"Social Media Strategies Social media such as blogs, Twitter, social networks, content sharing and far more give customers a voice and organizations a powerful tool for value creation and competitive differentiation."
- Susan Beebe
from Bookmarklet
one of the most powerful features of delicious is it's provision of a feed for each tag. this is a supreme workflow advantage for the collector/curator to spilt content into very narrow very focussed streams. lifestreaming is by definition an accumulation of more diverse streams albeit often focussed in a tight niche, however tagging in delicious and then redirecting those miro-focussed streams is something that ypu can't do with posterous. i absolutely love posterous however the comparison may not be fair.
- Deano @ Byron New Media
Clark do you mean facebook chat is not reliable? I use palringo http://palringo.com on phone and pc and have problems with facebook chat.
- David Gross
from email
I've been wicked busy lately and have just lately had some time to really spend here again. Guess what, I find and learn new things here at an alarmingly fast rate. Social - whatever, it's got a bit of that. But for finding and learning things, FriendFeed has all others beat by a country mile.
- AJ Kohn
the methods used are innovative, and will hopefully be adopted across the industry
- Mike Chelen
"Really exciting post, Brian. I love this whole shift from CRM to SRM. I’m hearing the term ROI referred to as “Return on Influence” a lot now… and also just heard another definition when I had the pleasure of meeting Jeffrey Hayzlett, CMO of KODAK. Jeff challenged the audience, hungry for the holy grail of social media ROI, with “try Return on Ignorance.” I think the future of the social web is that those companies who will really thrive are the ones who are highest on the engagement charts. As consumers, we want to know these big brands – as well as small companies and service providers – are really listening deeply and taking action to make improvements. It’s one thing to listen, it’s another to really participate. Peter Shankman made a prediction recently that in the next 2-3 years we’ll all be on one giant social network… Google. (Lol!) I’m with you, Brian – the big socnets like Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn (and any new solid ones that spring up), will not be isolated standalones,..."
- Mari Smith