Is the Internet draining us or do we lack focus?

information overload

Five years ago you would never have had access to as much information as you do today. Now the question arises, “Is there too much information available at my fingertips?”

You might not have thought twice about the slow yet apparent increase of information that is available on the web until now. In fact, I hardly thought much into it until I read this article.

The upside to the matter is that no longer do you have to dig through a book, purchase a $500 research report or conduct a focus group to gain information that seems quite simple to obtain today.

On the other hand, our eyes are glazing over so much of this information that we are becoming far less able to soak in pages of data and would rather read quick snippets of information from article titles. For example, say you conduct a Google search for “Percentage of businesses on Twitter.” You might get a great result from eMarketer offering an extensive three to ten page report all about this. But do you choose it? Probably not. Instead, you take in what the title says, “Study finds 56% of businesses use Twitter” and do a quick scan of the first few paragraphs.

This demonstrates the inability and time deficiency that we have to sit down and read a real report anymore. Our depth of knowledge is limited but our breadth is expanding. We are now taking in more types of data but at a shallower level. Many psychologists and scientists question if this will in turn make us more stupid.

They worry that we will not be able to think deeply and thoughtfully into any one topic anymore. While we may be well versed in many topics, what does that do when we are asked to go into detail on a particular subject and can’t?

This debate boils down to focus vs. plethora of information. I stand on the fence about the issue but would have to lean in the direction of saying that in general it will be a good thing. I believe that the more well versed a person is in the world on many different topics, the better off they will be. This is not to say you should know a little about biology, green energy, social media marketing, architecture and pollution, but that you should have a broad focus on a particular industry or topic and take in bits and pieces of data all over about that.

For example, my specialty is high tech internet marketing. Do I read intensive reports on this regularly? Nope. Instead, I set up Google Alerts, subscribe to about twenty blogs, follow around 350 people that are tech and marketing related on Twitter and watch videos related to these subjects. This gives me an expansive and thorough understanding of the general state of Internet marketing. Instead of honing in on one very particular part of my speciality, I like to use the plethora of data to my advantage by expanding my knowledge and expertise to a more general category.

A few months ago I wrote a post titled ‘Information Overload or Filter Failure’ which discussed that maybe we are just having trouble creating our own data filters in our minds. To combat this, pick out particular topics you want to be aware of while scanning the web. While scanning through your Google Reader, email and Twitter feed, act as a keyword catcher and focus on picking up only articles related to those. Don’t let the data explosion overtake your whole Internet experience and let it ‘dumb you down’ as experts are calling it.

As a tip, I try to read a book a month to allow myself to not become too entrenched in only learning from what the Internet has to teach me. I also do this to be able to immerse myself into a longer story and focus on reading hundreds of pages of the same piece rather than snippets. I have realized recently that this has been a bit of a struggle to do since I read so much online now, but I am sticking to my mission to do this and it definitely helps. Try that out too and let me know if it works!

How do you react to this issue? Do you feel dumbed down by the Internet or do you think it can provide us with an opportunity? Let me know your thoughts in the comments section below!

You might also want to follow me on Twitter to learn more @kristinedziadul.

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Love Thy Inbound Marketing Theories

Inbound Marketing just makes sense.

Most students graduating college with a marketing or advertising degree know the in’s and out’s of traditional outbound marketing theories, but they are outdated techniques today. During my college career I always sat in class wondering why companies bothered with mass television or direct mail campaigns if the response rates were hard to track or very low. It just did not make sense!

Upon graduation I have been studying all about inbound marketing, and love it. Today, virtually everything is online. Therefore, business must be online too. Think of the last time you waited around to hear about a product on a television ad or in a magazine. Instead, I bet you are looking up product features on Google, Facebook’ing friends to ask for their suggestions, or going to YouTube to find a product demonstration. This is because the Internet allows all types of information to be available at our fingertips 24/7.

Why inbound marketing?
Advertising online is a lot cheaper and highly targeted.
Being on Twitter and Facebook is free (aside from time and personnel needed to work on updating it)
Uploading videos on YouTube is free
Creating a quality website is comparatively inexpensive
Developing a ning community for your target market is inexpensive as well


It only makes sense to employ inbound marketing techniques for your business today! If your consumers are online, you must be as well. Plain and simple. Our economy has changed dramatically in the past decade. Ten years ago, television, radio, and magazines were highly effective because people were tuning in and did not know how to block out traditional advertisements. Today, we have TiVo, iPods, Amazon’s Kindle and Apple’s new iPad, and now the boom of Internet business.

It is also very easy to track your progress online. Google Analytics is a free way to track visits, traffic sources, and page effectiveness on your website. A new start up, HubSpot (located in Cambridge, MA) has their own excellent program to track leads and conversion on all of your sites, even social media sites. These tracking devices are much more precise than traditional ways of measuring results on television or radio.

A great resource to learn all the critical basics of inbound marketing is Inbound Marketing by Hubspot’s founders, Brian Halligan and Dharmesh Shah. To read my most important takeaway’s from this book, please see my recent blog about it. HubSpot also has developed an Inbound Marketing University which I am taking right now.

Is your company currently using inbound marketing techniques. If not, why not?

The Changing Web Communications Environment


Since traditional advertising techniques are on the downturn, and developing more Internet content that is both relevant and engaging is highly popular, the move towards Internet-based marketing is rapidly occurring.

Corporations are moving their communication tactics to the employee-level so that communication is no longer the primary job of a public relations or marketing department. For example, IBM decided to merge their marketing, public relations, and corporate responsibility functions into one department. IBM saw this as a move which would combine the company culture with the brand, with IBM values at the core of both.

One-way communications from company to consumer no longer works, and even large, more traditional corporations are realizing this. “The web is blurring the distinctions between corporate communications and individual employee communications with customers and stakeholders now” (Debruyn).

The most important way that companies can engage in two-way communications with consumers is by utilizing social networking sites. Social sites now have extensive search capabilities that may even revolutionize searching habits. Steve Rubel from Edleman said, “Social networks are going to start to make it easier for you to search content at point of information” (Convertiv).

What does this mean for Google? Even though Google embraces social sites being on the uprise, they are terrified of what it may mean for the new age of searching. Twitter allows users to search for any topic, person, business, etc., and shows real-time results of what is being talked about. While Google will still dominate searches for years to come, with over 37% search domination, they do fear what social searches will bring (Convertiv).

I think that Google must quickly develop a competing strategy so that they can stay on top of their search dominance on the web. With the rise of social media searches, Google must make a first mover advantage in the search engine industry to keep social searches less used than Google.

What do you think Google should do? Should they allow social searches to rise, or should they do something to keep their dominance of searches worldwide?

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