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The Top 4 Comics On The Web

17 Jun 2008 In: Culture, Design, Style

Each morning when I come to work, I try to steal a few minutes of time to read four web comics. I have tried a bunch of others, but I find that these are the ones that give me a mental boost that kicks off my day in a way that caffeine cannot. In other words, “clever” is my morning drug of choice.


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Can Glassdoor.com Be a Change Agent?

11 Jun 2008 In: Music, Social Media


Looking at my LinkedIn network of over 200 people, most people have been at more than one organization. If you take a random sample and interview you are bound to hear politically correct stories like

  • I wanted more money.
  • I felt under appreciated.
  • I did not get along with my boss.
  • I found a better opportunity.

Or you might find out that the person felt like they had their soul sucked out by Dementor kisses. Glassdoor.com is the place to air their filthy laundry about employment experiences anonymously. Registered users can review their previous position and talk about the benefits and gotchas of the employment experience. Registered users can also see the salaries for various positions within the companies.
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Zara is the Trader Joe’s of Fashion

9 Jun 2008 In: Style, Technology

During my first year at the agency, I had the pleasure of working with strategic mastermind, Justin Holloway, now with Dye, Holloway, Murray in London. We were working on a pitch and he was explaining the brand identity of Trader Joe’s. He summarized it as a company that sort of brings the epicurean delights of society to the common man.

Trader Joe’s specializes in being an affordable gourmet store. They eliminate the middle man by producing their own foods with vendor partners. If the food does not meet their quality standards, they have no problem with axing it or making it unavailable until they find a new partner. They carry very few brand names and will often carry a brand name until they can clone it to their standards (like Nutella). The shocking thing is that the industry average for product development is 9 months. Zara is rumored to be able to develop a product and get it to market in 2 weeks. When I first read about Zara, I thought not only is this a fantastic model, but it is a lot like Trader Joe’s.

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Hey Nanoblogs. What About the Money?

7 Jun 2008 In: Social Media, Technology

We rely on the Internet to do everything from communicating with our friends, families and colleagues to choosing a new cappucino maker. A good deal of the technology we provided for your webbing enjoyment is free, but supported software with guaranteed uptime generally does not exist without a revenue model (for long). Companies like Yahoo! and Google provide us with oodles of free tools without so much as having to say “Oh Toodles”. We know the juggernaut model. They sell ads and they roll in dough. So when people complain about Yahoo or Google tools being down, I am sympathetic because whether the notice it or not, those companies are earning money by having you as a user. But what about those that do not have a revenue model to speak of? Read the rest of this entry »

Can Plurk Work?

3 Jun 2008 In: Social Media, Technology

YASMMeT /yaz’ met/ 1. (acronym) yet another social media messaging tool

Plurk is the latest yasmmet. It’s clearly a “competitor” to the popular twitter system. Twitter essentially is an open version of popular instant messaging platforms like MSN Messenger and AOL Instant Messenger. Plurk has an opportunity to capture social market share, [Notice that I did not say anything about revenue share as neither currently has a revenue model to speak of] primarily because twitter is horrible about stability.

Plurk has had the benefit of watching twitter flop around like a fish on the beach, but twitter has a big head start. Plurk’s user interface is a lot different. Twitter’s advantage is that most of its users are already longtime instant messenger users and bloggers who understand the technology and have easily adopted and embraced its value proposition. Because Plurk takes a few times to get used to, it puts it at a huge disadvantage in a space where people will give you about 90 seconds before they decide if they want to pursue something– unless they get some of the Twitter elite to convert people.


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The Irony of the UPS Whiteboard Campaign

31 May 2008 In: Design, Music

I love the UPS whiteboard campaign.

The ads are mesmerizing they are sticky and the creative does not get in the way of the message.
The timing is impeccable. Andy Azula, the artist in the ads and creative director for The Martin Agency, makes what he is doing look easy. The tongue-in-cheek humor has longevity and is the inspiration for some ridiculous youtube knockoffs.

The Martin Agency got almost everything right. The music is perfect. Nearly. You see, the band is called…

THE POSTAL SERVICE.

Twitter Summed Up in a Song

29 May 2008 In: Social Media, Technology

Was Mama Cass an inspiration for twitter? My 5 year old was singing this song the other day and I immediately thought of twitter. I find myself putting things on twitter just to see if someone else will identify with my references. Other times because I tweet just because I need to get something out of my head and move on. It’s not exactly singing, but the whole tweeting for tweeting’s sake is a lot like making your own kind of music.

What If Everyone Suddenly Believed the Apple Propaganda?

27 May 2008 In: Technology

[For the sake of this argument and because most of Chairman Jobs' propaganda supposes that PCs and Windows are synonymous, let's say that Mac and OS X are also interchangeable. When I mention UNIX/Linux, let's assume that they are running on Sun or Intel hardware and therefore, to Macists are also icky like PCs and therefore must be destroyed.]

In the June 2008 issue of Wired Magazine, reader and Apple Zealot Dan Luke of Portland, Oregon made one of the most preposterous statements since “The world is flat.” What he does not realize is that his flippant attitude is actually dangerous to his red delicious way of life.

He declared: “It’s simple. Apple doesn’t make garbage. Everyone else does. PCs don’t really work.”

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Gregory Ng Belongs in Boston

21 May 2008 In: Beyond Classification

I am suffering from severe blogger’s block. This tends to happen to me when work becomes really active or I try to take on too many things. I push the blog to the back burner. This time is different though. My mind has been preoccupied by the fact that my friend, colleague and noodad.com partner-in-crimeGregory Ng and his family, have made a life changing decision to move from Boston to North Carolina.

My problem is that I cannot understand why he would want to leave a city that fits him like a glove. I will now summon the power of Blogdar, the relatively unknown Norse god of blogging, to convince him that he should stay.

Mr. DM

In the direct marketing and interactive space(s), you will be hard pressed to find a person with more high quality, actionable ideas. My old boss used to say that he hated sales. He wanted to put a dollar in the vending machine and have a client fall out. We all know that that is a sales pipe dream, but if you were to ask for that sort of scenario for ideas, well that’s Greg.

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If you have not been to Twitturly.com, you are missing out on the second most most important Twitter resource. The twitter search tool Summize is number one.

Joel Strellner has thoughtfully created a tool that gives us insight into the most popular URLs from the past 24 hours. Each time someone types in a link, Twitturly thoughtfully counts it as a vote for that URL. The best part is that it doesn’t matter if you’re using a tinyurl, is.gd or one of those other tools that help reduce the size of URLs (to rickroll your friends). Twitturly follows the URL to its destination.
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