I Can’t Go For That
Boing Boing ran this video last Thursday. It is a perfect example of Fred Wilson‘s notion of The Future of Media:
1. Microchunk it.
2. Free it.
3. Syndicate it.
4. Monetize it.
I can go for that, oh oh…oh can do!
Boing Boing ran this video last Thursday. It is a perfect example of Fred Wilson‘s notion of The Future of Media:
1. Microchunk it.
2. Free it.
3. Syndicate it.
4. Monetize it.
I can go for that, oh oh…oh can do!
We are changing our blurb from:
We are an internet marketing consultancy specializing in video search engine optimization across all devices. We call it Mobile Media Marketing. We help you tell your story so that people can find it and understand it and tell it to others.
To:
We make web videos so people can find you. We call it Mobile Media Marketing.
What do you think?
You can get an inside look at who the real Misty and Bill are in this video.
We share the Secret!
Josh Bernoff says:
The key is you’re living in a world where people’s expectations have been set by YouTube, so you want to think, what can I put together that somebody, might, in my customer base might actually find fun, interesting, entertaining to look at.
For over 40 years, Dr. Kenneth H. Fox of Auburn, CA has been creating massive concrete sculptures. Below is a map locating statues in this video:
Matt Waddell, a product manager for Google Mobile, in a Reuters Interview says, “We have very much hit a watershed moment in terms of mobile Internet usage. We are seeing that mobile Internet use is in fact accelerating.”
He also says iPhone users perform as many as 50 times more Web searches on these computer-phone devices as users of standard mobile feature phones typically do.
Music By: Kevin McLeod
In the past two years, we’ve posted 321 videos online and gotten 163,558 views — about 510 views per video on average. Our top twelve videos in this video wall have gotten 51,185 views.
Umair Haque writes:
In fact, when interaction is cheap, the very economic rationale for orthodox brands actually begins to implode: information about expected costs and benefits doesn’t have to be compressed into logos, slogans, ad-spots or column-inches – instead, consumers can debate and discuss expected costs and benefits in incredibly rich detail.
Do you provide a place in your Local Listings, Video Sharing, and Blog where your customers can review, comment on, and validate your Brand?
We take a minute to talk about customers’ ugly babies.