Category — Identity 2.0
Blogs are dead
Every few weeks I scan the Ad Age 150 – a comprehensive list of industry blogs indexed based on popularity and relevance. They index over 1000 blogs, and the top 150 have been published annually in their magazine.
Two things really stuck with me yesterday
- Seth Godin‘s blog had dropped from first to 28th. His blog ranking has recovered this morning to second spot – but the fact he is no longer on top of the blogsphere is a seismic shift from the last three years
- The number three blog Micro Persuasion (also consistently in the top 5) has declared his blog dead. He’s walking away from impressive rankings in Alexa, Technorati, Google, Post rank,Yahoo, and Collective Intellect in order to start a new site he’s calling The Steve Rubel Lifestream – which is really just another blog, but with a new POV that instead of writing long articles supported by several references he will post snack sized bits of information several times a day.
Looking at my 300 subscriptions in my RSS feed, nearly half the blogs have either stopped posting or at least reduced their frequency. Although I wrote about 5 reasons why twitter is making many blogs irrelevant here, I think it would be a mistake for people to abandon their blog in favour of a micro-blog such as twitter or a feed aggregator such as friendfeed.
Given that the most important brand you ever work on should be your own, your blog should evolve to be more than an opinion site, but one that aggregates and presents your personal brand. I was speaking to my friend Ted last night about this, and it makes a lot of sense. It’s also something I’ve intuitively done over the last year with this site.
CVs are dead – long live your personal brand aggregator!
Instead of killing your blog in favour of another platform, use your blog as the platform to other branches of your personal brand. Linkedin for business networking, slideshare for presentations, twitter for the in the moment perspectivce, facebook for the more personal connections, and youtube for videos.
While you’re at it, be sure to include a “share this” widget so that others can easily share your awesome content with their network and be sure your blog is mobile friendly – as increasingly your fans or those who stumble upon your site will be accessing it from their smartphones.
It would seem that blogs are in fact undead.
June 30, 2009 16 Comments
Sharing is caring: Part 2 – Must see video on data (identity) portability
As a follow-up to my post from last week, Michael Pick from Smashcut Media has hand-crafted a video to outline and demonstrate what Data Portability is and will be all about.
DataPortability – Connect, Control, Share, Remix from Smashcut Media on Vimeo.
January 16, 2008 4 Comments
Sharing is caring – the future of social media
Social Media has really evolved over the last 12 months.
Arguably it started when facebook opened up their platform to developers.
The number of applications went from 8 to hundreds within weeks and the level of user engagement increased and accelerated.
Many other major social media sites followed facebook’s lead and announced plans to open up their platform too… most notably Google’s Open Social announcement near the end of the year which had the promise of portability of applications and widgets across multiple platforms.
Many other sites that were struggling to match the pace of facebook’s growth declared that they would also join Open Social so that collectively they could change the landscape of social media once again (maybe this time in their favour).
There was just one major barrier
facebook’s social graph meant that people would not easily or quickly leave facebook for another platform – not after investing so much time and effort into creating networks and connecting to friends, family and colleagues.
As blogged on this site (see links below), it’s unlikely that consumers will abandon or share their online social media time with facebook until their data assets built within facebook became portable to other sites.
Enter dataportability.org
Their philosophy is that you own your own data – so you should have the right to do with it as you see fit…like export or port it to another platform, tool, or application. Check out their mission statement here.
As of now, the group is no more than a round table of smart people looking for a way to materialize a vision…. but what’s interesting is who has joined the round table discussion. As of today, key people from LinkedIn, Flickr, SixApart, Google, facebook and Twitter have joined the conversation.
If this turns out to be more than a PR stunt, this has the potential to be the biggest story of 2008 as true identity portability means we can take our social equity and use it however we see fit – and where ever.
That’s what I’d call Social Media 2.0
Or Identity 2.0
Whatever you want to call it – this is a significant signal that the digital social media space will continue to evolve at a rapid pace this year and we all stand to benefit from this.
Need to catch up on the conversation? Here are links to some of my previous articles that referenced portability of identity and identity 2.0:
January 11, 2008 1 Comment
Identity 2.0 – 25 tips to manage your online identity
There should be nothing more important to you than how your online identify is managed and protected.
Mashable has a great overview of the top 25 ways you can manage your online profile including tools to manage your reputation, officically sign documents, aggregate your profiles and other cool stuff.
I’m not sure how well this works yet, but there certainly appears to be momentum building for the universal profile / avatar concept discussed previously in this blog.
What do you think? How are you managing your online identity… have you consolidated to one main account or do you continue to manage multiple but similar profiles?
I’ve also now created a seperate category around identity 2.0 to track trends and noise in this space. Also thanks to my friend David from Ottawa for finding the great cartoon!
October 19, 2007 No Comments
Twitter-dee, Twitter-dumb?
Do you twitter? It’s a question I recently posed on my facebook account. Only a handful even knew what Twitter was…only three actually admitted to having a Twitter account.
Twitter is a really neat free social utility tool – it essentially allows you to post very short messages about what you are currently doing RIGHT NOW to the Twitter website – which you can personalize. This is very similar to creating status updates on MSN messenger or facebook…or even setting up email or SMS auto-replies.
The neat thing about Twitter is that you can follow somebody’s Twitter in many ways – either through a website (by visiting their site), as an update on your IM, as a SMS alert, RSS, or email. Think of it as micro-blogging – or blogging for people who don’t have enough to say to actually blog… or for people who want to say a few things but don’t want to create an entire blog posting around it.
I created my own Twitter account and admit i’m struggling to really find a use for it. After investing significant time in building my social equity on facebook, why do i need a separate social utility tool for status updates when facebook already does this automatically to my network of friends? Do i really want to tell people what i’m up to all the time? Do people even care? Will people accept my invitation to join Twitter in a lame attempt to make my twitter page more popular? I’m thinking the answer is no to all of the above.
Having said that, some people have said that Twitter has become a hot newswire – industry insight and news is sometimes available through a Twitter feed before it hits the blogs or news pages. I guess that’s important for some industry people…but does anybody else really care if they hear about industry news 3 hours before they read it in their RSS newsreader? One sign that Twitter has become a hit is the fact there are lots of imitations now available globally – like Pownce, Jaiku and Dodgeball. Wikipedia reports that there are over 100 knock-offs of Twitter now. It seems like instant messaging 2.0 has arrived.
As marketers, how do we leverage this channel to reach our audiences and deliver messages? If you are marketing an established personality (or trying to create one), this is an interesting space to play in. Celebrities and politicians have setup their own Twitter pages in order to connect with a younger audience. U.S. presidential candidate Obama has his own Twitter page here.
In previous blog posts I’ve discussed the idea around “Identity 2.0” or creating a way for people to manage their online profiles centrally so that they don’t need to manage multiple accounts or create new ones when they want to join new communities. I would suggest the same thing is or will be needed for micro-blogging to go mainstream. Wouldn’t it be great if somebody created a widget that automatically updated my status on all my channels? In this scenario all I would do is create a status update on facebook and watch (or not) as the widget automatically publishes my status to Twitter, Pownce, MSN Messenger, my RSS feed, personal website, blog, or email. I reference facebook because it’s easy, it’s already there and there is already huge social equity in the platform.
If Twitter can build more social equity beyond the early adopter tech / celebrity / politician communities, it has a great chance of being really useful. The best way to do this will be through real integration with facebook, myspace, and all other social networking tools
UPDATE 10/07: IF you actually click on the Twitter settings within facebook, you can have Twitter automatically update your facebook status. Sweet!
October 2, 2007 2 Comments
Plaxo’s online identity aggregator = identity 2.0
As a continuation of yesterday’s post, it seems that Plaxo is looking to get a headstart on identity 2.0 with their online identity aggregator…
August 29, 2007 1 Comment
Identity 2.0 – where does it begin?
Recently I’ve come across discussions around the future of online identity – specifically around the idea of creating a global or universal ID badge / profile etc… that you can reference or link to when you need to. Instead of filling out multiple profile forms for every social network you register for or instead of creating multiple online avatars for your favourite metaverse, why not have one global digital identity mechanism….kind of like having a passport or driver’s license that will be recognized across the web as authentic ID.
Today we can identify visitors through the tracking of their I.P. address and /or through cookies…but the problem is that it’s nearly impossible to track people as they switch computers or restart their machine (assuming dynamic IP addressing is turned on).
Check out the video by Dick Hardt. The video really brings to life the idea of “identity 2.0″ and offers some insight into where or how this will evolve on the web. You should also check out Mitch’s blog entry on global avatars and Mike Kujawski’s article on the importance of branding yourself as an authority online.
In the mobile space we use phone numbers instead of I.P. addresses as an identifier. With people changing their phone numbers less fequently then they would change computers, leveraging your mobile number as your access key to a global digital avatar is an interesting concept to explore.
Recent efforts by Sprite and Nokia’s (with MOSH) to create mobile social communities could mark the beginning of the mobile device becoming the primary digital interface…and therefore a potential leverage point for those seeking the holy grail of identity 2.0.
August 28, 2007 5 Comments

