Everything You’ve Ever Wanted to Know About the Sharing Economy but Were Afra...Crowdsourcing Week
In this crowdsourced session, Benita's presentation will be inspired by the crowd's curiosity.
By Benita Matofska, Chief Sharer, The People Who Share. Presented at Crowdsourcing Week Global 2016. Learn more and join the next event: www.crowdsourcingweek.com
Happy New Year 2039! What our world will look like 25 years from now.Natalia Hatalska
Future will be awesome. Future is so unpredictable. Future is scary. We don’t know what the next few years will bring let alone next decades. But I challenged the world’s greatest minds to deal with that daunting task and gathered their opinions to show us the future in the next 25 years. In 12 different aspects of our lives.
The future makers will tell you about it. Today.
Key note to Innovation Group of the municipality of Emmen about innovation, trends, and roadmap to Society30. October 2016, Amersfoort, The Netherlands.
Truly great collaboration partnerships don’t happen every day - or even every year. This Arkadin infographic looks at a century of great collaboration stories.
Even on multi-decade timescales, truly earth-shaking collaborations only pop up every decade or two. But when they do, they’re easy to recognise.
They involve big challenges, with the fate of nations and industries at their mercy. Perfect planning, with pin-sharp focus on strategy and strengths leading to extraordinary outcomes, changing the lives of billions.
The partnerships below aren’t the only ones, but they’re among the greatest. Collaborative technology - from transatlantic telegraphs to broadband conferencing and presence - played its role in every one.
Celebrity 2.0: New New Hollywood is Breaking All The Rulessparks & honey
The rise of the creative class is reshaping media and redefining fame and celebrity. The balance of power has shifted from producers, studios, broadcast networks, etc., to the new creative talent. We call this creative class “New New Hollywood” (NNH).
But what’s really profound is the power that these NNH creators wield. NNH personalities have enormous fan bases with extraordinary loyalty and unprecedented engagement - fanatical, in fact.
For example, Nicki Minaj (a traditional celebrity) has <9.5><5mil Twitter fans, while PewDiePie (a NNH celebrity) commands an audience of nearly 40 million on YouTube. NNH has so much influence it could single-handedly reshape culture and society, let alone brand preferences. NNH could even swing the 2016 presidential election!
Brands need to leverage NNH, but to do so, they need to understand the context and unique ways in which NNH operates. The rules of engagement are very different.
This report sets out to shed light on one of the most important cultural forces at work today: NEW NEW HOLLYWOOD.
We are asking cities to do a lot more with a lot less. At Urban.Us, we believe that startups have the potential to solve some of the most pressing city issues. But they will need help. We explore some of the key challenges and our approach during our first 6 months to begin work with our first 10 startups that are helping to make cities better.
Everything You’ve Ever Wanted to Know About the Sharing Economy but Were Afra...Crowdsourcing Week
In this crowdsourced session, Benita's presentation will be inspired by the crowd's curiosity.
By Benita Matofska, Chief Sharer, The People Who Share. Presented at Crowdsourcing Week Global 2016. Learn more and join the next event: www.crowdsourcingweek.com
Happy New Year 2039! What our world will look like 25 years from now.Natalia Hatalska
Future will be awesome. Future is so unpredictable. Future is scary. We don’t know what the next few years will bring let alone next decades. But I challenged the world’s greatest minds to deal with that daunting task and gathered their opinions to show us the future in the next 25 years. In 12 different aspects of our lives.
The future makers will tell you about it. Today.
Key note to Innovation Group of the municipality of Emmen about innovation, trends, and roadmap to Society30. October 2016, Amersfoort, The Netherlands.
Truly great collaboration partnerships don’t happen every day - or even every year. This Arkadin infographic looks at a century of great collaboration stories.
Even on multi-decade timescales, truly earth-shaking collaborations only pop up every decade or two. But when they do, they’re easy to recognise.
They involve big challenges, with the fate of nations and industries at their mercy. Perfect planning, with pin-sharp focus on strategy and strengths leading to extraordinary outcomes, changing the lives of billions.
The partnerships below aren’t the only ones, but they’re among the greatest. Collaborative technology - from transatlantic telegraphs to broadband conferencing and presence - played its role in every one.
Celebrity 2.0: New New Hollywood is Breaking All The Rulessparks & honey
The rise of the creative class is reshaping media and redefining fame and celebrity. The balance of power has shifted from producers, studios, broadcast networks, etc., to the new creative talent. We call this creative class “New New Hollywood” (NNH).
But what’s really profound is the power that these NNH creators wield. NNH personalities have enormous fan bases with extraordinary loyalty and unprecedented engagement - fanatical, in fact.
For example, Nicki Minaj (a traditional celebrity) has <9.5><5mil Twitter fans, while PewDiePie (a NNH celebrity) commands an audience of nearly 40 million on YouTube. NNH has so much influence it could single-handedly reshape culture and society, let alone brand preferences. NNH could even swing the 2016 presidential election!
Brands need to leverage NNH, but to do so, they need to understand the context and unique ways in which NNH operates. The rules of engagement are very different.
This report sets out to shed light on one of the most important cultural forces at work today: NEW NEW HOLLYWOOD.
We are asking cities to do a lot more with a lot less. At Urban.Us, we believe that startups have the potential to solve some of the most pressing city issues. But they will need help. We explore some of the key challenges and our approach during our first 6 months to begin work with our first 10 startups that are helping to make cities better.
Meetings Matter by Chris Kelly of Convene --BizBash Live NY 2015Brittany Valente
What can your meeting do that the internet can't do better? What can you do that nobody else in your organization can? Meeting organizers are orchestrators of intellectual capital.
Young Lions Czech Republic 2021 | MEDIA
www.younglions.cz
The only platform where young professionals can find out how good they are compared to their peers.
Powerful learning through experience by working under time pressure.
Young Lions develop ambition and the ability to create excellent communications solutions.
We can call them the national championship for brand communication professionals aged 30 or under.
They provide a unique opportunity to develop creative and personal excellence.
Consumer trends in communications 2017 : Canvas8Canvas8
The key consumer trends and insights influencing communication in 2017 – based on consumer research and analysis from behavioural insights practice Canvas8.
Here’s a recap of our Trendspotters’ 10 favorite finds of the past year that reflect emerging cultural currents.
Stops include: Ad Age Next, Line Friends Store, Impossible Burger, and more.
For more discussion reach me @Larryz This articles shows the need for security in layers, as each layer can be compromised.
Abstract. This paper is a short summary of the first real world detection of a backdoor in a military grade FPGA. Using an innovative patented technique we were able to detect and analyse in the first documented case of its kind, a backdoor inserted into the Actel/Microsemi ProASIC3 chips. The backdoor was found to exist on the silicon itself, it was not present in any firmware loaded onto the chip. Using Pipeline Emission Analysis (PEA), a technique pioneered by our sponsor, we were able to extract the secret key to activate the backdoor. This way an attacker can disable all the security on the chip, reprogram crypto and access keys, modify low-level silicon features, access unencrypted configuration bitstream or permanently damage the device. Clearly this means the device is wide open to intellectual property theft, fraud, re-programming as well as reverse engineering of the design which allows the introduction of a new backdoor or Trojan. Most concerning, it is not possible to patch the backdoor in chips already deployed, meaning those using this family of chips have to accept the fact it can be easily compromised or it will have to be physically replaced after a redesign of the silicon itself.
Meetings Matter by Chris Kelly of Convene --BizBash Live NY 2015Brittany Valente
What can your meeting do that the internet can't do better? What can you do that nobody else in your organization can? Meeting organizers are orchestrators of intellectual capital.
Young Lions Czech Republic 2021 | MEDIA
www.younglions.cz
The only platform where young professionals can find out how good they are compared to their peers.
Powerful learning through experience by working under time pressure.
Young Lions develop ambition and the ability to create excellent communications solutions.
We can call them the national championship for brand communication professionals aged 30 or under.
They provide a unique opportunity to develop creative and personal excellence.
Consumer trends in communications 2017 : Canvas8Canvas8
The key consumer trends and insights influencing communication in 2017 – based on consumer research and analysis from behavioural insights practice Canvas8.
Here’s a recap of our Trendspotters’ 10 favorite finds of the past year that reflect emerging cultural currents.
Stops include: Ad Age Next, Line Friends Store, Impossible Burger, and more.
For more discussion reach me @Larryz This articles shows the need for security in layers, as each layer can be compromised.
Abstract. This paper is a short summary of the first real world detection of a backdoor in a military grade FPGA. Using an innovative patented technique we were able to detect and analyse in the first documented case of its kind, a backdoor inserted into the Actel/Microsemi ProASIC3 chips. The backdoor was found to exist on the silicon itself, it was not present in any firmware loaded onto the chip. Using Pipeline Emission Analysis (PEA), a technique pioneered by our sponsor, we were able to extract the secret key to activate the backdoor. This way an attacker can disable all the security on the chip, reprogram crypto and access keys, modify low-level silicon features, access unencrypted configuration bitstream or permanently damage the device. Clearly this means the device is wide open to intellectual property theft, fraud, re-programming as well as reverse engineering of the design which allows the introduction of a new backdoor or Trojan. Most concerning, it is not possible to patch the backdoor in chips already deployed, meaning those using this family of chips have to accept the fact it can be easily compromised or it will have to be physically replaced after a redesign of the silicon itself.
15.11.18 Local govt in the 21st century - enkel collectiveenkelcollective
We live in a world of rapid change with big shifts in many areas of society. Large Silicon Valley corporations deliver services that government traditionally has delivered, and exponential technology development makes it increasingly difficult for government and legislators to keep up.
Furthermore, we have in the past years seen an increasing distrust in political institutions on all levels. One consequence of this is a global movement of citizen-led societal innovation through initiatives such as makerspaces, repair cafés, tool libraries, co-operatives and community sharing through social media. I.e. citizens begin to take things in their own hands.
This Trend report is the result of our Vigilantes work that constantly monitor the consumer behavior and product innovations to post it everyday on our magazine: L-1452.com
Building Engaging Communities on a Hyper-Local Scale: An Experiment in Commun...Kate Hamilton
Presented at Social Media Week Chicago 2014, Kate Hamilton reviews how blending quality content, digital technologies and social media can help create long-lasting, engaged communities, and shares key observations from her experiment with hyper-local community organization LoganSquarist that digital marketers, brands and storytellers can apply to their own strategies and tactics to full effect. She pairs these learnings with her experience as director of digital strategy and social media at Chicago-based precision content marketing agency IntraLink Global.
In the last decade, hyper-local journalism has grown exponentially nationwide as media companies have merged and coverage has become more homogenized in the top-tier outlets, which fail to report news of relevance and significance to local communities. This has led to the growth of, and a new appreciation for, local news reporting, which is evident in two ways: “block to block” coverage in community outlets, and citizen reporting through community blogs such as EveryBlock.
LoganSquarist, a hyperlocal news website serving Chicago’s Logan Square, was founded by Kate Hamilton in 2011, partly as an experiment in using social media to build community. Since its inception, LoganSquarist has grown from a Twitter handle to an influencer in its local community with a full-fledged weekly news publication and a 30-person volunteer staff organization.
Oversaw the creation of, and contributed to TMW Unlimited's second annual Strategy Department document 'Viewpoint'. A collection of thought pieces covering a range of important topics relevant to us as marketeers and our clients as brand owners. It observes trends, analyses what it means and recommends actions to fully capitalise on them. This year we explored the themes of 1) Cultural Pluralism 2) Diversity within Advertising 3) Retail Innovation 4) Automation revolution 5) Gen Z and Luxury and 6) Social Live Streaming.
A 2017 trends document created collectively by the Planning department at TMW Unlimited. I oversaw the production of the piece and co-authored two of the six thought pieces around the areas of 1) Automation and 2) Diversity
The Revolution will not be Televised...but if you're lucky, it'll be memed.Tara Hunt
I gave this presentation at CTAM Canada's annual gathering at Corus HQ in Toronto on June 20th. I think it's safe to say that it was a bit...um...controversial.
In order to prepare for this talk, I poured over mutiple reports and studies about the state of the Canadian Media and Entertainment industry. These reports included a lot of hand-wringing over online and American VOD services (Neflix, etc), but really discounted "User-Uploaded Video" (or "User-Generated Content") as largely irrelevant (except for the CRTC, who seems to want to regulate and tax creators).
So...that's what I focused on in here: UGC, including Creators (and online influencers), remix/mashup culture, stans/super fans, and social media content in general.
Three points where I think the audience winced:
1. with the enormous growth in available content, we are seeing a huge appetite for diverse stories - we don't need any more content aimed at white people.
2. the biggest competitors for attention are your own audience, who are no longer "consumers"...they are creators. And there are many of them and growing.
3. stop worrying about people stealing your content. Content isn't where the value lies. Attention is where the value lies. You should be encouraging them to steal! It's free marketing!
I guess I can understand why my message was a little controversial, but I want to help, not hurt.
This presentation highlights the importance of engaging all of the community in Innovation and incersing importance of Collaboraion and the mobile smartphone. It covers tips on trendwatching as a way to stimulate creativity along with some future predictions to give ideas on business opportunities and presents practical tips for small business operating in Main Shopping Street precincts
In The Next Outlook 2019 we describe various trends in the behaviour of consumers and organisations that are most relevant to companies and institutions in the coming years. Trends company management need to be aware of in order to keep customers satisfied and to attract new ones in this new world, tomorrow as well as today.
20. 52%
of Americans have rented, borrowed, or
leased the kinds of items that people
usually own in the past two years.
Source: Study Sunrun - Feb 2013
21. 83%
said they would share these items if they
"could do so easily."
Source: Study Sunrun - Feb 2013
22. "We’ve always been in a culture where
more is more, and suddenly we’re in a
culture where less is a better quality of
life. It’s pretty revolutionary."
Bill Stewart, VP of customer care at Sunrun
54. 1. Return to local markets: Etsy
THE CRAFTSMAN LIVES AGAIN ON ETSY
Human to human relationship between
the person who is making it and the
person who is buying it.
3 years
200,000 sellers
1 Million registered users
55. 1. Return to local markets: Etsy
FARMSTAND
There are more than 5,750 local
farmers markets versus 1,700 in 1994.
82. “this stuff ended up
running my life,
the things I consumed
ended up consuming me”
Photo Credit: Maxwell Holyoke-Hirsch http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/10/opinion/sunday/living-with-less-a-lot-less.html
Graham
Hill
83. You are not the clothes you
wear, the contents of your
wallet, or the car you drive.
84. “Advertising has us chasing cars
and clothes, working jobs we hate
so we can buy shit we don't need”
Rachel Botsman, in “What’s mine is yours”
114. "by the end of this decade, power and
influence will shift largely to those
people with the best reputations and
trust networks, from people with money
and nominal power"
Craig Newmark
131. LOIC LE MEUR
FOUNDER, LEWEB
LOIC@LEWEB.CO
FACEBOOK.COM/LOIC
TWITTER: @LOIC
Share.
Thanks for your help on
this presentation:
Morgan Denis
Axelle Tessandier
Karyn Kane Williams
Douglas Atkin
Editor's Notes
25,000 fans donated $1.2M on kickstarter to finance her next albumhttp://www.wired.com/underwire/2013/03/amanda-palmer-2/http://www.nytimes.com/2012/06/06/arts/music/amanda-palmer-takes-connecting-with-her-fans-to-a-new-level.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
SPARK VIDEO http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JbSUyYXH8hs
Distorted investment priorities, as wealth gets directed into what will earn the largest profit and not into what most people really need (so public health, public education, and even dikes for periodically swollen rivers receive little attention);Worsening exploitation of workers, since the harder, faster, and longer people work—just as the less they get paid—the more profit is earned by their employer (with this incentive and driven by the competition, employers are forever finding new ways to intensify exploitation);Overproduction of goods, since workers as a class are never paid enough to buy back, in their role as consumers, the ever growing amount of goods that they produce (in the era of automation, computerization and robotization, the gap between what workers produce—and can produce—and what their low wage allows them to consume has increased enormously);Unused industrial capacity (the mountain of unsold goods has resulted in a large percentage of machinery of all kinds lying idle, while many pressing needs—but needs that the people who have them can't pay for—go unmet);Growing unemployment (machines and raw materials are available, but using them to satisfy the needs of the people who don't have the money to pay for what could be made would not make profits for those who own the machines and raw materials—and in a market economy profits are what matters);Growing social and economic inequality (the rich get richer and everyone else gets poorer, many absolutely and the rest in relation to the rapidly growing wealth of the rich);The same market experiences develop a set of anti-social attitudes and emotions (people become egotistical, concerned only with themselves. "Me first", "anything for money", "winning in competition no matter what the human costs" become what drives them in all areas of life. They also become very anxious and economically insecure, afraid of losing their job, their home, their sale, etc.; and they worry about money all the time. In this situation, feelings as well as ideas of cooperation and mutual concern are seriously weakened, where they don't disappear altogether, for in a market economy it is against one's personal interest to cooperate with others);Worsening ecological degradation (since any effort to improve the quality of the air and of the water costs the owners of industry money and reduces profits, our natural home becomes increasingly unlivable);
An individual with no specialized skills should be able to make an average of $41,000 per year in the SERead more at http://venturebeat.com/2013/01/21/will-you-leave-your-job-to-join-the-sharing-economy/#eBwU2PvBIYBJEa57.99Sabrina Hernandez, 23, used to work at Starbucks, but she isn’t going back after averaging $1,200 a month this fall hosting strangers’ dogs in her apartment through website DogVacay. “It’s so much more rewarding than working in a customer-service setting.”Airbnb commissioned a study of its economic impact on San Francisco last year and found a “spillover effect.” Because an Airbnb rental tends to be cheaper than a hotel, people stay longer and spent $1,100 in the city, compared with $840 for hotel guests; 14% of their customers said they would not have visited the city at all without Airbnb.Today, City CarShare members save an average of more than $8,000 per year compared with the costs of private car ownership. Studies have shown, for example, that for every reduction of 15,000 owned cars, a city keeps $127 million in the local economy as people are able to get what they need within a smaller geographic area.