Actually, I noticed something interesting while reading. I’ve been floating through my blogroll and stumbled upon quite the similarity in peoples vocabulary. It seems that there are some brands which have become synonymous with their niche. For example, "Photoshop".

Adobe Photoshop has become synonymous with picture editing and graphic optimization. People no longer ask you to edit their pictures, they ask you to "photoshop it". This is truly the best way to solidify a lasting brand. When General Mills launched their cereal Cheerios.

This solidified the company as a lasting brand associated with food production. Seemingly the name Cheerios is synonymous with cereal. Every knows cheerios. During the 80′s when Coca-Cola began a ferocious marketing campaign to bring "Coke" onto the mainstream, everyone would associate any type of soda as Coke. The brand is synonymous with the niche.

I believe that any chance a company has to hear its brand name in place of its niche, they should jump for it. It is clearly one of the best ways to keep a brand alive. The name must be solidified. The name, a label put on advertisements EVERYWHERE.

I wonder, how can one improve the chances that their brand is synonymous with their niche? Let look at how Adobe Photoshop did it. By introducing their product within the 90′s, a noticeable rise in computer and internet usage was occurring at the close of the Cold War. Their timing was perfect in capturing the wave of translating tasks into digital tasks within digital environments.

Google did it as well. Their name is now synonymous with finding answers and search engines.

Kid A: "Who invented the internet?"

Kid B: "I don’t know. Google it."

Even people have done it. The name Trump is easily synonymous with money and success. Martha Stewart holds the niche of homemaking and interior decoration. To be the poster child of a niche or concept is the ultimate in preservation.

Was just reading through Jeremiah Owyang’s post on Web Design Workflow and Process Comparison. A very interesting read that as an amateur web designer myself would appreciate.

When web design takes on different types of projects, the development process likes to change. Mainly because if you are doing a consulting job you must get stages approved by the client. Otherwise, projects personal or lower-end can be created full through depending on the designer’s own preference.

I prefer this approach:

1. Analyze the situation
2. Develop a timeline
3. Design
4. Re-Analyze
5. Produce

Of course this is also subject to designer preference. During the analyze stage, developing an overall strategy could well save plenty of time and headache in the future. I know from experience. I took on a project and did not take the time to analyze and form a type of strategy. I immediately jumped into designing and producing it. Bad idea. I’m am still trying to tweak it and get the bugs out that I did not plan for. Definitely worth a look-see.

Micah Sifry of the techPresident blog recounts an interesting panel on how internet media is changing political journalism. I want to specifically focus on these comments…

Jarvis:

So Hillary Clinton has called her campaign a conversation. Can a
campaign be one? Or are they necessarily propagandistic, getting a
message out? Even on the Dean blog that was what it was about.

Brady:

I think it’s more like a conversation that you have at a job
interview, not the kind that you have over a beer. I’m skeptical of
that. I’d love people sitting there answering straight questions
completely honestly. We go through this with each cycle, that we think
we are going to find out who these people really are, and then by
election day we say, why haven’t we talked about the issues? I think
the key thing in this campaign is going to be how do these people react
to being covered all the time.

Rosen:

There’s a problem with this question, that we’re going to find out
who these people really are. I think that is a vain hope. We should
change that to, let’s force these people to be who they really are in
public. Instead of trying to strip away a false facade. One thing that
could change is this: in every campaign the candidate and his advisers
decide things that they don’t want to talk about. But these may be
things that the public wants to know about. We can try to get them to
talk about those things. We can try to get them to be realer in that
sense, in trying to get them to address the topics that people want to
hear about.

The speakers go on to entitle this concept of a candidate being "real" in front of the media and general public as "authenticity". I would like to explore authenticity on the side of the candidate. As Jarvis mentioned, Hillary Clinton has labeled her campaign as a "conversation". In many, many of her video conversations to the public she encourages the public to comment, argue, and to join the conversation. Is she authentic in requesting such feedback? Probably not. She is gunning for the highest political position in the entire country, and a top spot with the influencers of the western hemisphere. Propaganda is the name of the game. And she doesn’t play it all that well. By asking us, ordinary citizens, to talk with her she expects us to give her the answers. I would urge candidates to, rather than being "authentic" to be honest in how they plan on running this country. That is what matters.

The web brings a new atmosphere to campaigning such that the candidate is always being recorded and observed. The campaigns know this and now are able to control every outlet of information. Look at Obama, each of his videos show an energized and charismatic person with incredible enthusiasm and heart. In effect, authentic. But authenticity may appeal to some, what about others who wish to hear how this enthusiastic person will run a country? Indeed this race has gotten really hot really quick. And usually we begin asking issue questions very near the end of the race. With the internet asking all types of questions from all types of angles, what will the end of the race look like? Will we have run out of relevant questions to ask, will we have had our fill of information?

Now Giuliani is slowly getting into the web race. However, his ride is a slow and steady one atop a horse called "I was the hero of 9/11". His media coverage is less web-tastic than the potential democrat candidates but then again, strives within new york. The giuliani website is lacking, what many other candidates have adopted as prime media coverage and message dispersion, video. Albeit the website itself is lackluster at best. However I am not writing to quarrel with the design of candidate’s websites. This is to bring to light what we, as citizens and public media, understand as to the effects of web media on campaigns.

Summary: Web media is inevitable and inescapable. The public eye is always watching. Campaigns understand this and have adapted to control every outlet of information. We can draw new information from them by being persistent and unyielding in our coverage. We can demand honesty to skills less authenticity of person. The facade is there and we know it. Now tell us what we want to hear, be it through a facade or not.

A very good friend of mine happened to email me an interesting article [if you don't want to register with WT.com then email me and I will send you a transcript of the article.] he found in the Washington Times
. It touches on a subject that has frequented my posts, the popularity and utility of newspapers versus internet media. Jennifer Harper of WT wrote on March 13, 2007,

"Political insiders turn to the old standby for updates, even in the age of blogs and cable news. The
traditional newspaper is the most popular ‘destination for political
news,’ according to ‘The State of the News Media 2007,’ a 700-page
report released yesterday by the Project for Excellence in Journalism."

She goes on to say in the article that a major component of newspaper readership is due to the "political junkies" those people who follow politics "closely". However, I beg to differ Jennifer. The fact that "newspaper readership has dropped 20 percent since 1992" is a bigger component to the livelihood or death of print news than a host of political junkies getting their "fix" from papers. In fact, now that politicians are using the internet and YouTube as major outlets for their campaigns one could go as far to say that the brunt of news is begotten online.

Many newspapers themselves are realizing the impact of an online presence and are encouraging their journalist staff to contribute to their own blogs. Check out USA Today and their grasp of internet media. They have incorporated blogs, classifieds, and the well-known formerly paper-unique crosswords and sudoku. The point is that newspapers still and probably will always have some role in our society. Now however it will probably have to be a lot more dynamic.

When I think about the content of our economy today, I think of Neverland- Peter Pan and TinkerBell flying through the air. I know, it is quite a far out thought but bear with me here. Neverland, a world created by the imagination and ideas of children, is all too similar to where our world is heading.

I am referring to how we make money, how we develop business, how we meet with each other, how we get work done, how we buy music, how we learn, how we communicate, how we live. Yes, that’s right. Virtually. Intuitively. Imaginatively. A world built on imagination where the exchange of ideas is completely and utterly virtual. How cool is that? Interestingly enough, our entire idea of time and space has "been given a run for its money". We can be anywhere and everywhere in mere milliseconds. Science-fiction is becoming more and more reality. Take a look at Star Trek, communication via video and audio displayed on a screen. Teleportation to distances far reaching, i.e. conference calls, virtual business, etc. Now look at Star Wars, communication via holographic projections which are slowly making their way into our world beginning with projection TV’s [now a display of the past] and moving onto 3D projection.

The onset of social media as a prime conduit for the transfer of ideas intensifies innovation. As time and space become things of the past, I would argue that reality is no longer a graspable concept. What is real? What constitutes something being real? Is it merely a physical presence? An observable action? Space is no longer a relevant idea now that I can sit at home in New York, talk with a friend in California, all while completing a job in Ohio. Time is becoming more irrelevant as standing on line for tickets has gone out the window. Christmas shopping hell is now a breeze through paradise. What more need do we have for time? We have all the time in the world to get things done. Time is exponentially reduced each and every day. What is artificial? What is real? Potentially, nothing.


I love this episode of The Simpsons! One of my favorites.

Ok all. That is my other worldly post of the month. I have loved science fiction my entire life. While letting my mind wander during my lunch break at school today, I looked up old sci-fi stories and current science and tech articles. Sparks began to fly in my head as the neurons bounced off of each other in a bevy of realization and thought. We all need to let go of reality sometimes. Music is my outflow. Try it. Check out my LastFM weekly favorites.