Fun Description of Social Media
Social Media in Plain English from leelefever on Vimeo.
Lee Odden has asked a couple questions, in advance of the MiMA event tomorrow night. He'll be posting them on his blog in an edited form. I don't mean to scoop him, but here are my answers to his questions.
1. MIMA is having an upcoming event about social media in the enterprise, "Dual Reality: Who Controls Social Media in the Enterprise". How did the event and your involvement with it come about? What are some key topics?
Doug Pollei and I were talking in January about the social media, how companies like General Mills were going to be changed by it, and how much we had to learn. At the same time, he was looking into starting up a local chapter of the Social Media Club. I though there was a clear synergy with MiMA, suggested he approach MiMA about a joint program. He's a driver, and he made it happen. I'm happy to be part of it!
I'm looking for case studies in how other companies are handling social media, how they're working with agencies, which agencies they are using, etc. I'm also really interested in learning about how to manage these efforts across a complicated set of business groups (agencies, internal departments, functions, etc.)
2. How would you define "social media" to someone not fluent in interactive or online marketing?
I'm going to rip off Dan Zane's definition of folk music: Social media is media for social people. Or, a slightly more complicated version: Social media is the online content left by people as a by-product of being social online. It’s the media that results when folks write, review, share, trade, connect, etc. online.
A lot of people define it by the tools: IM, twitter, Facebook, etc. It's easy to look at the technology that delivers the media - like TV, radio, magazines. But, the key in this model is that the media is more associated with the behavior than with the tools.
3. What are some of the common issues large organizations encounter when trying to evaluate and adopt social media technologies? Are you seeing more internal or external facing applications? (ex: building a private social network vs engaging in existing/public social networks)
The only stuff I care about right now is consumer facing. I don't care too much about Enterprise 2.0 (though I know that I need the same tools for internal communications that I'm seeing take off in the consumer space).
The phenomenon is just getting started, even though to those of us who are on Twitter and compusively reload Techmeme it feels like it's been around a while. It's still so early in the game! Big companies that have been historically reliant on mass media are just now beginning to realize the extent to which their worlds will change as a result of social media.
A couple key issues:
For me, the scariest thing is the tension between wanting to move fast on this stuff, and not wanting to make a major commitment too soon. I think the idea of "first move advantage" is mostly bullshit in this space. Maybe it's because I'm getting older, or because my brands have more to lose, but I'm really getting comfortable with the idea of being the smart follower.
Social media is creating whole new communication patterns, consumers are learning new habits and they're inventing new ways of taking in information. And the technology to make it all go is literally being invented right now. As an entrepreneuer, I'd want to be right in the middle, creating the change. As a marketer, I'm comfortable with the idea of watching things evolve for a while. The last thing i'd want to do is go do something ham-fisted and get our brands burned as a result of haste or recklessness.
4. Can you share a few high level tips for companies that are in discovery mode when it comes to tasks such as deciding on social platforms and applications, internal management and success measurement?
I'm an unreliable source here. We're still sorting out this stuff, but I'll let you know when I'm confident enough that we've been successful. Here are principles we're working from:
One piece of advice that I would give is, work really closely with the companies. Facebook, Myspace, Google, Yahoo, Cafemom, Videoegg, have all been very willing to work with us to create successes.
5. What are some of the resources (sites, blogs, books, events, networks, applications, etc) that you rely on for information on social media best practices?
My reading list is much more narrow than both it should be and it used to be. I don't think I've got anything unique to share here...
6. I asked this question of Charlene Li in a previous interview about Groundswell, so you can't use her answer (RSS). If you were a social technology, which one would you be?
Twitter? Short attention span, limited capabilities, impulsive, compulsive, flexible
7. BONUS! What question should I really be asking you? (and the answer of course)
How are you making decisions about where to invest energy and time in social media?
Where are you placing your long term bets? (not telling)
Is Facebook the next AOL? (yes)
Is the web page dead? (Not yet, but it's dying pretty quickly)
What comes after the webpage? (the feed)
Is professional, quality content dead? (it's not nearly as valuable as it used to be)
Thanks for Gord Dibbon. This works like a charm.
Link: bullet points in one cell? - Excel Help Forum.
Bullets can be inserted by using ALT + 0149 from the NumPad
To get more than one line in a cell type your bullet then your text then hit
ALT + ENTER for a line feed.
ALT + 0149, more text etc.
Once you experiment you will get the idea.
You can make a bulleted/numbered list in a cell.
Calling all Women in Tech: She's Geeky - HomePage.
Some really interesting insights from HorsePigCow about measuing the health of your online community in her great post, Metrics for Healthy Communities . For those of us about to launch a critical community effort (you know who you are), this is required reading....
More soon. Link: Adweek Magazine In Print - Advertising News - Advertising Information.
Helping to solve the "discoverability" problem, the dudes at Polyvore have done something really powerful. Checkout: Discover or Start Trends - Polyvore. I'm not a clothes guy, but this isn't cool because of the clothes. Imagine if this were food, recipes, or music.
I'd love to do this on some of the sites i work on...
More evidence that the old media is going to be suffering from a brain drain over time, as the smart, motivated journalists and writers realize they can thrive online. It's got to be liberating for at least a good third of the folks in traditional media, terrifying for the other 2/3rd.