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Video will be increasing important as bandwidth grows and video is increasingly available on mobile devices.  The trend will encompass both short clips and longer feature content on YouTube, Chinese video-sharing site Youku and others, as well as interactive video communications via Skype, Facetime and other applications.  And video will remain a valuable search strategy, since video content is 53 times more likely to get a page one Google ranking than text.

S-commerce and M-commerce will become significant sources of online sales, as people become both more comfortable with being offered chances to buy products and services in social media and on mobile, and as the technologies develop to make online purchases faster and easier.

A much larger percentage of mobile users will be smart – smartphones will have deeper and deeper penetration, and that will open up a larger universe for marketers to do larger scale and sophisticated mobile marketing.  Now only 19% of handset owners in Asia Pacific have smartphones (compared to the North America’s 63%). Handset costs will drop and feature phones will begin to be marginalized.  And Microsoft Windows Phone 8 will likely gain users even as Apple iOS and Android continue to grow.

There will be some interesting consolidation reflecting market shifts, convergence, and the changing dynamic brought by increasing use of the cloud.  For example, RIM, maker of Blackberry, may potentially get bought, either by another handset maker looking to control the user base, or by a software/platform company (similarly to Google’s intention to buy Motorola).  Yahoo! may well have a new shape in a year, with either a different structure, new owners or both.

The importance of Apps will decline after a frenzied couple of years of growth and development.  With deeper penetration of smartphones, broadband, cloud computing, and HTML5, websites will have enhanced functionality, interactivity, power and speed.  The need for specialized apps for mobile or tablet users will diminish and apps will increasingly service more as “bookmarks” for highly functional websites, or as ways for companies to generate revenue by selling premium apps.

Will my predictions prove correct or just dragon’s breath hot air? Let’s check a year later.  In the meantime Kung Hei Fat Choi!

So bad it’s good

March 28, 2011

While surfing the web, I came across what can only be described as one of the only reasons I could come to hate Fridays. The song, Rebecca Black’s “Friday” has been a sensation on the internet for all the wrong reasons. It features the singer, your average doe-eyed teenage girl, singing (?) about her week, [...]

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Finding Your Fans: Building Your Brand by Fostering a Following

June 23, 2010

Social media is no fad or cultural fluke. The stats tell us everything we need to know. Facebook has almost 500 million members worldwide, available in 70 languages to 98 percent of the planet’s population. LinkedIn has a membership base that grows by a new member approximately every second. YouTube serves more than two billion [...]

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Mastering the dark art of video

October 14, 2009

Online video is something of a dark art. Get one right and they can spread across the Internet in minutes. Get one wrong and it sits unloved on YouTube barely breaking double figures in terms of viewers. Exactly what the magic ingredients are that make the difference between success and failure is a question many [...]

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Why didn’t anyone love Beth Cooper?

July 29, 2009

Anyone seen the movie “I Love You Beth Cooper?”
I didn’t think so, based on these numbers. And yet the movie was in the spotlight again this week, based on an interesting article from The Wall Street Journal, reporting that the film’s marketing team hired an external agency to create viral buzz about the movie.  In [...]

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Brands, bands and fans: Coachella goes social…

April 22, 2009

Returning from 3 days at the Coachella music festival it’s never been more abundantly clear how Twitter in particular…and social media in general…is hitting a mass-market peak. Whether it was the celebs tweeting backstage, the bands monitoring their tweeting fans, sponsors tweeting their wares or the tie-dye covered festival masses tweeting their experience from the festival [...]

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Data visualization: a key element to digital storytelling

March 23, 2009

All you online junkies out there have likely stumbled upon cool data visualization projects that reside on the internet.  Whether it’s watching the growth of Wal-Mart over time, or visualizing conversations and connections on Twitter, the concept is catching fire as the volume of data grows almost exponentially by the day, the availability of that [...]

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