Archive for March 20th, 2012

20 March
0Comments

SpaceX Prepares For April 30 Launch To Space Station

Photo: SpaceX

SpaceX and NASA announced a new schedule for the private company’s planned rendezvous with the International Space Station. The launch of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket was expected to take place earlier in the year, but as is often the case with space flights, it was postponed for more testing. Now the company is aiming for an April 30 launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

The mission will combine two tests for NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) contract into a single flight. A few days after launching, the Dragon spacecraft will approach the space station for docking, getting very close, but not actually connecting in order to make sure everything works as planned on both the SpaceX and the station side. After retreating to some safe distance for a period of time, the Dragon will then repeat the approach. But on the second run engineers will go all the way, docking with the ISS.

The tests are to demonstrate SpaceX’s capabilities to deliver payloads to the ISS. Since the retirement of the space shuttle program last year, NASA has been relying on the Russian rockets to deliver astronauts and cargo to the station. The Dragon will only carry cargo initially, but it is being developed to carry astronauts to orbit as well. SpaceX has a $1.6 billion contract for 12 cargo flights to the ISS.

Earlier this month SpaceX completed a dress rehearsal complete with countdown and fueling roughly 75,000 gallons of liquid oxygen and kerosene into the Falcon 9 rocket as it sat upright on the launch pad at the Kennedy Space Center. The test was one of the final steps before getting the go ahead for the actual launch.

In addition to announcing a new launch date, SpaceX celebrated its 10th birthday this week. The company was founded in 2002 by Elon Musk and was awarded the COTS contract with NASA in 2006. In 2008 SpaceX delivered its first payload to orbit, a Malaysian satellite. In 2010, the Dragon spacecraft was launched into orbit (picture above) and successfully retrieved back on earth, making SpaceX the first private company to complete such a flight.

In addition to SpaceX, Orbital Sciences Corporation is also competing for the COTS contract with its Antares rocket and Cygnus spacecraft.

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

20 March
0Comments

Infographic: Google+ for Business

The swell folks at BlueGlass made me a nifty infographic about Google+ for business, replete with all kinds of factoids and thoughts to consider. I’m not always a super fan of infographics, but there are clearly some advantages to them, it would appear.

So, take a look at what Google+ can do for you. This infographic has a bunch of marketing points scattered throughout it. You’ll see why Google+ might help you take your business goals to the next level.

Google+ for Business Infographic

Google+ For Business InfoGraphic by BlueGlass Media

Still with me? Great! If you think it’s worth it, please share liberally. And thanks!

Chris Brogan is an eleven year veteran of social media using both web and mobile technologies to build digital relationships for businesses, organizations, and individuals.

20 March
0Comments

Forget Passwords, Program IDs Your Keystrokes Instead

 

Human’s aren’t meant to remember passwords with a bunch of pound signs or other nonsensical symbols. Although, cryptic passwords are great for security purposes, they’re not so great for the humans trying to remember them. And we have plenty to remember.

DARPA announced on Monday that it is looking into the feasibility of getting computers to recognize users by the way they type, rather then having to enter a password.

Richard Guidorizzi, DARPA program manager, gave a talk in 2010 called “Beyond Passwords.” He explained that creating passwords that are easy to remember is bad for personal security. He said keystroke identification would make computers adapt to humans, rather than the other way around.

“Active Authentication” as it’s being called, aims to make how you type your identifying feature. The authentication process, Guidorizzi says, would happen in the background while the computer user goes about their business.

Roy Maxion, a research professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University, says such a program might recognize the length of time a user presses the keys. Since typing is a motor skills connected to our subconscious, it would be unlikely that someone could impersonate a particular person’s typing pattern.

A study at Pace University showed a similar program that identifies users by keystroke patterns was 99.5% accurate.

The downside of such a program is that it would require continuous monitoring to verify the same person was using the computer.

What do you think about active authentication? Tell us in the comments.

Image courtesy of iStockphoto, peepo

Via Mashable: http://www.mashable.com

20 March
0Comments

Mitsubishi Turns Their EVs Into Portable Power Supplies

Mitsubishi i-MiEV owners in Japan will soon be able to use the family car as an emergency generator, using their EV’s batteries to power a home.

The MiEV Power Box is an adapter that plugs into the i-MiEV’s quick charging port. Instead of recharging the car’s drive battery, it does the exact opposite, pulling 1500 watts of electricity to keep the lights on when the power goes out.

According to the automaker, an iMiEV with a fully-charged 16 kWh battery could provide power at 1500 watts for up to six hours — enough power to run a typical Japanese household for a whole day. The compact, 25 pound adapter seems like an ideal emergency power source for homes in densely-packed urban neighborhoods, where it would be impractical to store or use a large, loud diesel- or gas-powered backup generator.

Expected to sell for about $1800 when it goes on sale in late April, the Power Box is manufactured by a Mitsubishi Group affiliate and will be offered as an official option at Japanese Mitsubishi dealers. There’s no word on whether the Power Box will sell outside of Japan, or what kinds of safeguards are in place to ensure the car’s battery isn’t damaged if it’s left discharged for a long time after an emergency, though we’d suspect a dealer-supplied solution wouldn’t void any warranties.

The Power Box is a similar setup to Nissan’s Leaf-to-Home system, a concept technology that can power a home from the drive battery in a Nissan Leaf. Interest in such systems has grown following the tsunami and Fukushima nuclear disaster that drew attention to emergency preparedness and the limitations of the Japanese power grid.

Though the Power Box only has one AC outlet and can’t be readily tied into a larger power system, it’s an early example of what EVs have to offer beyond low-emission transportation. When eventually connected to a larger, “smart” power grid, EVs won’t only get their charge from a central power source but will also be able to give up some of their stored energy during emergencies or times of peak demand.

Photo: Mitsubishi Motors

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

20 March
0Comments

The Opportunity Engine

Melissa and AJ Leon

In previous years, and including this year, I tend to talk negatively about South By Southwest Interactive (also known as SXSWi). It’s an annual event in Austin, Texas, that has turned in recent years into lots of frail attempts at brand outreach and countless parties. Heck, I co-hosted a party this year, too, so I’m throwing stones at myself for putting it that way, but that’s what it’s become, if you let it. (Hint: “if you let it.”)

What I almost forgot was that every event is what we make of it. Every event is a chance to make an opportunity happen. The trick, however, is that we have to be diligent and open to such opportunities, and we have to have a sense of what we’d like to see happen.

The Opportunity Engine

It’s your duty to create an opportunity engine for yourself. This is essentially a mix of the following elements:

  • Your goals and mission (and the will to advance your own ideas or causes).
  • Your drive to take the initiative to make something happen.
  • Your ability to find the people or resources you need.
  • Your capabilities in serving or helping other people.
  • Your ability to communicate.
  • Your ability to collaborate.

I’ll give you an example.

I ran into Gary Vaynerchuk on the street outside my hotel at SXSW, and we talked for a few minutes about this and that. Because I hadn’t really been ready, I didn’t talk about what I might have wanted to cover. Instead, I went down a weird road that didn’t really help either of us. It was nice to see Gary, but I should have spent the time talking to him about his own world more. I didn’t need or want anything.

In another example, I did what I should have. I ran into Brian McKinney and Glen Stansberry from Gentlemint and I was able to quickly express my goals/desires for their service, could clearly explain my ideas, and made some recommendations and an offer that I felt might be helpful to the gents. It was nearly the opportunity engine should have worked (no matter what happens next), though I probably should have asked more clearly what I could do to be helpful to them, instead of simply prescribing my thoughts on what I could do to help them.

Notice That It’s a Two-Way Experience

In explaining the opportunity engine, it’s your obligation to lead with your goals in mind, and it’s you who must take the initiative, but it’s a two-party experience, where you should attempt to be just as helpful and serving of others as you are interested in seeking ways to advance your own ideas or causes. It’s your obligation to collaborate in some way, which means to give back as much as (or more than) you ask for from another person. (This is where it often fails, by the way, because people are greedy, either intentionally or accidentally.)

Create and Facilitate Opportunity

Next year, Jacq and I plan to attend SXSW Interactive, and we intend to play during SXSW music. For my time during Interactive, I promise not to gripe about all the parties and the silly drunkenness. Instead, I will go with my mind set on helping others with their opportunities, and I will go with a few of my own plans in mind as well. I will seek out meetings with others who might make good collaborators, and I’ll listen and be ready to help when talking with someone from whom I don’t need anything in particular.

Create and facilitate opportunities. You and I both miss many chances to do this every week. Let’s make this week the first of many celebrations of our fortune: the richness of the friends and colleagues we’ve met over the last while, and let’s reach out to see how we can better operate our opportunity engines to help others, and maybe to advance our own causes, too.

Remember the Engine

Remember to:

  1. Think with your goals and mission in mind (and the will to advance your own ideas or causes).
  2. Take the initiative to make something happen.
  3. Find the people or resources you need.
  4. Serve or help other people.
  5. Communicate your ideas and stories clearly.
  6. Collaborate where it makes sense.

And I’ll see you at the next big event.

Chris Brogan is an eleven year veteran of social media using both web and mobile technologies to build digital relationships for businesses, organizations, and individuals.

20 March
0Comments

Social media is about social science not technology

In 2007, I wrote an article entitled, “Social Media is About Sociology Not Technology.” It’s a statement that after five years, I thankfully continue to see shared every day on Twitter. As time passed and experience matured, I amended that statement to now read, “Social media is about social science not technology.”

Why did I change such a powerful statement? I believe that it is not only stronger now, it is also truer.

See, sociology is just one part of the equation. Social science is the study of society and human behaviors. As an umbrella term, we should think about social media and mobile behavior as it’s related to psychology, anthropology, communication, economics, human geography, et al. After all, everything comes down to people.

Unfortunately in new media, we tend to put technology ahead of people. Think about your current social media, mobile, or web strategy for a moment. Do you even know who you’re trying to reach? Do you know what customers or stakeholders expect or the challenges they face? Are you familiar with how they connect and communicate and why? Lastly, do you understand the journey they take to make decisions?

Whether we do or we don’t isn’t stopping us from embracing social and mobile technologies to reach the new generation of connected consumers.

In a Pivot study we conducted in 2011, we asked brand managers and marketers if they had a clear picture of who their Social Consumer is. An astounding 77 percent said yes.

When we explored specifically if respondent organizations asked Social Consumers what they expect from engagement, most responded, “No.” This is intriguing because we have 77 percent of organizations who say they know what their Social Consumers want, but 53 percent haven’t really asked. They do not—cannot—really know how to deliver value in social and mobile networks. On the other hand, 35 percent did note that they asked Social Consumers about their expectations. These organizations will most likely outperform organizations that did not ask.

There is no good reason or explanation for why we are not engaging or learning from customers. As it stands today unfortunately, the chart above says everything about how businesses see and value customer relationships.  This.must.change.

The great myth of social media is that it enables your business to build relationships with customers. Perhaps part of the problem is that the definition of relationships in this social economy is too simplified.  Relationships are not a function or derivative of technology. Pursuing the 3F’s of Friends, Fans, and Followers does not directly equate to value. At best, the definition of relationships when technology is at the center of connectivity, can mean nothing more than the way in which two or more concepts, objects, or people are connected, or the state of being connected.

Relationships are not static. They are in fact dynamic and becoming more so every day. The sales funnel of the past is now alive and is multidimensional.

Connected Consumers emphasize the input of those who define their interest graph – like-minded individuals on any given subject who share common interests and experiences with them. In this way, the connected evaluate the shared experiences of those they trust, and expect businesses to respond to their socialized questions. As a consequence, they don’t follow a linear approach through the classic ‘interest to intent’ funnel during their decision making process. Rather, they follow an elliptical pattern where their next steps are inspired by the insights of others, and their experiences are, in turn, fed back into the cycle to inform the decisions of others.

Reprinted from The End of Business as Usual, Chapter 14

A more sophisticated view of the customer is necessary to move beyond a static view of relationships. It’s time to get informed and emotional about customers. Doing so opens the doors to new touchpoints that are emerging and those that have already surfaced. Then and only then can we redefine online relationships to signify the way in which two or more people or organizations regard and behave toward each other.

If ignorance is bliss, awareness is enlightening…

This is why it’s critical that businesses shift resources away from social media monitoring and make a concerted move toward intelligence. This new listening movement will help businesses better understand who they’re trying to reach and what they value to inspire…well, everything. From marketing strategies to service models to new processes, products and services, intelligence becomes the key to meaningful engagement and ultimately increased awareness and relevance. In fact, I’d go so far to say that you should be as or more excited about intelligence and strategy as you are about Pinterest, Highlight, and all of the hot “it” apps.

Once you listen, not monitor, but truly listen to customer activity and observe online behavior, you cannot help but feel both empathy and harmony. Empathy is the secret ingredient in what I refer to as the ART of Engagement. It is the source of inspiring desired Actions, Reactions, and Transactions that means something to all those involved in commerce and relationship models.

In many ways, we are right now contributing to the problem instead of the solution. As it is, organizations, perhaps unintentionally, are putting the “anti” in anti-social media. People are equally part of the problem. They are causing disruption based on how they embrace technology and wield its influence online. Over time, it affects all it touches to varying extent. And, often people do not know what it is they want. This is where you come in. The answers lie in intelligence and empathy. Leadership unfolds in how you translate what you learn and feel into appreciation and understanding of the state of customer sentiment and how that correlates to the state of customer relationships. Then and only then, can you imagine and eventually articulate a new vision for what customer relationships and experiences should and will look like and lead the organization in a new and promising direction.

This is your time to raise the bar. Someone has to.

Via Brian Solis: http://www.briansolis.com

20 March
0Comments

Enterprise Social Networking is More Than Facebook Behind a Firewall

We see everyday what’s possible with social networks for improving customer engagement and experiences? Can the same be done with internal social networks for improving employee engagement and experiences?

In the many years of helping businesses align business objectives with social and new media strategies, there is one thing that always introduces difficulty into the equation, employee engagement. At some point in the development of any strategy, employee and stakeholder input is critical to ensure relevance and ultimately success. While social media may more often than not live in the marketing department, it affects the entire organization and as such, requires a centralized approach to leadership and management combined with a distributed platform for communication and learning.

Enterprise social networks (ESNs) are on the rise as they can deliver an immediate solution for aligning stakeholders around activity streams with the familiarity of Twitter or Facebook. These internal social networks are not only validating and useful to power users, but also friendly and easy to participate in for those who are new to the platform. While the promise of ESNs is significant to the future of how employees interact, learn, and ultimately work, challenges exist around adoption and overall measurement. And, like social media in general, businesses often underestimate or altogether miss the true potential of social networks and the role they play in bringing people together to do something incredible…over and over.

Charlene Li, my colleague at Altimeter Group, published a new report, “Making The Business Case For Enterprise Social Networking” to do just that, help you make the business case for enterprise social networking. As she observes from the onset, “ESNs are not simply Facebook behind a firewall. Every enterprise has distinct needs and nuances that require a reframing of a social network.”

So often, businesses deploy new technology without designing goals, processes, and reward systems to promote new engagement. Additionally, decision makers miss the need to empower key stakeholders to drive adoption and address internal skeptics and detractors. Thus, the potential for ESNs is restricted right out of the gate and in the absence of leadership and executive sponsorship, internal networking strategies miss critical opportunities to engage and inspire people, internally and externally, to more effectively connect and collaborate.

Everything begins with investing in a culture of employee and customer-centricity where ESNs and social networks in general become enablers for a new vision, empowerment, supported by defined outcomes and rewards. Yes, it’s part technology. But, tools only take you so far. It’s the philosophy and eventually vision and leadership behind the implementation that serves as the foundation for internal engagement.

Four Key Ways ESNs Deliver Value to a Social Business

In Charlene’s report, she found that many companies place greater emphasis on technology and not the people or the relationship factor that ESNs are designed to nurture.

Most companies approach enterprise social networks as a technology deployment and fail to understand that the new relationships created by enterprise social networks are the source for value creation. Yesteryear, internal technology departments could force software on business units, but in today’s consumerized world, business units can adopt enterprise software, often without IT ever knowing. As a result, a new approach is required that focuses on four key ways that relationships create value through enterprise social networks:

1) Encourage sharing.
2) Capture knowledge.
3) Enable action.
4) Empower employees.

These four points serve as beacons for guiding the development of a more meaningful engagement strategy within and across work groups to set the stage for a social business. If we bring a “Facebook-like” (get it?) mentality into our ESN strategy, we may fall short of enabling a truly social enterprise. In the report, she introduces the six elements that outline the differences between a public and enterprise social network to clarify the nuances between what’s truly possible.

What we have here is a failure to communicate

In general, expectations are high for ESNs because of the wonderful opportunities introduced through public-facing social networks. Executives are learning about the benefits associated with customer engagement through Facebook, Twitter, et al. But without establishing initial goals and then driving toward those outcomes, expectations for ESNs often go unmet.

Charlene’s research team interviewed 185 end users and surveyed 81 decision makers to learn about expectations for ESNs. They found that not only is there strong belief i the ability for ESNs to provide value to the organization, there is an emphasis on improving collaboration and the flow of information and knowledge within the organization.

However, Charlene uncovered “an undercurrent of concern” around potential value creation and the sustainable adoption of ESNs. Notably, most organizations saw one or more of the following four scenarios:

1. An initial enthusiasm and usage followed by slow decline.
2. Only one department strongly adopts the ESN.
3. Culture confusion and lack of executive engagement stymied growth from the start.
4. Lack of social business maturity.

Looking at the chart above, the majority of organizations are still in the experimental phases of ESN deployments. They’re piloting without operating under a formalized strategy. Examining the other numbers however, the distribution between formalized, mature, and advanced is notable.  But as Charlene notes, there are three critical painpoints that are either limiting success or hindering adoption. And, one could then revisit these numbers to discover that organizations may not be as far along as they believe.

Pain Point #1: Lack Of Metrics Means Business Impact Goes Unmeasured

Pain Point #2: Rapidly Developing Technology Platforms Create A Myriad Of Confusing Options

Pain Point #3: Integration Into Existing Platforms, Workflow, And Access Remain A Barrier

Developing an Action Plan

Making The Business Case For Enterprise Social Networking is rich, full of insights, and most importantly, it delivers a series of steps to follow to design ESN strategies to drive business value.

Regardless of where you are on the maturity curve, there should be four essential elements of your ESN action plan:
1) Objectives;
2) Metrics;
3) Relationships; and
4) Technology.

To get started, use the following checklist to help organize and prioritize your effort

Taking a Step Back: You are the Change Agent

There is no “I” in team, but there certainly is a “me.” And, to that point, there is also a “me” in social media. I guess, there’s an “I” too, but my point is that at the center of every team you belong to, is well, you. You are already learning about the importance of social media in your personal life. Many of you who are reading this now have also invested in demonstrating the importance of social media to your organization. But there’s a stark difference between traditional networking applications that most likely exist at your company today and the social networks you depend on for everyday communication, discovery, and engagement.

When you joined the organization you’re at today, you most likely received a desk, a PC, a phone, an email account, etc. You probably didn’t receive a Twitter handle or a Facebook page. You brought those into company. But that’s not all that came along with you. You introduced a new perspective on how transparent communication and connections facilitate engagement and collaboration. And this is why existing infrastructures that facilitate employee interaction and knowledge sharing are often not up to par to meet the needs for those pushing for transformation in the social economy.

Social media is about you. You have a voice. Everything you see in social networks is unique to you because you are at the center of the entire experience. This is why I lovingly refer to social media as the Egosystem. By design, everything revolves around you. Your friends, co-workers, the businesses and organizations you support, are linked to by you. You have become the ringmaster of your personal connectivity and in many ways, serve as the IT department not only for yourself, but also the people who rely upon you to ease their way into the egosystem. You know better than anyone what it takes to engage you and also inspire you to take action. You need to get something out of it. You need to see what happens as a result.

It comes down to you to demonstrate what’s possible because in the end, you know that employee engagement influences customer engagement.

As Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh recently shared with me, “If employees weren’t happy, they would not make customers happy. If customers weren’t happy, we wouldn’t be where we are today. We believe that if we get the culture right, then most of the other stuff, like delivering great service, or building a long-term enduring brand will just happen naturally on its own.”

Via Brian Solis: http://www.briansolis.com

20 March
0Comments

Mobile Devices Lead To A Stronger Connection To News Brands: Study

A new study finds that mobile devices, more than social networks, are driving the revolution in digital news consumption.

The newspaper isn’t dead, it’s just gone mobile.

Not only are more Americans getting their news on mobile devices than ever before, but these mobile users may also have a stronger bond to news brands than their laptop/desktop-using counterparts. According to the Pew Research Center’s annual State of the News Media study, 27% of Americans get their news on mobile devices like smartphones and tablets. And 44% of the country now owns a smartphone; 18% owns a tablet.

What’s more significant, though, is that these mobile users are more likely to turn to news brands directly, through apps and home pages, as opposed to Google search results or recommendations on Twitter or Facebook. In addition to suggesting a deeper connection with the news organization’s brand, the findings reflect a deeper connection to the news itself, with three in 10 users reporting that they read more news since purchasing a tablet than ever before.

Researchers also found that mobile use is adding to, not replacing, more traditional web-based news consumption, increasing traffic to major news websites by 9%. This spike may be courtesy of digital newcomers in rural areas where broadband access is limited, and for whom a smartphone or tablet is their first digital device.

In addition to its findings on mobile consumption, Pew looked at the effectiveness of social news discovery and found that a mere 10% of digital news consumers use social networks “very often” to get their news, which may come as a surprise to those of us glued to Twitter and Facebook for breaking news updates. Meanwhile, television news viewership is actually on the upswing at both local stations and cable networks. Local morning and evening broadcast audiences grew by 4.5%, the first signs of growth in 10 years, while CNN and MSNBC also experienced higher viewership in 2011 than the previous year. (Fox News was on the decline for the second year in a row, but still leads the pack with a bigger audience than the two other major networks combined.)

Finally, Pew researchers expect the number of digital news subscriptions on the market to nearly double this year, thanks to the relative success of paywalls like the one implemented by the New York Times, as well as the need to make up for lost ad revenue.

Image: Flickr user zilverbat

Via Fast Company: http://www.fastcompany.com

Valve Interactive
An online marketing and design agency in Portland Oregon