I. Online communities are merging networking, information organizing, and sharing functions, allowing for social discovery of content through peer recommendations.
II. Peer recommendations through online sharing provide a new opportunity for content promotion and distribution, replacing verbal recommendations. Publishers should leverage these endorsements rather than see online sharing solely as a threat.
III. To benefit, publishers need new business models like flexible packaging and credit systems, sharing rights priced appropriately, and support for community platforms to convert peer recommendations into traffic and sales. Clear access rights and payment options are also important.
With advent of the internet and global connectivity, the way business is done is changing, the way we utilize the people and their potential is changing, the way we interact with people is changing. Nobody is a stranger now and we are connected to one another with the network of networks.
Virtual Communities are interaction platforms for the new age millennials and beyond. The presentation explores different dimensions of establishing and fostering such Communities and the way their potential can be harnessed for the process of co-Creation.
Social Change: Social Media's role in BusinessMichael Murray
This is a presentation on using change management best practices to encourage social media adoption within organizations. It begins with a "Social Media 101" section, then explains Enterprise 2.0 as the 'other' social media. The presentation then presents change management as a vehicle for encouraging social media adoption. Finally a case study and basic social media strategies provide readers with some tangible suggestions for how to get started.
Beyond broadcast and consume: modification of provider-user information behav...Hazel Hall
Hazel Hall's invited keynote paper presented at ISSOME 2011: Information Science and Social Media International Conference, Turku, Finland, 24-26 August 2011.
With advent of the internet and global connectivity, the way business is done is changing, the way we utilize the people and their potential is changing, the way we interact with people is changing. Nobody is a stranger now and we are connected to one another with the network of networks.
Virtual Communities are interaction platforms for the new age millennials and beyond. The presentation explores different dimensions of establishing and fostering such Communities and the way their potential can be harnessed for the process of co-Creation.
Social Change: Social Media's role in BusinessMichael Murray
This is a presentation on using change management best practices to encourage social media adoption within organizations. It begins with a "Social Media 101" section, then explains Enterprise 2.0 as the 'other' social media. The presentation then presents change management as a vehicle for encouraging social media adoption. Finally a case study and basic social media strategies provide readers with some tangible suggestions for how to get started.
Beyond broadcast and consume: modification of provider-user information behav...Hazel Hall
Hazel Hall's invited keynote paper presented at ISSOME 2011: Information Science and Social Media International Conference, Turku, Finland, 24-26 August 2011.
Presentation from BISG's "What College Students Think: Making Information Pay for Higher Ed Publishing" Conference, held Feb 9, 2011 in NYC.
TITLE: Customized Content Platforms for the New Learning Ecosystem
DESCRIPTION: During this presentation, a late substitution for Clancy Marshall’s session, Dean Florez will focus on how students can participate in their own learning ecosystem through disruptive technologies on customized Web 2.0 platforms. Dean will discuss the need for student-centric learning models built on shared knowledge and assessment tools delivered by instructors through “MeshBook,” a new initiative currently funded by The 20 Million Minds Foundation (20MM). He will further discuss the need for merging of both commercial and open resource material, future university content farms, non-proprietary shared “mesh” networks, crowd-sourced curriculum evaluation and an enhanced royalty system that values customization and individualized instruction. Dean is a Harvard MBA and past California Senate Majority Leader.
Social Media, Marketing & Public LibrariesDarren Sharp
This keynote presentation by Darren Sharp, senior consultant at Collabforge (www.colabforge.com) was delivered to the Digital Marketing Seminar on social media for public libraries. Hosted by LibMark in Melbourne on 23rd October 2009.
A presentation introducing various social media tools and their application in a university research environment. This presentation was given at York University, Toronto, Canada
Presentation from BISG's "What College Students Think: Making Information Pay for Higher Ed Publishing" Conference, held Feb 9, 2011 in NYC.
TITLE: Customized Content Platforms for the New Learning Ecosystem
DESCRIPTION: During this presentation, a late substitution for Clancy Marshall’s session, Dean Florez will focus on how students can participate in their own learning ecosystem through disruptive technologies on customized Web 2.0 platforms. Dean will discuss the need for student-centric learning models built on shared knowledge and assessment tools delivered by instructors through “MeshBook,” a new initiative currently funded by The 20 Million Minds Foundation (20MM). He will further discuss the need for merging of both commercial and open resource material, future university content farms, non-proprietary shared “mesh” networks, crowd-sourced curriculum evaluation and an enhanced royalty system that values customization and individualized instruction. Dean is a Harvard MBA and past California Senate Majority Leader.
Social Media, Marketing & Public LibrariesDarren Sharp
This keynote presentation by Darren Sharp, senior consultant at Collabforge (www.colabforge.com) was delivered to the Digital Marketing Seminar on social media for public libraries. Hosted by LibMark in Melbourne on 23rd October 2009.
A presentation introducing various social media tools and their application in a university research environment. This presentation was given at York University, Toronto, Canada
282 sharon mombru ssp meeting new business models online communities 2905
1. New Content & Business Models in the New Publishing World Order
Online communities: a world of opportunity
How new forms of discovery through online sharing
can lead to wider content distribution and increase revenues
Sharon Mombrú, BlueInsights
SSP Annual Meeting, Boston, May 29 2008 1
2. BlueInsights
Background
• New ventures and e‐strategy consulting practice
• Background in scientific publishing ‐ strategy, product development, sales
& marketing
• Building an online platform for professional communities to store, share
and discover information
Vision
• Empower users to more easily discern and prioritise relevant information
through their self‐selected and trusted network
Aims for this meeting
• Create awareness of the role of online communities in scholarly
communication
• Form partnerships with organisations whose goal is to foster knowledge
exchange among niche scholarly communities
2
3. Agenda
Main topic
• How online communities offer new business opportunities
to publishers
Agenda
I. Trends in online communities and online information
sharing
II. New forms of promotion through peer recommendations
III. Potential business opportunities
3
BlueInsights
4. Online communities: merging of main functions
Networking
Online contact listings
Basic communication tool
People
LinkedIn
Facebook
Connotea Limewire
Information
2Collab YouTube
Information Organising Information Sharing
Gathering and reviewing of web File sharing with large audiences
pages for large audiences
4
5. Network ‐ LinkedIn
• Building connections between people
• Basic communication via connections
• LinkedIn Answers: tapping into people’s expertise
5
7. Information organising: Connotea
• Bookmarking and reference management for
researchers, clinicians and scientists
• Sharing references with all members or self‐created
groups
7
8. Online communities: merging of main functions
Networking
Online contact listings
Basic communication tool Social Discovery
Organising, reviewing
and sharing of all types
of information among
self‐selected groups
Twine, Plum, Jive,
BlueInsights
Information Organising Information Sharing
Gathering and reviewing of web File sharing with large audiences
pages for large audiences
8
9. Social Discovery: BlueInsights (prototype demo)
• Store and selectively share all types of content
• Build network in order to share
• More relevant filtering and distribution of
information via users’ peer network, offering better
discovery
9
10. Impact of merging networking, organising and sharing
functions
• Social networks as content discovery platforms
• Discovery driven by recommendations of peers
– 25% of users find out about movies and TV shows via peer
recommendation within the network
– 20% purchased music based on peer recommendation and
have searched a social network to find new music to
purchase
Source: Entertainment Media Research, UK, January 2008
10
11. Agenda
I. Trends in online communities and online information
sharing
II. New forms of promotion through peer recommendations
III. Potential business opportunities
11
12. The opportunity of online sharing: promotion through
peer recommendations
• Content owners regard online communities as a threat
because of the ease of sharing
• Online sharing is a form of peer recommendation, replacing
verbal or Email recommendation
• Content owners shouldn’t overlook the opportunity to
leverage these endorsements as another form of promotion
and distribution
• New business models are essential in this new environment
12
BlueInsights
13. Online sharing: the best recommendation you can get
Benefits to publishers
• Greater visibility of publishers’ content and brand
• Potential to drive traffic to publishers’ sites
• Alternative source of subscription revenues
Publishers’ options
• Allow network effects to develop gradually
• Participate in forming groups and lead the communication
process on social platforms
BlueInsights 13
14. Agenda
I. Trends in online communities and online information
sharing
II. New forms of promotion through peer recommendations
III. Potential business opportunities
14
15. Business opportunities for scholarly publishers
Today’s business models tend to be journal‐based. Search and
peer recommendation are article‐based and therefore require
new models.
More flexibility
• Allow for packages across journals and preferably publishers
(individual items selected by user or recommended by peers)
• Introduce a credits system (e.g. iTunes, iStockphoto)
• Offer sharing rights at different price points (e.g. as managed
by CCC)
BlueInsights 15
16. Prerequisites to survive in this new environment
• Ensure access rights are clear to end‐users as well as to the
community platforms: embed in the article file or store in a
centrally‐accessible location
• Ensure the peers’ recommendations are converted into traffic:
enable seamless linking from the shared article to the
appropriate copy on the publisher’s site
• Introduce standardised one‐click payment methods (e.g.
PayPal)
• Actively work with and support community platforms
BlueInsights 16
17. Summary and conclusion
• Sharing of information is becoming increasingly popular in
online communities
• Sharing is the ultimate form of recommendation
• Publishers can harness this form of free promotion to their
benefit
• Publishers should prepare their content and platforms for this
trend and work with community‐based platforms
BlueInsights 17