Archive for August 22nd, 2008

Photo Friday: Friend Request Accepted

August 22nd, 2008 | Popularity: 23%
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friendrequestaccepted

I photographed this advertisement while riding on BART in San Francisco recently – it struck me as a creative way to engage Generation Y, and in 2008, a reminder that for some people, online connections are becoming dominant to in-person ones (that and the fact that no one is advertising to Generation X, we’re the generation lost to marketers…). I liked it also because it supports my occasional motto, “in person is the new online.” On a more basic level, though, it speaks to the revolution that Web2.0 is creating around community – as I learned in the patient portal work I have done, these online connections can actually strengthen rather than weaken the offline ones.

You can see the rest of Dentyne’s innovative campaign on their site – they missed one crucial detail in their appeal to the Web 2.0 generation, though, by not making this content embeddable, which should be the case for a campaign like this. From my own experience, I know that big companies are often not of one personality, so there can be some disconnects as large organizations move into the future. In the meantime, enjoy the images.

Health Affairs Blog: Mark Leavitt “not magical just practical”

August 22nd, 2008 | Popularity: 27%
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Health Affairs Blog: Health IT Initiatives: Not Magical, Just Practical

Thoughtful quasi-blogpost* from Mark Leavitt, MD, who is also the Chair of the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT). In the post, Mark very nicely acknolwedges the number of dedicated volunteers in the CCHIT process – I know from experience that this group is working hard and is very talented (way more than I am).

*the quasi part is that I notice that the Health Affairs blog appears (to me anyway) as more of a Web 1.0 publication with comments, than a blog in the spirit of blogs. It might be nice to tweak the HTML title tags a bit for easier embedding into other blogs, and maybe shorter, more personal posts, in the spirit of blogging. I think Health Affairs has been on the leading edge to adopt the blog format in the first place to be sure, now perhaps they could go a little farther to support interaction with the people in health policy in a more behind the curtain way…