Posts Tagged ‘iPhone’

Jacob Salamon Announcing the Bazaarblog iPhone app

January 22nd, 2010 by Jacob Salamon Marketing Manager, International

Bazaarblog iPhone AppToday we are very proud to announce the launch of the Bazaarblog iPhone app, making it even easier to read Bazaarblog news stories, interviews, Social Commerce case studies, best practices, and more on your iPhone and iPod Touch. Also get access to the latest Tweets from our Bazaarvoice Twitter stream.

Using a very intuitive and exciting tool called AppMakr, we were able to develop this app in less than a day and deploy it to the iTunes App Store within a week. Now it’s time to see the user reviews trickle in!

iPhone and iPod Touch Users No iPhone?
iPod or iPhone Google Chrome
Download from the App Store Play with the App Online

Brett Hurt Meetings Mean Business; Don’t Be in the Bunker

March 4th, 2009 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

On my flight from Dallas to Austin today, I was struck by an ad in USA Today on page 7A that reads:

  • “Want to lose one million more jobs?  Just keep talking.”

The ad is by the U.S. Travel Association and promotes the website Meetings Mean Business.

This ad really resonates with me.  Business is best achieved by in-person conversations, not email, not web meetings, and definitely not Second Life.  I preach this at our company often as our CEO.  In the age of BlackBerrys, iPhones, and Android, you have to struggle to remember that relationships are fostered in-person.  Most communication should occur that way, especially within a company.  Email is best for mass-distribution messages or very quick yes/no responses.  I would use IM over email any day of the week for a real-time conversation.  Even Facebook messenger is better than email, for the simple reason of having my face and the recipient’s face IN the message, making it more personal.  The problem with many executive teams and CEOs is a lack of humility, and it is simply harder to be a jerk in person.  Email masks many cultural problems.

I remember watching Jamie Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan, on CNBC while he was at the World Economic Forum in Davos.  I remember him ranting about his fellow CEOs of financial services companies not being there.  Being “in the bunker” instead.  Not doing their part to get their companies back on track, with the impact their CEOs could have at such an important event.  I couldn’t agree with him more.  Don’t be in the bunker. Business gets done in person. As Andy Grove wrote in one of my favorites, High-Output Management, meetings are the medium of management.

I understand how tough the economy is, but those that didn’t show at Shop.org’s Strategy & Innovation Forum, where attendance was way down as compared to last year’s event, really missed out.  We had our best content ever (I serve on the Board of Directors and was very proud of how educational the content was this year).  At least you can read the blog entries.

I hope to see you at our Summit this April in Austin.  It is our single best training event of the year.  You will make far more impact in your company as a result of attending it, and the little money you spend on travel to attend will be an afterthought as a result.  Executives last year told me that it was the most actionable conference they attended all year.

And here’s Jamie Dimon on the economy.  I think he’s the real deal, and I’m listening to his interviews carefully:

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Brett Hurt Mary Meeker’s June 20 Technology Trends Report

June 28th, 2008 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Mary Meeker of Morgan StanleyMary Meeker writes one of my favorite trends report each year, Morgan Stanley's Technology Trends.  This makes for great weekend reading.  It gives you both a US and global perspective on the trends most affecting the technology industry broadly, primarily from a B2C perspective.  It has already been forwarded to me by many of the most connected people I know in technology, such as Josh Kopelman (one of our investors), showing its broad impact.

While all of the findings are of interest (mobile, widgets, personalization, etc.), this year I was most struck by three big trends:

  •  The global traffic share gains of YouTube, Facebook, Hi5, Wikipedia, and Orkut – all making the global top-10 for the first time.  I remember when Time selected "You" as the "Person of the Year" for their Dec. 2006 cover.  They may have called it too early.  Social connection online has truly arrived.  The growth of these sites are staggering, highlighting the power of community, user-generated content, and word of mouth online.
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Sam Decker Bazaarblog Ready for Your iPhone

July 10th, 2007 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Thanks to our blogging experts at ContentRobot, and their beta access to the iPhone Wordpress plugin, the Bazaarblog is now optimized for iPhone! We are one of two blogs we know of that are optimized for iPhone, including GrokDotCom.

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Brett Hurt How Advertising Will Evolve Using Word of Mouth

July 3rd, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

“Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don’t know which half..”
-John Wanamaker, advertising pioneer and famous merchant

YouTube Preview ImageWe had the pleasure of hosting Andy Sernovitz, the founder of WOMMA and a Bazaarvoice Advisory Board member, at our office a few weeks ago. Andy gave a lunch presentation to our team, and something he said really struck me: “Advertising is the tax companies pay to sell poor products”. Google, Starbucks, and many other brave companies decided to buck the formula and invest in the product instead of “brand imagery” (i.e., advertising). Andy has countless examples, and wrote a fantastic book on the subject that has been endorsed by the likes of Seth Godin and Guy Kawasaki, two of my favorite authors.

And then I met with a large apparel company a week later that is afraid of reviews. Prospect: “We tell the consumer how they should think about our products”. Prospect: “A hip woman in NYC may be turned off by a woman in Topeka, Kansas writing a review on a trendy fashion”. I’ll save you my lengthy and impassioned response.

As I write this, I’m on my flight back from London after spending a week in our UK office, speaking at the e-consultancy conference and meeting with prospects, partners, and press. And tomorrow is the 4th, so I’m feeling kind of revolutionary. So, here is my take on how advertising will evolve.

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Michael Osborne Do Believe the Hype – iPhone’s Buzz is Real

July 1st, 2007 by Michael Osborne Chief Revenue Officer

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As the Bazaarvoice gadget guy it was a moral imperative that I got an iPhone on Friday – so we could ALL share in its wonder. When I left the office at 3:30 on Friday I thought FOR SURE I’d be too late. I was wrong. When I waited in line and I was #200 or so I thought FOR SURE they’d come out and tell us they only had 100 units in stock. I was wrong. When the line finally started moving I figured they’d only have a few counters going and it would take forever, or they’d only let you get one, or they’d only have the 4gb iPhones, not the 8gb. Wrong, wrong, wrong. Apple did it right, exactly right, from the hype to the experience of getting one to the device itself. And their buzz couldn’t be hotter right now.

Steve Jobs set the blogs ablaze in January by announcing the iPhone and continued causing a word of mouth stir all the way through the interview with the Wall Street Journal. Looking back to my post in January, from day one the iPhone was a hit. The expectations were overwhelming and the dissenters numerous, but Apple adhered to one key rule in marketing – live up to the hype. Apple called their shot and told consumers EXACTLY what to expect, with demos and details metered out carefully, then simply released exactly that. Creating the buzz is easy, but nailing it on launch day is where some products have missed the mark. Not the iPhone.
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Michael Osborne Secrets, Speeches, and a Word-of-Mouth Frenzy

January 15th, 2007 by Michael Osborne Chief Revenue Officer

Since this is my first post to the Bazaarblog I thought I might introduce myself – I’m Michael Osborne, Vice President of Sales at Bazaarvoice.  I’ve been here for 6 months now and finally had a break between our great meetings with prospects to write up a quick post on something I’m very passionate about – technology.  Consumer electronics and technology in general has been a passion of mine since I was much younger and exposed to the original Apple Macintosh 128k.  And a recent announcement reminded me of just how long it has been since 1984.

This past week saw the public announcement of what will be THE device of the year in consumer electronics – the Apple iPhone.  Regardless of your views on Apple, the Mac, or the now legally-embroiled Cisco iPhone issue, you will admit that this thing is cool.  The blogs that cover this space exploded on Tuesday with the announcement at Macworld by Steve Jobs.  The blogs that DON’T cover this space exploded just the same.  It seemed that everyone was talking about this 4.5” x 2.4” x 0.46” phone – that doesn’t really exist yet.   I found it interesting that no matter how hard people tried, you couldn’t really talk about it for the past 2.5 years – including Apple employees that were working on it.

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