Monthly Archives: June 2010

I am an advocate of solar power – but the biggest advocate? I don’t think I’d fit that bill, but maybe you do!

The new ‘Power the House’ campaign just launched to find the most devoted advocates of solar power and have them help get solar panels back on the White House. Using the many facets of social media, the Power the House campaign encourages the public to check their social-media-linked site to get their daily action plan and participate in a game that spreads the solar word.

Once completing solar missions around the social-sphere on Facebook, Twitter, MySpace and Foursquare, players can earn points and win GLOMANA merchandise, like a glow-in the-dark t-shirt.  If you’re really into the idea and campaign, earning enough points to become the ‘Ultimate Solar Advocate’ will score you placement in a nation-wide press release when the campaign reaches 10,000 petition signatures!

The lead company driving the campaign, Sungevity, sent a request to the Obama administration to accept their offer of a free solar power system and launched their site to encourage the public to join in with them.  Looks like there are some participants and I hope it succeeds to reach their petition goal soon!

Summermash 2010 San Francisco

Hold onto your hats and get those phones charged to tweet the night away. Mashable, one of the world’s most popular blogs, is set to roll through the country on a five city stop as part of its SummerMash tour. Starting in Seattle, the Mashable team will go from city to city bringing social back to the Internet scene. Along the way, they’ll hit some great cities, including San Francisco, our nation’s capital Washington, DC, New York City and finally Chicago. Tickets are starting to go fast for some of the tour stops so don’t miss out on your chance to hang with some really great people.

This year’s SummerMash tour will have the Mashable team out in full force. From the debonaire Pete Cashmore, founder of Mashable to including a lot of the team’s senior editors and magic makers: Adam Hirsch, Ben Parr, Jennifer Van Grove, Barb Dybwad, Karen Hartline, Brett Petersel and Jolie O’Dell, if you’re a business owner, startup founder, fanboi/fangurl or just someone who wants to hang out and have a great time, then you don’t want to miss this event. It should be a truly epic event.

Mashable is quick to point out that the SummerMash tour is an “excellent opportunity” to get in front of influencers in each community and if any of their last parties are a sign, you can bet that the party you go to will not be disappointing. People from all walks of life will surely be in attendance, from founders, members of the media, developers, designers, social media professionals, marketers, PR folks and many others. Step away from the computer, unplug the phone and make sure you attend one of the biggest parties happening this summer.

Here’s the official schedule of the SummerMash tour:

  • Seattle: Saturday, July 10
  • San Francisco: Thursday, July 14
  • Washington D.C.: Thursday, August 5
  • New York City: Monday, August 9
  • Chicago: Wednesday, August 11

If you’re interested in any sponsorship opportunities for the SummerMash tour, there may be some spots still open and should contact sponsorships@mashable.com for more information.

Hope to see you out at a Mashable party this summer!

I admit it. When in desperate need of a mirror with no bathroom or other females in site, I try and tilt and twist my iPhone to get the perfect glare and touch up what needs to be fixed. It does the trick sometimes and is better than nothing, but today I found something that will solve all of my ‘need a mirror now’ problems forever. And no, it’s not carrying a mirror with me, why would I do that?

DLP Mobile has created a fantastic app for the new iPhone 4  – a mirror. How simple, but brilliant! The Mirror app will utilize the phone’s front-facing camera and hi-res display image to create the perfect and oh-so-handy mirror on your phone!  Also very cool is that the app will make color corrections and has light filters to allow viewing at night or in low lighting.

The app will go on sale on June 24th, the same day the iPhone 4 is being released out into the wild. My suggestion to all those overnight campers in front of the Apple stores,  download the mirror app asap. :)

E3 is one of the best gaming conventions that there is out there.  Happening once a year in Los Angeles, it attracts thousands of gaming programmers and nerds alike.

This year, Microsoft may have launched a new ground breaking technology that may push other video game consoles off the shelves.  The new Microsoft Xbox Kinect – formally known as Project Natal.

For several days leading up to the press event, Twitter’s stream was filled with E3 announcements and hashtags for a new device for what we all thought was #ProjectNatal.

Come time for the official press announcement, Microsoft announces that the product itself is called Kinect.  A new revoluntionary device that will connect to you to your Xbox360.

Kinect scans your whole body and senses your every move to play a game without using a physical controller. Kinect will let you play the game without any barriers, no controllers, just the way you were meant to.  You physically become part of the game.

The press event was filled with Cirque du Soleil performances that allowed you to be on the floor with the performers and hands on with the interaction.

Kinect is due to be available in stores during the holiday season of 2010.

*photos taken by Krystyl or provided by Microsoft Xbox

Earlier today, the folks at JESS3 and the marketing automation company Eloqua released a brand new infographic that they hoped would be an influential source for businesses and marketers in how to understand content marketing. We might know that we need to be in social media, but do we really know what purpose these social networks serve in the grand scheme of how we produce content?

JESS3 and Eloqua have both found a way to help solve this dilemma. Together they created what’s known as The Content Grid infographic that can be used by businesses to understand and build out a content marketing strategy. Don’t think of this strategy as like creating an editorial calendar, but rather as a map for how you as a member of a team should understand the nuances of social media and philosophy behind social networking. To this end, The Content Grid is meant to solve a few things:

  1. Which platform works best for what we are trying to achieve?
  2. Where does social media figure in the purchase funnel / sales cycle?
  3. Who should “own” social media?
  4. How can we utilize social channels outside of just Facebook and Twitter?

Social media doesn’t work for all things. You can’t just simply use Twitter in the entire business cycle. Instead, you’re going to have to look at the different tools to see which one is more effective. Would you use a hammer to screw in a nut or a drill to hammer in a nail? Of course not! It’s the exact same way with social media. To this end, The Content Grid looks at four main parts when it comes to content marketing:

The first involves how much control is given to  both the consumer and the company. This is the top and bottom part of The Content Grid. As you can see, it’s a matter of centralized control versus decentralization – if you want to maintain as much control as possible, then you’ll want to have tools that reflect that such as widgets and interactive demos – things only you as a company can maintain. But on the other hand, the decentralized control is the lawless frontier of the Internet. This is where most of the crowd and consumers are talking freely and won’t accept any control or censorship by any company. But it is here in the decentralized zone where you must enter and make your pitch to influence their decisions.

The second part deals with at which stage of the sales cycle the consumer is a part of…are they still unsure about your brand, in which case you need to build on awareness OR are they at that point where the consumer might be ready to make a purchase – this being the consideration phase. Again, different social media tools are more useful in different parts of the process.

If you also look more closely at The Content Grid, you can see that the social networks that are displayed correspond to a specific part of the grid. These placements are quite strategic because they correlate to the portion of the sales cycle AND relate to how much control a company would have. For the most part, what businesses will always need to be concerned about is in the areas from the middle of the grid down towards the most extreme part of the decentralized zone. It is here throughout the span of the sales cycle where businesses must empower their employees and team to use social media to help interact with consumers. It is quite telling that throughout the sales cycle, there are many departments involved in closing the deal, so why should it be any different with social media? There is NO SINGLE owner of social media – everyone in the company, from the receptionist to the chief executive are responsible for engaging.

You can read more about The Content Grid on Eloqua’s blog.

JESS3′s design work can also be seen on Brian Solis’ Conversation Prism and the Social Marketing Compass in his latest book Engage.