
Web 2.0 is all about connectivity. The content pyramid has been turned
upside down. It used to be there were a few powerful “information
dictators” that controlled the channels through which we received our
information.
The scarcity was in the barriers to entry to mass
communication. Millions and billions of dollars to buy air time over
television, radio and print-media.
Those barriers are gone.
Anyone with a computer, within a few minutes (literally) set up a web
page and have the potential to reach millions of people all over the
world.
So, turning things around and putting content creation in
the hands of consumers creates another problem. There is TOO MUCH OF IT!
A need to filter all this stuff then arises.
It
turns out that web 2.0 technologies and communities are very good in
filtering the wheat from the chaff through a few core technologies.
Services
such as technorati subscribe to a millions of blog posts and make note
of what tags are being used, and use these to categorize posts, and
often display what is known as a “tag cloud” (one taken from
technorati.com shown below) to show what’s hot and what’s not.

The
way it works is that the bigger the size of the font of the tags, the
more popular it is. This blog post is being written a few weeks before
Christmas, so it’s no surprise to find that “christmas” and “shopping”
are two big ones!
The ability to easily see the real-time trends of the “herd” is priceless from a marketer’s perspective.
Your
role is to gather the herd. To find out what they want. To give it to
them. Well.. now my friend it’s served up on a silver platter.
Here’s a tag cloud from another service called del.icio.us:
In this case it shows what tags people are using when they bookmark sites using the del.icio.us social bookmarking service.
This
is a marketer’s goldmine. Where in the offline world can you get such
up-to-date real-time trends of what people are interested in. You
can’t! This is exciting stuff guys and gals!
Take for example the website digg.com:
The
top 3 news stories are there because they had the most popular votes.
Anyone can submit a link to a news story, but only the top voted stores
make it to the home page.
This is a brave new world!
What does this mean for you:
A few things:
You
should be making a regular stop by social bookmarking and tagging sites
to get a “pulse” for the marketplace. Particularly if you are looking
for new niches to get into.
Also, you should consider replicating a democratic news site in your niche.
Many
of the sites that I’ve shown you are probably heavily slanted towards
the technology or early adopter market. But mark my words, they are
becoming more and more mainstream everyday. Three years ago no-one had
heard of a “podcast” - now virtually everyone has.
There are
“white label” software scripts that you can get or you can simply hire
a programmer to build your own digg.com clones for your niche.
Remember, what works for the general market often works in a niche, even more successfully.
You won’t be the next digg.com, or youtube.com but you could be troutfishnews.com or troutfishtube.com and own that market.
Now go forth and conquer.
– Euge
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Technorati Tags: web2.0, market-research, youtube, digg, social bookmarking, marketing


Hi,
I hate welcome posts… they are all cheesy… meant to build anticipation and excitement to the possibilities of what will unfold. But here goes
There’s a big wind of change that is occurring as a type this post -
- that change is called web2.0
Yes - it’s a buzzword.
Yes - it’s hype.
Yes - in reality all that’s been talked about could be done about 5 years ago.
But…
Yes - it WILL change the internet, and more importantly - It will change the face of online (and offline) marketing forever (well - until someone works out what web3.0 is!)
So, I’ll try to give you a dummies guide to what web 2.0 without stealing from the a wikipedia entry and ripping off what everyone else has said.
In short: web 1.0 was about taking businesses and business models that were possible offline, and simply moving them to the Internet.
web 2.0, conversely, is about creating websites and businesses, and new business models that can ONLY exist, or are unique to the Internet.
Very rough definition - so I’ll try to throw some more buzzwords in to give it some more structure:
Some of the key features of web 2.0 are as follows:
There’s a lot more to web 2.0 - and if you really must go ahead and read the wikipedia article. But for my vote, these are the most fundamental shifts, and if you ignore web 2.0 then you’re going to pay for it in spades?
Why? Because web 2.0 impacts fundamentally the fabric of business which is:
It’s no coincidence that youtube has been around for less than 18 months but has become ubiquitous - everyone has heard of it - and just sold out to google for $1.38 Billion (yes - read the “B”). And the same with myspace - even more so. If you’ve ever used myspace it is a usability nightmare! But it’s the highest traficked site on the Internet, and did it within 18 months!
Do you want to be king in niche? Do you want to be a household name in your business area? Then you need to harness these principals in your business and marketing.
And that’s what this blog is about.
Helping you to kick butt and gain the unfair advantage by applying web2.0 strategies to your online businesses.
Watch this space!!!
– euge
