The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

60
mark a greenfield The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

description

The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?. mark a greenfield. markgr.com/heweb10 twitter.com/markgr. before we begin …. History Lesson. First Things Last The Industrial Interruption Networked Markets. History Lesson. First Things Last. Markets Are Conversations. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Page 1: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

mark a greenfield

The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed:will anyone take delivery?

Page 2: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

markgr.com/heweb10

twitter.com/markgr

Page 3: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

before we begin …

Page 4: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 5: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 6: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 7: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 8: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 9: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 10: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

History Lesson

• First Things Last• The Industrial Interruption• Networked Markets

Page 11: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

History Lesson

• First Things Last

Page 12: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Markets Are Conversations

Page 13: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Markets Are Relationships

Page 14: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

why does a college have a web site?

Page 15: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Build and Sustain Relationships

Page 16: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Thesis #26

Companies need to come down from their Ivory Towers and talk to the people with whom they

hope to create relationships

Page 17: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

History Lesson

• First Things Last• The Industrial Interruption

Page 18: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Mass Marketing

Page 19: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Corporate speech became mass produced messages jammed into a one-way spam cannon

p 234

Page 20: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Messages are worse than noise. It's an interruption.

It's the Anti-Conversation.

p 151

Page 21: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Thesis #28

Most marketing programs are based on the fear that the market might see what’s really going on

inside the company

Page 22: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

History Lesson

• First Things Last• The Industrial Interruption• Networked Markets

Page 23: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

the long silencethe industrial interruption of the human conversation

is coming to an end

p 154

Page 24: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 25: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

engagement in the open, free-wheeling marketplace isn’t optional.

it’s a prerequisite. to having a future.

silence is fatal.

p 160

Page 26: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Public Relations has a huge PR problem: people use it as a synonym for BS

p 160

Page 27: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 28: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Company strategies that try to control the stream of information

now make the company look like a scaredy-cat.

p 6

Page 29: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 30: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

All Web pages must be formally approved by the Department of Business Prevention

p 91

Page 31: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

The reality is that when malicious propaganda happens ( and it will happen)

the truth will out

p 153

Page 32: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

In the age of the web where hype blows up in your face

and spin gets taken as an insult, the real work of PR is more important than ever

p 162

Page 33: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

marketing is not a department

Page 34: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

social media is the dial tone of the 21st century

Page 35: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 36: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 37: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 38: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 39: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Thesis #15

The current homogenized “voice” of business the sound of mission statements and brochures

will seem as contrived and artificial as the language of the 18th-century French court

Page 40: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Techno-Latin

A vocabulary of vague but precise-sounding words that work like

blank tiles in Scrabble: you can use them anywhere,

but they have no value

p 176

Page 41: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Web Services Mission Statement

Page 42: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Web Services Mission Statement

• Understand the Business

• Understand the User

• Understand the Medium

Page 43: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

@karj

Page 44: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Thesis #7

Hyperlinks subvert hierarchy

Page 45: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

The Internet has made your entry level employee as powerful as your senior vice president of marketing

p xi

Page 46: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 47: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

that Mary is the Under VP of Expected Deflations for the Western semi-region tells you nothing

that Mary is wicked smart, totally frank, and a trip to work with tells you everything

p xi

Page 48: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Institutions Are Legal Fictions

Page 49: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 50: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

mark a greenfield

Finding Your Voice:using Twitter to improve recruitment and retention

Page 51: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

most higher ed institutions take the wrong approach to twitter

Page 52: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 53: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

“logo” tweets must die

Page 54: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

In my view, it is better on any given day to talk with

a human than, say, a Coke bottle

Page 55: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

behind every twitter account is a person

hiding behind a brand reduces authenticity and transparency

Page 56: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 57: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 58: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 59: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?
Page 60: The Cluetrain Comes to Higher Ed: will anyone take delivery?

Thank You

mark a greenfield

markgr.comtwitter.com/markgr

delicious.com/markgr