Tuesday, November 24, 2009

#3- Internet is going with Web 2.0 - Park So Hee (Faith)


I knew the only word "Web 2.0" with simple information and I just undersand it as a developed or new web, it makes me to think that old web has name Web 1.0 and now I am having the sub ject "E-Market" that has relative with a Web 2.0.
Then I researched about the Web 2.0 Marketing as you can see ↓

Web 2.0 Marketing
By
Sean Carton, ClickZ, Oct 31, 2005
Sponsored by Omniture

No doubt you've heard plenty about "Web 2.0" lately. Of course, just because you've heard of it doesn't mean you actually know what it is.

Don't fret. A lot of the folks who bandy the term around don't really know all that much about it, either. Basically, it describes the next generation of online services delivered through the Web. Think of Flickr, Wikipedia, Ning, and del.icio.us, and you'll get the point.

The idea behind all these ventures is a good one: use the power of the Internet to hook people together to create content, share expertise, and provide checks and balances through social interaction. People have stuff they want to share (or axes to grind or stuff they want to say), so giving them a place to express themselves and a community of users to share it with will result in a system that grows exponentially through the network effect to become more than the sum of its parts. There's even a new browser,
Flock, designed around the concept that the browsing experience can be enhanced when users can share favorites and tags seamlessly through the Web.

Basically, we're talking open source content, and open source has worked pretty well as a software development methodology. Social networks built around a common aim can be pretty powerful.

But lately, cracks have begun to appear in Web 2.0 nirvana. Regardless of the breathless pronouncements of some, the limits of user-supplied content are starting to become apparent in terms of both the quality and system misappropriation. Spammers have tried to hijack Flickr with those annoying "win an free iPod" ads, and Wikipedia has been called to task for accuracy problems. The backlash is starting.

But we shouldn't throw the baby out with the bathwater. Openness does have its limits. As Xeni Jardin said recently on "Wired News," "When you invite the whole world to your party, inevitably someone pees in the beer." On the other hand, inviting your users to supply content in the form of pictures, video, tags, reviews, stories, and so on, can really help develop community. And as many bloggers have learned, participating in these kinds of things can help raise your profile and provide a forum for you ideas (provided you've got good ones) as a way of helping your business or promoting your products and services.

How should marketers look at the possibilities of Web 2.0? If you're thinking about utilizing social networking or other Web 2.0-like services on your own site, or you want to look into the marketing possibilities offered by these services, here are six rules to remember:

Remember you're part of a community. Members of a community have a vested interest in the greater good of the whole. They only participate in a way that benefits all. Spamming, misleading tags, incorrect information, and sneaky stuff (e.g., creating fictitious Wikipedia entries to promote your products are all activities that hurt the community.

Strike a balance between authentication and anonymity. The Internet was built on the concept of anonymity, but the anonymity that promotes participation and the free exchange of information can also allow malicious types to wreck your project. Contributor authentication can help by allowing you to delete offending material. But you'd better be sure you have a clear, strict privacy policy to encourage users.

Have some institutional guts. If you're going to allow the public in, be prepared for the consequences. Not everyone's going to agree with you or say nice things about your products and services. Don't block critics out. Engaging them in a positive way can often turn around potential problems. If you blog, you know this; often, engaging disagreeable posters turns them into instant friends.

Avoid spin. If you're going to participate in Web-based open services, don't try to spin your content with bland PR platitudes. People can spot "marketing" in a microsecond and don't think too highly of content that turns out to be a thinly disguised ad. On the other hand, using editorial to promote products can be pretty effective if done correctly.

Examine your motives. Are you jumping on the Web 2.0 bandwagon because it fits your strategy or because it's the current thing to do? Examining this question will tell you whether you're really ready to come to the party. It's a long-term commitment.

Get ready to work. Participating in the open, rough-and-tumble world of social networking and user-supplied content is a lot of work. The content needs to be fed and cared for constantly. Make sure you have the budget and the institutional will to continue the project -- indefinitely.

URL: http://www.clickz.com/3559851



Since I research it I found the example



































Even if I think I already know the what is Web 2.0, it is still confuse to define and hard to explain what is Web 2.0. Becaus it has wide infomation and have a lot of kinds so now I will list down of 8 kinds of new services and URL to make you to see.












Wednesday, November 11, 2009

#2- Steps in Digimarketing - Park So Hee (Faith)

Nowadays we could see the Digital Marketing everyday and now I will post about the digital marketing. Before to know about it, we should know what is digital marketing.
Digital Marketing is the promoting of brands using the Internet, mobile and other interactive channels.
We could see the many of Difital Marketing channels in the internet and we can know the influence of Digital Marketing because if we are using internet we easily see the advertisement, blog or some the other kinds of information about the company or products and I am sure that you remenber at least one advertisment among the many of Digital marketing in ther internet. And Now I am posting the steps of Emarketing Plan and 12 steps of Digi-Marketing plan way that can lead to success the Digital marketing.



7-Step eMarketing Plan:

1. Situational Analysis
- Defining Participants' Profiles
2. eMarketing Strategic Planning
3. Plan Objectives
- eMarketing Goals
4. eMarketing Strategy
- Marketing (Re)mix
5. Implementation Plan
- Digital Platform Plan
- Digital Awareness and Influence Plan
6. Budget (Revenues/Benefits and Expenses)
- Quantify Benefits and Costs
7. Evaluation Plan
- Data Plan
- Analytics Plan
- Optimization Plan



DigiMarketing Planning Step

Phase 1
Step 1. Participant Print/Profiles and Goals
*Key elements of a Participant Ptint are:
1. General Profile :basic information about yout customers.
2. Digital Prifile
a. Digital Usage Habits
b. Content Consumption Preferences : favorit sources of information, influences.
participants' attitutes to your competitiors' content
c. Consumer Content Creation Profile : What your customers are creating at the moment.
3. Individual Profiles : You will need to know all you can about individual customers. You may find this data in yout exising customer database or through trackingc customers' current web activity.

Phase 2
Step 2. Platform Proposition
People today have a vast array of digital options. Therefore, you will need a Difital Platform Proposition to articulate why people should engage wuth you, via tour platform, on a regular basis.
Step 3. Channel Mix and Creative Concept
This step in the planning process involves some important decisions about which digital channels you will use to engage your participants and what unique ideas you will convey through those channels.
Step 4. Content Outline (Company -Provided)
Content Outline is vital. Content now comes in two Company- Provided and Consumer -Created.
Markethers are often overwhelmed by the demands placed upon them to supply content for the channels they have chosen. Those that don't plan ahead realize agther the difital launch just how big- and cpntinuing- the content demands really are.
Step 5. Content Outline (Consumer-Created)
Consumer created content has exploded in the past few years. We now live in a cut-andpaste era when mash-ups and consumer content origination are common. Marketers need to adjust their plans to reflect this trend.
Phase 3
Step 6. Messaging and Viral Plan
*Messaging - Digital Messaging, predominantly via email and SMS, generally follows the principles of direct marketing, which marketers have followed for years. (Ex: Opted-in, Purpose of the messaging, Segmentation, Frequency, Digital Channel Preferences)
*Viral - Viralness is out of marketers' direct control.
Step 7. Digital Awareness Plan
Digital Awareness Plan will identify the channels you will use to highlight and promote your Platform.
Step 8. Digital Influence Plan
DigiMarketers must look beyond paid awareness to consider how the public dialogue in digital channels influences people. Consumers' recommendations can be an amazona force for those brands that are recommended.
Step 9. Digital Channel Unification Plan
Markeers must not only choose channels carefully; they must also interconnect the channels they choose.
*Steps to develop the channel unification plan
1.Physical-Digital Channels Intergration
2.Content Intefration
3.Digital Unification
Phase 4
Step 10. Data Plan
Data has been at the heart of direct marketinf for tears and indeed it is ate the very center of DigiMarketing too. Data is the currency of the difital age. Everything that happens in digital channels either relies upon or generates data. Data is both the fuel and the byproduct of DifiMarketing.
Step 11. Analytics Plan
Analytics should yield insights which you then use to make omprovements and gradually optimize your work. Analytics and optimization go hand-in-hand.
Step 12. Optimization Plan
Optimizing doesn't mean simply fixing things that are broken. You certainly should change something that isn't performing well so it performs acceptably. But you can also optimize something that is performing well by making it even bettr.




You can see thses 12 steps are only for the preparing step of the Digital marketing and I was surprise there is many steps in the guidance for the Digital Marketing and I also tried to follow these steps with my group report (Awesome Philippine) and I did only searching the information in the internet that already exist but still it was hard to make a plan followed by the steps. But we could see many of digital marketing in the interent.


For examples;