The document discusses two primary elements of Internet commerce: attention and network. Attention involves drawing an audience and having a limited window to engage them. Network economics involves a service or product becoming more valuable as more people participate in the network. Both attention and network are needed, as attention alone cannot sustain a business long-term, and a network cannot efficiently grow without attention to bring in new users.
Thomas Tudehope discusses the importance of social media for businesses. He notes that if businesses are not active on social media, their competitors likely are. He outlines some key trends in social media usage in Australia, including the popularity of Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest. Tudehope also discusses potential risks of social media for businesses if not properly managed, such as rushing online without a plan or failing to engage audiences. He provides tips on how businesses can effectively use social media to connect with customers, manage crises, and handle criticism.
The intention of this presentation is to summarize our team’s findings after initial research in the Social Media Marketing space. We relied heavily on sources including: eMarketer, Altimeter Group, Forrester, and Marketing Sherpa. At the rate the space is moving, this presentation should be considered old news as of noon today. Also, I apologize in advance for my mediocre PPT artwork skills.
This document discusses the benefits of social media marketing for businesses. It notes that social media allows businesses to directly engage with customers and prospects. It has also caused a shift in power by democratizing publishing and content creation. The document provides tips on taking a social media inventory to understand where a business's target audience spends time online in order to effectively engage them through social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. It emphasizes the importance of identifying which social media sites are most used by a business's target demographic.
How the web changes the organisation of business and the business of organisa...david cushman
Final version of the slides I presented in a keynote for Webciety at CeBIT in Hannover, Germany on March 8, 2012.
You can see the video of me presenting it here: http://webciety.c.nmdn.net/playlist/list.php#entryId=0_yxkxvl4w or go to my blog FasterFuture.blogspot.com and search for CeBIT
The document discusses how social networking tools like Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter can be leveraged by businesses to engage customers, enhance brands, and improve products and services. It provides an overview of various social media platforms and how companies can create a presence, interact with customers, and measure the results of their social networking activities. The presentation encourages businesses to embrace social media as part of their marketing strategy in order to stay relevant in today's digital landscape.
This document is a thesis that analyzes different types of video content published by 10 businesses on Facebook to determine which content is most effective at engaging consumers. The thesis conducted a content analysis of 50 videos (5 videos from each business) to classify the video types and measure consumer interactions like views, likes, shares and comments. The results found that traditional video ads were most effective at generating views but topical video content, which featured non-promotional topics, received the most shares on average, indicating it had the highest level of secondary engagement. The thesis provides context on the shift to online video consumption and evaluates previous research on video and social media marketing.
Sales in the new enterprise
(10 reasons sales people need to care about social media)
Many sales people will totally ignore social media – except keeping connections in their social networks. For some it is a
frightening development, for others it is the greatest opportunity for more success.
Instead of hoping someone needs what you are selling, why not take a proactive approach and be the expert and create some ways your customer can be more profitable and productive powered by ideas you share with them and powered by your products and services...sounds more interesting that way.
Thomas Tudehope discusses the importance of social media for businesses. He notes that if businesses are not active on social media, their competitors likely are. He outlines some key trends in social media usage in Australia, including the popularity of Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest. Tudehope also discusses potential risks of social media for businesses if not properly managed, such as rushing online without a plan or failing to engage audiences. He provides tips on how businesses can effectively use social media to connect with customers, manage crises, and handle criticism.
The intention of this presentation is to summarize our team’s findings after initial research in the Social Media Marketing space. We relied heavily on sources including: eMarketer, Altimeter Group, Forrester, and Marketing Sherpa. At the rate the space is moving, this presentation should be considered old news as of noon today. Also, I apologize in advance for my mediocre PPT artwork skills.
This document discusses the benefits of social media marketing for businesses. It notes that social media allows businesses to directly engage with customers and prospects. It has also caused a shift in power by democratizing publishing and content creation. The document provides tips on taking a social media inventory to understand where a business's target audience spends time online in order to effectively engage them through social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. It emphasizes the importance of identifying which social media sites are most used by a business's target demographic.
How the web changes the organisation of business and the business of organisa...david cushman
Final version of the slides I presented in a keynote for Webciety at CeBIT in Hannover, Germany on March 8, 2012.
You can see the video of me presenting it here: http://webciety.c.nmdn.net/playlist/list.php#entryId=0_yxkxvl4w or go to my blog FasterFuture.blogspot.com and search for CeBIT
The document discusses how social networking tools like Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter can be leveraged by businesses to engage customers, enhance brands, and improve products and services. It provides an overview of various social media platforms and how companies can create a presence, interact with customers, and measure the results of their social networking activities. The presentation encourages businesses to embrace social media as part of their marketing strategy in order to stay relevant in today's digital landscape.
This document is a thesis that analyzes different types of video content published by 10 businesses on Facebook to determine which content is most effective at engaging consumers. The thesis conducted a content analysis of 50 videos (5 videos from each business) to classify the video types and measure consumer interactions like views, likes, shares and comments. The results found that traditional video ads were most effective at generating views but topical video content, which featured non-promotional topics, received the most shares on average, indicating it had the highest level of secondary engagement. The thesis provides context on the shift to online video consumption and evaluates previous research on video and social media marketing.
Sales in the new enterprise
(10 reasons sales people need to care about social media)
Many sales people will totally ignore social media – except keeping connections in their social networks. For some it is a
frightening development, for others it is the greatest opportunity for more success.
Instead of hoping someone needs what you are selling, why not take a proactive approach and be the expert and create some ways your customer can be more profitable and productive powered by ideas you share with them and powered by your products and services...sounds more interesting that way.
Social Media Marketing: Principles and EconomicsEthan Bauley
This document discusses principles of social media marketing. It begins by defining key terms like industrial media, which is expensive and owned by few, versus social media, which is relatively cheap and ownership is distributed. It then covers topics like how networked people can outperform firms, the importance of listening tools, reaching out to bloggers, and integrating social media into marketing plans. It provides examples of how social media was used to help Cisco's public relations efforts.
Digital marketing involves using electronic devices and the internet to promote products and services. It uses technologies like websites, email, apps, and social media. Some benefits of digital marketing include lower costs, the ability to easily measure results in real time, and greater brand exposure and engagement with customers. Creating digital assets and content requires considering visual identity, navigation, layout, and credibility. Marketers also use digital channels like email, blogs, and social media to engage with customers and build relationships.
The document discusses various key performance indicators (KPIs) for digital marketing. It provides examples of common KPIs used to evaluate success across different marketing channels, including lead generation metrics like cost-per-lead and conversion rate, website traffic metrics, and social media tracking. The document also discusses how to measure each KPI and ways to improve performance.
Slides of the lecture "Web-based business models" taught by Eduardo Larrain at HEC, a French business school (Strategic Management Master) during 4 classes in February 2013
2014 class with updated slides is here : http://fr.slideshare.net/EduardoLarrain/201402-web-based-business-models-lecture
1. What’s the web?
2. What’s a business model?
3. Why study Internet-based business models?
4. What are the key elements of a business model?
• Value proposition and revenue streams
• Drill-down of key Entertainment markets: music, video games, book publishing
• Customer channels, customer relationships, key partners, activities, resources, cost structure
5. What are the business models of Internet heavyweights: Facebook, Google, Zynga, Linkedin, Groupon
6. What are the most promising business models among the world’s most valuable companies: Digital 100, Twitter
7. Conclusion and farewell
8. Appendix: group project and individual test
This document discusses how digital technologies are changing the future of work and the skills needed to succeed. It explores emerging jobs, the importance of developing digital literacies and maintaining an active digital profile. Examples are given of new roles involving coaching, caring and connecting that combine human input with technology. The document emphasizes that developing a customized digital footprint through blogging and social media can boost one's reputation, skills and career opportunities in the long run.
IBM presentation at Digital Media Barcelona- Twitter For Business Microbloggi...the bureau, digital agency
IBM presentation: Twitter for business - Microblogging goes to work by Delphine Remy-Boutant, WW Social Media Marketing Manager IBM SWG - Digital Media Barcelona event 16th September
The document summarizes IBM's use of social media for marketing purposes. It discusses IBM's goals in using social media to gain insights, increase conversations about IBM, build advocacy, and empower social media strategies worldwide. It provides examples of how IBM listens to customers, integrates social conversations on its website, creates and aggregates social content, and makes IBM experts visible online. It also outlines a maturity model for applying the "4Ps" (People, Processes, Platforms, Policies) across IBM to enable social engagement at tactical, adoptive and transformative levels.
This document discusses social media and its applications for business. It provides an overview of social media, explaining that it allows people to develop communities, share content, engage in conversations, and connect with others. It then outlines why businesses should use social media, including listening to customers, engaging with customers at low cost, and building relationships, communities, and trust. The document also discusses how to run a successful social media campaign, measure results, and provides examples of campaigns from companies like Dell, Zappos, BlendTec, and others.
This presentation was delivered at the 2009 Wisconsin Bankers Association's Tech Conference in Madison, WI. This show talked about how the impact of social media and web 2.0 tools are changing the way we build relationships with customers.
The document discusses social media and its importance for businesses. It defines what social media is and is not, how businesses can use it strategically, and provides examples of companies that have seen success through social media. The key messages are that social media is about creating conversations rather than pushing messages, is relevant for all businesses, and can help with marketing, sales, and other business functions when used as part of an overall strategy.
Addressing Top CEO Priorities through Social Media Marketing and MetricsJacques Pavlenyi
Presented at the August 21 2012 Business Marketing Association's Southern California Chapter meeting. The world is changing - becoming more social, even in traditionally conservative B2B. B2B marketing is maturing, with social leading to more measurable successes. But taking b2b social media marketing to the next level is easier than you might think. This presentation hopes to help you:
-- Understand how to better align social media marketing with key strategic initiatives
-- Learn how to focus on the social metrics that matter
-- See applicable examples of real b2b social media marketing benefits
These views are my own and do not represent those of my employer.
The document provides lessons learned for achieving digital success based on testing over 1,000 digital campaigns. It outlines key lessons which include: engaging consumers by being relevant and bold; focusing on visual branding; exploiting the dynamic nature of the medium through storytelling and video; keeping messaging simple; making calls to action obvious; leveraging synergy across channels; and understanding that low reach digital ads can still be effective. The lessons are derived from Ipsos' proprietary digital research and aim to provide marketers with relevant measures of digital campaign performance.
"Online Marketing in the Energy Industry" provides energy marketing execs a business case for online marketing and a roadmap for planning and execution of online marketing campaigns. The presentation also discusses how the energy industry can use social media as a marketing platform to build their brand and engage customers.
Emerging Social Business Strategies in 2010 | Social Business Summit 2010Dion Hinchcliffe
This document discusses emerging social business strategies in 2010. It examines strategies like enterprise 2.0, online communities, open supply chains, open business models, and crowdsourcing. It notes that these strategies leverage network effects, peer production, and open collaboration. While these strategies provide benefits like innovation, cost reductions, and competitive advantages, they also face challenges adopting a new cultural mindset and relinquishing some control. Overall, the document advocates that businesses reimagine themselves using a "social lens" to harness collective intelligence through new online models.
Introduction to social media from B2B perspective. Delivered at a customer workshop for a global B2B client.
External utilization part done and presented by Marko Sykkö from Promener / Tehostamo Consulting.
This document summarizes a presentation on developing a digital marketing strategy. It discusses recognizing the impact of the digital revolution, getting strategic with digital efforts, integrating various media for marketing, monitoring and evaluating return on investment, and applying concepts to a case study on Ralph Lauren. Key takeaways include making digital a priority, adopting a digital mindset, maintaining brands online, and developing an integrated digital strategy.
This document provides guidance on effectively engaging with social media. It emphasizes listening first before talking, and monitoring conversations to understand audiences and identify where they are engaging online. It also stresses the importance of integration across different communication channels and tools for listening, as well as focusing on outcomes over outputs when measuring the value of social media efforts.
1. Respond quickly and professionally to negative comments, showing you care about customer feedback.
2. Don't get defensive - acknowledge valid criticisms and show a willingness to improve.
3. Turn negative conversations positive by offering solutions or explaining your perspective in a polite, solution-oriented manner. The goal is to resolve issues and regain trust, not attack critics.
This document discusses online marketing techniques. It covers search engine optimization (SEO), display advertising, viral marketing, interactive marketing, social media optimization, and mobile marketing. It also discusses integrated marketing communications online. Some key points made in the document include that online marketing allows for lower cost distribution of information globally, it is interactive in nature allowing instant response, and it allows for easy tracking of statistics. Both push and pull techniques are used in online marketing.
1. The document discusses a social media plan for a new business called ABC focusing on the role and functions of social media. It defines social media and discusses the differences between social media, social networking, e-commerce, and e-communications.
2. The document analyzes the role of social media in small businesses including marketing, customer service, and sales. It also discusses specific social media platforms like Facebook and Google+ through SWOT and PESTLE analyses.
3. The role of social media in retail businesses is explored through generating awareness, marketing, customer service, and sales channels. The document concludes that social media provides opportunities for businesses through visibility, partnerships, and engaging with customers.
Social Media Marketing: Principles and EconomicsEthan Bauley
This document discusses principles of social media marketing. It begins by defining key terms like industrial media, which is expensive and owned by few, versus social media, which is relatively cheap and ownership is distributed. It then covers topics like how networked people can outperform firms, the importance of listening tools, reaching out to bloggers, and integrating social media into marketing plans. It provides examples of how social media was used to help Cisco's public relations efforts.
Digital marketing involves using electronic devices and the internet to promote products and services. It uses technologies like websites, email, apps, and social media. Some benefits of digital marketing include lower costs, the ability to easily measure results in real time, and greater brand exposure and engagement with customers. Creating digital assets and content requires considering visual identity, navigation, layout, and credibility. Marketers also use digital channels like email, blogs, and social media to engage with customers and build relationships.
The document discusses various key performance indicators (KPIs) for digital marketing. It provides examples of common KPIs used to evaluate success across different marketing channels, including lead generation metrics like cost-per-lead and conversion rate, website traffic metrics, and social media tracking. The document also discusses how to measure each KPI and ways to improve performance.
Slides of the lecture "Web-based business models" taught by Eduardo Larrain at HEC, a French business school (Strategic Management Master) during 4 classes in February 2013
2014 class with updated slides is here : http://fr.slideshare.net/EduardoLarrain/201402-web-based-business-models-lecture
1. What’s the web?
2. What’s a business model?
3. Why study Internet-based business models?
4. What are the key elements of a business model?
• Value proposition and revenue streams
• Drill-down of key Entertainment markets: music, video games, book publishing
• Customer channels, customer relationships, key partners, activities, resources, cost structure
5. What are the business models of Internet heavyweights: Facebook, Google, Zynga, Linkedin, Groupon
6. What are the most promising business models among the world’s most valuable companies: Digital 100, Twitter
7. Conclusion and farewell
8. Appendix: group project and individual test
This document discusses how digital technologies are changing the future of work and the skills needed to succeed. It explores emerging jobs, the importance of developing digital literacies and maintaining an active digital profile. Examples are given of new roles involving coaching, caring and connecting that combine human input with technology. The document emphasizes that developing a customized digital footprint through blogging and social media can boost one's reputation, skills and career opportunities in the long run.
IBM presentation at Digital Media Barcelona- Twitter For Business Microbloggi...the bureau, digital agency
IBM presentation: Twitter for business - Microblogging goes to work by Delphine Remy-Boutant, WW Social Media Marketing Manager IBM SWG - Digital Media Barcelona event 16th September
The document summarizes IBM's use of social media for marketing purposes. It discusses IBM's goals in using social media to gain insights, increase conversations about IBM, build advocacy, and empower social media strategies worldwide. It provides examples of how IBM listens to customers, integrates social conversations on its website, creates and aggregates social content, and makes IBM experts visible online. It also outlines a maturity model for applying the "4Ps" (People, Processes, Platforms, Policies) across IBM to enable social engagement at tactical, adoptive and transformative levels.
This document discusses social media and its applications for business. It provides an overview of social media, explaining that it allows people to develop communities, share content, engage in conversations, and connect with others. It then outlines why businesses should use social media, including listening to customers, engaging with customers at low cost, and building relationships, communities, and trust. The document also discusses how to run a successful social media campaign, measure results, and provides examples of campaigns from companies like Dell, Zappos, BlendTec, and others.
This presentation was delivered at the 2009 Wisconsin Bankers Association's Tech Conference in Madison, WI. This show talked about how the impact of social media and web 2.0 tools are changing the way we build relationships with customers.
The document discusses social media and its importance for businesses. It defines what social media is and is not, how businesses can use it strategically, and provides examples of companies that have seen success through social media. The key messages are that social media is about creating conversations rather than pushing messages, is relevant for all businesses, and can help with marketing, sales, and other business functions when used as part of an overall strategy.
Addressing Top CEO Priorities through Social Media Marketing and MetricsJacques Pavlenyi
Presented at the August 21 2012 Business Marketing Association's Southern California Chapter meeting. The world is changing - becoming more social, even in traditionally conservative B2B. B2B marketing is maturing, with social leading to more measurable successes. But taking b2b social media marketing to the next level is easier than you might think. This presentation hopes to help you:
-- Understand how to better align social media marketing with key strategic initiatives
-- Learn how to focus on the social metrics that matter
-- See applicable examples of real b2b social media marketing benefits
These views are my own and do not represent those of my employer.
The document provides lessons learned for achieving digital success based on testing over 1,000 digital campaigns. It outlines key lessons which include: engaging consumers by being relevant and bold; focusing on visual branding; exploiting the dynamic nature of the medium through storytelling and video; keeping messaging simple; making calls to action obvious; leveraging synergy across channels; and understanding that low reach digital ads can still be effective. The lessons are derived from Ipsos' proprietary digital research and aim to provide marketers with relevant measures of digital campaign performance.
"Online Marketing in the Energy Industry" provides energy marketing execs a business case for online marketing and a roadmap for planning and execution of online marketing campaigns. The presentation also discusses how the energy industry can use social media as a marketing platform to build their brand and engage customers.
Emerging Social Business Strategies in 2010 | Social Business Summit 2010Dion Hinchcliffe
This document discusses emerging social business strategies in 2010. It examines strategies like enterprise 2.0, online communities, open supply chains, open business models, and crowdsourcing. It notes that these strategies leverage network effects, peer production, and open collaboration. While these strategies provide benefits like innovation, cost reductions, and competitive advantages, they also face challenges adopting a new cultural mindset and relinquishing some control. Overall, the document advocates that businesses reimagine themselves using a "social lens" to harness collective intelligence through new online models.
Introduction to social media from B2B perspective. Delivered at a customer workshop for a global B2B client.
External utilization part done and presented by Marko Sykkö from Promener / Tehostamo Consulting.
This document summarizes a presentation on developing a digital marketing strategy. It discusses recognizing the impact of the digital revolution, getting strategic with digital efforts, integrating various media for marketing, monitoring and evaluating return on investment, and applying concepts to a case study on Ralph Lauren. Key takeaways include making digital a priority, adopting a digital mindset, maintaining brands online, and developing an integrated digital strategy.
This document provides guidance on effectively engaging with social media. It emphasizes listening first before talking, and monitoring conversations to understand audiences and identify where they are engaging online. It also stresses the importance of integration across different communication channels and tools for listening, as well as focusing on outcomes over outputs when measuring the value of social media efforts.
1. Respond quickly and professionally to negative comments, showing you care about customer feedback.
2. Don't get defensive - acknowledge valid criticisms and show a willingness to improve.
3. Turn negative conversations positive by offering solutions or explaining your perspective in a polite, solution-oriented manner. The goal is to resolve issues and regain trust, not attack critics.
This document discusses online marketing techniques. It covers search engine optimization (SEO), display advertising, viral marketing, interactive marketing, social media optimization, and mobile marketing. It also discusses integrated marketing communications online. Some key points made in the document include that online marketing allows for lower cost distribution of information globally, it is interactive in nature allowing instant response, and it allows for easy tracking of statistics. Both push and pull techniques are used in online marketing.
1. The document discusses a social media plan for a new business called ABC focusing on the role and functions of social media. It defines social media and discusses the differences between social media, social networking, e-commerce, and e-communications.
2. The document analyzes the role of social media in small businesses including marketing, customer service, and sales. It also discusses specific social media platforms like Facebook and Google+ through SWOT and PESTLE analyses.
3. The role of social media in retail businesses is explored through generating awareness, marketing, customer service, and sales channels. The document concludes that social media provides opportunities for businesses through visibility, partnerships, and engaging with customers.
The document discusses how social media and online communities are becoming increasingly important for brands and publishers to engage with audiences. It notes that interactive marketing spending will reach $55 billion by 2014, with most of the growth coming from social media. Marketers will need to use social media to genuinely engage audiences rather than just reach them. Successful online communities put members' needs first. The document also provides examples of how some companies and publications are using online communities successfully to support their brands.
At the Social Media Club Workshop held on June 11, 2007 in Palo Alto, CA at SAP Labs, Giovanni discussed how leading businesses are using social media to reorganize themselves for substantial gains in productivity, efficiency and market leadership. The presentation — which draws from more than 50 publicly available case studies — examines the key organizational and social challenges that businesses face when attempting to embrace social media.
This document discusses social media advertising and its measurement. It begins by introducing social media advertising and its role in integrated marketing communications. It then discusses popular social media platforms used for advertising like Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Twitter. It outlines pros and cons of social media advertising. The document then discusses how to measure success on social media through setting SMART objectives, creating buyer personas, and testing different creative strategies and ad executions. It provides examples of successful social media advertising campaigns.
Social Media Marketing as a Cogent Marketing ToolDigiFloor
Social Media has a very strong impact when it comes as marketing tool. Learn how social media was and still first choice to businesses for branding and marketing.
Learn how different social media platforms help marketers to brand their product. Here are some amazing facts and statistics of social media websites.
The document discusses various types of electronic marketing including internet marketing, database marketing, and direct marketing. It defines electronic marketing as directly marketing commercial messages to groups using email, with the goal of building loyalty, trust or brand awareness. The document then provides examples of basic website types such as personal websites, photo sharing sites, blogs, informational sites, online catalogs, directories and e-commerce sites. It also defines direct marketing as channel-agnostic advertising techniques including email, websites, mobile, catalogs and more.
Delta Generali social media - opportunity & challengeMiloje Sekulic
Fiercer market conditions seek more effort to make success, wide
intelligence, targeted approach, precise answer to your target
groups` needs and empowerment through embracing
changes that have taken place.
We are experiencing a period in which digital evolution is accelerating for brands. This time, the brands have a lot more to do than the past. Let’s take a look;
Digital marketing involves more than just mechanical changes but also a deeper theoretical transformation. It combines targeted marketing, direct marketing, social media marketing, customer-centered marketing, and two-way interactive advertising using digital technologies.
Digital marketing has evolved over time from one-way Web 1.0 marketing in the 1990s to the current period of marketing 3.0 where large data is collected and analyzed to precisely understand customer needs and improve targeted and efficient promotional activities.
Local digital marketing agencies have an advantage in the domestic Chinese market as they have been operating in the marketing field for over a decade and have accumulated many clients. Revenue from digital marketing has become a major source of income for local agencies.
transformation. It is a blend of target promoting , direct showcasing , decentralized promoting, client situated advertising, two-way intuitive advertising , remote or worldwide advertising, virtual advertising , paperless exchanges , and client cooperation promoting. Computerized promoting has enriched showcasing blend in with new meanings. Its capabilities essentially incorporate data trade, online buy, internet distributing, electronic money, web based promoting, corporate advertising, and so forth. It is the fundamental showcasing technique and improvement pattern of undertakings in the time of computerized economy. One-way showcasing in light of Web1.0 In the mid-1990s, the Internet (Internet) was conceived, and the Web genuinely turned into the worldwide Web and started to enter individuals' lives. Web 1.0 is the term for the earliest variant of the Web. According to a specialized perspective, the site pages of Web 1.0 are "read-just” and clients can't alter them, however can peruse or look for data. By and by, on the grounds that the Web has opened up another world for people, in the time of computerized showcasing 1.0, Web content creation is overwhelmed by sites, clients reserve no privilege to associate, ads are described by single-thing correspondence, and clients latently acknowledge promoting data on sites, mostly utilizing show flag commercials, spring up ads, web crawler ads, and so on. The primary motivation behind advertising is to sell items.
In the period of advanced advertising 2.0, with the abrupt rise of web-based entertainment and video destinations, organizations have limited the distance with clients, laid out thorough promoting procedures, and acknowledged ongoing observing and normal examination of information. Subsequently, the Web has continuously turned into a significant channel for corporate showcasing, and promoters have moved seriously publicizing financial plan venture from disconnected media to online media. In the promoting 3.0 period portrayed by the utilization of huge information innovation, it is possible to gather and break down information, for example, client look, perusing, snaps, buys, and sharing. In light of this information, "client representations" assist companies with precisely understanding client needs and inclinations, so that promoting exercises are more focused and proficient, and brands are completely and successfully showed. The promoting school is essentially gotten from the intuitive publicizing school of the customary publicizing school. Since homegrown and global promoting monsters possess worldwide publicizing clients, with the ascent of Web promoting, the intelligent promoting business is isolated from the promoting organization field, and has progressively turned into a significant piece of the promoting wellspring of significant sites. Like Ogilvy, Publicist, Dents and other publicizing monsters, they have never feared not having clients, and have turned into the key security fo
Challenges of Small Businesses in using Digital Platforms for Promoting their...IJAEMSJORNAL
Small businesses can expand by adopting the correct digital marketing approaches, tools, and strategies on digital platforms, where there is a greater opportunity for smaller enterprises to advance to the next level. Digital marketing agencies are typically hired by business owners who do not know how to put up digital marketing campaigns on their own [1]. Digital marketing services are in charge of keeping organizations online while working within their budget constraints. Businesses, regardless of their size, should always ensure the promotion of their clients' enterprises in order to maintain continual technological innovation. When innovative technology becomes a mainstay for larger firms, the hurdles for small enterprises grow much more difficult. This study described the business owners’ preparedness and knowledge in different digital platforms. Results revealed that only a few business owners know how the digital world works. Most of them were only in the basic skills of their knowledge in the digital platforms. They have inadequate online payment options because of high processing fees, poor internet connection, and limited knowledge on how to use the application. Another challenge for the business owners was competition in Digital World for paid ads versus organic and poor brand credibility.
This document discusses how to effectively use various online tools and social media for public relations purposes. It provides tips on creating an engaging website, using social media to build your brand and generate leads, monitoring online conversations, and managing your online reputation. While social media allows anyone to share their message, the document emphasizes that simply having an online presence is not enough - you must provide valuable, engaging content to attract and retain an audience. It also cautions that negative online conversations can damage your reputation, so issues should be addressed promptly and respectfully.
Social Marketing for Small Businesses - DraftJoe Filcik
How should small businesses think about social media and marketing?
What apps & sites should your brand or business be using to reach customers?
This deck is a draft framework for thinking about how small business can think about marketing on the ever expanding number of social networks and media companies.
This document provides an overview of digital marketing concepts presented by Angelina Conley. It discusses digital marketing versus traditional marketing and frameworks for digital marketing like the 4E framework of excitement, education, experience and engagement. It also outlines the 7C online framework and considerations for social media engagement. Additional topics covered include going mobile, how firms engage customers through listening, analyzing and acting, and steps for conducting a digital marketing campaign.
The document discusses various types of electronic marketing including internet marketing, database marketing, and direct marketing. It provides an overview of objectives of e-marketing campaigns, how marketing has changed with the internet, and benefits of direct marketing such as allowing direct communication with customers through various channels like email, websites, and mobile.
Digital Marketing
This passage is explored by the "Science China" science reference book section gathering and application work project.Computerized showcasing is the act of advancing items and administrations involving computerized correspondence channels to speak with purchasers in an opportune, significant, modified and savvy way. [ 1] Computerized promoting envelops large numbers of the methods and practices found in Web showcasing (network advertising). The extent of advanced promoting is more extensive and incorporates numerous other correspondence channels that don't need the Web, for example, non-web channels, for example, Television, radio, SMS, and so forth., or then again online channels, for example, web-based entertainment, electronic promoting, standard publicizing, and so forth The purported computerized showcasing alludes to a promoting technique that utilizes the Web, PC correspondence innovation and advanced intelligent media to accomplish showcasing objectives. Advanced showcasing will utilize progressed PC network innovation however much as could reasonably be expected to look for the improvement of new business sectors and the mining of new purchasers in the best and practical way.Computerized promoting is a significant level showcasing movement in view of clear data set objects, through computerized media stations like phone, SMS, email, electronic fax, network stage, and so on., to accomplish exact showcasing, quantifiable advertising impacts, and digitization .Computerized showcasing was recently viewed as a different type of promoting in a particular field, yet starting around 2003 it has frequently been viewed as equipped for arriving at by far most of A type of advertising in most customary showcasing regions like direct advertising.In the time of advanced economy, when customary ventures acknowledge digitalization, they should focus on computerized promoting as a significant perspective, change the showcasing thoughts, models and techniques that can't address the issues, and acknowledge new advertising strategies. Along with computerized administration and assembling, computerized showcasing, as a problem area, will become three significant parts of computerized undertakings
Computerized promoting isn't simply an innovative unrest, yet in addition a more profound idea upheaval. It is a mix of target showcasing, direct promoting, decentralized showcasing, client situated showcasing, two-way intuitive advertising, remote or worldwide showcasing, virtual promoting, paperless exchanges, and client cooperation showcasing. [ 3] Advanced promoting has supplied advertising blend in with new meanings. Its capabilities fundamentally incorporate data trade, online buy, internet distributing, electronic cash, web based promoting, corporate advertising, and so on. It is the primary promoting strategy and advancement pattern of ventures in the time of computerized economy. In the era of digital marketing 2.0, with the sudden emerge
Digital Marketing Training And Servics In Dahranwalasidrajaved45
Digital Marketing
This passage is explored by the "Science China" science reference book section gathering and application work project.Computerized showcasing is the act of advancing items and administrations involving computerized correspondence channels to speak with purchasers in an opportune, significant, modified and savvy way. [ 1] Computerized promoting envelops large numbers of the methods and practices found in Web showcasing (network advertising). The extent of advanced promoting is more extensive and incorporates numerous other correspondence channels that don't need the Web, for example, non-web channels, for example, Television, radio, SMS, and so forth., or then again online channels, for example, web-based entertainment, electronic promoting, standard publicizing, and so forth The purported computerized showcasing alludes to a promoting technique that utilizes the Web, PC correspondence innovation and advanced intelligent media to accomplish showcasing objectives. Advanced showcasing will utilize progressed PC network innovation however much as could reasonably be expected to look for the improvement of new business sectors and the mining of new purchasers in the best and practical way.Computerized promoting is a significant level showcasing movement in view of clear data set objects, through computerized media stations like phone, SMS, email, electronic fax, network stage, and so on., to accomplish exact showcasing, quantifiable advertising impacts, and digitization .Computerized showcasing was recently viewed as a different type of promoting in a particular field, yet starting around 2003 it has frequently been viewed as equipped for arriving at by far most of A type of advertising in most customary showcasing regions like direct advertising.In the time of advanced economy, when customary ventures acknowledge digitalization, they should focus on computerized promoting as a significant perspective, change the showcasing thoughts, models and techniques that can't address the issues, and acknowledge new advertising strategies. Along with computerized administration and assembling, computerized showcasing, as a problem area, will become three significant parts of computerized undertakings
Computerized promoting isn't simply an innovative unrest, yet in addition a more profound idea upheaval. It is a mix of target showcasing, direct promoting, decentralized showcasing, client situated showcasing, two-way intuitive advertising, remote or worldwide showcasing, virtual promoting, paperless exchanges, and client cooperation showcasing. [ 3] Advanced promoting has supplied advertising blend in with new meanings. Its capabilities fundamentally incorporate data trade, online buy, internet distributing, electronic cash, web based promoting, corporate advertising, and so on. It is the primary promoting strategy and advancement pattern of ventures in the time of computerized economy. In the era of digital marketing 2.0, with the sudden emerge
Digital Marketing Training And Servics In Dahranwala
Honeydew slideshow
1. Conceptually there are two primary elements which need to be considered when
analysing Internet commerce; the attention and the network (Kelly 2007; Goldhaber,
1997).
Image 1 from: http://www.coastradio.org/images/attention.gif
Image 2 from: Image From: http://www.textually.org/textually/archives/2008/09/021196.htm
3. i. What is it?
• Simplistically attention media is drawing in an audience, from where (to whom?) you
are able to deliver your message. In the context of [the] Internet business, the first
element is being able to attract an audience, whether this be through Internet methods or
via the creation of interest from outside of the Internet medium.
Image From: http://i229.photobucket.com/albums/ee37/judithsydney/Andy_Warhol.jpg
• The attention, was characterised by Warhol, as the ‘fifteen minutes of fame’. The logic
being that everyone has it, but how this manifests itself becomes the ultimate challenge.
We need attention in order to create interest, but we only have a brief period to convert
this into something meaningful.
• Our attention therefore, is what will bring the audience to our product, site or event; we
have, but a fleeting opportunity to use this to create the next level of business.
4. ii. How important is it?
Image From: http://www.geecab.org/images/misc/hold_door_open.gif
• In the context of any business there is a need to get people ‘through the door’, in the
traditional context this would be through shop window display or advertising the business. It
is the gateway to bring the consumer in for the sale. There is no difference with Internet
commerce, in that there are the same principles of the necessity to get people ‘through the
door’, how we achieve this is the fundamental measure of success of the initial stages of the
Internet business.
• The attention grabbing for an Internet business is substantially greater than a traditional
outlet. In the first instance there are a larger level of options available, and with faster speeds
a potential consumer will be able to analyse a number of businesses in a rapid period of
time.
Technology parallel – broadband and web2.0 enabling increased speed or access, fast
comparisons/product research, quicker sales turnover – global sales
5. Image From: http://weburbanist.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/anagram-bookstore.jpg
• Consider the example of buying a book, for a traditional book buyer, visiting a strip mall
they might have 3 options, each 200 metres apart. Given browsing and travel time to visit all
three might take an hour and there may only be a differential of $5 in the price of the book.
[Juxtaposed] a book buyer online has hundreds of options, and does not have to travel far to
reach each one. The attention media therefore becomes important, the book buyer has a
limited attention span, therefore the successful site will generally have something to interest
and retain them (other than price). It may be the use of flash, a banner advertisement or an
offer which leads them to purchase from the site.
Eg: Book Depository (http://www.bookdepository.com/) has free world-wide shipping, Thrift
Books (http://www.thriftbooks.com/) sell - and thus recycle - second-hand books, have partnerships
with US libraries (sell ex-library books and return a share of profits) , free shipping in USA, they
also use environmentally friendly packaging
• Parallels between traditional consumer economics and Internet consumer economics is that
there, in the initial stages, something needs to draw the consumer in, and in the absence of
this the success of the business will be limited.
6. iii. Attention in isolation
• Can a business, in the long term survive on attention media alone as its economic basis?
This question was answered by the impact of the original Internet boom and bust. These
businesses had attention, even sales, but they were unable to convert this to economic
success. Fundamentally this was due to having failed to garner repeat sales and transactions,
and therefore needing to invest greater funds for each sale, as the novelty and adventure of
the sale (for the consumer) become less.
Image from: http://c.complex.com/blogs/wp content/uploads/2008/04/internetcelebrities.jpg
• For each successful proponent of the attention media, there are a thousand who have not
succeeded. South Park parodies this in the concept of ‘Internet millions’ a situation where
attention breeds only a concept of return, not an actual return.
7. iv. Attention as part of a consolidated Internet business
• As part of the development of any form of business there needs to be an element of attention
in the creation of buzz and interest in the product or service. In the absence of this, the
ability to draw the consumer is difficult, if not impossible, as there is no differentiation other
than price. Homogenised products could, in theory, survive without the attention of the
consumer (for example electricity providers) if only all participants failed to attempt to grab
attention.
Image From: http://barefoottess.files.wordpress.com/2008/10/spread-the-word2.jpg
• The attention aspect of Internet commerce, cannot create a business in isolation, rather it is
necessary for the business to have other elements, [but] conversely without attention media,
the Internet business and the fundamental economic model cannot succeed without firstly
drawing customers through the door.
9. Network economics is best manifested in the example of telecommunications and primarily the fax
machine. On its own a fax machine is pointless, but as more people have them they become more
powerful.
i. What is it?
• Conceptually network economics is that as the network grows, and more people participate
and become part of it, it becomes a more valid business. The nature of the network is that its
relevance is categorised by having more people in it, and using it.
Image From: http://prblog.typepad.com/strategic_public_relation/images/2007/06/22/simple_social_network.png
• The network can be anything, in the Internet context, this might be users, a forum, even
subscribers to a blog or mailing list. In the absence of these there is little, if anything
material about the business.
• Facebook, as a network, is a strong example of how the value of the medium grows with
each additional user. One user on Facebook has no one to deal with, to talk to, or to share
information, but as more people become a part of the network, the business becomes
stronger, the level of interaction increases and the value of the business rises.
10. ii. How does it work?
Image from: http://www.aisee.com/graph_of_the_month/gnumap.gif
• The fundamental economic basis for the business is that as more join the network, the value
of the network increases. Using the example of the fax machine, one is irrelevant, two can at
least communicate with each other, 1,000,000 and there becomes unlimited opportunities to
use the network. As the network increases the viability grows with it.
• (Reference) categorises the network as being a long term reality, and as something which
has been increased (grown?) with the increase in communication options. As there are more
users, and these users group together, the importance and the relevance of the business has
increased.
• For Internet economics, the network is the measure of long term success, attention alone
cannot economically build a successful business, as if I need to use attention to bring in a
new sale, each time, the cost of doing so will ultimately undermine the success (and
economic survival) of my business.
11. iii. Is it a new event?
• Simplistically, this is not a new event, but rather the birth of the Internet has meant that the
opportunities to enhance the network (existing networks?) have increased. With 600m users
on Facebook, this is greater than the population of all but 2 of the countries of the world. In
a traditional context, this has meant that network has grown beyond what would have been a
reasonable level of network in the world context.
Image from: http://hollywoodlandlord.files.wordpress.com/2010/01/wordofmouth.jpg
• Businesses have always relied on a network of sorts, whether this be word of mouth
advertising, or simply through the support of a business, to allow the owner to acquire more
stock, which satisfies more consumers.
12. iv. Network in isolation, can it grow or is it inefficient?
• In theory a network can grow without attention media assisting it, however this is an
uneconomic measure and one which will struggle to gain traction by its own devices. There
is a necessity for the network to be promoted in some manner, to bring users in and to ensure
that there is something to attract them to keep returning.
• YouTube is a good example of a business which requires both elements in order to remain
successful. The attention that the users create through the uploading of videos, brings more
users to the site, and the continual refreshment of the data that is uploaded keeps bringing
people into the network. However in isolation the creation of the network alone would be
insufficient for the business to succeed.
Image from: http://pictures.directnews.co.uk/liveimages/social+networks_1844_19548716_0_0_7031921_300.jpg
• The development of network as an aspect of economic success, ultimately the defining
measure of long term success, however in order to grow the business, there needs to be
strong promotion through the creation of attention to draw users to the site (into the
network).
13. v. Network as part of a consolidated Internet business
• Each successful business on the Internet has an element of network. To succeed by all
measures of a business, there is a level of repetitiveness which is constant across all models.
In the absence of this consistent transaction there is a lack of economic success as the cost of
new customers is considerable when compared with continuing customers. The network, as
it were, may manifest itself in a number of ways (being contributors, visitors, commentators,
purchasers or subscribers), each is as valid as the next in the growth of the business, and the
achievement of economic gains.
• In the absence of network, the ability of the online business to succeed is limited, and simply
can be confirmed by the bright burning but ultimately financially unsuccessful attention
grabbing ‘businesses’ whose carcasses litter the Internet business model.
15. • The merging of the two concepts into the creation of a successful business model is one that
we have considered in the context of Blizzard / Activision, and more specifically through
individual business units within the whole offering.
Image from: http://math.yorku.ca/infinity_old/Images/newInfinity.jpg
• In converging both elements we are considering much of the traditional business model.
Tying this back to something such as a newspaper, which enjoyed, on one hand the
sensationalism of the news page, to build user numbers; but on the other hand requires the
ongoing network of readers (who not only commented in print but also in discussion with
colleagues and friends) to build the legitimacy and loyalty of the print.
16. i. Role of each
• In a simple analysis, a business requires attention (loosely defined as advertising
[+marketing & promotion?]) to bring customers through the door, and then a network (of
customers) to promote the business, and to allow sales to occur to grow the business offering
and the products which could be supplied.
• In the context of the Internet business, this further manifests itself through the creation of a
longer term network, which not only creates the attention of the business, but also increases
the visibility of the business and the ability to create new content to meet the needs of the
consumers.
Image from: http://www.spoutingshite.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/upscale_server.jpg
• Considering the individual success of either model, there is an acknowledgement that the
business cannot survive in the long term without each providing support for the other
element of the business.
17. ii. Analysis of a successful Internet business – Blizzard / Activision
• The business of Blizzard Entertainment is considered in our timeline, and is one of a
company which has translated on exceptionally successful platform game into one of the
most valuable Internet commodities and the most successful MMORPG in the world (with
an estimate of over 50% of the market share).
Image from: http://brisbanemodchips.com.au/store/images/wow.gif
• In analysing this property there are two primary elements which have been considered, the
first is that of battle.net, the online ‘database’ as it were for the underlying games within the
series and the second is that of world of warcraft (‘WOW’) (a MMORPG), which was
developed from the original warcraft series Orcs and Humans.
• The company has a number of other successful titles which have been developed and
repackaged (for example Starcraft), however none, as yet, have reached the scale of WOW
in terms of revenue and market penetration.
• In many ways the WOW business has become a segment killer, seeing off a number of
challenges from similar businesses, which have simply been unable to create a level of user
numbers to challenge the dominant player.
18. (i) Battle.net
Image from: http://www.gx.com.sg/Admin/Storage/Data/UploadedPicture/Blog/img_85421_battlenet.jpg
• In itself battle.net does not make money for the Blizzard business, but instead is a
consolidated platform for gamers to use the products which they have physically purchased.
It is an online registration system as much as it is a methodology for the allowing of the
playing of games.
• The importance of the platform for the business is considerable in the context of brand
loyalty, security and promotion.
19. a. How does it create value for the business?
Security
Image from: http://localityswitch.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/Combination-Padlock.jpg
• A subscriber to battle.net now has the option of bank account like security features (through
the use of tags) to protect their account. This has addressed a significant concern within the
community over the hijacking of accounts, but has also meant that a user within the game is
given a level of protection greater than offered by most other games.
• Whilst this is not a revenue creator for the business, it is however, a defining feature and one
that places the business in a first mover advantage. A player in the game can be confident of
account security, well above what would normally be expected.
20. Brand Loyalty
• The platform has created a network for the user, wherein they can join forums of similar
gamers and can access information about upcoming games and features or can access beta
testing of new games and improvements. This brand loyalty has manifested itself in the
evolution of new games, which has been reflective of the wishes of the users.
Image from: http://pixelverdict.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/wow-cataclysm-logo-5801.jpg
• The accessing to reviewed forums has been a catalyst for the business making game
improvements in line with the wishes of the user community in a faster time than would be
available through other methods. This has brought the games closer to the players, and
therefore is more likely to meet their gaming needs (and enhance the overall experience). A
form of networking with customers
• The creation of brand loyalty is an importance aspect in the growth and success of a
business, it is accepted that acquiring a customer is seven times more expensive than
retaining one, where a customer enjoys a platform which recognising them as a part of a
community then the business is more likely to be successful.
• Battle.net has created a level of brand loyalty across multiple titles, the platform has tailored
itself to not only interest the user in the games that they are currently player, but also allows
them to make comment on the content of the current game, and the future of games that they
wish to see.
21. Promotion
• The Internet business models for the most part are reliant upon the promotion of the
commodity in order to bring users into the site. Insofar as battle.net has been used to date, it
is as much promotion as it is providing a secure platform.
Image from: http://staffingrobotonline.com/images/staffing-robot-brand-creation-promotion-management.jpg
• The user is given an insight into the new developments of the business, each time they log
in, they are given trials of new games and the quality of communication internally is
incredible. This promotion through platform has to some extent, replaced the need for
businesses to create buzz through computer magazines and traditional media sources.
• The creation of loyal users and members means that the business is better placed to promote
new products, through the development of the network of supports of the business, there is
an ability to create buzz outside of the traditional confines and in turn increase the numbers
of users on the platform.
• The value of this aspect again is not measured in terms of the creation of revenue, but
through the increase in exposure (which over time will increase revenue), it is not
necessarily definable in terms of overall revenue, but can be measured through this long
term increase in sales.
22. How successful is this strategy?
• The success of this aspect of the business has been considerable when examining the uptake
of user numbers on the platform, and the level of interaction on the forums and the sites
alone. There has been an acceptance that users are preferring to focus their purchases on an
online outlet as opposed to physical stores and blizzard.net is replacing much of the face to
face sales function.
Image from: http://www.stuffwelike.com/stuffwelike/wp-content/uploads/2009/08/star-craft-2.png
• As the component of the business is still relatively young, the financial performance and the
creation of value is still limited, however early indicators are showing that this component
of the business is greatly valuable to the overall business, and will be best demonstrated
once Starcraft 2 is launched in 2011.
• In terms of the creation of community, a simple measure for Internet
• businesses, to date there has been an estimate of ??? active users, which has been
compared favourably ahead of total Xbox live users.
• The creation of network to date has been successful, from its humble origins as a network
for the allowing of playing Orcs and humans, the games has greatly increased, to being the
platform for in excess of 20,000,000 users.
23. c. How has the business adapted with age?
• The original platform was for the playing of a network game. The platform worked on
slower Internet connections and required the individual player to have a working copy of the
game on their machines.
• As the speed of Internet connections has increased and the requirements of the players has
increased, there has been a continual refinement of the platform. Moving into web 2.0, users
are able to play many of the games with only limited data stored on the host machine. For
example, WOW only has a small percentage of the total platform on the host machine, the
majority of the game features are online, to the extent that the individual user is unable to
access the game offline.
• This is further evidence towards Kelly’s (1997) philosophy of ‘embracing dumb power’.
One dumb machine by itself is useless, while many dumb machines networked intelligently
are very useful (Liebowitz 2002, p.13-14, Kelly 1997). Nice point!
24. • This aspect of the business has grown as the business has matured, there has been a
movement from ‘now’ activities, to the creation of account and brand loyalty through the
platform, not only being a conduit for accessing the immediate game, but also in the
promotion to the user base and the ability of the user to contribute to changes in content.
• As attention has reduced in the long term growth of the business, the network has become
more of the focus, there is less attention media on the existing properties and more on the
creation of the buzz for new products. The platform has matured to define the sense of
community for users which has continued to grow the network organically.
•
25. d. What elements of the business are attention and which are network?
The simple definition of the economic measures of attention and network are prevalent in the
business model of blizzard.net.
i. Attention
• The attention elements of the business over time have been through the strength of the
existing properties and the building of the community to use the site. In the original
business, the attention was manifested through the attention that the game (Warcraft 2) was
gaining in mainstream media and through the actions of the participants. As one of the first
mover properties on networking games, the success and crossover from the standalone game
was through both mainstream and targeted media.
Image from: http://www.youtube.com/
• The business held tournaments to build usage and buzz. These tournaments have been
widely covered in both mainstream media and through specific industry publications. The
business has utilised existing platforms for the promotion of the events, expanding these
through media, YouTube has been a significant contributor to the promotion of the game
platform.
26. • As the business has matured the elements of attention in blizzard.net has been primarily on
the strength of the WOW property, this is considered below, but for blizzard.net this has
been through linking the platform to the game, and through the promotion of the new
properties through the site. It has been targeting the fans of the previous games, giving them
an outlet to experience the new properties and giving them a voice on development.
• This attention has been important in the growth of the overall business and number of users,
as users have seen the functionality in the platform they have been bringing more users to it
(and therefore creating further network).
27. ii. Network
• The strength of network economics in the context of the development of the business has
been the ability of the business, not only to invest into further infrastructure, but also
through the creation of an online community, who use the resources and play the games
contained through the platforms. Examining the evolution of these platforms over time,
there has been a necessity for more users to make the platform more successful.
Image from: http://www-cs-students.stanford.edu/~amitp/game-programming/game-ideas/radial-base/example.png
• ‘More gives more’; as the number of number of nodes in a network increases, the value of
the network increases. Blizzard products increase in customer value as the gamer population
(gamer network) increases (Kelly, 1997).
• This has been achieved through two primary methods, the first was through the
‘simplification’ of games, to ensure that there was not a situation where users were
discouraged from playing the game. The second is through increased functionality so that
the user is not required to leave the platform, this has been achieved through comprehensive
forum access to allow users to understand the mechanisms and techniques within the game
itself.
28. Image from: http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/photos/uncategorized/2007/06/25/wowhead.jpg
• The network economics has been promoted through the compulsory transfer to battle.net for
all WOW users, this has increased the overall traffic on the site, and has meant that there is a
greater community. The business has also acquired third party sites such as wowhead.com
which has added a further level of community which again increases the overall usage of the
site.
• This is an example of the ‘Law of Increasing Returns’ where businesses integrate their
resources with other businesses in order to create ‘Network Value’. Network Value
encourages exponential growth compared to the linear growth of economies of scale (Kelly
2007).
• The business relies heavily on the existence and expansion of the network of players, in the
absence of this, the games platform would be limited to standalone games, which, in the
increasing speed of Internet communications, are falling to wayside.
29. Image from: http://givetoothers.com/image/kids_icecream.jpg
• Liebowitz describes this as ‘Winner-Takes-All’ where businesses that occupy extended
networks are at a strong advantage because they:
- Pool resources
- Share financial, human resources, knowledge, expertise
- Link manufacturing, distribution and marketing
- Form technology cooperation networks.
(Liebowitz 2002, p.16; Rifkin 2001, p.19).
Image from: http://thumbs.dreamstime.com/thumb_409/1245072303vEM5zW.jpg
30. Image from: http://www.gosugamers.net/warcraft/images/news/Activision_Blizzard_Logo.jpg
• The formation of cooperation networks is demonstrated further in December 2007 when
Activision and Blizzard merge to form Activision Blizzard. This meant combining a
world leader in interactive publishing with a world leader MMORPG equating to 18.3%
market share at that time (Cunningham, Langlotz, Rhode and Whaley 2008, p.24).
• This is a drastic change from Industrial economy where it was all about excluding
competition (Rifkin 2001, p.17).
31. (ii) World of Warcraft
• The business model for world of warcraft is the monthly payment of fees by subscribers for
accessing the site and playing the game. It is estimated that the monthly revenue for the
business is in order of $200m, and is by the leader in the field. The game is played on
multiple servers (geographically aligned) and players are generally spread on these
according to the time that they joined the game. A player can have up to 50 characters with a
maximum of ten per server.
Image from: http://www.beefjack.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/12/world-of-warcraft-brushes-1.jpg
• A player acquires the software for the game once only, from that point on, if they ever need
replacement game disks they can download these from the blizzard.net site.
Digital nature of the downloaded replacement 'disks' means that they do not take up shelf space
(small amount of server space used to house the disk image) ie much more cost effective to store a
disk image than many physical DVDs
Graph from: Feldman, Leszczynski and Pulst-Korenberg 2009, p.14, Appendix Figure 3
• From this perspective Blizzard are ‘are able to achieve ‘instant scalability’ through their
ability to meet market demand in virtually no time (Liebowitz 2002, p.17). This is
demonstrated through their ability to accommodate increased numbers of users at any time
(Feldman, Leszczynski and Pulst-Korenberg 2009, p.2).
32. Image from: http://www.hss.state.ak.us/gcdse/history/Images/DSS_AccessImage.jpg
• Blizzard’s instant scalability is largely due to their products involving ‘access’ rather
than ‘ownership’ particularly with MMORPG games like WoW that involve monthly
subscriber fees (Feldman et al. 2009, p.2). This is one of the fundamental economic
basis of Internet commerce as demonstrated by Rifkin (2001); “Markets are making
way for networks, and ownership is being replaced by access” (Rifkin 2001, p.4).
33. • There are a number of adjunct businesses to WOW which have been criticised as taking
advantage of the nature of the player group, these being described as ‘Gold Farmers’ have
been accused of distorting the game and making it unfair, the counter argument to this has
been that for players without the time to play, using the gold farmers has simply levelled the
playing field. This secondary economy has been addressed by Blizzard through the use of
internal controls, but at the end of the day the regulation of this has been minimal as the
game requires parity between the ‘hardcore’ and ‘soft-core’ gamers.
• The WOW business is reliant upon the continued play of the existing player group and the
addition of new players to the network. The business has steadily grown from the original
game, with 2 subsequent major releases and a third to follow in October 2010. Each renewal
of the game has made the overall game more user friendly, and has reduced the level of skill
required to be successful at the game. The game caters for a myriad of different gaming
interesting, from the raider, solo player, those interested in playing auction or marketing and
even those who enjoy the community within the site.
Image from: http://www.blogcdn.com/www.joystiq.com/media/2008/10/orcjump.jpg
• The game now has an estimated 11,000,000 active users through the world, these numbers
continue to grow (Gray, 2008).
34. a. How successful is this strategy?
• In simplistic measures the property is the most successful game in its genre and in terms of
revenue the most successful game of all time, however this belies the entire story, and fails
to acknowledge the strength of the business in the conversion to the mainstream.
• The business has transformed from merely being the domain of a ‘geek’ to be inserted into
the common vernacular and now being merely a part of everyday life. To achieve this the
business has taken a number of steps, these have included significant advertising on
television and digital media (noted mostly through the Mr T and William Shattner Warcraft
advertisements) and were the business was part of parody (being the Southpark episode
“Make Love not Warcraft”) the DVD release for series ten contained a copy of warcraft.
Image from: http://starcraft.incgamers.com/gallery/data/512/medium/036_Pro_WoW_gamers_play_SC2.jpg
• This increase in overall popularity and growth in gamer culture is a strong representation of
an economy moving away from industrial production of goods and services towards cultural
production of electronic cultural entertainment (Rifkin 2001, p.7). This is represented by a
‘play’ ethic fuelled by commodified cultural experience (Rifkin 2001, p.7-8).
• This also represents a shift from an industrial workforce centered around supplying goods
and services, towards people servicing cultural ‘needs and desires’. Networked micro-
chipped machines replace the industrial human labour force while business concentrates on
working towards cultural experience (Rifkin 2001, p.9).
35. • The dominance of the game has been such that it has resulted in very few competitors
arising and even less being able to make traction against the dominant brand. Guild Wars, an
Australian company, failed in its attempt to compete (even though it was acknowledged as a
superior game), solely as it could not create a sufficient network compared with the existing
warcraft brand.
• The evolution of the franchise from the initial platform game to the MMORPG has not been
without issues, the business has required considerable adaptation to remain relevant, and in
this regard there has been an alignment between the wants of the users and the business to
ensure that the game continues to be strong.
Graph from: Morningstar Equity Research 2010, p.2
• Morningstar Equity Research reports that Activision Blizzard is one of the largest
developers,
publishers, and distributors of video games for consoles, PCs, and handheld devices. This
equates to current trading volumes sitting around 19 million.
36. b. How has the business adapted with age?
• The evolution of the WOW game over the 6 years of existence has been considerable and
reflects the intention to move from hardcore gamers to more mainstream. This adaptation
has been evidenced through the major releases reducing the emphasis on raiding to reach the
highest levels of the game and bring parity between the casual gamer and the hardcore
(primary through the removal of the 40 man raids with the introduction of Burning
Crusade). The business was under risk prior to the launch of Burning Crusade as there was a
large disparity between the player groups and the casual player was marginalised.
• This adaptation has manifested itself in a number of ways, recent changes have included
automated group finding which has meant that there is less need for organisation and less
‘downtime’. The development of a more comprehensive auction has attracted players whose
interests lie in accumulating in game gold. At a player level the ability to level up much
quicker has meant that a new player is not isolated for an inordinate period
• The conversion to the battle.net platform has consolidated the business in such a manner that
the Blizzard company has more contact with the customer base, with an eventual view to the
replacement property to the warcraft title (assuming this takes place in the foreseeable
future).
• By making the game generic it has attracted a greater number of users, this has been
response to criticism of the game from casual gamers, and whilst the business has not
necessarily ignored the hardcore gamers (and certainly appeased them through the
introduction of achievements), it has acknowledged that the success of the game is through
the number of players and not necessarily on catering solely to a hardcore base.
37. c. What elements of the business are attention and which are network?
• The advertising and marketing of the business has been as much about pointing at itself and
its users and being a message that the business is available and playable by all. The attention
aspect has been primarily through digital media, however the crossover has been
exceptionally successful and indicates that the business is well aware of the importance of
catering to both the hardcore and mainstream.
• In the initial stages of the game, there was almost a stigma attached, where it was the
domain of the nerds, this has been superseded by a commonality of the game, and the point
of the Southpark parody can be seen as almost the point where the business made the
conversion.
• Attention in the context of the success of the business has been in the growth of the player
numbers, more numbers has meant that the game has got stronger (and in turn increased the
user group). This attention has been important, as being the dominant company in the field
there is a constant need to draw in new players. Methods for doing this, have not only
included the methods above, but through allowing studies to be made of the game, critical
and positive media and through users and detractors from using forums.
38. • In the absence of attention economics the business would have struggled and its success has
been certainly attributed to events that have been created by the business, whether these be
successful advertising, events or the creation of buzz.
• The network of the business is the number of active users and the creation of in game (and
out of game) communities, groups and guilds. These have been an important element of the
growth of the game and ensuring that it continues to be supported. The creation of
community has been an important aspect of the development of the business, in the absence
of this the game would only be a simple platform and the attractive elements of the game
would be unachievable.
• Network economics in the context of WOW are manifested in the interaction between the
users, there is a legitimate community, with social parameters and the expectations that
define a normal community. This network has brought the game to be as a much a
replacement for physical community for many, and provides succour where the marginalised
do not identify with their own communities or groups. This has grown the game in terms of
not only users but in providing interaction which builds the success of the game.