Posts Tagged ‘social media’

Taking a Chance With Transparency

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011


Domino’s Pizza seems to have gone all-in when it comes to standing behind their product. They kicked off their new image

with Super Bowl ad’s touting farm grown veggies, and then invited customers to share photos of actual Domino’s pizzas at Showusyourpizza.com.They adopted a successful online strategy that allows a customer to track their order from oven to delivery and leave feedback. To take it one step further, they are broadcasting that feedback in Times Square. Fast Company has a great write up:

Pie In The Sky? Domino’s Flips Switch On Times Square Instant Reviews, Takes Transparency To New Level

Meta Information: That’s Info About Info (If You Didn’t Know)

Monday, August 23rd, 2010

Here’s some information about information about information. Sorry, I couldn’t resist.  It’s meta information… like in the title and it’s EVERYWHERE.  It’s a trip when you think about it.  This entry was written for 52’s blog by Brian Belefant whose link to more info is included in the body.  Thanks Brian!

A picture used to be worth 1,000 words. But thatʼs no longer enough. When I import a picture into Aperture, I can append it with 52 meta tags –– words that describe everything from the focal length I shot  it at to its copyright.

This may seem fairly benign, but when youʼre sitting in the Newark Airport for five hours waiting to make a connecting flight –– as I am –– you have lots of time to explore implications.

My first notion is to think of it in economic terms. What used to be worth 1,000 words is now worth 1,052. Thatʼs a five percent rate of inflation, or deflation, depending on whether youʼre talking about the pictures or the words.

Words about pictures is only one thing, though. I write a blog (www.60secdirector.blogspot.com). Recently, I had a slightly uneasy feeling when I found out that people were blogging about my blog.

Sure, itʼs flattering. But some of the blogs that blogged about my blog have larger readerships than I do. Isnʼt that weird?

And then thereʼs the part about the information itself. My blog provides information –– itʼs bite-sized lessons on directing for aspiring filmmakers. But when someone blogs about my blog, theyʼre providing information about information.

Meta information.

And what about twittering, googling, facebooking, linking, tagging, and all those other verbs that didnʼt even exist 15 years ago, but now have infected our language to the point that theyʼre better understood than concepts that many would argue contribute more to our body of knowledge? Can you distinguish between “continuous” and “continual”? I canʼt. I used to know the difference. Now I have to look it up. But I can tell you how a blog is different from a tweet. Does that mean information about information supplanting information itself?

(Okay, bad example. “Continuous” and “continual” are words about information. But you get my point.)

Wandering around the terminal for the fifteenth time, I pass Starbucks. They have nine different words to describe coffee mixed with milk. And Iʼm not even talking about sizes or the adjectives you can apply to fine-tune your purchase, like “wet”, “dry”, “no-foam”, and “extra-hot.”

Outside Hudson News, thereʼs a huge poster for ʻLuckyʼ. An ad for a magazine dedicated to shopping. Or to put it another way, an ad for a collection of ads and information, much of which, Iʼm sure, refers to other information –– books, other magazines, movies.

If you buy the magazine, they put it in a plastic bag with pictures of magazine covers on it, presumably to advertise their availability to the other passengers waiting five hours to make a connection. Hudson News recruits you to disseminate information about information about information.

Inside Hudson News, my eye is drawn to a particular book. ʻPreciousʼ. Based on the movie ʻPreciousʼ, which was based on the book ʻPushʼ.

Huh?

A book based on a movie based on a book? They should make a movie about that. And if it does well, they can turn it into a book. And so on.

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WTF is social media?

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

Join a panel discussion about the world of social media—Where do advertising, design and marketing fit? Do they fit at all? What are the consequences and potential of engaging in social media? How can you manage a brand in an online environment? And… why is my mom commenting on my Facebook status?