07 November 2007

A Flurry of Podcasts

Hey all,

What a crazy week! We've had a flurry of podcasts, site builds, and productions.


Secondly, we've put together a podcast for Automation Alley promoting the Business Development Series. First one of this monthly show features two people I like a lot - Terry Bean from Networked, Inc. and Charlie Wollborg from Curve Detroit (If you're not going to hire us, do yourself a favor and hire them. Or hire both of us. Either way, they're great folks).

Thirdly, the new episode of Global Business Perspectives Radio is up, and it features Faris Alami, the CEO of Integrated Systems Management. Over on that podcast, they're talking international business and the book "Kiss, Bow, or Shake Hands?"

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08 October 2007

A Chill For Online Media: Corporations Ban Employees From Blogs, Podcasts and Forums

I got an interesting email from a friend, which has echoed a situation that many are starting to share - and we need to be aware of it as a media creation community.

More and more companies are dealing with forums, blogs, social media and podcasts by banning people's participation completely - their reasoning being that employees may say something damaging or secret.

In fact, they're banning participation or even attendance at recorded events because of that fear. I also wonder if those same people are banned from calling in to radio shows.

I'm not a lawyer, but this, in my opinion, is a clear violation of first amendment rights.

These people who work for these companies not allowed to speak or attend, period, without it being approved by the company, on anything? What if it's an event on greek mythology - and you're a real estate broker? What about church?

Many, many churches record and podcast their broadcasts. Guess you can't go to service. What if you want to speak at your local school board meeting? Forget about it, it's being recorded for TV.

Again, there is no trust by employers - and so why should employers expect any trust or loyalty back? I think this economy shows we're all free agents - and companies that block free speech are going to suffer long-term. The best and brightest won't accept this - or will temporarily until their next job a year from now.

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05 September 2007

Apple keeps changing the media landscape...

Admittedly, as a content creator for the iPod and iPhone I have skins in the game, but this is possibly Apple, yet again, setting the pace.

First the iPhone came out - and at $599 and $499, a bit pricey. For mac-loving early adopters.

Now, you can buy NEW 8gb iPhones for $399, and 4GBs (I'm sure for a limited time) at $299. Talk about so competitive you now start truly eating into blackberry (I'll be posting the conversion/love story of a sales exec to the iPhone later).

Now, add to that a video player with an OK screen size at $149... and now, you have a mass market device. Next step is $99... but $149? There is now no real financial barrier for everyone to have fully functioning video in their pocket.

The opportunities this opens for organizations, corporations, media - it's the maturation of a new on-demand platform that truly gets close to the democratization content.

Sure, it'll still cost you money or resources (time, sweat, tears) to create GOOD stuff - but this opens it up to companies to have a device that is now going to be delivering audio and video and be as ubiquitos as the television.

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17 August 2007

iTunes Plus - What an Improvement

Since there are only song by EMI in iTunes Plus, I haven't happened to hit a song that is iTunes Plus in the last few weeks when I've been shopping around.

Well, spending a gift certificate from a friend for my Birthday, I got "Harder Better Faster Stronger" by Daft Punk - and what a difference. The bass is fuller, the high end is much more detailed... I wish all iTunes songs were of this level. Not that iTunes is bad, but this is really nice.

Of course, if you're not prepared to want to rebuy your EMI songs with iTunes Plus (you can for only the difference - 30 cents per song) you may not want to start to buy this option - to me at least, everything else now sounds just a little hollow unless I pulled it from a CD I bought.

I hope that eventually, all the rest of he labels do what EMI did and go DRM-free (no copy protection - you own the song, completely) and double the quality. It is a very audible difference, although the files are a bit larger in size.

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15 August 2007

Podcast is now available

Here is is...




Also, here is the RSS feed for you to subscribe. As soon as iTunes makes the podcast link available to auto-subscribe, I'll have it here and on the right side of the site.

http://www.portagemedia.com/blog/businessviews.xml

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Bits 'n Bytes

Some quick hits...

- Although Europeans under 30 have mixed views about American culture, they find it creative and love the Apple Mac computer....

- 313digital, a great organization for digital advertising, is having their digital day at the ballpark on the 26th of September... which also happens to be the last home game of the year. If you do digital advertising in the Detroit metro, you need to join these guys. Check out the event details - from that page you can find a link to join them.

- Apparently, Yahoo is beating Google in a category, and that's being a portal. I'd do a whole post on this, but well, duh. Google is not a developed portal, but a better search engine. Yahoo obviously has better offers for someone who wants all-in-one everything and is an average user. Good work from the local guys at University of Michigan!

-Andy Inahtko is hilarious, and I'd wax poetic about the ease of typing on the iPhone, but why? The Apple Phone Show covers that subject better than I ever could.

-Digital Views Through a Business Window Podcast comes out tomorrow.... I'm not committing to a regular release day of the week yet, but I will keep it current and not let it go more than two weeks between episodes.

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10 August 2007

Google Pulls Plug on Google Video - Your Paid For Videos won't work anymore

This is huge news - the first instance of DRM (Digital Rights Management) being used to de-activate people's content on their computers.

According to this email (I am attaching the text below), Google is now offering you credit at Google Checkout for an amount compared to the videos you have purchased. This should be a warning to all of those using Digital Rights Managed music, video or the like that they can turn it off at any time and give you little to no compensation for it, and quite frankly, I have no interest in the five dollars, I want to view the videos I paid for.

This should be a reminder, even though Google Video wasn't the most popular, that anything you own with DRM on it can be taken away from you at any time - and the only thing that you have is a promise that they won't do it. This should remind you on bigger sites, like iTunes, it's completely possible that if a deal with a record label goes south, you may not be able to listen to your music anymore. You might get a credit, but again, I bought the material because I liked it.

Here is the email I received:

Hello,

As a valued Google user, we're contacting you with some important information about the videos you've purchased or rented from Google Video. In an effort to improve all Google services, we will no longer offer the ability to buy or rent videos for download from Google Video, ending the DTO/DTR (download-to-own/rent) program. This change will be effective August 15, 2007.

To fully account for the video purchases you made before July 18, 2007, we are providing you with a Google Checkout bonus for $5.00. Your bonus expires in 60 days, and you can use it at the stores listed here: http://www.google.com/checkout/signupwelcome.html. The minimum purchase amount must be equal to or greater than your bonus amount, before shipping and tax.

After August 15, 2007, you will no longer be able to view your purchased or rented videos.

If you have further questions or requests, please do not hesitate to contact us. Thank you for your continued support.

Sincerely,

The Google Video Team

Google Inc.
1600 Amphitheatre Parkway
Mountain View, CA 94043

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04 August 2007

Two bits of Xology

Interesting little bit I found in Xology today - about how men and women use the internet differently and some food for thought on your Saturday (I always try to keep it light on the weekends).

Also, an article decrying the lower aural quality of digital music - something that I deal with daily.

You may need to register for free to get access...



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01 August 2007

The Heart of a Website

This article is great - it relates to me my monthly or weekly occurance - the anorexic writing of websites.

Someone will come through my door - and want a website. But there is no content. And, as much as I'd like to take your money, no content = no website.

We either say come back with content, or pay us to create it for you off of a set of interviews.

http://www.alistapart.com/articles/revivinganorexicwebwriting

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27 July 2007

Did You Know - Web 2.0

Fascinating. Simply Fascinating. We are living in exponential times.

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11 July 2007

Featured in Great Lakes IT Report

I'm very proud to tell you all about our Podcast/Green initiative being featured in the Great Lakes IT Report.

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10 July 2007

How Can A Podcast Help Save The World?

We just sent this release today, and thought I would share it with you all:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE (July 10, 2007):

HOW CAN A PODCAST HELP SAVE THE WORLD?

3,200 pounds of CO2 emissions at a time. That’s the estimated carbon footprint of reaching just 2,000 people in one place, and that’s if no one has flown to the meeting or conference.

Podcasting almost completely eliminates this imprint, by making content accessible in a high-quality form, online, anytime, and on the go. And since podcasting regularly reaches ten to one-hundred times the original audience, your message in front of 200 can reach 2,000... 20,000... or more.

To help reinforce this environmental commitment, the Royal Oak - based interactive agency Portage Media Solutions is now purchasing 250 pounds of carbon offsets for every person who contacts them about professional podcasting for their business or organization.

Beyond being a green enhancement to your corporate communications or marketing efforts, podcasting can save up to 98% on your media distribution costs vs. teleconferences and direct mailing.

To learn more about carbon offsets, visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbon_offset

To learn more about podcasting, visit http://www.portagemedia.com/what-is-a-podcast.pdf or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcast

To learn more about Portage Media Solutions, visit http://www.portagemedia.com

####

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09 July 2007

An Answer To The Cold Call Jitters...

I was rumaging about this weekend, and realizing how much one needs to embrace cold calling. This of course will not replace my networking, my meetings - however, the good 'ol cold call is an effective way to drum up new business. Problem is, that although there are sales skills within me, my "mirror" view always seems to be that of entrepreneur or visionary - not salesperson (more on that in my "Business Lessons" series very soon).

So, into Google the search goes - and voila - a piece of podcast gold.

"The Cold Calling Podcast" is full of really useful information - and I can say in the ten episodes that have been devoured, there has been more information than a library of books could tell me.

There is a lot of content I need to catch up on - but I already fully recommend it.

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05 July 2007

Plans are the Right Price for iPhone

**Warning - a mini-rant is enclosed in this post**

I just go the word on the iPhone plans - and they're the right cost.

For $99.99, you get 1350 minutes, 200 texts, and unlimited data. Perfect.

Goodbye Verizon, great service, but, alas, no iPhone.

This is the wonder of a mostly-unsubsidized phone. At $499, Apple is making money on the device and puts it in a reachable price point - reducing the monthly price.

There are a few questions for the iPhone - but considering our companies' work flow is 100% mac centric, not using Windows beyond testing, other client's servers and error checking, we've been waiting for this device since our "switch" four years ago.

**Begin Mini-Rant**

I had talked to Verizon about offers in competition - but they started to slam Apple engineering. Completely wrong answer to an Apple person who knows their engineering skills - even more hilarious when you know the small fact I flat out stated the reason I want an iPhone is the seamless integration with my mac and can Verizon match it.

That, and cellphone sales reps crawl my skin. I've never been told the truth by them, and always do all the research myself.

**End Mini-Rant**


I'll be buying from the Apple store directly - they've always treated me very, very well, even if I'm buying a $20 item.

This device, I believe, will be a game changer. I'm sure there will be bugs the first month or two, but, it is revolutionary in true Apple style.

So iPhone, I'll see you in September. Work out your issues, and we'll start our relationship then.

If you need more iPhone madness, go to http://www.applephoneshow.com

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05 June 2007

Productivity Means Avoiding Email

For anyone dealing in, with or near technology, email is a saviour and a pariah.

Email, although useful, can suck up your time in multiple-hour chunks - and considering I get hundreds of emails a day I need to take action on, it can render someone almost unproductive.

This blog post has a bunch of interesting (some tongue-in-cheek) tips for productivity. Some are applicable in your situation, some are not. However, if you feel like you or your employees are working but aren't producing, check this out:

Only doing email twice a day will make you far more productive for the rest of the day. The problem with email is that getting an email triggers that same endorphin hit I mentioned above -- the one that a mouse gets when he bonks on the button in the cage and gets a food pellet.

Responding to an email triggers that same hit. The pleasure chemical hits your neocortex and you go "ahhh" inside and feel like you've done something.

So you sit and work with your mail client open and you interrupt your work every time an email comes in and you answer it and you send another email and you feel great in the moment. But what you're really doing is fracturing your time, interrupting your flow, and killing your ability to focus on anything long enough to get real high-quality work done.

This one is far easier to say than do. And it won't be feasible during projects where lots of updates during the day really are important -- raising money, for example, or closing a big deal.


There is a ton of value to just walking over to the next cube and directly communicating.

We all, at times, hide from each other behind carpeted low cubicle walls at times, instead of using technology as a tool we use it as a shield.

Major hat tip to one of my favorite blogs, 43folders, where they look at a couple of the other items in this article. Merlin Mann, thank you.

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22 May 2007

Using Wifi without permission can mean ten years in the slammer

ARS TECHNICA and Buzz Out Loud is reporting about the story of a man, Sam Peterson, who was surfing the net on an open wifi network outside a cafe - without buying anything.

According to the good folks at BOL, under Michigan law it is 10 years and a large fine. Now, I do think this Peterson guy should go in and buy coffee out of sheer respect - and I do agree with the prosecution who gave a more sensible sentence for this crime, a $400 fine and 40 hours of community service. But it should be a reminder to not use an open wifi point without permission.

Nicely, here in Oakland County, we now have free wifi in select areas - and soon across the county.

Personal Note: I know this law was written for a different purpose - compromising computer networks and stealing things - and possibly, this law should be re-written to reflect the reality of todays' world. Check out this case where the law community is quite a bit behind the technology.

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21 May 2007

YouTube is Fun, Not Smart

Great piece of information wound up in my inbox today from Mediapost (free login required) - some key snippets...

But the real problem is not with content, as marketing clips should (and must) be every bit as creative as popular clips on YouTube; instead, it lies in the delivery of this content. Only a handful are approaching video with the same care as one would any other medium.


Webcasts can be sent to an email list or delivered on-demand from a link on the company home page. Podcasts can be pushed through an RSS feed or available for download off a brand's site. Either way, a company needs to link itself directly with the content and keep viewers coming back for more. Otherwise, there's a good chance that an entertaining clip on YouTube will do more to promote YouTube than it will to sell your product.

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08 May 2007

Omnivore, Connector, Productivity Enhancer, or Lackluster Veteran?

A friend sent me this very interesting article about how people use technology, breaking them into four groups: Ominivore, Connector, Productivity Enhancer, and Lackluster Veteran.

Also included were some interesting statistics in regards to the percentages of all Americans who have a specific technology:

Assets: Information Appliances
Percentage Of All Americans Who Have Specific Technology

Cell phone: 73%
Desktop computer: 68%
Digital camera: 55%
Video camera: 43%
Laptop computer: 30%
iPod or other MP3 player: 20%
Webcam: 13%
Blackberry, Palm, or other personal digital assistant: 11%

Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project April 2006 Survey. N=4,001. Margin of error is ±2%.

Feel free to add to the comments which type you are!

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06 April 2007

Cable Networks Block Ad Auctions

IHT is covering this interesting story -

Apparently, the cable networks are blocking eBay from selling ad time on their properties by refusing to participate.

EBay was hired to build the exchange last year by a group of large marketers, including Hewlett-Packard, Home Depot and Intel. The group, which had pledged $50 million to test the project, has said that it thought placing ads in many types of media could be done more efficiently using an Internet auction rather than human negotiation.


I understand why. This could eliminate almost all salespeople in this industry and cut off a huge revenue stream for agencies (which is what the marketers who funded this, I'm sure had in mind). After all, if you can create the material, send the material, and buy the space, a CEO could be left asking, "what is the value of the agency and or salespeople? I could just contract the parts myself and save the overhead, or put it all on my interactive provider."

However, being as involved in online media as we are, we see automated bid systems as part of every new initiative or media network (an example would be Federated Media), allowing you to spend $100,000 or $10,000 or $100, leveling the playing field.

And yes, it would seem to lower prices - but it does so mostly by taking the commission cut away from the (in this new model) now non-existant salesperson and instead of having two go-betweens (the buyer's agency and the selling agency) it's a direct representative - so the buying company itself buys (as opposed to having an agency buy for them) directly from the selling representative.

Ad executives not involved with the eBay project expressed similar concerns.

"By going to this online bidding system that eBay was sharing with us, we'd be taking a step backwards," said John Muszynski, chief executive of Starcom USA, an agency in the Publicis Groupe that buys ads.

"Years ago, you basically bought for the tonnage, you bought slots and you bought for the price," he said. "We have now integrated the buying process into the marketing process. We're doing product integrations. We're doing significant added-value. We're doing promotions."


I don't know how exactly I feel about it all, as we're content creators and could benefit either way, but it's pretty obvious to me this is the way media is starting to go...

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12 March 2007

Iterotext.com is Launched

We're proud to announce the launch of the new website for Iterotext, a multilingual document translation company in Troy, Michigan.

Thanks to Erik Drader and Ryan Poling for all their help on this one, as well as to Beverly Cornell for being what could only be called a model client, delivering everything on time and on spec so we could do our job well.

Here is the link to the press release on their site.

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08 March 2007

RIAA Raises Rates on Internet Broadcasters - If Implemented, Will Change The Face of Internet Media

So I heard a very interesting item from Leo Laporte's TWiT Network and Buzz Out Loud - that the RIAA is going to increase the rate per listener for streaming radio by as much as three fold.

This could have some very interesting implications. But I think it's going to play out in one of a few ways - or even, a combination thereof.

1) Internet Radio Will Die. I don't necessarily buy this concept. People are resourceful.

2) It will evolve, and it will either evolve to:
a) Charge more for their advertising and add value to the proposition so advertisers pay more (actually, very possible - in general, I find people do not charge enough for the value of their content)
b) Carry indie artists or artists on a new breed of labels who are open to digital media (such as my beloved Barenaked Ladies).

Arbitron shows a strong adoption of internet radio - and I understand why. It has less commercials, it can have higher quality, and you can get whatever station you want, when you want (see a theme here on the internet?) and it doesn't have the same barrier to entry that podcasting has - although, we've mitigated it, it's still a bit confusing for some because of it's nomenclature.

The RIAA could very well be shooting themselves in the foot - internet media skews young, and that's where they get the kids to get into the music. However, the RIAA for the past few years has been in a freak-out dance, trying to save a dying business model and they're trying to apply all the old rules to a new game - because that's all that they understand. It's like taking the rules of the game "Monopoly" and applying them to "Hungry Hungry Hippos." It just doesn't work.

Footnote: There is a whole new business evolving in podsafe music - because the labels charge obscene amounts of money per download to use their music. It's in the early stages, but in time, it will continue to evolve and grow.

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06 March 2007

Comerica leaves downtown

Another hit for downtown Detroit - Comerica moving it's corporate HQ.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070306/BUSINESS06/70306018

I am completely convinced that this is only harbinger of more leaving. It's 200 now for political reasons, but I fully believe following the logic in this article it's presence will be shrinking downtown.

Between this, various ad agencies (JWT and Brogen) leaving or left Detroit, it's not a good sign.

However, Comerica leaving is NOT a Detroit-is-bad issue, it's a Michigan-is-not-growing issue. We need to realize that we must band together, embracing small business and entrepreneurship (which this area needs to do more of) and not let these items get us down.

In many ways, the whole region feels "depressed." And understandably so - but this could be the greatest opportunity we have to reinvent ourselves.

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05 March 2007

Podcasting Story on NPR

Interesting piece I heard this morning on Morning Edition - about podcasting, and who makes money doing podcasting.

And, I think it has a fair look - however, it also talks about the toolmakers and people who create podcasts making money, much like the goldrush.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7711156

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22 February 2007

Google Enters the Office Fight

I've been watching this for awhile, and now it's officially released:

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/02/22/business/google.php

I have some mixed thoughts on this - I have played with those programs and I like them - however, they need to become more powerful to be honest competitors, although free or $50 a user for a year (with support and extra storage) is a great price.

I worry of the times you can't connect to the internet - of which there are still many in road environments, etc - and just need to type something. A hybrid would probably be best - but it's good to see something actually happening in the Office space so that there is some competition - as competition is a good thing and drives innovation and can only be good for all of us, the consumer.

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