Thanks for the reality check

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Back in Malmö after two days at Webbdagarna, with quite a few meetings on the side. Not quite as many as I had hoped as I became ill and had to take it easy. I’ll have to get well at the weekend.

Webbdagarna didn’t teach me much as far as knowledge about the internet goes. Fully understandable, as it wasn’t aimed for people like me (and that’s why the Reboot comparison was a bit unfair perhaps).

This being said, I didn’t leave without learning anything. I got a major reality check concerning what level of knowledge mainstream marketers in Sweden have about the internet. It’s low; oh, so low.

I had a similar experience when held a presentation at Citygate Forum 2004 (if you’re a good Googler you’ll find a clip of it with me wearing an absolutely hideous sports jacket!). I spoke about Lawrence.com and key points in creating successful youth oriented web sites. No one knew of it. Richard Gatarski spoke about blogs. No one at heard of that either, more or less.

Everywhere I go I hear the same story: “I have a real job, when am I supposed to have time to catch up on what’s happening on the internet?”. My answer to this is: the internet is your job, like it or not. There’s no job on earth that won’t, or can’t, be affected by the internet in some way.

There’s a lot of work to be done, fellow missionaries.

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Going to Stanford!

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stanford.jpg

I just got invited to participate at the Innovation Journalism conference at Stanford University. As part of the Swedish delegation. Yay, thanks Thomas! I’m childishly happy about the whole affair. Reboot last year was one of last years best two days, and I’m hoping this might be equally inspiring. In a more media related way perhaps, which suits me just fine.

This week I’ll be in Stockholm Wednesday and Thursday. If you want to meet up, let me know!

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OpenStreetMap from an interns point of view

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* Victor has written about his first OSM experiences over in our Good Old Office blog – good stuff! It’s working really well, I’ll add a link as soon as the first part is done.

* Likemind tomorrow, both in Malmö, Stockholm and Copenhagen.

* My keynote at Webbdagarna got cancelled as new sponsors entered the project. I understand that these conferences are commercial and need to cash in when they can, but it’s a difficult balance between the amount of bought presentations and the ones purely aimed for the audience. The moment the conference programme looks like 25 sales pitches, you’re in trouble. This is not the case this time, but still. Just sayin’. I’m going to be part of a panel discussion with former minister of infrastructure Ulrica Messing instead, which should be fun.

* I’m joining the newly started Swedish web network iFramkant as well. Looking forward to being a part of it.

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The latest:

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It seems like everyday is workshop day lately, and those that aren´t go towards preparing presentations. Not a lot of blogging either, but last week wasn’t very newsworthy anyway.

Plans for this week at Good Old:

* Victor, our intern, is helping us make the first OpenStreetMap of Malmö. I’ll keep you posted on the progress there. We’ve got a few cool ideas concerning mapping and our neighbourhood.

* Likemind Malmö at Solde Kaffebar this Friday, 9 am. Be there! Also, on the other side of Øresund, it’s the première of Likemind Copenhagen hosted by Casper.

* Good Old will also be hosting the first Geek Meet Malmö. Not entirely sure what date yet, but pretty soon I hope.

* Two presentations as well, one at Sydsvenskan and one at Studentlitteratur.

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MySpace stops all external widgets

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User-generated haven MySpace recently made the bold move to stop Widgets from running on user pages. Users were adding widgets to their gaudy pages to play songs, videos, the weather. A few weeks ago, MySpace decided to block all widgets that weren’t MySpace widgets – maybe as a step towards commercializing the content on the user generated pages.

(PSFK)

Feeding the MySpace beast obviously doesn’t apply any more. I can understand that MySpace don’t like the leeching, but their success had never become as great if it wasn’t for all the add-ons.

I think it’s a mistake to throw them out. Users both know and like Slide.com and Photobucket – making them switch to MySpace clone services won’t be an obvious step for everyone. Providing an arena for users to create and interact is great, but don’t dictate how they should be doing it.

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Why newspapers buy communities

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In my last post, Jonas Sandberg left a comment with so many questions that when I started to answer them, it turned into a post of it’s own. So here we go: why I think newspapers are buying communities.

As I see it, there are two major factors that can be found:

1. Reaching young adults with targeted advertising.

2. Creating brand awareness in the target group, and acting as a bridge over to other media channels and brands that they own.

In an online world, the traditional newspaper (web site) can’t appeal to everyone. The site portfolio that you, as a newspaper, should be offering your advertisers must therefore be considerably broader. Ownership of all these sites is not necessarily required, but there should be a significant financial interest there. Look at Washington Post that co-hosts an ad-network for local bloggers, for instance.

The ongoing discussion of trying to make the newspaper “younger” or more “hip” (that has been active at the places where I’ve worked at least) really addresses a completely different problem. Yes, a newspaper must renew itself in order to stay alive, but no – this will not solve all it’s troubles. This is mainly an editorial issue, not a an advertising issue.

The days where people had one source of information are gone. You might have read one paper, but who reads one web site? Still, you can become the one source within the niche you intend to cover. The challenge now is to have many of these niche channels and then offer them to your advertisers.

With the argument above, it makes more sense to try to acquire the sites where the young adults are right now, rather than trying to make them visit the main newspaper site. Synergies occur as they can use the newspapers current sales force to sell in this new channel, broadening their offer to include a wider demographic. This works specifically well in the case of Apberget.se as this is a local community that would suit the VK sales force well.

The second point is one that few young people want to admit: one day, when you’re older, you’re going to slow down and start caring more about your local community. It’s the way it has always been. When you have kids, you care about schools. When your parents are old, suddenly care for the elderly is important. And with an increasing local focus of national tabloids like Aftonbladet and Expressen, brand awareness for local papers is more important than ever.

In my opinion, the only way for a newspaper to stay important and active is to follow their readers through all stages of life – with different channels, products and approaches. And a coherent strategy is the glue to shift the readers seamlessly from one product to another. And at the moment, a local community is a good first step in young adults ever-changing media consumption.

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“Staggeringly apparent in its pre-existing obviousness”

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This is the funniest post you’ll read all day:

Sore tempted as I am to spend the day surreptitiously watching Oscar clips on youtube, I feel moved to publicly mock the folks over at the Pew Research Institute, who have spent God knows how much time and money monitoring American internet useage only to come up with a ‘finding’ so staggeringly apparent in its pre-existing obviousness, that the moral laws of Western philosophy are struggling to deal with it as I type:

Wireless Users ‘do more online

That’s the sort of quote that make me want to quit my Swedish and talk English all the time.