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Showing posts with label roadmap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label roadmap. Show all posts

Oct 26, 2012

A Quick Sitecore Roadmap Looking at the Next Year #sitecoresym

Sitecore's Senior VP of Product Marketing, Darren Guarnaccia provided an updated Roadmap for Sitecore's stable of product offerings during the Sitecore Symposium 2012 North America in Las Vegas. There's quite a few interesting improvements and additions that will be of interest to both business and technical users.

Here's the highlights of the Roadmap Darren discussed. 

Near Term Additions for Q4 2012

  • Version 6.6 of Sitecore CMS will be released
  • Good news for Mobile developers as this will include Sitecore's Mobile SDK and a very sophisticated system for simulation of content on many mobile device classes
  • Updates to Sitecore's DMS system, adding Engagement Intelligence features that will be of great use to business and marketing users
  • A refresh to the Foundry product based on Sitecore CMS v6.6 and an update to their Social Connected tool

First Quarter 2013

  • A big, much-anticipated update to Sitecore CMS with the release of Sitecore 7, which includes large scale item storage support
  • For business users there's some new and very powerful additions to DMS with the Visual Path Analysis tool which allows marketing folks to dig deeply into how users are reaching (or not) various content
  • Email Campaign Manager 2.0 will also be released

Second Quarter 2013

A lot of technical and infrastructure goodies come in Q2 2013, including:

  • A refresh to the new SPEAK UI platform
  • Updates to DMS to support the CRM Service Layer
  • A refresh of the Sitecore Intranet Portal product based on Sitecore CMS v6.6
  • Sitecore's DMS will integrate with Sitecore eCommerce, and DMS will become available on Microsoft's Azure Cloud Platform
  • The Sitecore Adaptive Print Studio will gain ability to interact directly with files produced by Adobe InDesign

Second Half of 2013

  • Some significant updates to the core CMS functionality with updates to Sitecore CMS workflow, new features for content reuse, and finally the beginnings of some usability improvements to the administrative interface which will accelerate in the future
  • Launch of Big Data for Sitecore's DMS. With all the tracking and analytic requirements of Sitecore's Customer Engagement features, the ability to manage the data requirements of the system has been a concern from Day 1. With this update the DMS system should be able to handle many terabytes of analytic data with the option of storing that data in a variety of locations both locally and in the cloud

… and Beyond

  • Significant enhancements to the existing Sitecore Personalization features, including the ability to personalize down to the field level within the CMS

About the Author

Ryan Bennett is a certified Sitecore developer and Principal Solutions Architect at San Francisco-based consulting firm Cylogy, Inc.

 
 

Source : cmswire[dot]com

Aug 20, 2012

Inside The Secret Facebook Group Where "Social Marketers" Swap Tips

You're not invited to join, but one of its members gives us a tour--and a few souvenirs.

Follow Fast Company's roadmap to social media: surefire rules, data, and expert wisdom guaranteed to show why this market is completely unpredictable.

Facebook salesfolk will sell you an ad, but they can't help your posts rise atop news feeds. "The sales team doesn't know the nitty-gritty of Facebook. When you get into the science behind it, they don't understand it all," says Chris Tuff, director of earned and emerging media at the ad agency 22squared. So if you'd like some help, solicit an invitation to a private Facebook group known simply as Social Marketers. Its 380 members (as of July) parse the platform's API and help one another exploit it. "We just got wind of some new things coming over the next year," Tuff says. "Minds are going to be blown. It's about to get a lot more sophisticated and confusing. We're reliant on each other to figure out what all these changes mean."

Want to join the club? Best of luck. Here's a primer:

Name: Social Marketers

Founder: Tyler Willis, VP of business development for Unified, a marketing-technology platform for big brands

Who's involved: A mix of marketers, agency execs, and entrepreneurs. Notable members include Ekaterina Walter, Intel; Scott Monty, Ford; Esteban Contreras, Samsung; Jeff Widman, Pagelever.com; and Matt "Matty Mo" Monahan, CEO and founder, AlphaBoost, a social advertising tool.

How to get invited: Members can bring others in, but it doesn't happen often. "You have to be very discerning because you're essentially being judged on who you invite," Tuff says. He earned his entry after speaking at the AllFacebook Marketing Conference.

What to do if you're in: Participate. "Tyler Willis will say, 'Everyone comment on this post because I'm weeding out people who aren't active,' " Tuff says.

What not to do: Self-promote. Also, don't let many clients into the group. "Us being ahead is why they hire us," says Tuff.

Regular conversation topics: New tools, EdgeRank changes, and winning campaigns.

General consensus: General Motors was foolish for pulling its Facebook advertising.

Reliably controversial topic: Google+.


Source : fastcompany[dot]com

Aug 13, 2012

Baratunde Thurston Confesses How His Twitter Spamming Almost Killed "The Onion"

Photo by Brooke Nipar

Follow Fast Company's roadmap to social media: surefire rules, data, and expert wisdom guaranteed to show why this market is completely unpredictable.

I almost ruined my company's brand on Twitter. As The Onion's director of digital, I'd been testing Twitter on myself for a year before I launched @TheOnion in March 2008. Shortly thereafter, Twitter added us to its Suggested User List, which made our follower count and my ego explode. Then, on May 19, I activated the Tweetlater service to help schedule certain posts. I also enabled a feature that automatically thanked each new follower. I put some dark joke in there that I cannot remember, but trust me: It was clever and awesome. Our followers would be hooked.

I flipped the switch on Tweetlater, then left the office to attend a political fundraiser, patting myself on the back for another digital strategy job well done. But something wasn't right. My iPhone began buzzing incessantly from inbound Twitter alerts. Hundreds of people were complaining that @TheOnion was spamming their timelines. Then I realized my mistake: I had set the gratitude bot to thank individual followers publicly, rather than in private. We were flooding our thousands of followers with scores of duplicated tweets. As I realized the scale of my mistake, my phone stopped working altogether. The iPhone sadly lacks the ability to process a constant stream of hate-filled text messages. I raced home, a 45-minute journey, to unplug the brand-destroying doomsday device, but I was too late. For a day at least, I turned The Onion into a social media joke akin to its own headline "New Social Networking Site Changing the Way Oh, Christ, Forget It."

Saving me from complete embarrassment was the fact that in May 2008, not as many people cared about Twitter as today, so there weren't very many witnesses to my crime. Since then, the stakes have gotten much higher. For organizations, brands, and individuals, social media has become mainstream with a multitude of platforms, assumptions, and expectations--all sucking away ever-larger slices of marketing budgets, even though the payoff isn't always clear. As Occupy protesters often chant during police raids, the whole world is watching. But what do we see? We're not even sure. We gather at conferences and ask each other, again, "Is it the regime-toppling, rights-bolstering, community-enabling conversational sales channel we've been promised?"--and those questions still feel new and compelling, because nobody has a good answer.

Twitter is a medium of adorable baby photos and adorable cat photos and adorable baby cat photos. And on top of this, brands have amassed a layer of well-paid social media experts--consultants! executives!--who are tasked with transforming brands into friends. For companies that see this new frontier as a marketing opportunity (and that's basically all of them), it is a thin line between relevant and creepy stalker. You want to be where the conversation is and join it in an "authentic" way, but just because someone is talking about your product does not mean he wants to talk about it with you. Should every human gathering place be targeted for interactive marketing campaigns? How would you feel if you and your friends were out dining, discussing Game of Thrones, and an HBO executive suddenly joined your table screaming, "Winter is coming!"

I sympathize with the marketer's lament for a simpler time when you could just buy some TV ads a year in advance, drink a few martinis, sexually harass your secretary, and go home. Even five years ago, a home-page stunt or takeover might have sufficed. Today, the platforms you "need to be on" change every few weeks. Facebook Groups are out and Pages are in. No, Pages are out and Subscriptions are in. Tumblr is the new black, and email is actually the best social network. Tom from MySpace has returned . . . on Facebook. And what on earth is your Pinterest strategy? Oh, you don't have one? Congratulations, you just unlocked the Irrelevant Businessperson Badge on Foursquare.

Even figuring out your platform of choice doesn't provide much comfort or stability because the platforms don't want to share all their rules and methods out of well-placed fear that some of you will abuse that knowledge. Or, maybe they don't even know themselves. Social media services seem torn between protecting their users, empowering their users, selling out their users, and annoying everyone.

Now, try measuring that. What is success? Impressions? Clicks? Mentions? Sales? Viewers? Some new unit based on a dopamine meter and backdoor API installed in the user's hypothalamus? Yes! Let's call that metric "feelies."


Source : fastcompany[dot]com