Imaginación y Creatividad aplicada a los nuevos Negocios 2.0
Creador de Acroworld 2.0, Empresa dedicada al tema Gestion Documental orientada al Escenario 2.0, Consultor Technical Adobe Systems / Acrobat & PDF. Consultor para Macromedia, Apple . Premiado a nivel Nacional e Internacional. Premio al "Mejor Consultor de Latinoamerica" Adobe Systems . Mejor Speaker Argentino . 4to puesto en el Ranking Mundial al "Mejor Orador Hispano Parlante" . Mejor Consultor Senior de la Region. En La actualidad estoy muy Enfocado en Generar Canales de Contenidos entre Grandes Empresas, Proveedores y Clientes Finales.
Face facts: social media isn’t new anymore. Actually, it hasn’t been new for a long time.
We’ve been socializing on the web for well over a decade – long before Twitter, Facebook and the glorification of monolithic walled gardens, which are nothing more than modern versions of AOL and prodigy with bells and whistles.
If you think the social web is new, you’re already far late to the party. And if you are late, the worst thing you can do for your brand or yourself is to flat out ignore or brush off a form of communication that an entire generation already sees as “invisible.”
As technology becomes ubiquitous it also becomes invisible… The more networking succeeds, the less we’ll be aware of it.
This has already occurred. The social web is invisible to my generation. It’s invisible because we aren’t talking about how groundbreaking it is or how it is somehow disruptive, to us it always existed. It’s as normal as the telephone is to the previous generation. We simply don’t know a world without it. We use it, but we don’t really talk about it (except us metablogging geeks, but we don’t count – I am talking about regular people).
The web is not fascinating to an entire generation because we grew up in a world where it was native. In fact, it’s uncomfortable for us to read how the older generation thinks this is new because it just shows that they were oblivious to shifts in communication happening around them. For me, growing up and witnessing most of mainstream society ignore the web is actually somewhat depressing, as it is evidence that people are afraid of change and embracing what is new/different until they have no choice.
If you are a brand or a marketer and don’t “get it” by now, the worst thing you can do for your reputation is publicly state that you’re new or consider social media new. There really isn’t an excuse for having ignored trends this long and it just shows you aren’t paying attention. If you want to forever reinforce the way things are done today, being a communications professional is not for you. Tomorrow is always different.
Going along with that, at this point I don’t think brands need social media experts, they need good marketers. By now, marketers worth their salt understand all media, and if they are really good, they also have their finger on the pulse of where this is all headed.
The best thing you can do if you find yourself on the wrong side of the business digital divide right now is quietly learn or get consulting to become educated on how to modernize your marketing and brand. It’s nearly 2010 – you’re going to look passé to all stakeholders if you don’t approach in a strategic and smart fashion.
Fluency in the web is not something to be put in a silo separated from the rest of your business like many have been doing. It is a standard requirement that your entire team comprehends it – at least if you want to not just survive, but thrive in a connected society.
What I’m hoping to see in 2010:
Do you agree social media isn’t new? What do you want to see going forward?
Via.thefuturebuzz.com
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