podcast

David Spark has been working away on a fabulous new resource for folks thinking about the role that social media should play in the business plan. Called be the voice, it’s a blog and podcast featuring “stories of thought leadership driving business growth”.  Thought leadership, of course, is one of the most powerful public relations strategies if you can execute it well, and David’s blog is a showcase of some of the best.

Although the podcast officially launches this week, I am flattered to have been David’s first interview.  In Sell your product by letting everyone see you use your product, we talk about iotum’s strategy to promote Calliflower conference calls with the SquawkBox podcast.  But don’t just listen to my call.  With folks like Charlene Li, Oliver Marks, Chris Heuer and Peter Hirshberg on his show, there’s a wealth of material to learn from.

Put it on your iTunes subscription list.  That’s what I did… you won’t want to miss a single episode.

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KYOTO, JAPAN - FEBRUARY 9: Ichimame, an 19-yea...Image by Getty Images via Daylife

I was inspired by a piece last week on GigaOm about the evolution of blogs, titled Why Blogs Need to be Social. This morning we talked about the evolution of blogs and social networks, where they intersect, and how.  The whole topic has been engendered by the discussion around whether bloggers and blogs have failed their readers.

ReadWriteWeb asks whether blogs have any purpose any more, noting that lifestreams are replacing them.

In his piece, Om Malik acknowledges that we have to consolidate the many social tools we use, and says “We have two choices in order to consolidate these — either opt for all-purpose services such as Facebook (as tens of millions have done) or use our blogs as the aggregation point or hub for all these various services. Facebook, for instance allows you to share photos, aggregate your digital droppings, share comments with friends and exchange messages, but it doesn’t give you a unique identity on the web. In contrast, blogs with social features could allow you to do exactly that.”

Om is really putting his money where his mouth is, and over the weekend announced a WordPress theme and plug-ins called Gigalogue which will provide those aggregation services.

Mathew Ingram echoes Om’s sentiment saying “Blogging isn’t for everyone…For those who want more control over their online data and destiny…I think blogs and blog-based tools are the best route.”

And at the announcement of Movable Type Pro, SixApart said on their blog “Providing social features to your community doesn’t mean you have to give up control of your community to a giant media entity. Managing a community online is something you can do yourself, using easy-to-use, open tools.”

It seems there’s a clear tension developing between the social networking platforms of the world, and bloggers.

We talked about the impact that social networks are having on blogs, and how blogging has changed over the last couple of years.

The closest thing many people have got to an aggregation point, right now, is Facebook.  It aggregates their twitter and blog feeds, and it has become the defacto place for people to upload photos.  We discussed other aggregation services as well.

Om holds Robert Scoble up as an example for all of us.  Scoble’s blog aggregates his friendfeed, pictures and longer blog posts in one place for all things Robert Scoble.  Do people want to read all kinds of blogs like this, or would you rather go to Facebook, or some other social network, and read aggregated feeds from all your friends?

This morning I wrote that Calliflower conference calls are turning into kind of a defacto social network for a few of us. The SquawkBox is a daily audio show, but with a distinctly social element to it — it’s usually a core group of the same people, the chat wall in many cases serves as a kind of comment board, I drive it with twitter announcements and I redistribute it afterward on a podcast.  People didn’t necessarily see Calliflower conference calls as a social network, but they saw SquawkBox as social.

And we also chatted about how the Olympic news coverage is being handled.  There are those who are upset at NBC’s decision to embargo news until prime time, and there are those upset that CNN twittered the news of Phelps’ 8th victory as it broke.  What should the networks be doing?

On the conference call: Brad Jones, Jeanette Fisher, Frank Abrams, Jorge Aguilar, Sheryl Breuker, Bill Volk, Jim Courtney, Mike Pruyn, Hudson Barton and Jeb Brilliant.

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Socialcasting with Calliflower

August 18, 2008

On the SquawkBox this morning we’ll be talking about social networks, blogs and the coming intersection of these media.  This conversation is inspired by a piece last week from Om Malik titled Why Blogs Need to be Social, and a subsequent follow up from Mathew Ingram titled Let a Hundred Facebook’s Bloom.  However, there’s more [...]

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Calling on VON Community Members

May 15, 2008

It’s no secret that VON is in trouble, and maybe dead. Jeff Pulver has resigned from the board of Pulvermedia, the people we all knew and loved that were part of the organization aren’t there any more (check out my pal Carl Ford’s group What should Carl Ford do next on Facebook, for example), and [...]

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Squawk Box Feb 26 — the death of mobile apps?

February 26, 2008

We had another very interactive call this morning.  Of our three topics, the "death of mobile application development" was most thoroughly discussed.  We were lucky enough to have William Volk, CEO of MyNumo — a mobile application developer — on the telephone.   William eats, lives and breathes these issues every day.  Afterward, one participant messaged [...]

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Squawk Box January 24

January 24, 2008

Here's this morning's SquawkBox.  One of the better ones!  We had Andy Abramson, Howard Thaw, and Randall Howard on the line talking about everything from AT&T's results to iPhone momentum, Fonality's deal with Dell, Best Buy's decision to abandon it's users with virus infected digital picture frames, and the recording industry's latest tactics to try [...]

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Squawk Box with Duncan Stewart.

January 22, 2008

Join us this afternoon for a special edition of the SquawkBox with guest Duncan Stewart.  Duncan is a consultant, columnist to the National Post, and a bit of a futurist. Tomorrow morning he'll be hosting the TMT 2008 seminar here in Ottawa, and discussing market trends.  We're lucky enough to have him on the SquawkBox, [...]

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Podcasting with Carl

January 20, 2007

Carl Ford and I recorded a 10 minute segment for his weekly podcast earlier this week.  We talked about the iPhone, innovation, and of course, iotum’s new Talk-Now application.  As you may know, I have similar thoughts about the iPhone to the thoughts expressed in this Ars Technica post. Anyway, I certainly enjoyed the chat with [...]

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Alec Saunders on Interviews

November 8, 2006

Flat Planet Phone Company CEO, and iotum Partner, Moshe Maeir pointed me to Ron Lewis’ Interviews site after I recorded a podcast with Ron recently.  Wow!  First, egomaniac that I am, I went and listened to my own interview.  It might be one of the better podcasts I’ve participated in.  Ron’s a great interviewer, and then [...]

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OCRI Radio on Podcasts, Blogs, and Markets as Conversations

June 14, 2006

Last week I spun by the OCRI offices to record an OCRIRadio segment with Jeffrey Dale and Nathan Rudyk.  We were talking about blogs, podcasts, and markets as conversations.  Enjoy!

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