ILM East: David Weinberger Says, ‘The Real World Is Always Local’

Harvard-Berkman logo

David Weinberger, author and senior researcher, Berkman Center for Internet & Society, Harvard University, kicked off ILM East 2011 with an opening keynote focusing on use of social media by local businesses to pursue conversations, engagement and customer acquisition. Weinberger argued that, “the Net has a unique property in its creation of a nexus of information, communication and sociality. Nothing else does this.”

This nexus begets the inevitability of “locality” or localness in the social utility of the Net. People care intensely about what’s local and what they’re interacting with.

Weinberger offered three imperatives for local businesses using social media and the Net:

  1. Align your interests with those of  customers — it’s a conversation not a monologue.
  2. Figure out how to add value to the consumer’s online experience. It’s hard for consumers to “add value” to search engines (services, making broader Web more usable, better reflection of customer interests).
  3. Get out of the way — enable customers to add their own value; they know what they want. Quoting from his book “The Cluetrain Manifesto,” Weinberger reminded the audience that, “Markets are conversations — connected, real, out of control.” Social media should support this.

Weinberger’s final advice was that Net users feel that this “medium is profoundly and deeply ‘ours’ based on what we care about.” Fail to respect this at your peril.

Rick Ducey

Rick Ducey is the managing director for BIA/Kelsey. He is an expert in digital media innovations, competitive strategies, new product development and new business models, including digital ecosystem collaboration strategies. Ducey oversees the firm's consulting, research and advisory services areas. He is also the program director for BIA/Kelsey's Video Local Media advisory service. This program provides coverage and analysis of how online, mobile and broadcast video technologies, competition, shifting consumer demographics and media usage trends are driving changes in the media ecosystem and SMBs and other advertisers can be successful in the new environment. Ducey assists clients with their business planning and revenue models, strategic research, market assessment, and designing and implementing digital strategies. He is also a cofounder of SpectraRep, one of BIA�s companies, which sells a patent-pending IP-based alerting system that he co-invented. Prior to joining BIA in 2000, Ducey was senior vice president of NAB's Research and Information Group. In this position, he was in charge of the association�s new technology assessment, audience and policy research, strategic planning and information systems, including all Internet operations, and he also developed publications and seminars. Before joining NAB in 1983, Ducey was a faculty member in the Department of Telecommunication at Michigan State University where he taught and did research in the areas of emerging telecommunication technologies and strategic market research. He also served on the graduate management faculties of George Mason University and George Washington University in telecommunications management and the University of Maryland, where he taught strategic market management and research methodologies. Ducey was selected as the Spring 2011 Shapiro Fellow at George Washington University where he teaches entrepreneurship in new media. He has published a number of research articles and papers in these areas and serves on editorial boards of leading scholarly journals in the communications field. He has also worked at radio stations WSOQ-AM/WEZG-FM and Upstate Cablevision in North Syracuse, New York. Ducey received his Ph.D. from Michigan State University, M.S. from Syracuse University and B.A. from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>