1. A Life Less Complicated

    We are bang in the middle of the Information Age - the time in which access to and transfer of information is easier than ever before. Many of us grew up during this digital age. A digital native or not, most people will agree that there is an evident phenomenon of information overload in the world today.

    Not necessarily a bad thing, is it? Who imagined that you could type “best sedan in India” in a tiny little search box, to get an information bank of 15 million web pages in less than 0.32 seconds, to help you make a purchase decision. But one click leads to another, and before you know it, you are lost in a complex maze of a highly unstructured information system. And this is just one way most of us access information. As new data produced at rapid rates start piling up to the existing stack, multiple access-points crowd the information gateway & our demand for information gets further complicated. It’s no surprise that in a recent study conducted by Euro RSCG, a vast majority (56%) of the 7000+ adults, from 19 countries around the world, say that they are concerned about this overload of information.

    Library Classification System – the exhaustive system of coding and organizing library materials for a structured access is an inspiration to solving the issue of abundance and access. Technology, information architecture, graphic design and many other fields have identified this and offered solutions to tackle it. When information abundance meets structure, process & organization, the average human brain is in a better position to process information and makes a highly informed decision. Abundance then becomes structured chaos. Say for instance, when you search on Google, the results page offers you multiple filters that help you prioritize and process information based on your needs. Or your iPhone home screen that lets you organize applications based on their similarity – drop two separate news apps together to create a ‘News’ folder. Microsoft’s Metro design philosophy offers to solve this by offering a structured design approach that consolidates groups of common tasks to speed up usage.

    A significant shift occurred when publishers and creators of content platforms gave away the control of organization to the users. Along came social bookmarking, tagging, screen customizations, RSS feeds and more. With Pinterest, user controlled content and information mapping has scaled new heights.

    In spite of various efforts, the ebb and flow of complexity in the information age will prevail.  Are we, as marketers and communication specialists, adding to this complexity or lessening it? Perhaps it is worthwhile that, the next time you write a creative brief or come up with consumer engagement strategies for the online world, you answer this: ‘How will this idea or campaign simplify your consumers’ life?’

    (Originally published here)

    Image by Matt Madd from Flickr.com

  2. via:filosofiatumbleriana

    via:filosofiatumbleriana

  3. 3 Reasons to NOT Auto-Post Your Tweets to LinkedIn | Business 2 Community →

    Frequency
    The number of times most people tweet on a daily basis are far greater the number of times most experts say you should post updates on LinkedIn. The recommended frequency for tweeting is about 5-10 times per day according to some experts, while many LinkedIn Gurus agree that you should post updates no more than 1-2 times per day.

    If I wanted to sift through 1000s of tweets per day from my connections, I would follow them on Twitter and do it there. I want my LinkedIn update stream to be clean and uncluttered so I can interact with my connections on a more personal level, which is why I generally will hide updates from my LinkedIn connections if they are auto-posting more than a few tweets a day.

    Etiquette
    The etiquette and terminology on the two platforms are completely different. Many people on LinkedIn don’t know what a hashtag is or what RT means. They aren’t familiar with #followfriday or #musicmonday. They could be confused when they see me referred to as @MarketPathAC instead of my full name.

    Twitter has a language of its own and doesn’t always translate very well for non-twitter users, which make up a majority of LinkedIn’s demographic. Heck, I’ve been on Twitter for 3 years and I still don’t understand what some peoples’ tweets say.

    Shareability
    This is my #1 reason not to auto-post tweets to LinkedIn. Take a look at the image below… it’s the same question I asked in the “via Twitter” example I used at the beginning of this post, only this time I posted it directly as a LinkedIn update:

    Read the full post here

  4. Posting: The Best of Times & the Worst of Times
Bit.ly recently released new data on the ideal posting times for Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr, based on click activity they see on links shortened through their service.  While timing on Facebook and Twitter tends to be similar, Tumblr showed near opposite behavior. There are no hypotheses given on why this is - a younger demo? less business activity? more mobile devices? We have only conjecture right now, but either way, this serves as a friendly reminder that format isn’t the only thing we should be optimizing for when creating and scheduling posts for different platforms. 
FACEBOOKBest: 1PM & 4PM; Wednesday at 3PM being the bestWorst: After 8PM & before 8AM
TWITTERBest: 1PM & 3PM; 2.8 hour half-lifeWorst: After 8PM & after 3PM on Fridays
TUMBLRBest: Friday nights are a key time; peaks on Monday & Tuesday between 7PM & 10PMWorst: Before 4PM
You can read Bit.ly’s original blog post here.
via: situationinteractive

    Posting: The Best of Times & the Worst of Times

    Bit.ly recently released new data on the ideal posting times for Facebook, Twitter, and Tumblr, based on click activity they see on links shortened through their service.  While timing on Facebook and Twitter tends to be similar, Tumblr showed near opposite behavior. There are no hypotheses given on why this is - a younger demo? less business activity? more mobile devices? We have only conjecture right now, but either way, this serves as a friendly reminder that format isn’t the only thing we should be optimizing for when creating and scheduling posts for different platforms. 

    FACEBOOK
    Best: 1PM & 4PM; Wednesday at 3PM being the best
    Worst: After 8PM & before 8AM

    TWITTER
    Best: 1PM & 3PM; 2.8 hour half-life
    Worst: After 8PM & after 3PM on Fridays

    TUMBLR
    Best: Friday nights are a key time; peaks on Monday & Tuesday between 7PM & 10PM
    Worst: Before 4PM

    You can read Bit.ly’s original blog post here.

    via: situationinteractive

  5. Consumer Social behavior in global digital life: 

    72,000 people, 60 countries. China has the most shopaholics. Brasil loves to chat.

    via: clipandshare

  6. This is kinda dope!

    This is kinda dope!

  7. At the Amsterdam Motor Show, Renault enabled an easy way for consumers to ‘like’ the car on Facebook, if they liked it at the show. This is creates a new meaning to how brands are now able to integrate their online and offline experiences. 

    via: peterhenshaw

  8. alexjcampbell:

Twitter traffic has levelled off, Tumblr has appeared on the map, and MySpace is, uh, doing pretty well.
(from this excellent, very detailed article in Fortune)

    alexjcampbell:

    Twitter traffic has levelled off, Tumblr has appeared on the map, and MySpace is, uh, doing pretty well.

    (from this excellent, very detailed article in Fortune)

  9. Twitter get its due, finally.

    Value added services, like detailed analytics, for commercial twitter usage seems to be a great incentive to businesses, brands and companies who look into twitter for the ocean of data it provides.

    “Twitter will still be free for everybody and we’ll still tell them to go crazy with it,” said Stone in an interview. “But we’ve identified a selection of things that businesses say are helping to make them more profit.” - Biz Stone, Co-Founder of Twitter

    Read the entire article here.

  10. Now Twitter Knows Where You Are, so What Happens Next?

    Twitter takes on Augmented Reality, in this case, to aid you with the necessary tools to locate Twitter users around your area and listen in on the conversations that are going around near you. Privacy being a concern, this going to be an opt-in feature for the geo-savvy individuals.

    Biz Stone, announcing the new service on Twitter’s blog noted that it will also be useful if you’re tracking an event like “a concert or even something more dramatic like an earthquake.”

    Read the FastCompany article here.