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We are Bloggers, hear us roar?
Link: Blogs becoming force in advertising | Reuters.com.
Whoo hoo! How about this new research in the Reuters article below?
What does this mean, tho? My immediate thought is that there is a great warning embedded here. Take a study like this and mindlessly apply the results to your thinking, and shift the massive advertising persuasion push to blogs, and you risk killing the goose that laid the golden egg.
You see this happen all the time in television. They get a piece of research that says audiences like "X," and without thinking about WHY audiences like "X," they just turn around and run "X" into the ground, until audiences absolutely HATE "X."
So here's my logic. Advertising is wholeheartedly NOT persuasive. With emotional branding (pathos), it does OK, but audiences are far too savvy to expect advertising to be logical (logos), and most importantly, audiences have been conditioned over time to distrust the source (ethos).
Audiences DO trust close family and friends, word of mouth, MORE THAN ANYTHING.
Insofar as blogs appear to be as trustworthy as close family and friends, audiences will treat them on par with word of mouth recommendations.
However, if bloggers by and large sell out, or if the trust/credibility link-love system fails, if scam-blogs and splogs proliferate and drown out all the signal for their noise, the truths of this study will evaporate as surely as people stopped believing the boy who cried wolf.
It always amazes me how business these days takes a scorched earth approach in pursuit of profit, instead of looking at how longevity and trust matter more than quarterly returns. I mean, what self-respecting capitalist would actually hype a lie or corrupt a source that reaches an actual audience (what should we call blogging payola? blogola?) if it means destroying his or her own future customer base or ability to reach that customer base?
What this research tells me is that when given a choice, people choose authenticity. Sales pitches don't feel authentic, so they are disregarded. Blogs feel authentic, so they are tentatively trusted. Those who promote rampant pitching without regard for authenticity will probably rush in and exploit this source.
Will authenticity be strong enough to win, or will the pitches drive the real audience out of the blogosphere?
Link: Blogs becoming force in advertising�| Reuters.com.
Blogs becoming force in advertising
LONDON (Reuters) - Blogs are becoming a force to be reckoned with as a means of advertising products, according to a survey.An Ipsos MORI poll found that the Internet journals are a more trusted source of information than TV advertising or e-mail marketing.
[...]
Ipsos MORI found a direct link between blogs, or user-generated content, and people's intentions to buy goods or services.
Any company that fails to come up to standard should beware. The blog is replacing word of mouth for endorsing or condemning a product or service.
[...]
Blogs, or weblogs, are a more trusted source of information (24 percent) than television advertising (17 percent) and email marketing (14 percent), the survey commissioned by Hotwire, a technology public relations consultancy, said.
But they still lag behind newspapers (30 percent).
[...]
"Word of mouth is no longer restricted to close friends and family, it can have the same level of influence upon millions of people across the world."
November 14, 2006 at 10:23 AM in Advertising, Chris B, Discuss!, Marketing, Weblogs | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Still seeking a name
We had a successful white boarding session on Friday for the conference.
But we still need a name. The goal of the conference is to show how all of these components (blogs, wikis, open source, social networks, video, podcasting, RSS, community building) are interrelated and how they affect each and every one of our lives. The bulk of trusted information is no longer coming from journalist and advertising, but from consumer generated content and ongoing online conversations.
For businesses, when we listed the roles/departments of those who should come we came up with PR, Marketing, Advertising, Management, HR, Legal, IR, CRM, Sales...you get the point I hope.
The next question was how do we tie all these different roles together so they each walk away from the conference with relevant information. The answer came with the fact that each of these roles work together as a team to protect and/or enhance the company's reputation both internally and externally. Each of these departments are also always looking for knowledge, which the collaborative, open nature of these tools increase the ability to effectively gain knowledge if leveraged appropriately.
The conference is on a Saturday, Feb 10, 2007 and will be free to attend, though there will be pre-registration. The goal is to get the conversation started or turn up the volume about what these trends mean in our lives and how to start embracing them.
Ideas for names needed please!
November 11, 2006 at 05:40 PM in Conferences | Permalink | Comments (32) | TrackBack
Reminder about meeting tomorrow night
We are meeting at Buffalo's on Mansell at 7:00 PM (just east of 400 on the right) - to go over some of the creative details of the conference.
Look forward to seeing everyone there.
November 7, 2006 at 04:31 PM in Conferences | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Sifry's Alerts: State of the Blogosphere, October, 2006
Link: Sifry's Alerts: State of the Blogosphere, October, 2006.
Today, the blogosphere is doubling in size approximately every 230 days.
* About 100,000 new weblogs were created each day, again down slightly quarter-over-quarter but probably due in part to spam fighting efforts.
And to think there are still a lot of people who wonder what a blog is and why they should care...
November 7, 2006 at 09:06 AM | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
wikiHow - The How-To Manual That Anyone Can Write or Edit
Link: wikiHow - The How-To Manual That Anyone Can Write or Edit.
This is cool - but when you get into things like car repairs or home repairs there could be consequences for following the wrong information. I mean using a word incorrectly is one thing, hooking the wrong electrical thing up - quite different.
What do you all think about this project?
November 2, 2006 at 04:19 PM in Discuss! | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Savannah is having a conference!
Drew is putting a conference together in Savannah is January. Sounds like an opportunity for another Road Trip!
November 2, 2006 at 08:50 AM in Conferences | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack