Web Development | Search Engine Optimization | Online Marketing
31 Dec

With 2009 just hours away, there’s hope, expectation, and reservation in the air.
A few thoughts: 2009 will be the year of…
There is one key attribute to success that most do not realize. Everyone is self-employed. Whether you work for a corporation or have your own freelance company…you are essentially self-employed.
If you work for a company as an employee and get a W2 at the end of the year, you are still in theory a one person company and your product is…you. Your time, your creativity, and your talent…that’s what you get paid for.
In 2009, I believe we will see people take more responsibility for their own progress and careers. Instead of leaning on job security – which is a mind game anyway – we will lean towards independently looking towards progressing ourselves. You are your own boss…even if you have to answer to someone.
Through this realization, we will see people branch out into other areas. You no longer have 1 job…you may open up a side business selling info products, freelancing, blogging – who knows.
2009 will be the year of the self-employed.
As retirement accounts dry up, loans are called, and credit lines are reduced we need to optimize and adapt for the better. What were priorities in 2007 and 2008 will change this year.
From families and businesses paying off their debt and re-structuring their expenses to save more to real estate investors going crazy over bargains to be had.
From workaholics spending more time with their families to students finding new ways to pay for school so they don’t have to borrow.
From parents taking back control of their retirement by not relying on extremely leveraged institutions for help to college savings accounts being started for new born babies.
2009 will be the year of shifting priorities.
As marketing morphs into consumer interaction and corporate execs become transparent a new way of reaching your audience is taking hold. Inbound Marketing is the process of building your brand and evoking consumer loyalty through communication, relationships, and an equally satisfying need to make our world a better place.
Utilizing Search Engine Optimization, Brand Marketing, Social Media, and overall Reputation management; start-ups will compete with giants by creating communities for niche markets and taking over market share through quality products/services and Inbound Marketing. If you build it correctly, they will come.
2009 will be the year of Inbound Marketing.
In line with being self-employed, the personal brand comes into play. No longer do consumers only care about the product or service, they now care about the people behind the curtain. With so many companies faltering in 2008 it becomes increasingly important to put your money towards the leadership behind a cause.
With the transparency that social media networks bring to executives, personal brand will play a big role in consumer confidence. This is extremely apparent when you look at Apple and Steve Jobs…then the challenge is how do you pass on “your brand” to the company yet still take it with you when the time comes.
2009 will be the year of Personal Branding
Many people are confused by how to monetize or even utilize social media networks. Whether it’s Facebook, MySpace, LinkedIn, or twitter, they are confused. And rightly so…these applications have a feature set but it’s up to the users to determine how that feature set is used.
In 2009, I see twitter emerging to a mass audience. Whether they know how to use it or not, twitter offers something the other networks are not geared towards..the ability to find and connect with strangers of like mind. Networking and building, this is where I see twitter exploding.
2009 will be the year of twitter emergence.
On a side note, if you are interested in a really cool twitter showcase coming in January ‘09 – follow me @arifgan – details to come early Jan…seriously, you don’t want to miss this one.
Now, on to you…our readers are clever, creative, and determined so let’s hear it…
2009 will be the year of?
6 Responses for "2009 will be the year of…"
2009 will be the year web video begins to replace text heavy web pages and inefficient intra-company communications/meetings. Arif’s recent tweet linking to the Ford social marketing guru’s recent “aha” moment underscores this coming shift in thinking. (Great video of a car parallel parking itself!)
2009 will definitely be the year twitter takes off. Looking forward to your upcoming twitter showcase.
@Jim Doman
Good one, video is already taking on a bigger and bigger role. Now with increased bandwidth availability the throughput isn’t such a big deal.
You are dead on. Everyone, (whether they realize it or not) are self employed.
I remember, my sister said these words to me years ago. I thought she was weird.
Great post.
@Chris Desouza
Thanks for the comment. I hope 2009 is a year that people take their future into their own hands…even more so based on the turmoil we’ve seen when you rely on others – just look at the many retirement accounts that have been turned upside down.
2009 will be they year of business model innovation.
Various industries will continue to be disrupted by insurgents with completely new business models (remember Skype and the telco industry?). At the same time large established companies will use the crisis to make tough decisions and prepare the field for new business models. It’s always easier to implement new ideas during a crisis because less questions are asked and there is less resistance because people don’t want to keep their jobs.
Initially there will be little risk-taking though, because it’s difficult to foresee how the global economic crisis will evolve…
If this is the year of the self-employed, how will you service that potential market, or will you? I’m particularly thinking about things like building an online presence/brand and whether you will do anything for that. Anyway, just a thought since you brought it up on your blog.
I recently went to this meeting http://www.meetup.com/DenverConsultantsCorner/calendar/9627654/ which was interesting for self-employed consultants.
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