MicroMedia Paves the Way for Macro Influence
Warning! This post is about MicroMedia and the emerging market for Media Snacking, but it is not served as a "byte" sized snack. It is instead, a full meal, so I hope you brought your appetite.
The inspiration for this story comes from a meme circulating through the Web that discusses "snacks" and the market for "media snacking." It was started by Forrester analyst Jeremiah Owyang when he publickly asked whether or not you respect media snackers. He then tagged Francine Hardaway, Chris Brogan, Shel Israel, Connie Benson, and Bill Claxton to continue the conversation.
Ultimately I was pinged by Todd Defren and I thought, rather than discuss whether or not I respect Media Snacking, it might be helpful to examine what it is and why it exists in order to ascertain its value and potential.
What’s a media snacker?
Basically it's folks who consume small bits of information, data or entertainment when, where, and how they want. Some pin this specifically on the youth, because in a sense, they grew up much more "connected" than the generations before them.
But it's not just about the youth.
This is about media in general and how it is carving new channels and creating new vehicles to facilitate conversations, relationships, and sharing by and for the people - across every generation and market demographic. In short, MicroMedia is being driven by the content curators, creators, consumers, and thought leaders who are defining the new social economy.
In case you haven't heard, many edglings are already starting to show signs of Social Media fatigue with so many networks, content publishing tools, and voices vyring for and thus thinning their attention span. Their RSS readers are overflowing with posts, tools such as Twitter, microblogs, blogs, and Facebook are addictive and their respective communities are constantly calling for attention, participation, and updates. The list goes on and on.
There have been many debates as to whether the great attention economy will incite the inevitable attention crash.
But we persevere. We have to.
Every week, every day, there's a new tool, network, or service and edglings flock to each of them, test, and then share their experience. Their reports and opinions determine whether or not the rest of the herd follows in their experiments.
People are always on the hunt for new information and will go to unfathomable depths in order to find and reach people.
Of course, as in every market, there are guides or trend setters whom people naturally follow and with enough momentum, the crowds increase in population as no one wants to get left behind. People naturally go where their peers, friends, and family go. But with every new, exciting service that gains momentum, individuals, whether they're an early adopter or a mainstream user, are forced to create and maintain new and existing profiles across multiple networks simply to communicate with their contacts and maintain their relationships.
Is this an ominous sign for Social Media?
Hardly.
This represents a shift in media creation and consumption (sorry I don't like that word) as many people are simply pulled in so many directions. Many just don't have time to read and watch everything that's pushed to them.
Enter MicroMedia, an emerging market category which seems to date back to 2000, but really didn't start to take current shape until 2005 and 2006 with the rise of Web 2.0.
Regardless of terminology however, many of you are already experimenting with MicroMedia, whether you know it or not. Tools such as Twitter, Kyte.tv, Pownce, Tumblr, Jott, and even Facebook are all forms of MicroMedia which allow you to send and receive small "bite-sized" media morsels for easy chewing and digestion. Many praise the rise of MicroMedia as a step in the right direction for enhancing our media consumption as well as increasing our participation within dedicated communities
Jeremiah Owyang who has been discussing this topic quite a bit over the last several months describes it this way:
Quick audio or video messages published to a trusted social community. May be created and consumed using mobile technology, and often distributed using other social media tools.After some thought, I amended it a bit:
Any form of concentrated content created using social tools that broadcast voice, video, images or text to targeted Web and mobile communities.
The content published via MicroMedia goes by many names including, video, audio and blog snacking, media snacking, snack bytes, media bytes, snacks, etc.
Whatever we call it, it represents a new medium, one that places an emphasis on brevity and value in order to say more with less. And, it's not just about us, those who blaze the trail by experimenting, documenting, and sharing our experiences with shiny new objects, it's about the people dictating their preference for creating, receiving and sharing information in specific ways.
Text Example
Audio Example
Video Example
Steve Rubel wrote earlier this year that MicroMedia allowed him to do more with less. It freed him from the pressures of having to write daily posts, which in turn forced him to focus on sharing shorter, more frequent thoughts and discoveries across a myriad of dedicated social networks, including his blog and microblog aka his lifestream.
Sometimes however, less, is just well, less.
I participate in almost all forms of macro and micro media, production and consumption. As in almost everything, there is plenty of garbage out there. Just because we can produce things easily these days, doesn't make them good. But, it's my choice what I chose to share and to what I watch, read and listen; just like it's the choice of everyone to determine when, where, and what they consume.
So in order to reach these increasingly discerning groups of people, you'll need to understand their culture and where the participate and then reverse engineer the process from a position of sincerity and empathy.
I use a few different MicroMedia services for hosting my aggregated stream of macro content as well as media snacks. Jaiku and Tumblr provide an easy and seamless tool for creating a stream which presents all of my social activity through constant bite-sized formats. Whether it's through my blog, microblog, various social networks, different people choose which format works for them, just like they can choose which social networks to cultivate friendships.
The point is that MicroMedia represents a new opportunity for information to reach people. And as our attention span thins, MicroMedia will evolve into legitimate rivers that reach people however and wherever they find and share their information. Even if you don't subscribe to the "less is more" philosophy, there are those that do. People have choice, so ignoring them will only ensure that we're not included in their diet of relevant media snacks.
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Resources
Excellent presentation: "The Economics of New Media"
Here's a great video about media snacking, just look beyond all "youth"
I've created a list of MicroMedia tools designed to facilitate the creation, sharing and discovery of media snacks. Please help me populate the directory by sending an email to pr2point0 [at] gmail [dot] com or leave a comment. I'll update the list to keep it tasty.
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A Directory of MicroMedia Tools and Services
Text/Media:
Twitter
Pownce
3jam
Lifestreams and Microblogs:
Video:
Eyejot
Kyte.tv
Seesmic
Facebook Videoustream.tv - Live video streaming
Justin.tv - Live video streaming
Veodia - Live video streaming
Yourtrumanshow - Episodic video streaming
Magnify.net - Video curation, packing short videos are topics or themes through one channel
Mobile Voice:
Pinger
Jott
Utterz
Twittergram
Gabcast
Mysay
Social Networks:
Facebook - Think Newsfeed
Yahoo Mash - Think Newsfeed
iRover Network for iPhones, friends, and short messages
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Other voices carrying the meme forward:
Clay Newton, Connie Reece, Leo Hopkins, Deborah Schultz, Steven Hodson, Geoff Livingston, John Johnston, Cathleen Rittereiser, Mark Cahill, Kevin Dugan, Kami Huyse, Jane Quigley, Sarah Wurrey, Gaurav Mishra, Drew McLellan, Andrea Vascellari
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Connect with me on Twitter, Jaiku, Pownce or Facebook.
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utterz facebook mash mysay gabcast kyte.tv jaiku tumblr twitter media micromedia micro macro socialmedia social+media media2.0 media+2.0 2.0 pr2.0 pr publicrelations content public+relations pr+2.0 snack byte snacking snacker
7 Comments:
Great post Brian. I agree and discussed this in my own media snack after I was tagged by Geoff. I love media snacks b/c they do give me a little something to tide me over, sort of like appetizers. Every now and then however your community will want the entire dinner, better be prepared.
Good stuff.
/kff
Well said Brian. I've taken to media snacking this year, and while I'm finding many benefits to it, I'm also finding that it is shifting the way I consume and produce media. It seems as I snack more I have less time for full meals, whether that means writing my regular blog entries or reading novels. I used to read anywhere from 2-5 books a week, and now I spend much of that time online. Meanwhile most of my RL friends have yet to jump on the bandwagon, so when I start talking about Flickr, Pownce, Tumblr, etc. they look at me as though I'm speaking some other language!
Sometimes less is less. Very, very true. And dinner is what you really crave when you have a snack. Well done. Funny video, too.
Your definition is more concise than mine, I like it!
"Any form of concentrated content created using social tools that broadcast voice, video, images or text to targeted Web and mobile communities."
Brian good points as usual. I think of this as giving people many consumable formats to choose from.
Twitter for short and concise messaging, blogging for lengthy messaging and video for visual messaging.
Dan Schawbel
www.personalbrandingmag.com
Thanks for mentioning me post. I liked your post a lot for your thoughts and the resources. The phrase "less is less" resonated with me. I wanted to write something similar, but couldn't find such an elegant and concise way to say it.
Hello Brian,
It's nice to join the conversation globally, and it was really interesting to read your post.
"When enough individual voices pool together, the whisper becomes a roar, transcending MicroMedia into macro influence."...well said.
Andrea
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