Archive for November, 2007

Social Media Influences IT Decisions

I got spanked a while ago (in semi-private - doggone it, or we all could have chimed in) for making comparisons between the southern California wildfires and social media jumping firewalls into organizations. My reader was offended by the message that social media would creep into organizations, even if IT didn’t sanction it and the corollary about firewalls.

I was heartened this morning when I logged into my IT Toolbox account, (IT Toolbox is a social media group for IT decision makers) and read the results of a survey they just posted.

The Executive decision makers they surveyed ranked social media sources the most trusted information source for making purchasing decisions, paralleling consumers’ trust in WOM.

IT Toolbox Decisions

Now most of my research friends would tell you that anyone who joins a social network is likely to rate them more highly than those who don’t. Agreed. Next…
To see the level of trust in peers (vs. paid analyst research, for example) for these folks is not surprising at all to me. The majority of those surveyed were from companies with fewer than 1000 people, and probably couldn’t afford the expense of a Gartner or IDC subscription anyway… so whom do they turn to for information? Their peers - probably previously unknown to them.

Social media connections (my LinkedIN invitations come in much more often now) are providing real research tools for knowledge workers.

And (by the way - for those who might also think I’m completely heartless) my sister, who’s family was evacuated twice during the fire, never once complained about the corollary I drew. And (as I noted) just last week she invited me to be her friend in Facebook.

Now there’s some irony!

Blogworld - 140+ speakers, call for attendees??

Blogworld Expo starts tomorrow in Vegas. I was surfing the site to see how it was unfolding, and was impressed by the speaking line-up. As I was scrolling down the list of speakers, it occurred to me there were a boat-load of them - so much so that I had to count… twice.

Perhaps I’m being naive, but if there are 143 speakers slated to appear in a three-day event, how many attendees will be there to listen?

I can’t wait to read the coverage of the events, and I really hope someone will publish a count of attendees. Perhaps the show will be a watershed moment in the blogosphere, where the Las Vegas Convention Center is filled with bloggers (speakers?), sponsors and (I sincerely hope) tons of attendees to soak up the lessons to be learned.

You can bet I’ll be subscribing to the news out of the show for any hint of reception, receptivity and (I sincerely hope) largess.

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