Feb 242012
 

Social Media Unveiled is a social media seminar targeted for Professionals, Managers, Executives and Technicians. YouTube superstars WongFu productions will be live in Singapore together with some of their friends like David Choy, Wai Hong Fong and Richard Frias joining across the world on Google Hangout – sharing their experience in using social media.

Nicholas Aaron Khoo will be hosting this Q&A session on 27 Feb 2012 from 6.30pm at NTUC Auditorium! Be ready for a time of valuable exchange in a fun and interactive setting.

Register here - http://wongfusingaporentucauditorium.eventbrite.com.au/

Feb 012012
 

LEWIS PR recently released a book – The Changing Face of Communications - a collection of 12 articles written to help the modern marketer tackle everyday digital PR challenges. This is really key to marketing and PR professionals as well as companies in general who are looking keep themselves updates in this digital age.

Some of the techniques in this book include getting started on corporate blogs/videos and incorporating search-engine-optimisation in PR, among many others.

Summarized excerpt after the break: Continue reading »

Jul 152011
 

HP Labs has recently done some research on Social Media User Behavior, monitoring both Sina Weibo (the microblogging service in China) and Twitter (everyone else). HP Labs found vast differences between the user behavior of people (who are mainly Chinese) using Sina Weibo and Twitter.

For the experiment, HP Labs scientists examined the topics that are most popular on Sina Weibo during a 30-day period and compared them to previous findings from research on Twitter.

In China, people tend to use Sina Weibo to share entertainment-type content such as jokes, images, and videos, and a significantly large percentage of posts are “retweets” (a re-posting of another user’s tweet).  The trends that are formed are almost entirely caused by retweets of this kind of content.

In contrast, prior HP Labs research shows that trending topics on Twitter have more to do with current events than entertainment and that the effect of retweets is not as large (although it is still substantial).

You can check out the HP Labs research paper for more information - What Trends in Chinese Social Media.

Find HP in social media… in China and around the world
HP on Twitter and Facebook: @hpnews, @hp, @hplabs, facebook.com/hp
HP on Sina Weibo: www.weibo.com/hpchina
China HP blog: www.hp.com.cn/hpchinablog

Jul 142011
 

Google launched Google+ just a few weeks ago, and it has boomed into a relentless hunger from the Social Media scene to be on the newest and hottest social media platform from one of the most popular brands on the planet, Google. However, I still hear a lot of people asking what exactly is Google+, why they should want to be on it, and how to use Google+. Well, I’m going to try to answer all those questions, and talk about what will become possible in future for Google with this new Google+ social media platform.

Be forewarned, this is a pretty heavy article. Read on after the break. Continue reading »

Jun 182011
 

Online digital advertising has come a long way. But digital advertising and marketing is not the only thing that was discussed at ad:tech singapore 2011. There were 3 encompassing topics surrounding the entire conference:

  • Non-intrusive, ubiquitous, willingness to consume advertising and marketing
  • Understanding and utilizing social media as a platform for advertising, marketing, and brand advocation
  • New technologies and innovative ideas to create an experiential marketing campaign

Here are my thoughts on all 3 topics after talking to many people, and attending some of the talks.

Consuming Advertisements

There are many solutions out there there provides more interactive and engaging advertising, like playing a game or achieving some goal out of the advertisement. However, with the advent of more digital media content being consumed online, these solutions have started integrating itself into these digital media, largely video. Firefly Video from Tribal Fusion is one of them that is offering such a service. A non-intrusive advertising on your digital video content at the bottom right corner with a “firefly” logo that entices you to hover over it to pop up an interactive advertisement. Other solutions, from Innity, concentrates on providing engaging advertisements to attract consumers to learn more.

However, all these methods are geared towards creating engaging advertisements and allowing the consumers to decide whether hover over and learn more. I personally feel that if you give consumers a choice whether or not to “consume” an advert, the answer is mostly no. Furthermore, most of these solutions do not address the fundamental issue (except maybe for Firefly Video) that content consumed is now moving towards richer digital media rather than text.

If you allow content producers to easily produce content (video, audio, photos) and seamlessly (based on the content producer’s requirements where to put it) insert dynamically selected interactive and engaging advertisements directly into the content (much like a TV network station programming) for consumers to view/listen to the partially-intrusive advertisement for 5-10 seconds (should the consumer want to learn more he can click on the advertisement to learn more) and offer that as a service, together with analytics and performance feedback to the content producers. This is exactly what I’m looking for as a digital online content producer. If it can be done with rich text, why not with rich digital content?

Thoughts?

Understanding Social Media

A lot of efforts, discussions, methodologies, tools were seen during ad:tech singapore 2011, about how social media can make or break your brand, how to use social media as one of the marketing tools to spread your campaign. But many people forget that social media is an organic living being, where relationships become more important than just marketing campaigns. Utilizing the usual marketing metrics and KPIs to achieve your end goal result might sometimes fail with social media as your tool.

The need to quantify relationships and brand affinity through social media is much more important than simply utilizing social media as a marketing tool. That’s where BLUgrapes and Duxton Consulting is trying to solve with their experimental “Social Brand Index” (SBI) to measure affinity to a brand using standard psychological tools. Advertisers and marketers need to understand that social media is a living breathing thing that requires long term engagement and investment, time and effort, to nurture the brand with marketing strategies.

I personally feel there’s a missing audience everyone seems to be forgetting, but everyone is talking about – the bloggers, influencers, the mass social audience. All these efforts are being put into understand what social media is, but nobody including those termed as “mass social audience” actually understand what it is too! How about sharing these findings, statistics,”influences”, tools in the effort to help everyone understand themselves too? To understand others, you must first understand yourself. In order to understand what social media is, social media must first understand itself.

Think about it.

Technologies evolving marketing campaigns

Technology is a tool that can be used to create amazing marketing campaigns, making once thought to be impossible ideas a reality. Lots of new ideas and technologies were showcased, and one that resonated was Fuji Xerox’s 1:1 experience. They utilized technology to automate a lot of the processes and concentrated on using technology to offer personal connection and personalized experience to the target customers.

The upcoming technology that’s slowly gaining popularity is utilizing Location Based Services (LBS) as a marketing tool, gaining mass social audience reach together with game mechanics and physical location tracking to effectively run a marketing campaign. Many case studies of successful use (and unsuccessful) of LBS were shown at ad:tech singapore 2011. I think we will see even more use of LBS, augmented reality (AR), and other such innovative technologies as part of various successful marketing campaigns.

Summary

So those are some of my thoughts on ad:tech singapore 2011 and what was shown there. Hope to be invited once again to ad:tech singapore next year in 2012. Check out the photos after the break: Continue reading »

Jun 062011
 

Symbian Anna is the first major software update from Nokia. The newly release Nokia E6 and X7 will come with Symbian Anna, and updates for the rest of the Symbian^3 phones, namely Nokia N8, C7, C6-01 and E7 will be made available in Q3/2011.

Symbian Anna comes with the following improvements from Symbian^3:

New icons, enhanced usability

  • New squircle style icons for applications
  • Folders are denoted by a squircle that looks like a folder
  • Portrait QWERTY keyboard for text input (can change back to T9 keypad)
  • A split screen when entering text into web pages and apps (not a separate input text)

Better web browser

  • New Webkit (AppleWebKit/533.4)
  • Faster (about 3x) JavaScript engine
  • Improved website error prompts/security warnings
  • IDN support
  • Better performance and memory optimization, including page load time
    • Improved webpage rendering with hardware acceleration
    • Smoother and sharper font rendering
    • CSS3 animations
    • Support for high DPI screens
    • Smooth scrolling (up to 60 fps)
    • Better fit to mobile screen with view-port tag support
    • Achieved score of 111 on html5test.com
  • UI/UX improvements:
    • Simplified UI
    • Back-button always visible
    • URL field always visible
    • Integrated Search
    • Open to Homepage by default
    • Easy exit from extension
    • Long tap to copy/open links in new window

New Ovi maps

  • Predictive Search
  • Integrated social media features with check-in to Facebook, Twitter, and Foursquare
  • New public transport lines
  • Ability to download and update full country maps directly to smartphone via WiFi
  • Ability to share places via email and SMS, and also with friends using non-Nokia phones

Business users

  • Instant messaging and presence with Microsoft Communicator Mobile
  • Email enhancements that include full meeting request support
  • Business grade security hardware-accelerated device encryption

 

May 252011
 

For those who missed the preview screening of Twittamentary back in Feb at HackerspaceSG, here’s your chance to catch the full final cut version of Twittamentary on Monday May 30 7pm at Objectifs, 56a Arab Street, which is just down the road from HackerspaceSG. You can sign up at http://twittamentarymay30.eventbrite.com/.

Twittamentary looks at how lives connect and intersect within the Twitter community as the real-time web accelerates serendipity. A year ago, Director Tan Siok Siok set out on a whirlwind road trip across America to discover and document the effects of the social media phenomenon, Twitter. She interviewed a wide range of Twitter’ers, from a travel journalist turned “twilebrity” to a homeless woman who uses twitter from the public library, from a stock trader and a prostitute who uses twitter as her personal GPS.

Filmmaker Tan Siok Siok @sioksiok will attend the screening and share her insights on the making of the film.

Dec 082009
 

I’ve been to some tech PR events for the past few months and I realise that not everyone in the public relations and marketing know how to handle the tech bloggers and geeks very well. So, not in any particular order, here are some of my thoughts that some events I attended actually made me happy.

1. Let each person have the actual gadget/device/software/product to play with.

I think this is important when introducing or launching a new technology or product. We’re geeks and if you don’t even have your product for us to try out and play with, it really defeats the purpose of us attending your PR event. We came to see something that we’re interested to write about, not some marketing BS.

2. Less Marketing, More Tech.

Traditional media usually write because they (hopefully) have the passion to write (full stop). Whereas for bloggers and social (or new) media, we tend to write because we have the passion in the things we write about. We do not report, but we write about our opinions, why we like certain products and why not, without any of that marketing BS you give us. So we’re pretty much unaffected by fancy words and flashy strategies. We just want to get into the nitty gritty details as soon as possible. We do want to understand certain rationale behind certain decisions too.

3. Be honest.

I think this tends to be the same for all around. We’re a forgiving group of people, different from the traditional media where the “scoop sensation” is what they are after. If you’re honest, be it about a mistake or not reading our blog, we’ll understand perfectly well. If you don’t know, just say you don’t know. But if you’re dishonest and we find out, we do not forgive all that easily for that.

4. Listen to our feedback and what we have to say.

The serious hardcore geeks always have feedback about any product that they are passionate with. We’re probably the one group of people you’ll find that cares for the product enough to want to improve it. So listen to us and take notes. We do not expect every feedback to be fulfilled, but at least we like to know we’ve been heard.

5. Give us the freedom to do anything with the product (except destroying it of course).

We try everything we can to find what we love and what we hate. Most PR events tell us what we should love, but none tell us what we should hate (and of course you can’t). So we love to figure out everything from scratch and ask for help later on. Do not try to lead us along unless we ask for it.

6. Do not ask us to post press releases and tell us what we can or should post.

Ultimate do not do. We do not look kindly to people who tell us to do these things.

7. Provide a conducive environment to talk and discuss.

I realise some PR events have lots of fancy flashy lights and loud music to impress. But frankly speaking, the best PR event I like the most is a place where we can discuss and talk about the product. Have that one-on-one personal time with the product. Tell us the product, and we ask you some questions. But please, make it conducive. You don’t have to spend a lot in order to get us engaged. Brightly lit places are great for looking at products and playing with it.

8. Be casual and have fun.

It really painful to meet a PR person that’s uptight, stressed out and not enjoying the event that he/she hosts. If you enjoy the event and have fun, we’ll also enjoy the event and have fun.

9. Provide us with the media kit that contains every detail we need, including photos.

Yes, some of us do not have cameras. Better still, send these through email so we can access the media kit from anywhere.

10. Learn and know your product.

If not, get someone who knows your product well enough to answer a majority of the questions thrown. We love technologies, and we have lots of questions about that technology. Remember, honesty is always good. Admit if you don’t know the answer and get back to us with the answers.

Sep 092009
 

So we’ve started our march towards Barcamp Singapore 4. Preetam Rai has done a great job securing an awesome place at the IDA office in Suntec Tower 3, 14th floor. There’s probably going to be 3 training rooms for barcamp sessions, 4 meeting rooms for brainstorming and discussions,  and 1 lobby for food and networking. This is by far the most awesome Barcamp location, and it will be the most awesome Barcamp ever held in Singapore.

When: 21st November 2009
Where: IDA office at Suntec Tower 3, 14th floor.

So to all geeks, designers, social media, startups, and just anyone, go add your name as a participant to the wiki now, or even suggest a topic, at Barcamp Singapore 4 and join us in the spirit of sharing, brainstorming, discussing, and just plain old fun.