Lieber Marc,
William Edwards Deming hat den Japanischen Wirtschaftsbossen vor fast 60 Jahren in seinen 14 Punkten des Managementprogramms erklärt, wie man erfolgreich wird.
Napoleon Hill hat in seinen Büchern, das Gesetz des Erfolges und
Denke nach und werde reich ähnliches festgehalten, nämlich, lerne von den Besten!
Gegenwärtig ist
Mark Zuckerberg mit seinem Facebook einer der erfolgreichsten Unternehmer der Welt, was die gegenwärtigen Wachstumsraten betrifft!
Was macht ihn so erfolgreich?
Der
Social graph!
Mass distribution through the social graph
Mark erklärt Dir, wie Du den
Social graphQUOTE ("IT-Giganten stricken am Menschen-Netz von Christian Stöcker"
Ein Begriff treibt Kapitalgeber und Netz-Unternehmer in den USA derzeit um - und den Wert von Unternehmen wie Facebook in schwindelnde Höhen: "social graph".
optimal nutzen kannst!
Investiere Dein Budget in den Social graph!
Investiere Dein Budget in die Entwicklung von Programmen des Social graph!
investiere Dein Werbebudget in Mulitplikatoren und Amplifikatoren, welche Du über
soziale Netzwerke wie
- a Small World
- Ecademy
- Facebook
- hi5
- LinkedIn
- MySpace
- Plaxo
- Orkut
- Spoke
- Xing
- usw.
integrieren kannst und vergiss jegliche Segmentierung, denn die ist wenig effektiv.
Jegliches Expertenwissen ist fast gänzlich wertlos, erklärte vor ein paar Tagen in
Crowdsourcing The Crystal Ball, erschienen bei Forbes,
James Surowiecki, der vor drei Jahren den Bestseller "
Die Weisheit der Vielen" (Original: The Wisdom of Crowds. Why the Many Are Smarter Than the Few and How Collective Wisdom Shapes Business, Economies, Societies and Nations) geschrieben hat.
Ellen McGirt von Fastcompany erklärt in "
Facebook is the "IT" Company of 2007" wie der 'Social Graph' funktioniert
QUOTE ("Ellen McGirt von Fastcompany erklärt"
Harnessing the power of News Feed, the new apps, and the booming user base to make money for Facebook itself is the task of a new hire, VP of product marketing and operations Chamath Palihapitiya. Zuckerberg brought him aboard this summer to help figure out how to exploit what Facebookers call the "social graph"--those thousands of threads that make up users' connections to other people--and to create Facebook's coming targeted advertising program. Palihapitiya, 31, is tall and whippet thin, with elegant manners and a ready smile. A former electrical engineer, born in Sri Lanka and raised in Canada, he ran AOL's instant-message group, then jumped to the venture fund Mayfield. He is part Sand Hill Roadster and part freethinker; he appeared in an art film last winter making pointed comments about Silicon Valley's "old boy's club." ...
"Facebook users are more engaged with each other," he says. "Aren't you more likely to be interested in what your friends are doing?" Google, which focuses by and large on demand fulfillment, is a $160 billion company. "For every dollar that goes into fulfillment, there are hundreds that are spent on generation," he says, particularly by the big brands.
So what could Facebook be worth? Five times Google? Ten times? "Could be," he smiles.
Zuckerberg is focused on encouraging developers to come up with more programs for the platform. He's even willing to give them money: In September, Facebook announced the formation of FbFund, which offers grants of $25,000 to $250,000 to developers with promising plans to build a business on the platform.
Instead of worrying about meeting Wall Street expectations as a public company--though it's likely his team is planning for an IPO--Zuckerberg is enjoying apps like Scrabulous, which lets users play Scrabble together. Created in a week by two brothers from India, it caught on like wildfire, with half a million users signing up in the first 10 weeks. Zuckerberg was one of them. "It got my grandparents on Facebook," he says, smiling. "They like playing with me."
Vergiss alle Werbemassnahmen, die sich ausserhalb von
sozialen Netzwerken bewegen, wobei ich Trigami klar zu den sozialen Netzwerken zähle!
Gruss
Lucas Wyrsch
Swiss Business Club