
The
web has steadily become a utility of the masses. We’ve all become
familiar with using the web for communicating, surfing, shopping,
receiving information in different forms and a host of other usage
attributes both personally and professionally.
The web economy has largely been fed by advertisers vying for
eyeballs and attention. Advertisers have been a fundamental resource of
the web economy. When a change occurs that alters the old models and
creates improved models with a promise of higher returns then said
changes are likely to create systemic shifts across the entire web.
Systemic changes ripple through the entire web and influence the
system from end to end. Any new innovation usually spawns further
innovations throughout the supply chain of interconnected elements that
fuel the usage patterns of the web as we know it today. We are at a point of web history in which systemic changes are being fueled by the innovations facilitated by the social web.
The social web brings more influential human elements with global
reach than any previous technological development in the history of the
web. Combine the influence of the human elements with the
innovation and demand of the swarms and you have a scenario that will
fuel further changes unforeseen, unpredictable and unimaginable.
What and Who Moves the Web Forward?
Today’s Web 2.0 initiatives, silo networks and emerging models are
the infants of what the web can and will be, sooner than later. The BIG
(IBM,Microsoft, Google, Facebook, etc.etc.) are influencing the web
with incremental innovation that just fuels the appetite of the end
user for more individual control, less silo’s mentality and more
openness. The current models of the “BIG” are economically fueled by
shifting advertising models from brands anxious to be just a click away
from the end user and always in our face. The small represent
over 600 million users of the toddler web, known as Web 2.0, and the
users want to reduce the cycle time by which the toddler web grows up.
The “what” and “who” that moves the web forward are driven by
thought leaders and influences from both the BIG and the small.
Google’s OpenSocial is an example of the BIG pushing the “open” ball
forward a notch, but not a leap. Doc Searls VRM
Project is an example of one person, both BIG because of the depth and
breadth of his thinking and small because he is one person, setting in
motion a path for the web to grow from a toddler to an adult. Doc’s
vision and road map of the web can and will be fulfilled when the small
unite in mind and spirit and influence the BIG to follow the vision.
There are others like Doc who see the web as a tool for creating
abundant markets worth trillions of dollars in new trade, the trade of
a new economy. We choose to point to Doc Searls whereas The Cluetrain Manifesto laid the foundation of the track that would bring the web forward. Doc’s VRM Project
is the fuel that accelerates the Cluetrain to a future that is open,
enabling to individuals and empowering to institutions that understand
the power of a system that is open with no borders and enables free
trade driven by relationships that create the new
economy, The Relationship Economy.
Since this is the tenth anniversary of The Cluetrain Manifesto it is
time for us to fuel this train and give it speed. If you agree then
show your support by joining in a conversation with us and Doc. A group on
Linkedin has been set up as well as a group on Facebook. Lets celebrate and stoke the engine of the Cluetrain with conversational fuel that awakens the markets. It is up to us to create the changes we want.
What say you?