I've already announced on my personal blog, the imaginatively-titled David B. Thomas, that I am leaving SAS to go to New Marketing Labs. Today is my last day here. I'm in my office right now, procrastinating, since the packing up has come down to the annoying stage: small things and
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Cisco just released one of those big reports that is bound to get everybody all aflutter. The Cisco 2010 Midyear Security Report is subtitled, "The impact of global security threats and trends on the enterprise." No points for guessing that I jumped straight to the social media section, after seeing
Last night The Mrs looked over my shoulder at Tweetdeck and said, “Everybody’s talking about Old Spice.” It’s the hottest topic in social media, marketing and advertising right now. Built on the success of the video embedded above, which now has more than 13 million views on YouTube, the
Mashable.com is a great place to keep up-to-date on the happenings in social media, and their @Mashable Twitter account is my personal social media canary-in-the-coal mine. Today they're warning us about a new Facebook scam centered around a video that promises to reveal the "truth" about Coca-Cola. If you click
Chris Brogan is a well-known social media speaker and consultant. You may have seen him in the "Nuts and Bolts of Social Media" series interviews he did with Deb Orton. (Scroll down past the clip of the goofy-looking guy in glasses.) He's also an amazingly prolific blogger, sometimes posting several
I just saw a tweet from someone attacking “self-declared social media gurus.” This has been going on for a long time, to the point where people who have some professional relationship to social media would probably rather be called a shoplifter than an expert. It’s gotten a little out of
At South by Southwest this year, people were talking about location-based services like Foursquare and Gowalla as the next big thing, the same way Twitter was discussed there in the past. Location-based services let you check in at a place from your mobile device, and people who you have let
New Marketing Labs does a great job with their conferences of distilling the essential information into easily understood chunks that you can take home and start, um... chunking with right away. One of the first social media conferences I attended was their Inbound Marketing Summit in San Francisco, way back
I've had a few conversations lately with friends and business acquaintances who expressed an interest in a job involving social media. I found myself giving all of them the same basic advice, so here it is. None of it is new or novel, and I'm not entirely sure I haven't
Seems like there are a lot of great folks writing social media books right now. Last week I learned that Amber Naslund and Jay Baer are writing a book aimed at small and medium-sized business, organizations and non-profits. I just heard on the Six Pixels of Separation podcast this morning