Are The Olympics Cuttings Edge For Marketing Or Cutting Marketers Out?
Every Monday morning at 7:10 am, I am a guest contributor on CHOM 97.7 FM radio broadcasting out of Montreal (home base). It's not a long segment - about 5 to 10 minutes every week - about everything that is happening in the world of technology and digital media. The good folks at CHOM 97.7 FM are posting these segments weekly to SoundCloud, if you're interested in hearing more of me blathering away. I'm really excited about this opportunity, because this is the radio station that I grew up on listening to, and it really is a fun treat to be invited to the Mornings Rock with Terry and Heather B. morning show. The segment is called, CTRL ALT Delete with Mitch Joel.
This week we discussed:
Pierre Landry sits in for Terry and Heather B.
We're in Olympics mode. And, in typical Olympics mode, the IOC has created a whole batch of Draconian laws that prohibit short videos that may misrepresent how the Rio Games are represented. News organizations are banned from taking Olympic Material and turning it into GIFs, Vines, etc... The ICO also banned any businesses from using the terms "summer", "gold", "games", "effort", "victory", "Rio" and "2016" in relation to the games. They don't want any brands (who aren't paid sponsors or advertisers) to "benefit" from the Games, without their permission. In a world like ours, how do they expect this to play out?
Amazon made a surprising announcement last week. They are shipping enough packages across the US that it is starting to build their own airline fleet. Amazon One?... the first Amazon Prime Air airplane was unveiled in Seattle. According to Amazon: "You can almost think about the difference between commercial flight and private flight... We have the ability, with our own planes, to create connections between one point and another point that are exactly tailored to our needs, and exactly tailored to the timing of when we want to put packages on those routes -- versus other peoples' networks which are optimized to run their entire network. We add capacity, we add flexibility, and it gives us cost-control capability as well." Think about the logistics, data and information that Amazon knows about you, me and every consumer.
Facebook is making a huge play toward making Snapchat useless. Instagram (which is owned by Facebook) just added a new feature that lets people share photos and videos that disappear, the key feature of Snapchat. "Users can write over the photos and add annotations -- just like in Snapchat. The product lets people post photos or videos taken throughout their day in a slideshow form, just like Snapchat Stories. They vanish in 24 hours -- just like Snapchat Stories. To make it totally clear, Instagram is calling its product Stories too." Will it work?
App of the week: inshorts.
Listen here...
Tags:
advertising
amazon
amazon one
amazon prime air
app of the week
brand
chom 977 fm
chom fm
consumers
ctrl alt delete
ctrl alt delete with mitch joel
data
digital media
facebook
gif
guest contributor
heather beckman
inshorts
instagram
instagram stories
ioc
j walter thompson
jwt
logistics
mirum
mirum agency
montreal radio
morning show
mornings rock with terry and heather b
olympics
pierre landry
radio segment
radio station
rio olympics
slideshow
snapchat
snapchat stories
social media
soundcloud
sponsor
technology
terry dimonte
twitter
vine
vines
wpp








Six Pixels of Separation
- Mitch Joel's profile
- 80 followers
