by Pat Kitano on December 8, 2010 in Social Commerce, Uncategorized
With Groupon currently the poster child for social commerce, there’s a lack of true social interactions in the current nascent state of social commerce beyond “sharing” the deal with your buds. The group buying concept is essentially another ploy to get folks to buy something in the traditional e-commerce sense. How do deals become social? [...]
by Pat Kitano on August 10, 2009 in Breaking News, New business models, Social Media, Trends
Here are some sample definitions of what constituted “online presence” through the Internet ages: 1998: Started an internet company 2000: Personal website 2003: Search engine optimized website 2005: Search engine citations, MySpace takes off 2007: Blog or MySpace page 2009: Blog + Twitter + Facebook + LinkedIn + relevant social networks The 2009 Conclusion: Online [...]
by Pat Kitano on March 16, 2009 in Facebook, New business models, Slideshows, Social Media, Social networking, Trends, Twitter
Welcome to the Multi-Conversational Web The new Facebook page redesign has incorporated real time friend feeds that makes Facebook more conversational like… Friendfeed or Twitter. What this means is any friends can respond instantly to conversations as they happen: With three applications – Facebook, Twitter and Friendfeed – competing for participants, applications are developing to [...]
by Pat Kitano on February 19, 2009 in Blogging, Facebook, Social Media, Social networking, Twitter
Two years ago, online conversation used to reside on blogs and their commentators. The objective was to make and validate points of discussion. Now, soundbite communication – SMS, micro-blogging, “like” – distills communication down to making the point. The speed of online communication is accelerating because, in simplest possible terms, there are now more people [...]
by Pat Kitano on February 16, 2009 in Marketing, New business models, Social Media, Webinars
As some readers may know, my firm has been developing social media strategies for real estate business development. Real estate is an industry whose practitioners require hyperlocal presence. Although real estate professionals have been joining social networks like Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn to develop that presence, the rest of their community of friends, clients and [...]
by Pat Kitano on February 15, 2009 in Blogging, Facebook, Marketing, Publishing, Social Media, Social networking, Twitter
The online conversation happens everywhere on a ubiquitous cloud. I Twittered a link to a NYTimes article: My Twitter feed is incorporated into my FriendFeed account Which then gets fed into my Facebook account: Where friend Ross Rylance commented on it. Veterans of Facebook, Friendfeed, Linkedin and Twitter know this phenomenon well. This is a [...]
by Pat Kitano on February 3, 2009 in Advertising, Politics, Social Media, Social networking, Television, Twitter, Uncategorized
Twitter makes it easy to meet people you want to meet: EXPRESS GOOD WILL – Following your followers (unless they are truly unsavory) acknowledges their existence and is a good will gesture. You never know whether a stranger is going to turn out to be a great network contact… ACKNOWLEDGE – If you follow somebody [...]
by Pat Kitano on January 10, 2009 in Advertising, Celebrity, Marketing, Mass Media, New business models, Newspapers, Publishing, Real Estate, Social Media, Social networking, Sociology, Technology, Television, Twitter, YouTube
TODAY’S ONLINE CONTENT FATIGUE Web 2.0 could be described as a phase in the evolution of the Internet that facilitated individuals in creating content within the constructs of social websites (blogs) and social networks (as participants). User-generated content was the New New Thing when it first appeared refreshingly on blogs (in 2002 blogs were being [...]
by Pat Kitano on October 4, 2008 in Facebook, Social Media, Social networking, Sociology, Twitter
The participants of the “mature” social networks – MySpace, Facebook, LinkedIn – tend to replicate the same network contacts, generally those associated with the individual or industry. The micro-blogging applications Twitter and Friendfeed, and to a lesser extent MyBlogLog, have set up “following” systems that encourage anonymous network linkage. The result is the development of [...]
by Pat Kitano on September 16, 2008 in Slideshows, Social Media, Sociology, Twitter
This is Part 2 to earlier post Proliferation of Feed Based Networks Part 1. Websites as brochureware aren’t credible as society embraces social media to validate brands, products and services. Companies must incorporate social media systems into their online strategies in order to market effectively. Website 2.0 – Creating a Conversational Web View SlideShare presentation [...]