All the rage just a year ago (and now reduced to niche-niches like MetBlogs with very little chunking in t

Together, we entrance.
he UK), hyperlocalisation seems to have been snafu’d under the carpet.
Yet it promised – and could have delivered – so much.
You think of the internet, and the natural penchant is to cogitate on the macro side of life. Big things, big dreams.
But what the webs actually conjured, perhaps as an unplanned aside, was the opportunity for communities and their constituents to connect in a more personal and intimate fashion.
Who knew?
Hyperlocalisation was a word touted by the media cognoscenti. I think the reason it never truly achieved its potential was because those very same people who talked about it, feared it. Hyperlocalisation has the potency to rid the world of newspapers that operate on a superfluous, magnanimous level.
Hyperlocalisation (jesus, this is starting to read like an article written purely, and optimised neatly, for SEO – yet I assure you, this is not the case) is the convergence of passion and people. It’s not restricted only to region, but avails of niches, spectrums of opportunity. People with a common interest is where hyperlocalisation sings.
Word And Mouth is working to invigorate communities with the limitless advantages of hyperlocalisation. There are relationships to be built, is money to be made for everyone involved. The outright benefits, inevitably, are a greater sense of closeness, of knitting of parts to form stronger, healthier wholes.
It’s the perfect time to reinvestigate the charms of the hyperlocal concept. Foursquare, Groupon and Yelp – front runners in the 2010 race for success – can each fuel interest from the wider internet community in projects of this ilk.
Does the idea of community entrance you, as it does us at Word And Mouth? Tell us about your dream.
Picture courtesy of clevercupcakes. Because they nyom.
Hyperlocalisation is about being at the heart of humankind, proacting and reacting at a moment’s notice.
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