Category: Twitter

A Million Dollar Idea vs A Billion Dollar Idea

‘Some of it is timing’, says my friend Steve Crandall, a twenty-year veteran of Bell Labs and a particle physicist who works with everyone from Pixar to DARPA.  “I came from a place that had several billion dollar ideas, but few were realized inside the organization.  Of course turning an idea into money has several other important ideas along the way and some of the most important may only be remotely connected to the original”.

Asking the Twitter and Facebook communities for their thoughts resulted in some great responses. What’s the difference between a Million Dollar Idea and a Billion Dollar Idea? Here are the TOP 3 answers:

SCALABILITY: “If the design fails when the quantity increases then it does not scale.” says Miami-based artist and entrepreneur Andreas W. Gerdes.

EXECUTION: Is the idea executable and are you the right person to successfully execute the idea? “The world does not pay for good ideas. The world pays for the successful execution of a good idea”, insists tech freelancer, Joe Mohen.

TRANSFORMATION: Is the idea a ‘game-changer’ eg. “Does the idea change people’s behavior?”, asks Jason Segal, of Sustainable Development Capital when he is looking for an investment opportunity.

Music Icon Dave Stewart and Nokia are betting they’ve invested in a Billion-dollar, game-changing idea that will turn the music industry on it’s head and reaffirm Nokia’s leadership in the mobile space, despite today’s announcement of a $832 million dollar loss in the third quarter. Here’s an overview of the new business model via an interview with Stewart and his protegee Cindy Gomez:


Juliette Powell is an author, entrepreneur and integrated media specialist. Her first book: 33 Million People in the Room (Financial Times Press, 2009) builds on her work as co-founder and COO of the Gathering Think Tank Inc., an innovation forum at the intersection of integrated media, business, innovation and technology. A popular key note speaker and commentator, connect with Juliette directly at juliettepowell.com and Facebook.

Call To Action from Space and the Twittersphere

Drop everything and make sure you’re in Times Square tonight at 8pm ET. Such was the message that boomed into my ear, just moments ago and frankly, I’m still reeling. After all, how often does one get a four minute phone call from space, no less?? The caller was Cirque du Soleil Founder, Guy Laliberte, who wanted to make sure that I  - and five thousand of my closest NY friends - are on-site tonight when Shakira does a surprise free performance as Cirque du Soleil takes over all of the screens in Times Square to broadcast the LIVE Moving Earth and Stars for Water Worldcast event.


Could one live global web-cast change the way we think about water issues? Cirque du Soleil and  celebrities like Shakira, U2, Al Gore, Selma Hayek and a constellation of other news makers and Nobel Prize laureates in 14 cities around the world are banking on making a difference via the live webcast on onedrop.org. More than just a celebrity-driven multi-million dollar world event, tonight’s amazing performance is part of Laliberte’s ‘Poetic Mission in Space’ that I wrote about in HuffingtonPost last June.

Under the theme Moving Stars and Earth for Water, the Poetic Social Mission will raise awareness about the issues of water in the world today from a variety of perspectives, including those of citizen journalists, bloggers and the twitter community.

What they all have in common is a concern regarding access to water and a desire to illustrate this in their own distinctive way.

Tonight’s Live Webcast:

Be Part of History - join me and all our Twitter friends in Times Square for the Live show. Share the word via twitter and don’t miss the live broadcast event on www.onedrop.org October 9, 2009 at 8:00 pm. EDT.

Juliette Powell is an author, entrepreneur and integrated media specialist. Her first book: 33 Million People in the Room (Financial Times Press, 2009) builds on her work as co-founder and COO of the Gathering Think Tank Inc., an innovation forum at the intersection of integrated media, business, innovation and technology. A popular key note speaker and commentator, connect with Juliette directly at juliettepowell.com and Facebook.

World Celebrities Unite to Celebrate Water

From International Space Station (ISS), 14 cities, Al Gore, U2, David Suzuki, Shakira, Matthew McConaughey, Salma Hayek and many more top celebrities will be taking part in a world premiere artistic event on October 9th to raise awareness about the issues facing our planet’s water.

As I wrote about in my June 4th story in HuffingtonPost on September 30th, circus entrepreneur, Guy Laliberte, the founder of Cirque du Soleil and of the ONE DROP Foundation decided to become the first private explorer in space to engage in a Poetic Social Mission in Space. During his 12-day stay aboard the International Space Station (ISS), Laliberté’s unique social/humanitarian mission will have one clear purpose: to raise humanity’s awareness of water-related issues.

The Network Effect

The One Drop Foundation is using social networking to create a global domino effect using your tribes, network and sheer belief that together we can build better world!

Laliberté’s mission in space is dedicated to making an impact on how water, our most precious resource, is protected and shared. ONE DROP’s goal: to play a role in changing and influencing how safe water is shared and made accessible around the world.

Why unite to fight water crisis?

  • Nearly a billion human beings do not have access to safe drinking water.
  • More children die every year from drinking unclean water than in all of the world’s armed conflicts.
  • Fully half of the world’s wetlands have disappeared since 1900.
  • Collectively, the women of South Africa walk the equivalent of 16 trips to the moon and back each day just to collect water.

What is Moving Stars and Earth for Water event?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6LdNj0kV9P4

On October 9 Laliberté intends to lead an artistic performance from orbit entitled Moving Stars and Earth for Water. The two-hour global show will link up with live performances and celebrity appearances from 14 cities worldwide. The whole endeavour will be streamed on ONE DROP’s website (http://www.onedrop.org) on October 9, 2009 at 8:00 p,m. EDT (GMT-4).

This once-in-a-lifetime artistic event will have at its core, a poetic tale to celebrate water written by Man Booker Prize award winner author Yann Martel (Life of Pi). The tale will be gradually revealed as the program takes us through 14 cities around the world such as NYC, Rio, Santa Monica, Mumbai, Tampa. It will bring together personalities such as Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, Dr. David Suzuki, Matthew McConaughey, Peter Gabriel, Salma Hayek, Shakira, Tatuya Ishii, U2, Nobel Peace Prize winner Wangari Maathai and many others who will join their voices with Guy Laliberté and the ONE DROP Foundation to celebrate water.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gjFvACN3ayE

Under the theme Moving Stars and Earth for Water, the Poetic Social Mission will raise awareness about the issues of water in the world today from a variety of perspectives. This live event will be presented around the world by a global community of artists representing all cultures and creative disciplines and wellknown personalities. Celebrated around the planet, the artists are singers, actors, filmmakers, photographers, dancers, acrobats, poets, etc. What they all have in common is a concern regarding access to water and a desire to illustrate this in their own distinctive way.

Here are some simple but effective ways you can help the ONE DROP foundation fight against water crisis:

On Facebook:

Add the 1 Drop Avatar to your account

Join  fan page

On Twitter:

Follow ONE DROP account

Add the 1 Drop Avatar to your account

Live Webcast:

Be part of history: Don’t miss the live broadcast event on www.onedrop.org on October 9, 2009 at 8:00 p,m. EDT (GMT-4).

New Internet Manifesto: All For All?

It all started when I came across a random link, originally posted on Twitter by the Official Twitter account of the World Economic Forum. The post led me to a new ‘Internet Manifesto‘ on ‘how journalism works today‘ and to a new story for Huffington Post where I posted the first five declarations for discussion.

Truth be told, as a journalist, I’m tired of seeing the usual suspects discuss what is best for all of us. I applaud @Davos and the World Economic Forum for bringing this Internet Manifesto to a wider audience. Now it’s up to all of us to define the type of future we’d like to co-create using the internet and so I give you the next 5 original declarations from the new Internet Manifesto, translated from German by Jenna L. Brinning and reproduced below for your review and comment. (The first five were posted here.)

The Internet changes improves journalism.

Through the Internet, journalism can fulfill its social-educational role in a new way. This includes presenting information as an ever-changing, continual process; the forfeiture of print media’s inalterability is a benefit. Those who want to survive in this new world of information need a new idealism, new journalistic ideas and a sense of pleasure in exploiting this new potential.

The net requires networking.

Links are connections. We know each other through links. Those who do not use them exclude themselves from social discourse. This also holds for the websites of traditional media companies.

Links reward, citations adorn.

Search engines and aggregators facilitate quality journalism: they boost the findability of outstanding content over a long-term basis and are thus an integral part of the new, networked public sphere. References through links and citations—especially including those made without any consent or even remuneration of the originator—make the very culture of networked social discourse possible in the first place. They are by all means worthy of protection.

The Internet is the new venue for political discourse.

Democracy thrives on participation and freedom of information. Transferring the political discussion from traditional media to the Internet and expanding on this discussion by involving the active participation of the public is one of journalism’s new tasks.

Today’s freedom of the press means freedom of opinion.

Article 5 of the German Constitution does not comprise protective rights for professions or technically traditional business models. The Internet overrides the technological boundaries between the amateur and professional. This is why the privilege of freedom of the press must hold for anyone who can contribute to the fulfillment of journalistic duties. Qualitatively speaking, no differentiation should be made between paid and unpaid journalism, but rather, between good and poor journalism.

Now some of you may read all 17 declarations from the Internet Manifesto just to find out why the German constitution is mentioned (the authors of the manifesto are German) or you might wait for my next post but more to the point, what is a manifesto anyway? According to Wikipedia:

A manifesto is a public declaration of principles and intentions, often political in nature.”

Just above the wikipedia page, a note that puts the declarations below and the intention of this post into perspective: ‘The examples in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. Please improve this article and discuss the issue‘. Yes, please..

Author, Juliette Powell

Author, Juliette Powell

Juliette Powell is an author, entrepreneur and integrated media specialist. Her first book 33 Million People in the Room (Financial Times Press, 2009) builds on her work as co-founder and COO of the Gathering Think Tank Inc., an innovation forum at the intersection of integrated media, business, innovation and technology. A popular keynote speaker and commentator, connect with Juliette directly at juliettepowell.com, twitter and Facebook.

Tweetiquette… For Weddings?

Image courtesy of hartboy

Image courtesy of hartboy

This summer has been filled with new clients, lots of travel and new opportunities to work with the people I care about the most. On a personal note, I was fortunate to attend six weddings this summer, four of which weren’t just weddings, they turned out to be what I have begun to think of as ‘the twedding’.

You know you’re at a ‘twedding’ when:

1.    Your wedding invitations were sent via the micro-blogging site twitter.com.
2.    All aspects of your big day have been vetted by your twitter followers who suggest everything from wedding guests to wedding vendors.
3.    Members of the wedding party take ‘candid’ photographs and videos of the ceremony and upload them directly to twitpic and twitvid for community commenting.
4.    Your wedding becomes a trending topic on twitter.
5.    The groom tweets “I’m married” before kissing the bride.

As more and more engaged couples say ‘yes’ to social media, I wondered about the do’s and don’ts of ‘tweetiquette’. Is there a ‘twedding tweetiquette’? In this era of transparency and ‘ce-web-rity’, do couples secretly want us to ‘tweet their weddings’? Below, some of my favorite brides-to-be chime in with their thoughts:

‘We don’t intend to tweet or facebook only because we want our focus to be present and shared with the actual people in attendance‘, asserts bride-to-be Aviva Gayle. ‘We’re not really concerned with the virtual audience in the internet either. I’m sure if we were guests we’d feel differently, and want to exclaim “congrats” or “beautiful setting” or “great band” or “what-have-you!“‘

Isabel Walcott Hilborne, a bi-coastal online community consultant agrees: ‘Tweeting won’t be allowed at my wedding. I frown upon people telling others (who weren’t invited and perhaps are resentful) how much fun they are having!  I think it’s snobby - “I’m here and you weren’t invited!”  How rude.  Plus - live in the moment, don’t try to be elsewhere’.

Bride-to-be Nikki Stelma sees it differently: ‘I’d have to discuss it with my fiancé but we’re both very social so if one of us started tweeting at the wedding, the other would want to as well’, says Stelma, a New York based event coordinator. ‘There are so many details that happen during weddings that it is impossible to remember it all.

‘By opening an online discussion, you’re sharing your big day with everyone and they help you collect and immortalize all of the moments from multiple angles. When you think of it, it’s very intimate’.

Brody Bond, a creative director at a brand development agency in Baltimore who is getting married in a few weeks, couldn’t agree more: ‘It’s ok to be bold about who you are and what you do. This is an opt-in world, so you don’t need to worry too much about people being disinterested.’ Bond and his fiance Lisa have already set up a twitter hashtag (#Brisa) and a new twitter account (@BrisaBond) to keep friends up to speed on new wedding developments. No stranger to social media, Bond explains:

As always, it’s not about you. It’s about serving friends and family - especially those who aren’t there.One should always be thinking “what can I do to add value? How can I serve people?” In that way, social media helps to accomplish the intended purpose of wedding ceremonies more than the ceremony.

Bond has a habit of taking photos and “tweeting live” from friends’ weddings and rehearsals so it isn’t surprising that he has chosen to apply these same principles to his own wedding. You can check out Bond’s hilarious pre-wedding twitvid here.

If using social media to share your wedding is a new trend, what are the rules of engagement for those encouraging guests to tweet? Mindy Howard, Founder and Chief  Twit at TweetMyWedding.com sums up the wisdom of the crowd with her top 5 wedding ‘tweetiquette’ basics:

  1. The wedding couple should not be tweeting the whole time - they should be engaging personally with their guests & family.
  2. Use a ‘Tweeter of Honor’ and a hashtag (#) for the event, so everyone can participate, congratulate and tweet for the couple.
  3. Never tweet anything you would not say out loud at a wedding.
  4. Tweeting before and after the ceremony is acceptable, but never ever during the ceremony.
  5. Do not tweet during vows, special songs/music or toasts during the reception. Tweeting while someone is speaking is like talking over them - Hold off 5min!

To Tweet or Not to Tweet
In this day & age including all of your online friends in your wedding via social media could push that guest list into previously unmanageable and unaffordable numbers yet for most of us, no matter how engaged in social media we are, the question remains: Are ‘tweddings’ ‘Twagic’ or ‘Twiumphant’?

What do you think?

Juliette Powell is an author, entrepreneur and contributing commentator with HuffingtonPost.com. Her first book: 33 Million People in the Room, (Financial Times Press, 2009) details how to successfully use digital media in business. Powell is co-founder of the Gathering Think Tank Inc., an innovation forum at the intersection of media, business, advertising and technology. A popular key note speaker and commentator, connect with her on Twitter and Facebook.