We’ve had a very busy couple of weeks here at wikiDOMO. It
started with preparing for our first parade. Yup, you read that right!Parade!One of the things we’ve wanted to announce is that we are working with a
number of BIAs (Business Improvement Areas), here in Toronto
and in Hamilton, Ontario.
One of those BIAs is the Bloor West Village BIA. As a matter of fact, it was
the first BIA in world!It began in 1970
and for the most part, Alex Ling has been instrumental in driving its success
and that of the BIA concept overall.
While working with Mr. Ling and the BloorWestVillage
community, he asked us to attend the Toronto Ukrainian Festival parade - so we
did. We got our dinosaur and signage and handouts ready and on Saturday
September 19th wikiDOMO attended its first parade. I must say it was a
blast!We will definitely be attending
next year; and we got a lot of ideas on how we will continue to support the
BIAs.
First One Web Day
Sponsorship
Meanwhile, we became aware that there was a One Web Day
event here in Toronto and in New York City, so we decided to attend both. In Toronto
we helped to sponsor the event at Café Taste along with Mozilla and Tucows.
Dragan stepped up to help with both setting up the event and representing
wikiDOMO. I was in New York with
Vesi (my wife and our Membership Manager) and attended the event in WashingtonSquarePark
in Greenwich Village. We showed up a little late and
missed the speeches, but we had a great time nonetheless.
It takes commitment to be involved in our community and we
at wikiDOMO wish to contribute in any way we can. Thanks to everyone who helped
us at these events and to those who organized such great events.
Well, it's been a couple of months since we last posted to the Linking Local blog. That's not to say that we haven't been busy. A lot has been happening in the background, we've released a number of new features to the http://www.wikiDOMO.com alpha site and more features and bug fixes will be released by the end of September. We've also been doing community outreach and have a couple of exciting partners to share with you. But, more about that in a future posts.
This post is about Open Marketplace, something we've been working on for some time. As we developed wikiDOMO.com from the original concept, we kept encountering more and more concerns with the media, marketing and advertising industries - the industries we call the Marketing-Industrial Complex. We realized that the impact of what we were doing was much bigger than just a tech start-up - it was something that had the potential to change how marketing works - to change the marketplace.
We knew we needed to develop a broader model that allowed anyone to engage in its development and most importantly benefit from it. So, we started to work on the model, at first we called it "open marketing" and then after a lot of meetings and feedback we decided Open Marketplace was more accurate. After a few months of work we now have something that we can share with the world:
Open Marketplace Manifesto
The media, marketing and advertising industries are a massive marketing-industrial complex. The mass marketing options that once worked for marketers and consumers are no longer effective. They worked before, in part because there was no viable alternative. In the post Internet age consumers and businesses alike are abandoning the complex and attempting to replace it with the Internet.
However, the Internet by itself is not a solution. We're looking to social media for answers, but it's not meant to address this problem. We must develop a new model that allows us to transition away from the marketing-industrial complex. A model that truly addresses marketplace needs by providing efficient and low cost production, distribution and consumption of marketplace information. A model that avoids the inherent duplication and fragmentation carried over from the complex.
The future marketplace must be open. An open, non-proprietary model can help consolidate and direct innovation to the needs of both the providers and consumers. Only then, can the Internet deliver its true potential: free and open access to the information that empowers our lives.
Open Marketplace is a future where everyone has access, a voice, and shared responsibility over marketplace information to make better consumer choices.
It's about a future:
where everyone has free and equal access to promote anything;
where local, national, and international marketplaces' are equally empowered;
where relevant, reliable, timely information is freely available to the marketplace;
where providers and consumers have equal ability to voice their opinions;
where everyone is able to collaborate and engage in open conversation;
where the production and distribution of information is a cooperative effort;
where we all benefit from a new sustainable, efficient and effective marketplace; and
where the end game for marketplace participants is increased information quality.
To achieve the future Open Marketplace, we must be guided by these core principles:
The commons is where all marketplace information belongs.
Competing is good - sharing is better, because we all win.
Duplication and fragmentation are the enemy - aggregation is essential.
The marketplace must set standards, and most importantly follow them.
Transparency of information is the air that sustains the open marketplace.
An identification system for everything, and everything with an ID.
Every bit of information linking to the physical world.
We want to see the Open Marketplace future come to pass and we have taken it upon ourselves to make it happen. But, we can't do it alone. At the very least we need encouragement, we need to know if you think we're on the right track. Better yet, we need your help! We've created a public Open Marketplace Google Group. The group is a work space where you can learn more about the project, provide input and add your name to the Open Marketplace co-conspirators list.
If you have feedback of any kind on the Open Marketplace Manifesto please add a comment below or start a discussion on the Google group.