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Sport Social Networking – a match made in Australia

July 6th, 2007 | 1 Comment | Posted in Eventstreaming, Social Media, Sport, Startups, Web

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Australians are sports nuts. They are absolutely obsessed with the stuff. Any conversation with one of them ultimately leads to a discussion of their favorite team for the weekend’s match, or for Gen Xer’s their son or daughter’s match. Grassroots sport is thriving down under.

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So where else but in Australia would the perfect match occur between grassroots sport and niche social networking. A Sydney-based start up, 3eep, is pioneering this space. They’ve teamed up with Kanga Cup, one of the largest youth football tournaments in the world to provide an online community zone for the upcoming Australian event.

Kanga Cup takes place in Canberra between 8-13 July and players, parents and coaches will be able to upload photos and videos and track their team’s progress on special Team Zones.

3eep’s Head of Community Development, Nick Gonios, notes: “This will be a fantastic way for Kanga CUp participants to keep in touch with family, friends and passionate fans back at home, wherever in the world they may be!”

According to Nick, there will also be some eventstreaming taking place via ustream.tv.

It’s pleasing to see Australian initiative at work both on and offline.

All presence, correct and waiting to pownce

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I’ve loved watching how folks who hadn’t yet jumped on board Twitter, the miniblogging and presence application, got what it’s about after a few days and within a week or two became hooked.

You see, presence tools are addictive. They represent  “your favorite coffee shop 2.0″ – a place to hang out with your kinda people and tune into snippets of their everyday lives.

While Twitter has represented a big step forward in growing awareness for presence apps it is not unique. There were a handful of tools before it, notably Jaiku, and there will no doubt be others after it. Just like in the world of social networking – we’ve come a long way from when we launched First Tuesday across the world in 1999 – there will be other presence apps. Some of which are mere clones and others which push the innovation envelope.

What is amazing to see though is the pace of change in this space.  Twitter’s traction really took off at the end of the first quarter 2007. We have seen a number of clones launch since then and now we have a serious contender for progressing the space: Pownce.

Ross Mayfield has some excellent coverage of this new app, which has been launched by Kevin Rose, Leah Culver and others. Like all innovators it will have its detractors and the inclusion of advertising into the business model of Pownce is already causing some angst. As one Twitter user has said:

“Sponsored links to my desktop? F… y.., Pownce! Uninstalled.”

Guerilla marketing in the age of eventstreaming

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Usually watching lifestreaming is anything but lively — the banalities of a San Franciscan startup are only interesting to a very small niche. But yesterday, iPhone Day, was an inflection point.

Many folks chose to jack into the various live videostreams that covered the lead up to and the speedy consummation (in most cases – sorry, Kris Tate) of iPhone mania. Some of these folk were within driving distance, and elected not to get caught up in the frenzied gadgetry. While others were on the other side of the planet.

Hanging out in Bunbury, Western Australia, Duncan Riley tuned in and captured his thoughts on TechCrunch, for whom he writes regularly. Sometimes the clearest view comes from afar, from outside the maelstrom and Duncan hits the nail on the head in his post:

The difference on iPhone Day was that instead of turning to blogs or waiting for the mainstream media to report the facts hours later, we were all able to watch it all in first person. The promise of user generated live media was delivered. The seed of a revolution was planted.

The seed Duncan is referring to is exposure. Thomas Hawk, CEO of Zooomr, has confirmed this view. He notes that as a two person startup they don’t have a big advertising budget. I suspect, like most startups, they don’t have an advertising budget at all. So, together with his colleague, Kris Tate, he set out to cover iPhone Day and as a result promote the Zooomr brand.

His take on this is pure guerilla marketing magic:

…we have to be resourceful as we develop, grow and bring Zooomr to maturity. We have embraced grass roots journalism from the beginning. Blogs, podcasts, videoblogs, social media sites, live casting — all have been used on a shoestring to allow Zooomr to compete with much larger corporations who have at hire some of the finest and most expensive PR agencies in the world.

Zooomr is able to promote like this more than anything because of the generosity of the Zooomr community who understand what we are doing and what Zooomr is all about. Central to the success of yesterday’s launch was that Zooomr stickers were *everywhere*. People were wearing them, they were used as the rope tape to form the entry line into the store. They were prominently featured on CNBC’s coverage of the event. But we never would have had the stickers except for the fact that one of our photographers Randyman generously at his own expense printed up 500,000 of them for us.

The message here for brand developers worldwide is “be resourceful and be noticed” – exposure is there for the taking.

Photo courtesy of Thomas Hawk. Yes, it was chosen intentionally – capturing Kevin Rose and crew outside the Palo Alto Apple store on iPhone Day using Robert Scoble’s Nokia N95 …poetic justice.