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Expect to get more interactive in 2007

Expect to get more interactive in 2007

By:  Dan McLean  On: 01 Feb 2007 For: Network World Canada Creator

It was the year of Web 2.0 technology in 2006 and an era of social networking, which spawned interactive communities of cyber-congregators seeking to share common interests and passions.

“We refer to it as viral advertising — it spreads like a virus and doesn’t cost you much,” he says. “Being on the Web through blogging is an example of viral marketing and advertising.”

Cyber-communities of participative behavior are great places for businesses to learn from and about those who might be interested in retail products and services.

“If you are a little business, one of the things you might do is test drive new ideas through an online community. It’s a new area of market research,” Jacobson says.

“There are lots of inexpensive and active blogs where you can reach out to people and test ideas and see what reaction you get. It’s an extension of classic market research that was typically not available to smaller companies. The little guys didn’t have that ability before. Now that has changed...thanks to the Internet.”

Jacobson predicts that, in 2007, new technologies will be available to business that will provide the means to deliver unique services to customers who clearly want real-time and interactive online experiences.

Among the most intriguing are emerging wireless communication services offered through cellular telephones that are “location aware.” Through certain types of wireless telephones there will the means to pinpoint a person’s location from a cellular signal and deliver to them a localized service. It’s already being used. Mr. Jacobson describes a dating service offered by South Korea Telecom. If there is someone who fits your defined dating profile located within 100 metres of you, then you might receive an e-mail alert message telling you that person is nearby and can arrange an immediate meeting. A similar application in retail might allow a business to electronically alert people passing near a storefront location to specials or discounts featured that day.

“You could be seeing some of these applications and services come to market in 2007,” Jacobson says.

Projectors in mobile devices are coming, too. You’ll be able to use a hand-held device like a cell phone or PDA as a projector to display Internet Web pages, movies or live television on any nearby surface. A business profession might want to quickly download a presentation from a remote PC and show it to a customer in colour on a wall, Jacobson says.

“The world is moving away from capturing people’s attention, to capturing their intention,” he says. “I’ll try and capture it using multimedia or coming to your office and showing you a video on a wall. It’s highly targeted and personalized content and a lot of it is user originated content.

“These technologies will be focused on understanding and serving ubiquitous participants, whether they are consumers or employees,” Jacobson adds.

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Dan McLean Dan McLean is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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