Archive for the ‘Short Posts’ Category

Network Theory: Google of Social Media is coming.Part 1

March 5th, 2009 by Talat | No Comments | Filed in Internet, Mathematics, Series Post, Short Posts, Social Media, Technology
Courtsey: thesituationist

Courtsey: thesituationist

Social Networks pervade the internet.Facebook CEO, Mark Zukerberg  often talks about social graphs and the new emerging business  model(and what not). Despite the apparent failure of Facebook to  leverage its business potential , there is a ring of truth in the  almost prophetic pronouncement of the CEO of the biggest social  network site.

Just like links have deep mathematical structures (which Google  exploited to the hilt), Social Networks have even deeper and more  meaningful structures ready to be exploited. And it has mathematical  precedence as a study of Network Theory.

Starting with isolated research in the early twentieth century , and  following with significant gaps in research progress, network theory  has recently formed a broad theoretical discipline. And it has just  just come of age. The most appealing aspect is the live and  extensive hot bed to test and exploit its theories in the form of  Social Networks like Facebook,Myspace, Orkut etc.

Network Theory fits within a broader theoretical discipline known as  complexity theory(the study of complex systems). Complexity theory is interdisciplinary and studies complexity on  multiple levels. Example of complex systems include weather  patterns, food webs, traffic flow. Network Theory is a subset of  complexity theory that specifically studies complex networks. These  theories overlap and influence each other and their boundaries are  fuzzy.

In this series I will shine a light on the results in Network theory  and how they can be leveraged to push social network marketing to a  totally new level. Think Yahoo catalogs and then think Google’s  intelligent search engine, I am talking about that kind of level up.

You must have heard of “ small world effect“, and if not that  then you surely must have heard of “ six degrees of separation“. It  is hypothesized that you are separated by anyone else in the tangled  network with average of six: means that there is someone who knows  someone who knows someone who knows you. The average length of this  chain is six.Now this is a very powerful result. And once you see  something powerful, the best thing is to start asking questions–  lots of it: How can I leverage it? Can it explain something that we  have noticed already? How can I manage that change now that I know this?  Can I innovate on it? Does it open a new dimension for marketing? If  yes then how can I get on it and exploit it?

It is very important to ask these kind of questions because the  questions themselves(even if you don’t have an answer right now)  show you that we find marketing space crowded only because we have  not discovered other marketing dimensions. Imagine living in a two dimensional  world and all of a sudden discovering the third dimension, and think  what kind of mobility that knowledge will give you.

These kind of results are fundamentally different from tactics  marketers apply to navigate through the crowd. These kind of results  show you new dimensions, not just how to eke out a living in an  already crowded space. And it is extremely important that you  yourself ask the questions before you see the answers.

And in short, what is that phenomena again? The phenomena is Network  theory which opens up a new dimensions in internet marketing, and  more precisely social network marketing. And when a new dimension  opens up the rules change, even for the dimensions you are already  working on.

It is very important that you think about it. Leave your thoughts, questions etc in the comments and I will try to address most of them plus what I have to say in my next post.

As Discovery Channel would say –”Think again.”

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Warming up to social media and Network Theory: 9 links.

February 21st, 2009 by Talat | No Comments | Filed in Internet, Series Post, Short Posts, Social Media
Courtsey : lostartofblogging.com

Courtsey : lostartofblogging.com

We will explore Social Media in the light of Network Theory in the next few posts. And figure out ways how to tap into the mathematics of Network Theory to make the market work for us.Here are some starters for you.

  1. We don’t need a Social Media ROI model :Here you will get some very pertinent ROI models for the social media.Essential read !
  2. 3 Surprising Mathematical Principles That Every Persuasive Marketer Must Know: It is a blog post based on my presentation to the marketing team of my erstwhile employer, Mindvalley. I talk about 3 little known mathematical principles, tied to psychology, which will tremendously help you in reaching out to the market.
  3. How to Understand Your Audience: Data Collection & Analysis: Maki’s blog is one of my favorites . Here he details various useful metrics to consider while< analyzing your blog traffic and gives some tips on how to (more…)

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Portfolio of Strategies in the Internet: Lessons from Bill Gates.Part 1

February 2nd, 2009 by Talat | 2 Comments | Filed in Entrepreneurship, Internet, Series Post, Short Posts
Image representing Bill Gates as depicted in C...

Image via CrunchBase

I had some major misunderstandings about Microsoft’s Windows strategy. After some research I realized even more what a genius Bill Gates is. (Even though I might disapprove of some of MS’s policies, but that is besides the point.)

In one sentence Bill Gate’s strategy for Operating Systems can be called Portfolio of Strategies.

It was 1987, and MS-DOS was challenged by more graphical and intuitive Operating Systems. And Microsoft was still a $346 million minnow. The then giants were already eying the OS market in various ways:

  1. IBM was building a multitasking OS/2 system.
  2. AT&T in collaboration with Sun Microsystem and Xerox was making its own user friendly OS.
  3. HP in collaboration Digital Equipment was building its own version of UNIX Operating system.
  4. Apple already had a highly graphical OS, and it kept out-innovating Microsoft.

To say that odds were stacked against Microsoft would be an understatement.

Apparently Bill Gates had two options: (more…)

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Entrepreneurship: The code of creation.

January 25th, 2009 by Talat | No Comments | Filed in Entrepreneurship, Philosophy, Psychology, Short Posts
DNA structure
Image via Wikipedia

You have journeyed all the way with me, and we are here. Let me remind you of our wonderful journey together. And let me re-introduce myself. I am the Entrepreneur. I was tiny and unicellular, I moved around in the prebiotic soup. I am sure , you mighty observer, must have dismissed my micro and insignificant activity. I was helpless and vulnerable, and many the likes of me just vanished without a whimper.I somehow managed to survive, barely. I just hanged on enough till the next major evolutionary step. Despite the harsh conditions (more…)

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The new web economics and how to take advantage of it: some pointers.

January 20th, 2009 by Talat | No Comments | Filed in Entrepreneurship, Internet, Mathematics, Short Posts, Technology
Courtsey : http://www.cindoc.csic.es

Courtsey : http://www.cindoc.csic.es

Imagine millions of neurons made up of simple chemical substances. And when they are meshed together they give rise to an amazing phenomena what we call as human brain.The magic of human brain does not occur because of the individual neurons but because of the way they are connected. Any system has two parts: component and connections. Almost always it is the type of connections which govern the system’s behavior.And those connections give rise to behavior which (more…)

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Two intriguing questions and funny robots!

December 28th, 2008 by Talat | 2 Comments | Filed in Mathematics, Philosophy, Psychology, Short Posts
wendy's rules for robot anatomy/mechanics
Image by gydnew via Flickr

Mostly it is the questions which really matter. Einstein said that if we ask the right questions, much of our work is done.

Not a while ago I did an interesting experiment. I wanted to see how much order can emerge from randomness.So I made these two computer programs.And the results suggested some powerful questions. (more…)

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Google Treasure Hunt(Puzzle 1)

October 14th, 2008 by Talat | No Comments | Filed in Mathematics, Short Posts

I stumbled upon Google Treasure Hunt,  a series of puzzles posted by google for you to submit. So, here I present the solution to the first one. The question goes something like this:

A robot is located at the top-left corner of a 44 x 66 grid (marked ‘Start’ in the diagram below).

The robot can only move either down or right at any point in time. The robot is trying to reach the bottom-right corner of the grid (marked ‘Finish’ in the diagram below).

Note: The grid below is 7×3, and is used to illustrate the problem. It is not drawn to scale.

Robot

*Image not to scale.

How many possible unique paths are there?
(Note: Answer must be an exact, decimal representation of the number.)

Solution seems quite straightforward if you are familiar with higher mathematics. And if you are not, then no worry, I am here to help. :) (more…)

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