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Gov 2.0

7 Digital Trends to Watch in 2012

by Daria Steigman on January 17, 2012

Daria Steigman & Dan Horowitz on IABC/Washington's Digital Trends 2012 Panel

From l-r: Steve Radick, Dan Horowitz, Daria Steigman, and Rick Dunham

Integration, mobile, and consolidation were all topics under discussion at the January 12 IABC/Washington panel on trends in digital communications.

Here are my top seven takeaways:

1. Silos will start to fall. According to Steve Radick of Booz Allen Hamilton’s Digital Strategy and Social Media Practice, government agencies will better integrate their social media initiatives. He noted, in particular, that people are starting to understand the disconnects that happen when customer service is not integrated.

2. Government social media will be in “wait and see” mode. Radick said not to expect a lot of big Government 2.0 initiatives. He suggested that most agencies will be in waiting mode during this election year.

3. Companies will start to clean up their act. Dan Horowitz of Fleishman-Hillard’s Digital Group and Social Media Practice pointed to a new Altimeter report that found that large companies have an average of 178 corporate-owned social media accounts. In 2012, he said, they will consolidate and coordinate better–which involves, of course, aggregating efforts via smart tools (e.g., Buddy Press).

4. Social media reaches maturation. Horowitz pointed to Forrester’s just-released research on social media adoption that found that 86 percent of adults who use the Internet use social media.

5. The press release is dead. Okay, Rick Dunham, Washington Bureau Chief of the Houston Chronicle and chief author of the Texas on the Potomac blog, didn’t really say this. But he did say that he’s relying more and more on Twitter search and other social media to discover trending stories and breaking news–and to get ideas for news stories–and not so much on press releases.

Plus two trends from my remarks:

6. Mobile has arrived. eMarketer estimates that there will be 113.9 million mobile Internet users in 2012–an increase of 17.1 percent from 2011. This includes 72.8 million mobile shoppers and 37.5 million mobile buyers. This means that every business–large and small–needs to have a mobile strategy.

7. “Find-ability” will be more important than ever. With Google rolling out “Search Plus Your World,” having a solid content marketing strategy (and quality content) will be more important than ever. Businesses that are still relying on static, corporate-brochure-type Web sites will be left in the dust.

Bonus Trend: Platforms. I just read Phil Simon’s The Age of the Platform (review coming soon), and I haven’t really had a chance to sit down and think through how small businesses will be able to take advantage of what he calls “extremely valuable and powerful ecosystems” (think Amazon or Apple) that allow you to scale, morph, and bring in partners, users, vendors, and so forth. While the business concept may not be new, technology has made doing this very different. I think Simon’s on to something. This is one emerging trend to watch.

Agree with these trends? Disagree? Think something’s being over-hyped? Please weigh in below.

Photo courtesy of Capitol Communicator.

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Want to Change the World? Tweet the White House.

by Daria Steigman on April 13, 2010

Last month, I wrote about Expert Labs’ initiative to crowdsource ideas and information to help policymakers reach better decisions. Now the White House is seeking our help in crafting big ideas. The process is simple:

  • Think big.
  • Tell the White House (via Twitter, e-mail, or Facebook)
  • Tell you friends (and spread the word)

This is only one small step, but it’s really a big leap forward in thinking about how citizens can interact with our government.

Check out Anil Dash’s new post, Our Biggest Challenge Yet, for details.

Have you grabbed a free copy of Your Social Media Checklist? Download it today to get 9 tips for being findable and attracting the right customers for your business.

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Anil Dash Talks Crowdsourcing, Gov 2.0 Style

by Daria Steigman on March 15, 2010

If you’ve ever sent a letter to your congressman or submitted comments in response to a proposed federal agency rule, then you know that talking to the government can be akin to screaming into the void. You have to jump hoops to submit your information, no one seems to be listening, and the response is almost always a form letter.

Anil Dash is trying to change that. He and Expert Labs are working on a project to revamp the way Americans communicate with our government. It’s a bold experiment in crowdsourcing ideas and information to help policymakers reach better decisions. At its heart, the project is testing ways to reaching out to people where they already are. So maybe it’s about letting people “like” ideas on Facebook, “favorite” tweets, or answer a question seeded on LinkedIn. Dash, who spoke at the ”.gov is the new .com” Sweets and Tweets event last week, said the incentive could be as simple as recognition (e.g., identifying the good and best answers on LinkedIn).

For more about what Dash had to say, OhMyGov has a great piece on DC’s emerging start-up culture and Debbie Weil has a good wrap-up (with links to photos and the livestreamed video).

Photo by Simon Yates (Flickr).

Have you grabbed a free copy of Your Social Media Checklist? Download it today to get 9 tips for being findable and attracting the right customers for your business.

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