Posts Tagged ‘Podcast’

Chris Anderson – Free: The Future of a Radical Price

Friday, February 19th, 2010

Though I have not taken the time to read his first book, The Long Tail, I have more than the highest form of respect for Chris Anderson as a writer and journalist. I think it is because I am such a nerd when it comes to looking at the small stuff, and notice that it has huge potential. See my fascination of Freakonomics – here, and NETFLIX – here.

With his new book, released the Autumn of 2009, Chris Anderson takes a look at FREE, as a philosophy, the history of it, and how it has come to be a new form of how one can make money. He even goes as far as to give good example of how YOU as a business owner can make money buy sell your product for nothing.

I know that my views are not shared by many, but here’s my view of the whole “Give it to me for free, and I might pay you for it” scenario.

The minute after I had finished listening to the book, I decided to buy it. Thus, Chris Anderson will get what he deserves for writing the book, even though that was not his intention. For him, you can download the book from iTunes, and never ever give him another dime. He believes that if the book is good, people can hire him to come to there country and talk about it – and for that, he’ll charge. I agree!

The same might be the way that the music industry should look upon themselves. The artist gives away it’s music for anyone to listen to it, and if people like it, the artist might be able to come to their country and/or city to play. Chris Anderson shares this view – which is nice to hear. The generation of young people today are more and more interested in seeing the artist, then just to listen to it – seeing is believing. What could be one of the reasons why the industry does not like this way, is that most contracts in the industry gives the record company money for the number of records sold, and the number of times the song is played on the radio. The artist makes it’s money when “creating the music” – kind of like a worker at the mill. As long as s/he grinds the corn it gets paid. But it will not get money when the company sells the flower at the store – unless the worker is entitled to a bonus, but that’s different.So when the artist plays his/her songs live – it gets paid from the number of tickets sold. The record labels get close to none.

I will not go any further into how the music industry should change their point of view, but I have a plan.

If you want to hear it, you can reach me via my e-mail, but it’s going to cost you to hear it.

Download Chris Anderson’s book as a podcast here – from iTunes.

Marketing 2.0, but not Company 2.0

Friday, October 16th, 2009

companycomputer

Interesting thoughts came up while listening to the Podcast Brand Fast-trackers with Peter Hirshberg, Co-Founder and Chairman of The Conversation Group.

Or, maybe not as much thoughts as a “my creator, he might be on to something here” experience.

They conversation concerned that companies must work hard to keep their brand updated to the ever changing market. Though this is a not new finding, what struck a chord with me was when Peter Hirshberg said that too many companies are now updating to Web 2.0 and will soon understand that they need to use Marketing 2.0 (applying social media in their marketing) as well. However, what a company must do while doing all this, is to update their company to COMPANY 2.0.

I never heard anyone talk about it, and that might be the reason for why I became so excited. It is easy to say that one should update to web 2.0 and marketing 2.0, because that only means to exchange one part of the company structure or plan, for another. The old marketing plan can be changed of the course of a month or maybe a long weekend at some hip resort.

But, can your company take all this? Does your customer get all this, or will they be lost because too much of what they once knew about your company are now lost due to all of this.

Think of your company as a computer that you bought in the year 2000. Think about the design, the size of the hard drive, the processor, the CD-ROM and all other features.

Now think of the same computer today. To make it work, you have probably updated the hard drive to get more size since files are bigger, and you need more data. You have bought more RAM to operate the huge programs you are running everyday. This means that you have probably update the programs, and the operating system.
The only thing that is still what it was is the shell that surrounds all this.

You might work or started your own company a few years ago, and up until now you have done these changes that one have to do. When the market grew, so did you – more people being hired, and you had to get educated on how things that you ones knew by heart, work in today are setting. The company has a website, if you are a hip company you might have a Facebook group or a blog that is used to communicate to your customers. And right about now, it is time to operate the marketing plan as well.

The problem is, that no one of your customers sees this, or the market. They just see the same company that ha been there for many years. Same CEO, same theme, same logo. The attributes that forms the structure of the company are still the same, and people might find that as negative.

IBM found themselves in a situation were their company was not needed anymore. They had changed everything INSIDE the company, but to really make that leap that they needed, they had to change the outside, the shell as well.

It is easy for a author, researcher or mr/mrs Know-it-All to use expressions as “2.0″. But what about the ones who are supposed to do all this, the companies? It is time that some one stopped talking about “all the cool” things, and focused on what this means for the market.

For more on this subject, read these posts from other blogs, Carl Rosenberg & Passionate.

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