Sorry, but I can't find another word to describe the following but Sad. Sad as in it is sad that anyone would want to check their Facebook status while having sex, or sad that anyone could be having such bad sex in the first place. Unless, of course, you felt compelled to Tweet about your experience. But couldn't you wait until AFTER you were finished? That's called having manners.
Apparently,'net addiction is at a new level: users update from bed, dinner'.You can read the entire post in ars technica.
See ya, off to update my status and look at my blackerry for the 73rd time since 5.03am...
Friday, March 19, 2010
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Tweet and Televise Your Abortion?
The story in Newsweek "Outing Abortion, From Town Halls to Twitter" is a couple of couple of weeks old (03/03/10), so way dated in our news cycle, yet the heated arguments about abortion will never go away. Certainly not now we can televise and tweet about abortion as they happen in real time right before our eyes. TMI OVERLOAD.
If Twitter and social media have democratized the internet, what have they done for the abortion movement? Apparently, they are being used as vehicles to "desensitize" the issue... When we can watch a woman induce a DIY abortion on YouTube, it's clear we have turned the very ugly corner on privacy, sensibility and what's fit for general consumption.
If Twitter and social media have democratized the internet, what have they done for the abortion movement? Apparently, they are being used as vehicles to "desensitize" the issue... When we can watch a woman induce a DIY abortion on YouTube, it's clear we have turned the very ugly corner on privacy, sensibility and what's fit for general consumption.
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Sayonara, So Long, Goodbye!
A short take on how one company killed America's love affair and its decades-long quest to be the best car brand - in just a few short months. Business is business is business. Except that the way companies do business in every country can be vastly different. Yes, even in our "global" marketplace.
Cultural nuances and traditions have a direct impact on management and leadership styles, affecting workforce attitudes and performance, from the top down and bottom up. Toyota's spectacular fall from grace puts the spotlight on how a number of Japanese cultural traits -- things like gokuhi, uchi-soto, gaijin -- helped propel its PR nightmare. In English, these terms roughly translate to secrecy, suspicion of foreignness, pride and insecurity -- none of which are particularly PR friendly or conducive to reputation-building, nor endearing to a nation consumed by transparency and openness.
Our way is not always the right way
One of the first things a marketer is supposed to learn is to know thy customer. Barring its first American flop in 1958, Toyota seemed to know its customers very well. The company pioneered just-in-time manufacturing, became the darling of the auto industry, and was embraced by American consumers wholeheartedly. At the same time, Toyota's reserve and intense pride seemed to reinforce the image (correctly or not) of the Japanese -- always striving for perfection - which up until a few years ago served the carmaker very well.
But alas, that pride -- and arrogance I would add -- is what finally got in the way of Toyota understanding its customers. In an era where customers control so much of the conversation, Toyota forgot the golden rule of know thy customers.
Read the rest on Media Post.
Labels:
Business Culture,
MediaPost,
Toyota,
Toyota's PR Crisis
iPad iPad in my hand, who is the fairest tablet in the land?
“Mirror mirror on the wall” now reads “iPad iPad in my hand"... First day pre-orders rounded up to 120,000 for the iPad. Nice... Make that 120,001 with my order.
If the iPhone moved the needle on the smartphone market and mobile advertising, publishers and content pushers will be rubbing their hands with absolute glee. My take is that the iPad will spur the pay-for-content movement –- finally –- and help re-write the playbook on why quality content should not be free.
Labels:
Content,
iPad,
iPhone,
mobile advertising
Tuesday, March 16, 2010
Now Here's Some Change You Can Believe In
Now Here's Some Change You Can Believe In - Michelle Obama takes on childhood obesity
Overweight and unhealthy kids have been three decades in the making. I know, I was one of them – and that was way back when we still had PE and played on the streets after school and on weekends. TV was a treat and reading was something we did for entertainment - imagine!!! Today, billions of kids are exposed to crappy, unhealthy food, almost zero exercise and a life of online everything. As parents today, most of us are guilty of having too little time to make sure our kids get enough exercise or making sure they're eating the best and most nutritious food we can give them.. I am guilty of this too.
So kudos to Michelle Obama for taking on this cause on behalf of America's children. It's not their fault they are obese when we feed them with rubbish everyday.. It's not their fault they're overweight when schools serve sugary junk food in the cafeterias.
And the best thing is that Congress won't get a chance to screw this up. That you can believe in!!
Sign up to support Let's Move and help American children (and us parents)re-establish a healthy relationship with food, exercise and healthy living again.
Labels:
Childhood obesity,
Exercise,
Let's Move,
Michelle Obama
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