Archive - April, 2009

Why Microblogging Could be the New Email

The following is a contributed article from Zeta.net. Link to the Original Article.

There’s no doubt about it: 2009 is the year Twitter broke. But what’s the point of microblogging and how can it help your business?

You know something’s hit the mainstream when Phillip Schofield mentions it on This Morning. But Twitter’s apparent overnight success took the best part of three years.

A prototype of the microblogging and social networking tool was built in two weeks in March 2006 and was launched publicly that August.  A programmer called Jack Dorsey came up with the idea when he was writing software that provided realtime status updates for taxi companies.  Twitter eventually became a company in May 2007.  It’s estimated that over 1.78 million people are now signed up to the service, compared to just 100,000 a year ago.  The company last year turned down a $500 million buyout offer from Facebook.

Its genius is in its simplicity.  Users are able to publish messages of 140 characters or less via the web or mobile phones. Collectively, these form a microblog, such as this one from Zeta.  Messages – or ‘tweets’ – are read by ‘followers’, who subscribe to your posts and have them delivered to their own Twitter homepage.

The result is a stream of updates on everything from what someone’s doing for lunch to the fact that they’ve just been elected US president.

Twitter may be the best-known microblogging tool but it’s far from being the only one.  Facebook’s status updates and wall posts make unwitting microbloggers out of its users.  Its recent redesign was a direct response to the growth of Twitter.

Tumblelogs such as tumblr and Soup extend the short-form format to include multimedia content. Yonkly is aimed at users who want to create niche microblogs.   The Google-owned Jaiku offers an open source take on the genre.  Plurk provides a quirky, timeline-based aesthetic.  And Yammer, which won last year’s TechCrunch50, is specifically designed to provide an internal microblogging tool for businesses.

With email becoming an increasing burden on people’s time, microblogging offers a compelling business communication solution.  “Web 2.0 evangelists… say it can facilitate an open-ended corporate culture that values transparency, collaboration and innovation,” says Forbes.com. “Most important, it can be an effective way to build a customer-centric organisation that not only communicates authentically but also listens to customers and learns from that interaction.”

A tool such as Twitter is ideal for following news on a specific topic or for asking questions of your peers.  Meanwhile, being able to update your status on the move benefits employees who need to keep in regular contact with one another: a single text can generate an update that is immediately fed to an entire group of co-workers.  With the wealth of access points that microblogs offer – from Firefox add-ons to iPhone applications – it’s an elegant way to keep people connected, irrespective of time zones or technology.

The business-focused Yammer allows companies to host the software themselves but this is the exception, not the rule.  Most microblogging services live in the cloud, with all the benefits – and problems – that entails.  Twitter, for instance, has grown so rapidly that its servers frequently keel over, resulting in the familiar Fail Whale screen.

It’s also worth considering that microblogging is, essentially, an extremely accessible form of publishing and that your posts can appear in Google search results and across the web.  It’s something that this Twitter user resolutely failed to remember, with the result that it cost him his job.  There’s also the risk that, if not managed correctly, microblogging serves only to add to your digital clutter – not reduce it.

For many of us, microblogs still have the novelty value of the latest web-based cultural phenomenon.  But, like email, tools such as Twitter are destined to become a central part of our working lives.  Even if you do use them to update colleagues on your lunch plans.

London to host microblogging micro-event

Visit Original Article – Times Online

The UK’s first event devoted to the new set of social media tools such as Twitter will take place at the Southbank in London on May 20. In keeping with the subject matter, the Media140 event will be short and sweet, lasting just four hours, from 2pm. Packed into those four hours will be a host of top-grade speakers, including journalists and representatives of The Guardian, Reuters, the BBC, and of course The Times, whose very own Joanna Geary will be discussing the impact of social media on local news.

TodaysMama.com Announces Microblogging Service to Connect Moms

View Original Article – eMediaWire

Salt Lake City, Utah (PRWEB) March 30, 2009 — TodaysMama.com, a regional publishing company and online community for moms, today announced the launch of TodaysMama Connect, a microblogging service designed to help women connect in 140 characters or less. TodaysMama.com is one of the first Web sites to offer a microblogging service catered solely to women. TodaysMama Connect will allow moms to connect not only with other moms all over the country, but also with national personalities, media outlets, and local business owners. The tool allows 140 characters or less, features topical groups, offers a mobile version, and links with Twitter so users can update both services simultaneously if they choose. Women who are interested in participating can visit www.todaysmama.com/connect and set up a profile.

Glam Media Launches Tinker.com

Visit Original Article – Glam Media

Silicon Valley, CA and New York, NY—March 31, 2009—Glam Media, Inc. (www.GlamMedia.com), the #1 online vertical content network with more than 1,000 publishers and 6,000 editors and contributors worldwide and a comScore Media Metrix Top 20 Web property, launched Tinker.com today, the first micro-blogging platform for people to find, follow, filter, create and share real-time conversations on events and breaking news. Tinker brings context, filters and curation to micro-blogging—and is the first safe monetization model for brand advertisers. Glam Media also unveiled the Tinker Micro-Blogger Network, leveraging its proven vertical content network model for micro-blogging influencers.

The Microblogging.com domain is for sale. Send an email to info@microblogging.com for more information.