Nuevas paradojas del marketing
Muy buenas, estas se las plantea Matt McDonald en su blog:
- If Twitter is down, then how can we Twitter about it?
- Why do early adopters tell everyone they know about the next big thing, and then complain when everyone starts using it?
- Is it still a wiki if only one person edits it?
- If you accept a friend request from someone you hate, does that make you friends?
- We want brands to join the conversation, but do we really want to talk to all of them?
- If blogging gives everyone a voice, why is it still so hard to hear anyone?
- If you’re in Second Life more than half the time, is it still second?
- Why is the next big thing small now?
- If knowledge is so valuable, why is everyone giving it away?
- If you can’t find yourself in Google, do you really matter?
- Why is it that when you’re completely busy, the first thing you do is tweet about how busy you are?
- If people are so lazy, why isn’t RSS more popular?
- Which came first? The troll or the message board?
- When did something behaving like a virus become a good thing?
- If the consumer finding out is inevitable, why do companies still try and trick us?
- If a blog has more comments than posts, who’s blog is it?


