Oh my, has it been a week since we last talked? If we follow each other on Twitter, then it’s probably been more like a few minutes, as that’s where I’ve been spending/wasting my time. Which brings us to the first in this cavalcade of content:
- Graeme Thickins, of DoApp and Tech~Surf~Blog fame, ponders whether using Twitter is decreasing his blogging activity. He also points to an early post on this topic by Ryan Block of Engadget: Does Twittering mean you blog less? The answer might surprise you. Personally, I’ve been seeing the effect on my own blogging. Heck, it’s way easier to spit out a 140-character tweet than to do the thinking, research and linking required for a readable blog post.
- Best Buy embraces Web 2.0 by announcing its Remix API. If, as Brad Stone’s NYT report suggests, this is part of a larger movement by legacy organizations to make their data publicly available, I think we’re in for some fun. Other recent and notable API releases include National Public Radio’s Open API, MTV’s Content API and Apple’s iPhone API.
- Speaking of the big-box retailer with the yellow, tag-shaped logo… From the irritatingly successful 4-Hour-Workweek author Timothy Ferriss, we learn that Best Buy has implemented a Results-Only Work Environment (ROWE) with amazing results. Specifically, they claim a 41% increase in productivity at HQ and a 90% reduction in employee attrition in some biz units. What’s ROWE? Ferriss finds out by interviewing Cali Ressler, the 20-something BBY employee who introduced ROWE from the bottom up and went on to write about the concept in Why Work Sucks and How to Fix It. Read Tim Ferriss’: “No Schedules, No Meetings — Enter Best Buy’s ROWE”
Update: Daniel Pink has an interview with Ressler and Thompson (Part 1 | Part 2)
- 3 Tips for a Great Landing Page - Landing page. Now, there’s a term, along with “microsite,” that ushers you right back to the heyday of Web 1.0. But for many marketers in Fortune 500 companies – who need 6 months lead time to put content on the corporate Web site – a microsite is still a valid tactic for supporting online and offline marketing campaigns.
- David Meerman Scott, speaking at the Inbond Marketing Summit, tackles the social media ROI question by asking, “What’s the ROI of putting on your pants in the morning?” and “What’s the ROI of the army of Guatemalan landscapers now raking the bushes around the building?” (via @desarev)
- And as long as we’re listening to gurus rip it up at conferences, be sure to check out Gary Vaynerchuk’s short, but intense keynote at the recent Web 2.0 conference in NYC. You might want to your volume down, as Gary gets excited and lets the effenheimers fly now and then.








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