I’m Marci and I understand digital.

I am a New York-based digital strategist with a background in experience design. I work with agencies, Fortune 500 companies, and startups to figure out how to best meet their brands’ needs on the web. Learn more...

Tag Archives: big ideas

Why TV lost the media war with computers

I love, love, love this article about why TV is loosing the war against computers as the preferred medium for advertising and entertainment. It’s what I think about whenever I am forced to watch live network TV (which I limit to new episodes of Lost). While I know some very lovely folks in traditional advertising and marketing, the industry as a whole has been broken for a very long time.

Paul Graham breaks down the reason for this outcome into four main factors:

  1. Open platforms that support innovation through the creation of an open market;
  2. The exponentially increasing capabilities of internet bandwidth over the past 15 years or so;
  3. Piracy (the ease-of-use of iTunes, the Kindle, and Hulu are reactions to this trend that have only recently become succesful);
  4. Social networking (which is most popular and useful to teenagers, who have grown/ are growing into the new media professionals of the future).

I’d also add a fifth point, which Graham touches on in his article:

  1. The increasing globalization of pop culture makes local programming (previously a strenght of TV) almost entirely irrelevant.

Overall this is great food for thought, not just as a (recent) history lesson, but as an indicator what types of strategies succeed online. Increasing relevant social connections, improving ease-of-use, contextualizing related materials, planning for future technological capabilities – these are some of the tactics you hear about in reference to successful startups all the time. It’s time that traditional media embraces its failure as a learning opportunity, instead of ceaselessly fighting it.

Via Boing Boing.

Craig Newmark Unlocks the Secrets to Building a Community

Craig Newmark Unlocks the Secrets to Building a Community

Nice set of guidelines from the original master, Craig Newmark (of Craigslist). Key points include the importance of an ongoing feedback loop and the creation of a non-exclusive environment that encourages a wide range and degree of participation. It’s interesting that, in a time when so many businesses are looking for the secret to social media success online, Craigslist rarely figures into the discussion, when in many senses it’s a precursor to modern social media practices.

Via Aaron Rutledge

Banners: the Media-Creative Schism

Banners: the Media-Creative Schism

Great article from The Barbarian Group‘s Rick Webb describing what I believe to be the single biggest problem in digital advertising right now: the gap between wholistic creative strategies and an understanding of what works in the digital space. So many of the agencies I’ve worked with over the past few years still treat digital as a tacked-on supplement to an overarching campaign (“Take this TV commercial, upload it to YouTube, and make it go ‘viral’”). Obviously this approach has limited effectiveness which is being even further reduced over time. I have yet to see an agency attack this problem successfully, but I believe that, as traditional media is further marginalized, successful companies will have no choice but to rely more heavily on digital creatives, and ultimately integrate them fully into creative/ branding team.

Saving the Spark: Developing Creative Ideas

Saving the Spark: Developing Creative Ideas

A List Apart‘s ideas for developing encouraging creative thinking.

Via aaronrutledge.com

A Hierarchy of Fears

A Hierarchy of Fears

Ranked from childhood to parenthood. I’m in the neighborhood of 14-17, myself.

Via kottke.org.

Why we’re powerless to resist grazing on endless web data

Why we’re powerless to resist grazing on endless web data

I shall be using this as an excuse from now on.

Rather than forcing people to constantly update [our] blog with full entries, why not pull from the

Rather than forcing people to constantly update [our] blog with full entries, why not pull from the content they’re creating anyway? So [the aggregator] pulls in content from del.icio.us, Flickr, Twitter and other people’s blogs and inserts it right into [the site]. In my mind, it’s an example of passive activity, which I define as tapping into people’s existing behavior in order to deliver, rather than asking them for the information themselves.

Fixing Business Software // NoahBrier.com