12 · 30

Blogging Baby Break

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Two weeks ago, a project I was working on for nine months came to fruition- the birth of my daughter, Liljana.

These last 14 days have been trying and fabulous at the same time. I've never been in love with something so quickly.

The blogging will be up and going soon. Until then, I'll be observing from the new side of motherhood. After all, women are known to be amazing multi-taskers.

12 · 23

Happy Holidays from Mayor Daley

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12 · 16

Geo Targeted Marketing: Here and Growing

This AdAge article provides examples, along with new geo specific tools, of how brands are taking a deeper look at micro targeting consumers based on hyper local habits.

I'm one of those folks that loves what Foursquare can do, but I haven't been utilizing too much. The action of checking in continues to be more appealing as I see potential exclusives and partnerships for the places I frequent. 

I haven't heard of the Yowza iPhone app, but after reading this piece, I'm curious to learn more about it.

12 · 08

How Much of The Web Do Consumers REALLY Understand?

I would have loved to be a fly on the wall at yesterday's FTC debates. Re: consumer privacy online.

As evolved as the web as, I don't think a good majority of the public knows about cookie deletion or click-stream analysis. Throw in the notion of keeping track of IP addresses for ad targeting and you have a whole populous of folks that don't know their activities are being tracked with a few simple pieces of Javascript.

Could educating the everyday consumer help enhance the overall web experience?

12 · 07

Enable Facebook Comments on your Custom Domain - The Official Posterous Posterous

Very excited about this development!

12 · 04

The Foodie App is Plain Awesome

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A colleague of mine and writer for the Chicagoist tipped me off to this fun, super niche and handy tool for those of us that not only love a good deal, but enjoy the inside scoop on food.  Check out Lizz's review of the $1.99 app, Foodie.

Hungry yet?

Innovation in Chicago dead or non-existent? I beg to differ with a big 'D'.

12 · 03

FlipShare TV: Coming to You and Your Family This Holiday Season

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My inner gadget geek received an email from Amazon this morning. The company behind Flip TV is coming out with FlipShare TV - making viewing your Flip videos directly to your TV via wireless technology.  Want to share new videos with family and friends? No problem. Use the FlipShare feature and share the videos with your family this way. They will get an update when new videos are available. If your family has the FlipShare TV software, they too can watch the videos on their TVs - even if they don't own a Flip cam.


Between my iPhone 3GS and Flip, I can't think of the last time I used my Canan Mini-DV camera. Have these new video devices changed the way you treat video capture?

Flip TV retails for $149.99 via Amazon

12 · 02

The Blagica Profiles: Meet Dave Van de Walle

Continuing on with featuring folks who've been in Chicago tech for some time, I'd like to introduce you to Dave Van de Walle...

Who are you?

Dave Van de Walle. Pronounced "van duh wall ee." Managing Principal of Area 224 -- which has morphed from a brand consultancy to a social media marketing consultancy/product development shop. We're right now launching a Realtor product called Real SMM. More on that later.

How did you get started in the Chicago tech scene? How long have you been here?

Been here in Chicago since 19-ought-93. Was actually the Sports Information Director at Chicago State University, then was the spokesperson and PR guy for TransUnion. Those two gigs got me more notoriety than anything I've done since -- TransUnion let me have the reins of consumer credit report tips long before those guys from FreeCreditReport.com were singing on TV.

I eventually landed at Aon in 1999 -- took the reins of PR for their Consulting unit and was there for 4 1/2 years before being asked to be VP of Global Public Relations in 2004. It was a great experience -- though most of my job was a combination of global relationship building and keeping us out of bad news.

I left Aon with one of those once-in-a-lifetime opportunities: run a startup. Specifically, U Sphere (www.usphere.com) a web portal that focused on making higher education connections (between all the parties involved in the "college search" process: parents, students, counselors and the college and university recruiters).

So that was my tech baptism by fire. Great experience. Wouldn't trade it for the world.

What are some of the most interesting projects you've worked on?

Gotta mention the one we're working on right now: Real SMM. (http://realsmm.com.) Social Media Marketing for Real Estate. There are real estate trainers, and there are social media marketing firms. We combine the elements of both. And, because people learn a variety of different ways, we provide training in a variety of formats. Already getting tremendous buzz (and not just the casual Ron May mention).

What I love about it is the chance to demystify technology -- in this case, for real estate agents and brokers, the most important thing is NOT that the tool is in the cloud or written in PHP. It is that they make actual, real, human connections with people. That they build their personal brand. That they engage, interact, build.

What is the difference between working in the space during the 90s compared to now? Did you experience any of the dot com bust?

When I was at TransUnion, in 1997 or so, I remember the firm waiting to get the "online credit report" thing just right. So I got to watch the competitors do the "ready fire aim" thing. But safeguarding consumer data was vital, and they didn't want to upset their customers (the banks and credit card companies). Smart approach.

I also remember joining Aon Consulting and watching the hustle to take the human resources function online. Again: watch competitors do silly things, learn from them, get your offering right.

What are you up to now? Tell me about it.

See above; Real SMM is a blast to work on.

I'm also part of an integrated campaign that O'Malley Hansen put together for Sara Lee Deli. What began as a project that would end up getting Moms to engage around their busy lives ended up as a viral video with 850,000 unique views -- driving viewers to the brand's Facebook page and getting them talking about the brand.

Any misconceptions you think Chicago has when it comes to digital media and tech?

This area does more innovating than we get credit for, but, because we're not New York or the Silicon Valley, we're an afterthought in a lot of people's minds.

I think there is still a great deal of bureaucracy, though -- I'd love to see more action from some of the quasi-governmental groups whose inaction is perpetuating the myth that there's not much going on here. The old adage: "Those who say, don't know and those who don't say, know..."

Tell me something I don't know about you

I'm a recovering sportscaster.

12 · 01

Unfiltered Free News Content on Google - No More

Google's blog recently announced a change-up to the way users read news content from Google.

Instead of consumers having complete access to newspaper publisher content, newspapers can now limit the number of pages a consumer reads per day (five). This access will be free of charge.

In addition to this new system, publishers can sign up for something called 'First Click Free'. This program will index the publisher's news articles, providing consumers with access to the full article. From there, the news site can present consumers with paid/subscription links.

Full details of the changes can be seen here. Could Rupert Murdoch's opposition to Google's crawling methods have something to do with the changes?

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