GM does corporate blogging, now corporate flickr. Why not go even further?

gm electric race carScoble tipped me off to this great story this morning about GM using flickr. GM has a blog I find out but not only have they embraced this simple way to reach out to their more enthusiastic fans, but they also said why not release all of our internal PR images and promotional event images on to a public flickr stream as well? In his blog post Diego Rodriguez of metacool has this to say about GM (great quote):

Corporate blogging is about trusting the judgment and intuition of individual contributors instead of relying upon a rule-based central authority. It’s about releasing control and rules, but embracing judgment and character. In general I think that’s a better way to market, because it comes across as more real and authentic because it is [..a..] trusting stance is a wonderful way to engage the outside world in creating contagious action around your offerings — which is the fundamental (if often forgotten) goal of marketers in the first place.

Very well put. Now can you imagine applying that logic to not just to Marketing (a no brainer) but also to internal corporate environment as well? I’m working on a technology project these days that we hope could enable businesses to do just that. [stay tuned…]

I’ll leave you with this: When was the last time that you felt that your parent company really, and authentically, thought about releasing control in order to “embrace your judgment and character”. Imagine how that would transform your loyalty, work ethic and commitment to them if they did? hmmm [and can you tell I used to work for a big bank?]

link: GM uses Flickr, do you?

picture: A snap from GM’s flickr photo stream showing what looks to be a concept GM hybrid or electric vehicle being tested at the Bonneville salt flats.

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Vista to have some cool audio processing features

I’ve been using my desktop for a long time as my primary media source for some time having thrown out my cd changer and dvd drive a long time ago [though i’ve since invested in a record player which i love]. So I was interested to read about these new audio features of Vista (MS’s immenent, if long delayed next version of windows). Windows can use a microphone to calibrate your speakers for frequency response and room positioning etc.. And it can do this, correcting/tweaking on-the-fly all audio singals output from a computer, in software, by just stealing a few cycles of CPU along the way. Neat. yet another reason to start thinking about throwing out your home stereo components. Now if MS could just do something about the general mediocre quality of integrated soundchip hardware found in most computers…

in Vista, we have a perceptually tuned version of room correction. Because we don’t expect everyone to own an instrumentation microphone, we have designed it so that you can use [most any] cheap microphone costing a few dollars to do an excellent job. IF you have a more expensive microphone, you can calibrate your room very accurately. All of this is implemented in in-box Vista software, using less than 5% on 3GHz CPU. Our room correction will equalize frequency response, time delay, and gain between all of your main channels, as well as build a first-reflection-cancellation filter if one or more of your speakers are near a reflective surface. If you do have a high-quality microphone, the room correction system will also flatten the overall frequency response and adjust the subwoofer delay accordingly.

more here: link

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Television advertising is dead they say

at least from the perspective of traditional branded package good companies chasing evermore fractional audiences with too many at dollars. But on the other hand for Web-based brands, I could see a TV advertising as just the thing for developing brand awareness and especially brand credibility. If you can afford to drop the money on a television that you must be a legitimate company the implicit logic goes. Now you could go too far with this (Pets.com and every other web1.0 superbowl add) but really I do think that TV advertising should be great for Web properties. And not just poker. Although clearly it’s a killer advertising medium for poker. Explaining why 4 out of 10 television channels show even the most hastily produced poker shows at Every Hour of The Day.

What other Web brands could benefit from TV spots? would it work as well for business apps? what are your thoughts?

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