Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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5 Marketing Lessons I learned from the dystopian "Black Mirror"

5 Marketing Lessons I learned from the dystopian "Black Mirror" | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
A viciously addictive series has taken my mind hostage and filled it with warnings about the future.

The culprit is Black Mirror, a dystopian sci-fi show from the UK, now bought by Netflix and prolonged to a third season. Each episode works like a standalone cautionary tale and deals with ordinary people abusing technology to ruin their lives.

Hence, it’s just like our social media world:)

Below, I’ve revealed my top five lessons I’ve extracted from the hauntingly real dystopian hit series, spoiler free of course:
Jeff Domansky's insight:

Mars Dorian draws social media lessons from a popular sci-fi TV series. 

La pluma digital's curator insight, November 3, 2016 9:03 AM
Cinco fórmulas de marketing extraídas de la distópica serie de ciencia ficción, que aborda una sociedad futurista dominada por las tecnologías.
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Thanks Social Media - Our Average Attention Span Is Now Shorter Than Goldfish | B2B Marketing Insider

Thanks Social Media - Our Average Attention Span Is Now Shorter Than Goldfish | B2B Marketing Insider | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it
Our Average Attention Span Is Now 8 Seconds – 1 Second Less Than A Goldfish


According to the National Center for Biotechnology Information, at the U.S. National Library of Medicine, the average attention span of a human being has dropped from 12 seconds in 2000 to 8 seconds in 2013. This is one second less than the attention span of a goldfish. That’s right, goldfish have an attention span of 9 seconds – 1 second more than you and I.

According to the source, this is due to “external stimulation” like all that content marketing we’re producing and distributing across all the social media channels....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Who said our attention span is…?

Shaquille Portee's curator insight, November 24, 2014 11:33 AM

This article points out how our attention spans have decreased over the years due to an increase in social media. The average attention span is now 8 seconds, one second less than a goldfish. This is due to external stimulation that we constantly get from looking at screens all day. 25% of teenagers admit to forgetting important details about their families and friends. The average worker checks their email about 30 times an hour. So what does this all mean. It means that firms have to develop new approaches to get and maintain consumers attention.

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1994: "Today": "What is the Internet, Anyway?" - YouTube

Some confusion is obvious on the set of NBC's "Today" show, regarding the Internet and the @-sign. This is reportedly footage from between segments that was not originally aired, and apparently dates to January 1994, around the time of the Northridge earthquake (that occurred literally five minutes from where I'm sitting, and which I remember very well indeed). 

Both the video and audio of this clip were in terrible shape when I received it recently -- I've cleaned up both as much as possible, though the quality (especially hue distortion) still definitely isn't anything to write home about.

Don't laugh too hard at Bryant Gumbel and Katie Couric. It's easy to forget how relatively recent a phenomenon the Internet is for most persons who use it today!

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Very funny clip and reminder how far the internet now reaches into our daily lives and business.

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How Donald Trump Hijacked the Authenticity of the Web — Backchannel

How Donald Trump Hijacked the Authenticity of the Web — Backchannel | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

His credibility is zero, but by attacking political correctness he projects a true voice to his internet followers

In most ways, Donald Trump has taken poor advantage of the Net. He has not used it for organizing and spreading a movement the way the Occupy Wall Street or Arab Spring did. He has not used it to raise essential funding for his campaign, as Bernie Sanders does. He has not used it to build community among his supporters as presidential candidates since Howard Dean in 2004 have.

 

He has not even used it as the primary vehicle for getting his message out, relying instead on the countless hours of coverage broadcast media have provided for free — although he’s obviously no slouch at social media. But despite these missed opportunities, Donald Trump has utterly excelled in one single aspect of the Net. Leveraging — and perverting — one of its key values: Authentic speech.


Speech on the Net sounds very different than the voice of old media. When I was growing up, the media’s authoritative voice had the same accent. It was professionally enunciated, often presented as neutral and stripped of personal belief, always calm, and overwhelmingly male. Then the Internet liberated our voices, training us to expect people to speak for and as themselves, with all their idiosyncrasies and imperfections.


Trump’s voice is indeed authentic in that sense. After all, he is the first major candidate for the presidency of the United States who clearly writes his own tweets. Hillary Clinton (whom I support) tweets out carefully prepared campaign points that seem obviously to have been written by her staff — especially when the tweets are dispatched while Clinton is making a point in a live debate. Donald, on the other hand, just says whatever is crossing his mind at that moment, much of which is nasty, degrading, and untrue. The lack of a filter, the weird punctuation, the very clumsiness of its expression makes Trump’s Internet speech seem much more authentic than Clinton’s....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Interesting look at Donald Trump and social media.

leechdisplay's comment, June 16, 2016 11:25 PM
Thats cold
Juan Francisco García's curator insight, June 19, 2016 11:26 AM
Unbelievable
rachel caduri's curator insight, July 9, 2016 12:40 PM

This article makes a lot of valid points however, I think they are incorrect about one thing. While Donald Trump has said and done many unfavorable things, he has been able to do one thing correct, and that is create a following. While his ideas are not something I personally agree with, there are many that do and he has brought them all together. He has used the mass communication powers that Twitter allows to generate a community and voter-base. Like the article says, Trump has a certain authenticity and genuine nature about him and his tweets, that people are drawn to. Like one of module's discussed, CMC often allows people to hide behind carefully crafted tweets, messages, and profile pages in online dating. Though it is not for dating purposes, politicians and candidates do the same thing. They create an online and public persona based on what people want. Trump however, has broken all these rules and ideas, and a significant amount of people found that honesty refreshing. He did not hide behind political correctness as many have done.

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'Alex From Target' Proves Point That Sometimes There Isn't Any

'Alex From Target' Proves Point That Sometimes There Isn't Any | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Some Internet memes rely on added sugar and mysterious ingredients to extend their shelf lives, as we discussed yesterday. Others, such as “Alex from Target,” are like French black truffles — not only are they wild, rare and out of the reach of most of us but they also require highly sensitive snouts to root them out.


Let’s get to the nut graf: “It turns out that Alex from Target is not a marketing ploy and he’s an actual, genuine person and bagger,” who just happened to be “fangirled” for his “super hot” looks while doing his job on the line in Texas, TMZ reported with all due exuberance yesterday.


In fact, according to TMZ’s blurb accompanying its video report, “Little Al's employer tells TMZ the Internet phenomenon is 100% genuine grassroots.”Lest you think this story is strictly for the tabloids, consider this revelation from the New York Times’ Leslie Kaufman: “The Alex phenomenon became the subject of news articles on the websites of Time, the Washington Post and CNN over the last two days. TheDallas Morning News tried furiously to confirm just which Target he worked for.”


And that’s nowhere near the half of it....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

As Thom Forbes writes, on the Internet, sometimes there is no point. That's a great point! In fact, that IS the point if you get my drift. This is a classic internet story worth studying.

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Why Twitter Should Not Algorithmically Curate the Timeline | Medium

Why Twitter Should Not Algorithmically Curate the Timeline | Medium | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

...So, why the distaste for a change that would benefit many of them? It’s simple: Twitter’s uncurated feed certainly has some downsides, and I can see some algorithmic improvements that would make it easier for early users to adopt the service, but they’d potentially be chopping off the very—sometimes magical—ability of mature Twitter to surface from the network. And the key to this power isn't the reverse chronology but rather the fact that the network allows humans to exercise free judgment on the worth of content, without strong algorithmic biases. That cumulative, networked freedom is what extends the range of what Twitter can value and surface, and provides some of the best experiences of Twitter....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

It’s the Human Judgment of the Flock, Not the Lone Bird, That Powers It writes Zeynep Tufekci. This is important insight for all Twitter fans and serious users. Recommended reading 10/10

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