I'm sure you're
asking "What the heck is 'Web 2.0' and why do I care?" Okay, maybe
that's not a good title for this article. Maybe it should be "Internet:
The Next Generation," or "HTML, XML, XHTML, AJAX, RSS, JSON and Other
Acronyms That Are Taking Over Your Life." Normally I try to avoid using
technical jargon but this is one concept you really need to understand.
So
what is Web 2.0? A phenomenon, more than anything real—although
its impact on your business is certainly real. But to understand why
you should care about Web 2.0, we need to explain "Web 1.0." The thing
we now call the Internet was first conceived in 1961, actually coming
into existence in 1965. (Note: Al Gore was not there.) Why didn't we
start using it then? Because it was weird, and only those with
multimillion dollar computers could have accessed it, anyway.
Twenty years later, IBM introduced the PC; why didn't we embrace the
Internet in the early 80s? Because it was weird and only geeks with the
patience to wait for a 300 baud line could have used it. Finally, in
1991, that first acronym was born and, with the arrival of HTML (Hyper
Text Markup Language), mere mortals had a way to publish information
and have it read by anyone in the world--even those with a different
type of computer. But even then, the Internet failed to catch on. Why?
Because it was weird, and no one but geeks knew what a web server was
since there were still only fifty or so in the world. In 1993,
web browsers that could translate HTML into nice, easy-to-read
documents (with pictures!) arrived on the scene, and people began to
grasp the possibilities. By 1995, web servers were popping up
everywhere, at the rate of 700 per day, and the Internet finally caught
on; in fact, it fairly exploded. From the time the Internet was first
conceived, till the time it finally started to catch on, was 35 years.
In contrast, the current level of innovation and adoption is so fast
that it begs to be named. That's what Web 2.0 is.
With so many
people on the Internet, companies have discovered they can dramatically
lower overhead by letting customers gather their own information and
make their own purchases— on the world wide web. Lower costs lead
to lower prices, and consumers like lower prices, so they've responded
to online shopping in droves. This has driven the need for increasingly
sophisticated programs to handle this burgeoning human-to-computer
communication. It's also driven the need for more sophisticated
computer-to-computer communication. (Enter XML!)
The bottom line
is that this "innovation explosion" that's been nicknamed "Web 2.0,"
whereby people are using the Internet in more and more creative ways,
to do things we couldn't have imagined as recently as five years ago,
is revolutionizing the way the world does business. We're now working
together (some would call it playing!) to build information stores,
transmit audio and video images, create newscasts (RSS and XHTML),
develop social networks, establish buying groups, share product
reviews, produce online encyclopedias, etc. And we like it! Look at the
staggering success of MySpace, YouTube, Blogger, Wikipedia, and other
online communities. Companies such as Google are happily supplying free
online services for users to continue brainstorming and create even
more services (called mash-ups; see definition in this month's Geek
Speak), which will be quickly adopted by other users.
Meanwhile,
companies large and small are using these innovations to create
self-service, online "virtual" stores where customers can research,
buy, track, and return defective items at their convenience. Businesses
that, a few years ago, might have opened a second location, are
building e-commerce websites instead, adding more services instead of
more employees, taking customer service to a whole new level. And
customers are responding: we like being spoiled, tracking our own
packages, seeing what our dream car looks like in Gamecock Red or Tiger
Orange. We like ordering things at midnight. In our jammies. Bottom
line: both consumers and companies—at an ever-increasing
rate--are finding that doing business online is more efficient, more
convenient, more affordable and, sometimes, more fun.
From this
point on, any company that isn't using the Internet to do business, and
adding new services and technologies as quickly as they become
available, is going to get left behind. Because we're fast becoming a
generation that wants what we want, when we want it, and what we want
is full information, served up instantly. And if we don't get what we
want, we hit that back button and, in a heartbeat, we've moved on to
the next website.
So, let me ask you again: are you ready for Web 2.0? You need to be; it's already here.
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