Tuesday, September 3, 2019
An Update
If you're looking for The Full Monty in podcast or newsletter form, this is where it's normally found.
The podcast is on a temporary hiatus while I develop a new format and seek sponsors, and the newsletter is now produced in email format only.
If you'd like to be on the list, please sign up here.
And if you'd like to hear more about the status and rationale behind it, please listen to this:
Image credit: The Course of Empire - Desolation by Thomas Cole (public domain)
Wednesday, April 10, 2019
Episode 72: Write Me
We take our communications for granted these days. It's so easy to tweet, text, snap, DM, PM, and email.
But the more mundane, analog way of communicating is more meaningful than ever. People want to be on the receiving end of your letters. But do you have anything worth writing about?
Would you consider leaving a rating or review for the show on Apple Podcasts? It helps other people find us.
Links:
- This episode: smonty.co/fullmonty72
- The story of Bass Reeves
- Letter to a fan
- Other commentary and updates at ScottMonty.com
Credits:
Theme song: Afternoon by Maestross is on a royalty-free license from Jamendo.com.
Incidental music: Adventure Western Music - The Wild West by Ross Bugden
Image credit: News from my Lad by James Campbell, 1859 (Wikimedia Commons - public domain)
Incidental music: Adventure Western Music - The Wild West by Ross Bugden
Image credit: News from my Lad by James Campbell, 1859 (Wikimedia Commons - public domain)
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, SoundCloud, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts. Or try this: ask Alexa or Google Home to "play the latest episode of The Full Monty podcast."
If you find this program valuable, please consider supporting it on Patreon. It covers the cost of hosting, email, music and more.
Monday, April 8, 2019
Pandora's Box — April 8, 2019
Big Tech has gifted us with our own Pandora's box; robots that can identify emotions; accomplishing autonomous driving using only cameras and reinforcement learning; two major U.S. advertising market milestones; standing up to influencers; another competitive move for Walmart; how Facebook's algorithm change affected different verticals; what happens when Instagram steals your handle; a three-year trend in pay-TV subscribership; with 300 streaming services available, one thing sets them apart; Spotify has some competition for paid subscribers; how to stop Google from tracking you; data visualization errors from the experts; leadership lessons from Game of Thrones; and more in the Pandora's Box edition of The Full Monty for the week of April 8, 2019.
The Full Monty makes you smarter faster, by curating essential digital business intelligence every week. Links are below with commentary in italics. Please sign up for our email updates to make sure you don't miss a thing.
Contents:
AnnouncementsTop Story
Artificial Intelligence / Autonomous
Communications / Marketing / Business Strategy
Retail Apocalypse
Platforms
Media
Privacy / Security / Regulatory
Measurement / Analytics / Data
Mental Nourishment
Announcements
I consult with and advise firms on digital strategy, informed from my time an executive at Ford Motor Company. I've worked with digital communications teams, customer service leaders, and C-level executives at companies like Walmart, McDonalds, T-Mobile and IBM on issues related to strategy, customer experience, and digital, social and content strategy. I help them become more customer-centric, improve customer relationships, and grow their business.
I welcome the opportunity to explore a relationship with your team. Let's have an introductory chat. Or maybe you'd just like to pick my brain for an hour.
Top Story
It took the Roman Empire some hundreds of years to fall; social media is already seeing cracks a decade and a half in.According to an NBC News / Wall Street Journal poll, the American public isn't too keen on social media companies like Facebook and Twitter. In fact, sizable majorities say these sites do more to divide the country than unite it, and that they spread falsehoods rather than news.
Some of the highlights:
- Six in 10 Americans say they don’t trust Facebook at all to protect their personal information.
- Eighty-two percent say social media sites do more to waste people’s time, versus 15% who say they do more to use Americans’ time well.
- Fifty-five percent believe social media does more to spread lies and falsehoods, versus 31% who say it does more to spread news and information.
Bottom line: if America was giving social media a Yelp review, a majority would give it zero stars.
This is a serious problem. Not just for Big Tech and its own issues with reputation and regulation. But for society.
We've got what amounts to a public utility via multiple platforms (lest we forget, Facebook owns four of them) that have effectively spiraled out of control. In granting netizens the ability to communicate as freely and anonymously as we wish, these platforms have brought out the best and the worst of human nature.
What's more, it's not clear that regulation is going to do anything to rein this in. And the founders themselves don't seem to be able to claw back or control their creations. The end result is that we're left with an imperfect world in which to operate our businesses (nothing new there).
Here's an idea:
Given that this is what we have to work with right now, why not make a commitment to less advertising and more community-building? That is, put fewer resources into competing for what little attention is left out there, and instead create a sense of belonging for your customers.
Put your efforts into retention and relationship building rather than chasing down someone who might not want to hear from you in the first place.
If you enjoyed this commentary, please sign up for Timeless Wisdom in addition to this newsletter and I'll send you a couple of more items a week.
About this week's image: James Barry created The Birth of Pandora to bring to life the mythological story of the gods' revenge on humans. Prometheus stole fire from heaven, and Zeus took revenge by presenting Pandora to Prometheus' brother Epimetheus. In the painting, the gods are contributing to Pandora's creation, including the three cherubs approaching with the jar. Pandora opened this jar (later translated as a box) she gave to Epimetheus containing sickness, death and many other unspecified evils which were then released into the world. In modern times the idiom Pandora's box means "Any source of great and unexpected troubles," or "A present which seems valuable but which in reality is a curse."
Artificial Intelligence / Autonomous
The latest in A.I., machine learning, and bots; mobility and autonomous everything.Aʀᴛɪꜰɪᴄɪᴀʟ Iɴᴛᴇʟʟɪɢᴇɴᴄᴇ / Mᴀᴄʜɪɴᴇ Lᴇᴀʀɴɪɴɢ
- Researchers at Case Western have developed robots that can identify emotions by analyzing facial expressions in real time with a 98% accuracy rate. (Phys Org) Let's hope they can't recognize fear.
- Natural language processing (NLP) is one of the most visible forms of A.I. (seen most commonly through voice assistants). Here's why NLP will be huge in 2019. (Venture Beat) It has to do with more than what we already see; there's lots of hidden orchestration that bots are doing at the enterprise level.
- I mentioned the problem of robocalls in the March 18 edition (with a hilarious video by John Oliver); it turns out that robocalls are getting even worse, using your own and your friends' phone numbers to spam you. (CNN Business)
- And just last week, I mentioned Google's ethics advisory board. Not so fast: Google has canceled its ethics advisory board amid concerns about the impartiality and ethics of its members. (Vox) Um, maybe select your board members a little more carefully rather than trashing the entire program.
- Lyft is banking on robotaxis to replace high-priced drivers and help turn ride-hailing into a profitable enterprise. Don't count on it. (Axios) In fact, autonomous vehicles will be even more expensive.
- Wayve is a British self-driving car company that claims to have an end-to-end self-driving system that uses standard cameras, no Lidar, no high-resolution maps, all powered by reinforcement learning. (Wayve) This could be interesting.
Sᴛʀᴀᴛᴇɢʏ / Mᴀʀᴋᴇᴛɪɴɢ / Cᴏɴᴛᴇɴᴛ
- The U.S. advertising market will hit two major milestones in 2019: It will be the first year that advertisers spend more on digital than on traditional media, and it will be the first time that Google and Facebook’s share of digital ad spending declines, due to Amazon. However, the two will remain the largest digital ad sellers in the country, making up nearly 60% of digital ad spending in 2019. (eMarketer) Lots to digest is this important report on the industry.
- Mastercard's CMO is the new president of the World Federation of Advertisers, and he thinks marketing isn't what it used to be, and needs to reclaim its gravitas and glory. (Digiday)
- Email is still a significant factor in digital marketing, and these are 13 statistics about email marketing that will shape 2019 and beyond. (Convince and Convert)
- What's working in content marketing for small B2C companies. (Agility PR)
- Mega-consulting firm Accenture purchased advertising powerhouse Droga5. Some predictions say it will upend the advertising industry. (Forbes) It certainly contributes to the trend of consulting firms becoming more like ad agencies and ad agencies becoming more like consulting firms.
- A small business owner who runs a beach club in the Philippines stood up to "influencers," telling them they couldn't barter their social media posts for a stay. (New York Times) Amen. So-called 'influencers' are often no more than freeloaders.
- Fox News CEO Suzanne Scott, who succeeded Roger Ailes after his ouster amid scandal, says she is focused on communication as a way to rescue the firm's reputation and power through boycotts. (Variety)
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Retail Apocalypse
Humans are a transactional species, and the practice — if not the very notion of what retail is — is undergoing a historical metamorphosis.- Walmart customers will be able to order groceries with voice commands through Google’s smart-home assistant. (CNBC) Sounds like they're echoing Amazon. This is more of Walmart's strategy of accumulating and aggregating digital assets to better compete in the 21st century e-marketplace.
- Two-thirds of U.S. shoppers typically start their search for new products on Amazon, according to a March 2019 Feedvisor study that polled respondents who have purchased from the marketplace in the past two years. (eMarketer)
- In the world of online transactions, trust scores are the new credit scores—but good luck finding out yours. (Wall Street Journal)
- You've likely seen that video footage of an Amazon blimp dispatching multiple delivery drones. Well, it turns out it's computer-generated, but it's no less scary than Amazon actually owning the patent to do just what we see in the video. (Gizmodo)
Platforms
News to know about relevant social media and technology platforms that may affect your business.
Fᴀᴄᴇʙᴏᴏᴋ / Iɴsᴛᴀɢʀᴀᴍ / WʜᴀᴛsAᴘᴘ
Vɪᴅᴇᴏ
Pʀɪᴠᴀᴄʏ / Sᴇᴄᴜʀɪᴛʏ / Hᴀᴄᴋɪɴɢ
Rᴇɢᴜʟᴀᴛᴏʀʏ / Oɴ-Dᴇᴍᴀɴᴅ Eᴄᴏɴᴏᴍʏ
- After criticism over data leaks, Facebook will stop asking users for their email passwords as a means of verifying some new accounts. (Axios) Smart move.
- A little over a year ago, Facebook announced changes to its algorithm that would impact publishers. Here's how the algorithm change affected various verticals, according to Parse.ly (Marketing Charts):
- Hardest hit: Arts & Entertainment
- 62% decrease for Style & Fashion
- Politics, news and social issues least affected
- 61% decrease for Family/Parenting
- WhatsApp announced it is rolling out a new privacy setting that will help you decide who can add you to groups, preventing spam additions that have been a pain point for many users
- When your Instagram handle is @SussexRoyal and you haven't used it for years, here's what happens: Instagram reclaims it for Prince Harry and Megan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex. The original account owner, a 55 year-old football fan, had this to say: "I can tell you that Twitter's gone mental. I used to have four followers and in 24 hours I've gone up to about 198." (BBC) He must be completely barmy now: following the news article, he has over 1,600 followers.
- Twitter’s pitch to advertisers centers on its uniqueness among the social apps, being the #1 site for discovery versus the "look at me" platforms. (Digiday)
- Twitter is testing new labels for conversation threads, in an effort to identify the original tweeter, mentions, and the like. (Engadget)
- In addition to closed captions, you can now add subtitles to videos on Twitter. (AdWeek) Subway riders everywhere thank you.
Media
The latest in the world of streaming video, audio, and the advertising, pricing and bundling models related to them.Vɪᴅᴇᴏ
- The Definitive Oral History of TiVo bring us the dark origins of binge-watching. (OneZero)
- Hulu is analyzing what the commercial experience might look like for binge-watchers. (AdAge) Makes sense. Binge-watchers shouldn't be subjected to the same kind of interruption or repetitive ads as other watchers. This could open up the opportunity for ad experiences that are multi-episodic or mini-stories themselves.
- The top pay-TV providers in the U.S. — representing close to 95% of the market — have seen their percentage of lost subscribers double year-over-year for three consecutive years. (Leichtman Research) That's not what you'd call a positive trend.
- There are more than 300 streaming video services available to consumers. With all these services, one feature that sets them apart from each other is original content. (Marketing Charts)
- As expected, Netflix is raising prices across the board in May. (Variety) Hey, they've gotta find some way to pay for all of that original content.
- In the March 4 edition, I shared Steven Spielberg's threat to exclude non-theatrical releases from Oscars consideration. Well, the Justice Department has warned the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences that its potential rule changes limiting the eligibility of Netflix and other streaming services for the Oscars could raise antitrust concerns and violate competition law. (Variety)
Aᴜᴅɪᴏ
- Apple Music has passed Spotify in paid U.S. subscribers, up to at least 28 million for Spotify’s 26 million. (Wall Street Journal)
- In 2018, streaming accounted for nearly half of music revenues worldwide. (IFPI)
- Program of the Week: This week's show is Business Wars from Wondery. This is a show we've highlighted before, but because they keep introducing new 6-part series, it's worth revisiting. The current battle is Hasbro vs. Mattel — something for the kid in all of us.
If you don't already, please subscribe to The Full Monty podcast, 7 minutes of weekly business commentary, many times with a historical or literary twist. What's past is prologue.
Try this at home: "Alexa, play the latest episode of The Full Monty."
Try this at home: "Alexa, play the latest episode of The Full Monty."
SPONSOR
Privacy / Security / Regulatory
Business disruptions in the legal, regulatory, and computer security fields, from hacking to the on-demand economy and more.Pʀɪᴠᴀᴄʏ / Sᴇᴄᴜʀɪᴛʏ / Hᴀᴄᴋɪɴɢ
- A significant majority of consumers do not expect Google to track their activities across their lives, their locations, on other sites, and on other platforms. (Nieman Labs) Poor unfortunate souls.
- Here's how you can stop Google from tracking everything you do. (Wired UK) Bonus: it only takes a couple of minutes.
- Researchers at UpGuard, a cybersecurity firm, found troves of Facebook user information hiding in plain sight, inadvertently posted publicly on Amazon’s cloud computing servers. (Bloomberg) In the words of Professor Moriarty, "All that I have to say has already crossed your mind."
- Pinterest and Airbnb are teaming up on a spring and summer travel guide, designed to curate experiences for discovery by travelers. (AdWeek)
- Waze is using data pacts, beacons, and carpools to win over municipalities that are looking to reduce traffic congestion, air pollution, and other conundrums. (Venture Beat)
Measurement / Analytics / Data
The future is not in plastics, but in data. Those who know how to measure and analyze it will rule the world.- The Economist takes data visualization seriously, but that doesn't mean it isn't guilty of a few mistakes now and then. Here are some data visualization errors from their team. (The Economist - Medium)
- Microsoft, SAP and Adobe announced the expansion of their Open Data Initiative as they look to bring in additional partners. The core principle of the alliance is that the customers own their data and they should be able to get as much value out of it as they can. (TechCrunch)
Speaking
How can you energize your team and give them actionable ideas for boosting customer engagement? It's all about applying Timeless Wisdom to your process — practical and relatable lessons drawn from historical and literary contexts, updated to inform business growth.
Combine this with Fortune 10 executive experience and some great stories, and you'll be happy that you spent a fraction of what it costs to send your team to a major conference. I'll spend anywhere from an hour to a whole day with your team and give them the power to develop trusted, lasting relationships with your customers.
Mental Nourishment
Other links to help you reflect, improve, or simply learn something new.- Since we're almost at the Season 8 premiere, here are some leadership lessons from Game of Thrones. (strategy+business) Paying attention to your values and persuasion style can help you avoid getting beheaded or stabbed to death.
- The Bard clearly read many books. Where did they go? Looking for Shakespeare's Library (Lapham's Quarterly)
- Speaking of libraries, meet Dr. Alan Gribben, the Mark Twain expert who has spent the last 45 years discovering and cataloging the author’s library collection. By proving Twain read the greats, Gribben shows the world he was one. (The Guardian)
- There are no franchised Burger Kings within 25 miles of Illinois' original Burger King in Skokie. This mom and pop shop is the last Burger King in the U.S. with a trademark that the Burger King corporation hasn't been able to overcome. (Eater)
- The buffet is a good idea. The buffet is a symbol of the American dream. The buffet is delicious. The buffet is affordable, and a lot of us love a deal. And yet, our hearts have begun to grow cold toward buffets—why? (Vox) You can't B. cereus.
- A history of the public service announcement, and one in particular: "It's 10 o'clock: do you know where you children are?" (Tedium)
Wednesday, April 3, 2019
Episode 71: Tune That Name
We marvel at people who seem to have a way with their fellow humans. People who seemingly have others in the palm of their hands. What is it about individuals like this that capture our imagination and admiration?
It's not rocket science. But it does take a bit of work. The same can be said for personalization in marketing. It's doable, but it requires some effort. Are you ready?
Would you consider leaving a rating or review for the show on Apple Podcasts? It helps other people find us.
Links:
- This episode: smonty.co/fullmonty71
- How To Win Friends and Influence People
- Serial Marketers newsletter
- Other commentary and updates at ScottMonty.com
Credits:
Theme song: Afternoon by Maestross is on a royalty-free license from Jamendo.com.
Image credit: Othello's Lamentation by William Salter, 1857 (Wikimedia Commons - public domain)
Image credit: Othello's Lamentation by William Salter, 1857 (Wikimedia Commons - public domain)
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, SoundCloud, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts. Or try this: ask Alexa or Google Home to "play the latest episode of The Full Monty podcast."
If you find this program valuable, please consider supporting it on Patreon. It covers the cost of hosting, email, music and more.
Tuesday, April 2, 2019
Fool Me Once — April 1, 2019
Fake news fakes out April Fools' Day; personalizing your drive-thru preferences; ethics needs advisory boards; the future of newsrooms looks bleak; retail requires physical and online together; the latest social network; Facebook's commitment to stopping hate speech; YouTube ignored similar requests; beware TV networks; Spotify to surpass Pandora users; Huawei's engineering is a terrible security hole; the EU's new copyright rules are vapid; Uber tried to stop Lyft every way it could; Airbnb is bigger than Hilton; capturing data for business impact; how coffee led to the downfall of an empire; and more in the Fool Me Once edition of The Full Monty for the week of April 1, 2019.
The Full Monty makes you smarter faster, by curating essential digital business intelligence every week. Links are below with commentary in italics. Please sign up for our email updates to make sure you don't miss a thing.
Contents:
AnnouncementsTop Story
Artificial Intelligence / Autonomous
Communications / Marketing / Business Strategy
Retail Apocalypse
Platforms
Media
Privacy / Security / Regulatory
Measurement / Analytics / Data
Mental Nourishment
Announcements
I consult and advise brands and agencies through Scott Monty Strategies, which I founded after serving as an executive at Ford Motor Company. I've worked with digital communications teams, customer service leaders, and C-level executives at companies like Walmart, McDonalds, T-Mobile and IBM on issues related to strategy, crisis communications, customer experience, and digital, social and content strategy. It's all about better strategies to improve customer relationships and grow business. I welcome the opportunity to explore a relationship with your team.
Let's have an introductory chat. Or maybe you'd just like to pick my brain for an hour.
Let's have an introductory chat. Or maybe you'd just like to pick my brain for an hour.
Top Story
As you know, April 1st officially marked April Fools' Day. In the last decade or so, brands have stepped up their efforts to fool customers and the public with pranks that range from the subtle to the outrageous.Thanks to the advent of online scams and the inability by even the most intelligent people to detect fake news, we've seen a bit of a retraction of activity. Many people have expressed disdain or dread at the date, even vowing to remain off of social media for the day. In the U.K., government officials even asked media outlets to refrain from publishing traditional spoof stories on April 1.
This is nothing new for humans. We've been gullible from the beginning, wanting to believe those who approach us earnestly for help. But fool us too many times, and we become immune to such requests. This is the moral of Aesop's classic The Boy Who Cried Wolf.
Have we become the Internet who cried wolf?
If you enjoyed this commentary, please sign up for Timeless Wisdom in addition to this newsletter and I'll send you a couple of more items a week.
About this week's image: "Stańczyk during a ball at the court of Queen Bona in the face of the loss of Smolensk" by Jan Matejko depicts Stańczyk, the court jester during Poland's height. Besides his work as a court jester, he has been described as an eloquent, witty, and intelligent man who used satire to comment on the nation's past, present, and future. His usual mirth is gone, as he is deep in thought following the news that Poland lost the city of Smolensk to the Grand Duchy of Muscovy (Russia).
Artificial Intelligence / Autonomous
The latest in A.I., machine learning, and bots; mobility and autonomous everything.Aʀᴛɪꜰɪᴄɪᴀʟ Iɴᴛᴇʟʟɪɢᴇɴᴄᴇ / Mᴀᴄʜɪɴᴇ Lᴇᴀʀɴɪɴɢ
- The Association for Computing Machinery, the world’s largest society of computing professionals, announced that Drs. Hinton, LeCun and Bengio had won this year’s Turing Award for their work on neural networks. (New York Times)
- McDonald's is acquiring personalization company Dynamic Yield, in an effort to customize its drive-thru menus. The menu diplays will change based on the weather, traffic, and time of day and can be customized based on what you've ordered before. (TechCrunch, Vox) McDonald's going high-tech is part of what it needs to remain competitive; how franchisees respond will determine whether this is a viable plan.
- Nvidia's latest A.I. software turns doodles into landscapes. This is the beginning of what A.I. could do to art. (The Verge)
- Google has assembled an external advisory board to monitor whether Google violates its own ethical principles. The group is mostly academics. (The Verge) This is a step in the right direction regarding Big Tech's problems with ethics.
- The Ultimate Beginner’s Guide to A.I. in Marketing is a free online resource (no download needed) with 100 articles, videos, courses, books, vendors, use cases, and events to dramatically accelerate your artificial intelligence education. (Marketing A.I. Institute)
- It's ecosystems, not inventions that change the world. (Digital Tonto) A good reminder that innovation comes in steps.
- When it comes to autonomous vehicles, what's the acceptable death rate? Vision Zero in Sweden has an idea, and it involves makers of vehicles and roadways taking responsibility. (Automotive News) It's an interesting concept, given that vehicles are a leading cause of death today, and that safety should be paramount to any vehicle developer. Having consequences connected with actions is an important concept.
- Manhattan is implementing congestion pricing, the first such city in the U.S. to charge a premium for vehicles in particularly busy areas of the city. The proceeds would help to underwrite subway repairs. (New York Times)
Sᴛʀᴀᴛᴇɢʏ / Mᴀʀᴋᴇᴛɪɴɢ / Cᴏɴᴛᴇɴᴛ
- Paid media have always driven conversations about brands. But now there's a shift in which paid media are responsible for the most word of mouth in 2018. (Marketing Charts)
- Amazon is launching mobile ads for video, threatening Facebook and Google. (Denver Post)
- Adobe is rethinking the customer experience and showcases how brands and experts are transforming customer experience management. (Adobe)
- The Plain Dealer is laying off about a third of its unionized newsroom staff. A Pew Research Center analysis of Bureau of Labor statistics from 2008 to 2017 found overall newsroom employment dropped nationally by 23 percent and in newspaper newsrooms employment dropped by 45 percent. More than 2,400 media jobs have been eliminated so far this year, according to Business Insider. (Cleveland.com) The future of the news industry is in jeopardy, largely due to online offerings. Please support your local news organizations.
- If you'd like to see a CEO self-immolate on social media, look no further than Elon Musk. (Agility PR) While he's incredibly engaged with customers, he also damages his company by ignoring legal and regulatory requirements for publicly-listed companies.
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Retail Apocalypse
Humans are a transactional species, and the practice — if not the very notion of what retail is — is undergoing a historical metamorphosis.- Wayfair will open its first full-service retail store in early fall at the Natick Mall in Natick, Massachusetts. Shopping there will be a "seamless, connected experience," and shoppers will be able to buy directly in-store or have items shipped to their home. (Retail Dive)
- With the growth of online retail at an all-time high, it would seem that there's no future in brick-and-mortar stores. However, stores still matter in the digital age. (eMarketer) With ecommerce becoming so ubiquitous, physical retail matters more than ever.
- Even direct-to-consumer companies are feeling the pinch. This VC thinks the DTC market is overcapitalized. (Dididay)
Platforms
News to know about relevant social media and technology platforms that may affect your business.- There's a new social network that isn't new at all. The one with the best conversion rates and engagement. (New York Times) One might argue it's not that social either. But it's effective.
- Almost one-fifth of an average email’s total opens occur within the first hour of sending. Opens slowly decrease after the first hour, to the point where a little more than half (51%) of emails are opened by the 7th hour after they have been delivered. (Marketing Charts)
Fᴀᴄᴇʙᴏᴏᴋ / Iɴsᴛᴀɢʀᴀᴍ / WʜᴀᴛsAᴘᴘ
- Mark Zuckerberg wrote an op-ed piece calling for governments and regulators to help run his own company and the Internet. (Washington Post) Some may view this as Zuckerberg doing the right thing; others may view it as an act of desperation, knowing full well that it's beyond his (and thus anyone else's) capability. In other words, things are off the hook — which is appropriately, exactly what Zuck wants to get off of.
- Facebook wants to create a new section dedicated to news. (Recode) Undoubtedly in response to the site being overrun by news, fake and otherwise.
- Regardless of where one sits on the political spectrum, Facebook and YouTube get a lot of heat and Instagram is getting a pass. (Six Pixels of Separation)
- The U.S. government charged Facebook with housing discrimination due to its ad targeting system. (The Verge)
- Facebook is taking a strong stand against hate — specifically white nationalism. The network says that it will ban "praise, support, and representation" of white nationalism. (Facebook Newsroom)
- This comes after a report following the New Zealand shootings that found that neo-Nazi groups were allowed to remain on Facebook because "they do not violate any community standards." (The Independent)
- WhatsApp wants to track forwards to determine virality related to fake news. (TNW)
- Twitter is trying to find a way of maintaining its standards while adding context to tweets from politicians and other figures that may be offensive but are important for public debate. (CNN Business) This could be a full-time job when it comes to certain politicians.
Oᴛʜᴇʀ
Vɪᴅᴇᴏ
Pʀɪᴠᴀᴄʏ / Sᴇᴄᴜʀɪᴛʏ / Hᴀᴄᴋɪɴɢ
Rᴇɢᴜʟᴀᴛᴏʀʏ / Oɴ-Dᴇᴍᴀɴᴅ Eᴄᴏɴᴏᴍʏ
- Is there a way forward for Snapchat? Here are a few suggestions. (Social Fresh)
- YouTube executives were warned about the virality of conspiracy theories and other nonesense videos. They ignored such recommendations and opted for engagement, staff say. (Bloomberg) Because clicks = $, and that matters more to Big Tech than societal impacts.
Media
The latest in the world of streaming video, audio, and the advertising, pricing and bundling models related to them.Vɪᴅᴇᴏ
- Apple held its big media announcement last week with its Apple TV+ offering. Overall, it was well produced, but lacked details. (Axios) Yeah, but Oprah!
- Another entry in The Amazon Diaries: TV networks should scare you more than Amazon. Why? They're in service to the advertisers, not the audience. (OneZero)
- YouTube is not competing with Netflix and Amazon, as it cancels its plans for high-end series. (Bloomberg)
Aᴜᴅɪᴏ
- To BBC or not to BBC? The BBC claims that Google isn't directing people to BBC Sounds (its own podcast service) but to its own. And now BBC has blocked Google from accessing its site. Bottom line: Google Podcasts pulls directly from all podcast providers, giving them equal access to data and listeners. (Podnews) Really, BBC?
- Anchor launched a new "analytics suite" for both Android and iOS mobile devices. (RAINnews)
- According to a forecast on digital music listeners, Spotify will surpass Pandora in terms of users by 2021—one year sooner than predicted last year. (eMarketer)
- Spotify acquired true crime studio Parcast to expand its own podcast content. (TechCrunch)
- Google is auto transcribing podcasts and saving that metadata for search. (Android Police)
- Program of the Week: This week's show is American History Tellers from Wondery. Every part of your life — the words you speak, the ideas you share — can be traced to our history, but how well do you really know the stories that made America? The events, the times and the people that shaped our nation.
If you don't already, please subscribe to The Full Monty podcast, 7 minutes of weekly business commentary, many times with a historical or literary twist. What's past is prologue.
Try this at home: "Alexa, play the latest episode of The Full Monty."
Try this at home: "Alexa, play the latest episode of The Full Monty."
SPONSOR
Privacy / Security / Regulatory
Business disruptions in the legal, regulatory, and computer security fields, from hacking to the on-demand economy and more.Pʀɪᴠᴀᴄʏ / Sᴇᴄᴜʀɪᴛʏ / Hᴀᴄᴋɪɴɢ
- The U.K. slammed Huawei because its engineering is so bad that it has inadvertently left huge national security holes in its devices. (Bloomberg)
- When Max Vest found hidden cameras in his Airbnb late at night, he dressed, grabbed his things, and headed for the door. One problem: the man allegedly recording him was in the next room. (The Atlantic)
- The E.U. approved copyright rules over the objection of activists. New rules will require tech platforms to sign licensing agreements with authors, musicians, and news publishers if they want to post their content online. One component of the new law, called the “link tax,” would require sites like Google News to pay a fee when summarizing a story and linking to it. (Axios) They'll also have to proactively remove unlicensed copyrighted material from their platforms instead of waiting for complaints to roll in before acting. And you thought Brexit was a disaster?
- Uber tried to corner capital markets and squeeze out rivals with aggressive tactics. Despite this, Lyft survived and launched its IPO. (Wall Street Journal)
- Uber slashed per-mile pay from 80 cents to 60 cents in Los Angeles County and parts of Orange County and now Uber and Lyft drivers there are planning to strike. (Los Angeles Times)
- Showing no likelihood of slowing its dominance, Uber acquired Mideast ride-hailing company Careem for $3.1 billion. Key to this deal: Careem gets to keep its branding and app, which are highly valued in its home countries. (Associated Press)
- More monthly subscription options are coming to Dallas, Las Vegas, New York, and San Diego, as Uber brings its Ride Pass service to these cities for $15 a month. (9to5Mac)
- WeWork doubled its revenue in 2018. Unfortunately, it also doubled its losses. (Axios) So how does WeWork begin to break even or make money?
- Consumers spent more on Airbnb than on Hilton last year, giving the home-sharing company a 20 percent share of the consumer lodging market. (Recode)
Measurement / Analytics / Data
The future is not in plastics, but in data. Those who know how to measure and analyze it will rule the world.- Do you know if your social media marketing is working? Wondering how best to report on your efforts? Try 10 metrics to track when analyzing your social media marketing. (Social Media Examiner)
- What you measure should reflect what the business needs and what your executives value. How to capture data to make business impact. (KDNuggets)
- When it comes to data science, there's no reason we can't take a similar approach that we do for other areas of the business, such as a design thinking mindset for data science. (Towards Data Science)
Speaking
How can you energize your team and give them actionable ideas for boosting customer engagement? It's all about applying Timeless Wisdom to your process — practical and relatable lessons drawn from historical and literary contexts, updated to inform business growth.
Combine this with Fortune 10 executive experience and some great stories, and you'll be happy that you spent a fraction of what it costs to send your team to a major conference. I'll spend anywhere from an hour to a whole day with your team and give them the power to develop trusted, lasting relationships with your customers.
Mental Nourishment
Other links to help you reflect, improve, or simply learn something new.- Kahve was a favorite drink of the Ottoman Empire’s ruling class. Little did they know it would one day hasten the empire’s demise. (1843) Time to switch to decaf.
- The mass extinction of dinosaurs has long been a mystery. The fabled 'asteroid theory' has long been assumed, but one paleontologist may have finally unlocked the secret behind the day the dinosaurs died.
- If procrastination isn’t about laziness, then what is it about? (New York Times) I'll let you know as soon as I do this other thing...
- Millennials are killing everything! Or so the pundits would have you believe. Here are 12 industries that experts say Millennials are killing. (CB Insights)
- This is nothing new. Generations have been at war for years. (Timeless Wisdom)
Wednesday, March 27, 2019
Episode 70: Generation Gap
Recent years have seen Millennials blamed for just about everything, from the changing norms around working hours, to marriage and car ownership, and for killing things like napkins, golf, and department stores.
And while it's easy to lay the blame at the feet of a new generation that is disrupting the age-old way of doing things, this generational conflict has a tradition that spans the ages. If we can understand the patterns of differences in the generations, we can prepare for how to position our businesses appropriately.
Would you consider leaving a rating or review for the show on Apple Podcasts? It helps other people find us.
Links:
- This episode: smonty.co/fullmonty70
- Scott Stratten on Millennials
- "The Generation Gap in Antiquity" by Meyer Reinhold
- The Laws of Human Nature by Robert Greene
- Other commentary and updates at ScottMonty.com
Credits:
Theme song: Afternoon by Maestross is on a royalty-free license from Jamendo.com.
Incidental music: Emerald Therapy by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license
Image credit: Saturn Devouring His Son by Francisco Goya, 1823 (Wikimedia Commons - public domain)
Incidental music: Emerald Therapy by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license
Image credit: Saturn Devouring His Son by Francisco Goya, 1823 (Wikimedia Commons - public domain)
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, SoundCloud, Spotify, Stitcher, or wherever you get your podcasts. Or try this: ask Alexa or Google Home to "play the latest episode of The Full Monty podcast."
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Monday, March 25, 2019
This Again? — March 25, 2019
Hit replay for the TV revolution, and a bonus Streisand effect sitcom; A.I. and ethics are becoming interwoven (or should be); what the tech sector gets wrong about mobility; the #AdobeSummit is here; how to build trust as a leader; what went wrong at Boeing; tales of the drunk shopper; Walmart's secret weapon against Amazon; Instagram goes shopping; Facebook's adult content guidelines, explained; Pinterest files for an IPO; Google gets a massive fine; Disney completed its acquisition of Fox; branded podcasts are preferable; Facebook employees may have had your password for years; Airbnb's guerilla warfare against municipalities; marketers can't put ROI against everything; why Wite-Out is still at thing; and more in the This Again? edition of The Full Monty for the week of March 25, 2019.
The Full Monty makes you smarter faster, by curating essential digital business intelligence every week. Links are below with commentary in italics. Please sign up for our email updates to make sure you don't miss a thing.
Contents:
AnnouncementsTop Story
Artificial Intelligence / Autonomous
Communications / Marketing / Business Strategy
Retail Apocalypse
Platforms
Media
Privacy / Security / Regulatory
Measurement / Analytics / Data
Mental Nourishment
Announcements
I consult and advise brands and agencies through Scott Monty Strategies, which I founded after serving as an executive at Ford Motor Company. I've worked with digital communications teams, customer service leaders, and C-level executives at companies like Walmart, McDonalds, T-Mobile and IBM on issues related to strategy, crisis communications, customer experience, and digital, social and content strategy. It's all about better strategies to improve customer relationships and grow business. I welcome the opportunity to explore a relationship with your team.
Let's have an introductory chat. Or maybe you'd just like to pick my brain for an hour.
Let's have an introductory chat. Or maybe you'd just like to pick my brain for an hour.
Top Story
Remember when streaming video was a novelty? When you could brag about being among the first to switch from Netflix's DVD-mailer model to online video? The world of streaming media seemed simple in those days.The idea was that you could exercise choice and determine what kind of programming you wanted to watch — not be told by your cable company that you had to accept the sports package if you wanted to include a channel like AMC or Bravo. It was called bundling, and it led to ever-higher prices for consumers as they were locked into programming situations that they couldn't control.
Along came Netflix — and Hulu— and Amazon Prime Video — and you were free from that.
Until...
Suddenly streaming services popped up everywhere. CBS, HBO, Showtime, and now newcomers Apple, Disney+, WarnerMedia, NBCUniversal and suddenly consumers are feeling subscription fatigue. It's like the 1990s, all over again, but this time consumers are creating their own bundles. And it's getting a bit pricey.
In the return to what is essentially the same business model (i.e., you can't get all of your preferred content in one place), we're also seeing retro programming. In 2018, 14 of Netflix’s top 20 shows, and all 10 of its top 10 shows, were broadcast-network reruns.
It's as if we forget the past and long for it at the same time.
Another case in point: there are instances when the misinformed public uses historical examples to reinforce a point, but haven't done their research thoroughly. Which is why it' heartening (at least for this former classics major) to see historians taking to Twitter to set the record straight.
Then there's the instance of Congressman Devin Nunes suing Twitter over the Devin Nunes Cow account — a parody account — that annoyed him. But Rep. Nunes forgot the very real Streisand effect: the account had around 1,000 followers before last week's lawsuit; it currently has over 630,000.
Those who don't know history...
If you enjoyed this commentary, please sign up for Timeless Wisdom in addition to this newsletter and I'll send you a couple of more items a week.
About this week's image: Ulysses and the Sirens (John William Waterhouse, 1891) depicts Homer's hero Odysseus (the Greek version of Ulysses) on his way home from the Trojan war, facing the Sirens. The Sirens, who with their melodious voices lured all navigators to destruction were, according to classical tradition, creatures having the body of a bird with the head of a beautiful woman. They were informed by the oracle that as soon as anyone passed by without heeding their songs they should perish. Circe warned Odysseus in advance, and he plugged his the ears of his crew with wax and ordered himself to be bound to the mast, allowing them to successfully pass the fatal coast.
Artificial Intelligence / Autonomous
The latest in A.I., machine learning, and bots; mobility and autonomous everything.Aʀᴛɪꜰɪᴄɪᴀʟ Iɴᴛᴇʟʟɪɢᴇɴᴄᴇ / Mᴀᴄʜɪɴᴇ Lᴇᴀʀɴɪɴɢ
- As tech companies begin to recognize the flaws in technology, the need for A.I. ethicists is becoming clear. (WSJ Pro)
- In the last week or so, we witnessed how tech companies simply haven't prioritized some things that are harmful to users, but instead have worshiped at the altar of the golden calf. (Medium)
- Why do we struggle with ethics and technology? Largely because tech creates an artificial barrier between humans and tasks. And that reduces empathy. (Timeless Wisdom) Can we create artificial empathy?
- In the hopes that it can democratize A.I., MIT has a system that can train neural networks 200 times faster than before. (Engadget)
- How CMOs are adapting to the machine learning age, including cleaning up data and working outside of the traditional marcomms channels. (AdWeek)
- The high tech sector certainly has a lot to contribute to mobility, but the arrogance that has characterized its initial forays into the space has also exposed a deep sense of utopian naivete. (The Drive) This former auto executive's take: tech's predictions are usually on an unrealistically sped-up timeframe and involve urban prognosticating for the entire country. More ranting on this tomorrow on Timeless Wisdom.
- Autonomous cars will generate more data and as blockchain technology develops, it could offer a secure way to manage that data while providing additional benefits to passengers. (Axios) The data thrown off by cars is already voluminous. The future of auto data needs to be secure and manageable.
- A guide to the future of trucking. Trucking is among the three most common jobs in 29 U.S. states, but it’s getting automated and the trucking industry is transforming. (Quartz)
- Ford is building a factory in Michigan for autonomous and electrified vehicles. (CNBC)
Sᴛʀᴀᴛᴇɢʏ / Mᴀʀᴋᴇᴛɪɴɢ / Cᴏɴᴛᴇɴᴛ
- Advertisers don’t appear to be uncomfortable with the digital duopoly—at least, not enough to stop spending there. (eMarketer) What are you going to do about it? It's a two-party system!
- It’s an all-star lineup (and me) heading to the biggest digital customer experience conference of the year. (Adobe)
- The three most effective ways to build trust as a leader may not be what you think they are. (Signal v. Noise) Again, it comes down to being human.
- If you think leadership and communication doesn't matter, look at the impact Alan Mulally had on Boeing (and Ford). (Forbes) The "Working Together" model is deceptively simple: articulate a clear and compelling vision, develop a comprehensive strategy to deliver on that vision, and execute on that through a relentless implementation process led by a team of talented people working together. Which is where leadership and communication come in.
- How CEOs are boosting ethics engagement to build culture and brand trust. (Agility PR)
- Five ways to evolve and learn new communications skills. (Spin Sucks)
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Retail Apocalypse
Humans are a transactional species, and the practice — if not the very notion of what retail is — is undergoing a historical metamorphosis.- What percentage of alcohol-consuming Americans shop drunk? How much do they spend? What do they buy? The 2019 Drunk Shopping Survey has answers. (The Hustle)
- Jetblack is a $600 a year personal shopping service for New Yorkers. Walmart is using Jetblack’s army of human agents to train an artificial intelligence system that could someday power an automated personal-shopping service, in a battle for retail's future. (Wall Street Journal)
- Walmart announced it was halting its popular Savings Catcher feature in its app, which automatically refunds customers the difference of any item purchased at Walmart that's found elsewhere for less. Then the social media backlash began. (Retail Dive)
- From customer-centricity to tech with a purpose, here are some themes from NRF 2019 to take into 2019. (Smartbrief)
- New York Magazine has opened a retail store based off of its newsletter offerings. Is this the future of retail? Or perhaps the future of commerce for publishers? (Medium)
- Two from the excellent series The Amazon Diaries (OneZero):
- What it's like working as an Amazon Flex delivery driver.
- A vote for automation from a warehouse worker: “I Don’t Have Energy to Do Much Else Aside From Amazon.”
Platforms
News to know about relevant social media and technology platforms that may affect your business.
Fᴀᴄᴇʙᴏᴏᴋ / Iɴsᴛᴀɢʀᴀᴍ / WʜᴀᴛsAᴘᴘ
- Instagram announced it is launching a beta shopping program with over 20 beauty and fashion brands, including direct-to-consumer players, in which it would test the ability to shop, check out and manage orders within the app. (Digiday) Watch this space. As Facebook looks to link Instagram, Messenger and WhatsApp, commerce is a play that puts it on par with WeChat, the app from Tencent in China that is a Swiss Army knife of services.
- Instagram is testing the locking of usernames for 14 days after changing them, in an effort to crack down on bots and theft. (AdWeek)
- Facebook Messenger now has message threads. (Venture Beat)
- A close reading of Facebook's guidelines around...some of the more sensitive issues around adult activity on its platform. (The Next Web) The visual alone is worth a click.
- Sweeping changes after an investigation mean that Facebook will no longer allow employers, landlords, or lenders discriminate in ads. (ProPublica)
- Twitter is cracking down on API abuse. If customers primarily use the data to serve business customers as a B2B tool, like for customer service or social media monitoring, they’ll have to pay to enter a commercial licensing agreement with Twitter with a custom price based on usage. Twitter refused to even specify the range those prices fall into. (TechCrunch) If data is the new oil, expect to pay.
- For months, Twitter has been inserting tweets from popular accounts into feeds of users who do not follow them. (CNN Business) The practice means Twitter at times has amplified inflammatory political rhetoric, misinformation, and conspiracy theories. Because, why not? Everyone else is doing it.
Oᴛʜᴇʀ
Vɪᴅᴇᴏ
Pʀɪᴠᴀᴄʏ / Sᴇᴄᴜʀɪᴛʏ / Hᴀᴄᴋɪɴɢ
Rᴇɢᴜʟᴀᴛᴏʀʏ / Oɴ-Dᴇᴍᴀɴᴅ Eᴄᴏɴᴏᴍʏ
How can you energize your team and give them actionable ideas for boosting customer engagement? It's all about applying Timeless Wisdom to your process — practical and relatable lessons drawn from historical and literary contexts, updated to inform business growth.
- Pinterest filed for its IPO, speeding up the process to race to market. The company will be PINS on Nasdaq. The company reported a $63 million net loss on $756 million in revenue for 2018, compared to a $130 million net loss on $473 million in revenue for 2017. (Axios)
- Which makes perfect sense why Pinterest is hiring more salespeople than engineers for the first time. (Thinknum)
- European regulators hit Google with a $1.7 billion fine for its role in blocking other advertising on its platform. (CNBC) This won't be the last we hear of this.
- Google unveiled Stadia, its game streaming service for Chrome, Android, and TVs. The service will support cross-platform play and 4K at 60FPS with HDR, launching later in 2019. (9to5 Google)
- Snapchat is launching Snap Originals, its first full slate of roughly a dozen serialized original shows, including scripted series and docuseries. (Axios) More advertising and branded content opportunities ahead...
Media
The latest in the world of streaming video, audio, and the advertising, pricing and bundling models related to them.Vɪᴅᴇᴏ
- Disney officially completed its $71.3 billion acquisition of Fox, a move that transforms the entertainment and media industry. (AdWeek) The impact of this deal should not be understated. Disney is a media juggernaut, now with a 30 percent stake in Hulu, ownership of Twentieth Century Fox, FX, National Geographic, ABC, ESPN, and the catalogs of Marvel, LucasFilm, Pixar, and Disney proper, to name a few. When you wish upon a star...
- Nine reasons why Disney+ will succeed — and four reasons why criticism is overhyped. (Redef) Including the classic 1957 strategy schematic that shows how all of Disney's elements are interconnected.
- There are more streaming options than ever, and consumers are feeling the strain. (USA Today)
Aᴜᴅɪᴏ
- Branded podcasts are better than podcasts with ads. (Fast Company) Yeah, done well they are.
- After tracking Apple Podcasts for two years, here are the results that include seasonal patterns and category leaders. (Pacific Content)
- Google Podcasts is now available on desktop, with syncing to your Android device. (9to5 Google)
- In another nod to the ubiquity and universality of audio, Moby released his latest album on the Calm app. (Calm) It's actually the perfect place, given the kind of music Moby writes.
- Program of the Week: "Tally," the first season of Over My Dead Body is a seven-part series from Wondery that looks at the "perfect" couple, two lawyers whose relationship ended in a bitter divorce and the husband's murder. Throw in Miami-area gangsters, an overly possessive set of in-laws, and you've got yourself a real-life murder mystery.
If you're not already, please subscribe to The Full Monty podcast, 7 minutes of weekly business commentary, many times with a historical or literary twist. It's like Paul Harvey for business. New episodes every Wednesday.
Try this at home: "Alexa, play the latest episode of The Full Monty."
Try this at home: "Alexa, play the latest episode of The Full Monty."
SPONSOR
Privacy / Security / Regulatory
Business disruptions in the legal, regulatory, and computer security fields, from hacking to the on-demand economy and more.Pʀɪᴠᴀᴄʏ / Sᴇᴄᴜʀɪᴛʏ / Hᴀᴄᴋɪɴɢ
- Facebook's treatment of data and its refusal to fundamentally address its policies and practices is causing a Congressman to call on the Federal Trade Commission to investigate Facebook for antitrust practices. (New York Times)
- And then, the next day, as if to prove his point, Facebook employees had access to hundreds of millions of user passwords for years. (Recode)
- Guesty — a startup that provides a suite of tools aimed at property managers that list on Airbnb (and others) — announced it has raised $35 million to continue to help fund the company’s rapid growth. (The Hustle)
- Why is there so little tech regulation? Politicians are reluctant to disrupt the enormous wealth creation machine that technology has turned out to be. (The Register)
- Airbnb has stated publicly that they want to pay taxes. So why are they waging a guerilla war against local governments by suing them when the governments seek tax payments? (Wired)
- Lyft is seeking a valuation of between $21 million and $23 million in its IPO, equating to $62 to $68 per share. (Wall Street Journal)
Measurement / Analytics / Data
The future is not in plastics, but in data. Those who know how to measure and analyze it will rule the world.- Marketers shouldn't try too hard to relate everything back to ROI or they might risk looking like an idiot in front of finance. (Marketing Week)
- Is too much of something a bad thing? When it comes to data, the answer may be yes. Data managers feel overwhelmed by an abundance of tools. (eMarketer)
Speaking
I'm pleased to be heading to the #AdobeSummit as an Adobe Insider, courtesy of Adobe.
Combine this with Fortune 10 executive experience and some great stories, and you'll be happy that you spent a fraction of what it costs to send your team to a major conference. I'll spend anywhere from an hour to a whole day with your team and give them the power to develop trusted, lasting relationships with your customers.
Mental Nourishment
Other links to help you reflect, improve, or simply learn something new.- You've probably come across your fair share of grammar philistines in texting or email, who don't care to follow protocol. Well, meet the man brought to trial for murdering the English language. (LitHub)
- The 1922 book The Fourth Dimension and the Bible by William Granville is a fascinating example of the intersection of science and religion. In this case, Granville explored the more mysterious aspects of the Bible through the rigors of pure mathematics, using the terminology of C.H. Hinton, who visualized this spatial dimension in "Tesseracts." (The Public Domain Review)
- A history of the humble milk crate, and the story of this commonly stolen type of container: how it became an icon of storage and design, and the target of tough legal regulations—and how those regulations have started to backfire. (Tedium)
- Correction fluids have improbably outlasted the typewriter and survived the rise of the digital office. Who Still Buys Wite-Out, and Why? (The Atlantic) I think I smell a good story...
Top image credit: Ulysses and the Sirens by John William Waterhouse, 1891 (Wikimedia Commons - public domain)