One of the things that struck me when installing Chrome was how it actually asked me: "Would you like to keep Yahoo! as your default search engine?" (I'll grab a screenie when I can)
If this was Microsoft, there would have been no question at all - just Live Search as default - and that annoying pop-up everytime that asks you - "Would you like to make Internet Explorer your default internet browser?" No such thing from Chrome, it just sits quietly as my non-default browser.
Which brings me to my point on the evolution of technology in the social dimension. The old Web 1.0 method was when the technology vendor would sneakily and pushily switch all your defaults and settings to favour its own applications and programmes. But that's not working anymore today. So much so that PC vendors like Sony are giving vendors the choice to not have "pre-installed, value-added applications and tools" on their brand-spanking-new machines.
For this reason, I think Google's nailed it. In the new Web / technosphere, the audience is increasingly resistent to the "push." We'd much rather be treated as intelligent people who know what we want and where to get it.
"You don't have to keep asking me if I want Internet Explorer as my default browser, I'll set it as such if I want it."
There's a keen lesson for companies to learn here - not just for technology outfits. In communications, its no longer safe to assume the public is ignorant and that the company knows best. Instead of just thinking of what the company says (message), what's more important is going to be thinking about how the company behaves.
After all, no one likes a pushy door to door salesman that takes every opportunity to push his product onto your face. Even if its a good product.
3 comments:
kinda like them PR guys right? :P
Yeaps... :) can't go around like sales man right?
hi David, sorry for my late reply. uh i study at TARC. so any good PR advice for me?! LOL. btw if you've heard, us final year PR students have just finished handling a college event. was in a measly corner of some newspaper today.
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