spacer
business
spacer
speaking
spacer
books
spacer
articles
spacer
photos
spacer
videos
spacer
family tree
spacer
business
spacer
speaking
spacer
books
spacer
articles
spacer
photos
spacer
videos
spacer
family tree
spacer
business
spacer
speaking
spacer
books
spacer
articles
spacer
photos
spacer
videos
spacer
family tree
spacer
business
spacer
speaking
spacer
books
spacer
articles
spacer
photos
spacer
videos
spacer
family tree
spacer
business
spacer
speaking
spacer
books
spacer
articles
spacer
photos
spacer
videos
spacer
family tree
spacer
business
spacer
speaking
spacer
books
spacer
articles
spacer
photos
spacer
videos
spacer
family tree

lifestream

  • @ieaffiliate What's childish is the notion that you want to dominate elections and not let the other side's voice be heard. #Noon32 twitter.com/jdlasica
    2 hours ago

flickr stream

videostream

spacer spacer
                                       
July 16

Are you a self-actualized, empowered customer?

spacer
Doc still looks the same as when I photographed him at the Innovation Summit at Stanford seven years ago this week.

 

Review of ‘The Intention Economy’ by Doc Searls

Review by J.D. Lasica

spacer In “The Intention Economy” (Harvard Business Review Press), Doc Searls picks up where he left off as co-author of “The Cluetrain Manifesto,” the seminal 2000 book that coined the phrase “conversations are markets” and ushered in a new understanding of how the Internet has changed the power relationship between institutions and individuals.

In his new book, Searls takes things a step further, painting a picture of what happens “when customers take charge” of this often dysfunctional relationship. Searls describes the tiny buds and sprouts of an emerging Intention Economy driven by customer demand and customer intent, an economy he believes has the potential to supplement and perhaps displace the present-day Attention Economy, where companies mine for personal data about us — sometimes with comic ineptitude — so that they can match us with products we don’t want and don’t need.

In the Attention Economy, we are consumers, calves, couch potatoes and eyeballs. Not so in the Intention Economy, where empowered customers set the agenda for releasing their own data and set the terms for engagement with “vendors” (that is, businesses).

This new movement even has a suitably geeky name, VRM, for vendor relationship management, to refer to the panoply of startups and projects that are trying to stretch capitalism in new directions

Doc, a longtime friend who wrote a positive blurb for my book “Darknet” and an alumnus fellow at Harvard’s Berkman Center, fills in the blanks for those of us who didn’t know such a movement existed. It even has a suitably geeky name, VRM, for vendor relationship management, to refer to the panoply of startups and projects that are trying to stretch capitalism in new directions rather than undermine it. (Doc runs ProjectVRM at Berkmann.) In this new assertion of customer power, where we shed our skins as passive consumers, we will tell businesses how they may serve us, notify the market about our intention and decide how much information about ourselves and our transactions to disclose. While specific examples are somewhat short in supply today, one gets the feeling that Doc is more interested in rallying entrepreneurs to this new approach with the entreaty, Come and build!

Along the way, Doc lays out the big picture in a way that few other writers and big thinkers can do, knowing when to zoom in and when to pull back to the 50,000-foot view. He astutely points out the cold calculations of the marketplace’s big players, like AT&T and Verizon — which are trying to define the Internet in terms of their business interests — as well as the world’s most valuable company:

“So, like Apple, Google wants to fix slow, damaged, or broken markets. But unlike Apple, Google wants to fix those markets by making them freer and more open for everybody — and therefore much larger as well. That is, to grow markets horizontally.”

Short version: If Apple can’t own something, it has no interest in nurturing it.

Continue reading »

  • Tags:  
  • Berkman Center
  • ,
  • book review
  • ,
  • customer relationship management
  • ,
  • Doc Searls
  • ,
  • empowered consumers
  • ,
  • empowered customers
  • ,
  • Intention Economy
  • ,
  • Project VRM
  • ,
  • ProjectVRM
  • ,
  • vendor relationship management
  • ,
  • VRM
spacer

{ Start the conversation }


November 28

Can you name this songbird?

spacer
Is this a Northern Mockingbird?

By J.D. Lasica

This summer and fall, the most melodious bird I’ve ever heard kept a regular vigil outside my home here in the San Francisco East Bay.

I’m really curious if anyone can identify it. Take a listen:

Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.

Some observations:

• It spend a lot of time in a tree next door, and I snapped the photos above (but needed a more powerful lens) while it flitted up in the air about six feet and then descended on the top branch again.

• It was as nocturnal as I am, with much of its chirping and warbling taking place between midnight and 2 am. The sounds were fantastically primal, with at least a dozen variations coming from the same bird.

Leif Utne, who’s become something of a naturalist up in the Pacific Northwest, offered to take a crack at this a while back, and one Twitter friend sent along these links:

• Northern Mockingbird, from Field Guide to Birds of North America, which notes that its terrain includes Northern California.

• Know your garden bird song (Guardian) — the song thrush could be another candidate.

So, mockingbird, or not?


spacer This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported.

  • Tags:  
  • bird songs
  • ,
  • bird sounds
  • ,
  • mockingbird
  • ,
  • Northern Mockingbird
  • ,
  • song thrush
  • ,
  • songbirds
spacer

{ Start the conversation }


November 27

Highlights of Pleasanton and the Tri-Valley

Highlights of California’s Tri-Valley region from JD Lasica on Vimeo.

spacer Here’s a short chat I had with Amy Blaschka, President and CEO of the Tri-Valley Convention & Visitors Bureau, about the Tri-Valley region (where I live), located in the San Francisco East Bay. The Tri-Valley consists of Pleasanton, Livermore, Danville, San Ramon and Dublin, and it’s best known for the Livermore wine region, golf, an amazing array of parks and sports fields, and the historic downtowns of some of the cities, especially Pleasant

gipoco.com is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its contents. This is a safe-cache copy of the original web site.