The State Of Social Media 2008

The State Of Social Media 2008

I’ve been on a recent whirlwind speaking tour recently sharing and learning all things related to the socialization of marketing and service as well as how to measure these new strategies and tactics. From San Diego to New York to SF back to New York and then Vegas and SF again I was reminded that no matter how grand an expert one purports to be the truth is that we’re all still trying to figure this out as it continually changes together. I’m not talking about what to do or how but what must be done in order to ensure that this global renaissance paves the way for permanent residence in every media property and business through value education and reform.

The world of Socialized Media is maturing and along with it our knowledge expertise reach and personal and represented brands are only flourishing. It will continue as long as we realize that these new social tools and networks require an entirely new commitment and embodiment of what we personify and how we can be a genuine resource to the people who define the communities that are important to us.

In Technorati’s 2008 State of the Blogosphere report the company observed that blogging is becoming mainstream leading the way for an Active Blogosphere defined as the ecosystem of interconnected communities of bloggers and readers at the convergence of journalism and conversation. I’d also add that as the Active Blogosphere further permeates our daily information consumption and distribution processes that the Social Web equally becomes pervasive. But it’s so much more than an Active SocialMediaSphere. As networks become densely populated and new communities arise and thrive we’re experiencing a fundamental shift in content creation distribution and consumption thus creating an Active and Participatory Media society that is inspiring and seeding a more literate and enlightened generation.

Blogs and social networks are now part of our daily lives.

* comScore MediaMetrix August 2008

Blogs: 77.7 million unique visitors in the US

Facebook: 41.0 million MySpace 75.1 million

Total internet audience 188.9 million

* eMarketer May 2008

94.1 million US blog readers in 2007 50 of Internet users

22.6 million US bloggers in 2007 12

* Universal McCann March 2008

184 million WW have started a blog 26.4 US

346 million WW read blogs 60.3 US

77 of active Internet users read blogs

YouTube = 10 percent of all internet traffic source: Ellacoya Networks

YouTube amp; Wikipedia among top brands source: brandchannel.com

Five of the top 10 websites are social source: Alexa

Over 100 million blogs exist source: Technorati

120000 new blogs launched every day source: Technorati

1.5 million posts per day 17 per second source: Technorati

Everyone is a Social Media Expert

You’re a purveyor of new media but then again so is everyone else it seems. So what are you going to do to rise above the fray while also delivering true incontestable value to those you’re helping?

Are you an evangelist or a consultant?

Are you an extension of your company brand or are you an employee?

Are you a leader follower or are you meandering through your profession?

Are you confined to the role of a social marketer or do you represent something with longerterm value?

At the end of the day everything that’s transpiring around us is actually improving the existing foundation for our business from service to marketing to product development to sales to executive management and everything in between.

Social marketing revitalizes and empowers every facet of our workflow and its supporting ecosystem. Seeing the bigger picture and tying our knowledge to the valuable feedback from our communities will help us guide businesses towards visibility profitability relevance and ultimately customer loyalty.

In every single case it doesn’t just take an expert; it requires a champion to make an impact. You are that champion.

About the writer:nbsp;nbsp;Brian is Principal of FutureWorks. He is cofounder of the Social Media Club an original member of the Media 2.0 Workgroup a contributor to the Social Media Collective and ConversationalMedia.org

Solis in concert with Geoff Livingston released Now is Gone a new book that helps businesses engage in Social Media. He has also released a series of ebooks on new PR and blogger relations.

You may also find articles by Brian at the TalentZoo.com

Related posts:

  1. Do Not Fear Social Media
  2. Strengthening Social Network Media For A Growing MLM Income
  3. Social Networking Goes MLM
  4. Cebit 2008 – Was The New Concept A Success?
  5. Taking Advantage Of Web 2.0 Online Communities To Generate Traffic

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