odds/ends things/thoughts

Mostly from the Internet, sometimes by Conrad Lisco.

  • The blind men and the elephant: A case for transmedia storytelling.

    • 7 Dec 2009
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    • planning transmedia
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    There’s a well-known Buddhist story of blind men and an elephant. A group of blind men (some say men in the dark) touch an elephant to learn what it is like. One blind man feels the tusk and believes elephants to be hard and tough. Another feels the flexible ear, concluding that elephants are agile and graceful. Another feels the legs and concludes the elephant is strong and powerful. Each individual perspective is valid, but no one person understand the whole animal.

    When the men compare notes on what they felt, they’re in complete disagreement. The story is meant to illustrate that understanding and reality depends upon one’s own perspective and context.

    Like most Buddhist teachings, this story has application in all aspects of life, and can even be applied to marketing. Brands are complex beasts, with attributes not unlike the elephant – some soft, some strong, some flexible. We do our best to communicate them, but at the end of the day, we’re subject to audience perspective. Consumers each have their own varying perspective and it’s constantly changing and evolving. It’s why context is so so important.

    This parable got me thinking about transmedia storytelling, where a story spans multiple media in a coordinated way. Consumers are exposed to varying touchpoints, each tasked with delivering specific parts of the overall message. Individually, they each give a sense of the story, but together they have real power.

    If the blind men had been exposed (individually) to each of the elephant’s “touchpoints,” perhaps they’d understand the whole.

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  • The power of transmedia storytelling.

    • 24 Nov 2009
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    • brands coke media transmedia
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    In today's interconnected world, young adults, teens and even kids have become so comfortable with media technology that they flow from one platform to the next. The problem is that their content is not flowing with them.
    via forbes.com

    Thanks to @edcotton for putting me on to this article.

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  • About

    Head of Community Experience co: collective, a brand innovation studio
    for the 21st century C-Suite.

    This is where I keep odds and ends, things and thoughts. Mostly from the Internet, sometimes written by me.

    A few projects:
    filterfest.tumblr.com
    townholler.tumblr.com

    Note: opinions are my own.

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