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January 29 2012

16:03

Customer Experience Reading List For Senior Execs

Our research shows that an increasing number of companies will focus on customer experience in 2012. So there will be a new cadre of senior executives beginning to learn about customer experience. As they gain interest, they’ll look for materials that they can read to get up to speed. Here’s a short list of posts that I’d recommend sharing with these CX newcomers:

  1. The 6 Laws Of Customer Experience. Every executive should understand these fundamental drivers of how organizations deliver customer experience.
  2. The Four Core Customer Experience Core Competencies. The path to customer-centricity requires mastering these four competencies: Purposeful Leadership, Compelling Brand Values, Employee Engagement, and Customer Connectedness. The report also has a self-assessment tool that execs can use to gauge their organization.
  3. My Customer Experience Manifesto Continues. Provides a perspective of how to think about customer experience management.
  4. Customer Experience-Loyalty Connection. This report uses large-scale consumer research to show the link between customer experience and customer loyalty, good for understanding ROI.
  5. What If Customer Experience Has No ROI?. This is a three-part post that explains he connection between customer experience and business results.
  6. Customer Experience Affects Attitudes And Behaviors. Shows how customer experience links to business and brand strategy.
  7. Three Characteristics Of Transformational Leaders identifies that elements that leaders need if they want to drive change int heir organizations.
  8. Improve “Purposeful Leadership” In 2011. Gain a deeper understanding of the role that leadership plays in transforming customer experience.
  9. The 8 Signs Of Executive Commitment. Gauge the commitment level of the executive team with this simple diagnostic.
  10. The Customer Experience Checklist Manifesto. Use this checklist of eight items to make sure that investments will improve customer experience.
  11. 8 Customer Experience Trends For 2011. These trends give a good sense of where things are heading, but key an eye out for an updated list of megatrends.

If you can get your senior executives to spend 60 minutes reading through this material, then they should have a much better understanding about what it takes to build a more customer-centric organization. If they show some interest, then I would also sign them up for the monthly CX Journal so they can continue on their learning journey.

The bottom line: An informed senior executive is a critical CX asset.


15:44

facit sucht research consultant für user experience / usability (m/w) - München

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Tätigkeiten:

Sie leiten eigenverantwortlich qualitative und quantitative Marktforschungsstudien mit dem Themenschwerpunkt User Experience / Usability.

  • Studienkonzeption, Erstellung von Angeboten
  • Erarbeitung von Fragebögen und Leitfäden
  • Realisierung von User-Experience-Tests, Usability-Tests im Labor, Eye-Tracking, Anforderungsanalysen, ethnografischen und anderen qualitativen Studien
  • Erstellung von Klickdummys (Rapid Prototyping)
  • Realisierung quantitativer Studien (Online Surveys)
  • Qualitative und quantitative Datenanalyse, Interpretation, Entwicklung von Empfehlungen für unsere Kunden
  • Präsentation und Beratung unserer Kunden bei der Umsetzung der gewonnenen Erkenntnisse
  • Leitung von Projektteams
  • Steuerung externer Dienstleister
  • Dauerhafte Betreuung unserer in- und ausländischen Kunden

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research consultant für user experience / usability (m/w)

15:43

e.pages sucht User Interface Designer / Webdesigner (m/w) - Jena

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Deine Aufgaben

In der Position „User Interface Designer / Webdesigner“ wirkst du bei der Konzeption und Umsetzung neuer Oberflächenfunktionen einer webbasierten E-Commerce-Anwendung mit.

In Abstimmung mit dem Produkt Management und der Entwicklungsleitung erstellst du Entwürfe / Prototypen der Benutzeroberfläche und setzt diese mit Hilfe deiner technischen Kenntnisse um. Mit deinen Erfahrungen und Fähigkeiten im Bereich Usability fällt es dir leicht, dich in bestehende Geschäftsprozesse und Funktionalitäten einzuarbeiten, Schwachstellen in der Benutzeroberfläche zu erkennen und diese bestmöglich zu beheben. Dabei kennst du sowohl die aktuellen Browser-Technologien, deren Entwicklungswerkzeuge sowie alle Themen, die mit Web-Programmierung zu tun haben.

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User Interface Designer / Webdesigner (m/w)

15:41

Hornbach sucht User Experience Webdesigner (w/m) - Bornheim

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Ihre Aufgaben

Als User Experience Webdesigner (w/m) sind Sie mitverantwortlich für die Entwicklung von Design- und Interaktionselementen zur Kundenführung in allen digitalen Medien, speziell für unseren Webshop.

Sie bewerten Anforderungen und beraten die Fachabteilungen zu Neuentwicklungen unter den Aspekten „ Look and feel“, User Experience und Usability.

Sie konzipieren Vorschläge zur Website-Gestaltung und User Experience wie zum Beispiel Wireframes, Sitemaps und Mock-Ups. Zusätzlich erstellen Sie Grafiken für die Produktion.

Die Qualitätssicherung und Sicherstellung der Einhaltung unserer CI/CD gehört ebenso zu Ihren Aufgaben wie die Bestimmung von gestalterischen Vorgaben unter Berücksichtigung medienübergreifender Kommunikationsstandards.

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User Experience Webdesigner (w/m)

15:38

Audi sucht Advanced Graphical User Interface Designer (m/w) - Ingolstadt

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Ihre Aufgaben

  • Als Advanced Graphical User Interface Designer/-in konzipieren und gestalten Sie die Zukunft der Audi MMI- und Fahrerinformationsysteme sowie der Applikationen für mobile Endgeräte
  • In enger Zusammenarbeit mit den anderen Interieurdesign-Disziplinen sowie den Fachdisziplinen "Bedienkonzept und Ergonomie" entwirft das Audi Design GUI-Team hochwertig progressive Interfaces für zukünftige Fahrzeuggenerationen

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Advanced Graphical User Interface Designer (m/w)

15:34

hmmh sucht User Experience Engineer (m/w) - Bremen

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Als User Experience Engineer entwickeln, gestalten und begleiten Sie konzeptionell anspruchsvolle Online-Projekte. Dazu liegt die Planung und Präsentation von Wireframe-Modellen in Ihrer Verantwortung.

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User Experience Engineer (m/w)

15:31

SAP sucht Senior User Interface Design Specialist / Expert (f/m) - Walldorf

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EXPECTATIONS AND TASKS

As member of our team you will be responsible for developing new design concepts and for getting these concepts implemented in the user interface technologies. You will work together with product areas on design solutions working on a common design vision. As part of a central design team you will work in an open and collaborative environment on the continuous improvement of our products. You will convince stakeholders from our designs and make them excited of our innovations and visions.

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Senior User Interface Design Specialist / Expert (f/m)

15:29

FTI Touristik sucht User Interface Designer (m/w) - München

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Ihre Aufgaben:

  • Mitarbeit in einem Creation Team an der Gestaltung bestehender und neuer Reiseportale der FTI Group
  • Konzeption von Nutzungsabläufen und Seitenstruktur in Form von Wireframes oder Flussdiagrammen
  • Entwickeln von Prototypen, Prozessabläufen und Navigationsplänen
  • Analyse und Gestaltung der Interface-Architektur mit dem Ziel einer effektiven Nutzererfahrung
  • Weiterentwicklung der bestehenden Designs und Verbesserung der User Experience
  • Anfertigung von Styleguides für die Web-Produktentwicklung

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User Interface Designer (m/w)

January 28 2012

16:11

Fubiz Awards - Animation

Fubiz est fier de vous présenter jusqu’au 10 février les Fubiz Awards 2012 et vous propose de voter pour vos créations préférées. Petit tour d’horizon aujourd’hui avec les nominés de la catégorie Animation des Fubiz Awards à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.


Tribute to Drive - vote

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The Saga of Biorn - vote

the-saga-of-biorn

The Loner - vote

the-loner

Pencilhead - vote

pencilhead

My Bloody Lad Animation - vote

my-bloody-lad-animation

Dripped - vote

dripped

One minute Puberty - vote

one-minute-puberty

Countdown - vote

countdown

Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ - Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

14:55

Davide Bellocchio

Découverte de Davide Bellocchio, un photographe italien mondialement reconnu. Spécialisé dans la publicité, il dévoile tout son talent pour la manipulation photographique et le montage dans une sélection de clichés publicitaires à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.



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Previously on Fubiz

Copyright Fubiz™ - Suivez nous sur Twitter et Facebook

11:00

Hans Rosling: The Jedi Master of data visualization

And who's Darth Vader of visualization? "If there is a Jedi Master of presenting data clearly, visually, and simply, then it is Hans. He proves time and time again, that data are not dull-and when you are trying to change the world, there is no excuse for boring presentations." (Garr Reynolds a.k.a. @presentationzen ~ Presentation Zen)
Tags: InfoViz

January 27 2012

23:22

How and why we communicate with others

This is chapter 2 of my book Grouped. You you like and want to read the rest, you can do so here!

 

HOW AND WHY WE COMMUNICATE WITH OTHERS

 

WHY WE TALK

We talk to survive

The desire to communicate is hard-wired into all of us. It was an effective survival mechanism for our ancestors, who shared information about food supplies, dangerous animals, and weather patterns, and it continues to help us understand our world, including what behavior is appropriate and how to act in certain situations. People talk because sharing information makes life easier.

Our motivations for sharing online are the same as the motivations of our ancestors. We often update our status because we need information. Research has shown that the majority of tweets that mention brands are seeking information rather than expressing sentiment, and one in five tweets is about a product or service. (1)

We talk to form social bonds

Decades of research in social psychology has shown that people talk to form and grow social bonds. Conversations ensure that we understand one another. One key aspect of this is communal laughter. Research has shown that if people laugh together with strangers, they are as generous to them as they are to their friends. (2)

Talking to someone sends out strong social signals. It shows people that we consider them important enough to spend time together. This is also true online. People update their status to produce a feeling of connectedness, even when people are geographically distant. (3) Status updates often contain social gestures and people often respond by liking or commenting on the content, not because they actually like the content but because they want to send out a social signal to build the relationship. In many cases, the conversation that follows a status update is much more important than the status update itself. More than the act of sharing content, marketing campaigns need to support conversations.

Research has shown that social bonds are central to our happiness. The deeper the relationships someone has, the happier they will be. (4) Women talk to form social bonds more often than men. Many of their conversations are aimed at building and maintaining their social network. Men more often talk about themselves or things they claim to be knowledgeable about, often because they are trying to impress the people around them. (5)

We talk to help others

When researchers have studied why people share, they have consistently found that many do it to help others. This is an altruistic act with no expected reciprocity. For many, it is important to them to be perceived as helpful, and so they try to share content that they think other people will find valuable. (6) This is especially clear when we see people share information that may not reflect positively on themselves.

We talk to manage how others perceive us

While people talk to make their lives easier, to form social bonds, and to help others, most of our conversations are a form of reputation management. (7) Research has shown that most conversations are recounting personal experiences, or gossiping about who is doing what with whom. Only 5 percent is criticism or negative gossip. The vast majority of these conversations are positive, as we are driven to preserve a positive reputation. ( 8 )

Our identities are constantly shaped and refined by the conversations we have. Our values were passed on from conversations with our family, community, society, country, church, and through our profession, and are continually refined by the people we spend time with.

Quick tips

Build marketing campaigns that grow social bonds. For example, for Mother’s Day, the online florist 1-800-flowers.com used Facebook to have mothers vote on the products that they would prefer to receive as a gift. this generated stories in the News Feed, to be seen by their children.the motivation to grow social bonds led to four out of the five top-selling Mother’s Day products being the ones voted for on Facebook.

Build marketing campaigns that enable people to help each other. Sephora fans on Facebook organized to send each other unused cosmetics samples. One person starts a box of 30 samples, sends it to someone else who takes 15 samples out and adds 15 of their samples back, before sending it on to a third person who does the same, and so on.

 

WHAT WE TALK ABOUT

Many of our conversations are about other people

One study on what people talk about found that about two thirds of conversations revolve around social issues. Another study found that social relationships and recounting personal experiences account for about 70 percent of conversations. Of the conversations about social relationships, about half are about people not present. The anthropologist Robin Dunbar described these conversations as “Who is doing what with whom, and whether it’s a good or bad thing, who is in and who is out, and why.” (5) Conversations about other people and their behavior help us understand what is socially acceptable in different situations by revealing how the people we’re talking to react to the behavior of the person not present.

Understanding how others have acted, as well as how the people we care about and trust react to those actions, shapes our behavior. It shapes what ideas we agree with, and how we may behave in the future. Supporting conversations about other people is critical for social products and for marketing campaigns based on social behavior.

We share feelings, not facts

Creative agencies the world over try to create content that people will spread. In order to do so, they need to understand what people share, and why. The vast majority of “viral” campaigns don’t spread at all, and this is often because the content is factual. Many research studies have shown that people don’t share facts, they share feelings. (9)

Jonah Berger and Katherine Milkman studied the most-emailed articles on the New York Times over more than a six-month period, totaling 7,500 items. They expected to find content that included factual information that might help others, such as diets or gadgets, but instead found that people shared the content that triggered the most arousing emotions. This included positive emotions such as awe, and negative emotions such as anger and anxiety. Emotions that were not arousing, for example sadness, did not trigger sharing of content. (10)

Content that is positive, informative, surprising, or interesting is shared more often than content that is not, and content that is prominently featured is shared more often than content that is not, but these factors are minor compared to how arousing the content is.

These findings have important implications for advertising. BMW ran a successful campaign called “The Hire,” which induced feelings of anxiety through elaborate car chases and generated millions of views. Content that is non-arousing, for example, content that makes people feel comfortable and relaxed, is unlikely to be shared. Public health information may spread more effectively if it induces feelings of anxiety rather than sadness. (11)

We talk about the things that surround us

Our everyday offline conversations tend to be about whatever comes to mind, independent of how interesting it is. And what usually comes to mind first is what is in our current environment (we’ll see later how this works for brands). If we’re talking to good friends, even our desire to appear interesting takes a backseat to environmental cues. Although we do craft our conversations in order to shape others’ perceptions of us,6 most day-to-day conversations with people we know well are about everyday things and are cued by our environment.

Conversely, our desire to appear a certain way to others is a bigger factor in what we talk about online than offline. Offline, many of our conversations are driven by a need to avoid awkward silences. While people most often talk about what is visible or cued by their environment offline, when online they don’t need to fill a conversation space so they can think more carefully about what might be interesting to others.

We talk about brands in passing

The research firm Keller Fay estimates that people talk about approximately 70 brands every week, an average of 10 a day. (12) We might imagine that people talk at length about the pros and cons of competing brands, but most of the time this is not so. Most references to brands in conversations happen in passing. People are talking about something loosely related to the brand, the brand comes up for a few sentences, and then disappears, as the conversation continues about the core topic. When people talk about brands, they are usually not motivated by the brand but by the instinct to converse with others and fill conversation spaces. We need to understand the incidental nature of brand conversations when planning marketing campaigns.

Research has shown that around Halloween, when there are more environmental cues about the color orange, products that are orange (Reese’s Pieces, orange soda) are more top of mind. (13) Other research found that products that are cued by the surrounding environment are talked about 22 percent of the time, versus 4 percent for products not cued by the environment. Products that are publicly visible are talked about 19 percent of the time, versus 2 percent for products that are not publicly visible. For example, in one research study, upcoming concerts were talked about much more often when there were CDs in the room. (14) We talk about eating much more often than technology or media, yet many assume that the latter are objectively more interesting.

This has profound implications for understanding how people talk about brands. Products that are visible and accessible will be talked about more. Products that are not naturally in people’s environment need to build associations with things that are in people’s environments. Yet, samples are not a substitute for the actual thing. Coupons and samples do not drive more conversations, but giving people the full product to try, so that it is consistently in the person’s environment, can lead to a 20 percent increase in conversations about that product. (14)

Interesting (arousing) products are talked about more initially, but once the novelty wears off, they are talked about less than things cued by people’s environments. Frequency of use also drives conversations, as products used frequently are easier to recall from memory and are therefore more top of mind. (15, 16, 17) People talk about big brands far more often than smaller brands. This is not surprising, as bigger brands are more accessible—more visible and easier to recall from memory.

Because we communicate much more frequently with the small number of people we are emotionally closest to, about half of conversations that mention brands are with a partner or family member. (12) Of these brand conversations, 71 percent are face to face, 17 percent are on the phone, and only 9 percent are online. (12) When it comes to spreading ideas, we need to target people’s closest ties.

Quick tips

Online posts that ask people to talk about others are likely to have high engagement rates. Many brands ask people to mention others in their responses, like this example from Jameson Irish Whiskey.

Polls are a great way to drive conversations about your business because the lightweight nature of interaction makes them more aligned with how brands bubble up and dissipate in natural conversations, like this example from Target.

Build campaigns around content that generates strong feelings, as it’s more likely to be shared. Marmite is a food brand in the uk that is either loved or hated by people.to generate sharing from the people who hate Marmite, they created a Facebook page called “the Marmite Hate party.”

if you’re trying to get people to talk about your brand, put it in their physical environment, as people will talk about things that surround them. Huggies had people upload their favorite photos of their babies to Facebook and then had the most popular photos printed on buses and in subway stations.

 

WHO WE TALK TO

Most of our communication is with the people closest to us

We like to think that we talk to a wide and diverse set of people, but the reality is that we talk to the same, small group of people again and again. Research shows that people have consistent communication with between 7 and 15 people, but that most conversations are with our five strongest ties. We communicate with the same 5 to 10 people 80 percent of the time. (2) Keller Fay found that 27 percent of our conversations are with our spouse/partner, 25 percent are with a family member, and 10 percent are with a best friend. That’s 62 percent of our conversations with the people closest to us. Only 5 percent of our conversations are with acquaintances, and only 2 percent are with strangers. The remaining 31 percent is with the rest of the people in our social network. (12)

Research shows that people use social networks primarily to strengthen the bonds with their strong ties, and secondarily to build relationships with weak ties. When we looked at how many different people members communicated with directly on Facebook every week, including private messages, chats, wall posts, and likes and comments on status updates, we saw that the average was just 4 people. When we looked at how many different people they communicated with every month, it was only 6 people. This is despite the fact that these people are checking Facebook almost every day. (18) Other research has shown that the more people see each other in person or talk on the phone, the more they communicate online. (19)

We can map how frequently we communicate with others onto our social network structure:

We communicate more with the people toward the center of our social network, the people we are emotionally closest to.

Who is listening to us changes what we talk about

Who we talk to online has a large impact on what we talk about. Many people think carefully before posting status updates. Sometimes they have an explicit audience in mind for the post and need to consider whether it will be interesting or offending to the rest of the people they are connected to.

People are very conscious of being seen to be communicating information others will find interesting, funny, or useful. As they usually see only positive feedback, for example “likes” or comments on Facebook posts, it’s hard for them to know what other people find valuable. For many people the only way is to look at posts that receive no feedback, assume people didn’t find it interesting, and factor the characteristics of that post into future decisions about whether to post something. Sometimes people post updates broadly, as receiving serendipitous replies outweighs any risk of communicating uninteresting information to others.

We communicate differently to explicit groups of friends compared with larger groups of people.

When we talk in public, we’re very careful about what we say. For example, online public ratings tend to be disproportionately positive when they’re linked to our real identity. This is especially true when the other party involved can reciprocate. When people post anonymously, their ratings tend to be almost 20 percent lower than when they use their real names. When ratings are not visible to the party being rated, people give negative reviews more frequently. (20)

Quick tips

We need to build marketing campaigns around the people we’re closest to. When BMW launched the new Mini cooper in the us, they didn’t target people in the market for a car or people who fit their customer profile.they instead targeted existing Mini owners, as they knew that these people were the best way to influence their friends. (21)

 

SUMMARY

People talk for a variety of reasons: Sharing information makes life easier, talking helps to grow social bonds with others, and choosing what we talk about allows us to manage how others perceive us.

We talk about other people, what’s around us, and things that generate strong feelings. Most conversations involve recounting personal experiences, or gossiping about who is doing what with whom.

We talk about brands in passing, often driven by what we see in our environment, and to fill a conversation space with someone else.

Most of our communication is with the people closest to us. We communicate with the same 5 to 10 people 80 percent of the time.

 

FURTHER READING

  1. See the 2009 research paper “Twitter power: Tweets as electronic word of mouth” by researchers at Pennsylvania State University and Twitter.
  2. See the 2011 research paper “Social laughter is correlated with an elevated pain threshold” by Robin Dunbar and others.
  3. See the 2010 research paper “Is it really about me? Message content in social awareness streams” by researchers at Rutgers University.
  4. For a great overview of research on happiness, see Derek Bok’s book The Politics of Happiness: What Government Can Learn from the New Research on Well-Being (Princeton University Press, 2010).
  5. See Robin Dunbar’s book How Many Friends Does One Person Need? (Faber and Faber, 2010).
  6. See the 2008 research paper “Word-of-mouth as self- enhancement” by Andrea Wojnicki and David Godes.
  7. For two examples, see the 1992 Social Psychology Newsletter article “The truth about gossip,” and the 1990 article “A social psychology of reputation,” both by Nick Emler.
  8. See Robin Dunbar’s book Grooming, Gossip, and the Evolution of Language (Harvard University Press, 1998).
  9. See the 2009 research paper “Emotion elicits the social sharing of emotion: Theory and empirical review” by Bernard Rimé.
  10. See the forthcoming 2012 research paper “What makes online content viral?” by Berger and Milkman.
  11. This example is from the 2011 research paper “Arousal increases social transmission of information” by Jonah Berger.
  12. The marketing consultancy Keller Fay have conducted many studies into how people converse. Explore their data at kellerfay.com/category/insights/.
  13. See the 2008 research paper “Dogs on the street, Pumas on your feet: How cues in the environment influence product evaluation and choice” by Jonah Berger and Gráinne Fitzsimons.
  14. See the 2011 research paper “What do people talk about? Drivers of immediate and ongoing word-of-mouth” by Jonah Berger and Eric Schwartz.
  15. See the 1977 social psychology research from Tory Higgins, William Rholes, and Carl Jones.
  16. See the 1982 research paper “Memory and attentional factors in consumer choice: Concepts and research methods” by John Lynch and Thomas Srull.
  17. See the 1990 research paper “Recall and consumer consideration sets: Influencing choice without altering brand evaluations” by Prakash Nedungadi.
  18. Statistics from internal analysis at Facebook.
  19. See the 2006 report “The strength of internet ties” by the Pew Research Center.
  20. See the 2010 research paper “I rate you. You rate me. Should we do so publicly?” by researchers at the University of Michigan, and the 2007 research paper “A familiar face(book): Profile elements as signals in an online social network” by researchers at Michigan State University.
  21. MINI’s innovative marketing strategy is described by Charlene Li and Josh Bernoff in their book Groundswell: Winning in a World Transformed by Social Technologies (Harvard Business Press, 2008).

 

Tags: Book
22:32

Soleone Luxury Bamboo Basics


Your favorite PJs, most breathable workout gear, and sexiest T-shirt have become one. Soleone’s soft, quick-drying, and sustainable clothing line is out to replace all your active wear, right down to your skivvies. And by scrapping the harsh chemicals and fabrics in favor of planet- and human-friendly bamboo, you get a product that your bum and your conscious can feel good about it. Follow Soleone on Facebook and Twitter.

Tags: Style
20:00

This week in PopTech: Innovating the news and minding the mind

There’s always something brewing in the PopTech community. From the world-changing people, projects and ideas in our network, a handful of this week’s highlights follows.

  • Interested in exploring if and how mental training involving mindfulness exercises changes attention and emotion in the brain? Take a free, online course on The Cognitive Neuroscience of Mindfulness with 2010 Science Fellow and brain scientist Amishi Jha
  • Kevin Starr (PopTech 2010), Mulago Foundation director, looks for the best solutions to the biggest problems in the poorest countries. In an article published in the Stanford Social Innovation Review, Starr addresses the hype regarding impact investing.

If you’d like to receive a stream of these updates (and more) throughout the week in real time, follow us on TwitterTumblrFacebook, sign up for our newsletter, and subscribe to the PopTech blog.

Image: Articulate Matter

19:00

Publishing News: Ereader ownership doubles, again

Here are a few of the stories that caught my attention this week in the publishing space.

Two surveys indicate a bright future for digital publishing

Back in June, a survey conducted by the Pew Internet & American Life Project showed ereader ownership in the U.S. had doubled in six months. As impressive as those statistics were, the latest survey released by the company this week showed that both tablet and ereader ownership in the U.S. nearly doubled again, but in a much shorter time frame between mid-December and early January (the holiday season, of course).

Ereader ownership chart

The survey also indicated that "[t]he number of Americans owning at least one of these digital reading devices jumped from 18% in December to 29% in January." And ownership wasn't gender biased in terms of tablets: The survey showed that the same percentage — 19% — of both males and females own a tablet. Ownership of ereaders, however, skewed female: 21% of women in the U.S. own ereaders but just 16% of the men do.

Pew attributed the dramatic growth not only to holiday shopping, but to the timely release of devices priced in the double digits by Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

Another survey released this week by RBC Capital indicated that Amazon may be making more bank per Kindle Fire device than initially thought — meaning it may not be losing money on each sale in the long term. Eric Savitz at Forbes quoted analyst Ross Sandler:

"Our assumption is that AMZN could sell 3-4 million Kindle Fire units in Q4, and that those units are accretive to company-average operating margin within the first six months of ownership. Our analysis assigns a cumulative lifetime operating income per unit of $136, with a cumulative operating margin of over 20%."

codeMantra collectionPoint 3.0 — Compose it; convert it; package it; distribute it; track it; re-price it; control your digital book workflow and metadata from one platform with collectionPoint 3.0, now available

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt strikes a deal with Amazon

AmazonLogo.jpgHoughton Mifflin Harcourt and Amazon Publishing East Coast announced a deal this week in which HMH will publish the print editions of Amazon's East Coast titles and, as Laura Hazard Owen pointed out, "will distribute them everywhere in North America outside of Amazon.com."

Owen astutely observed that this agreement may pave the way for Amazon to get its books in the hands of Barnes & Noble brick-and-mortar shoppers, a feat Amazon has yet to accomplish.

Also this week, Bloomberg Businessweek ran a feature piece on Larry Kirshbaum, the man behind Amazon Publishing East Coast's success thus far — or "Amazon's hit man," as Businessweek dubbed him. The feature also dipped into the history of Amazon Publishing and its relationship to traditional publishing and the Big Six. It's well worth the read.

A call to arms for libraries

Much of the current discourse around libraries centers around ebook availability. But the importance of the future existence of libraries goes way beyond whether or not the digital version of James Patterson's latest bestseller can be had with a library card. A Slideshare post by Ned Potter this week elevated the discussion to a higher plane. Some highlights from the presentation include:

  • "The top 10 jobs of 2010 didn't exist in 2004 — who can provide relevant up-to-date information in areas in which none of us are educated? Libraries can."
  • "There are three billion Google searches per day — libraries can provide access to the Internet and help people use it safely."
  • "Librarians are information professionals — they can help sort, assess, collate and present information in our age of information overload."

Here's the presentation in full:

To stay current with the library discussion, other library experts to follow include Peter Brantley, Andrew Albanese, Justin Hoenke, and Sarah Houghton (to name just a few).

Related:

18:30

Top stories: January 23-27, 2012

Here's a look at the top stories published across O'Reilly sites this week.

On pirates and piracy
Mike Loukides: "I'm not willing to have the next Bach, Beethoven, or Shakespeare post their work online, only to have it taken down because they haven't paid off a bunch of executives who think they own creativity."

Microsoft's plan for Hadoop and big data
Strata conference chair Edd Dumbill takes a look at Microsoft's plans for big data. By embracing Hadoop, the company aims to keep Windows and Azure as a standards-friendly option for data developers.

Coming soon to a location near you: The Amazon Store?
Jason Calacanis says an Amazon retail presence isn't out of the question and that AmazonBasics is a preview of what's to come.

Survey results: How businesses are adopting and dealing with data
Feedback from a recent Strata Online Conference suggests there's a large demand for clear information on what big data is and how it will change business.

Why the fuss about iBooks Author?
Apple doesn't have an objective to move the publishing industry forward. With iBooks Author, the company sees an opportunity to reinvent this industry within its own closed ecosystem.


Strata 2012, Feb. 28-March 1 in Santa Clara, Calif., will offer three full days of hands-on data training and information-rich sessions. Strata brings together the people, tools, and technologies you need to make data work. Save 20% on Strata registration with the code RADAR20.

18:23

Climate Resilience Lab: PopTech goes to Nairobi

The effects of climate change are well documented. Climactic events such as floods, hurricanes, tsunamis, typhoons, and prolonged droughts are among the most visible results of recent dramatic changes in the earth’s atmospheric conditions. Less visible, perhaps, is the effect these events have on the world’s most vulnerable populations – girls and women in resource-poor communities.

It is a cruel fact that those with the least resources to combat the effects of adverse climate events are also the most vulnerable to those effects. A 2011 Plan UK study convincingly articulates the degree to which girls and women bear the brunt of climate disasters:

  • Women and girls are recorded as 90% of those killed by the 1991 cyclone in Bangladesh and up to 80% of the loss of lives in the 2004 Asian Tsunami. In 2007, an estimated 1.5 million people were left homeless due to rains and flooding in 18 African countries with women and children representing more than three quarters of those displaced by natural disasters.
  • A study by the London School of Economics (LSE) analyzed disasters in 141 countries and concluded that gender differences in loss of lives due to natural disasters are directly linked to women’s economic and social rights. The study also found that in societies where women and men enjoy equal rights, losses in lives due to natural disasters were more gender balanced.  
  • The LSE study found that boys are likely to receive preferential treatment in rescue efforts, and in the aftermath of disasters both women and girls suffer more from the shortages of food, and from the lack of privacy and safety of toilet and bathing facilities, and sleeping arrangements. In addition, in many countries, girls are discouraged from learning survival skills such as swimming or climbing.

When you add to this mix proscribed gender roles and cultural norms which place undue hardships on adolescent girls such as demanding household and family tasks and responsibilities, their lack of access to information and resources, lack of knowledge of their rights and of life-saving skills, and lack of power in decision-making, the problem makes itself manifestly clear.

Building resilience to climate change among at-risk communities is no easy task, but one thing is certain: girls and women must be active agents in the creation of any meaningful solutions. Strengthening the resilience of communities requires both a recognition of their place of the front lines of this battle and also must draw upon their unique skills, experiences, and knowledge.

This February 7-11, 2012, we will be hosting our Climate Resilience Lab in Nairobi, Kenya in collaboration with our partners from the Nike Foundation and the Rockefeller Foundation in an attempt to address these very issues. The Lab will bring together a carefully chosen network of climate researchers, gender experts, social innovators, technologists, designers, and community champions, to explore new possibilities in this domain. Our goal is to move “beyond the white paper” to identify and collaborate on high-potential new approaches that can be tested, scaled, and implemented.

We will explore new ideas, interrogate existing models to see what’s working and what isn’t, and identify and build on the most effective methods as we move forward. We encourage you to visit the Lab’s webpage, review the research, and meet our participants. We will be sending updates from the Lab itself as well as producing video, photographic, and written content that will tell the story of what the PopTech community is doing to address this timely and critically important issue.

16:00

Visualization of the Week: Politicians' word counts

'Tis the season for political infographics, what with the 2012 presidential election well underway as well as this week's State of the Union address. All of that speech-making provided plenty of opportunity for data visualization.

Following the State of the Union address, The New York Times posted the following visualization comparing "selected words used by President Obama in his State of the Union addresses and by Republican presidential candidates in their debates, television interviews and major speeches since May."

Choice words visualization
See the full visualization.

Although this example is just a "simple" bar graph, these sorts of visualizations are becoming increasingly popular in making political arguments — whether by politicians or by newspapers.

You can view the full visualization here.

Found a great visualization? Tell us about it

This post is part of an ongoing series exploring visualizations. We're always looking for leads, so please drop a line if there's a visualization you think we should know about.

Strata 2012 — The 2012 Strata Conference, being held Feb. 28-March 1 in Santa Clara, Calif., will offer three full days of hands-on data training and information-rich sessions. Strata brings together the people, tools, and technologies you need to make data work.

Save 20% on registration with the code RADAR20

More Visualizations:

15:54
15:00

The Girl with 7 Horses

“The Girl with 7 horses” est le dernier projet de la photographe Ulrika Kestere. En utilisant des tissus divers pour recomposer des chevaux dans la nature, cette artiste retrace le voyage d’une femme à la recherche de ces animaux imaginaires. Une série à découvrir dans la suite.



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