Posted by Jim Haughwout on September 26, 2010 · Comments Off
Is Google Priority Inbox an independent product development effort—or is it part of Google’s efforts to compete with Facebook and Twitter in the social media space?
Posted by Jim Haughwout on January 16, 2010 · 2 Comments
In the technology industry, “PII” stands for “Personally Identifiable Information.” However, anyone who provides technology to customers should also think of it as standing for “Privacy Is Important.” Two important events this week—one regarding Google and one regarding Facebook—underscored the importance of this and served as reminders of how important protection of privacy is to mainstream adoption of technology…
Posted by Jim Haughwout on December 24, 2009 · 2 Comments
Back in the “Days of Dial-up,” thanks to great affiliate marketing, Christmas Day used to be the number one registration day for Internet (Web 1.0) leaders like AOL. What will Christmas hold this year for Social Media (and Web 2.0) leaders like Facebook and Twitter? Will the results be good–or will they indicate it is time for new affiliate marketing programs?…
Posted by Jim Haughwout on November 7, 2009 · 2 Comments
The majority of business (i.e., mission-focused) social media communities are simply not safe. As a result, it is easy for third parties to hijack these communities for malicious use. I recommend incorporation of four tools to make your business community a safe environment for your enterprise, its mission and its stakeholders. If you do not have these, it is only a matter of time before something happens…
Posted by Jim Haughwout on September 24, 2009 · 1 Comment
One of the biggest mistakes I see when business create social communities is thinking they have to create yet-another-copy of Facebook. There or many social network business solutions at our disposal. The key is picking the right one to solve the problem on hand and achieve the metrics identified for success…
Posted by Jim Haughwout on July 4, 2009 · 2 Comments
Use of modularity and encapsulation if one of the most powerful approaches to scaling architecture (your ability to built it, your cost to operate it–AND the value you can obtain from it). Those enterprises who incorporate this into the DNA of their technology create “killer networks” that can used to generate enormous value…