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Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded Lecturer from the Brisbane Graduate School of Business, Queensland University of Technology
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Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Dec 18, 2015

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Page 1: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Not just for nerds:Using emergent technologies

to improve communication

Joanne JacobsProject Manager,

Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded Lecturer from the Brisbane Graduate School of

Business, Queensland University of Technology

Page 2: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Scope of the Presentation

• Changes in consumer behaviour

– Fragmentation of media audiences

– Shift from consumption to interaction

– Tools not enough; social motivations

• The Rise of “Web 2.0”

• The value of blogging

Page 3: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Fragmenting media landscape

• More channels than ever before to receive content

• More audiences focused on their own ‘user-generated’ content than on professionally produced programming

• Consumers are demanding personalisation of information and are informed about content with which they engage

Page 4: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.
Page 5: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Technorati: Blog Growth

Source: Technorati, State of the Blogosphere.

Page 6: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

MySpace versus Google (Visits)

Source: Hitwise, MySpace Moves Into #1 Position for all Internet Sites

Page 7: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

YouTube, Flickr Reach

Source: Alexa, cited in Google, You Tube & Dark Side Of Online Video, Om Malik

Page 8: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Rise of ‘Web 2.0’

• Web 2.0 software and technologies arose as a means of solving a publishing and accessibility problem, whilst accommodating social communications

• Web 2.0 not technically different from Web 1.0, just delivering on the promise of the “markets are conversations” ideals of technology advocates (see The Cluetrain Manifesto)

Page 9: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Web 2.0 Definition

Web 2.0 is the network as platform, spanning all connected devices; Web 2.0 applications are those that make the most of the intrinsic advantages of that platform: delivering software as a continually-updated service that gets better the more people use it, consuming and remixing data from multiple sources, including individual users, while providing their own data and services in a form that allows remixing by others, creating network effects through an "architecture of participation," and going beyond the page metaphor of Web 1.0 to deliver rich user experiences.

SOURCE: O’Reilly Radar, http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2005/10/web_20_compact_definition.html

Page 10: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Web 2.0 technologies

• Blogs

• Wiki

• ‘Mash-ups’

– a website or web application that uses content from more than one source to create a completely new service

• RSS

– Really Simple Syndication or RDF Site Summary; a web feed format for aggregating content drawn from websites, blogs and podcasts

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Changes in consumer behaviour

• Web 2.0 has evolved, not been manufactured

• It represents the following changes:– Desire for negotiated meaning development

Eg: Reality programming and voting on results (user Agency)

– Desire for a continuing conversation – Interest in following citation trails– Desire for multiple media channel opportunities

(text, audio and video)

Page 16: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Shift from consumption to interaction

• Audiences for traditional media now fragmenting– Gen Y are spending less time in front of the television

and read less print media than ever before– In addition to subscription television services, and

‘professional’ games and web content, user-led content channels now highly popular

• Audiences now use content as an excuse to contact (Rushkoff, 2003)

Page 17: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

What’s new about Web 2.0?

• Engaging stakeholders in decision making

• Allocating tasks based on skill sets and expertise rather than as a role in an employment environment

• Generative tools to denote ‘hot’ topics

• A culture of critical debate and engagement

– Produces a sense of trust in the publisher

• Evolving “correctness” of data

Page 18: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Who Cares?

• Media companies (News Corp’s Rupert Murdoch)

• Publishing industry• PR and advertising industries• Sub-cultural groups

(niche industries – the ‘Long Tail’)• Political marketers and lobby groups• Research organisations and educational

institutionsCommunicators MUST respond

Page 19: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

What difference will it make?

• Increased customer engagement and intellectual investment in an idea (John Twelve Hawks, The Traveler, Doubleday)

• Transparency of business practice (Dallas Morning News)

• Provides an incentive for participation in digital networks (social motivation)

Page 20: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Tools are NOT enough

• Dominant sense among software providers and advocates that the tools will be a silver bullet for interaction needs among audiences

• Errr… No. Litany of examples of social software implementations that have ‘died’

• Research demonstrating social purposes are more dominant motivations than information and entertainment

Page 21: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Improving communication

• Blogs and other Web 2.0 technologies can permit conversations to evolve between an organisation and its stakeholders

• Conversations are more effective facilitators of business than common ‘information overload’ strategies

• Communication is not broadcasting; it’s not enough to get the message out. You have to be open to responses

Page 22: Not just for nerds: Using emergent technologies to improve communication Joanne Jacobs Project Manager, Australasian CRC for Interaction Design Seconded.

Not just for nerds….

• Business blogging on the rise

• Other Web 2.0 technologies emerging as a means of categorising information and for knowledge management

• The Attention Economy is upon us! (Davenport & Beck 2001)

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Any questions?

Joanne JacobsProject Manager, ACIDSeconded Lecturer from BGSBPh: 3337 7832 Mob: 0419 131 077Email: [email protected] ID: bgsbjj

(tell me who you are before adding me as a contact!)Blog: http://joannejacobs.netBook: Uses of Blogs, Available for order from Amazon