
§ Subscribe
§ Utterz
§ Podcast
- For Immediate Release
A weekly podcast for professional communicators from Shel Holtz, ABC and Neville Hobson, ABC.
Podcast Feed
Vote for FIR
§ PR Search
§ Places
- Shel's link blog
- Blogs I read
- Holtz Communication + Technology
- IABC
- Ragan Communications
- Society for New Communications Research
§ Dead Trees
- How to Do Everything with Podcasting
by Shel Holtz with Neville Hobson
- Blogging for Business
by Shel Holtz and Ted Demopoulos
- Corporate Conversations
by Shel Holtz
- Public Relations on the Net
by Shel Holtz
§ License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Monday, January 22, 2007
Tech leaders see a gold mine in Second Life
Fortune magazine senior editor David Kirkpatrick is just out with an article on the future of Second Life, noting:
...what’s beginning to catch the attention of IBM and other huge corporations is something potentially far more profound than a new online pastime. It’s the ability to use Second Life as a platform for a whole new Net—this one in 3-D and even more social than the original—with huge opportunities to sell products and services.
Exactly, although I’m not 100% convinced that whole new Net will be based on the Second Life engine. But to me, it’s a whole lot more intuitive to navigate down a street, into a building, and into a room to buy a product than it is to click through left-hand navigation panels. Plenty of writers of speculative fiction (e.g., William Gibson, Neal Stephenson) have predicted this development.
You don’t have to get excited about the culture of Second Life as it now exists in order to understand that the underlying idea could well be the kernel of the Internet’s next significant evolution. The reason to embrace Second Life now is to understand the principles so your organization can be ready when the transition begins. (Remember all those companies that shrugged off the Web for years saying, “Who needs a website?")
I think that transition is inevitable, although I certainly could be wrong, but here’s the issue: If I’m right and your organization hasn’t figured it out, you’ll be playing catch-up while your competitors are out in front. If I’m wrong, you really haven’t lost anything.
Anyway, read the article. No registration required.







Digg/shelholtz
Flickr/shelholtz
Facebook/Shel Holtz
Linkedin/shelholtz
Twitter/shel
YouTube/shelholtz
Del.icio.us/shelholtz
GMail/Shel Holtz
Technorati/shelholtz
MyBlogLog/shelholtz
