On Brands, Technology and Feelings.
(20)12 Things to think about:
1. CAN WE BET SMALL AND WIN BIG?
2. WHAT WILL BE THE NEXT BIG THING?
3. CAN WE PREDICT THE FUTURE?
4. WHERE DO WE LOOK FOR INSPIRATION?
5. CAN THE BRAND BE THE CURATOR?
6. HOW IMPORTANT IS THE PRODUCT?
7. WHICH CHANNEL IS THE BEST?
8.. WHAT IS HAPPENING IN THE MARKET?
9. WHAT IS A VIRAL?
10. WHAT IS GOOD CONTENT?
11. IS THERE A KEY TO INNOVATION?
12. HOW BIG ARE THE POSSIBILITIES?
Apidays New York 2024 - The value of a flexible API Management solution for O...
Â
THE DIGITAL HEART.
1. BRANDS, TECHNOLOGY & FEELINGS
THE DIGITAL
HEART
MEDIAFRONT A PART OF MCCANN WORLDGROUP
2. BRANDS, TECHNOLOGY & FEELINGS
(20)12 THINGS
TO THINK
ABOUT
MEDIAFRONT A PART OF MCCANN WORLDGROUP
3. 1. CAN WE BET SMALL AND WIN BIG?
2. WHAT WILL BE THE NEXT BIG THING?
3. CAN WE PREDICT THE FUTURE?
4. WHERE DO WE LOOK FOR INSPIRATION?
5. CAN THE BRAND BE THE CURATOR?
6. HOW IMPORTANT IS THE PRODUCT?
7. WHICH CHANNEL IS THE BEST?
8.. WHAT IS HAPPENING IN THE MARKET?
9. WHAT IS A VIRAL?
10. WHAT IS GOOD CONTENT?
11. IS THERE A KEY TO INNOVATION?
12. HOW BIG ARE THE POSSIBILITIES?
5. âBut itâs a disservice to constantly
put things in this radical new light
â that itâs going to change everything.
Things donât have to change the world
to be important.â
Steve Jobs
[Wired, February 1996]
6. âPixar storytellers must make thousands
of little bets to develop a movie script,
Hewlett Packard cofounder Bill Hewlett
found that HP needed to make 100 small
bets on products to identify six that could be
breakthroughs.â
Peter Sims
Describing his book âLittle Betsâ
11. âThe best products in the world
starts out as features.â
Kevin Systrom , Co-founder of Instagram
What problems are we [Instagram] trying to solve?
1. Y want to find information of something you capture with your phone,
ou
not the keyword for search (sometimes you don't even know what to the keywords are)
2. Y want to have an instant interaction with other people with similar question or interest
ou
3. Easy(one click or a shot of photo should be enough) way to find/share/connect
12. âThis emphasis comes directly from Jack
Dorsey, who says, âIâm really good at
simplifying things.â He espouses a
tremendously attractive belief that good
industrial design wins customersâ trust by
disappearing.â Maybe advertising is finally
catching up with industrial design.â
13. âThe odds of failure is the same
for really big projects,
as for really small projects . . .â
Jamie Wilkinson
Co-created Know Y Meme & taught the Internet Famous Class
our
14. Where can you start?
Make a list of five small bets for your brand:
1. ?
2. ?
3. ?
4. ?
5. ?
16. "We expect that the next big thing
will be a bigger version of the last big thing.
What we donât expect, yet what is most likely,
is that the next big thing wonât look important
to us at all â until itâs so important that we
canât ignore it. "
Brian Eno
17. âHe wasnât predicting, but looking for
interesting and important problems to solve. Â
And therein lies the difference between a
trend and fundamental change.â
On Richard Feynman (Scientist)
20. CREATIVITY DRIVES THE FUTURE
Visual Futurist, Syd Mead
â technology tends to build on itself, grow together and cross-reference each other
â technology is just an assistant to the human intellect
â creativity is the creation of putting elements together in different combinations
- science fiction is reality ahead of future
35. donât forget Youâre Ph.D. is your brand
the bigger and your ïŹeld of interest.
picture!
Letâs not forget
Matt Might
to be inspired
by what happens . . .
36. Other ïŹeld
donât forget Other ïŹeld
the bigger
picture!
Matt Might
Other ïŹeld Other ïŹeld
Other ïŹeld Other ïŹeld
Other ïŹeld
38. Can kids teach themselves?
Scientist, Sugatra Mitram,
Hole in the Wall (HIW) experiement
In 1999 a computer was placed in a kiosk, created within a wall in an
Indian slum at Kalkaji, Delhi . Children were allowed to freely use it.
The experiment aimed at proving that kids could be taught by computers
very easily without any formal training.
40. "Beyond the age of information
is the age of choices"
Charles Eames
41. " The power of influencers is not new.
But having tools available to instantly convey
personal opinions is a revolution.
As the number of choices expand,
our dependence on curators increases
proportionally."
Steve Addis
42. 1) Help people create an exchange value
2) Give them the tools, the motivation, the
information to do so
3) Represent the culture they serve, be the
senter of the thing you do
4) Pick the most qualified and enthusiasthic
people to represent you
Douglas Rushkott
43. GOOGLE
ïŹnd a strong signal LINKS
curate it at scale SEARCH ENGINE
currency HUMAN ATTENTION
FACEBOOK
ïŹnd a strong signal THE SOCIAL ENGINE
curate it at scale THE FACEBOOK PLATFORM
currency HUMAN ATTENTION
TWITTER
ïŹnd a strong signal TWEETS
curate it at scale THE TWITTER PLATFORM
currency HUMAN ATTENTION
TUMBLR, QUORA, GOWALLA, INSTAGRAM
John Battelle
44. "The inflexibility to deal with
individual's specific discovery needs
is still there.
This is an opportunity for every brand."
John Battelle
48. How do you choose?
" Many make the same mistake by assuming that there is
a dominant trend towards new media. Â
In actuality, the real trend is toward greater media diversity. Â
Most of the old stuff will continue to prosper. "
"A new channel is like a new window in the brands building..."
Khartik S.
"A truly great story doesnât need a gatekeeper. . . it just needs a home."
The new journalism
49. Fish were the developers are!
Share your data with open API!
«Marketers typically don't try to become platforms or court developers,
but that's all about to change.
An ever-changing array of platforms will erode our fascination with single
venues and get us thinking about how we can hedge our bets by helping
developers succeed across a portfolio of them.»
Steve Rubel
OPEN API TIMELINE
51. BE HONEST
. . .there is one muscle that shows sincerity.
Itâs a muscle, called theobicularis occuli,
that encircles the eye socket.
Most people donât pay very close attention to
and itâs very hard to deliberately adopt.
So when people genuinely smile,
in a true burst of positive emotion,
not only to the corners of the mouth,
controlled by the zygomaticus major,
but this muscle around the eye also contracts.
This causes the crows feet wrinkles
that fan out from the outer corners of the eyes
and its also responsible for folds in the upper eyelid.
Most people canât do that deliberately.â
Marianne LaFrance
52. âIn their willingness to show the less
desirable parts of their brand, they were
making a much bigger win with consumers.
They were coming across as seeming
honest.â
For Brands, Being Human Is The New Black
62. âIn considering how people will respond
to what you make, abandon the distinction
between âformâ and âcontentâ,
or between âexecutionâ and âmessageâ.
People donât dissect or disaggregate what
we make but respond to it as a whole.â
M. Weigel
63. Jonathan Harris
The Never-Ending Story
âSo, how can we raise the stakes?
A lot of online platforms are missing an important aspect in storytelling,
which is the listening part.
Can you build that type of engagement through technology?
Well, one of the pieces of this system Iâve been building is that to tell the story you have to
dedicate it to somebody, which creates a gift economy of stories.
Itâs like changing the scale of the discourse, a deeper phenomenon of one story being
answered with another story being answered with another story.
So, is it the need to reciprocate the gift story that will drive people
to engage with the new platform?
Y but it is also that it takes a little bit of the loneliness out of online existence, which
es,
can stem from just shouting into the void. Itâs more like sending a letter instead. Thereâs a
hard-wired connection between two points, even if there are other things existing around
that rope. I donât think you can resist technology. Itâs far too powerful, so what you do is
shape it into a place that you want to live or the way you want to live with it.
64. Kevin Kelly says
these are the attributes we are willing to pay for . . .
Immediacy
Personalisation
Authenticity
Attention
Interpretation
Accessibility
Embodiment
Findability
65. Cory Doctorowâs Tech Optimism
âAre you optimistic or pessimistic about the future?â
â Itâs a question I get asked so often that I have a little canned response
I can rattle off without thinking:
ââIn order to be an activist, you have to be both:
pessimistic enough to believe that things will get worse if left unchecked,
optimistic enough to believe that if you take action,
the worst can be prevented.ââ
67. EVOLVE OR DIE!
Can the five key traits that innovaters share,
inspire us?
Kaihan Krippendorff
68. ASSOSIATE
â connect the dots
â seek the patterns in seemingly unrelated information
â find diverse sources of information and inspiration
Text
What industry can you look to?
69. OBSERVE
â observe intensly
â spot customer needs and emerging week signals
â put your antenna up for this months buzz
topics and issues of the brand?
What problem can you solve?
70. EXPERIMENT
â try things just to see if they work
â sign up to all possible new services
â launch beta products
- try five low risk experiments on behalf of the brand?
#iseefaces
Photo by @mikpix
#planking
Photo by @threeehearts
How can you use a popular service or platform?
71. QUESTION
â be curious, walk the journey of discovery
â challenge your discoveries
â Ask!
When?
What?
Who?
Why? The mind is not
contained to the cranium.
Itâs province is of the
inïŹnite imaginative spirit.
72. NETWORK
â without a precise goal in mind
â meet and talk to people with opposing views
â get access to a breadth of information
- open serendipitous opportunities
When all
think alike,
then no one
is thinking.
Walter Lippman
73.
74.
75. Where can you start?
Make a list of five small bets for your brand:
1. ?
2. ?
3. ?
4. ?
5. ?
78. Donât forget to explore
the unlimited possibilities
the amazing world wide web
and all the sharers out there
who give away their knowledge,
their data, their time,
thoughts and feelings
for us to build upon!
79. "Creativity requires the courage to let go of certainties."
Erik Fromm
ââŠand you wonât be interesting unless you say things imaginatively, originally, freshly.â
80. Please, make shure to check out the original sources, that inspired this presentation.
CHAPTER 1
http://techcrunch.com/2011/04/18/little-bets-the-book/
Instagram Mashups, a list + Look at how brands (and bands, e.g. Moby) are using Instagram
Soundcloud + Soundcloudâs app gallery
50/50 make or break: http://5050.gd/
Faris Yakob on the 50/50 project http://farisyakob.typepad.com/blog/2011/09/5050-hackathon-nyc.html
http://techcrunch.com/2011/02/03/founder-stories-instagram-products/
http://thinkingalaud.posterous.com/instagram-ïŹnd-the-problem-ïŹrst
http://techcrunch.com/2011/09/02/instagram-adds-50-million-photos-in-august-now-over-200-million-total/
http://techcrunch.com/2011/09/13/instagram-and-intuit-founders-discuss-lean-startups-pivots-and-what-makes-a-product-successful/
http://vimeo.com/19086114 + http://jamiedubs.com
CHAPTER 2
http://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/2010/11/brian-eno-next-big-thing/
http://www.digitaltonto.com/2009/feynmans-6-principles-of-trendspotting/
http://www.onepiece.no
CHAPTER 4
http://matt.might.net/articles/phd-school-in-pictures/
CHAPTER 5
http://curatoreffect.blogspot.com/
http://rushkoff.com/2010/03/25/program-or-be-programmed/
http://battellemedia.com/archives/2010/12/signal_curation_discovery
CHAPTER 7
http://itwofs.com/beastoftraal/2010/12/20/social-media-roi-what-is-the-roi-of-installing-a-new-window-in-your-organization/
http://www.twistimage.com/blog/archives/the-new-journalism/
http://www.steverubel.com/
http://blog.programmableweb.com/2011/01/03/api-growth-doubles-in-2010-social-and-mobile-are-trends/
CHAPTER 8
http://www.amazon.com/Lip-Service-Smiles-Memory-Politics/dp/0393060047/ref=sr_1_1?s=dmusic&ie=UTF8&qid=1316007672&sr=1-1
http://www.fastcompany.com/1776854/how-being-human-is-the-new-black-for-brands
CHAPTER 9
www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/07/why-do-viral-videos-go-viral/
CHAPTER 10
http://blog.mediafront.no/2011/05/31/det-digitale-hjertet/)
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/29/opinion/29franzen.html?_r=1
http://mweigel.typepad.com/canalside-view/2011/04/through-a-screen-fuzzily-how-people-really-make-sense-of-advertising.html
http://designmind.frogdesign.com/articles/the-never-ending-story.html
http://www.locusmag.com/Perspectives/2011/05/cory-doctorow-techno-optimism/
CHAPTER 11
http://www.fastcompany.com/1711531/ïŹve-innovative-new-year-s-resolutions?partner=rss
http://looklet.com/ + http://www.robyn.com/wedancetothebeat/
http://www.facebook.com/bursdag
http://instagramers.com/destacados/how-to-use-hashtags-in-instagram/
http://synapticstimuli.com/ + Photo resource, Jung-Yeon Min http://www.kashyahildebrand.org/zurich/min/index.html
http://www.exactitudes.com/
81. Videos.
A future imagined
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9VMW1UDd0w0
Can kids teach themselves?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xRb7_fïŹ2D0
The Wire: Stringer's 'product' meeting
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BPS9YKGaKQE
Chipotle ad - Back to the start
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aMfSGt6rHos
Golden Voice viral
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6rPFvLUWkzs
Nike ad - Addiction
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XPTpEkdceic
John Jay on creativity
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EpfYPVzJohc
82. Want more?
A few more links that shoot to your heart.
Google Chrome:Â Dear Sophie
Mural explorer:Â Love letter
Y the world and I:
ou
Tylor The Creator -Â Yonkers
Stoop sitting
Kurz und Schön opener
Susan Sontag Animation: Regarding the Pain of Others
Days with my father