Archive for March 29th, 2012

29 March
0Comments

AT&T Labs, Carnegie Mellon’s Haptic Steering Wheel Pulses You In The Right Direction

Image: AT&T Labs

Steering wheels with haptic feedback aren’t anything new. Putting aside your GT5 gaming rig, automakers like Audi, BMW, Infiniti and Mercedes-Benz have been equipping steering wheels with the pulsating motors for years, mainly as part of lane departure warning systems that gently vibrate when you begin veering outside the lines. But AT&T Labs and Carnegie Mellon are doing one better, using haptic feedback to provide navigation instructions.

Utilizing 20 individual motors mounted around the wheel, engineers have programmed an off board navigation system to pulse clockwise for right turns and counterclockwise for left turns, negating the need for voice prompts or directional arrows displayed on a screen.

While the bandage wrapped prototype looks like a Logitech controller fresh out of the ER, this is just a proof of concept before Carnegie Mellon publishes its study on new methods of providing feedback to drivers. And with legislators gearing up to enact sweeping anti-distraction laws, this could be a technology AT&T and its partners could pitch to automakers as another way of getting drivers to keep their eyes on the road.

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

29 March
0Comments

The Pillars of Influence and How to Activate Cause and Effect

Digital Influence is one of the hottest trends in social media and it is also one of the least understood. Klout, PeerIndex, Kred among many others are investing millions of dollars to understand how our social media activity translates into influence. The market for influence is only heating up with more entrants expected to debut and acquisitions or mergers likely on the horizon. Within the last 90 days alone, Klout took in a Series C of $30 million from Kleiner Perkins at a whopping valuation of $200 million. PeerIndex also recently announced an investment of $3 million.

Whether we agree with them in principle or not, the topic of digital influence is only becoming more influential. Almost anyone with a social media profile is already indexed in at least one of the many vendors on the scene today. Consumers are trying to figure out what it means. Brands are realizing the promise of connecting to connected consumers. Advertising and PR agencies are spending budget against it. So what is influence and what does it really mean?

Right now, there are more questions and theories than answers. Like some relationships in Facebook, it’s complicated. But, I can tell you what it is not. Influence is not popularity and popularity is not influence. It’s so much more than that.

Since 2009, I’ve studied the influence landscape. After a few years and a few dozen articles on the subject, I concentrated my focus on developing a comprehensive report to take a deep dive into all things influence. One year later, I’m proud to publish my first report as part of the Altimeter Group, “The Rise of Digital Influence.

Early on in the development of the report, I learned that the definition of influence was elusive or in some cases, down right incorrect. At the same time, vendors claim to track influence when in fact, they track elements of online social capital based on proprietary algorithms of how people engage and connect in various social networks. While this isn’t influence per se, brands and those familiar with “influence” services now associate the idea of direct influence with scores, which is part of the problem. So, I set out to explore the landscape to help make sense of it. It’s not a scorecard of vendors. It’s not a rally against vendor positioning. It’s a call for clarity.

It’s important to note that the report is actually a constructive “how to” guide for businesses to learn how to use tools such as Klout and PeerIndex to build productive relationships with connected individuals.

The Rise of Digital Influence examines why “what” services track is useful and how to make it useful to your business as it relates to specific business objectives. The report shows how to use each tool to build an effective “influence” strategy…step by step.

The Score is not an Indicator of Influence

I think few would disagree that influence as a score is imprecise. But it is in this assertion that the responsibility of translating numbers into insights falls on those who expect to glean value from these services. Everything starts with the realization that none of the vendors out there actually measure influence. Instead, they measure a slice social capital, which is defined here as the online networks of relationships among people in a particular society, enabling that society to function effectively.

After spending a significant amount of time with brand managers, advertising and communications professionals, and also connected consumers, it was clear that the “score” became the emphasis. Brands sought out people with higher scores. Users pursued ways to increase their scores. Services built programs that rewarded those with higher scores. But very little went into gaining better understanding of what the number actually meant for brands and consumers alike.

Though very public experimentation however, brands are learning in real-time that scores do not matter as much as the context of relationships. Consumers are learning that gaming scores or being part of branded marketing activity without purpose may actually affect their status within their online communities.

I believe that many look at the idea of influence backwards, unknowingly relying on scores rather than understanding how influence is actually created and used.

Without context or defining purpose or value upfront, experimentation is already leading businesses down the wrong path of wasted time, resources, and squandered opportunities to build important relationships. And for users, they’re left without a strong grasp of how these scores affect them online and offline.

An important question for businesses to consider is what does a score actually represent? What does a “74” mean to your business goals and objectives? And, how do you apply it toward effective strategies and supporting metrics? It turns out that a “74” means very little when viewed simply as a score. But that’s just common sense. However, each service provides a deeper view of individuals, why they’re scored in a particular way and most importantly the elements that contribute to contextualized social capital (focus, authority, the nature of relevant relationships, etc.) and how their online activity potentially reaches and affects others. Services such as Traackr and mBlast excel here.

Here, value is in the eye of the beholder. The value is a result of research and how data is interpreted and applied against business objectives. So, in that sense, tools that measure online activity can provide value if you know what you’re trying to accomplish first and how you will measure success and then apply that filter to your examination.

Defining Influence – Measuring Outcomes

Once businesses take the time to learn about digital influence, its benefits, and how to connect with influential consumers, brands can harness social networks to proactively drive positive sentiment, engagement, and results. It’s important to take this time to gain a better grasp of digital influence to develop a meaningful strategy and defining desired outcomes. See, digital influence is defined as the ability to cause effect, change behavior, and drive measurable outcomes online. So a score of “74” doesn’t correlate directly to outcomes. But, through design, brands can identify the right people, develop meaningful engagement strategies, design online experiences that can lead to desirable results.

When defining a strategy, a good place to start is by going back to basics. Some of the most often asked questions that deserve your consideration upfront are:

· What is influence, and what makes someone influential?
· Who is influential in social networks and why?
· How can I recognize influence or the capacity to influence?
· What effect does digital word of mouth have on my business?
· How can I measure successful engagement with influential consumers?

To help you find the answers and more importantly, to get the greatest value out of influence vendors, I include a detailed Influence Action Plan to develop thoughtful, results-oriented strategies and programs. The Action Plan is designed to walk you through the steps necessary to assess where you are, where you need to be, who can help you get there, why, and what’s in it for them and those who follow them.

Your next steps are then to turn your Influence Action Plan into a working strategy. Here’s what to do next:

1. Define the parameters of the program and what success looks like
2. Assesss vendors based on your goals and identify influencers that will help you achieve desired results
3. Design a program that provides value to not only influencers, but also those connected to them
4. Measure performance and optimize strategies and experiences from program to program
5. Repeat

By studying the people who matter to your business, and the people who matter to your customers, your business strategies will benefit from a new level of customer awareness and sensitivity that speaks volumes in new media. Suddenly the score isn’t as important as the elements that earns someone stature within their community. Understanding this will contribute to a more informed, effective and valued engagement program. And at the end of the day, while “influence” vendors help identify ideal connected consumers, it is up to those who run influence marketing programs to define the “R” or return in ROI to track the true measure of influence, outcomes.

Download the report…

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

29 March
0Comments

Your $50 iPhone Navigation App is Almost Obsolete

scout-cap-1

HTML5 might be the future of web apps, but the new mobile standard hasn’t gotten much play in the car. TeleNav’s Scout division aims to change that with a new navigation system that offers voice prompted, turn-by-turn directions through your mobile browser. And even better, it’s free.

Scout is launching the new service today and allows developers an easy way of incorporating navigation functionality directly into existing web pages. With a single line of code, a site can provide a clickable link that automatically launches the HTML5-based mapping system, just like you would get in a full-featured standalone navigation app.

TeleNav’s goal is to nix the static map you would normally get when clicking on an address, initially partnering with Avantar’s Yellow Pages app for search, and has deals in place with AroundMe to provide local point of interest searches, Life360 for family member tracking and WedVite to give wedding attendees a one-click solution for navigating to the big day’s festivities. Additionally, you can share your destination through email, SMS, Facebook and Twitter, making impromptu meet-ups that much easier.

We had the chance to sample an early version of the app through Scout.me, doing both a POI search for Thai food and followed by navigating to a home address. The setup works as advertised, but TeleNav reps are quick to point out that Scout.me is best used for short jaunts around town rather than long road trips.

Updates and rerouting take a bit longer than a native app, and voice prompts – while useful and generally well timely – override your phone’s audio, eliminating music playback when streaming over Bluetooth. We tested the web app on both an iPhone running iOS 5.1 and an Android device, and while TeleNav recommends using the service with an iPhone, it worked suitably well on our Android tester, but was slower to display instructions and had issues with voice prompts. TeleNav says an Android-optimized version is in the works. For longer trips, the free Scout app for iOS delivers a better experience, but doesn’t provide voice guidance, something TeleNav plans to include in a new premium version of the app.

Developers can use the service free of charge thanks to TeleNav’s mobile advertising scheme or can license the software for an ad-free experience. The rest of us can take the new navigation system a spin through Scout.me’s site.

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

Valve Interactive
An online marketing and design agency in Portland Oregon