Breakfast with a Side of Social Media
This morning was Social Media Club DC‘s first ever Social Media Breakfast, and it was great! Held at Teaism here in downtown DC, we had great food, great conversation, and some excellent speakers. I’d never even been to Teaism before, but if this morning’s breakfast was a good indication of their normal food, I’m excited to go back.
The speakers included Geoff Livingston (on Twitter, @geoffliving), Alex Howard (on Twitter, @Digiphile), and Shashi Bellamkonda (on Twitter, @shashib). They had a lot of great things to say, and I even had the great opportunity to continue into a conversation with Geoff Livingston at our table after the speakers had all presented. Unfortunately, I had to jet a little early because of class, but here’s some of what I gleaned from the speakers.
Geoff Livingston had a simple message: “get mobile, get mobile now,” he said. Appropriate. I think most people in the social media and technology world are well aware now that mobile is certainly the next big revolution in communication and media tech. The iPhone and social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook have led the way to a more digital, more mobile, more connected life–24/7, wherever you are. He said that this next evolution in the industry is “your opportunity to be a visionary” and if you want to lead then “load up [your] reader” with every tech blog you can find. Thankfully, I’m well-covered on that front–Mashable is like the gospel for social media tech, and I must subscribe to at least 10 or 15 other big blogs, in addition to all the smaller, more personal format ones. There’s lots of info out there. Always learning.
Shashi Bellamkonda had much the same message–it’s all about mobile, it’s all about staying on top of trends, and it’s all about staying connected and active in the social media sphere. You can’t read about this and know it, you have to use it to know it.
Speaking of trends, Alex Howard rounded out the group and gave us a great list of what he thinks are the biggest trends coming for 2010. They are:
- Search – traditional search engines being replaced by social media
- Niche networks – using OAuth to log on, individual networks, platforms such as Ning
- Privacy – much discussion on the “privacy is dead” controversy spoken by people like Pete Cashmore, Eric Schmidt and Mark Zuckerberg; Howard disagrees, says there will be a big debate both in social realm and in congress this year
- Social gaming – games like foursquare, “Farmville” on Facebook, etc. becoming huge players
- Security - key: “STOP USING INTERNET EXPLORER 6″
- Open web - no more locked into platforms
- App as the new Web site – quoted from Mathew Ingram, making mobile apps for revenue; es
timated $7 billion in revenue
for mobile apps in 2010 - Geolocation – Twitter integrated geolocation, games like Foursquare, etc.
- Online video – continuation of the growth seen since 2006, more mainstream content online, CNN streaming, Hulu, iTunes, Amazon, Boxee; also, organizations like CNN and the White House using Facebook, YouTube as outlets for online video
And that about wraps it up. It was a great morning–I’m already looking forward to the next event!
Update: I’ve added Alex Howard’s presentation from the event to this post. It’s embedded below the jump, check it out, it’s pretty awesome! He uses Prezi, which has been one of my favorite tools since early last year.
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Social comments and analytics for this post…
This post was mentioned on Twitter by alexpriest: Breakfast with a side of social media–wrapup of today’s @smcdc event. Thanks to @digiphile @geoffliving and @shashib! http://bit.ly/5Mkna0...
Hi Alex,
Thanks for the recap of the Social Media Breakfast. Would love to catch up and talk more when we meet next.
Shashi
No problem! Thanks for the comment. And that sounds great, I’m sure we’ll have no problem keeping up with each other on Twitter, we can figure out when our paths collide again soon!
[...] Though I’d meant to post this much earlier, in a way I’m glad I didn’t get a chance to do so, because I’ve found some terrific recaps of the event, such as in Shashi’s Examiner column and Alex Priest’s excellent writeup. [...]
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Alex Howard, Shashi Bellamkonda, Bryan Person, Jill Foster, Andi Narvaez and others. Andi Narvaez said: RT @digiphile: 2 takes on today's Social Media Breakfast DC: @shashib http://bit.ly/4OwIJq & @alexpriest http://j.mp/74UMEo #smcdc #smbdc [...]
Thanks, Alex. It was a pleasure talking with you yesterday. Keep the faith!
[...] Don’t believe me? Alex Priest did an AWESOME job recapping the event here. [...]
[...] Don’t believe me? Alex Priest did an AWESOME job recapping the event here. [...]
Your post seems very sensible. I look forward to hearing another one.