Tag: social media

The Honeymoon is Over

Back from two weeks on a beach, newly married. Quite a shock to the system returning to work, and it has taken a few days before I could accelerate my pace to cope with everything. Digging myself out from under a pile of email, voicemail and Facebook messages took a day in itself.

It’s an unexpected addendum to my comments on the multiple communications technologies we all deal with every day: as blissful as two weeks on a beach was, by the end I was beginning to get withdrawal symptoms. Being so connected to the world is strangely addictive.

MySpace is Dead

I have long asserted that the prices paid for hot Web 2.0 properties are a little nuts. My belief is that they are only valuable because they the latest fad, but fads – by definition – do not last. Especially when the fad is amongst the most fickle consumer group – young people. Now I can add a little science, or at least economics, to prove my gut instinct.

Admittedly this is based on a very limited amount of knowledge. I am currently reading ‘The Undercover Economist’ by Tim Harford, a fantastic book that should be part of the national curriculum in every country. Few books give more insight in to the way the world works in so few pages. It explains the basic rules that govern the value of a company: their potential for earnings, and their scarcity.

Apparently most company’s shares come to rest around a price to earnings ratio of 16. So companies that are worth much more than 16 times their earnings must have great scarcity power.

I would argue that this is true of very few hot Web properties. They generally don’t do anything that could not be replicated or improved upon. And given the fickleness of the consumers they target, their long-term value has to be seriously questioned. Even revolutionary ideas like Skype seem to be losing some momentum – though the figures may not show it, certainly amongst my peers I have noticed a steep decline in its use. News Corp’s acquisition of MySpace may have been vindicated by the subsequent advertising deal it signed with Google, but MySpace most of all looks very vulnerable to its users departing for new pastures, notably Facebook.

I believe there are opportunities to create more lasting Web 2.0 ventures but they need to rely on more than novelty – they need scarcity power. If you can provide information and resources that are not available anywhere else, or at least are more difficult or expensive to find elsewhere, then you can create a lasting proposition – assuming you can maintain the scarcity.

Like any good scientist, I intend to test this hypothesis. Watch this space – I’ll be inviting readers to join the beta community.

This Modern Life

The last few weeks have been hectic to say the least. So much so that my blog posting has been severely restricted. Like many people today, I split my time between a number of different job roles and clients, meaning I am constantly having to juggle priorities to ensure I meet many different expectations – with work delivered both to the right standard and within a given deadline. Unfortunately the volume of work and life commitments recently has meant that something had to suffer – namely this blog. The situation should improve somewhat over the next month and I’d like to get back in to the rhythm of posting regularly.

Funnily enough, the Beeb called me up last week and asked me to comment on the role that technology plays in the modern life. I’m appearing on the BBC Radio Manchester breakfast show tomorrow morning alongside a self-confessed Luddite to talk about the gadgets that I can’t live without. It got me thinking about whether the preponderance of communications technologies on which we all (except the Luddites) rely is responsible for the increased pace of life, or whether it just helps us all to cope with a trend that was happening anyway.

I think the answer comes down to the individual. For me, having a laptop with broadband access, means that I can work from my bed if I want to, as I am now. Admittedly I am working on a Sunday, but that is my choice and it is enabled by the fact that the tools of my work are so portable.

By contrast, imagine a junior executive in a full-time office role. The Blackberry with which he or she might be equipped isn’t a chosen tool to allow them to work more flexibly. Rather it is a work-assigned tether to the office, eating in to their free time.

In either case though, the technology is a fundamental enabler of the knowledge economy in which we all exist today. Though you can’t disentangle the development of one from the other, I for one am happy to working in an economy where I can choose when to work, and can make a living from selling my creativity of thought. Especially when I get to be creative in such a comfy environment.