The Olympic Games and Web 3.0: Monetizing the Olympic Movement's Digital Assets (2010)
1. The Olympic Games and Web 3.0: Monetizing the Olympic Movement’s Digital Assets Professor Andy Miah, Jennifer Jones, Ana Adi University of the West of Scotland
2. The Olympic Games and Web 3.0: Monetizing the Olympic Movement’s Digital Assets Professor Andy Miah, Jennifer Jones, Ana Adi University of the West of Scotland International Sport Business Symposium, Vancouver 2010 [email_address] [email_address] [email_address]
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4. IOC Congress 2009, Conclusions: The Digital Revolution A new strategy should be defined to enable the Olympic Movement to communicate more efficiently with its own membership and stakeholders as well as to allow for effective information dissemination, content diffusion and interactivity with the global population, in particular with the youth of the world. It should be an integrated strategy which includes the full coverage by all media and in all territories, of the Olympic Games, as well as the recognition of the new opportunities to communicate the fundamental principles and values of Olympism through all media In order to disseminate the values and vision of Olympism, the IOC and other stakeholders of the Olympic Movement should undertake a fundamental review of their communication strategies, taking into account the fast-moving developments in information technology and, more recently, the digital revolution The Olympic Movement should strengthen its partnership with the computer game industry in order to explore opportunities to encourage physical activity and the practice and understanding of sport among the diverse population of computer game users
5. Could this signal a fundamental revision in the definition of who are the Olympic media? Could we see Google as a core media partner for the IOC? What about other large new media organizations? Do the conclusions of the Congress go far enough? Who are the Olympic media now?
15. The IOC now has a presence in large new media organizations
16. other media spaces Athens 2004, VISA Olympian reunion Center
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19. citizen journalist Not accredited by IOC Pervasive reporting Broadcast quality Community focused Covering the streets
20. Olympic feeds on Twitter (via a ‘Tweetdeck’ browser) New forms of visualising the Olympic media
21. Beijing 2008 torch relay, citizen media track the international leg, while broadcasters fail
22. monetization of new media Can the IOC have its cake and eat it?
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27. should monetization take place? answering this relies on a theory of new media culture
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29. how not to do it The consequences of corporate blogging practices
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32. extending non-sport Monetization may be most suitable to non-sport Olympic content
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Hinweis der Redaktion
It’s apparent that the Olympic media are primarily those who pay for the Games
Alon with the vulnerability of organizations to protect themselves
And large social media sites are being utilized by the IOC as media delivery devices
These environments also convey the break down of intellectual property protection
However, the work of these organizations is crossing over into new areas of communication where institutions become their own media vehicle eg IOC twitter account sending Olympic news The way in which people encounter Olympic information is changing
We have citizens following the torch and reporting what happens