumptions are made about audiences. Just because someone did a search on “a dark blue 1998 to 2003 Mercedes Benz CLK-320 coupe” doesn’t mean that I have any intention on buying one. I might simply be reading up more about a horrible hit-and-run fatality in New Haven.
Likewise, determining why people purchase products can be fraught with false assumptions. Some people might buy Portuguese wine because it is inexpensive. Others might buy the same wine because they have Portuguese ancestry. Another speaker described the shock that a client had when they were shown pictures of their fans on MySpace. Too often, people may be targeting the wrong demographic.
It reminds me of a great line from the play Travesties by Tom Stoppard. In it, a Dadaist artist has a wonderful line to the effect, “It is the responsibility of the artist to laugh, and jeer, and howl, and belch at the common delusion that infinite generates of causes can be inferred from effects.”
Perhaps creatives at ad agencies need a little more Dadaism in their own work. Instead of targeting fifty year old white males of a specific education and income level in Woodbridge, CT that own a dog, a cat, a hybrid, and have children in gifted education programs, they should target people that want to feel like they are accepted and belong to some group, people that are concerned about the economy, people with complicated emotional ties to their families, people that feel a little self-conscious when someone seems to stare at them from across the room, the way the painting stared at my daughter, or so many other demographics that don’t really narrow things down very much but instead reflect the human condition.
From this, you can get people to feel a personal connection. They might even want to join a discussion others touched by the product or even help an ad go viral.
If we keep focusing more and more on narrowing demographics, we might find the people most likely to be interested in our products, and at the same time, we just may alienate them enough to drive them to our competitors. In the sixties, people had tee shirts that said, I am a human being, do not bend, fold, spindle or mutilate. Perhaps a similar tee shirt today would say something like, I am not a demographic.
(Originally posted at DigiDay.)
#digiday Arbitraging Advertising Exchanges
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 06/08/2009 - 21:55Today, I viewed yet another digiday conference from of a small content provider, or publisher, a participant in various blogger advertising networks, an advisor to politicians considering media buys, and an old Wall Street techie. It is from this vantage point that I wish to offer a few out of the box ideas.
#InternetWeek in Review
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 06/07/2009 - 15:42This past week has been incredibly busy. Between the America’s Future Now conference and the Massachusetts Democratic Convention, I’ve missed much of InternetWeek and all of Computers Freedom and Privacy ’09 Conference. I haven’t had a lot of opportunity to write about the events I did attend, so today is catchup day.
Thursday afternoon, I attended Beyond Facebook: How will today's students use the Web of tomorrow? at finding Dulcinea. I wasn’t really acquainted with finding Dulcinea before I went. Back in 2007, TechFold dismissed finding Dulcinea as a Mahalo clone.
The session started off weakly. Jordan Goldman, Founder and CEO of Unigo did a less than compelling pitch for his website. Another listed speaker was Michael Staton, Founder and CEO, Inigral. I must admit, I can’t even remember if he was on the panel. If he was actually there, I guess that shows how much of an impression he made.
James Rohrbach Founder and CEO of GulliverGo was one of the next speakers. As it started off, I was afraid that this was going to be as bad as the first speaker. However, he made a reference to the Senator Paul Simon Study Abroad Foundation Act. This act, he believed, would result in an increase in student travel abroad and he believed that GulliverGo would be well positioned to help students with this and make a nice little profit at the same time. It is interesting legislation I should follow.
One of the things that was particularly interesting about GulliverGo is that they provide Cost Per Action advertising. He noted that CPA advertising is normally done for microsites instead of destination sites, but that they were being successful with CPA as a destination sites. I’ve followed GulliverGo on Twitter and will be interested to see how they do going forward.
Next up was Ariel Aberg-Riger, Creative Development & Marketing Manager for Fourth Story Media. She spoke about The Amanda Project.
“Amanda is brave, beautiful, an original, fierce, spiritual, otherworldly, total weird, diabolical?, a mystery. Amanda is missing.”
The Amanda Project is a site aimed at teenage girls so they can join in a collaborative story about a new mysterious girl at school called Amanda. To me, it feels like an effort to take fan fic, bring it into the mainstream and commercialize it; fan fic of Blair Witch Project meets Miley Cyrus.
Ariel, not to be confused with Amanda, did a great job of talking about different sites that promote engagement with the site. She talked about project based sites like Stuff on my cat. She talked about category based projects like FML, MLIA and GMH and she talked about niche projects like Beautiful Losers.
Not to be outdone, Kate Hillis, Co-Founder and Partner of NextNext Entertainment, Chat the Planet and Qwidget spoke. Qwidget is an interesting idea. You create a widget with a question. Initially people answer the question as a yes or no, then they get drawn in by being asked to explain why they answered one way or another. The same question can be on multiple sites at the same time and this provides a great way to cross pollinate discussions. It is not yet in beta, but the signup site asks what sort of site you plan on using it on, and I was glad to see that it included Drupal.
After the panel concluded there was a small reception and I had some interesting discussions. Particularly, I want to shout out to @WickedRB, and @hummingirl who are both from finding Dulcinea as well as @thinkglobally.
My next stop was the Digg party. I was hoping for something closer to the party at finding Dulcinea, but the Digg party was more like a rave. I didn’t find any opportunity to talk with people about QRCodes and Digg. I had printed out some QRCode leaflets with a QRCode pointing to the Digg page for my article. Unfortunately, no body that I spoke with had a QR Reader on their phones. However, I did get a message on Twitter about QMCODES Q-Lytics. Scan this code to give it a test:
Saturday, I was at the 2009 Massachusetts Democratic Party Convention followed by a local carnival, so I didn’t get a chance to go to the Webutante ball last night or Twiffleball today.
However, tomorrow I will go down to Digiday:Networks and Digiday:Target. It will be interesting if any of the speakers can will have thoughts about Cost Per ReTweet advertising (CPRT).
In the evening, I expect to be too tired for the Webby Gala. If I do have energy, I’m more likely to try and get to the A New Way Forward discussion at The Tank Space for Visual and Performing Arts on 354 West 45th St.
More soon...