Entries in External Communications (12)

Interview with a Podcast listener.

podcasting.jpgWhy do buzzy professionals listen to podcasts ?

I asked Patrick Wong, a 39 years young senior design engineer who works for ASML in Veldhoven that question.

(This is a long blogpost - want to print this immediately, click here.) 

  • How many podcasts do you subscribe to and what kind of podcasts are they (topics) ?

I am currently subscribed to about 25 podcasts. I listen mostly to science and news background podcast. Practical advantage of these is that they are pure audio (no video) so I can listen to them in the car. All in all this means I listen regularly to about half of the 25 podcasts I am subscribed to. These can be divided into a number of categories like software tips and tricks, Apple related, National Geographic, photography, news and background or science related...

  • What are the major advantages you experience with podcasting ?

You can listen to them when you like and you don't have to hear the same news 5 times a day or you can listen to something again if you want to... for example when someone mentions an interesting book in a Podcast and you didn't have the time to write down the details when you were listening to it the first time. By downloading podcasts you can archive them for future reference, you can share/forward interesting episodes to others or even link to them on your own website.

For me they are also a kind of short highlights on certain topics (e.g. what's new in science or what goes on in the US according to Katie Couric) : an efficient way to stay up to speed on what goes on in a certain area of interest. Focussing on special subjects can also function as a knowledge repository or as tutorials, in my case How To's in Photoshop.

On the "user side" it is very convenient that you can enjoy features like automatic download from iTunes, automatic sync with iPod... All in all very convenient to use and most of them are free of charge.

Other advantages are that you can be listened to podcasts while you are on the road to spend such time more efficiently. There are no geographic boundaries like with TV and you can subscribe to Podcasts from everywhere, like the Finally, audio can be combined with other content like video or text for for example language courses...

  • When do you listen to your podcasts ? How much time do they take (in average) ?

I mostly listen in my car on the way to or from work. Some are short (1-10 minutes), others are longer, up to 70 minutes. On average they are approximately half an hour long. Adding them all up on a weekly basis (some are daily podcasts, others weekly) I end up with about 50 minutes of listening material a day.

  • Do you sometimes react (by posting a blog comment, ending an email) to a podcast ?

I don't regularly react to Podcasts. It is a bit as with print articles where I will sometimes write a reaction but this isn't a regular habit, only when I think I have something valuable to contribute will I react. Because science topics are either highly specialized or very brief I generally just don't have enough knowledge to make comments about the subject matter. Sometimes I will forward a link of a Podcast to someone I think will find it interesting (e.g. I just listened to one in which they talk about the presumed impact of salt on high blood pressure, something we have been talking about at work) or it can be that I link one on my website.

  • On what device do you listen to your podcasts (MP3 player, portable PC/Mac, PSP, car radio etc...)

I simply connect my iPod to the car radio. The ones with video I watch on my Mac but very irregularly due to a lack of time really. Occassionally I will listen to my iPod connected to the stereo. This can be convenient if I want to listen to something together with someone else.

Some of Patrick's favorite podcasts:

  • Software tips and tricks : About Filemaker, Photoshop, Photoshop Lightroom and Final Cut
  • Apple related : Macworld, Apple Gazette, Inside Mac
  • National Geographic : best of, video shorts, NG World talk, Wild Chronicles
  • Photography : tips and tricks, Magnum Stories
  • News and background : Klara Rondas, Wetstraat watcher, Eye to Eye with Katie Couric, UChannel Podcast
  • Science related : Sciam Podcast, Nature Podcast, New Scientist Podcast and Science Magazine Podcast
Disclaimer: Patrick Wong works for ASML, a client of Leads United. This interview was done by email and slightly adapted in format for blog publishing & reading.

Posted on Tuesday, May 13, 2008 at 09:12AM by Registered CommenterPhilippe in , | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Blackline to offer enterprise grade online monitoring of blogs, news sites and forums.

Crisis-communications.jpgBoth Blackline and Leads United have now the ability to perform detailed online buzz tracking and monitoring for their clients through a partnership with Attentio, a Brussels based market intelligence company.

We're now able to:

  • Track brand & product mentions online.

  • Discover positive or negative trends around a brand.

  • Monitor the blogopshere and news sites for potential issues.

  • Create industry intelligence reports.

  • Draft online competitive analysis reports.

1763799-1511123-thumbnail.jpgThis is a very important add on to our existing services. Listening is the first step for any company who would like to start using social media for its business communications efforts, our dashboard will allow us to do exactly that.


Top Brands Online Buzz during CeBit 2008.
The online monitoring dashboard from Attentio can be seen as the professional/top level extension to our RSS workshops and in house training sessions as well as an extension to Leads United traditional clipping service. I am looking forward to tailor this service to specific clients and to research my first trend report about social media in Europe...

Of course, if you're interested to discover this new service, please let me know.

Posted on Monday, May 5, 2008 at 10:06AM by Registered CommenterPhilippe in | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

European Media and their websites in a Web2.0 age...

external_communicationsMainstream media have turned to the web some time ago but more and more news sites are incorporating social media features like RSS feeds, blogs etc... into their websites.

Already in 2006, the Bivings Group started to index this movement when it launched a call for "newspaper research" which I eagerly answered at the time and started to create my own index of Belgian news sites... which I never finished.

Today this topic is active again thanks to the efforts of Joanna Geary in the UK who, on her turn, was heard by the good people from L'Observatoire Des Medias who are now trying to index as much as media websites as possible in Europe.

This time I'll try to get my 20 something colleagues from Leads United to split up the Belgian online news ecosystem so that we can all add at least 1 site to the index... Should work and not take that much time I guess.

The launch of the new website of cafebabel.com today is showing the way...

Here's a short extract from their press release:

Cafebabel.com in figures:

  • 300, 000 unique visitors per month (source: Google Analytics)
  • 6 languages: English, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Polish
  • 350 journalists and 700 translators in 26 local editing teams in Europe
  • 70 European blogs
  • 4, 000 subscribers to the community
  • 11 full time employees and 3 interns
  • Created in 2001 by Erasmus students, cafebabel.com is an independent media edited by the Babel International association.
A possible future of online news sites...? What do you think ?
Posted on Tuesday, April 29, 2008 at 04:38PM by Registered CommenterPhilippe in | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint
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