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Dear lawyers, can you guys get your act together please?

I have a lot of respect for the legal system; it makes this world a better place to live. However, I'm really fed up with the attempts of lawyers and other people making a living out of the legal practice to kill the wonderful social interaction that is growing on the internet.

It's definitely a lot worse in the US and the UK then in mainland Europe, but the web is worldwide so we are getting our fair share of legal bullshit here too. Some examples:

  • Companies are afraid to start a blog because someone may post something 'illegal' on a webpage that is 'managed' by this company. Illegal? Like "I don't like your competitor" or what?
  • A simple 'send to a friend' form is now being packed with disclaimers; in fact the disclaimers are about 5 times the size of the actual message. I even heard somebody suggesting that people should register on their site (you know, a 3-page form with even more disclaimers) before they could send the link to this site to a friend. And they actually expect somebody to do this?
  • Anything posted on a site has to be moderated, and even worse, approved by the legal department before being put online. It's like people divorcing talking to one-another through their lawyers, I never heard anyone getting better from that expect the lawyers themselves.

Where has common sense gone?

Dear legal community ...
Do not tell me you are inciting this legal fear just to protect your jobs! Please confirm that it is only because you are clueless and don't understand what the internet as a community and means of communication is about. Because then I know that one day you will get the point and start taking up your responsibility and facilitate the virtual world rather then killing it.

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Agency.com & Telenet

Two major changes on the business front!

We (Hypervision) became Agency.com Brussels. I remembered Agency. com from 6 years ago when in the middle of the dotcom bubble they were one of those worldwide online service companies everybody wanted to work for. They were never in Belgium I think, but we did get into competition with their Amsterdam branch at that time. Well, they have survived the bursting bubble and were taken over by Omnicom (OMC) in the mean time. Since last year they 'married' to TBWA\ (part of Omnicom) and now we (logically) become part of Agency.com. It's great to get the international dimension again into my life. Really missed that the past years.

Second major event, we (TBWA Group Belgium, comprised of TBWA\, TEQUILA\ and Agency.com) won the Telenet account. I'm really looking forward to working with this company and be at the hart of innovation in telecom, internet and digital TV. They have been the first to offer telephone over cable, were at the hart of spreading broadband over here and launched cutting edge digital TV last year (with a broadband return channel, which is unique in the world!). I can tell you, the meeting with Duco Sickinghe (CEO) and his team was impressive. These guys know what they're talking about!

All of this is increasing the workload too much, but fortunately we've got some talented new people coming in to help coordinate all this new bussiness and service our customers to the best.

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Column Inside 2: “Social software”? Handle with care!

A recent survey showed that when buying electronic toys, people are influenced in the first place by friends and relatives. What used to be the role of the salesman in the shop, has now done been taken over by a new generation. First it was journalists, then famous countrymen or other TV personalities, but today active bloggers or other online curators determine the market. Trendwatching (last year guest at a seminar at Agency.com Brussels) calls this “Curated Consumption”.

Did you buy the latest album from Jamie Cullum? If I were a jazz guru, you’d be in the record shop already (or online). Now, if you go onto iTunes you’d better have noted down that name correctly, because there’s about 5653 jazz musicians on there. This is again that ‘Long Tail’ (see previous post). So how do I discover the best songs in this long tail? Not easy.
Let’s take another example. Imagine you’re on the iTunes music strore and you click on P!nk. At the top of the list with iMixes (playlists made by professional or amateur DJ’s) there is a list called “songs … that rock”. It appears to be a cool DJ set, and somewhere in the middle there is “Eve 6”. Never heard of? That’s quite normal as the band stopped in july 2004. With no more then 4 clicks you just surfed from P!nk to a no-longer-existing punk rock band. Our iMix DJ and his playlist on iTunes have shown us the way, he’s our curator.

Traditional media (newspapers, magazines, etc.) and of course newsportals offer us an immense amount of information. But in the blogphere there is even more news to be found. How can we find our way in there?
The answer is again in human intelligence. The internet has grown big as a source of information; the next leap forward is in the web as a means of communication. People ‘talk’ with people online. The curators of the web write on their blogs, the community of readers around those blogs answers through comments or their own blogs. Or it can even be much simpler; you buy a book and write a review on Amazon.com. Now you are the curator.

This phenomenon has given rise to a new generation of trusted people who direct the market. They are many, but only exist thanks to their public. And that public (that community) with similar interests connects through blogs, tag clouds, RSS feeds, del.icio.us, audio and video podcast and many more forms and shapes of social software to come. They show the way on the information highway and have a lot of influence. But … only as long as their community trusts them.

To end this piece, here’s a tip for marketers looking for a “hip” edge for their next campaign. If you think about using communities, keep in mind that the blogsphere is a very volatile environment. The power of the each community member is so strong that the smallest mistake will fire back hard.

No need to be an elephant in the online china-store. Handle with care!

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Consumer generated advertising for Eurostar

Eurostar has a reputation for creative (and effective) advertising in Belgium. The last campaign promoting London through a number of word games linked to intentionally misspelled (John Lemon, Hide Pork, ...) names triggered some consumers into making their own versions (e.g. Pony Blair). Now Eurostar has set up a site where these creatives can 'do their thing' and share it with the rest of the community.

Have a go at it yourself:
http://www.eurostar.com/londonxperience

P.S.
Campaign developped by TBWA, interactive concept, site and campaign by Hypervision.

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Back online ...

Whew, I'm back ...

Was out of the country in the lovely Austria for some ski-fun with the family (see picture) but man ... the backlash when I came back was horrible. After the snow it was an e-mail avalanche that caught me.

I guess it was not a good idea to take a break at a moment when business booms, you office moves (with the full team of course) and several new recruits need to be integrated in the team. So I hardly survived the past two weeks but today I managed to free some time to update my blog again.
By the way, these are our new offices ... yes, the penthouse ... cool or what? Read more about moving an interactive agency on our sysadmin's blog: http://www.herbosch.be/blog/

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Inside Column 1: In SEARCH of Business - A Long Tail Story

Translating “geek talk” into useful business ideas, that is what I want to do in this new column. Is “love & peace” back in town thanks to social software and RSS feeds, or will we buy a Google micro-PC so we do not only time shift but also shift locations? This kind of babbling I want to translate into actionable insights. And I count on you to give this column the obligatory Web 2.0 flair; indeed this will be an interactive column. Well, I guess that’s quite obvious as you’re reading this on my blog …

This column actually talks about Google’s core business: SEARCH, or rather as Google describes it in their mission: “to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful”. Search is one of the driving forces behind every “Long Tail” business model, and as long as Google nurtures that strength, their success story will continue.

Yep, this is the gook talk I promised: What is “The Long Tail?”
Answer: Look it up in Google, read the article in the Wired archive or visit the blog .

Let’s make it a little easier on you, this is what you need to know about “The Long Tail” to understand the rest of this column:
The 80/20 rule as invented by the Italian economist Pareto is no longer valid in the digital world. Example: Even a large bookstore can only store a limited number of books (typically 130 000). Within that limited collection, 20% of the titles bring in 80% of the revenue. Amazon.com on the contrary has an almost unlimited collection (2,3 million books). When analyzing Amazon’s turnover we learn that more then half of the turnover is realized by those books that are not available in physical stores.
So, Amazon.com doubled the market size with a huge number of titles that are only occasionally sold. But because Amazon.com is a virtual store with an extremely low cost for an extra title, every book sold ads to the profits.

The Long Trail theory, soon to appear as a book (pre-order now), is in my opinion the basis for a great number of successful online business models today, and even more as the digital economy grows.

So, by now you should be getting an idea of why search is so important. Right, The Long Tail can only work if consumers find what they want in this massive amount of information. If Google succeeds in playing a role in all these Long Tail business models they are on the way to heaven. What started of as “search anything” has evolved to search based e-mail (gmail), searching video and audio, organizing RSS feeds and soon, who knows, a Google replacement for Windows or OSX? Companies can order their Google search server or, the ultimate Long Tail of advertising, place ads based on what the consumer is searching for.

We can find an interesting Belgian example with Delhaize. They can never stock their full wine collection (> 1300 wines) in one single (physical) super market, it’s simply to elaborate. That is why they launched Delhaizewineworld.com. With Hypervision (soon Agency.com Brussels) we recently added a new search/navigation feature which allows the consumer to dynamically select a number of parameters (type, origin, price, etc.) to find the right wine. You literally flash through 1300 wines in seconds to end up with a short, relevant and practical list of wines to choose from.

“The Long Tail” with a layer of user friendly search technology, and of you go to e-commerce heaven.

Agree or not?
Submit a comment. And if you have suggestions for future columns, just let me know.
By the way, “The Long Tail” can be opened up in some more ways, but that’s a subject for another column.

Bert.

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Presenting some long tail ideas at the BeCommerce awards

Got a presentation to prepare for next week. I guess I was a bit overambitious again, would have preferred hitting the greens rather then sitting here preparing another powerpoint. On the other hand, it motivates me to dive into a fascinating subject:

“Small markets, big business”
Turning small markets into big business thanks to e-commerce. Pareto’s 80/20 rule is history, long live “The Long Tail”.

Many of today’s successful e-business operations, such as Amazon.com or the iTunes music store, profit from “The Long Tail” effect. Learn about “The Long Tail”, and even better, discover how it can influence your business. Is it an opportunity or a threat? Together we will explore a number of strategies how you can get the most out of “The Long Tail” and build a business in markets or with products you thought had no potential before.

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First blogmarketing initative in Belgium results in blogstorm

Tom De Bruyne presents a good vision on a first blogmarketing initiative in Belgium. This new (for marketing and PR people) territory is a difficult one to explore. High potential yes, but also high risk.

In addition to his post I think that blogmarketing will only work with involved audiences, which probably means specific blogs that have some kind of connection with the product or service you promote. Generalist blogs who mainly discuss 'the news' and often tech-related stuff may not be the ideal environment to open up the discussion on a new consumer product. It'll end up there eventually, but rather as a 'news' item (which is OK) then as a fundamental discussion on the yes or no of your product.

Read more at i-wisdom.typepad.com/iw...

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ad-verse: Direct Marketing: A Science of Stupidities (well, not really if you ask me)

Wondering how to explain all of the new marketing speak to ordinary people with a lot of common sense (could be your boss, your customer, your wife, ...)? Check out thiw blobpost from Eric Weaver.

If you skip his ranting about traditional direct marketers (I'm too positive thinking by nature to buy into all of this negative energy), you actually discover a great shortlist of how to be 'real' and talk with customers as people you honestly want to convince of the actual benefits of your product or service.

Go check it out! soundprinciples.com/ad-...

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Start a conversation ...

A small extract of something I wrote to one of our customers. I thought it sounded good so wanted to share it with you:

"The future of marketing communications will not be measured in the number of contacts but in the quality of the conversation with prospects and customers. This is the consequence of the fact that they choose the internet to interact with us. And that requires a totally different view on how to do marketing and measure success on short term. One thing is sure, long term success (6 to 12 months) expressed in sales will be for those who chose to talk WITH customers and NOT TO customers."

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Nick, if you're in Hotel Monaco in Denver, contact me

iTunes in a hotel roomI just had an interresting experience in my hotel room in Denver. I linked up to the wireless network to check mail and update podcasts. Upon opening iTunes I noticed that two more people on the network had iTunes opened, with the music sharing feature on.

I connected to Nick's laptop (who is Nick?) and checked out which podcasts he had ... he's a geek, so much is clear. Now, this is interresting. I really feel like talking to this guy, his choice of music is orginal, he has some interresting podcasts on his laptop, we could have an interresting breakfast conversation. Is there an opportunity for Apple here? Just add a small IM feature and I can have a chat with Nick.

On the other hand, this means the whole hotel can now see my music, podcast and video podcast collection ... eeuh ... need to get disconnected I think :-). And Nick obviously left for breakfast (he's no longer online, the podcast I listened to stopped), probably a good idea to do the same. Bye.

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Gadget Tsunami?

Did you get flooded by gadgets this Christmas? Or did you take the recent shopping time to spend your savings on an iPod accessories, a new phone and a set of games for your PSP? I can tell you, I did :-)

While discussing gadgets over Christmas dinner we found that every succesfull electronic gadget is based a tangible consumer benefit (no real surprise here). However, most of the time this benefit is not the genuine invention. Take 'video' (in the sense of moving images) as an example. The brother "Lumière" may have invented how to reproduce moving images, but TV, VCR, DVD players, TIVO, iPod video or the PSP re-use this invention with a new consumer benefit in the distribution or experience:
- TV: watch moving images in your living room
- VCR/DVD: watch TV on demand (kind of)
- TIVO: real on demand watching, including time-shifting
- iPod/PSP: location shifting (watch basically video anywhere)

So, wanna get rich? Don't try to invent new stuff but take something existing and improve it somehow. Look at Microsoft ...!

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Contemporary art & advertising


Visited the museum of contemporary art this weekend. I was together with Don Scales (CEO of Agency.com) and in the Sergej Bratkov exhibition we found this great work that would fit perfectly in the lobbby of a major advertising agency ...
Symbolic for the future of traditional advertising?

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Joseph & Steve on Across the sound

The "Across the sound" podcast is one of those podcasts I keep synchronised on my iPod. A bit long sometimes, but always full of interresting ideas and opinions. The latest show ("N° 12") is a special issue based almost entirely on listener feedback, which makes it into a reflection of what the community around this podcast thinks. THAT's a great concept!

By the way, the music in my audio feedback that Joseph & Steve like so much is obviously from the podsafe music network:
Girl fight by BMs Beds and Bumpers

Find out more:
"Across the sound" podcast on new marketing and pr by Steve & Joseph
"Jaffe Juice" blog on new marketing by Joseph Jaffe (also a podcast there)
"Micro pursuasion" blog on PR by Steve Rubel

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Companies Blogging

Should all companies start their own blogs just because? Don't think so! Blogs offer great opportunities for new marketing, or rather, new PR. But as always one must be clear on the objectives before starting to communicate.

Obviously you need to have something to talk about. It could be the life in the office if you have enough entertaining people around, a high profile company may use it to share and clarify strategic choices or you could share some know-how with the world.

The big difference with old school marketing however is that blogs are not fully controlable. In big organisations different people in different departments will spread their vision from their point of view, that's the nature of blogging. And a real blog has the possibility to comment on blog posts turned on. So your respondents will build your image with you.

Solution: Make sure you have your strategy and objectives figured out, and communicate them correctly and consistently, especially internally. In fact, just get your act together as a business and you won't get into trouble.

PS
It's probably a good idea to have the legal department look at the terms & conditions of your blogs ... you never know :-)

Related reading (in Dutch):
Aandacht voor bloggende bedrijven in De Morgen

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