Posts Tagged as ‘social media’

Friday, 18 December, 2009

Ban social media, lose the marketing war, lose staff

Yesterday I came across a great post: Why multinationals are losing the marketing war, by Chris Rand who asserts:
the biggest barrier to engaging with customers and prospects online remains the corporate IT environment.
He says too many companies block access to tools like Facebook and Twitter just as they used to restrict access to the [...]

Friday, 18 December, 2009

Let’s be positive on social media: issue guidelines not bans

According to a November Information Age story (linked in a recent e-newsletter), over half of UK organisations are restricting employee access to social media websites such as Facebook and YouTube due to the threat of litigation. Research among lawyers in the 2009 Litigation Trends survey conducted by US law firm Fulbright & Jaworski asked how [...]

Tuesday, 15 December, 2009

Social Media and Construction Marketing

I am doing the opening talk at a social media and construction marketing pre-conference training day in London on 3 February 2010, organised by Emap Networks, the events arm of the publisher of Construction News, Architects’ Journal and other publications, and run in collaboration with CIMCIG.
The event will re-unite me with former Emap marketing director [...]

Monday, 30 November, 2009

A public PS: Paul

Looking back at my open letter to Paul Morrell, I realised that it would probably need to be printed out and posted to him, or at the very least emailed, so perhaps we need a post-script….
A public PS: Paul
I would be delighted to be proved wrong, but I suspect you probably don’t read many blogs, [...]

Wednesday, 25 November, 2009

How far are AEC firms lagging behind? A long way.

ReadWriteWeb is a must-read blog for many people interested in social media, and its coverage of corporate adoption of Web 2.o is excellent for those looking at its use in business (so-called Enterprise 2.0). Today, I read a post, Enterprise 2.0: Study Shows Adoption is Real, by Alex Williams that reported survey data from the [...]

Monday, 16 November, 2009

Next from UBM: the Building Network

Having seen UBM sister publication Property Week establish an online community in September, Building magazine has followed suit, with The Building Network, also hosted on the Ning platform.
I discovered this after noticing some familiar-sounding links on Twitter. What used to be a flow of news headlines and job vacancies from @BuildingSite now appears to include [...]

Thursday, 12 November, 2009

Goodbye, CJ

Earlier today, the Twitter grapevine tweeted the news that UK construction industry weekly magazine Contract Journal (CJ) and its website, contractjournal.com, is to be shut down from the end of this month. The announcement by parent company Reed Business Information was made in an email (a tweet from Kirstie Colledge of Simply Marcomms prompted me [...]

Wednesday, 11 November, 2009

More cynical sniping at Twitter costs

Today’s Daily Telegraph has an article, Twitter costs Lord Mandelson’s department £3,175 a year, reporting the UK Department for Business’s calculation of the cost of its employees spent running three Twitter accounts (@bisgovuk, @digitalbritain, @BIS_Science), which have amassed a respectable total of 9,894 followers.
The tone of some of the article is reminiscent of the slightly [...]

Monday, 9 November, 2009

Web 2.0 construction computing awards, anyone?

Tomorrow (10 November) is the last day to register online votes for the Construction Computing Awards 2009, promoted by BTC, the UK-based publisher of Construction Computing, CADuser and other magazines.
Back in August, when nominations opened I blogged on ExtranetEvolution.com about there being no category for Web 2.0 type applications. Since then, I have been thinking [...]

Friday, 6 November, 2009

Not all IT media people are Tweeting (yet)

Having worked in the IT sector of the architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) sector, it is only natural that I should look at how AEC-oriented IT companies and the publications that cover them use social media tools such as Twitter. For example, back in January I blogged about the how the main UK AEC publications [...]