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	<title>The M Companies &#187; branding</title>
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	<link>http://www.themcompanies.com</link>
	<description>Professional Business Development &#38; Consulting</description>
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		<title>K9 ADVISORS</title>
		<link>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/k9-advisors/</link>
		<comments>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/k9-advisors/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 19 May 2009 16:50:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[branding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Small Business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dog problems]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[dog training]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[k9]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[miami]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.themcompanies.com/?p=776</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[K9 ADVISORS was founded as a result of my passion. For years, I trained thousands of dogs for a large dog training facility in Miami. There, I began as a protection dog decoy and agitator and quickly progressed into basic and advanced (off- leash) obedience and severe behavior problem solving, becoming the facility&#8217;s head dog [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" title="edel miedes" src="http://k9advisors.com/tempimage/picture5.jpg" alt="" width="260" height="310" /></p>
<p>K9 ADVISORS was founded as a result of my passion. For years, I  					 trained thousands of dogs for a large dog training facility  					 in Miami. There, I began as a protection dog decoy and  					 agitator and quickly progressed into basic and advanced  					 (off- leash) obedience and severe behavior problem solving,  					 becoming the facility&#8217;s head dog trainer. Throughout the  					 years, I’ve trained many other dog trainers, advancing some  					 and releasing those not suited to dog training, in addition  					 to managing and training the kennel staff. I continued  					 training dogs of all kinds and ages with varying behavior  					 issues while attending Florida International University. I  					 then received my Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology,  					 with an emphasis on behavior assessments and modifications,  					 in 1997. <span id="more-776"></span>Shortly after graduating, I began a lucrative  					 career as a financial advisor, while continuing to train  					 dogs for free in my spare time. It was never something I  					 could let go completely; it was too much a part of me.  					 After creating and operating my own financial service firm,  					 I still continued with my passion of dog training. While a  					 financial advisor, I continued to help various local rescue  					 groups save some &#8220;un- adoptable&#8221; dogs with behavior  					 problems through my training techniques. Eventually, I  					 found my passion for helping dogs and their owners more  					 rewarding than being a financial advisor. I then coupled my  					 drive and my ability to advise people on their financial  					 affairs with my solid dog training. Today, I am well recognized by many local and national  					 rescue groups as a canine behavior problem solver. I can  					 train ANY dog, regardless of the circumstances. From  					 severely abused and neglected, to deaf and blind dogs, to  					 even police dogs for various local police departments, I’ve  					 done it all!</p>
<p><img class="floatRight" style="width: 239px; height: 235px;" src="http://k9advisors.com/tempimage/picture7.jpg" alt="Dog Behavior Problems" /> <!-- #EndEditable --> <!-- #BeginEditable "cont2" --></p>
<h2>Specialties:</h2>
<p><!-- #EndEditable --> <!-- #BeginEditable "cont3" -->* Solving Severe Dog Behavior Problems</p>
<p>* Training Advanced, Off-Leash, Obedience</p>
<p>* Developing Obedient Family Protection Dogs</p>
<p>* Importing and Acclimating Executive Protection</p>
<p>* Dogs for Business Owners and Families.</p>
<p><!-- #EndEditable --> <!-- #BeginEditable "cont4" -->The advantage to working with me is that I am an owner AND the dog  		  will be trained in a very precisely tested system that works! Any  		  owner will see amazing results in the very first lesson. Contact me  		  today to set an appointment for your dog’s training.</p>
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		<title>How 10 Famous Technology Products Got Their Names</title>
		<link>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/how-10-famous-technology-products-got-their-names/</link>
		<comments>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/how-10-famous-technology-products-got-their-names/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2009 13:56:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Big Business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[branding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Internet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[android]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[apple]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[big cats]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[blackberry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cio.com]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[firefox]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[how they got their names]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ipod]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[name]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[names]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[red hat linux]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[thinkpad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[twitter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wikipedia]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.themcompanies.com/?p=772</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[From iPod and BlackBerry to Twitter and Wikipedia, we take a look at the processes and people who came up with the names for these iconic tech products. Coming up with a great technology product or service is only half the battle these days. Creating a name for said product that is at once cool [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="slideshow_desc"><img class="alignnone" title="bold" src="http://viralelectronics.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/rim-blackberry-bold-smartphone.jpg" alt="" width="395" height="387" /></p>
<p class="slideshow_desc">From iPod and BlackBerry to Twitter and Wikipedia, we take a look at the processes and people who came up with the names for these iconic tech products.</p>
<p class="slideshow_body">Coming up with a great technology product or service is only half the battle these days. Creating a name for said product that is at once cool but not too cool or exclusionary, marketable to both early adopters and a broader audience, and, of course, isn&#8217;t already in use and protected by various trademarks and copyright laws is difficult—to say the least.</p>
<p class="slideshow_body">The makers of these 10 tech products—the iPod, BlackBerry, Firefox, Twitter, Windows 7, ThinkPad, Android, Wikipedia, Mac OS X and the &#8220;Big Cats,&#8221; and Red Hat Linux—all have displayed certain amounts marketing savvy, common sense and fun-loving spirit in settling on their products&#8217; names. Here are the intriguing, surprising and sometimes predictable accounts of their creation.</p>
<p class="slideshow_body"><a href="http://www.cio.com/special/slideshows/famous_tech_names/index" target="_blank">[Check out the Slideshow on CIO.com]</a></p>
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		<title>How to Monitor Your Brand 24/7</title>
		<link>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/how-to-monitor-your-brand-247/</link>
		<comments>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/how-to-monitor-your-brand-247/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2009 11:18:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[branding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Business Gurus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Career Development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Small Business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Strategy & Models]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Internet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[blogpulse]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cotweet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[personal branding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[scoutlab]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tns cymfony]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[toolkit]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tweetdeck]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[twitter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[vanno]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.themcompanies.com/?p=764</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Twitter is the canary in the coal mine of public opinion &#8212; for celebrities, politicians, and, of course, corporations. When European discount carrier Ryanair lashed out at &#8220;lunatic bloggers&#8221; after a Web designer reported a glitch on the airline&#8217;s site, its online reputation dipped as low as its fares. Conversely, Mars got a sweet treat [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" title="monitor" src="http://www.schoolmocks.co.uk/uploads/1228945909-21465-case-study-pulse-top.jpg" alt="" width="426" height="253" /></p>
<p><strong>Twitter is the canary</strong> in the coal mine of public opinion &#8212; for celebrities, politicians, and, of course, corporations. When European discount carrier Ryanair lashed out at &#8220;lunatic bloggers&#8221; after a Web designer reported a glitch on the airline&#8217;s site, its online reputation dipped as low as its fares. Conversely, Mars got a sweet treat when it posted Skittles-related tweets on its Web site, learning immediately how people felt about the candy.</p>
<p>Twitter&#8217;s explosion from microblogging curiosity to <span style="text-decoration: underline;">mass-media phenomenon</span> [0] has awakened a lot of companies to just how fast memes spread on the Internet today. Make a mistake like Ryanair&#8217;s &#8212; or Johnson &amp; Johnson&#8217;s offensive Motrin ads last winter &#8212; and the response is brutal. Get it right like shoe retailer Zappos and bask in the love. How can you know if your canary is singing or dead? These tools will help you monitor not just Twitter but everywhere the online conversation involves your brand.<span id="more-764"></span></p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">TweetDeck</span> [1].</strong> To follow the raging tweetstream, you need a dashboard. This free download splits your Twitter feed into subgroups, letting you follow shout-outs (@replies) in one window and specific searches in other views. For instance, Pepsi could follow Mountain Dew, Gatorade, Tropicana, and Frito-Lay in four different search fields, receiving instant feedback on announcements and ad campaigns.</p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Scout Labs</span> [2].</strong> Need to monitor feedback on your new product? Scout Labs reads blog posts and social-networking comments from around the globe and judges them by their words and tone. The sentence &#8220;I love Amazon but the Kindle 2 is disappointing&#8221; gets properly parsed as a positive comment for Amazon but a negative one for its e-reader. This ultra-targeted approach allows clients such as Charles Schwab, HP, and Netflix to follow comments in real time and react quickly. Pricing starts at $99 a month for five searches.</p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">BlogPulse</span> [3].</strong> This free feature from Nielsen Online searches the blogosphere for what&#8217;s happening with your brands. Type in a few keywords and track the number of mentions over the past six months, and view them in a handy fever chart. You can also trace the roots of a Web conversation and learn more about key Web influencers.</p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Vanno</span> [4].</strong> It&#8217;s Digg for reputation. Readers vote on news stories, opinion, and gossip about more than 5,800 companies, and Vanno mashes it up into a numerical score. The free site tracks these companies based on 25 topics, including job satisfaction, customer service, and social responsibility. At press time, Cisco was No. 1.</p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">CoTweet</span> [5].</strong> This free service (currently in limited beta) allows multiple people to tweet from the same user name, using software to replicate the success of Zappos&#8217;s hundreds of staff bloggers, including CEO Tony Hsieh, within one account. Employees can delegate tasks, track conversations, schedule posts, and best of all, identify the people behind the brand.</p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">TNS Cymfony</span> [6].</strong> If you need a more heavyweight tool (starting at $40,000 a year), TNS Cymfony goes beyond simple keyword analysis across the Web and analyzes grammar. It also includes crisis PR solutions that track key bloggers, journalists, and consumers. (Nielsen Online&#8217;s <span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>Buzzmetrics</strong></span> [7] service offers similar features.) During the past Super Bowl, TNS Cymfony reported that the teaser for the anticipated summer hit <em>Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen</em> earned seven times the buzz of the average ad during the big game.</p>
<p>Use these seven tools and you won&#8217;t have to worry about revenge; your brand will be transformed into an agile, respected member of the Web&#8217;s social swirl.</p>
<hr size="1" noshade="noshade" /><!-- Output printer friendly links --><strong>Links:</strong><br />
[1] <a href="http://www.tweetdeck.com/" target="_blank">http://www.tweetdeck.com/</a><br />
[2] <a href="http://www.scoutlabs.com/" target="_blank">http://www.scoutlabs.com/</a><br />
[3] <a href="http://www.blogpulse.com/" target="_blank">http://www.blogpulse.com/</a><br />
[4] <a href="http://www.vanno.com" target="_blank">http://www.vanno.com</a><br />
[5] <a href="http://www.cotweet.com" target="_blank">http://www.cotweet.com</a><br />
[6] <a href="http://www.cymfony.com/" target="_blank">http://www.cymfony.com/</a><br />
[7] <a href="http://www.nielsen-online.com/" target="_blank">http://www.nielsen-online.com/</a><br />
<br />
<a href="http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/135/scobleizer-brand-new-day.html" target="_blank">[via Fast Company]</a> By <a title="View user profile." href="http://www.fastcompany.com/user/robert-scoble">Robert Scoble</a></p>
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		<item>
		<title>The Secrets of Marketing in a Web 2.0 World</title>
		<link>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/the-secrets-of-marketing-in-a-web-20-world/</link>
		<comments>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/the-secrets-of-marketing-in-a-web-20-world/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Feb 2009 14:33:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[branding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Small Business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Technology]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Internet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bentley university]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bruce weinberg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[collaboration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[delicious]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[email marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[erin white]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[marketing secrets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mobile applications]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[new website]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[participation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social networking]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[viral marketing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[web 2.0]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[website development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[wsj small business]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.themcompanies.com/?p=754</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[For marketers, Web 2.0 offers a remarkable new opportunity to engage consumers. If only they knew how to do it. That&#8217;s where this article aims to help. We interviewed more than 30 executives and managers in both large and small organizations that are at the forefront of experimenting with Web 2.0 tools. From those conversations [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" title="marketing 2.0" src="http://www.screenmatter.com/images/img-internet-marketing.jpg" alt="" width="350" height="320" /></p>
<p>For marketers, Web 2.0 offers a remarkable new opportunity to engage consumers.</p>
<p>If only they knew how to do it.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s where this article aims to help. We interviewed more than 30 executives and managers in both large and small organizations that are at the forefront of experimenting with Web 2.0 tools. From those conversations and further research, we identified a set of emerging principles for marketing.</p>
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<p>But first, a more basic question: What is Web 2.0, anyway? Essentially, it encompasses the set of tools that allow people to build social and business connections, share information and collaborate on projects online. That includes blogs, wikis, social-networking sites and other online communities, and virtual worlds.<span id="more-754"></span></p>
<p>Millions of people have become familiar with these tools through sites like Facebook, Wikipedia and Second Life, or by writing their own blogs. And a growing number of marketers are using Web 2.0 tools to collaborate with consumers on product development, service enhancement and promotion. But most companies still don&#8217;t appear to be well versed in this area.</p>
<p>So here&#8217;s a look at the principles we arrived at &#8212; and how marketers can use them to get the best results.</p>
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<p class="targetCaption">A Web site can be a marketer&#8217;s lifeline with its customers, but what happens when it&#8217;s marred with negative reviews and comments? Bruce Weinberg, marketing professor at Bentley University, tells WSJ&#8217;s Erin White how to address and recover from poor feedback.</p>
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<p>Web 2.0 tools can be used to do what traditional advertising does: persuade consumers to buy a company&#8217;s products or services. An executive can write a blog, for instance, that regularly talks up the company&#8217;s goods. But that kind of approach misses the point of 2.0. Instead, companies should use these tools to get the consumers <em>involved</em>, inviting them to participate in marketing-related activities from product development to feedback to customer service.</p>
<p>How can you do that? A leading greeting-card and gift company that we spoke with is one of many that have set up an online community &#8212; a site where it can talk to consumers and the consumers can talk to each other. The company solicits opinions on various aspects of greeting-card design and on ideas for gifts and their pricing. It also asks the consumers to talk about their lifestyles and even upload photos of themselves, so that it can better understand its market.</p>
<p>A marketing manager at the company says that, as a way to obtain consumer feedback and ideas for product development, the online community is much faster and cheaper than the traditional focus groups and surveys used in the past. The conversations consumers have with each other, he adds, result in &#8220;some of the most interesting insights,&#8221; including gift ideas for specific occasions, such as a college graduation, and the prices consumers are willing to pay for different gifts.</p>
<p>Similarly, a large technology company uses several Web 2.0 tools to improve collaboration with both its business partners and consumers. Among other things, company employees have created wikis &#8212; Web sites that allow users to add, delete and edit content &#8212; to list answers to frequently asked questions about each product, and consumers have added significant contributions. For instance, within days of the release of a new piece of software by the company, consumers spotted a problem with it and posted a way for users to deal with it. They later proposed a way to fix the problem, which the company adopted. Having those solutions available so quickly showed customers that the company was on top of problems with its products.</p>
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<div class="insettipUnit"><img src="http://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/OB-CU272_bi_web_DV_20081209131437.jpg" border="0" alt="[The Journal Report: Business Insight]" hspace="0" vspace="0" width="262" height="394" /> <cite></cite></div>
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<p><strong>Give consumers a reason to participate.</strong></p>
<p>Consumers have to have some incentive to share their thoughts, opinions and experiences on a company Web site.</p>
<p>One lure is to make sure consumers can use the online community to network among themselves on topics of their own choosing. That way the site isn&#8217;t all about the company, it&#8217;s also about them. For instance, a toy company that created a community of hundreds of mothers to solicit their opinions and ideas on toys also enables them to write their own blogs on the site, a feature that many use to discuss family issues.</p>
<p>Other companies provide more-direct incentives: cash rewards or products, some of which are available only to members of the online community. Still others offer consumers peer recognition by awarding points each time they post comments, answer questions or contribute to a wiki entry. Such recognition not only encourages participation, but also has the benefit of allowing both the company and the other members of the community to identify experts on various topics.</p>
<p>Many companies told us that a moderator plays a critical role in keeping conversations going, highlighting information that&#8217;s important to a discussion and maintaining order. That&#8217;s important because consumers are likely to drift away if conversations peter out or if they feel that their voices are lost in a chaotic flood of comments. The moderator can also see to it that consumer input is seen and responded to by the right people within the company.</p>
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<h4 class="first">Getting Sociable</h4>
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<li><strong>A New Approach:</strong> Marketing these days is more about building a two-way relationship with consumers. Web 2.0 tools are a powerful way to do that.</li>
<li><strong>The Pioneers:</strong> A growing number of companies are learning how to collaborate with consumers online on product development, service enhancement and promotion.</li>
<li><strong>The Lessons:</strong> From these early efforts, a set of marketing principles have emerged. Among them: get consumers involved in all aspects of marketing, listen to and join the online conversation about your products outside your site, and give the consumers you work with plenty of leeway to express their opinions.</li>
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<p>And, of course, it&#8217;s important to make a site as easy to use as possible. For instance, there should be clear, simple instructions for consumers to set up a blog or contribute to a wiki.</p>
<p><strong>Listen to &#8212; and join &#8212; the conversation outside your site.</strong></p>
<p>Consumers tend to trust one another&#8217;s opinions more than a company&#8217;s marketing pitch. And there is no shortage of opinions online.</p>
<p>The managers we interviewed accept that this type of content is here to stay and are aware of its potential impact &#8212; positive or negative &#8212; on consumers&#8217; buying decisions. So they monitor relevant online conversations among consumers and, when appropriate, look for opportunities to inject themselves into a conversation or initiate a potential collaboration.</p>
<p>For example, a marketing manager of a leading consumer-electronics company monitors blogs immediately after a new-product launch in order to understand &#8220;how customers are actually reacting to the product.&#8221; Other managers keep an eye on sites like <a href="http://digg.com/" target="_blank">Digg.com</a> and <a href="http://del.icio.us/" target="_blank">Del.icio.us</a> that track the most popular topics on the Web, to see if there&#8217;s any buzz around their new products, and whether they should be adjusting, say, features or prices.</p>
<p>In one case, a company found a popular blogger who had spoken highly of the company&#8217;s brand. Just prior to launching a new product, the company sent the blogger a free sample, inviting him to review it with no strings attached. The end result: The blogger wrote a favorable review and generated a flood of comments. So the company got nearly free publicity and feedback.</p>
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<div class="insettipUnit"><img src="http://s.wsj.net/public/resources/images/OB-CU764_bi_web_DV_20081212123245.jpg" border="0" alt="[The Journal Report: Business Insight]" hspace="0" vspace="0" width="262" height="394" /> <cite>Peter &amp; Maria Hoey</cite></div>
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<p><strong>Resist the temptation to sell, sell, sell.</strong></p>
<p>Many marketers have been trained to bludgeon consumers with advertising &#8212; to sell, sell, sell anytime and anywhere consumers can be found. In an online community, it pays to resist that temptation.</p>
<p>When consumers are invited to participate in online communities, they expect marketers to listen and to consider their ideas. They don&#8217;t want to feel like they&#8217;re simply a captive audience for advertising, and if they do they&#8217;re likely to abandon the community.</p>
<p>The head of consumer research for a leading consumer-electronics organization created an online community of nearly 50,000 consumers to discuss product-development and marketing issues. One of the key principles of the community, she says, was &#8220;not to do anything about marketing, because we weren&#8217;t about selling; we were about conversing.&#8221;</p>
<p>In short order, community members not only identified what it was they were looking for in the company&#8217;s products, but also suggested innovations to satisfy those needs. The company quickly developed prototypes based on those suggestions, and got an enthusiastic response: Community members asked when they would be able to buy the products and if they would get the first opportunity to buy them. They didn&#8217;t have to be sold on anything.</p>
<p><strong>Don&#8217;t control, let it go.</strong></p>
<p>In an online community, every company needs to find an effective balance between trying to steer the conversation about its products and allowing the conversation to flow freely. In general, though, the managers we interviewed believe that companies are better off giving consumers the opportunity to say whatever is on their minds, positive or negative. Moderators can keep things running smoothly and coherently, but they shouldn&#8217;t always keep the conversation on a predetermined track. The more that consumers talk freely, the more a company can learn about how it can improve its products and its marketing.</p>
<div class="insetCol3wide">
<div class="insetContent">
<h4 class="first">For Further Reading</h4>
<p>See these related articles from MIT Sloan Management Review.</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Harnessing the Power of the Oh-So-Social Web</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><em>By Josh Bernoff and Charlene Li (Spring 2008)</em><br />
The authors develop a strategic framework that businesses can use to implement social applications in a number of departments, including research and development, marketing, sales, customer support and operations.<br />
<a href="http://sloanreview.mit.edu/smr/issue/2008/spring/01/" target="_blank">http://sloanreview.mit.edu/smr/issue/2008/spring/01/</a></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Enterprise 2.0: The Dawn of Emergent Collaboration</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><em>By Andrew P. McAfee (Spring 2006)</em><br />
There is a new wave of business communication tools including blogs, wikis and group messaging software that allow for more spontaneous, knowledge-based collaboration.<br />
<a href="http://sloanreview.mit.edu/smr/issue/2006/spring/06/" target="_blank">http://sloanreview.mit.edu/smr/issue/2006/spring/06/</a></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Beyond Enterprise 2.0</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><em>By Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee (Spring 2007)</em><br />
The authors explore the complementary relationship between traditional managerial tools and the evolving modes of collaboration and communication, such as wikis.<br />
<a href="http://sloanreview.mit.edu/smr/issue/2007/spring/16/" target="_blank">http://sloanreview.mit.edu/smr/issue/2007/spring/16/</a></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Systems Marketing for the Information Age</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><em>By John G. Singer (Fall 2006)</em><br />
The authors suggest that companies must take a marketing ecosystems view, which shifts away from the logic of &#8220;brand&#8221; as the primary unit for business strategy.<br />
<a href="http://sloanreview.mit.edu/smr/issue/2006/fall/18/" target="_blank">http://sloanreview.mit.edu/smr/issue/2006/fall/18/</a></p>
<ul>
<li><strong>How to Market to Generation M(obile)</strong></li>
</ul>
<p><em>By Fareena Sultan and Andrew J. Rohm (Summer 2008)</em><br />
The mobile platform provides the perfect mechanism for reaching young consumers.<br />
<a href="http://sloanreview.mit.edu/smr/issue/2008/summer/12/" target="_blank">http://sloanreview.mit.edu/smr/issue/2008/summer/12/</a></div>
</div>
<p>One marketing executive recalled the first time she let an online community created for a client interact with very little control or moderation, resulting in an animated discussion about the look of the company&#8217;s product. The client, with great concern, asked. &#8220;Who told them [the consumers] they could do this, that they could go this far?&#8221; Of course, when this process resulted in totally new packaging that helped boost sales, the client was ecstatic.</p>
<p>As another executive of a company that creates online communities for clients told us: &#8220;You have to let the members drive. When community members feel controlled, told how to respond and how to act, the community shuts down.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>Find a &#8216;marketing technopologist.&#8217;</strong></p>
<p>So who should direct a company&#8217;s forays into Web 2.0 marketing? A number of managers identified an ideal set of skills for an executive that go beyond those of a typical M.B.A. holder or tech expert. We coined the term marketing technopologist for a person who brings together strengths in marketing, technology and social interaction. A manager said, &#8220;I&#8217;d want to see someone with the usual M.B.A. consultant&#8217;s background, strong interest in psychology and sociology, and good social-networking skills throughout the organization.&#8221;</p>
<p>Foot soldiers need to be carefully selected as well. One large technology company weighs employees&#8217; proven skills to choose writers for blogs that are read by consumers. The company has long used blogs internally to help employees discuss technical issues, products, and company and industry topics. When it decided to use blogs to raise its profile online, it recruited those who had shown the most skill at blogging within the company. The company currently has about 15 employees who blog publicly, mostly on technology trends, and is recruiting more the same way. Meanwhile, the bloggers plan to meet occasionally to share the lessons learned from their experiences.</p>
<p><strong>Embrace experimentation.</strong></p>
<p>One Web 2.0 strategy does not fit all, and sometimes the best way to find out what&#8217;s best for a given company is to try some things out and see what happens.</p>
<p>Blogs, wikis and online communities are among the tools that companies are most commonly using for marketing, but there are other ways to reach consumers. Some of the companies we talked with have gotten their feet wet in the online virtual world Second Life, where millions of users interact with each other through avatars. Companies can sell their goods and services and sponsor events in Second Life just as they do in the real world; one sponsored a contest for the best avatar.</p>
<p>Others are considering new ways to use more-familiar tools. For instance, many companies have long used instant messaging on their Web sites to allow shoppers to chat with customer-service representatives. One executive we spoke with said he would like to experiment with allowing consumers to chat with each other as they shop on his company&#8217;s site.</p>
<p><a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB122884677205091919.html" target="_blank">[via WSJ Small Business]</a> By SALVATORE PARISE ,  PATRICIA J. GUINAN and BRUCE D. WEINBERG</p>
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		<title>Big Business with Big George Foreman</title>
		<link>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/big-business-with-big-george-foreman/</link>
		<comments>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/big-business-with-big-george-foreman/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Feb 2009 14:24:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[George Foreman has three fundamentals of business success: selling, integrity, and &#8220;the shotgun tactic.&#8221; Over a lifetime, Foreman has created the kind of well-rounded success that most people dream of. He is a profitable businessman, a community leader, a husband and a father. His life is full, but more importantly to Foreman, his life is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" title="george foreman" src="http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/img/v3/05-26-2007.NR_26Foreman1.GFB25FB3K.1.jpg" alt="" width="350" height="523" /></p>
<p>George Foreman has three fundamentals of business success: selling, integrity, and &#8220;the shotgun tactic.&#8221; Over a lifetime, Foreman has created the kind of well-rounded success that most people dream of. He is a profitable businessman, a community leader, a husband and a father. His life is full, but more importantly to Foreman, his life is meaningful.</p>
<p>With nearly 100 million George Foreman Grills sold since 1995, Foreman has had enormous influence in the wellness industry. He is also one of the highest-paid and most recognized celebrity endorsers in the world.<span id="more-734"></span></p>
<p>In 1999, Foreman signed a $137.5 million deal with Salton Inc. (recently merged with Applica Incorporated), entitling the grill manufacturer to global, unrestricted use of Foreman’s name in marketing the Lean, Mean, Fat-Reducing Grilling Machine and related products. The deal made Michael Jordan’s $40 million deal with Nike look small by comparison.</p>
<p>Before his endorsement of the grills, Foreman made business deals based primarily on a desire for income. “I was so successful,” he says. “All the ads I had done for sausages, you name it, [I was] mainly thinking about money. But then I went into the grill business.” He took the grills all over the country, making personal appearances and boosting sales. “I was meeting people who would say, ‘The doctor told me to get a George!’ I’m like, what are they talking about? Get a George?” He realized his product was making a difference in people’s health, and his perspective changed. “From that point on, you know, I can never go back to what I used to do where I just sell and sell,” he says. “Now everything I do has to be connected to something healthy.”</p>
<p style="text-align: left;"><img src="http://api.ning.com/files/ZQaq9i20*YPzvS8dZBlyoEtFayMgzeggk9Q-8tboM2osgug4j-1sovNdh8A5SQnQsbPLt**vHcQGD-3YR7AidZEHlTQB4uKl/GeorgeForeman2.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="380" /></p>
<p><strong>The Importance of Selling</strong><br />
Of course, Foreman’s business success started with his success as an athlete. Born in 1949 in Marshall, Texas, Foreman, nicknamed “Big George,” was one of seven children in a struggling home. By the time he was 15, he was a street thug and mugger in Houston’s dangerous 5th Ward. His life changed when he left for California to join the Job Corps and was introduced to the discipline of boxing. In 1968, Foreman won the Olympic Gold medal in Mexico City, in only his 25th amateur fight. A world champion was born.</p>
<p>Within a few years of turning professional, Foreman’s record was 37 wins—most by knockout—and no losses. In 1973, he defeated Joe Frazier to become heavyweight champion of the world. Despite his fame, he maintained a cold distance from the public, and his surly demeanor earned him occasional boos in the ring. He defended his title twice before losing it to Muhammad Ali in the “Rumble in the Jungle” in 1974.</p>
<p>A few years later, Foreman announced what he thought was his retirement. A religious awakening led him to pursue a life in the church. He didn’t know at the time that the seeds of his business success lay in these days of personal transformation.</p>
<p>“It started because I left boxing in 1977 and worked in evangelism at a church in Marshall,” he says. Foreman had made a fortune in boxing, but now turned his attention fully to his faith. “I spent all my time preaching with lots of money. Lots of money.” But he didn’t preach like a rich man. He spent countless nights out on the streets of Houston, in all weather. Just as in his boxing career, he was relentless.</p>
<p>He also made good on a personal pledge to help at-risk youth, just as he had been helped during his early days as a teenage thug. After he joined the Job Corps, a counselor saw young George’s potential and got him involved in boxing, possibly saving him from a life of crime or jail or worse. Foreman wanted to provide the same kind of opportunities for young people and in 1984 founded The George Foreman Youth &amp; Community Center, which offers scholastic and athletic activities including, of course, boxing.</p>
<p>But 10 years after he left boxing, he says he looked up and was on the verge of bankruptcy. “I had to go back into boxing for our survival, to feed my family.” Fortunately, his years spent preaching on the streets of Houston had taught him valuable lessons that would carry him into a second career as a businessman. “What I found was the 10 years I was out of boxing, I was preaching on the street corner and I’d make people stop. They didn’t know me,” he says, “the old George with an afro and all that. So I realized I could stop these people, who are always headed somewhere, for a second and sell my message. That’s what I learned to do on the street corner.”</p>
<p>He tried applying his newfound skills in the boxing world. “So I went back to boxing trying to sell the old George Foreman heavyweight champion of the world,” he says. “Nobody wanted to buy it, though.” Foreman was 38 when he returned to the ring, a tough sell for any athletic comeback. But the man in front of the camera this time wasn’t cool or removed. He had a gentleness about him that contrasted his toughness in the ring, and that appealed to the public.</p>
<p>“In time, I learned the importance of selling,” he says. Foreman realized he had power outside the ring to influence how people viewed him. In 1994, at the age of 44, Foreman reclaimed the heavyweight title. “That’s when people started to say, ‘This guy can sell himself. Let’s let him sell Doritos or Kentucky Fried or McDonald’s.’ ” And sell, he did. In addition to promoting these companies, Foreman became the spokesman for Meineke Car Care Centers. The boxer and preacher was now an advertiser’s dream come true.</p>
<p>But he says his athletic ability was less a factor in his business success than his selling skills. “If you learn to sell, it’s worth more than a degree,” he says.” It’s worth more than the heavyweight championship of the world. It’s even more important than having a million dollars in the bank. Learn to sell and you’ll never starve.”</p>
<p><strong>Integrity: His Greatest Asset</strong><br />
“The greatest asset, even in this country, is not oil and gas,” Foreman says. “It’s integrity. Everyone is searching for it, asking, ‘Who can I do business with that I can trust?’ ”</p>
<p>By 1994, Foreman’s life was again on the upswing. When he took the opportunity to endorse what is now the George Foreman Lean, Mean, Fat-Reducing Grilling Machine, he found a new drive to help people improve their lives by improving their health. Now he won’t settle for anything less when it comes to endorsements. “One of the biggest things is to fight,” he says. “Just don’t go absolutely for the buck.”</p>
<p>Foreman learned after his fi rst retirement that to go back into boxing he had to protect the brand of George Foreman. “So now I understand you must preserve the quality of your name, your integrity,” he says. “You don’t want to lie about anything. And it’s something that people will be happy about once they get to know you. Because people count on you. You know, a contract you can easily break. I’ve found in business, everyone signs a contract to make a business deal, and they always leave a loophole so they can break them.</p>
<p>Foreman says people with integrity are in high demand. “There are a lot of guys who are successful, they make a lot of big money, I mean millions overnight with a contract, and they don’t understand the evaporation. It evaporates. You’re always back to square one. I found that out, so integrity is how I do business. That’s my main asset.”</p>
<p>This attitude is one he intends to impart to his kids. He has 10 children—five with his current wife, Mary “Joan” Martelly. George III, nicknamed “Monk,” is Foreman’s business manager. “Your children are looking at exactly what you do,” he says. “You’ve got to believe in something. And you’ve got a line that you can’t cross. I point this out.</p>
<p>“I’ll give you an example. I had the opportunity to go into the restaurant business. A chain of restaurants, the George Foreman restaurants. And it was an opportunity right out to make lots of money.” But Foreman is opposed to selling liquor in his establishments, in accordance with his religious beliefs. “And they said, ‘Well, this is what will make more profi ts. You can just donate them to charity.’ I said, ‘No, I can’t do that.’ And my sons, who were in business with me, watching me put this deal together, they could not understand it. They just couldn’t understand. Not to say that they have to have the same feelings I have about things. But at least have something you believe in and you cannot be talked out of by dollars and cents. And that’s what I try to pass on.”</p>
<p><strong>The Old Shotgun Tactic</strong><br />
Foreman is approached by hundreds of potential business partners every year. He reviews offers daily with George III, and asks for input from his wife and children before he signs a deal. So how does he choose from all the opportunities he sees? “I call it the old shotgun tactic,” he says. “My grandfather used to go out hunting during the days of the Depression. The good shooters, the marksmen, shot with one shell.” But during the Great Depression, you couldn’t put all your bets on one bullet because those bullets were expensive. “If you missed the squirrel, so to speak, you don’t have anything but an excuse on the table,” Foreman says. “But if you buy these cheap shots, which are buckshots, they scatter. You come back in with a squirrel. Although you got a lot of buckshot in it, you got a decent meal on the table.</p>
<p>“So now I use the same thing, although you’ve got to be selective because you have a name to protect.” Foreman believes that one of the many opportunities he investigates will hit it big. “You know you put out a lot of buckshot, you’re going to strike one,” he says. “You’ve got to start out early in the morning and look at hundreds, literally hundreds of things, looking for that quality. And it may take a year, it may take three or four years, but you’re going to hit something so you have something to put on the table for your family.”</p>
<p>Foreman’s company, George Foreman Enterprises, consistently strikes new deals for products and services that meet Foreman’s requirements of being high-quality and beneficial to the consumer. He has lent his name to a line of clothing for big and t a l l men sold by Casual Male and endorsed a new brand of shoes for diabetics by InStride as well as a health-food restaurant chain called UFood Grill.</p>
<p>“And then we have the green cleaning products, which I’ve been working on for a couple years,” he says. “We finally got it absolutely, totally biodegradable.” He hopes that using biodegradable products, like George Foreman’s Knock-Out Household Cleaning System, will help preserve the land for his grandchildren. His other hope is that the established cleaning-product manufacturers will follow suit. “This is going to be so good it’s going to make the big companies jealous, and they’re going to outdo me. And I still win,” he says. “I still win. Because it makes the planet much better.”</p>
<p>But it doesn’t end there. Through Foreman’s Web site, visitors can purchase cookbooks, memoirs and autographed boxing gloves. His 10 books, three of which were published by Thomas Nelson in the last two years, offer inspirational insights into life, comebacks and fatherhood. And then there are the grills. The newest version, the 360 Grill, is selling well and is one of several George Foreman brand small kitchen appliances, including the Lean Mean Fryer for reduced-fat frying and the Grill &amp; Roast for convection cooking.</p>
<p>He’s also become a star of the small screen; his reality series Family Foreman starring him and his family debuted in 2008 on the cable channel TV Land, and an ABC sitcom starring Foreman ran for nine episodes in 1993-94.</p>
<p>Foreman has succeeded in creating more than a brand. He has created a relationship with consumers based on integrity and a gift for making the sale. This relationship allows him to transfer his brand to a wide range of products and succeed in staying diversified. “The bottom line is, you make a decision you’ll be able to sleep with, wake up the next day, look in the mirror and feel good about yourself,” Foreman says.</p>
<p>“You want to leave something, you really do,” he says. “I mean, in the end, statues and all those things, that doesn’t mean anything. Leave something that we’re all going to benefit from. I think that’s what I’d like to do.</p>
<p><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Apply Foreman&#8217;s philosophies for success in your life:<br />
</span></strong><br />
<strong>1.</strong> Belief: &#8220;You have to have something you believe in. It could be someone you believe in, too. But at least have something you believe in and you cannot be talked out of by dollars and cents.&#8221;<br />
<strong>2.</strong> Integrity: &#8220;You must preserve the quality of your name, your integrity. You don&#8217;t want to lie about anything. And it&#8217;s something that people will be happy about once they get to know you. Because people count on you.&#8221;<br />
<strong>3.</strong> Sales: &#8220;Learn to sell and you&#8217;ll never starve.&#8221;<br />
<strong>4.</strong> Resilience: &#8220;You&#8217;re going to fail if you do enough business. But you can always come back because you&#8217;ve got some integrity, and people need that.&#8221;<br />
<strong>5.</strong> Persistence: &#8220;It may take a year, it may take three or four years, but you&#8217;re going to hit something so you have something to put on the table for your family.&#8221;<br />
<strong>6.</strong> Legacy: &#8220;You want to leave something, you really do. I mean, in the end, statues and all those things, they don&#8217;t mean anything. Leave something that we&#8217;re all going to benefit from.&#8221;</p>
<p><a href="http://sta.rtup.biz/profiles/blogs/big-business-with-big-george" target="_blank">[via Sta.rtup.biz]</a> by <em>Amy Anderson</em></p>
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		<title>Ten Best Green Jobs for the Next Decade</title>
		<link>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/ten-best-green-jobs-for-the-next-decade/</link>
		<comments>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/ten-best-green-jobs-for-the-next-decade/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Feb 2009 21:58:01 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivan</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.themcompanies.com/?p=726</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;It&#8217;s time to bail out the people and the planet,&#8221; says Van Jones [1], author of The Green Collar Economy: How One Solution Can Fix Our Two Biggest Problems [2]. We agree, and this guide to to sustainability-focused career paths will help retrofit and solar-charge your work life. The TOP TEN GREEN JOBS FOR THE [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" title="green recycle" src="http://www.sfbg.com/blogs/politics/green.gif" alt="" width="375" height="375" /></p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s time to bail out the people and the planet,&#8221; says Van Jones [1], author of The Green Collar Economy: How One Solution Can Fix Our Two Biggest Problems [2]. We agree, and this guide to to sustainability-focused career paths will help retrofit and solar-charge your work life.</p>
<p>The <strong>TOP TEN GREEN JOBS FOR THE NEXT DECADE:</strong><span id="more-726"></span></p>
<p><strong>Farmer</strong></p>
<p>America has only two million farmers, and their average age is 55. Since sustainable agriculture requires small-scale, local, organic methods rather than petroleum-based machines and fertilizers, there is a huge need for more farmers &#8212; up to tens of millions of them, according to food guru Michael Pollan. Modern farmers are small businesspeople who must be as skilled in heirloom genetics as marketing.</p>
<p><em>Schools</em>: University of Vermont: Center for Sustainable Agriculture; Stone Barns Center For Food &amp; Agriculture in New York State; University of Oklahoma: Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture; Evergreen State College: degree in Sustainable Agriculture.</p>
<p><em>Related careers</em>: urban gardener; farmers market and CSA coordinator; artisanal cheesemakers; and other food producers.</p>
<p><strong>Forester</strong></p>
<p>Modern forestry is a complex combination of international project finance, conservation and development. According to the World Bank, a staggering 1.6 billion people depend on the forest for their livelihoods. Foresters help local people transition from slash-and-burn to silviculture&#8211;teaching cultivation of higher-value, faster-growing species for fruit, medicine or timber, for example while carefully documenting the impact on the environment. Deforestation, which causes around a quarter of all global warming, is also likely to be a leading source of <span style="text-decoration: underline;">carbon credits worth tens of billions of dollars</span> [3].</p>
<p><em>Schools</em>: Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies; Duke University: Nicholas School of the Environment; University of Michigan: School of Natural Resources &amp; Environment.</p>
<p><em>Companies/organizations</em>: The Nature Conservancy; New Forests Inc.</p>
<p><strong>Solar Power Installer</strong></p>
<p>Making and installing solar power systems already accounts for some 770,000 jobs globally. Installing solar-thermal water heaters and rooftop photovoltaic cells is a relatively high-paying job&#8211;$15 to $35 an hour&#8211;for those with construction skills. And opportunities are available all over the United States, wherever the sun shines. Currently over 3,400 companies in the solar energy sector employ 25,000 to 35,000 workers. The Solar Energy Industries Association predicts an increase to over 110,000 jobs by 2016 &#8212; even more if <span style="text-decoration: underline;">anticipated tax credits are accelerated</span> [4].</p>
<p><em>Companies</em>: Akeena Solar; Sungevity; Sunpower; Full list at SEIA.org.</p>
<p><strong>Energy Efficiency Builder</strong> Buildings account for up to 48 percent of US energy use and greenhouse gas emissions. LEED, the major green building certification, has <span style="text-decoration: underline;">over 43,000 accredited professionals</span> [5]. But the cutting edge in efficient buildings goes far beyond LEED. Buildings constructed according to Passivhaus and MINERGIE-P standards in Germany and Switzerland, respectively, use between 75% and 95% less heat energy than a similar building constructed to the latest codes in the US. Greening the US building stock will take not only skilled architects and engineers, but a workforce of retrofitters who can use spray foam insulation and storm windows to massively improve the R-value (thermal resistance) of the draftiest old houses. A study by the Apollo Alliance recommended an $89.9 billion investment in financing to create 827,260 jobs in green buildings &#8212; an initiative supported by the Obama stimulus package, which <span style="text-decoration: underline;">specifically mentions energy retrofits</span> [6].</p>
<p><em>Schools</em>: Arizona State University School of Architecture: Energy Performance Climate-Responsive Architecture; University of Michigan: Alfred A. Taubman College of Architecture + Urban Planning; The Earth Institute at Columbia University.</p>
<p><strong>Wind Turbine Fabricator</strong></p>
<p>Wind is the leading and fastest-growing source of alternative energy with over 300,000 jobs worldwide. Turbines are 90% metal by weight, creating an opportunity for autoworkers and other manufacturers to repurpose their skills. According to the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">American Wind Energy Association</span> [7], the industry currently employs some 50,000 Americans and added 10,000 new jobs in 2007. Their <span style="text-decoration: underline;">job board</span> [8] is an excellent place to start looking for opportunities.</p>
<p><em>Companies</em>: Vestas; Siemens; GE Energy.</p>
<p><strong>Conservation Biologist</strong> The granddaddy of diversity, E.O. Wilson, famously called conservation biology &#8212; a discipline with a deadline. The urgent quest to preserve the integrity of ecosystems around the world &#8212; and to quantify the value of &#8212; ecosystems services &#8212; leads to opportunities in teaching, research and fieldwork for government, nonprofits, and private companies. The forthcoming economic stimulus package from the Obama administration offers the prospect of <span style="text-decoration: underline;">increased federal support for science and research</span> [9].</p>
<p><em>Schools</em>: Center for Conservation Biology at the University of Washington and the Center for Conservation Biology at Stanford University. At the small <span style="text-decoration: underline;">College of the Atlantic</span> [10] every student gets his or her degree in human ecology; it&#8217;s been called the most sustainable college or university in the world.</p>
<p><strong>Green MBA and Entrepreneur</strong></p>
<p>The concept of the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">triple bottom line</span> [11] has migrated from the margins to the mainstream of the business world. A recent report by the U.S. Conference of Mayors, Mayors Climate Protection Center found that business services like legal, research and consulting account for the majority of all green jobs &#8212; over 400,000. This includes everything from marketing to the LOHAS (Lifestyles of Health and Sustainability) segment, to serving as a VP of sustainability within a large company, to piloting a green startup like Method or Recyclebank.</p>
<p><em>Schools</em>: Stanford School of Business; San Francisco&#8217;s Presidio School of Management; Leeds School of Business; University of Colorado at Boulder &#8212; Deming Center for Entrepreneurship; the Bainbridge Graduate Institute in Wash.</p>
<p><strong>Recycler</strong> The total number of recycling jobs in the United States is at more than 1 million, according to <span style="text-decoration: underline;">recent reports</span> [12] (<em>PDF, right click to save</em>). Although the market for paper and plastic has slowed down recently due to the economic downturn, demand for steel is still strong &#8212; 42 percent of output came from scrap in 2006 &#8212; and recycling remains the economical alternative to high disposal fees. Worldwide more than 200,000 people work in secondary steel production, and the US is a major center of production. <span style="text-decoration: underline;">New laws and regulations</span> [13] are also creating a need for specialized companies that can close the loop by recycling and repurposing e-waste, clothing, plastic bags, construction waste, and other materials.</p>
<p><em>Companies</em>: Rumpke; Greenstar North America.</p>
<p><strong>Sustainability Systems Developer</strong> The green economy needs a cadre of specialized software developers and engineers who design, build, and maintain the networks of sensors and stochastic modeling that underpin wind farms, smart energy grids, congestion pricing and other systems substituting intelligence for natural resources. Coders with experience using large scale enterprise resource planning have an edge here, as well as developers familiar with <span style="text-decoration: underline;">open source and web 2.0</span> [14] applications.</p>
<p><em>Companies</em>: IBM, V2Green, WindLogics</p>
<p><strong>Urban Planner</strong> Urban and regional planning is a linchpin of the quest to lower America&#8217;s carbon footprint. Strengthening mass transit systems, limiting sprawl, encouraging use of bicycles and deemphasizing cars is only part of the job. Equally important is contingency planning, as floods, heat waves and garbage creep become increasingly common problems for metropolises. Employment in this sector is projected to grow 15 percent by 2016, and the jobs are mainly in local governments, which make them a slightly safer bet for the downturn.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.fastcompany.com/articles/2009/01/best-green-jobs.html" target="_blank">[via Fast Company]</a> by Anya Kamenetz</p>
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		<title>Super Bowl XLIII Ads: Teased, Remixed, Too Hot for TV</title>
		<link>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/super-bowl-xliii-ads-teased-remixed-too-hot-for-tv/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 31 Jan 2009 17:13:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Big Business]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.themcompanies.com/?p=716</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The most sacred of American annual rites is upon us: sitting through an over-hyped football game to see cutting-edge TV ads that occasionally rival feature films for production value and creativity. But this year it isn&#8217;t just about television &#8212; the spotlight&#8217;s online. Some of America&#8217;s biggest brands are experimenting with viral ads, user generated [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" title="super bowl xliii" src="http://directtree.net/muxr9weqehxhu2xfthqse4tdx.gif" alt="" width="376" height="249" /></p>
<p>The most sacred of American annual rites is upon us: sitting through an over-hyped football game to see cutting-edge TV ads that occasionally rival feature films for production value and creativity.</p>
<p>But this year it isn&#8217;t just about television &#8212; the spotlight&#8217;s online.<span id="more-716"></span></p>
<p>Some of America&#8217;s biggest brands are experimenting with viral ads, user generated ads, online remixes and web-only versions that are too-hot-for-TV.</p>
<p>&#8220;The broad &#8216;digital swing&#8217; this year is striking,&#8221; said Tim Lefkowicz, president of <a href="http://blog.collectiveintellect.com/">Collective Intellect</a>, an online marketing company based in Boulder, Colorado.</p>
<p>Some familiar faces like General Motors and FedEX have <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601079&amp;sid=a2JO_OjRaiqM&amp;refer=home">decided to punt</a> this year, but NBC has nearly sold out its <a href="http://www.nfl.com/superbowl/43">Super Bowl XLIII</a> ad inventory at up to $3 million for a 30-second spot. It&#8217;s worth it: Viewership always reaches stratospheric levels for the game, approaching 100 million people in the U.S. alone and about a billion worldwide.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s a challenge and an opportunity, and every year the bar is raised. This may be the year that geeky cred plays a big part in pushing the envelope.</p>
<p>&#8220;In years past only smaller, more tech-savvy companies relied heavily on digital methods, in large part due to the high cost of a Super Bowl second, but also because they understood the values and habits of its core consumer better,&#8221; said Lefkowicz.</p>
<p>This year, brands as big as Miller, Doritos, PepsiCo and Hyundai Motors are running ads with a major online component.</p>
<p>Doritos is experimenting online this year with an ad consisting entirely of user generated content. &#8220;<a href="http://crashthesuperbowl.com/#/contestinfo/">Crash the Super Bowl</a>&#8221; had people submit their own ads and vote on the which one should appear in the official spot.</p>
<p>The winner gets an additional $1 million if the ad makes it to the number one spot on USA Today&#8217;s Ad Meter. The online gallery of submissions includes a man chasing a bag of chips around the floor after teasing a cat with a laser pointer, and a guy who discovers the power of &#8220;The Crunch&#8221; where a woman loses her clothes and a policeman turns into a monkey.</p>
<div class="entry-more">
<p>Miller Lite is betting on online hype to raise awareness for a series of 1-second only ads for Miller High Life. The ads would make little sense on TV without an online education campaign. It has created <a href="http://www.1secondad.com/">a website</a> where viewers can watch a 30-second teaser and some of the ads that didn&#8217;t make the cut for the Super Bowl.</p>
<p>Gatorade, a Pepsi product, has been testing viral ads in anticipation of the Super Bowl that refer to the sports drink as “G.” The “<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X4dm-OnmLXY">What’s G?</a>” teasers have been televised and also appear online. The vague ads feature multiple celebrities, including Li&#8217;l Wayne, Serena Williams, Derek Jeter and the JabbaWockeez Dance Crew, and have created quite <a href="http://www.marketingshift.com/2009/1/gatorade-lures-fans-online-what.cfm">a stir</a> in the blogosphere.</p>
<p><object width="425" height="344" data="http://www.youtube.com/v/X4dm-OnmLXY&amp;color1=0xb1b1b1&amp;color2=0xcfcfcf&amp;hl=en&amp;feature=player_embedded&amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/X4dm-OnmLXY&amp;color1=0xb1b1b1&amp;color2=0xcfcfcf&amp;hl=en&amp;feature=player_embedded&amp;fs=1" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /></object></p>
<p>E*Trade is another big name when it comes to Super Bowl Sunday. Its popular &#8220;Talking Baby&#8221; debuted last year, and will make a reappearance on Feb. 1 despite a recent announcement that the company will reduce ad spending in 2009.  The new commercial will be centered around the weak economy, and its premier on Sunday accompanies a big online marketing push.</p>
<p>&#8220;If you go to our page in YouTube you will find a short series of outtakes of commercials that are not being run with the baby which have been getting successful reception,&#8221; said CEO Donald Layton in the company&#8217;s <a href="http://seekingalpha.com/article/116900-e-trade-financial-corporation-q4-2008-earnings-call-transcript?source=wildcard&amp;page=-1">Q4 conference call</a>.&#8221;We put it out just last Friday night, and so we&#8217;re starting to do some pre-marketing buzz in a viral manner.&#8221;</p>
<p>As part of this viral campaign and in addition to the <a href="http://www.youtube.com/etrade">YouTube channel</a>, E*Trade now has a Talking Baby <a href="http://twitter.com/etradebaby">Twitter account</a> and <a href="http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/pages/ETRADE-Baby/45441344525">Facebook page</a>.</p>
<p>Hyundai Motors reeled in Billy Corgan and drummer Jimmy Chamberlin of the Smashing Pumpkins for a pre-game spot advertising the new Genesis Coupe. The “The Epic Lap” ad, created by Goodby, Silverstein &amp; Partners, features a new song from the band called “FOL.”</p>
<p>The video will be available for remixing at <a href="http://www.edityourown.com/">www.edityourown.com</a>, and includes multiple shots of high speed drifting for an interactive mashup.</p>
<p><object width="425" height="344" data="http://www.youtube.com/v/GiV0BK2591I&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/GiV0BK2591I&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /></object></p>
<p>“We hope it’s going to change the brand image, and we’re confident that it will,” said Genesis Coupe product manager Derek Joyce.</p>
<p>And one of the brands that has become rather infamous for its racy Super Bowl ads, GoDaddy.com, plans to once again air a web-only version of its too-hot-for-TV ad online at the start of the Superbowl.</p>
<p><object width="480" height="295" data="http://www.youtube.com/v/i4F7mqeL8cU&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/i4F7mqeL8cU&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /></object></p>
<p>&#8220;Viewers have come to expect our edgy internet-only versions on Super Bowl Sunday and this year&#8217;s online video really pushes the envelope,&#8221; said Bob Parsons, GoDaddy&#8217;s CEO and founder.  &#8220;In fact, the extended version of &#8216;Baseball&#8217; almost makes me blush.&#8221;</p>
<p>For the first time in five years of Super Bowl advertising, GoDaddy says it received approval for two different ads weeks before the game.</p>
<p>“Baseball” and “Shower” both feature IndyCar driver Danica Patrick. The first has her making fun of the steroid saga, while the other features Patrick showering with another women while three guys manipulate their actions online.</p>
<p>The teaser ads were <a href="http://www.bobparsons.me/1stAnnualDingDong.html?watch=1">pre-screened</a> on GoDaddy’s <a href="http://www.godaddy.com/default.aspx">website</a>, and voted on by the public. The winner will be revealed at the start of the game.</p>
<p>But the most shocking, controversial Super Bowl ad that is arguably getting the most exposure without the $3 million price tag, will never actually be aired during the game.  PETA&#8217;s &#8220;Veggie Love&#8221;, which depicts scantily clad woman licking, stroking and nearly having sex with vegetables, was <a href="http://www.peta.org/content/standalone/VeggieLove/Default.aspx">banned by NBC</a>.</p>
<p><a href="http://video.google.com/superbowl.html" target="_blank">CLICK HERE FOR PAST COMMERCIALS</a></p>
<p><a href="http://blog.wired.com/business/2009/01/super-bowl-43-a.html" target="_blank">[via WIRED]</a> by <span style="margin-right: 20px;"><span id="contributor" class="c cs">Chris Snyder</span> <a href="mailto:chris_snyder@wired.com"><img src="http://blog.wired.com/images/icon_email.gif" alt="Email" /></a></span></p>
<p><em><a href="http://crashthesuperbowl.com/"></a> </em></div>
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		<title>Gut Check: An Interview with Tony Hawk</title>
		<link>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/gut-check-an-interview-with-tony-hawk/</link>
		<comments>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/gut-check-an-interview-with-tony-hawk/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Jan 2009 14:08:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[branding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[business development]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Business Gurus]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Small Business]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[activision]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[birdhouse projects]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[shaun white]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[tony hawk]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.themcompanies.com/?p=662</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Tony Hawk may be more a businessman than skater now, but his success in both comes from following his instincts. Tony Hawk is rich and chief executive of his own company, but that doesn’t mean he’s changed all that much from the skateboarding kid with a junk food diet. In fact, it’s something he says [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><!-- /#byline_wrapper --></p>
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<div class="dek">Tony Hawk may be more a businessman than skater now, but his success in both comes from following his instincts.</div>
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// --></script> <span class="dropCap">T</span>ony Hawk is rich and chief executive of his own company, but that doesn’t mean he’s changed all that much from the skateboarding kid with a junk food diet. In fact, it’s something he says makes him a better C.E.O.</p>
<p>For Hawk, it&#8217;s always been about being true to one&#8217;s self, or at least his constituency—the skaters.<span id="more-662"></span></p>
<p>&#8220;You have to be approachable and identify with your audience,&#8221; Hawk said. &#8220;I never forgot where I came from. I still continue to skate with the kids and see what they&#8217;re up to. I still eat at McDonald&#8217;s.&#8221;<br />
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<div class="linkItem"><a href="http://www.portfolio.com/slideshows/2008/09/Tony-Hawk"><span><img class="mltIcn" style="display: inline;" title="slideshows" src="http://www.portfolio.com/images/site/icn/icon_slideshows.gif" border="0" alt="slideshows" /> Sky High </span></a></div>
<div class="linkItem"><a href="http://www.portfolio.com/video/back-to-back/tony-hawk-one"><span><img class="mltIcn" style="display: inline;" title="videos" src="http://www.portfolio.com/images/site/icn/icon_videos.gif" border="0" alt="videos" /> Tony Hawk on Authenticity</span></a></div>
<div class="linkItem"><a href="http://www.portfolio.com/guides/Back-to-Back-Hawk-Heiden-Rigby"><span><img class="mltIcn" style="display: inline;" title="videos" src="http://www.portfolio.com/images/site/icn/icon_videos.gif" border="0" alt="videos" /> Watch more interviews with Tony Hawk</span></a></div>
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<p>Hawk has never lost touch with that audience and doesn&#8217;t want to. And that may be the key to the success of his Tony Hawk Inc., a privately held business with 30 employees working from an office park 40 miles north of San Diego.</p>
<p>&#8220;(I want to) actually experience it and not hire a marketing group to do it for you and then you&#8217;re out of touch and you&#8217;re relying on whatever their vision is,&#8221; Hawks said.</p>
<p>Hawk started skating at the age of nine and three years later he gained his first sponsor.</p>
<p>Two years later at 14, he turned professional and in the following two years, he was considered the best skateboarder in the world. Over the next 17 years, he won enough contests–enough to think he was set for life.</p>
<p>He launched a skateboarding company, Birdhouse Projects, but it struggled as pubic interest slumped. Hawk slumped, too, financially. But when skateboarding and extreme sports began to grab the spotlight, he seized the opportunity.</p>
<p>His defining moment could be deemed when he went to the 1999 X-Games in <span class="mmHolder"><a href="http://www.portfolio.com/business-travel/city-guides/san-francisco/" target="_self">San Francisco</a></span> and completed the first &#8220;900&#8243; in skateboarding competition. (A 900 is a jump of two-and-one-half rotations, 360 degrees + 360 degrees + 180 degrees = 900).</p>
<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t really anticipate making (the 900) that night,&#8221; Hawk said. &#8220;I told myself that night that I was going to make that trick or get taken to the hospital.&#8221;</p>
<p>That kind of determination <span class="mmHolder"><a href="http://www.portfolio.com/video/back-to-back/tony-hawk-one">served Hawk in business</a></span>, too.</p>
<p>&#8220;I go with my gut feeling,&#8221; Hawk said. &#8220;Is this is something that is truly connected with what I do.&#8221;</p>
<p>He trusts his instinct because &#8220;I do live in this world. I didn&#8217;t learn about it through videos or books. I actually did it and struggled with it.&#8221;As a businessman, Hawk now has racked up unusual success.</p>
<p>His video game series with <a id="COMPANY_2539" onmouseover="popOver(this);" onmouseout="unPopOver(this);" href="http://www.portfolio.com/resources/company-profiles/Activision-Blizzard-Incorporated-2539">Activision</a> has sold more than 30 million copies and the newest releases are frequently among the top 10 sellers in the business. He’s done a direct-to-DVD movie, a clothing brand that’s sold at Kohl’s and last year, the Tony Hawk Big Spin roller coasters made their debut at Six Flags’ Amusement Parks.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s all in addition to his skateboarding business and an extreme sports tour called Tony Hawk&#8217;s Boom Boom HuckJam, which he started in 2002.</p>
<p>Hawk also founded the Tony Hawk Foundation, which is designed to promote and help finance public skate parks in low-income areas.</p>
<p>The foundation has distributed more than $2.3 million to non-profit groups building skate parks everywhere from Homer, Alaska to Needles, Calif., to Greencastle, Ind., to Livermore Falls, Maine.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.portfolio.com/executives/features/2008/09/15/Tony-Hawks-Business-Successes" target="_blank">[via Conde Nast Portfolio]</a> <span class="byline"> by Phillip Lee </span></p>
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		<title>The Wired Presidency: Can Obama Really Reboot The White House?</title>
		<link>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/the-wired-presidency-can-obama-really-reboot-the-white-house/</link>
		<comments>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/the-wired-presidency-can-obama-really-reboot-the-white-house/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Jan 2009 13:28:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivan</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[In November, not two weeks after winning the election and still two months from becoming commander in chief, Barack Obama brought the government into the 21st century. Or at least that was what we were told when he released his first Web video address as president-elect. The clip, billed by some as a modern fireside [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" title="obama wired" src="http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1702/ff_obama_f.jpg" alt="" width="421" height="401" /></p>
<p><strong>In November,</strong> not two weeks after winning the election and still two months from becoming commander in chief, Barack Obama brought the government into the 21st century. Or at least that was what we were told when he released his <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zd8f9Zqap6U">first Web video address</a> as president-elect. The clip, billed by some as a modern fireside chat, was embedded as a YouTube video on Change.gov, the incoming administration&#8217;s Web site. Sitting in a leather chair, framed slightly off center from his chest up, Obama delivered a three-minute talk on the economic crisis, vlog style.<span id="more-618"></span></p>
<p>The video quickly racked up hundreds of thousands of views, and within a few days hundreds of blogs were linking to it. Obama&#8217;s foray into viral video, the story went, heralded the beginning of a new era in government communication and transparency—&#8221;Franklin Roosevelt 2.0,&#8221; in the words of <cite><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/11/14/obamas-transparent-presid_n_143805.html?view=print">The Huffington Post</a></cite>. <em><a href="http://voices.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/11/14/the_youtube_presidency.html">The Washington Post</a></em> proclaimed the advent of the &#8220;YouTube presidency.&#8221;</p>
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<div id="caption"><strong>1 million:</strong><br />
The number of views received by Obama&#8217;s first YouTube address as president-elect.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>It wasn&#8217;t long, however, before savvy observers noted what was missing from this and other Obama videos: the chance for ordinary citizens to talk back. The campaign initially disabled the comment function on YouTube and prevented response videos from appearing alongside. A YouTube video without comments, some pundits groused, is more like a monologue than a chat, fireside or not. &#8220;I don&#8217;t see how one-way messages provide any more transparency for the work of the White House or government than the current old-style radio addresses,&#8221; <a href="http://blog.sunlightfoundation.com/2008/11/14/youtube-fireside-chats-need-to-be-interactive/">blogged Ellen Miller</a>, director of the Sunlight Foundation, a government-transparency watchdog group. &#8220;Is Obama ready,&#8221; <a href="http://www.techcrunch.com/2008/11/15/is-obama-ready-to-be-a-two-way-president/">challenged TechCrunch</a>, &#8220;to be a two-way president?&#8221;</p>
<p>Of course, Obama&#8217;s transition team had good reasons for disabling responses. For starters, YouTube comments are typically the intellectual equivalent of truck-stop graffiti. (When the team belatedly allowed comments a couple of weeks later, the site was flooded with <a href="http://www.youtube.com/comment_servlet?all_comments&amp;v=Zd8f9Zqap6U&amp;fromurl=/watch%3Fv%3DZd8f9Zqap6U">insights</a> like &#8220;USA susks.&#8221;) Also, his team would have zero control over the potentially critical or embarrassing response videos that users would post next to the address. The real reason, however, was that Obama wasn&#8217;t actually trying to have a conversation <em>with</em> Americans via YouTube. Like every president before him, he was simply harnessing the latest tools <em>to</em> talk to them, one-way.</p>
<p>Technophiles who watched the campaign closely expected more, and now they are putting pressure on the White House to govern with unparalleled transparency and citizen interaction. Dan Froomkin of the Niemen Watchdog Journalism Project and <cite>The Washington Post</cite> summed up expectations in a <a href="http://www.niemanwatchdog.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=background.view&amp;backgroundid=00307">blog post calling</a> for Obama to embrace &#8220;wiki culture&#8221; in which &#8220;major policy proposals have public collaborative workspaces.&#8221;</p>
<div id="embed">
<div id="pic"><img src="http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1702/ff_obama_icon_twitter_250.gif" alt="" /></p>
<div id="caption"><strong>150,000+ subscribers</strong><br />
follow Obama&#8217;s Twitter feed.</p>
<p><strong>0 tweets</strong><br />
have been posted by Obama staffers since the election.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>Obama has himself to blame for raising such expectations. During the campaign, he embraced every form of social media. At <a href="http://my.barackobama.com/">My.BarackObama.com</a>, supporters could create profiles, talk to each other, and—by election day—plan some 200,000 offline dinners and living room fund-raisers. Users could log in from home to get lists of swing-state voters to telephone; this generated <a href="http://voices.washingtonpost.com/the-trail/2008/11/20/obama_raised_half_a_billion_on.html">3 million calls</a> in the final four days of the race. Those efforts were combined with massive database-crunching to identify potential voters who could be approached door-to-door by last-minute canvassers, myself included.</p>
<p>As for John McCain&#8217;s efforts, well, he didn&#8217;t really have any. According to Andrew Rasiej and Micah Sifry, cofounders of the Personal Democracy Forum and the blog TechPresident, Obama had <a href="http://dyn.politico.com/printstory.cfm?uuid=8D4A3BBC-18FE-70B2-A80E5D5EB3369391">four times</a> the number of Facebook supporters, 24 times the Twitter devotees, and three times the visitors to his site in the final campaign week. The public watched about 15 million hours of Obama campaign videos on YouTube. Along the way, Obama collected 13 million email addresses, more than a million cell phone numbers, and a half-billion dollars in online donations.</p>
<p><!-- pagebreak --> <!-- start article photo --></p>
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<div id="caption"><em><br />
</em></div>
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</div>
<p><!-- close pic -->There&#8217;s also another reason to expect a tech-driven presidency: Obama promised it. He said he would expand government transparency by putting more data up on the Web, streaming meetings live, and letting the public comment on most legislation for five days before he signs it. He said he would bring blogs, wikis, and social networking tools with him into the executive branch—all overseen by a new national chief technology officer. Indeed, Obama&#8217;s transition site, Change.gov, offers glimmers of a potential digital presidency with its YouTube addresses, issue-based discussion forums, and inside-the-transition videos featuring future cabinet members responding to comments.</p>
<p>But turning his innovative campaign and transition into Government 2.0 won&#8217;t be easy. The nimble Obama startup is about to be absorbed into a stodgy, technologically backward behemoth: the federal government. Ahead are bureaucratic obstacles the campaign never imagined, along with the political land mines that transparency brings. Obama will have to preserve the enthusiasm of his supporters while engaging the larger group of people who either didn&#8217;t vote for him or didn&#8217;t vote at all. His task is to rebuild the personal connection that supporters felt they had with Obama the candidate, assuring them that he is listening to them—without being deafened by the cacophony. If he can do that, Obama can alter how the government engages its citizenry and accomplish what he really cares about: his own policy goals.</p>
<p>Building that intimacy from the Oval Office will be a delicate and complex task, and just letting &#8220;AcidTrout&#8221; respond to a YouTube address with &#8220;Who&#8217;s the black guy?!?&#8221; isn&#8217;t going to do it. &#8220;One of the things that gives me ulcers is that there are a lot of high expectations,&#8221; says an Obama aide. &#8220;But we&#8217;re going to have to change how government thinks about the Internet before we can do the things we want to do.&#8221;</p>
<div id="embed">
<div id="pic"><img src="http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1702/ff_obama_icon_pdf_250.gif" alt="" /></p>
<div id="caption"><strong>500+ PDFs</strong><br />
submitted by third parties for viewing and public comment are available on <a href="http://change.gov/">Change.gov</a>.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>Still, <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/in/maconphillips">Macon Phillips</a>, the campaign&#8217;s deputy director of new media, who has served in a similar role for the transition, warns: &#8220;Day one is going to be a lot different than perhaps day 100.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>The basement</strong> of the <a href="http://www.gsa.gov/">General Services Administration</a> building in Washington, with its maze of identical hallways and frosted glass doors, reeks of generic federal bureaucracy. But if the new administration plans to reboot the system, it will find a pair of guides here in <a href="http://www.linkedin.com/pub/1/BBB/AB1">Bev Godwin</a> and <a href="http://www.gcn.com/print/27_11/46279-1.html">Sheila Campbell</a>, cheerful doyens of the executive branch&#8217;s Web strategy. Godwin, director of <a href="http://www.usa.gov/">USA.gov</a>, the federal government&#8217;s all-purpose information Web portal, and Campbell, head of the government&#8217;s Web Best Practices Team, know every manacle and chain shackling the government to the 20th century. In a drab conference room one afternoon in late November, they discussed their optimism—and detailed their concerns.</p>
<p>For starters, the federal government operates more than 24,000 separate sites, many of them years out of date. &#8220;Nobody stepped back and asked strategically, how do we do this?&#8221; Godwin says. &#8220;Whenever there is a new initiative or program, they put up a new Web site.&#8221; And the first thing they usually do on that site, she says, is post a bandwidth-hogging picture of the bureaucrat in charge.</p>
<div id="embed">
<div id="pic"><img src="http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1702/ff_obama_icon_comments_250.gif" alt="" /></p>
<div id="caption"><strong>3,701 comments</strong><br />
on health care were submitted online to secretary of health and human services designate Tom Daschle.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>Godwin and Campbell have been pushing government agencies to treat citizens more like customers, rebuilding their sites to help visitors do things like find loans or obtain passports—rather than serve as static repositories for press releases and personnel photos. &#8220;At Housing and Urban Development, for example, one of the missions is to reduce homelessness,&#8221; Godwin says. &#8220;If you go to <a href="http://www.hud.gov/">HUD.gov</a>, can you find shelter? The answer is no.&#8221; If the government can improve itself in these little ways, they say, great. Don&#8217;t worry about trying wild stuff, like setting up federal social networks. Many agencies bar employees from even <em>looking</em> at sites like Facebook at work, much less building their own versions.</p>
<p><!-- pagebreak -->Progress has been achingly slow. There have been some notable exceptions—like a blog on the <a href="http://www.tsa.gov/blog/">Transportation Security Administration</a> Web site, open to comments and manned by five agency staffers, and NASA.gov&#8217;s numerous <a href="http://www.opennasa.com/2008/06/15/social-media-whats-the-point/">social media initiatives</a>, including Twitter feeds from 20 missions and projects. But the successes are rare and isolated. &#8220;We know that there are a lot of people advocating for more open government,&#8221; Godwin says. &#8220;We&#8217;re saying, absolutely, put the data out there. But I think we have to be realistic.&#8221;</p>
<p>For example, many of Obama&#8217;s online campaign techniques would be impeded by a collection of obscure and well-intentioned rules. <a href="http://www.access-board.gov/sec508/guide/act.htm">Amendments</a> to the 1973 Rehabilitation Act, for example, require that all government Web content be made reasonably accessible—in real time—to disabled users. Also, six months of negotiations between the General Services Administration and Google to establish a federal YouTube channel have stalled over similarly intricate legal issues. Meanwhile, a Clinton-era law called the <a href="http://www.cio.noaa.gov/itmanagement/pra.html">Paperwork Reduction Act</a> requires that an agency undergo a laborious approval process any time it &#8220;surveys&#8221; more than 10 people. The result: &#8220;Agencies tend to avoid doing these kind of surveys,&#8221; Godwin says. Would having users submit information to a social network or wiki count as a survey? Nobody knows.</p>
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<div id="pic"><img src="http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1702/ff_obama_icon_youtube2_250.gif" alt="" /></p>
<div id="caption"><strong>20.3 million:</strong><br />
The number of visits to Obama&#8217;s YouTube channel since its September 2006 launch.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>Even triumphs like Obama&#8217;s 2006 <a href="http://obama.senate.gov/news/060926-obamas_first_la/">Google for Government</a> bill, cosponsored with Republican senator Tom Coburn, have been caught up in red tape. The bill led to the creation of <a href="http://fedspending.org/">FedSpending.org</a>, a site allowing the public to track federal contracts and grants. Instead of building it in-house, the Office of Management and Budget decided to license something similar from a nonprofit watchdog group, <a href="http://www.ombwatch.org/">OMB Watch</a>—for just 4 percent of what the government had expected to spend. It was a striking victory for government efficiency, but the process behind the scenes &#8220;was extremely difficult,&#8221; says <a href="http://www.ombwatch.org/article/articleview/128">Gary Bass</a>, executive director of OMB Watch. After floating the idea of donating the system to OMB (&#8220;the government can&#8217;t take things for free,&#8221; Bass quickly learned), the nonprofit had to sign on as a subcontractor and undergo three rounds, and six wasted months, of bidding before the deal was complete.</p>
<p>Changes to what is effectively the president&#8217;s homepage, <a href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/">WhiteHouse.gov</a>, will encounter similar obstacles. <a href="http://twitter.com/almacy">David Almacy</a>, a PR executive and new media consultant at Waggener Edstrom who served as the Bush administration&#8217;s White House Internet director from 2005 to 2007, recalls that following Hurricane Katrina, he <a href="http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2005/08/20050831-3.html">posted the transcript</a> of a speech to the site. In the text, where Bush had directed people to Redcross.org, Almacy helpfully inserted a hyperlink. &#8220;Within a few hours,&#8221; Almacy says, &#8220;I got a call from the White House general counsel&#8217;s office saying I needed to take out the link.&#8221; Some federal government Web pages, it turns out, are virtually barred from linking to nongovernmental sites to avoid the appearance of endorsing one product or organization over another.</p>
<p>The incoming administration is still working to assess the implications of the <a href="http://www.archives.gov/presidential-libraries/laws/1978-act.html">Presidential Records Act</a>, the post-Nixon legislation requiring the preservation of all White House written communications. But that means that once any page goes up on the White House site, it can&#8217;t be altered, only archived and replaced, greatly slowing down the process of modifying and enhancing pages.</p>
<p>The Obama team was able to sidestep these kinds of troublesome rules on Change.gov, in part because, as a quasi-governmental site, it&#8217;s not subject to executive-branch restrictions. They were able to post videos on YouTube, link to outside sites, and even publish content under a <a href="http://change.gov/newsroom/entry/towards_a_21st_century_government/">Creative Commons license</a>, allowing it to be freely shared.</p>
<div id="embed">
<div id="pic"><img src="http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1702/ff_obama_icon_websites_250.gif" alt="" /></p>
<div id="caption"><strong>24,000 Web sites</strong><br />
are operated by the US government.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>When he does arrive at the White House, Obama or his CTO can lift some of the Internet restrictions with the stroke of a pen. Others will require congressional action or clever technology.</p>
<p>Even if Obama&#8217;s tech team gets a free hand to rework the federal webosphere, things can still go awry. Take the 2006 race of Massachusetts governor Deval Patrick. Both David Axelrod, Obama&#8217;s top campaign strategist, and David Plouffe, his campaign manager, worked for Patrick, a little-known candidate who used Internet-driven grassroots support to win. In a precursor to My.BarackObama .com, the Patrick campaign placed the state&#8217;s voter list on its Web site, allowing its supporters to download phone numbers and call neighbors. &#8220;We believed in people&#8217;s ability to organize themselves and get involved,&#8221; says <a href="http://www.alipescme.com/">Charles SteelFisher</a>, who ran the campaign&#8217;s Web operation.</p>
<p><!-- pagebreak --></p>
<h3>No We Can&#8217;t</h3>
<p>Barack Obama wants to transform the way the White House connects with the public. But there are plenty of obstacles standing in his way. After the election, the governor&#8217;s team launched <a href="http://devalpatrick.com/">DevalPatrick.com</a> to keep supporters engaged. On a <a href="http://devalpatrick.com/issues.php">MyIssue</a> page, registered commenters could propose, comment on, and vote for legislative ideas.</p>
<p>But the administration was immediately blasted when a database feature designed to verify Massachusetts residency was alleged (incorrectly) to reveal unlisted phone numbers. The privacy flap lured a collection of trolls and conspiracy theorists to the site, crowding out earnest discussion on gambling bills and income taxes with 9/11 chatter and religious debates. Critics, meanwhile, said that Patrick&#8217;s efforts were less about engaging the public than about running a permanent online campaign.</p>
<p>Eventually Patrick&#8217;s Web site recovered, developing a more sophisticated way of moderating comments and creating forums around the governor&#8217;s plans to reduce property taxes and add public kindergarten programs. The site also allowed people to create grassroots communities to work on issues they cared about. Still, the public isn&#8217;t exactly burning up the site: The <a href="http://devalpatrick.com/issue/sharedparenting">leading vote-getter</a>, a bill to promote fathers&#8217; custody rights in divorce cases, had just 1,100 tallies as of mid-December. Offshore wind power, meanwhile, was losing, <a href="http://devalpatrick.com/issue.php?issue_id=7595644">16 votes</a> to <a href="http://devalpatrick.com/issue.php?issue_id=7607038">15</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Obama&#8217;s team</strong> has moved carefully as it transitions from campaigning to governing. Between two wars and an economy in shambles, building an Oval Office social network has not topped the priority list. &#8220;Day one, do we need a White House My.BarackObama? I don&#8217;t think so,&#8221; says the Obama aide, who was required by the transition press office to speak anonymously. &#8220;It&#8217;s more important to step back and ask, what are the goals for the White House? And I think that making the government more accountable and transparent is more important than getting people to act.&#8221;</p>
<p>To that end, the transition team served up small accountability stuff first. Change .gov supplemented Obama&#8217;s weekly YouTube addresses with periodic videos from inside the transition process, everything from staff meetings to vlog-type updates from advisers. In early December, Obama&#8217;s public director of liaison and intergovernmental affairs announced—<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v9xYOlxLK5M">via video</a>—a Change.gov feature called <a href="http://change.gov/open_government/yourseatatthetable">Your Seat at the Table</a>, through which the transition would post every document received from every interest group and outside person throwing it advice. Users were allowed to comment next to the documents, while the <a href="http://change.gov/openforquestions">Open for Questions</a> feature let them submit and vote on questions for the transition team. The latter experiment illustrated the double-edged nature of feedback when the Senate-seat-selling scandal involving Illinois governor Rod Blagojevich broke. Supporters began flagging related questions &#8220;inappropriate,&#8221; and then Obama staffers <a href="http://www.google.com/support/faqs/bin/topic.py?topic=15799">buried the queries</a>. ABCNews.com <a href="http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2008/12/obama-transitio.html">jumped on the story</a> and the apparent hypocrisy. <em>Obama Transition Web Site &#8216;Open for Questions&#8217;—Except on Blagojevich</em> read the headline.</p>
<p><!-- pagebreak -->Change.gov does feature some Slashdot-like issue forums where user rankings send the most popular comments to the top. The <a href="http://change.gov/page/content/discusshealthcare">first forum</a>, in which two staffers appeared in a short video on health care policy and asked for comments, garnered thousands of horror stories and policy prescriptions. A week later, one of the staffers reappeared with future health and human services secretary Tom Daschle in a rehearsed-looking YouTube <a href="http://change.gov/newsroom/entry/join_the_discussion_daschles_healthcare_response/">video response</a>. &#8220;We are just so pleased that so many of you have written in,&#8221; Daschle said, appearing extra-pleased. &#8220;I spent a lot of the weekend actually reading the comments &#8230; We want to make sure that you understand how important those comments and your contributions are.&#8221; The comments the pair selected to discuss, however, seemed serendipitously aligned with Obama&#8217;s proposed initiatives.</p>
<div id="embed">
<div id="pic"><img src="http://www.wired.com/images/article/magazine/1702/ff_obama_icon_responses_250.gif" alt="" /></p>
<div id="caption"><strong>550,000 responses</strong><br />
came in from supporters after Obama adviser David Plouffe requested feedback about the campaign.</div>
</div>
</div>
<p>In other words, with everything he&#8217;s done so far, Obama has been acknowledging feedback but not necessarily heeding it. And that&#8217;s what we can expect from Obama&#8217;s plan to post all pending nonemergency legislation online and <a href="http://www.barackobama.com/issues/ethics/">allow the public</a> to comment for five days before he acts on it. By mid-December, technology advisers were still struggling to determine the best way to implement the idea. The bigger question is, what will it accomplish? Even the system&#8217;s own architects concede that it&#8217;s unlikely that online comments and voting will sway the decision to sign or veto.</p>
<p>Nor should it. The Obama team, for all its Web enthusiasm, recognizes that an online community—no matter how vibrant—doesn&#8217;t represent all of the American public. &#8220;A lot of people consider online interactions and communications as representative of Americans. But we have a lot more high-speed Internet lines to drop before that&#8217;s true,&#8221; the Obama aide says. And even with ubiquitous broadband, online voting would remain the ultimate in self-selected polling. There&#8217;s no reason to believe that commenters would reflect Americans as a whole or even that they&#8217;d be Americans at all. Citizens also may not be as interested in the daily machinery of Obama&#8217;s workaday government as they were in his novel campaign. Case in point: By mid-December, views of Obama&#8217;s weekly YouTube address had <a href="http://washingtontimes.com/news/2008/dec/09/obamas-web-presence-loses-its-luster/">dropped by half</a>.</p>
<p>Still, the new administration wants to be able to marshal its supporters to act. Obama himself <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WyNzC9W2C8Q">suggested as much</a> last April. &#8220;Our database has a couple million people on there who are activated and inspired,&#8221; he told a small group in Indianapolis. &#8220;And so what I want to do is to continue that after the election.&#8221; In mid-November, Plouffe sent out a series of emails to supporters. The first directed them to a detailed survey of their campaign experience and policy interests and told them, &#8220;It&#8217;s up to you to decide how we move forward.&#8221; Later, a Plouffe missive declared that &#8220;you&#8217;ll be instrumental in generating support to pass legislation that puts America on the road to recovery.&#8221; At a closed-door meeting with its leading activists in Chicago in December, the Obama team took it a step further and told activists to be ready to pressure Congress on economic stimulus, health care, and energy legislation. A couple of weeks later, the campaign encouraged its supporters to organize &#8220;change is coming&#8221; get-togethers to discuss the future of the Obama movement, online and off.</p>
<p>Obama doesn&#8217;t want his 13 million-name email list to serve as just another political interest group. He needs it to be a tool to keep people engaged with his politics and policies. &#8220;Even if you push through the best government programs,&#8221; says <a href="http://www.gwu.edu/%7Egspm/about/bios/cornfield.shtml">Michael Cornfield</a>, a political-science professor at George Washington University, &#8220;it&#8217;s hard to solve the actual problems&#8221; without effort from regular people. A national health care plan, for example, will work a whole lot better if former precinct captains are willing to explain it to their neighbors, just as they explained how to get to the polls. And a presidential Twitter feed, Flickr photos, or WhiteHouse.gov video Q&amp;A sessions may not vastly increase transparency or deeply inform policy, but they create a valuable intimacy with citizens. &#8220;People who think they are being listened to tend to respect more the person talking,&#8221; says Rasiej.</p>
<p>That may not sound like a big deal. But contrary to what Web evangelists and the incoming administration would like to believe, Obama&#8217;s campaign was never a bottom-up endeavor. The incoming president didn&#8217;t crowdsource his view on the Iraq war or use Digg to determine how to allocate campaign dollars. He ran one of the most tightly controlled, top-down campaigns in modern history, to the point of pressuring outside advocacy groups not to advertise on his behalf. Rather, he asked his supporters for money and inspired them to get involved, giving them the tools to organize themselves and a message to sign on to.</p>
<p>Instead of turning WhiteHouse.gov into a governmental synthesis of Facebook and Wikipedia, or running a permanent campaign off the White House email list, Obama&#8217;s best shot at rebooting the government is to remember how he got there: making people feel that they were part of the solution and then enabling them to talk to one another and take action. &#8220;There is a relationship between Barack Obama and each individual, and that&#8217;s multiplied tens of millions of times over,&#8221; says <a href="http://www.bluestatedigital.com/pages/staff/">Joe Rospars</a>, the campaign&#8217;s director of new media. &#8220;But there are also millions and millions of relationships between our supporters. Both of those kinds of relationships didn&#8217;t end on Election Day.&#8221;</p>
<p><a href="http://www.wired.com/politics/onlinerights/magazine/17-02/ff_obama" target="_blank">[via WIRED]</a> by <span id="contributor" class="c cs">Evan Ratliff</span></p>
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		<title>Shaun White&#8217;s Business is Red Hot</title>
		<link>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/shaun-whites-business-is-red-hot/</link>
		<comments>http://www.themcompanies.com/blog/shaun-whites-business-is-red-hot/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Jan 2009 15:56:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivan</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[When he won the gold medal in snowboarding at the 2006 Olympics in Torino, everyone knew how Shaun White&#8217;s story would end. The corporate advertising complex would line up to capitalize, just as it has with every gold medalist since decathlete Bruce Jenner. And White, with his strange equine beauty and crazy pile of long [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone" title="shaun white fast company" src="http://www.fastcompany.com/files/feature-56-shaun-white2LG.jpg" alt="" width="452" height="301" /></p>
<p>When he won the gold medal in snowboarding at the 2006 Olympics in Torino, everyone knew how Shaun White&#8217;s story would end. The corporate advertising complex would line up to capitalize, just as it has with every gold medalist since decathlete Bruce Jenner. And White, with his strange equine beauty and crazy pile of long red hair, would assume the position, allowing his action-sports cred and new America&#8217;s-darling status to be sucked out of him and slapped on every can, box, and cookie bag in the nation. All the elements for cashing in and selling out were in place: Take a kid with working-class roots (his mom was a waitress, his dad worked for the water utility in San Clemente, California); add Olympic gold and huge endorsement checks; run the cliché. Heinz would offer six figures to put White on everything from ketchup bottles to stewed tomatoes (White&#8217;s then-nickname: the Flying Tomato). Maybe a toothpaste company would come pushing tubes of new Shaun Extreme Whitening. Throw in some potential heavy-rotation spots for Schick Xtreme Shaving and Doritos Extreme Nacho Cheesiness and the caricature is close to complete. As a final inspired bit of packaging, someone would lay down the big bucks to insert Mr. White in a straight-to-DVD production of <em>Faster Times After Ridgemont High</em>, where he would be cast as a snowboarding Spicoli attending a junior college somewhere near Banff. White would then spontaneously combust into the most <em>awesome! bitchin&#8217;! rad! gnarly!</em> D-list spokes-celeb ever.<span id="more-601"></span></p>
<p>But Shaun White took a pass on becoming the Crown Fool of Gnarnia. &#8220;I was so fortunate to have had some success before the Olympics,&#8221; he says. &#8220;So when the time came for everyone to come at me, I was able to step back and say, &#8216;Do I really want to do that? Do I want to be known for airing over some dude who is going <em>aaaahhh!</em> with his teeth gleaming?&#8217; &#8221;</p>
<p>Considering the risks involved in his day jobs &#8212; in 2003 he added pro skateboarder to his résumé and took gold at the 2007 Summer X Games &#8212; control is a survival instinct. (At 11, a midair collision with another skateboarder left him with a cracked skull, a broken arm, and a fractured foot.) Even as a teenager, White understood the power of his image &#8212; his pre-Olympic sponsor list included Mountain Dew and T-Mobile &#8212; and felt compelled to protect it. &#8220;A photo would go out that I didn&#8217;t approve, and a kid would come up and have me sign it,&#8221; says White, now 22. &#8220;And it&#8217;s an awful photo, and I know because I&#8217;m signing it he&#8217;s going to put it up on his wall. Now he&#8217;s got this awful photo on his wall. That stuff would get to me.&#8221; So much so that at 15, he made sure his agent wrote a right of approval into all his contracts to control the use of his name or likeness. &#8220;A lot of people will just put their name on anything, and you can tell,&#8221; he says. &#8220;I just can&#8217;t do that.&#8221;</p>
<p>Unlike gymnast Shawn Johnson with McDonald&#8217;s, or human fish Michael Phelps with Subway, White has sought out companies he truly connects with. Working with a tight team of advisers that include his 29-year-old brother, Jesse, and his agent, Mark Ervin of IMG, White sees these deals as a long-term investment portfolio, something that will outlast his knees. Each corporation meshes with a discrete slice of his actual life, and with each one, White dives in and takes a central role, from the design of specific products to pulling deals together among his various partners. Last fall, his street-wear line appeared in Target stores across the country. This year, he expanded his best-selling Burton collection of snowboarding gear to include a stand-alone extension for women. There are marketing deals with HP, Oakley, and Red Bull. He collaborated on a snowboarding video game with Ubisoft that went on sale just before the holidays. And whether it&#8217;s the quirky commercials for Target, the reality-style video shorts in the back-to-school Web campaign for HP, or the high-energy ads for Ubisoft, the ecstatic look and feel of the White DNA comes through. &#8220;Every week, we get presented with a big opportunity from someone,&#8221; says Ervin. &#8220;Shaun turns down a lot of money. And I couldn&#8217;t be more proud of him.&#8221;</p>
<p>The companies that do make the cut look to White as a tractor beam to the $150 billion youth market. &#8220;Shaun White has this ability to juggle his authentic world and the corporate world and be that third platform between the two,&#8221; says DeeDee Gordon, a trend expert whose L.A.-based company, Look-Look, focuses on youth culture. &#8220;He is living by his own code, and young people admire that. He has definitely stayed true.&#8221;</p>
<p>White&#8217;s most valuable asset of all, the key to that $150 billion, may be an eccentric charisma that is an irresistible draw for kids &#8212; and, more important, their parents. In a post-Olympics interview on CNN, White marveled at the attention flight attendants lavished on him after seeing his gold medal: &#8220;I had unlimited service after that. I was gettin&#8217; drinks. I was gettin&#8217; snacks. I was taking photos in the back&#8230; .&#8221; The anchor interrupts, &#8220;Wait a minute, drinks? You&#8217;re 19 years old!&#8221; Without missing a beat, White drawls: &#8220;I&#8217;m talking about Mountain Dews, baby.&#8221; And with that, a little backstage bragging was transformed into boy-next-door wholesomeness. A little sass to impress the kids, an apple-cheeked smile to win over parents everywhere, and for his sponsor at the time, Mountain Dew, a plug money can&#8217;t buy.</p>
<div>******</div>
<p><strong>&#8220;Blood wicking.&#8221;</strong></p>
<p>White has just returned from a surf trip in Bali and the Maldives, and he looks tan and fit, though his rolling SoCal twang is hoarse from a previous night&#8217;s karaoke party in Los Angeles. He and Jesse are tucked into a booth at Freemans, a restaurant on Manhattan&#8217;s Lower East Side with a vintage zinc bar and a taxidermy collection that ranges from a white goose in a landing approach to a wall of jackelope skulls.</p>
<p>White is describing the properties of the fabrics in the clothes he designs with brother Jesse, noodling an inside joke about the amount of blood snowboarders and skateboarders tend to spill. &#8220;With snowboarding, there are only a certain number of fabrics that are waterproof. It&#8217;s a lot of function with the fashion,&#8221; he says. &#8220;For Target, it&#8217;d be nice, but my cotton doesn&#8217;t need to be blood wicking.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Whites have been building their professional partnership since 2002, around the time when Burton Snowboards offered Shaun a chance to design his own pro boot. He had been riding for Burton since he was 7, when the company expanded into kids&#8217; gear, but after several years on the pro circuit, he was looking to throw his leash. &#8220;I was getting older and didn&#8217;t think I could roll with Mom and Dad anymore,&#8221; he says. &#8220;So what&#8217;s the next best thing? Older brother.&#8221;</p>
<p>In his new role as quasi-adult supervision for a 15-year-old, Jesse handled the travel schedule, shot promo photos, and explained to the occasional New Zealand rental company how the car got wrecked. &#8220;I was 22 and just learning how to be an adult myself,&#8221; he says. &#8220;It was way too much responsibility.&#8221; Adding to it, Shaun asked him to take on the design work: &#8220;I&#8217;ve always loved Jesse&#8217;s art, so he designed the boot. It sold out in the first hour of a trade show, and we had to do a re-release. That&#8217;s where it all began.&#8221;</p>
<p>For four seasons now, the Whites have created boards, boots, bindings, jackets, pants, and underwear for Burton. Together, they brought a radical reinterpretation to the boxy, baggy snowboard style by incorporating splashy colors and menswear elements: lapels, asymmetrical zippers, motorcycle-jacket cuts. &#8220;When I first started, I didn&#8217;t have a clue about the difference between houndstooth and herringbone,&#8221; Shaun says. But he had ideas that Jesse was able to translate into patterns.</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d say, &#8216;Why don&#8217;t we do a jacket like this?&#8217; &#8221; says Shaun.</p>
<p>&#8220;And then I&#8217;d draw it and say, &#8216;Like this?&#8217; &#8221; says Jesse.</p>
<p>&#8220;And I&#8217;d say, &#8216;Yeah, but with a pinstripe lining,&#8217; &#8221; says Shaun. &#8220;We wanted it to fit well and be different. It worked.&#8221;</p>
<p>Already in touch with their inner marketers, they even titled the pieces: Puff the Magic Jacket, Jacket of the Gods, the Most Unholy Jacket Ever. &#8220;I wanted parents to have to call and ask, &#8216;Do you have the Most Unholy Jacket Ever?&#8217; &#8221; laughs Shaun. It&#8217;s a classic White touch, a way for rebellious kids to feel like they&#8217;re buying from a peer. But since the rebellion stopped well short of Satanic cults or Columbine jokes, parents could laugh along. And drop the $200.</p>
<p>Despite the immediate success of the Whites&#8217; early gear, it took some convincing to get Burton to produce the women&#8217;s line. &#8220;At first we were like, yeah &#8230; no,&#8221; says Greg Dacyshyn, Burton&#8217;s creative director. &#8220;But then they came at me with full creative boards, showed me the presentation, and it wasn&#8217;t about Shaun. It was about this design aesthetic Shaun saw. He was like, &#8216;You&#8217;re not making clothes for the girls I want to hook up with.&#8217; &#8221; The line tapped a market no one had targeted. &#8220;We always kept a smaller size of my pro model board because a lot of girls rode it,&#8221; says Shaun. &#8220;There was this void. The clothes were all built for men, and in my experience, I think chicks &#8230; ladies &#8230; er &#8230; they know what we call them &#8230; special lady friends &#8230; they want to look hot.&#8221;</p>
<p>His instinct for pushing sponsors into new ideas and new territory is becoming part of White&#8217;s value. He worked with Oakley to create its first signature goggle, which quickly became a best seller, and today, the company&#8217;s top athletes all have goggle and sunglass models. Similarly, when HP decided it wanted to connect to the youth market, it saw White as a logical choice to star in the first of what it hoped would be a series of commercials. &#8220;This first ad was very difficult because we had to explain what this thing was going to be,&#8221; says HP marketing VP David Roman, describing what became the &#8220;Hands&#8221; campaign. &#8220;We were saying, &#8216;We&#8217;re going to show who you are by what&#8217;s on your computer and have all these graphics and animations, and you&#8217;re just going to stand there and move your hands and it will all come together.&#8217; It was an act of faith. Shaun got it immediately.&#8221;</p>
<p>The campaign eventually featured Jerry Seinfeld, Serena Williams, Jay-Z, and Pharrell Williams. &#8220;We&#8217;ve done 10 of those commercials and Shaun White got the biggest pickup of all,&#8221; says Roman. When asked about the experience, White just laughs. &#8220;They had this hand stunt double for me in case I couldn&#8217;t do it,&#8221; says the first person to pull a 1260 (three-and-a-half rotations) at the Winter X Games. &#8220;It was hilarious.&#8221;</p>
<p>As a mogul in training, the White mantra is to keep it light. But as his medals pile up &#8212; and as his various ventures post big numbers &#8212; getting him to sign on has become an increasingly high-stakes moment for his pursuers. In the run-up to NBC&#8217;s new Winter Dew Tour last December, for example, the mood at 30 Rock was tense. &#8220;It was really important to get a commitment from Shaun,&#8221; says Kevin Monaghan, a senior vice president at NBC Sports. &#8220;I remember telling Dick Ebersol [NBC Sports' legendary chairman] when White had signed on and was going to appear. Dick said, &#8216;He <em>has</em> to appear. It can&#8217;t be called the best winter tour if you don&#8217;t have the best athlete.&#8217; &#8221;</p>
<p>But the easiest way to calculate White&#8217;s commercial draw may be to listen to video-game maker Ubisoft. &#8220;We wanted to move our portfolio to include sports and create a snowboarding product,&#8221; says Tony Key, SVP of sales and marketing. &#8220;Our only condition was to get Shaun White attached to the project. If he signed on, our plan was to build a billion-dollar franchise. If not, we wouldn&#8217;t pursue it.&#8221;</p>
<p>During our long lunch, Jesse and Shaun finish each other&#8217;s sentences and follow random thoughts to illogical conclusions. Blood wicking evolves into an imaginary album title and often ends their sentences as a kind of exclamation point. &#8220;I would not have gotten where I am if it wasn&#8217;t for Jesse,&#8221; says Shaun in a serious moment. &#8220;There are so many people who want to pull you in the wrong direction. Jesse keeps me straight.&#8221;</p>
<p>******<strong>The red neon sign</strong> of Hollywood&#8217;s Roosevelt Hotel casts a monochrome glow over a rooftop party after the X Games last August. Mark Ervin, White&#8217;s agent, is wearing jeans and a dress shirt, tails out, and sipping a Budweiser. Even though his client didn&#8217;t win the vert skateboarding competition earlier that day, he&#8217;s in a fine mood. He should be.</p>
<p>Seven years ago, while primarily representing skiers at IMG, Ervin was advising Target on how to gain access to the action-sports world. His recommendation was simple: sponsor Shaun White. On this night, that part of White&#8217;s life is coming full circle and expanding in a widening gyre. Throughout the packed crowd of attractive Southern California skate groupies, pieces from the Shaun White 4 Target collection can be seen on various members of the White inner circle. &#8220;When Shaun and his mom approached me to represent him, my only hesitation was whether I could devote the time it would take to do it properly,&#8221; Ervin recalls. &#8220;Even back then, I believed what was possible for him.&#8221;</p>
<p>The two met for lunch at an Italian restaurant on Pacific Coast Highway to discuss working together. Was it weird to be a 31-year-old man talking to a kid about managing his career? &#8220;Shaun makes that part of the equation easier,&#8221; he responds. &#8220;He&#8217;s spent so much time with adults that he was more articulate than half the people my age.&#8221; Ervin was surprised to find a 15-year-old who could make him laugh. He also saw how driven White is. &#8220;I knew Shaun well enough and what his expectations were going to be. He was the perfect storm: a prodigy in two sports, plus a magnetic personality in front of the camera. I also knew that he would hold up his word.&#8221; Bemused at how easily it all went down, Ervin laughs, &#8220;He and I shook hands, and I never looked back.&#8221;</p>
<p>There&#8217;s a calm about Ervin that must appeal to White. He&#8217;s no Ari Gold. And he refuses to slag any of the proposals he has received for Shaun, including the Flying Tomato routine from Heinz: &#8220;Look, it&#8217;s fun to see corporate America embrace a kid like Shaun, and I appreciate that these people are willing to step up, even if the idea is totally wrong for him.</p>
<p>&#8220;We look at everything through a long-term lens,&#8221; he continues, &#8220;and ask, How does this affect us in three years? Five years? Ten years? I look at my job as allowing Shaun to make informed decisions. I give my opinion, but never tell him what to do.&#8221;</p>
<p>As evidence of White&#8217;s expanding ambition, Ervin points to White&#8217;s decision to leave his sponsor Volcom, a $216 million action-sports cult brand, to design the Target line. &#8220;The Volcom-to-Target transition is an example of how Shaun had to choose between two long-term relationships,&#8221; he says. &#8220;It was tough, but he saw that Target was a better platform to pursue an entrepreneurial drive and also fulfill a dream of creating cool, affordable clothes.&#8221; That move also highlights White&#8217;s understanding of brand balance: Target&#8217;s line focuses on street wear and skateboarding for a mass market, and is therefore completely differentiated from the more sophisticated and expensive technical winter outerwear he produces with Burton. Instead of creating a situation where one deal could cannibalize another, White cranks up his exposure in a new market without diluting his presence in the first. Even his former boss reluctantly understands. &#8220;I looked at it and said, &#8216;I can see it from his perspective,&#8217; &#8221; says Volcom CEO Richard Woolcott. &#8220;We had a great run with Shaun. He has an extraordinary opportunity to pioneer a name and a brand and to connect with a lot of customers. It&#8217;s like when Nike and Michael Jordan took it to another level. I would rather have him, but he&#8217;ll always be family.&#8221;</p>
<p>As the party ramps up, Joe Prebich, a team manager at Red Bull, is goofing with White and some special lady friends. Prebich, 25, looks like Jesus if the Son of Man had a stylist; for White, he&#8217;s a kind of work-life-balance guru &#8212; packing a lifetime supply of caffeine. &#8220;Joe is like a guy from the hippie days,&#8221; says White. &#8220;I just look at him and think, What would it be like to live back then? Then I realize he<span> is </span>from back then, just somehow transported here.&#8221;</p>
<p>Prebich, who wears gold-rimmed aviators and blond hair down to the middle of his back, often helps White choreograph his runs in both snowboarding and skateboarding. &#8220;Unlike other riders who just wing it or have a vague idea of what tricks they&#8217;re going to pull,&#8221; Prebich says, &#8220;whether it&#8217;s in snow or skating, Shaun has three runs worked out in his head that build from serious to crushing.&#8221;</p>
<p>In contrast to other beverage brands, Red Bull likes to think of itself as a cultural company that encourages creativity in its athletes. &#8220;We try to identify where Shaun hasn&#8217;t been and make it happen for him,&#8221; Prebich says. As on a recent trip to Japan: &#8220;He&#8217;s been, like, 27 times, but he&#8217;d never gone just to shred powder. So we took him to this remote island, stayed in a traditional <em>ryokan</em> and just lived it.&#8221; Of course, Red Bull also brought along a small film crew and shot the whole experience, releasing it on MTV as <em>Shaun White Big in Japan</em> &#8212; and later reselling it as a DVD, <em>The Ultimate Ride: Shaun White</em>.</p>
<p>******<strong>A look at the</strong> structure of White&#8217;s network reveals a pattern: He sits at the epicenter of a multipronged onslaught. After the party, Target&#8217;s head of lifestyle marketing, Troy Michels, recounts a trip he took to Costa Rica with White in 2006. They were on a boat in the Pacific, he says, sore from the previous day&#8217;s surf session, hot and salty from a morning of chasing dorado and bigeye tuna. Taking a break from their labors, he and White hung their legs over the side of the boat and had an informal meeting. White had just signed his deal with Ubisoft and mentioned the Target chalet in Aspen, where the company puts up White and other riders and clients during the annual Winter X Games. &#8220;Shaun was just riffing on how he thought the chalet would be a good virtual meeting place in the game,&#8221; says Michels, remembering how White looked out on the sun on the water and said, &#8220;You guys sell a lot of video games, right? I think it would be a good fit.&#8221; Michels shakes his head and laughs. &#8220;It was so casual, but at that moment, I knew it was going to happen.&#8221;</p>
<p>Weeks later, during the Dew Tour skateboarding final in Portland, Oregon, the announcers heckle Jesse White for getting married that weekend and preventing Shaun from competing (White played Led Zeppelin&#8217;s &#8220;Over the Hills and Far Away&#8221; on guitar as Jesse&#8217;s bride walked down the aisle). &#8220;There is a Shaun factor,&#8221; says NBC&#8217;s Monaghan. &#8220;When he competes, not only do the events seem much more important, but the crowd gets into them much more, and there are more people.&#8221;</p>
<p>As the sports of snowboarding and skateboarding have grown, so too has the power of Shaun White and his impact on the action-sports industry. It&#8217;s now hard to tell where one begins and the other ends. Shaun has drawn in outside players who have helped expand once-fringe pursuits into multibillion-dollar endeavors. And charting his gravitational field has become akin to the Kevin Bacon game: Shaun White meets Mark Ervin through IMG and connects with Target. Target sponsors White, spends millions on advertising, raising awareness of skateboarding (and, because it&#8217;s Shaun, snowboarding), and eventually produces his clothing line. White&#8217;s Target connection eventually leads to a limited-edition Ubisoft game in which players not only meet in the Target Chalet but also outfit themselves in gear from Burton and Oakley. Meanwhile, White sponsor Red Bull produces a documentary that appears on MTV, which has a partnership with NBC to produce the Dew Tour that NBC is broadcasting live in multiple cities for both summer and winter events. And here come the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver, which could just crank the whole cycle up another notch.</p>
<p>On hearing these connections laid out, White responds, &#8220;Impactatious!&#8221;</p>
<p>He is sharing his admiration for Don King&#8217;s facility with the language. &#8220;That&#8217;s the way he described a boxer&#8217;s punch. <em>Impactatious</em>. You can just see him making a fist and holding it there way too long,&#8221; White says, holding up one of his own.</p>
<p>White is aware of the double-edged nature of exponential growth. He knows he has critics, those who see size as the enemy of cool. But he&#8217;s okay with it. &#8220;I&#8217;m still pretty young and just winging it, but on a different level. I&#8217;m not really worried about the haters, the Buzz Killingtons,&#8221; White says. &#8220;I had a friend come up to me, an older guy whose wife is in the industry. I&#8217;d tell you his name, but he&#8217;d love it too much. He&#8217;d be like, &#8216;Yeah, that&#8217;s right!&#8217; But he&#8217;ll know who he is. Anyway, he came up to me after all the Olympic interviews and he said, &#8216;Thanks for making it look legit.&#8217; I didn&#8217;t get it at first, but it was respect. He said I was &#8216;solid&#8217; as the voice of this group. It was wild. I have friends who are pro photographers who have shot snowboarders for years and years, and their moms would call them and say, &#8216;I saw that Shaun guy. <em>That&#8217;s</em> what you do?&#8217; It was just a weird take on it. It made me nervous. I thought I could have blown it so hard so many times. I could have said anything. Blood wicking!&#8221;</p>
<blockquote class="pull"><p>White knows that size can be the enemy of cool. &#8220;I&#8217;m still pretty young and just winging it, but on a different level,&#8221; he says. &#8220;I&#8217;m not really worried about the haters.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>******<strong>Before Shaun White</strong> was a year old, he had open-heart surgery three times to correct a congenital defect known as tetralogy of Fallot. Surgeons had to open a ventricular tract, repair valves that were leaking blood, and suture a number of holes to increase blood flow through the cardiac circuit. &#8220;Obviously, I don&#8217;t remember any of it,&#8221; says White. &#8220;And maybe one day, I&#8217;ll be more interested in the details, but I haven&#8217;t been that curious.&#8221; It could be argued that what didn&#8217;t kill him has made him stronger.</p>
<p>After lunch in New York, White heads next door to Freemans Sporting Club, a menswear shop heavy on tweeds and boiled wool, operated by the restaurant&#8217;s owners. In the back is a traditional barbershop where customers can get a straight razor shave or a haircut. Before doing anything, White asks about retail protocol, adding with a laugh that he&#8217;s only just begun buying clothes. &#8220;In the past, nearly everything I wore came from sponsors,&#8221; he says.</p>
<p>White picks out a fitted flannel shirt and a peacoat made from the same fabric used in British Royal military jackets. He emerges from the dressing room wearing the flannel unbuttoned, rocker style. If you look closely, you can faintly see the beginning of a scar that as an infant must have run the length of his torso.</p>
<p>Earlier, a question had come up about that scar, whether it had any special, mystical powers, like Harry Potter&#8217;s lightning bolt. Did it tingle or burn when he was approached by companies that are the wrong fit for him? At the time, he just laughed and said, &#8220;That&#8217;s funny. I definitely understand tingles &#8230;&#8221; and then artfully changed the subject.</p>
<p>As he tries on the peacoat, the salesman explains that the buttons are made from ox horn and are basically unbreakable. (Jesse laughs, &#8220;If anyone can break them &#8230;&#8221;) White flips up the collar and checks himself out in the mirror. The coat fits like it was custom-made; he looks at Jesse, who confirms its coolness. Shaun breaks into a broad, confident smile &#8212; the same smile he flashes when he eventually comes back to the question he seemed to be trying to avoid. &#8220;Actually,&#8221; he says, &#8220;my scar starts to tingle when I connect with companies I want to work with.&#8221;</p>
<p><a href="http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/132/shaun-white-lifts-off.html" target="_blank">[via Fast Company]</a> by <a title="View user profile." href="http://www.fastcompany.com/user/mark-borden">Mark Borden</a></p>
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