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Web 2.0, Communites, and Business Processes


The original ideas behind web 2.0 communities were about openness and abundance. The ability for members to freely exchange information. Most CMO's and business managers rely on web analytics - they look at quantitative data - to make decisions. CMO's should be changing their thinking about value. Rarely do they have a feel for the qualitative information.

A central web 2.0 principle


Students at LIAFA University in Paris partnered with a team at Orange Labs to analyze Flickr (a web 2.0 application) using data from 2006. They produced this paper.

Web 3.0, RDF, and the Semantic Web


RDF is a W3C standard for modeling and sharing distributed knowledge based on a decentralized open-world assumption.

What Do You Think?


How many times a day does - What do you think - get asked? Who's asking? Your customers, your employees, your suppliers, your kids, your friends, strangers, the media, colleagues. It seems everybody wants to know what you think.

Sorting out social software, community platforms, content management.


Collaborative Tools - Web 2.0 - Social Networking Software - Community Platforms - Social Commerce - Content Management.

Social applications fill in the gaps that traditional business strategies, rigid IT software, and static web sites fail to address.

Social shopping sites ringing up sales


Amazon figured out social shopping and e-comm - social commerce - a long time ago. They made it easy for consumers (aka prosumers) to make recommendations, write reviews and then share the information with other users. You know, like us. Although, I am not surprised that these ideas failed to catch on much with must businesses.

Web 2.0 and customer support


Have you ever landed on a web site that was like a museum - look but don't touch? You know, the static ones with old information. Or one where you couldn't find the information you wanted? The kind where the customers needs were an after thought. I dread those. You see them all over the web. From small business sites to medium ones and even large company sites. They all suck.

Collaborative innovation


Here's a nice film promoting Charles Leadbetter's new book "We Think". The book is about collaborative innovation on the net.

From Mr. Leadbetter's site, "Welcome to We-think: mass innovation, not mass production

Improving customer services with social networking software.


Customer facing employees using social networking software are improving customer services. Employees are able to collaborate and share what they know with other employees and learn what they don't know about customers.

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