woensdag 30 november 2005

De krant lezen via weblogs

De manier waarop ik navigeer door al het nieuws is vergelijkbaar met hoe Chris Anderson het hier beschrijft. Maar wat gebeurt er met de MSM (Mainstream Media) wanneer iedereen maar aanneemt dat iemand anders het wel laat weten wanneer er 'in de krant' iets interessants staat?

"Aside from a few purely information feeds, such as new Netflix releases, most of what I read online is blogs. (You can see my current subscriptions here.) I don't visit any mainstream media sites directly (and in print, I only read the Sunday New York Times and a load of magazines). If there's something relevant to my interests in the Wall Street Journal, the daily NYT or some other news site, I assume one of the blogs I read will point me to it."

Content distributie strategieën

Goed advies voor diegenen die actief zijn in de content business, en wie is dat niet tegenwoordig...

"Assuming you buy into this vision, which you probably should, there are some tangible ways that publishers could shift their business to aim into the center of that world. There are some strategic decisions that will help publishers become more competitive in a world of "feed ubiquity", and there are some specific operational changes that will make your content accessible for different tools and technologies."

zondag 27 november 2005

Content distribution strategies

Some sound advice if you are in the content business, and who isn't these days....

"Assuming you buy into this vision, which you probably should, there are some tangible ways that publishers could shift their business to aim into the center of that world. There are some strategic decisions that will help publishers become more competitive in a world of "feed ubiquity", and there are some specific operational changes that will make your content accessible for different tools and technologies."

Reading the paper through blogs

The way I navigate the news is comparable to how Chris Anderson does it. But what happens when everyone will just assume that someone else will write about it when there's something interesting to be read in the the MSM (MainStream Media)?

"Aside from a few purely information feeds, such as new Netflix releases, most of what I read online is blogs. (You can see my current subscriptions here.) I don't visit any mainstream media sites directly (and in print, I only read the Sunday New York Times and a load of magazines). If there's something relevant to my interests in the Wall Street Journal, the daily NYT or some other news site, I assume one of the blogs I read will point me to it."

zaterdag 26 november 2005

Comments to the editor

Joi Ito on CNN. The remark on the International Herald Tribune is one that should make you think.

"Rebecca talked about global voices and I talked about blogs being conversations. Nothing new to readers here, but felt good having a chance to say it on CNN. I also quoted Thomas Crampton's post about how the IHT only gets 30 letters to the editor while we often get more comments on blog posts."

Bloggers vrij laten?

Een lijstje marketingtrends voor 2006 op fris_licht.

"2. Weblogs worden een standaardinstrument
De merken die correct met blogs omgaan, krijgen respect van consumenten en hiermee een stukje 'street-credibility'. Zeker als merken de bloggers vrij laten te schrijven wat ze willen."


Hebben ze een keus dan....?

Reacties voor de hoofdredacteur

Joi Ito op CNN. De opmerking over de International Herald Tribune is er eentje die velen aan het denken zou moeten zetten.

"Rebecca talked about global voices and I talked about blogs being conversations. Nothing new to readers here, but felt good having a chance to say it on CNN. I also quoted Thomas Crampton's post about how the IHT only gets 30 letters to the editor while we often get more comments on blog posts."