Richard Binhammer, Strategic Corporate Communications, Social Media and Corporate Reputation Management
Focus groups, customer surveys, and other traditional means of gathering customer feedback are powerful tools, but they have crippling limitations: You only get the information you asked for, you only hear from people willing to talk with you, and you only get answers to questions when you ask them. By listening and engaging on social media, brands can hear from a broad cross-section of customers, talking in real-time, without leading questions or prompting, about the issues that most concern them and the products and services they want most. Find out how to use social tools and analytics to learn what customers are thinking, and get ahead of opportunities and avert crises before they happen.
Mitch Wagner, Editor-in-Chief, Internet Evolution
Mitch Wagner has worked both sides of the street, as a technology journalist and a marketer and social media strategist. He helped lead development of social media marketing strategy for a business-to-business security company. Prior to that, he was an executive editor and writer at InformationWeek, where he launched the publication on Twitter, Facebook, and Linkedin. He pioneered blogging for Internet Evolution's parent company, United Business Media.
Mitch has been a writer and editor at InternetWeek, Computerworld, and more. He started his career in technology journalism covering Digital Equipment Corp. and IBM, then covered operating systems before leaving that beat to start writing about this new idea of doing business on the Internet (against the advice of his editors, who were sure the Internet wouldn't last). Mitch's first journalism jobs were on local community newspapers in the New York metropolitan area; on his very first job, after writing and pasting up the whole newspaper, he put the bundles in the back of his car and delivered them.
Mitch is a social media addict. Follow him on Twitter: @MitchWagner and Facebook. He lives with his wife in San Diego, where he avoids direct sunlight.
Richard Binhammer, Strategic Corporate Communications, Social Media and Corporate Reputation Management
Richard Binhammer is one of the early corporate adopters of social media for business, dating back to 2006, when he started responding to bloggers who expressed opinions affecting brands and corporate reputations. From these beginnings monitoring blogs through simple Web searches, he became an early adopter of Twitter, Facebook, Google+, and Pinterest, leading to strategic adoption of social networks for business purposes.
Since 2006, he has been a leader in experimenting with, adopting, analyzing, and deploying social media to help businesses do better business.
As director of Dell’s Social Media and Community team, he was responsible for communications, social relations, and training while remaining active in Dell’s social media outreach and overall social adoption across the company.
Binhammer joined Dell in corporate communications as a member of the public affairs team in 2005, managing its community efforts in North America and the Asia-Pacific region. Before joining Dell, he worked with several communications consulting agencies in St. Louis and New York, where he focused on planning and implementing strategic corporate communications to achieve business success and build positive corporate reputations.
Before his corporate communications work in the USA, he worked in Canada as a political aide to senior cabinet ministers. He was involved in running local, provincial, and national campaigns and built a successful lobbying business.
His background includes more than 20 years of experience in issue management, public positioning, media relations, and stakeholder outreach.
He has bachelor’s and master’s degrees in political science from Queen’s University in Canada.
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In the 1970 science fiction thriller Colossus: The Forbin Project, two giant supercomputers from the United States and Soviet Union secretly join forces to take control of the collective nuclear might of the two countries. In the film, the two machines discover each other's existence, communicate back-and-forth, share their collective data, and cut their human creators out of the process. It is the ultimate example of machine-to-machine communications, or M2M.
The smartphone market reached a significant milestone, a breakthrough that may cause vendors to celebrate but could strain the capabilities of IT service desks.
In the fall of 2011, around 160,000 students in 190 countries enrolled in a Stanford-sponsored online course about artificial intelligence. About 23,000 completed the course and got certificates, including 248 who got a perfect score. The university offered the same course the old-fashioned way to students sitting in Stanford classrooms. None of the those students got a perfect score.
As Mitch Wagner discussed today, Yahoo is acquiring Tumblr. The big Internet debate at the moment is whether Tumblr will be good or bad for Yahoo. Regardless of their stances on the future of Yahoo itself, many claim that Yahoo will somehow ruin Tumblr.
New York's Metropolitan Transit Authority is conducting a pilot test of digital kiosks to guide subway users to where they want to go more efficiently and at lower cost.
The whole Amazon.reader debate is a double-stupid. It's stupid to think that there's any e-book buyer who doesn't know Amazon's URL, and it was stupider to let ICANN launch the whole free-form TLD initiative to start with.
While NFC's original goal was to enhance mobile commerce applications, it is finding its way into a number of other uses, which is creating both opportunity as well as challenges for IT departments.
Enterprises would like to move to cloud computing but are hesitant because they are concerned about providers’ ability to secure company data. Here are some tips that help to ensure that if breaches occur, the business is not left holding the bag.
Edmunds separates customers into segments based on the info it collects on its site and from partners, and uses that to push out custom content, said Brian Baron, director of business analytics for Edmunds.com, at Predictive Analytics Innovation Summit.
The automotive website uses propensity modeling to target ads and customer registration forms, said Brian Baron, director of business analytics for Edmunds.com, at Predictive Analytics Innovation Summit.
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M2M: Rise of the Machines? Not Yet David Weldon In the 1970 science fiction thriller Colossus: The Forbin Project, two giant supercomputers from the United States and Soviet Union secretly join forces to take control of the collective nuclear might of the two countries. In the film, the two machines discover each other's existence, communicate back-and-forth, share their collective data, and cut their human creators out of the process. It is the ultimate example of machine-to-machine communications, or M2M. CLICK FOR MORE
M2M: Rise of the Machines? Not Yet David Weldon In the 1970 science fiction thriller Colossus: The Forbin Project, two giant supercomputers from the United States and Soviet Union secretly join forces to take control of the collective nuclear might of the two countries. In the film, the two machines discover each other's existence, communicate back-and-forth, share their collective data, and cut their human creators out of the process. It is the ultimate example of machine-to-machine communications, or M2M. CLICK FOR MORE
M2M: Rise of the Machines? Not Yet David Weldon In the 1970 science fiction thriller Colossus: The Forbin Project, two giant supercomputers from the United States and Soviet Union secretly join forces to take control of the collective nuclear might of the two countries. In the film, the two machines discover each other's existence, communicate back-and-forth, share their collective data, and cut their human creators out of the process. It is the ultimate example of machine-to-machine communications, or M2M. CLICK FOR MORE
M2M: Rise of the Machines? Not Yet David Weldon In the 1970 science fiction thriller Colossus: The Forbin Project, two giant supercomputers from the United States and Soviet Union secretly join forces to take control of the collective nuclear might of the two countries. In the film, the two machines discover each other's existence, communicate back-and-forth, share their collective data, and cut their human creators out of the process. It is the ultimate example of machine-to-machine communications, or M2M. CLICK FOR MORE