MI Roundup: Sandberg, U-M Mobility Center, Detroit Trends

Here’s a look at some of the news from around southeast Michigan’s innovation community that you may have missed:

Facebook COO and bestselling author Sheryl Sandberg was in town last week to talk marketing strategies at a meeting of the Adcraft Club in Troy, MI. The informal theme of the presentation was Detroit’s importance in international marketing and advertising. Sandberg said the number one question asked on Facebook concerns the meaning of life, but the number two question is, “What should I buy?” That presents a huge opportunity to Detroit and the auto industry, she said, because there’s an unprecedented ability to personalize advertising and reach people through their smartphones.

Something else has changed that is key to Detroit advertisers, she said: We’re putting our true identities online. In the Internet’s infancy in the 1990s, the Web was a big, anonymous platform. Now, we’re voluntarily sharing an unbelievable amount of personal data, all there to be mined by the savvy marketer. The result is that consumers want things on demand: “We believe we should get what we want when we want it, and we want it personalized.”

Facebook’s goal, she said, is to bring personalized marketing to everyone. “The partnership between Facebook and the automotive industry is interesting, because each has very different cultures,” she pointed out. “At Facebook, we think in 3 to 6-month cycles. One of our mottoes is move fast and break things.” Of course, the automotive industry would be litigated out of existence if it adopted that motto, but Sandberg said one thing the car companies can learn from is Facebook’s “ability to make the world smaller,” with 1 billion people each day logging onto the platform worldwide. “Car sales are a great bell-weather for how the economy is doing,” she added. “We see how this industry has transformed the United States and continues to be a source of innovation and marketing brilliance.”

—Elsewhere in the auto industry, the University of Michigan’s Mobility Transformation Center announced this week that Ford has joined the center as one of its industry partners. (Bosch, General Motors, Econolite, Toyota, and Xerox are the others.) The project’s partners met this week for the center’s groundbreaking ceremony in Ann Arbor. Located on 32 acres of the university’s North Campus Research Complex, the off-road test site is being built to lay the foundation for a commercially viable system of automated and connected vehicles that can communicate with one another wirelessly. Industry partners have committed to providing $1 million each to support the center and its programs over three years.

—Good news: Business Leaders for Michigan released a statewide survey this week that reported that more than 87 percent of Michigan voters believe that revitalizing Detroit is important to the state’s overall economy. The survey further broke down the numbers: 78 percent of Democrats and 51 percent of Republicans said revitalizing Detroit was “very important,” with voters in the counties immediately bordering the city expressing the highest numbers of support. (As has long been the case, voters in West Michigan were the least supportive of revitalizing Detroit.) A whopping 70 percent of voters ages 18 to 29 said Detroit

Author: Sarah Schmid Stevenson

Sarah is a former Xconomy editor. Prior to joining Xconomy in 2011, she did communications work for the Michigan Economic Development Corporation and the Michigan House of Representatives. She has also worked as a reporter and copy editor at the Missoula Independent and the Lansing State Journal. She holds a bachelor's degree in Journalism and Native American Studies from the University of Montana and proudly calls Detroit "the most fascinating city I've ever lived in."