Posts Tagged ‘Web-2.0’

Sam Decker Q&A with Mike Maples, Jr. (new Bazaarvoice advisor & investor)

March 13th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Behind a great company is a great board of directors, board of advisors, and investors. At Bazaarvoice, we count ourselves fortunate with advisors and investors who have chosen to put their time and resources behind our venture. Today, we’re pleased to continue the trend, and announce that Mike Maples, Jr. has joined as a Bazaarvoice advisor and investor!


Mike Maples, Jr. is the managing partner of Maples Investments, and was recently named as one of “8 Rising VC Stars” by Fortune Magazine for his investments in business and consumer technology companies. His background spans a variety of markets including consumer technology, small business, and the enterprise, and he has led various functions in product development, marketing, business development, and corporate strategy. Mike co-founded Motive and was responsible for worldwide product marketing at Tivoli. Now as an investor, he is behind investments such as Twitter, Digg, Spiceworks, Chegg, IMVU, and Aggregate Knowledge. See his investments here.

Mike shared some of his thoughts on joining Bazaarvoice as an investor and advisor, as well as his investment strategy and perspectives on the market:

Why did you invest in us when some investors are cautious of the “Web 2.0” space?  TechCrunch recently said that Web 2.0 is a bankrupt term.

I suppose it’s more accurate to consider the question in reverse.  I’ve been looking for the opportunity to invest in Bazaarvoice for quite some time and I am thrilled to be *permitted* to invest. I guess persistence does pay off sometimes!

In terms of the market space, and all of the talk of web 2.0, in my view the company’s success speaks for itself.  It’s customers read like a who’s-who of online commerce providers and the company has dared to be new and different in an environment characterized by a lot of me-too companies.  It has also discovered a very efficient business model that can reach scale without raising a lot of money.

What trends do you see in the marketplace that support the growth for our type of service?

The first generation of companies in the social web understood that user-generated content would be important for value creation and many of the companies I invested in earlier were the first to jump on this.  In my opinion, Bazaarvoice is the first company to marry user-generated content with user-generated *commerce*. Combining these two is very powerful because you have the architecture of participation characterized by communities, combined with a very straightforward and efficient way to monetize.

I believe that there will be several very interesting user-generated commerce plays (especially since eBay hasn’t moved quickly enough in recent years) and I think Bazaarvoice is the first in this new wave just as companies like Facebook, digg, and Twitter were pioneers of the user-generated content trend.

The other trend that is powerful is the shift from traditional “old media” style mass-marketing to peer-to-peer marketing enabled by relationships on the Internet.  Bazaarvoice is a leader in leveraging this and I am also working with 750 Industries, who plays firmly into this trend as well.

How does this investment align with your priorities and what you want to invest in?

At a high level, I believe that about 15 startups per year will set themselves apart in a fundamental way from the over 8,000 that will be funded.  If I had to reduce my strategy to one sentence, it would be “Find as many of the 15 as you can every year.”

Finding the 15 out of the 8,000 is a lot easier said than done!  My approach is to invest in companies that have a visionary founding team, a huge potential market, a fundamental advantage backed up with a network effect, modest capital requirements, and a unique value proposition for customers. I believe that Bazaarvoice has been a superperformer in these areas for some time.

As an investor in Digg, Twitter, and now Bazaarvoice, where do you see the “social space” going in the next five years?

The trends in technology innovation have switched from enterprise trickling down to consumer innovations scaling up.  The bellweather companies are now companies like LinkedIn, digg, Bazaarvoice, Twitter, and Facebook and they are the companies to watch to get a feel for what will happen with business solutions in the future.  There will be new types of companies in the business software and services arena that apply IT consumerization to solve problems that have in the past been solved by expensive and hard-to-use enterprise software.  Some of the companies I work with are already demonstrating this, such as Solarwinds, Spiceworks, Demandforce, Egnyte, and Hyper9.   Each of these firms leverage network effects, highly appealing user experiences, communities, and consumer internet sales and marketing methods to build their products and their businesses with great efficiency.

Five years from now the trend toward IT consumerization will be very pervasive and will impact small businesses and enterprises in a very fundmental way.  Traditional enterprise software companies will feel that this is very disruptive but the users of technology will be the big winners.

Sam Decker A Simple Way to Prioritize “Social” Initiatives

July 31st, 2008 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

When planning your social strategy and investments, it’s difficult to know where to start. Here’s a way to think about and organize your decisions, based on my years of sitting in the purchasing and strategist seat.

First, think about how any social technology will impact the prospect or customer’s “purchase momentum.” There are social technologies that create connections and communities, but the ultimate goal is driving purchases. Evaluate how salient any type of UGC or social participation is for researching, shopping, narrowing, comparing, and building confidence for prospects to buy. The closer the interaction is to a prospect’s “task,” the closer it is to helping people make their purchase decisions.

The importance of the second factor (X axis, below) is something I’ve come to realize after years of change leadership at startups, at Dell, and during the last two years seeing how the right investments in customer dialogue accelerates our clients’ social strategies. This is the depth and speed of acceptance of the proposed social initiative. I call this factor the “cultural momentum” of your initiative, and it relates to how quickly you can build excitement internally, bringing “customer oxygen” into your corporate culture! Let me explain…

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Brant Barton Holland’s largest online retailer shares Web 2.0 vision

July 9th, 2008 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

Today’s blog is guest-written by Anna Skaya, Online Community Manager, Europe

Meet wehkamp.nl – the number one online retailer in Holland and one of the best and most personal online department stores across Europe. Wehkamp prides itself on turning products and services into smart, innovative solutions and exceeding their customers’ expectations.

“Innovation” was the resounding topic for the first-ever “Wehkamp Online Partner Day,” which Bazaarvoice attended, alongside our Radius partners Endeca, Coremetrics, and Responsys, plus Optimost and Scene7. These partners brought innovation to life, providing aggregated solutions on some of the most forward-thinking ideas of the industry. Discussions ranged from social shopping, viral marketing, advanced social networking, and taking ratings and reviews to another level. Exploring integrations with Scene7 (advance picture navigation on pictures submitted with R&R), Endeca (text mining reviews for relevant search criteria), Responsys, and Optimost (A/B tests on “Top Rated” emails with and without ratings or reviews) were just a few ideas that came of out the sessions. The leadership at Wehkamp clearly saw the need for the web of partners to come together and share ideas – the day was buzzing with thought leadership, creativity, and overall feeling of excitement and innovation.

What has made this unique online retailer number one in one of the most technologically advanced countries in the world? According to Wehkamp, it’s a combination of innovation, early adoption, a strong personal brand, and an innate need to provide exceptional customer service to a marketplace they have served, cross-channel starting with catalogues in 1952, for over half a century.

I caught up with Alexander Van Slooten, Manager of Internet Strategy at Wehkamp, to learn more about their vision for the future of online retail.

1. INNOVATION
Two-thirds of the Dutch population have shopped online in the past year, and over 88% have access to the Internet (2nd highest in the world.) You have a great opportunity to be a creative thought leader in the online space. What are some of the ways you innovate?

Being the first online retailer in Holland (we launched our first site in 1995), we have an obligation to stay innovative. Over the years, we were the first to launch a customer self-service ‘chatbot,’ had the first Dutch viral marketing video on YouTube, were the first Dutch retail website that may call itself “Drempelvrij” (our site is also optimized for disabled people who use voice browsers and Braille media browsers). And we were of course the first Dutch website that allowed reviews on apparel.

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Brett Hurt Everything Is Miscellaneous (As Told by Video)

October 28th, 2007 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

In April, I blogged about the video, "Web 2.0 – The Machine Is Us/ing Us".  Now the same professor that created that video, Michael Wesch at Kansas State University, has created a new one called "Information R/evolution" that summarizes some of the key points of the book, "Everything Is Miscellaneous", which I blogged about in May.  The author of the book, David Weinberger, was the keynote speaker at this year's Shop.org Annual Summit.  

For those that missed David's presentation, I recommend watching this video.  Or even for those that saw him speak, you may want to watch this and forward it to some folks in your company.  Tagging, and other user-generated content trends, will have a profound impact on eCommerce over the "long-term" (i.e., the next 1-3 years – remember this is an "Internet Speed" age we live in). 

I highly recommend reading his book as well.

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Wayne Stribling Ordinary People Making Extraordinary Impact

February 27th, 2007 by Wayne Stribling Former VP of Client Services

Occasionally the Bazaarblog will feature guest bloggers. Today's blog was written and contributed by Tung Huynh, one of our Community Managers dedicated to helping clients leverage the Bazaarvoice solution, drive review volume, and promote ratings and reviews online and offline.

Recently the Wall Street Journal featured an article titled "The Wizards of Buzz". In it the authors cite how Web 2.0 is "turning ordinary people into hidden influencers, shaping what we read, watch, and buy." In today's connected and social media driven world, a twelve year old from Toronto is helping to define what "news" is on Reddit, a news site similar to Digg.

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Brett Hurt Word-of-Mouth Wisdom #2: Joan Broughton of Shop.org

December 31st, 2006 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

In my second interview for the Word-of-Mouth Wisdom Interview Series (and the last of 2006), I was fortunate enough to get some of Joan Broughton's time.  Joan is a good friend and a former fellow Shop.org Board of Directors member.  I have worked with Joan for many years while at Coremetrics as REI was (and still is) a Coremetrics' client.  While at Coremetrics, Joan and I worked on a project that tracked the success of Google paid search campaigns (SEM) to offline (in-store and call center) sales, and the results were very enlightening.  When I was contemplating launching Bazaarvoice in May of 2005, I asked Joan for her wisdom on the matter.  In short, I have always respected Joan's intelligence, accomplishments, and true partnership. 

Joan is Shop.org's VP of ContJoan Broughton, Shop.org's VP of Content and Educationent and Education.  I remember how excited I was on the day Joan told me she was joining Shop.org's executive team, and she has already had an enormous impact on the quality of the events, new hires (such as Larry Joseloff), and new initiatives (such as the recent blog launch).  Joan couldn't have brought a better background to the Shop.org team.  As I mentioned, she previously worked for REI as their VP of Multi-Channel Programs.  She managed two business units, encompassing over $100 million in annual revenue with a team of 200 people.  Joan was responsible for launching REI's "order online, pick up in store" option for customers, as well as many online services.  Prior to REI, Joan was Office Depot's Director of Web Publishing.  She has spent more than 12 years in the online industry, including working at O'Reilly & Associates and America Online.  In other words, Joan has more online experience than almost anyone I know.

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Brett Hurt The Word-of-Mouth Potential of Green Products in 2007 and Beyond

December 30th, 2006 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

GM's EV1, the first electric car to be produced since the 1930sI just finished watching Who Killed the Electric Car?, a documentary about General Motors and the failed EV1 car, the first electric car to be produced since the 1930s.  I will not get into the politics of the movie – you should watch it (or read that Wikipedia entry) and interpret the information as you see fit.  But I will say that I think that General Motors missed a phenomenal opportunity to both tap into a new wave of customer demand and create an incredibly powerful positive word-of-mouth movement that they sorely need.  This is important on so many levels, not the least of which is that the Millennials (the next generation of 100 million American consumers) are socially and environmentally conscious consumers (as I wrote about in October).

EV1s getting crushed after being taken back from their leaseesThe most insightful part of the movie, as it pertains to word of mouth as well as green products, is to watch the reaction of EV1 leasees (all EV1s were leased until GM proved the market potential) when they realize that they can not buy their EV1 under any condition.  They organize, they petition, they beg.  Big name actors like Mel Gibson, Tom Hanks, and all other EV1 leasees are turned down.  The organizers get together and offer to buy all of the cars for $1.9 million – their request goes with no answer (according to the movie).  After finding out that the EV1s are being destroyed, they stand outside of the GM parking lot where EV1s are being stored to watch over the cars to make sure that GM doesn't destroy any more.  They literally do this for months on a 24×7 basis.  Talk about love for a car!  It makes iPod owners look downright disloyal.  I guess that is because a car has such a big impact on your life as opposed to an iPod, and the EV1 leasees were so passionately focused on making an impact on the environment.  These consumers were a word-of-mouth revolution waiting to be leveraged by GM.  But, GM being short-term focused like so many companies that are incentivized to think that way due to the short-term nature of making your numbers for Wall Street analysts, completely misses the boat.  [Side note: this short-term focus was really crystallized for me by my friend, Derek Woodgate, who is a corporate futurist and the founder of The Futures Lab, in a discussion we had on why the corporate world needs futurists.  He has a great job, in my opinion, but more on that perhaps later.]

The Tesla is a well designed, fully electric sports carOne of the big critiques of the EV1, from a consumer perspective at that time, is the short distance that the car can travel on a full charge (only 55-75 miles on the first generation model, due to the early generation batteries used; but the movie states that the average American only drives 29 miles per day although it doesn't seem like the car was ever marketed to highlight that this range would be sufficient for some 90% of American drivers).  Another critique is the high production cost of $80,000 per vehicle when the lease payments would net around $34,000 to $44,000, obviously a money-losing proposition for GM.  But a former EV1 employee explains that once economies of scale kick in, from good marketing and availability in large metropolitan areas, the production costs would have fallen dramatically and battery technology would have rapidly improved.  This seems like a logical argument to me, especially considering the recent success of the Tesla, which can travel up to 250 miles on a full charge.  It also helps that the Tesla goes 0-60 in 4 seconds and looks like a well-designed sports car.  Unlike the EV1, which had a failed rollout (only leasing 800 units), the Tesla recently sold out their flagship 2007 model in just four months. 

I guess my point here is that GM could have figured it out if they stuck with it, and the consumer emotion evoked by the product was simply incredible.  And I think it is indisputable that GM missed the boat on the launch of hybrids relative to Toyota (who is projected to pass GM in 2007 as the world's largest producer of autos).  In the movie, one of GM's former Board members talks about his support of the EV1 project more from a R&D perspective, given the shift in consumer demand that he saw coming.  The success of hybrids and the launch of the Tesla prove that demand is there, if the marketing is well executed then word of mouth could have done the rest of the work.

What does all of this have to do with the title of my blog post?  Well, I predict that green products are going to be one of the hottest trends for the next decade.  They are ripe for an amazing level of positive word of mouth ("free marketing?").  Obviously coffee and universal access to global information also need little advertising when the product is great (Starbucks invested in their stores and locations, Google invested in the world's best search, and neither invested in advertising – positive word of mouth did that job for them).

There are more and more people that are accepting the consequences of global warming.  Just today, it was reported that another enormous ice shelf broke away in the Canadian Arctic.  As I first predicted in July of 2006, I wrote that the documentary An Inconvenient Truth would be marked as the most impactful documentary in modern history.  After seeing it a month ago for the first time, I have to admit that is a transformational movie.  You simply can't see it and not be emotionally moved by the implication of the evidence presented – it truly is "an inconvenient truth".  If you haven't seen it and want the quick "cheat sheet", this summary is a good place to start.  And 60 Minutes recently had a compelling report – here is an excerpt.

In August, I wrote about Wal-Mart embracing sustainability (and the rapid impact they could have given their immense scale).  And I recently learned (when having coffee with one of their heads of eCommerce) that they include a video on what they are doing about it with every copy of An Inconvenient Truth that they sell.  Here is an example of one of their recent initiatives, among many. 

From Millennials being more socially conscious consumers to Kleiner Perkins investing huge sums of money in alternative energy, there is something major under way here.  There is a shift in consumer demand that is just beginning to be felt (look at the Whole Foods stock rise that I wrote about when reporting on Wal-Mart and sustainability).  Wal-Mart, the largest company in the world, acting early on this shift is a wake-up call for smaller companies everywhere.

The bottom line is that I truly believe when we look back and assess the long-term economic impact of the events of 2006, it will be that the green movement got underway and rolled like a freight train through the economy for the next several decades.  And sparked consumer emotion and word of mouth that had never before been seen.  The stakes are simply too high and too broadly felt for it not to.

If you don't have a green strategy, I suggest you start moving now.  We'll see a lot more green (both green products and the money made off them) in 2007 and beyond.  We can help you rapidly evolve these products by tapping into word-of-mouth analytics and helping you learn what is really resonating (and what isn't) with your customers.

Update on Jan. 2:
I was just catching up on BusinessWeek while at the gym, and noticed that the "green" trend was highlighted in three different "ideas" for the "The Best Ideas of 2006", specifically:

The only other trend to have as many common ideas is that of user-generated content, a topic near and dear to Bazaarvoice and our clients.  Specifically:

Sam Decker Bazaarvoice Secrets for Shop.org Annual Summit (NYC, Oct. 10-12)

October 4th, 2006 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

If you're going to Shop.org Annual Summit next week in NY (Oct. 10-12) come see meet the team at booth #120. We have several announcements, case studies and demos to show you.

You can also come to a panel or roundtable we are hosting at the Web 2.0 Bootcamp (pre-show event) and during the summit. Here's our schedule if you want to print this.

 

And, for a select few people who read this (you can tell your closest colleagues) we are going to perform a unique display of ecommerce wizardry. Come by our booth and we will guess your conversion rate. If we get it wrong, we have a special 'under-the-table' giveaway for you (limited supply)!

Oh, and one more thing (this is like the peeler in the ginsu knife commercial, but better!)…

This is not announced anywhere else. Bryan Eisenberg (speaking at the conference) will be signing and we will give you FREE copies of his new best-selling book, Waiting for Your Cat to Bark, at our booth (#120) on Thursday, Oct. 12 at 1pm and 4:15pm breaks. He may be guessing some conversion rates as well!

See you there!

Brett Hurt Consumer-generated ads and GM (revisited at Supernova)

July 4th, 2006 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Two Wednesdays ago, I had the pleasure of speaking at Supernova 2006 in San Francisco.  I led a discussion group on how large companies could improve their brand image/trust in today's hyperlinked, "always on", "the user is in control" (their words) world.  This was part of the "Engaged Markets: Conversations" track and Robert Scoble of Microsoft blogging fame was a co-presenter.  We talked a lot about how companies could really listen to customer conversations (i.e. word of mouth) in the world's first archived word-of-mouth format (i.e. the Web).  By listening, they could determine the real source of disstrust and implement specific tactics to improve their image, and then listen again.  Lather, rinse, repeat.  Or, rather, listen, implement, repeat.  Supernova photographer taking photo of Brett

However, the highlight of this conference was the panel discussion immediately following mine, named "Engaged Markets: Social Media" facilitated by Pete Blackshaw and Max Kalehoff of Neilsen BuzzMetrics.  Their panelists included Michael Wiley from General Motors and Curt Hecht from GM Planworks.  Michael is the Director of New Media at GM Communications and is responsible for launching the GM FastLane Blog, where Bob Lutz, GM's Vice Chairman, regularly blogs and gives GM a "more human feel".  Curt Hecht is Executive Vice President at GM Planworks, which handles all buying and planning for GM's more than $3 billion annual spend in advertising.

This blog post by Dan Farber at ZDNet does a great job of summarizing the highlights of the panel discussion.  I blogged about GM in April, hypothesizing that a revolutionary in their approach to advertising may be underway.  After hearing Michael and Curt talk, I am now confident that my hypothesis is more concrete.  These guys really get it.  Here are some of my favorite quotes from the panel (from the blog by Dan Farber):

  • In the context of the social media explosion, Michael Wiley, GM director of new media, didn't hold back. "The existing ad paradigm sucks, it's woefully inefficient. It takes huge dollars to create ads on TV that run for 30 or 60 seconds and give the consumer virtually no information," Wiley said. "The opportunity is to create relatively grassroots ads, six to eight minutes long that give an in-depth brand experience and are released online."
  • "Instead of GM producing ads online, we could use testimonials in existing online content as our advertising vehicles moving forward," [Michael Wiley] added.  "Why not serve those up instead of a contrived advertisement." 
  • Wiley also said a secret to GM's success is listening to conversations, including the negative comments. GM has blogs and comments on posts [that] frequently bash and criticize the company's products. "You need to be open to criticism and willing to [engage] detractors," Wiley said. "Businesses like GM need to fundamentally change the way they operate. Customer engagement and every customer's opinion counts is just beginning. For years and years you could keep the squeaky wheel happy…now they can talk to a millions of people. The process to change the way business is done is slow process…and still mostly old way of doing business that has been around for 40 years."
  • …the voice could be larger than the Wall Street Journal [in influencing purchase decisions]. We just need to find the brand advocates," [Curt Hecht said].
  • "We will continue to see the existing power structure subverted," Wiley said. "It's a period of upheaval, and I am confident it will just get better over the next few years," Wiley concluded.

Michael also talked about the effectiveness of their "Google Pontaic" campaign as well as their campaign to point shoppers to Edmunds to compare Chevrolet's features versus competitive models.  The goal here is to say to potential customers, "we know you don't trust us and consider us a stodgy old-world company – so here is some third party credibility that is easy for you to find and mostly consumer-generated" (that's my not so great paraphase, not his actual words).

It was also very interesting to see Ed Keller's groundbreaking research on the word of mouth "all-stars" (the most talked about brands in America in a net positive context).  Chevrolet was #5 on the list.  No other domestic car company was on the top-ten list.  GM is doing something right.

If this doesn't make the authors of "The Cluetrain Manifesto" smile, I'm not sure what would.  Actually, one of them was in the audience and I publicly thanked him for inadvertently helping me come up with the name for our company.  Unfortunately, I didn't see him smile back at me.  Maybe it was my comment about most domain names being taken!

Happy 4th of July and God bless America!      4th of July in Austin from SXSW Interactive

Brett Hurt Insightful Research on the ‘IM Generation’

July 3rd, 2006 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Tony Perkins, founder of the AlwaysOn Network and Red Herring magazine, wrote a passionate and insightful three-part post on the "IM Generation" (i.e. IM as in the "Instant Messaging" Generation).  IMers were born between 1980 and 2000, and they follow the "PC Generation", which was led by entrepreneurs like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, and Michael Dell.

While I believe that many Web 2.0 businesses are misguided by focusing on too small of an audience, Tony's post contains quite a bit of research that I found very interesting.  This is the largest and most influential generation of consumers to embrace the Web, and it would pay to think about how to reach them.  As Mary Meeker of Morgan Stanley said at Stanford Graduate School of Business last November, "Watch what the kids are doing – that is the future…" [this link is also chock full of great research that I often refer to].

Here are my favorite excerpts from Tony's post.  The implications the IM Generation will have on word-of-mouth marketing and multichannel retailing will be far reaching and disruptive:

  • Looking at the big picture, it's easy to see that the IM Generation has taken the baton from the geeks. The PC Generation made the PC into a tool commonly used to create and process documents and spreadsheets, the IMers added digital media sharing and communications to its core functions. Today, the entrepreneurs who create the devices, digital content, and Web publishing and communication services for this generation can win big. This is the bull's eye of the current market opportunity.
  • IMers have an active lifestyle; they use multiple means of connectivity at any given time. Their means of digital communication have expanded beyond the e-mail and Usenet messages of the PC Generation, and include text messaging and IM, group messaging on e-mail lists, conversing in chat rooms, posting blogs, Internet telephony, and using webcams to videochat. The Internet—and the mobile phone—also mean that communication between IMers has been transformed from "house-to-house" to the new "person-to-person" paradigm. While most phone calls are still between two people, e-mail and IM make it easy for many persons to communicate at once.
  • According to the Pew researchers, more than 57% of U.S. teens have created content for the Internet. This includes creating blogs, personal webpages, and sharing original artwork, photos, stories, or videos. Remixing existing online content into new "mashup" creations is also very popular. Content remixing is equally prevalent across genders, ages, and socioeconomic groups. And surprisingly enough, Pew researchers found that teens with dial-up and teens with broadband remix at comparable levels.
  • Teens also tend to blog and read blogs more than adults. Approximately four million kids between 12 and 17 years old, or 19%, have created their own blog, compared to 9% of 30-somethings. Nearly 40% of IMers report regularly visiting blogs, compared to just 27% of those aged 29 to 40. As a result, the IMers are more in the habit of relying on and trusting non-traditional (that is, non-Big Media, non-Big Entertainment) sources. About 62% of blog-reading teens say they only read blogs written by people they know.
  • IMers are more conditioned to tap into their network of friends for knowledge, insight, and opinion on products and entertainment and major life decisions. Peer-network influence is now the dominant factor in the lives of these young folks, which makes it challenging to market to this demographic.
  • According to the Energy BBDO's report "GenWorld: The new Generation of Global Teens", today's wired teens are resistant to traditional advertising messages, and more likely to be influenced by the people in their online networks.  The report does identify ways to speak to them without alienating them, but advises that marketers' potential strategies should include contacting these teens on their terms, in ways that let them communicate with each other and personalize what they receive. Open communication empowers this group and encourages optimism. This is why Rupert Murdoch's move to target 21-year-olds by building MySpace into a major portal seems viable.  Over time, it's likely that any brand that does not allow IMers to be openly interactive simply won't be trusted. Yet the consensus among marketing professionals is that popular brands are staying extremely relevant. If executed well, fashionable brands like Adidas and iPod can have the same connecting power with teens as a social network.
  • Kids not only taught us how to instant-message and how to program our mobile phones (and VCRs), but they're demonstrating that the "mobile PC" is the  new client/server model. Of the teens Pew surveyed, 45% have mobile phones. A third of them have text-message access and use their mobile phones to access websites and services. They also use their mobile phones to take and send photos, record and send messages complemented by graphics and video clips, and serve up other multimedia content.
  • The IMers benefit from today's technology being cheaper, more powerful, and easier to use than that of the PC Generation. Of those surveyed by Pew at the end of 2004, 51% of online teens said they downloaded music, compared to 25% of adults. Nearly one-third of online teens (versus just 18% of adults) said they downloaded videos. As for playing games online, 81% of U.S. teens do. That's about 17 million people, up an impressive 50% since 2000.
  • Psycho-graphically, many studies, including Energy BBDO's "GenWorld" study, find that teens aged 13–18 are very concerned about the world and their own future. These concerns have made them self-activists, creative, and highly adaptable to emerging technologies. These kids are also bound by common ethics and values, and they're incredibly loyal to each other. Some researchers are worried, however, that these new behavior patterns might encourage group-think, and are uneasy about to what extent this "wisdom of the crowd"-driven culture might suppress individuality.
  • Another encouraging observation is that, according to Pew researchers, IMers' most popular online activities include sharing self-authored content and working on webpages for others. They also regularly help adults do things online, which all reflects the open/sharing and loyal nature of the new generation.
  • One pervasive concern has been that the Internet robs people of in-person contact, leading to a disconnect with the real world. The assumption is that time spent online is at the expense of time with friends and family. But for today's teens, the opposite is true. Their time online is largely focused on maintaining, strengthening and creating relationships. It appears that Internet-time is almost exclusively drawing kids away from the relatively unsocial activities of watching TV and sleeping, instead of reducing their in-person time with friends and family.
  • IMers are comfortable using a variety of devices to search all forms of media and create and share content in ways that just weren't possible for their PC Generation predecessors. Today's online teens live in a world filled with user-generated, customized, and on-demand content, much of which is easily replicated, manipulated, and redistributed. The Internet and digital publishing technologies have given them the tools to create, remix, and share content on a scale previously only accessible to the conglomerate gatekeepers in broadcast, print, and music.