Skype Subverts T-Mobile

Many a writer, analyst and blogger have put the label of “disruptive” on Skype. I think NOT. The proper term, as I have said before is “subversive” and what the following will prove and point to that exact claim. Now for those who don’t see the fine points of differentiation, disruptors upset the status quo. … Read more

Kind Words

My mentor in PR, the late Sy Roseman, used to tell me that "self praise" stinks which is one reason why I don’t have a real web site for my company, but more so, because it’s who talks about you and what they say that matters. That’s why it was so it was very rewarding, … Read more

The Line Between Blogging and RSS

I recently received a series of requests from some traditional media outlets asking me to add their VoIP feeds to my Blogroll. After a brief exchange with one of the best bloggers I know, Bob Cox, founder of The Media Bloggers Association and TheNationalDebate.com I was able to better articulate what I felt when I read the request.

These guys are clueless.

There is a big difference between a blogger and media outlets using RSS feeds for distribution. So while the company which shall remain nameless goes out suggesting links to their feeds would be good for my readers, and I should add them to my blog roll, it became even cleared how big media is missing what Blogging is all about.

Blogging is about a personal communication with your audience. I often say it’s not how many, but who is reading your blog. The numbers only matter to advertising folks, not public affairs or PR experts. They know that influencing the right people is what it is all about.

Blogging is more like Direct Marketing than advertising. Since media companies are all about eyeballs, one needs to think more about the influence the blog has, than the traffic.

And to the company who asked for the "link," you’ll get yours, in the stories "I" choose to highlight for that’s why readers choose to use blogs. They want the filter and the insight that goes along with it.

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Blogging Changing Media

While not VoIP related, Today’s New York Times has a story on how blogging is impacting the world of gossip in the media. In the past, when sources mattered, scoops were the key and reporters valued relationships and sought to build new ones, as one never knew where that would lead. Today, reporters and editors … Read more

Credit Due and Deserved

A lot of media coverage has fallen on Vonage’s complaints about Port Blocking by a couple of companies. The real credit goes to Paul Kapustka, who has been like a proverbial bloodhound on breaking and covering the story from its very start. Kapustka, editor of Advanced IP Pipeline for CMP. He’s been on the story … Read more

Scam Deliverd By Skype

EuroTelcoblog’s James Enck discovers a flaw in the Skype multi user chat system and waxes on about it. One of the aspects of Skype I see is some type of social networking feature being overlayed with it. The Pulver Communicator already has this type of feature built in but until the type of trust system … Read more

DoOM and GloOM from OM get’s Countered

“Om, it’s not dot-VOIP yet“….so says Canadian Mark Evans in his blog today. Om thinks the dot.com/dot.bomb era is hitting VoIP, and while some startups may become casualties, there are also more established companies in the space from top to bottom who are shifting to VoIP for telephony and the related business. While there is … Read more