Empathy for the Introvert

In an empty theater, I watched a matinee of The Social Network. The only people there were me and my husband. Granted, it was a Monday afternoon, but it was strange to be all alone in the theater. The experience was even more heightened as we had purchased the ‘deluxe’ tickets in the balcony.

I’ve been particularly strident about Facebook. Its pull and power have concerned me. The lack of my ability to manage my information on the site is what has me still resisting its pull. But it cannot be ignored. So I went to the movie.

I know that it is a STORY. But it got me thinking about the narrative of Mark Zuckerberg’s life. Pretty intense. I don’t feel I’ve given enough thought to what it must have been like to create the facebook. The story the movie told is not 100% accurate I’m sure. However, it provided me with some empathy for Mr. Zuckerberg, an introvert. I like the simplicity of the story. Boy meets girl. Boy loses girl. Boy builds software in response. The last scene of the movie punctuates this narrative.

I appreciate the perspective that art brought to me on the topic of Facebook. The reality of this phenom is something I have to deal with as a digital citizen. I think they can get it right. The movie (the art) even gave me a little hope that might be more likely than I realized.

Innie Once More

The term “Innie” has been used amongst my colleagues to refer to an Information Architect that works inside a large organization. At the Information Architecture Summit in Phoenix this April, Dan Willis and Mags Hanley paid tribute to this concept (Innies vs Outies, a UX Death Match). I’m invoking the term here to refer to my new career adventure.



At the beginning of October, I joined the User Experience group at Oracle. A few weeks in and already I can see opportunities to contribute to this team to drive high quality interaction for all the constituents that need to interact with Oracle online. This is a pretty big task. However, I’ve been in this situation before and it’s exactly the kind of challenge that I find incredibly rewarding. I like big, gnarly, complex communication requirements. I like the set of challenges that come with “making the complex clear”. I’ve really been enjoying digging in.

As something begins it implies something has ended. In taking my new gig I had to leave my EightShapes colleagues. I’ve worked with them for many years. I met Nathan at an IA Summit based on conversations there we asked him to build a documentation system for the company I was working for at the time, Sun Microsystems. That was just the beginning of many projects.

As an employee and contractor with EightShapes, I was a trusted partner in the work I completed for clients. I learned a great deal working for and with Dan, Nathan, Dimple, Jason, John, Chris, Izac, PJ, James, José, David, Debbie, France, Anna, Geoff and our lovely and collaborative clients. I think they should know I appreciate it. :-)

It’s been three years on the ‘Outside’. The skills I sharpened and the great projects I got to work on while consulting definitely gave me insight that I’ve been calling on in my current role. So, here’s to making the complex clear inside the organization.

An Evening With Brian Solis in Minneapolis

I attended an event Tuesday evening sponsored by the smartly run Kane Consulting team. Brian Solis came to speak about his book, Engage.

The word that came to mind as I left the event was ‘refreshing‘. Brian Solis is smart in understanding what he knows and that it’s a constant to continue to learn. He is also humble in proposing that we all need to be our own experts.

I haven’t seen much modesty out there around this topic. Mr. Solis came to teach us. That’s what attracted me to this kind of engagement when I started participating years ago. The chance to share with others, learn from them and grow together.

I first got actively involved in the participation age when I worked at Sun Microsystems and became an internal advocate for blogging at Sun. It was hard to quantify the benefits, but it felt like the future to me. I participated and saw the things that came back to me through reaching out to others in this way. So much potential!

A couple of insights that struck me from the presentation:

Introverts are the new extroverts.

Mr. Solis discussed the fact that this way of engaging is the future. It shifts the power structures that are currently in play. This is a different way of reaching out than what we are normally faced with in today’s meatspace. Extroverts most definitely rule traditional networking but there is subtlety and longevity to the way a person needs to interact and exist in a virtual space. I think this gives introverts an advantage.

You have an audience.

If you are out there engaging, it’s likely someone is listening. What are you saying to them? He challenged us to give this some more thought.

Curation, curation, curation

Packaged experiences are coming to save us from the firehose that is twitter, facebook, the internet and more. If you are able to cull through information and put it together in a way that helps people understand it, you can find success in this new world.

If it can’t be found it does not exist

People don’t spend time digging for content. You need to do everything you can to make if findable. Tag it, add meta data, put it in multiple places, tell your audience about it and ask them to tell others too. If nobody sees your brilliant content and engages with it, is it really there?

The web was only the beginning

I’ve been around awhile. I’ve worked on creating online experiences going on 14 years. One of the key things I’ve seen from marketing teams is that they are used to the way they’ve been trained. ‘Launch and Leave’ is something I’ve heard before. But this kind of marketing is getting less effective. The onset of the internet started this evolution and this need. The rise of the participation age is forcing an evolution from campaigns to a continuum. You need to KEEP engaging. You also need to provide a place for your audience to go once you get them. Is your web site ready to take on the interested parties you are culling for your business or your art? We have to think about the ways in which customers want to engage and support those models.

Your Business Models and Structures May Need to Change

Customers are evolving and requiring completely different ways of interacting with your company. The picture below shows how a very hierarchical company has shifted and evolved their structure in order to be successful in responding to customers. According to Mr. Solis, it’s been 2 years in the making and it’s still in progress. It’s not easy, but it’s necessary to be successful into the future. As the saying goes, business must evolve or die.

Thanks to Jen Kane and Kary Delaria for a great evening. I enjoyed listening to Brian Solis share his knowledge and encourage everyone in the room to get as good at this as him and to keep learning and keep engaging.


Walking

I love things that inspire me. This young man walked across the country. There is a pause in the middle at Mt. Rushmore. That’s a special place to me because I grew up in South Dakota and visited my grandparents there with my family every year for the first decade of my life. He punctuates the adventure with a great song from Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros -Home.

Fake Email

I got an email today from the people at Gmail (supposedly). They said my account was full. If you are going to fake it, my advice is to do better.

  • They got the email address sort of right but missed the boat
  • They forgot key punctuation (always a clue)
  • They are using inconsistent bolding, coloring, and font sizes (another clue)
  • I can log into Google to check on this and Google doesn’t say my account is full

So the message is to be careful out there and the best way to do that is to start by being smart. Use your critical thinking cap when people ask you for sensitive information.

Here’s what they sent me: