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January 05, 2006

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Comments

BWJones

I've long held that this is in fact the case. The companies that "get it" are those that are going to be moving faster and will be better able to respond and predict what their customers want. In fact, I have been stunned at the efforts put into some of the contacts made by a certain Fortune 500 company that is blogging, including sending engineers and members of their product teams out for site visits based upon comments I've made on their corporate blogs.

It has been said before, but the biggest mistake companies can make is assuming that bloggers are simply consumers. The reality is that this medium allows for so much more....


Larry Irons

Chris,

The "alpha" customers you refer to are important for their role in innovation, and companies endorsing "open innovation" are beginning to notice them as a rsource to use in improving products and services.

In his book, Democratizing Innovation, Von Hippel calls them "lead users" and argues they can drive innovation for products and services, whether for physical products or information services. They are often boundary spanners who bridge the customer community with the providing company. In that sense, corporate bloggers are boundary spanners serving as connectors between their companies and the customer community and, especially, lead users.

Christian

Hey this so informative nice blog.

keyboard

I think the stats speak for themselves. We have a long way to go.

It does amaze me the low number for the blogs. Maybe I shouldn't be surprised!?

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Tidbits

The Long Tail by Chris Anderson

Notes and sources for the book

FREE was available in all digital forms--ebook, web book, and audiobook--for free shortly after the hardcover was published on July 7th. The ebook and web book were free for a limited time and limited to certain geographic regions as determined by each national publisher; the unabridged audiobook will remain free forever, available in all regions.

Order the hardcover now!