Transcript slides
Why are we all experimenting
with Web 2.0?
Terry Hulbert 2.0
Director of Business Development
American Institute of Physics
ASIDIC Fall 2008 Meeting
Salem Waterfront Hotel, Salem, MA
16 September, 2008
[email protected]
Introduction (1)
• Please do not be fooled by my British
accent
• I will use The Queen’s English
– niche, Luddite, jargon
• I am an evangelist
– and I make no apologies for it
Introduction (2)
• What do the critics say?
• What are the Web 2.0 drivers?
– some of the numbers
•
•
•
•
Meta trend
Context & illustrations
My own thoughts
Wrap-up
What do the critics say?
• It’s a fad
– it’ll never catch on; it’s a distraction
• It’s for a whole other generation
• It doesn’t translate to the scientific or
academic research world
• Who’s making any money from all this?
– massive experimentation; is that a
coincidence?
Web 2.0 market drivers (1)
• Global growth:
– 1 billion worldwide access
– 845 million use it regularly
– digital natives (<30)
• 88% online
• 51% contribute content online
– China broadband growth rate – 79% during last three
years
– world’s most popular blog is a Chinese blog
‘Web 2.0 Principles & Best Practices’, John Musser (2007, O’Reilly Media, Inc., ISBN 0-596-52769-1)
Web 2.0 market drivers (2)
• Customers are always-on
– broadband usage approaching 50%
• as of March 2006, 42% of all Americans had highspeed, continuously connected broadband
connections
• essential fabric of their daily lives
• Broadband facilitates photo, video & audio
distribution (everyone’s a publisher)
Web 2.0 market drivers (3)
• Customers are connected everywhere
they go
Web 2.0 market drivers (4)
• 2006Q1 – 2 billion global cell phone users
(twice the PC internet population)
• 28% of users have accessed the Web
from their cell phone
• Trend accelerating with more sophisticated
devices
• Opportunities for location-aware
applications
Web 2.0 market drivers (5)
• Customers are not just connected; they’re
engaged too
– increasingly comfortable & capable in creating
& contributing their own content
• photo, video, audio, comments, product reviews,
personal & professional blogs
– at April 2006 >50 million blogs; 175k new
each day
– top-10 social networking sites visited by ~45%
of ALL internet users
Web 2.0 market drivers (6)
• On an average day:
– 5m Americans create content via a blog
– 4m share music files on P2P networks
– 3m rate a person, product or service
What’s happening?
• Web is now finally becoming a true,
read/write platform
• Mass media is increasingly challenged by
UGC
• Technology is disrupting long-established
industries
New social models
• UGC as valuable as traditional media
• Social networks form and grow with
tremendous speed
• Truly global audiences are reached more
easily
• Rich media is now part of everyday life
(and expectations)
• Kent Anderson referred to ‘apomediation’
Meta trend
• Consumer experience in the Web 2.0
world is setting a new higher bar
• That knowledge and experience follows
them into their workplace
• In turn, software vendors are incorporating
Web 2.0 principles into their products &
services.
Social networks (1)
• Consumer & collegiate social networks
– what’s here moves to our space
– MySpace, Facebook
• Professional social networks
• Enterprise networks
– Intranet, extranet, partners, suppliers, etc.
Social networks (2)
• Knowledge sharing
– benchmarking, how-to’s, etc. between peers
• Crowdsourcing
– source collective knowledge and info to contribute
and produce e.g. citizen journalism
• Expert networks
– legal services area, entrpreneurial area, e.g. Gerson
Lehman Group
• Professional networks
– like LinkedIn, primarily job seeking, sales prospecting,
or ‘finding’
What do I mean by Web 2.0?
•
•
•
•
•
Social networking, communities
RSS, blogs, wikis…
Mashups
Tagging, folksonomies
Utility, utility, utility,…
Incidentally,…
• 22% hiring managers review social
network profiles
• 34% of those found material contentious
enough to drop a candidate from
consideration
• 24% found something that influenced them
favourably
(Research from CareerBuilder (via AllThingsDigital blog 11 sep 2008)
Mashups
• Just some examples
• Don’t care about scepticism
• Care about experimentation, innovation
(and also utility)
Tagging & folksonomies
• 28% of Internet users tagged or
categorised online content – photos, news,
blogs
• And “on a typical day online, 7% of
internet users say they tag or categorise
online content”
Source: Pew Internet & American Life Project, December 2006
2collab research
• >50% of respondents (1894) see social
applications as “playing a key role in shaping
nearly all aspects of research workflow” in the
next 5 years
– think about ManyEyes, dataviz, etc.
• >25% currently use social applications
• 23% believe social applications will have a
‘major influence’ on grant application within the
next 5 years
• >25% see them as major influence in the future
for finding jobs
BioInformatics LLC research
• 77% of life scientists participate in some
type of social media
• ~40% use social media for 1 or more
hours per week
• ~50% saw blogs, discussion groups,
online communities and social networking
sites as “facilitating the sharing of ideas
with colleagues and/or the community”
What are we trying to do?
• Create an architecture of participation
• Innovation – perpetual beta
• Rich user experience, beyond the
traditional
• Software, features, etc beyond a single
device
• Leveraging the ‘Long Tail’
Business models…hmmm
• Advertising based, sponsorship
– 2Collab, BioMedExperts, Scintilla, Facebook, Digg,
Del.icio.us
• Subscription
– Sermo, Community of Science (COS)
• Transactional
– InnoCentive, IdeaConnection, Big Idea Group
• Blended
– LinkedIn
• No-one has any answers…
Why?
•
•
•
•
If we want to compete
If we want to innovate
If we want to be leaders
If we want to position ourselves to exploit
the one great idea
• If we want to attract new business and
retain existing business
Summary (1)
•
•
•
•
Easy for last 5,000 days !
Cusp of truly exploiting Web 2.0…
…and social networks, communities, etc.
The next big thing is lots of little things
– that’s features & granularity (the 2 M’s)
Summary (2)
• Jeff Baer – “continually evolving”
• Kathy Greenler Sexton – alluded to ‘fail
fast & culture of failure’
• Brad Kain – ‘socialisation’ of the web
• David Durand – “experiment or die”
• Larry Schwartz – how could you not be
enthused
• I urge you to defeat the politics
Summary (3)
• Why?
– faith & hope
– optimism
– Inevitability
• Dave Freeman –
– “We're going to the future. Do you want to
come along?”
Thank you
Any questions?
Terry Hulbert
Director of Business Development
American Institute of Physics
ASIDIC Fall 2008 Meeting
Salem Waterfront Hotel, Salem, MA
16 September, 2008
[email protected]
Experiment & innovate
• Using NEJM as an example…
Blogs
•
•
•
•
•
Editorial blog
Corporate blog
Personal & professional blogs
Research blog, lab notes…?
Think: the election blogosphere as an
influencer; increasingly used in place of
polls
– Howard Dean Democratic presidential nomination
campaign (2004)
– “Rathergate” – Killian documents controversy (2004)