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WHY ALL MEDIA ARE SOCIAL MEDIA In 2006, the Big Players Adopted New Technologies and Started Two-Way Conversations
Where do social media end and mainstream media begin? The question is not nearly as easy to answer today as it was just one year ago. Social media, according to Wikipedia (where else?), consist of "the online tools and platforms that people use to share opinions, insights, experiences and perspectives with each other." This includes blogs, message boards, podcasts, wikis and vlogs. For a long time, they were considered related to, but separate from, mainstream media. That point of differentiation is now gone. Deep changes Meanwhile, the barrier to joining the media fabric has been obliterated by these very technologies. Lots of people are making nice advertiser-supported incomes either as solo or start-up media entrepreneurs. What's more, an entire new economy of service providers has propped up to help them do just that. So as we roll into 2007, it's fair to say that "social media" as a separate entity is dead. Nevertheless, there are still two strata of media, both of which are now social. Big media bring lots of experience and resources but have become more of a two-way conversation. Indie sites, meanwhile, fill niches the mainstream media can't touch. They also have fewer church-state restrictions and operate at a lower run rate. It all fits together nicely. Like baseball By Steve Rubel Mailed 2007-02-06 |
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