Archive for the ‘Case Studies’ Category

Google’s Eric Schmidt answer to online privacy? Change your name!

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

WOW!  This is a fantastic read of an telegraph article by Murray Wardrop.

“Google’s Eric Schmidt suggested that young people like Ozean Interactive’s web designers will actually have to change their name because they have shared so much detail on social networking sites.

I can not begin to tell you how scary this is.  College is a time in people’s lives when mistakes are made.  I mean who has not had that night in college they regret?

I can not tell you how many prospective interns, prospective designers, prospective developers with great resumes - NEVER get a call for an interview after four quick searches:  google, facebook, twitter, and foursquare/gowalla.

Want to know if an prospective intern is a partier / idiot / etc……?

Look at the time stamps of tweets - if all done at 3:30 am…..and regard some type of party / hook up / rant….

If every photo on facebook is of them hugging their BFF with a red cup in your hand…..professing just how “F* up are we?”

If google’s first SERP result is a newspaper story about your DUI / your shoplifting / your drunk and disorderly conduct / etc……

If every single one of your check-ins are @ [insert bar name here]…..

Don’t get me wrong….

I did some/most of these things….I just didn’t record it for everyone to find - before my job interview.  Here is a hint - got a great resume, yet STILL NO INTERVIEWS???? - check your social media.

Privacy has changed dramatically in the past 5 years.  Essentially, there is none!

Web Video Production | The Client Relationship and Prices

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

For some reason, I remembered this today, and I thought I would share.

Ultimate IE6 Cheatsheet from Smashing Magazine Twitter

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

One of my favorite Twitter accounts to follow is @smashingmagazine. LOVE their stuff.

They had a great tweet this morning regarding the mess that is Internet Explorer v6. We have stopped our support of the browser, but you can never quite get away from it.

The article is a comprehensive overview of the challenges of IE6 and should be read by every designer, sales person, and client.

BRILLIANT! How to use video on the web

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

Link to > OK Go - This too shall pass

Directed by James Frost, OK Go and Syyn Labs. Produced by Shirley Moyers. The official video for the recorded version of “This Too Shall Pass” off of the album “Of the Blue Colour of the Sky”.

I have watched this 4 times, and I am still amazed at this video on the web. The timing, the video shots, the brilliance of this video can not be overstated.

I am in awe, and you must watch it now! Click the link above.

This is link to a CNN story on the making of the video

An excerpt from the story:

“For nearly four minutes — captured in a single, unbroken camera shot (my emphasis added) — the machine rolls metal balls down tracks, swings sledgehammers, pours water, unfurls flags and drops a flock of umbrellas from the second story, all perfectly synchronized with the song.” source CNN.com

“Look at your man, now back to me.” Old Spice Commercial

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

ChiefTWiT Leo Laporte as he interviews the commercials creators, Eric Kallman and Craig Allen of Wieden + Kennedy.

This is the old spice commercial and how they did it. A good look at what it takes to produce a :30 second commercial.

They took three days, built a half of a boat, etc.

Link to Behind the Scenes Interview.

Mass Media is dead - my 6 & 3 year old show me so

Monday, July 20th, 2009

Want to know how the media environment will look in 3 - 10 years?  Look no further than my two, darling little snowflakes - my 6 year old and my 3 year old.  They are in house experts on everything and are always willing to share their opinions on a variety of topics.

My two little special snowflakes and media experts

My two little special snowflakes and media experts

Case in point - what will happen to mass media as we know it today? I have been pondering this question for some time now, caught up in the details of Nielsen ratings, shifting demographics, Cost per Points, etc.  I went back and forth on the death of mass media, but my views were about to crystallize over cartoons and pancakes.

One Saturday morning, I was able to step back from the details and the future became crystal clear - mass media as we know it and grew up with is dead - gone - finished!

My 6 & 3 year old showed me.

Here is the scenario:

I woke up especially early and completed some work that I had to do AND worked out - all before 8am.  I was feeling productive, cooking pancakes, and waiting for the kids to wake up.  In a Clark Griswold moment, I had visions of a family breakfast and Saturday morning cartoons while being sandwiched between my precious little ones on the family sofa.   We ate the delicious pancakes and the excitement built to a fever pitch - time for cartoons.

We leapt onto the couch, and frankly, I was being the world’s best DAD.  My son was excited, I even think my daughter hugged me.   Then it all went terribly wrong.

I grabbed my universal, all in one remote (one of the best inventions of all time, if you ask me) and with the click of one button caused my entire living room to hum with excitement.  I quickly surfed the channels until I found a cartoon, and settled back to bask in the glory of being super dad - if just for one hour.

Before my back could hit the sofa, my son looked at me with a shocked 6 year old face that screamed, “What in the hell is this?” Actually, coming out of his mouth (much to my wonderful wife’s credit) was “Dad, can we watch one of our shows?”

My daughter quickly followed up with “Dad, this isn’t TIVO.  You are not doing it right, are you fooling?”

I gathered my wits, “NO, we are going to watch this cartoon.  I LOVE it.”

“But dadd-y” (when daddy-y comes out, I know I am in trouble) “Your show isn’t even on.”

Quickly, I turned to the TV and a commercial was on.

“Yeah, daddy, your show went off,” trailed my daughter in a mocking voice.  ”But, don’t worry, you can fast forward”

“Here I will show you,” as my 3 year old grabbed the remote and quickly navigated her way through the TIVO menu to start the newest episode of Dora.

“Now, now, children, I don’t want to watch TIVO, I want to watch the show that was on.”

Stunned SILENCE.  AKWARD.

“Can we go outside now?”  ”Yeah, can we?”  Were the two statements heard as they ran towards their rooms to change out of their maple syrup stained PJs.

All that was left was the world’s best Dad, alone on a couch, cluching his all in one remote as the media world closed in on him.

And that in a nutshell is the future of television and mass media.

My children do not have appointment viewing.  Their entire media consumption is on-demand - all the time.  If they can’t watch EXACTLY what they want, EXACTLY when they want it, they will find something else to do.  The thought of watching a live program with commercial breaks not able to be fast forwarded thru - completely foreign.   The thought of gathering around a television at 8 pm to watch their favorite show - completely foreign.

How do media companies bridge the gap between how my demo consumes media and how my children consume media?  I don’t know - but that is the BILLION dollar question.

However, everything I needed to know about the changes in the media industry and the changes in media consumption, I learned one Saturday morning after pancakes.  That I do know.

Now where is my IPOD?


Ozean Media is an award-winning web design firm Ozean Media is an award-winning web design firm.