NYTimes: Cloud Computing: So You Don’t Have to Stand Still
NY Times today has a great article explaining the concept of Cloud Computing. Have a look: Prototype - Cloud Computing - So You Don’t Have to Stand Still - NYTimes.com
"A lot of our exposure to services and products is now going to be socially mediated. It's going to be very hard to create a centralized broadcasting message about a brand or product... That's where mass interpersonal persuasion comes in. Through the newsfeed and my social network, interesting stuff now comes to me; I don't have to go searching for it."Fast Company then (rightly) asks if this will flow into the Long Tail philosophies that are popular right now. Fogg's response is fundamentally correct, although perhaps not how he means it:
"As a brand, you can worry about all these micro niches and micro markets and the long tail, but I think at the end of the day you're not going to have enough resources to do that. You have to focus on creating a spectacular product or service, and your market will find you."Whoa, wait a second... did I just read that in the future (according to Fogg), marketers are going to be out of a job? That if you build it (really, really well) they will come? Fortunately, not exactly:
"You don't have to pre-define your market right out of the gate. As long as you watch what's going on, you can adjust and go with what's working."Phew. For a minute there, I saw long lines of well-manicured homeless folks trying to explain why the street is now REALLY where it's at.
Labels: Facebook, Fast Company, long tail, Marketing, SaaS, social networking, Web 2.0