If someone opened the curtains behind
the window to their soul, would you look in? What if you were a marketer and this was your
consumer unveiling his inner thoughts?
Or perhaps this thought process is too deep. What if they were merely unveiling their
intentions for you to see, as unadulterated and unfiltered as possible? For a marketer, that would be a dream come
true. Enter the realm of social media.


This idea goes even further. With Google running a tethered service of
sites that all share data as microcosms of Google’s overall idea, what are the
potential applications social media based data in marketing? What is the current state of lifestyle
media for extracting customer insights?
What are the restrictions? Best
of all, where is this idea going and where does most of its potential lie?
When people think of social media, often
times their minds immediately run to the idea of Facebook, LinkedIn, and
Twitter, and maybe even Orkut if they’re perusing around Brazil. In reality, lifestyle media is becoming
social media. On my phone, I have MyFitnessPal,
in which I store what I eat daily to analyze later in pursuit of my health
goals. I also share this journal
selectively with other fitness freak friends. Hypothetically speaking,
developing a Machine to Machine (M2M) protocol that allows this and other related
apps to share my data would provide an interested party access to my eating
habits and schedule, my tastes, what a typical shopping
basket looks like for me, the brands that I care about, my demographics, and so much more. Access to data in Yelp, a popular social media tool for reviewing and identifying restaurants to suit a variety of tastes, would tell an interested party which areas of town I’m willing to travel to for food, which places I’m not willing to travel to, how far I’d be willing to travel for various types of food, and how frequently I may visit particular restaurants. Accessing the locational data from any social media app could do the same. Past patterns are a solid indicator of future patterns. But what are the restrictions in all of these ideas?
basket looks like for me, the brands that I care about, my demographics, and so much more. Access to data in Yelp, a popular social media tool for reviewing and identifying restaurants to suit a variety of tastes, would tell an interested party which areas of town I’m willing to travel to for food, which places I’m not willing to travel to, how far I’d be willing to travel for various types of food, and how frequently I may visit particular restaurants. Accessing the locational data from any social media app could do the same. Past patterns are a solid indicator of future patterns. But what are the restrictions in all of these ideas?
Privacy is a huge issue for most users,
though they leave locational data open to their favorite phone apps. Would people share locational data with an
interested party? If the value provided exceeds the cost, or perceived risk,
the answer will be a clear yes. The
ability of machines to speak in the same language, or protocol, also stands
between the present situation and ultimate success. Varying applications storing data in varying
formats makes the
data difficult to aggregate into a usable format. What could the answer be? Companies are actively dedicating resources to developing standard M2M protocols. Google has been a huge proponent of open platforms such as with Android, just as the Linux crew has been. The more important issue is if all of this was possible and would the end state be worth the journey? Absolutely.
data difficult to aggregate into a usable format. What could the answer be? Companies are actively dedicating resources to developing standard M2M protocols. Google has been a huge proponent of open platforms such as with Android, just as the Linux crew has been. The more important issue is if all of this was possible and would the end state be worth the journey? Absolutely.

Hi Carlos - I like this whole area as a topic for a paper. It is quite vast, so you'll need to figure out how and where you can narrow in on the topic you'd most like to cover. My worry is that you can write a whole book on the last few questions in your paragraph and dedicate the next few years of your life exploring it. I'd really like to work with you to organize your thoughts. The blog post makes a lot of really good points, but it comes across as a bit sprawling and does not have a super clear direction. I had to read it again to make sure you covered all of the points I was hoping that you all would cover (and I'm 95% sure that you did). I'm assuming you were including the Pew poll as your central article? Let's work together to make sure that this is a paper that is really good for you and stays quite focused within the limited space you'll have to write it. Thanks!
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