1/4/2024 0 Comments Source amnesia![]() I preferred the days when good information was easily discernable from bad. Be prepared to see more advertising ideas start to play around with, and amalgamate good information, as the need for it increases. Disgruntled former employees, or anyone with a vested interest (positive or negative) can bring a corporation to its knees or raise it from the ashes. ![]() This idea is topical and relevant because it plays on the ambiguity of the review system that’s in place at the moment. Free nights accommodation will be given to those guests who receive a ‘5-star review’ (it pays to behave!). Instead of customers reviewing the hotel (which they are encouraged to keep on doing) the hotel will be reviewing the guests. ![]() My agency recently toyed with the concept of reviews, and with a client of ours, The Art Series Hotels in Australia, we’re offering ‘Reverse Reviews’. For example, Yelp recently came under fire for ensuring big advertisers were spared from negative reviews, whilst those companies who didn’t advertise were thrown to the wolves. However, this too is being gamified and corrupted. If everyone gives an opinion on something, then all of those opinions can be amalgamated, and a truth can be found-crowdsourced fact finding. The collective actions of so many people, and the intense referencing, mean the information on Wikipedia is substantially better than many other areas of the net. Depending on whom you ask, Wikipedia is the saviour of the world, or a contributing menace. One fightback to source amnesia is the wisdom of crowds, or getting collective opinion on certain subjects. When a planner presents the strategy on behalf of the agency do they clearly stipulate the source of the information? Do you know if the source is reputable or not? Do you care? We’re losing our ability to delineate good information from bad. ‘What, you found that outdoor advertising has more engagement than TV ads? Wow how interesting…. I see media agencies often do this with research reports given to them by media owners. It trains us to not be critical, and just accept what we are given. In a Google Age, all facts are treated as equal, and that’s a worry. This isn’t so bad if they are blogging about where to buy the latest lipstick, but what if they are blogging about things of substance, such as health or childcare? There is a lot of money to be made in these highly emotive areas-and therefore a lot of misinformation being spread, all of which the consumer increasingly takes at face value, due in part to ‘source amnesia’. if they are sexy and charismatic, not necessarily right) then Google will ensure their information gets to the top of the pile. As long as they get enough views and influential links (i.e. We accept the fact, but don’t pay attention to the source-leading to source amnesia.Īround the world we now have bloggers pretending to be experts in all manner of areas. If however, we need to find a ‘fact’ and just ‘type it into Google’, well it doesn’t matter how ‘right’ the information is, nor where it comes from. You see, if we put a lot of effort into finding out whether something is true, and cross-reference our knowledge with other pieces of information, we are more likely to remember not only the fact, but the varsity of said fact, and where and how and why we came to that conclusion. Like most modern-day malaise the culprit, so ‘they’ say, is Google. Source amnesia is the increasing tendency to remember the fact, but forget the source.
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