L@Fw2008 Scott Kveton

Post on 09-May-2015

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Scott Kveton's Love@ First Website Ignite presentation

transcript

Social Networking:How far have we come?

Scott Kveton, Vidoop

Father, husband, geek, gardener, pizza maker, bacon lover

What are people doing with social networking today?

LOLcats

FAIL

Earthquake

(I’m addicted to Twitter - @kveton)

@saracuda + Twitter

Olympics & Elections as technology benchmarks

2004 – 2008 - 2012

State of the tech 2004

Facebook - 2/2004MySpace - 1/2004

YouTube - didn’t existGoogle - 8/2004 @ $75/share

Twitter - didn’t exist

Olympics 2004:NBC Coverage

“At the time, NBC's online coverage was restrictive by today's standards — mostly highlight clips and no live video, delayed until after the events aired on TV, and required a valid credit card to verify residency in the United States.” - Andy Baio, waxy.org

Elections 2004:

“In prior Presidential elections the Web served as little more than another channel for candidates to broadcast their positions and collect donations.” - Catherine Holahan - BusinessWeek

State of the tech 2008

Olympics 2008:NBC Coverage

“NBCOlympics.com may have streamed 72 million videos and racked up 1.2 billion pageviews, but Yahoo Sports still edged it out with an average of 4.7 million visitors a day versus 4.3 million” - Source: Nieisen Online

Elections 2008:

“Obama wasn't asking supporters to come to his Web site to give money. His campaign was bringing donation tools to sites where Web surfers already hung out: YouTube, Facebook, MySpace, blogs, and wherever else supporters could post Obama's campaign slogan and a bit of code. ” - Catherine Holahan - BusinessWeek

Real-time tracking of the debates

Elections +Mobile +Social Networking =Awesome

Phone Bank 2.0

Olympics: 2012

Elections: 2012

Thanks. Enjoy Today.Fin.

Me.http://kveton.comhttp://twitter.comhttp://flickr.com/photos/kvetonhttp://vidoop.com