An interesting article on YouTube and the future of online video and communication

The following article appeared on TechCrunch presenting views from Chad Hurley, founder of YouTube. In terms of communications it is interesting because it presents benefits from using a diversity of platforms to disseminate your messages either through paid or unpaid content. Here are a few excerpts:
A Brave New World – The Future of Managing Content

From the printing press to the blog, from the record player to the iPod, and from the stage to the home theater, the way content has been produced, distributed and consumed in the world is constantly evolving.

The digital age has brought with it great change and great challenges; to some it brings the goal of global content distribution closer. For others it represents a loss of control and maybe the loss of a business model. As this era accelerates – as content moves from controlled to distributed, as we migrate from a single platform delivery model to multi-platform delivery, as the world changes around us – we need to ask ourselves: can and will we adapt to this new paradigm? Are we the drivers of change, or will change drive us?

For those of you wary of this new, decentralized distribution model, understand that the technology exists to give you the control you need. And by opening your content to digital distribution, as so many content providers have already done, you gain unprecedented reach and scope to touch new audiences around the world, anywhere and anytime. If you embrace this opportunity, you will evolve your business model and find new channels and opportunities to deepen engagement, discover new viewers and find new, substantial revenue opportunities.

Ultimately, we all need to embark on this journey together. We cannot retreat from technological advances. Even if YouTube didn’t exist, other platforms would surely be driving this change.

The truth is that the long-anticipated convergence of TV and the computer is happening faster than anybody predicted. It’s happening now. Let’s look at just a few data points on this:

– Around 10 billion videos are viewed monthly online in the U.S. alone
– On YouTube 13 hours of content are uploaded every minute
– The number of people consuming video on their PCs is higher than ever before
– In France over 120 million hours of video content is watched per month while over 3 million mobile phone subscribers use their phone to view a video

So online video is here to stay and evolving faster and in more dynamic ways than anyone imagined, even a few years ago. As for the business questions: the market potential of online video distribution may be in its early stages, but it’s here and growing fast.

– The online video advertising market is set to be worth over a billion dollars by 2010, will reach over $3 billion by 2012, and over $5 billion by 2013

People want solutions for searching, discovering, watching, and interacting with video. And you, as content providers, are looking for new audiences and new revenue channels. Given these demands, how can we take advantage of this massive market opportunity?

Let’s recognize that video captures the visceral, dynamic quality in life and shares it with the world. This has driven YouTube’s exponential growth in the last two years. Again, 13 hours of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute. That’s the equivalent of Hollywood releasing more than 57,000 full-length movies every week. Hundreds of millions of people come to YouTube every month to search, discover and share this content with their friends.

For you, the content owners, online video provides big opportunities across the 4 Rs: Reach, Research, Revenue, and Rights Management

First, online video provides massive and targeted reach to hundreds of millions of viewers. And we’re making those videos and communities even easier to discover. Online video also provides content owners with an opportunity to extend their brand, reach new consumers, and tap new revenue opportunities, which I’ll discuss later. For this group, online video provides the benefit of longer viewer engagement with greater frequency across multiple channels.

In August of this year the International Olympic Committee launched nine Channels on YouTube. Through our platform, the IOC offered this year’s Summer Olympic Games to a truly global audience across 78 territories in Asia, Africa and the Middle East for the first time in Olympic history. Hundreds of millions of people around the world were able to engage and experience the Olympics online, many of whom never had never had the opportunity to see the Games on their televisions. All of this took place while NBC, the broadcaster that owned the rights to the Olympics in the US, effectively used our Video ID technology to monitor and quickly block copyrighted Olympic content uploaded to the site.

Second, research provides a new breed of analytic tools that dive into who, why and where your content is being watched.

The products and features being developed by online video providers continue to evolve. For example, the American rock bank Weezer launched their music video “Pork and Beans” on YouTube resulting in over 4 million views in just two days. Using our sophisticated analytics tool, the band was able to then get an in-depth look at the video’s views. This data provided an online focus group of sorts, enabling them to prepare more effective and powerful marketing campaigns. It even helped Weezer understand where their videos were being watched and then plan their upcoming tour.

And third, global distribution and analytics tools give advertisers and content owners fresh channels of revenue on new and existing forms of content. Advertisers want simplicity with reach. Online video does this by combining reach beyond TV, with the targeting, reporting and accountability of sophisticated online advertising tools and analytics. Online video began as a playground for advertisers where they could test ideas, drive brand awareness and create consumer engagement through clever viral video campaigns. In the current economic climate, this platform also provides advertisers with an affordable distribution channel and metrics to help gauge the success of a campaign and drive engagement numbers up.

The European Commissioner for information, society and media, Vivian Reding, recently hailed YouTube as a great example of how content producers and service providers can work to benefit each other through our Video Identification technology, saying: “The Youtube platform tells the rights owner if his content has been uploaded to Youtube. He then has a choice: leave it up as it is, add advertising – thus monetizing the content- or requesting that the content be taken down.” I couldn’t have said it better myself. And we will remain committed to introducing these types of protections tools in the future.

Ultimately, the online video experience is about empowerment. Consumers of online video are empowered to be their own content programmers, consuming the relevant mix of mass, niche and personal media they demand. Advertisers are empowered through data to better understand and engage with their audiences. And content owners are empowered, through sophisticated identification tools, to control their content and make smart business decisions with their content.

The proliferation of content will continue exponentially. And as methods for uploading, aggregating, personalizing and distributing digital content develop, content owners will find new challenges and business opportunities. Spurred by technological innovation, people are already looking beyond their laptops to upload, customize and distribute content from and to any device.

Video content delivered to mobile devices will open consumers, advertisers and content creators to a world of opportunity. Everything from movie watching and sharing to hyper-targeting and dynamic, interactive, location-relevant ads are emerging within the mobile market. As the Web grows, so will videos’ presence in it. Accelerated by the power of embeddable video, developers will find new, innovative ways to push the boundaries of how ads are served and watched online. And the jump from the desktop to the TV, or the phone to the TV, or the camera to the TV, will all become seamless.

Gaining control of online video content and discovering effective business models are vital not only for our growth, but for our common survival. Online video is already fully integrated into the fabric of the Web – its presence is universal, inspiring and empowering to all that embrace it. In the very near future, the distribution of online video will soon cease to be seen as a threat, but rather as a fundamental distribution solution that can be personalized on desktops, phones and tv’s alike.

Where we are today is not the YouTube era. It is not the digital content era, or the multi-platform era. Where we are today is an extension of the work you have all done, built on the shoulders of CBS, RCA and the other innovators who came before us. There is no old media. There is no new media. There is one media with one common purpose: to inform, move and inspire the world through information, art and entertainment. Together, we can find a solution that will benefit everyone in this ecosystem, from consumers to advertisers to the content owners alike.

Read the full article here

By | October 16th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

GenevaLunch – new website

Our favourite online community newspaper, GenevaLunch has a new website with more content and a new clean design. Apart from the news from the Geneva Lake region, their blogs are always worth a read and you will find plenty of information on their resources pages.

By | October 15th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

Intersting article on blogging and journalism

This article discusses an online survey conducted by the online journalism blog to find out how journalists with blogs felt their work had been affected by the technology. 200 blogging journalists responded in total, from 30 different countries.

Of particular interest to this research is what has happened to journalistic processes in this meeting of cultures, particularly as some theorists have argued journalism is in a process of adapting in the face of technological, social and economic changes…

Read the full article here

By | October 14th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

Interesting blog – Innovation 2.0 and…

Following our recent event on mobile communications, here is another blog which may be of interest about innovation, ideas, web 2.0, social Networking, collaboration, knowledge management…and more.

http://enterprisecollab.wordpress.com/

The author is Stephane Cheikh, a Geneva based SITA employee working on innovation. It is a collection of personal thoughts around topics  such as future trends and innovation, disruptive web 2.0 business models and emerging technologis and markets.

By | October 3rd, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

Article on Web 3.0 in The Journal of New England Technology

Friday, September 26, 2008
Inside Web 3.0 : Local companies aim to make Web 3.0 smarter
By Jim Kozubek, Special to Mass High Tech (The Journal of New England Technology)

The next-generation Internet, labeled Web 3.0 by some, remains for now a theoretical state with various prospective capabilities. However, whether or not Web 3.0 – the intelligent web – emerges as experts predict, you can be certain that the Internet will evolve. It must, given its exponential increase in use, and local information technology companies are already working on the Internet infrastructure of the future.

Since broadband and web evolution enabled the Big Bang of the Internet a decade ago, online traffic has grown at a staggering rate, now doubling every two years and set to reach, by 2015, a zettabyte a year – that’s a 1 and 21 zeroes – a Discovery Institute report said. That means one of the defining concepts for Web 3.0 will be constraint, a term that comes with positive implications.

The speed of applications is essential to real-time functions as well as to a next-generation Internet, but, to be even more useful, the Internet needs to enable users to search and find resources that are relevant to them. This depends not on hardware but on middleware products, tools that enable interoperability of applications across a network.

Middleware is integral to “markup languages,” such as XML and HTML, that match language descriptions of websites and enable the linking of information and search engines to evolve, but markups are far from perfect languages. Markups match simple terms such as “morning star” and “evening star” and “Venus,” and are extensible to provide unlimited instances in pictures, definitions and references to the planet, or the goddess, based on search.

But markups do not constitute a grammar to “understand” complex concepts such as “the woman married to the father of Aeneas” because markups are not set up to understand grammatical relationships.

A server may be able to understand the intention of an Internet user and gather layers of information. Enter a phrase such as “I need a driver’s license” and it could pull up the address to the nearest department of motor vehicles, find forms needed to apply for a license, and schedule an appointment because it understands what the “need” of a user is in stated context.

“It’s going to be companies like ours that solve problems for specific needs that enable the creation of the Semantic Web,” Greenblatt said. “This is a point when information is layered and more valuable to users.”

Lee Feigenbaum, cofounder of Cambridge Semantics Inc., expects to go to market at the end of the year with a semantic spreadsheet that combines search functions with Microsoft Excel spreadsheets coded in RDF.

“The whole idea of semantic technology is to make information more useful,” he said. “You start being able to publish data that is reused, linked and create new functions for something like a spreadsheet.”

Read the complete article here>>

By | September 29th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

Interesting article on research blogging in the Economist …

User-generated science : web 2.0 tools are beginning to change the shape of scientific debate

Although Web 2.0, with its emphasis on user-generated content, has been derided as a commercial cul-de-sac, it may prove to be a path to speedier scientific advancement. According to Adam Bly, Seed’s founder, internet-aided interdisciplinarity and globalisation, coupled with a generational shift, portend a great revolution. His optimism stems in large part from the fact that the new technologies are no mere newfangled gimmicks, but spring from a desire for timely peer review.

With the technology in place, scientists face a chicken-and-egg conundrum. In order that blogging can become a respected academic medium it needs to be recognised by the upper echelons of the scientific establishment. But leading scientists are unlikely to take it up until it achieves respectability. Efforts are under way to change this. Nature Network, an online science community linked to Nature, a long-established science journal, has announced a competition to encourage blogging among tenured staff. The winner will be whoever gets the most senior faculty member to blog. Their musings will be published in the Open Laboratory, a printed compilation of the best science writing on blogs. As an added incentive, both blogger and persuader will get to visit the Science Foo camp, an annual boffins’ jamboree in Mountain View, California.

By itself this is unlikely to bring an overhaul of scientific publishing. Dr Bly points to a paradox: the internet was created for and by scientists, yet they have been slow to embrace its more useful features. Nevertheless, serious science-blogging is on the rise. The Seed state of science report, to be published later this autumn, found that 35% of researchers surveyed say they use blogs. This figure may seem underwhelming, but it was almost nought just a few years ago. Once the legion of science bloggers reaches a critical threshold, the poultry problem will look paltry.

Read  the article on the Economist site.

By | September 28th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

Communications Director Magazine – journalism and PR

The magazine Communications Director published an interesting issue recently about the relationship between journalism and public relations. Several experts provide insights in to challenges linked to their coexistence, the misperceptions on each side and possible solutions for better collaboration.

In an increasingly globalised environment with rapid technological changes, our roles are shifting. which is a challenge for many. Today, the Internet is a breeding ground for amateur reporting of all levels of news. Journalists are caught between their desire to write quality articles and keep up with the fast pace of online publication while communications professionals struggle to keep an open flow of information between teh various stakeholders in their organisation.

The issue looks at various perspectives from how PR and journalism helped Poland make the shift towards capitalism to the role education plays in influencing the two professions in Spain. It also includes an article by award-winning UK journalist, Nick Davies, who criticises the influence which he claims PR has in today’s media.

It also lists the top 100 crucial PR – related publications selected by top communications experts.

For more information, check the table of contents on their website.

By | July 29th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

Resources on storytelling

Many people have asked for further resources on storytelling following our excellent breakfast meeting with Sue Hollingsworth – here are some recommended resources and information:

Article in PME magazine:
Article in French on the website of Sue’s partner (Nicole Voillat) in Geneva

Course:
Sue leads a Corporate Storytelling workshop in England at Emerson College in Sussex in the UK, 16-19 July 2008.

Suggested books:

1) Stephen Denning: “The springboard : How storytelling ignites action in knowledge-era organizations” BH – 2001

2) Stephen Denning: ” The secret language of leadership” John Wiley & Sons – 2007

3) Annette Simmons: ” The Story factor” – Basic Books – 2001

Glenn

By | April 10th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

New English language news website for Switzerland

Edipresse, published of local papers Tribune du Genève and Le Matin has launched a new English language website – Swisster. The website aims to provide daily news for the 100,000 English speakers in the lake Geneva region.

The website is subscription based and costs CHF 300 per year to consult articles on the website. The local news market is hotting up – we already have Geneva Lunch, which provides local news and features (but for free..)

Glenn

By | April 2nd, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments

E-newsletter on communications in Europe

The team from Communication Director, a subscription-based print magazine for communicators in Europe, offer a free bi-weekly newsletter on the latest developments in corporate communications and PR in Europe.

By | February 18th, 2008|Other resources|0 Comments