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Tidings of Comfort and Joy…
(Really love your squash photo! Quite the bountiful fall harvest!)
labels make it easier to monetize.
As Laura noted we will hear/see that phrase for years to come. It is and will be meaningless. Apt?
Pondering how the A-list's leadership position acts on the whole I can't help thinking that what we lack are the subtle quasi-biological feed-back/feed-forward systems that promote real flourishing. (Case in point: one of the top TwitterVille Stars tweeted your blog post ... but he did not come by and comment on it. And, as we all know, comments are the root system of the blogging biosphere.)
In any case, very glad to read your musings ... a refreshing break from the 24/7 marketing of those who redefine ROI to be Return on Interest.
stay well
--bentrem
Pam
pamhoelzle at twitter
Thanks for your replies. I doubt the phrase will be coined for years and meaninglessly annoy you...honestly, you jest to fear that this post could do that. What I'm interested in is practice and pushing folks further into the opportunities that are emerging. The resistance you offer shows that I've hit upon something that is perhaps uncomfortable. As for thinking like a publisher, the plight of the industry does not change the point. If Brian's insight is valid, and obviously I think it is, then where is the next beach head. So forgive the metaphors and lets at least talk action.
As for what David thinks, he has a way of showing up when and wherever he is mentioned, so my guess is he will speak for himself.
As for Chris...I'm amazed he's engaged with me as much as he has. He's steering his own pirate ship and I'm good with that. Every inkling of what I'm formulating opened up too me by studying his practice. He's really an open book.
As for the cloud thing, publishing across platforms and using harnessing the power of search and feed takes a different approach then merely trying to drive traffic to one place: the current monetized blogging system. What I'm getting at is developing the content throughout the system. See, it's like scrapping the 'press release' ( a tool to push people to a specific site or event to get the content) for the 'release' itself. In that way...cloud seeding analogy might still have legs...
To pick up on your last comment:
"See, it’s like scrapping the ‘press release’ ( a tool to push people to a specific site or event to get the content) for the ‘release’ itself. In that way…cloud seeding analogy might still have legs…"
Gone is the traditional double-spaced press release for journalists only. Social media news releases now act as stand alone multimedia publishing platforms [with room for text, video, audio, images and social bookmarking] available to anyone who's searching online.
Maybe the real trick here is think like your favorite TV personality, pro blogger or rock star: be entertaining, be everywhere, be responsive and build your own your fan base where they are.
@wiredprworks on twitter.com
I've been using the term here and there "Brand Journalism" - the idea that any brand can be a publisher of information on the Web creating information that people want to consume and are eager to share. A good example is Cisco http://newsroom.cisco.com/dlls/index.html where they publish a bunch of stuff (all over the cloud perhaps) and then aggregate it in their media room. This is brand journalism and this site looks more like the Wall Street Journal Online than a company site.
As for Bobbie's comment, most publishers monetize content with advertising which puts them in a bind. Brand journalism monetizes content by driving people into the buying process.
David
--Lea.