When it’s over will you switch off

June 1st, 2008  Tagged

 

Came across an interesting SMH article by Jill Serjeant titled “Why the switched on are switching off” which I could totally relate to and it could sum up my experience with ELMT1. Although I have loved every moment of this course I have spent a huge amount of my waking existance on line. 

So as the subject draws to a close I am wondering how much I will scale back my online time.

 

Saying that I have finally joined Facebook….and have found another new reason to spend more time on line :)

 

When is a blog an ad?

April 5th, 2008  Tagged ,

Following on from my previous blog about the EU directive on flogging. I came across an interesting blog….http://www.globaltravelblog.com/

A very sophisticated blog with RSS feeds, podcasts, videos, tag clouds, categories and very well managed content (possibly too well managed when you read some of the posts).  The posts and members are currently dominated by Flight Centre consultants with email links back to a Flight Centre.

In my quest to understand Web 2.0 and the implications for the travel industry and how word of mouth is spread about destinations and products I found this site quite intriguing.

My first thought……is this a community of practice I should be  a part of?

It looks a lot better than the Travelzine (the site I have chosen to study) and definitely has a comparatively improved technological framework.  I was keen to find out more about this site so I clicked on the “about us” section and yes it definitely belongs to a commercial operator perhaps on the biggest in Australia …Flight Centre

The Flight Centre Group Product Ads which exclusively dominate the site should have given it away plus if you read the conditions - you will see some interesting conditions of advertising which the owners of the site have clearly decided does not apply to them.

Look the site is a clever use of Web 2.0 and is a great way for Flight Centre to engage with their customers and build customer loyalty.  I am however suspect at the efforts to profile the site as a global travel blog when it really is one big advertisement for Flight Centre and the community primarily consists of travel agents of the company. 

Happy that I have chosen my community the Travelzine.   I go back to my previous blog where trust is a key element in Web 2.0 and that people will trust their community when taking recommendations for products and services.

I suspect Advertising blogs will face the fate of TV advertising, similar to the power of the remote control, Net users have the power to selectively filter out the “ads” with the click of the mouse.

Commercial Travel blogging – an offence in the EU

March 30th, 2008  Tagged ,

A recent blog on Travel Mole outlines the interesting consequence of misuse of Web 2.0 by commercial tourism operators trying to buy favour with consumers by fake postings to sites such as Trip Advisor.  

Commercial blogging – ‘flogging’ – becomes an offence in Europe – March 28 2008 by Dinah Hatch 

“The end, it seems, could be nigh for those cheeky hoteliers who pretend to be customers on TripAdvisor and write themselves glowing reviews. As of April 6, Brussels will be banning such underhand activities as the EU’s Unfair Commercial Practices Directive comes into force, making commercial blogging, or flogging as it’s known, an offence.

The new law includes two categories of unfair commercial practice – misleading practices and aggressive practices. Whether a practice is deemed unfair will be judged in light of the effect it has on the average consumer’s consequent decision to purchase. The law means companies, no matter how small (and that includes sole traders), will not be able to post online themselves or pay anyone else to post reviews or blogs about their own companies that are misleading.

The law comes into force at a time when the public are beginning to make their disapproval about flogging heard.In the US, the recent Travel 2.0 Consumer Technology Survey which was commissioned by Phocuswright revealed that when travel purchasing decisions are being made, most Americans said they would rather make their own minds up than follow the views of people they didn’t know (and therefore, by implication, could not trust). “ 

My initial thoughts are

1) How are they going to police and track it – that will be interesting to see

2) Once they work that out people will find a way to get around it

3) Trip Advisor is a commercial site – you have to take it on face value and understand that (apologies to the Americans and anyone else who didn’t see the mass advertising that dominates the site)

More importantly, it gives support to the notion that non-commercial social networking sites where people build relationships and communities of “trust” may have greater impact on people’s purchasing decisions.  This is something I am interested in and one of the reasons I have chosen the Travelzine as my learning community to study. 

First Postings of a virgin blogger

March 12th, 2008  Tagged

Diaries of a nervous blogger… 

OK its not that bad really…time to step through the looking glass to the other side.

Keep posted as I discover:

 a) How to use and navigate this site

b) How to blog

c) Hopefully contribute to experience of E-Learning 1 – write something meaningful and pass the subject

 Any advice welcome

DM