Written by: Barbara French

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Thursday, February 14th, 2008 at 5:21 am PT

Canopus Research and Strategy Analytics stirred up some buzz this week with new research services focused on virtual worlds. It brings up some interesting implications for analyst relations.

Before we go any further: I have no Second Life presence. I don’t even qualify as a n00b. I’m just calling it like I see it, from out here.

First, the latest buzz:

Canopus Research is building a field office in Second Life. This came to my attention via Canopus Research’s page on Facebook, where Will Zachmann posted a photo album of his SL field office and Mr. Arifi Saeed, “Research Director, SL”.

Meanwhile, Strategy Analytics is venturing into virtual worlds in pursuit of metrics. They’re out to benchmark the virtual world critical success factors, like perceived engagement and expected time spent. This caught my attention via a press release featuring a color photo of Wett Mopp, “Virtual World Analyst”.

What are some of the implications for analyst relations?

1. You don’t need to join virtual worlds to find analysts with presence, but vetting them may be a challenge. You can figure out who’s where by tapping your social networks, formal business comms, feeds, offline networks. Figuring out who has street credibility in a virtual world, let alone across multiple platforms, is a different kettle of fish.

2. Avatars are already part of the analyst landscape. This raises questions around transparency — for clients, research subjects, and analysts alike. Historically, hidden identities and multiple identities have been hallmarks of virtual environments.

3. Nobody knows (yet) how virtual worlds will change analyst services. Research needs are emerging. Analysts are experimenting with coverage areas and office locations. Some are temporary: Brandon Hall added an SL office for its 2007 conference registration. Others are intended to last.

4. It’s feeling like last call for early adopters. Anyone lusting for First and Only claims on virtual world stuff had best saddle up!

Written by: Barbara French

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Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007 at 5:35 pm PT

Four high-profile bloggers have recently become vCard-carrying members of the ICT industry analyst community. First, it was Daniel Taylor returning to the analyst ranks at Yankee Group. Next, David Tebbut joined Freeform Dynamics. Yesterday, Jeremiah Owyang joined Forrester Research and Matthew Aslett joined The 451 Group. And just in time for Oktoberfest, too.

I’ve always believed that the collective reputation of “the analysts” depends on the quality of the people filling the jobs. If so, prospects for the analysts are looking pretty good.

Written by: Barbara French

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Monday, June 12th, 2006 at 8:44 pm PT

Yankee Group public relations boarded a roller coaster last week. On the upside, their *former* PR agency of record won an award — for facilitating 1,400 mentions of Yankee and/or its analysts in the business press. On the downside, Yankee issued a press release on operating system reliability that was sure to fan flames among its Linux detractors. Imagine their glee — the detractors’ glee, that is — on discovering factual errors in the release.

To get a sense of the tallies here, the press release on Yankee’s OS reliability study resulted in more than 700 derogatory reader comments at Slashdot in less than 24 hours. And, that was just on Slashdot…

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Written by: Barbara French

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Monday, February 7th, 2005 at 9:41 am PT

As professional opinion leaders and market experts, industry analysts face three key challenges as bloggers: credibility, relevance and passion. Tekrati explores these challenges and how different analyst groups address them, as we continue this special report on industry analyst blogs. Related stories offer in-depth comments from selected analysts, and a reading list that links directly to analyst commentary on blogs and RSS.
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