Posts Tagged ‘Google’

Buzz, Big Brother and B2B: Will there be a thunderstorm?

Monday, February 15th, 2010

When I first heard about the new Google Buzz, I thought, Gads!  How am I ever going to stay on top of social media that change faster than chocolate disappears from my pantry?  And, gads again, do I have to learn how to use yet another thingy so I can get the QCircuit word out where it ought to be?

But no.  It turns out Google Buzz (gotta love the Buzz name—and remember, we were EMS Buzz first!) makes it easy.  If you’re on Linked In, Facebook or Twitter, you know it takes time to build up a following.  But Google Buzz just accesses all the aggregate info about you in the great Cloud in the sky to link you up with people you’re already connected with.

You can share links, photos, videos, send messages and comment on postings just like other social media, but Google Buzz takes things a step further.  According to a recent Christian Science Monitor article, “Google Buzz’s algorithms are constantly analyzing users’ preferences—what they like and dislike, what their friends are sharing, and who they’re interacting with.  If a bunch of your friends are passing around a link or talking to a person, Buzz will shoot you a recommendation.”

So if you use Google Buzz for PR purposes, you could get your message to a selected target group fairly quickly and easily.  Boggles the mind.  Or maybe it Googles the mind, with Google privy to your thoughts seemingly before you think them.

Yes, there are privacy controls, but I still think things are getting creepy.  I guess it’s too late for that, since everybody knows, as of this post, that I’m a chocoholic.  My deepest thoughts are collecting in a Cloud even as I strike these keys.  But I can’t help thinking we’re in for a doozy of a thunderstorm.

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B2B Brands, Take a Lesson from China

Monday, February 1st, 2010

I have been following the Google China news with fascination.  There are really a number of significant aspects to the story, but I’ll focus on one for now. That is the concept of control.

Think of China as a brand.  Think of Google as a medium for disseminating information, and all its customers in China as stakeholders.  This shouldn’t be hard, as I am stating the obvious.

The point is, China is trying to control what its customers (the Chinese people) see through the media.  They have demanded that Google comply with their censorship rules (something I believe Google agreed to, somewhat reluctantly, as the cost of breaking into the huge and promising market in China).  Worse, and the source of the latest flap, China employed very sophisticated technology to hack into Google e-mails in an attempt to thwart content they deemed subversive or pornographic.

Google, recovering some integrity, (remember, they agreed to censorship) threatened to pull out of the country.  But the customers, the Chinese people, desperately want Google to remain, to the point where they are laying flowers on the Google sign outside the company’s headquarters in Beijing.  Poignant, really.

What’s the lesson for EMS companies and other B2B brands?  You cannot, repeat, cannot, control what your stakeholders see or hear any more even if you don’t like what it is.  The Internet, social media, instantaneous news and our way of life in the 21st century simply preclude the concept of control.  China is like brands of yore, sending out carefully crafted messages to the marketplace through tightly controlled channels.

That kind of marketing is now really over.  We must recognize and embrace the messages our customers are sending us.  We must engage in the conversation.

If people are going to blog unhappy things about your brand, learn from it.  But don’t try to stop it.  Because surely it’s a losing battle, even for a powerhouse like China, to try and keep the lid on any longer.I have been following the Google China news with fascination.  There are really a number of significant aspects to the story, but I’ll focus on one for now. That is the concept of control.

Think of China as a brand.  Think of Google as a medium for disseminating information, and all its customers in China as stakeholders.  This shouldn’t be hard, as I am stating the obvious.

The point is, China is trying to control what its customers (the Chinese people) see through the media.  They have demanded that Google comply with their censorship rules (something I believe Google agreed to, somewhat reluctantly, as the cost of breaking into the huge and promising market in China).  Worse, and the source of the latest flap, China employed very sophisticated technology to hack into Google e-mails in an attempt to thwart content they deemed subversive or pornographic.

Google, recovering some integrity, (remember, they agreed to censorship) threatened to pull out of the country.  But the customers, the Chinese people, desperately want Google to remain, to the point where they are laying flowers on the Google sign outside the company’s headquarters in Beijing.  Poignant, really.

What’s the lesson for B2B brands?  You cannot, repeat, cannot, control what your stakeholders see or hear any more even if you don’t like what it is.  The Internet, social media, instantaneous news and our way of life in the 21st century simply preclude the concept of control.  China is like brands of yore, sending out carefully crafted messages to the marketplace through tightly controlled channels.

That kind of marketing is now really over.  We must recognize and embrace the messages our customers are sending us.  We must engage in the conversation.

If people are going to blog unhappy things about your brand, learn from it.  But don’t try to stop it.  Because surely it’s a losing battle, even for a powerhouse like China, to try and keep the lid on any longer.

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