
With all the talk about Web2.0 technology not many product developers have developed the "marketing side". It seems that in the new era of technology innovation, marketers are lagging behind (this is not new). By this I mean that the work on popularizing and dissemination Web2.0 technologies is far behind 'what the technology can do'. There are almost no examples, case studies, tutorials, possible use ideas... all the "stuff" that accelerates the use of new technology products in the world of Web2.0. This situation is actually a huge opportunity for us marketers. Not just in marketing, but in marketer's ability to move business forward (connecting products, vertical uses, corporate "behind the fire wall" use, etc.). This is what I see when speaking with technologists every week. They are extremely focused on the "bits and bytes" / "features and benefits" the stuff they read about in old marketing books. There are so many things to develop using new technologies that technicians must focus hard. But in the focus on 'how to do it' they miss 'what to do with it'! This is not a new phenomena, this happens every time we get a technology shift which changes all the rules. Lots of people see the big picture, this is what Tim O'Reilly called Web2.0.
As marketer I first zoom in to look at the technology. Than I try to develop very specific product ideas and figure out what to do next. The first step is "who is wants this? How are they going to use this?" O'Reilly's Web2.0 covers too many specific technologies to use as examples. Let's look just at the popularizing of user contribution. The most common technology which is changing the way we work is called by the developers "user content". This is contributed articles, comments, links, video and audio clips, and now even chat and phone conversations (see the
Fring service and Google phone service). Blogging started this whole trend when 'Blogger' became a hot application. At about the same time, Amazon has started to develop reader's reviews in a big way. The page for a book became more than a catalog, now readers have newspaper and magazine reviews, comments from readers, comments from people in the area of interest. Eventually Amazon even created a forum for discussion about books which did not exist in a popular form on the Internet. Today this does not seem like such an innovation, this phenomena of innovation which quickly become part of the daily convention. If you look carefully at your expertise and the markets you know, you could probably see similar opportunities of turning old services into Internet services.

In explaining the ability of use of user comments take a look at Amazon. One of the best ways to see how technology is used is by picking a simple example. Search for 'the Koran' on Amazon. While this might be a slightly charged topic it is a simple example of what information one will find on Amazon. Go half way down to the 'Most Helpful Customer Reviews' section. Today (October 12, 2008) the following was displayed: "144 of 153 people found the following review helpful: // An Important Read, July 14, 2003 // By Benjamin (USA) - See all my reviews..." with a 6 paragraph review. Than there was another review "97 of 121 people found the following review helpful: // Not Bad, but there are Better, October 4, 2001" with suggestion to go to another translation. Finally there was a third customer review. Notice that Amazon did not participate and seemingly did not even pick the reviews. They seem to come via popularity "voting" by readers. Here is excellent information which would take a great deal of editorial writing to gather and would not be as wide audience. Also notice that Amazon let's anyone "vote" on the review which makes it easier to put the most popular review right at the first page. If you want to see all 77 reviews there is a link at the end of the three on the main page. Here you will find lots of people who write in detail about the differences in translation and even sources where you can get more information. Also, lots of opinions. This is even better than a newspaper's op-ed section. It gives a potential reader the ability to see what readers think about the book. I would suggest the you dig further into how Amazon organizes reviews and ratings of reviews and think about ways to make your own information useful to your audience. While selling books is not what most technology marketers do, we need to be just as good in our own information organization and presentation. We don't have any more excuses when a site like Amazon is so good at it.
Not to beat a dead horse, take a look at a different book all together: Ernest Hemingway's 'To Whom The Bell's Toll'. Here there is an additional section with 'Editorial Reviews'. This is pure marketing and even in this classic book comes directly from sources who are simply interested in selling you the book. But, this is also a bridge to the pre-Internet (certainly pre-Web2.0) days where newspaper and magazine reviews were the source of information about a book. Amazon at least takes the position of showing just a small part of the editorial review on the main page. If you go to the page dedicated for the editorial review there is much more information and even the first chapter of the book. I don't think that Amazon needs to work that hard selling Hemingway to Americans, but still this is an excellent resource for readers. Finally at the bottom are the three "Most Helpful Customer Reviews" which one is from an author with some background on how this story affected him during the Vietnam era. The other reviews are also good and I presume that American high school students could use these reviews to develop their own ideas on how to describe the book and the ideas in the story. In this book you will find 263 reviews. Imagine as a technology marketer if you can get 263 opinions or reviews for anything you market. OK, this is Hemingway's most monumental piece of work, but I would still put this as an example of what we can strive for in our own work. No piece of software needs 263 reviews but a dozen would be great. No chip needs even a dozen but five would be excellent.
Well, I hope Amazon can help you and many others understand that simple function of user contribution. In the case of books its reviews. There are other excellent examples like Red Hat's knowledge base. But that will have to wait for a future article.
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