The Hippie Web is dead; enter the Money Web.
Yesterday I gave a talk for a global investment firm.
I told the investment firm that the Hippie Web (2005 – 2015) had died and that it was time to prepare for the Money Web (today and onwards).
Here are the details:
A Roundtable for Chief Strategists
The investment firm had flown in chief strategists from SOMO, Rapp, Qubit, Forward, and Whispr Group. We represented different types of digital agencies (mobile, digital advertising, conversion, search and social).
The firm’s investors wanted to inform themselves about the digital future for brands and were eager to hear us present our perspectives.
The other chief strategists pointed to countless exciting trends and developments, but I wanted to discuss the digital transformation more from a birds-eye view. Since I was the last presenter to go up, I was happy with my decision to paint with broader strokes.
Summary: My Talking Points
These were my talking points:
What To Expect From the Money Web
“In the digital space, attention is a currency.”
— Brian Solis
Here are my takeaways from my talk at the investment firm:
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PR Resource: The Electronic Age
Enter: The Electronic Age
Human culture is often described based on our access to production technologies (e.g., the Stone Age, the Bronze Age, and the Iron Age).
According to Marshall McLuhan and the Toronto School of Communication Theory, a better analysis would be to view societal development based on the prominence of emerging communications technologies.
McLuhan suggests dividing human civilisation into four epochs:
“The Gutenberg Galaxy is a landmark book that introduced the concept of the global village and established Marshall McLuhan as the original ‘media guru’, with more than 200,000 copies in print.”
Source: Modern Language Review 1McLuhan, M. (1963). The Gutenberg galaxy: the making of typographic man. Modern Language Review, 58, 542. https://doi.org/10.2307/3719923
As a PR professional and linguist, I subscribe to the concept of the Electronic Age. I firmly believe society is unlikely to revert to the Gutenberg Galaxy.
Read also: The Electronic Age and the End of the Gutenberg Galaxy
PR Resource: Types of Algorithm Graphs
Spin Academy | Online PR Courses
Types of Algorithm Graphs
Search engines, social networks, and online services typically have a wealth of user data to optimise the user experience.
Here are examples of different types of graphs that social media algorithms use to shape desired behaviours:
The different graphs are typically weighted differently. For instance, some media companies allow a fair degree of social graph content, while others offer almost none. Changes are constantly being enforced, and the silent switch might be the most notable example of a media company shifting away from the social graph. 2Silfwer, J. (2021, December 7). The Silent Switch — A Stealthy Death for the Social Graph. Doctor Spin | The PR Blog. https://doctorspin.net/silent-switch/
The media company can leverage these graphs using two main approaches:
Today, profiling seems to be the dominant approach amongst media companies.
Learn more: The 7 Graphs of Algorithms: You’re Not Unknown
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ANNOTATIONS
1 | McLuhan, M. (1963). The Gutenberg galaxy: the making of typographic man. Modern Language Review, 58, 542. https://doi.org/10.2307/3719923 |
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2 | Silfwer, J. (2021, December 7). The Silent Switch — A Stealthy Death for the Social Graph. Doctor Spin | The PR Blog. https://doctorspin.net/silent-switch/ |