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.


Facebook: The Courage to Step Away

Facebook has been a constant struggle for me. I got in early because I worked at Sun Microsystems. They let us in shortly after it was opened up to all campuses. It was kinda fun, really addictive and interesting to watch the progress.

What I didn’t know then, I know now.

Read the Terms of Use.

It’s like a roach motel in there. You can get in but you can’t get out.

The thing is – in the end – they have to make money. They know so much about me already that I wish I could take back. However, I can’t. Every single connection that I confirmed, every photo I’m tagged in, all of it is captured. I just wanted it to stop. It takes people like me standing up and saying that the practices are not OK. So here I go again.

If they open it up, I’ll be back in a flash. They can advertise to me if they share with me the info that they know. Google in contrast does share that info.

I’m not actually up in arms about privacy as much as everyone else. It’s more about the fact that I know what Google knows. That leaves the power in my hands. Where do you want the power to be? You should ask yourself.

“People Just Want to Be Heard”

MIMA and MCAD co-sponsor an ongoing salon entitled, Conversations About the Future of Advertising, (twitter tag #catfoa) at the Fine Line Music Cafe in downtown Minneapolis.

The speaker tonight was Alan Wolk. He was talking about brands in relation to social media.

My favorite part of the evening was when he was relating the @comcastcares story and he simply stated, “People just want to be heard.”

After he presented, it was more of a discussion forum with Q & A. Wolk brought up the fact that advertising agencies just want this interactive stuff to go away. I personally have a hard time understanding why there is a hesitancy to understand the new. A challenge to remain relevant is real. The market has always required business to evolve. As user experience professionals trying to create value and continually grow our practice we must take notice of the possibilities for interaction. There is more opportunity to be relevant and to be able to understand what is relevant by simply listening.

I asked Wolk what he thought about the place for agencies as the voice of their clients. Agencies twittering, blogging or somehow representing a client. He said he was on the fence. On this point, I decided that I believe that as long as you are honest about who is doing the talking, it doesn’t matter if you let your agency speak for you. Your customers will expect you to be open with them about communication that comes from you and its source.

Because, if in fact, people just want to be heard, brands that want to be relevant will need to listen.

Taking A Social Media Stance

This video is a pretty cool video from Best Buy. When I worked at Sun, I was really proud of how open the company I worked for behaved. Now, Best Buy takes the notion of sharing to another level.

I really hope this signals a trend for companies to think about what kind of relationship they want with their audiences. I think more companies thinking like this when they can will ultimately make our world a better place.

Social Media Hype

When I find myself in discussions with companies about social media these days, there is one thing that is common. People tend to be focused on the hype and one specific aspect of social media they have heard of. Many people and companies are feeling the pressure to get a Facebook page and twitter to the world. Some of them have heard about wikis and are demanding these magical tools be installed at their company. Now that may sound a little harsh, but it’s really common. It’s understandable too. It’s difficult to navigate through what is happening with new web sites and services that promote and enable different and creative ways of interacting.

Our world is turned upside down. It’s a whole new level of the Internet and it’s not necessarily relevant for every single business and brand on the planet. However, everyone is feeling the pressure because there is all kinds of activity.

If you step back, you can succeed in the confusion and fray. Start with an objective and use the tactics of ‘social media’ to execute and experiment. Communication has always been important for a company to succeed. The term social media describes services and web sites that allow people to connect in ways they have not previously had access to experience.

I remember the same thing happening when I started working on the web in 1994. In a few years time everyone needed a web site. They didn’t always know why, but they needed the site. Even though that certainly is more true than is was then, it’s not useful if the web site doesn’t serve a purpose for the business.

As the Internet provides us amazing new adventures every day, it important to keep your eye on the prize. What does your business do and does that require interacting with people in new ways? Maybe connecting your employees is a good place to start. If one thing holds true, social media activity requires authenticity and full disclosure.

We are all learning, but don’t get confused by the new terms and shiny objects. Stick to your goal for your business and focus on connecting to your customer. That’s all the ‘social media’ you need.

A Social Media Birthday

The more connected I become online, the more interesting it is to watch how the interactions play out. Since today is my birthday, I’ve seen at least a dozen greetings so far all from varying social spaces. Ecards, Facebook wall writings, emails and tweets.

It’s so easy to just ping someone to say hello. It’s really nice to get so many birthday greetings from so many people in my life. It’s also really nice to send them to people. In this scenario, the beautiful part is that social media is actually enabling us to be more thoughtful and polite.

The Shorty Awards

Have you heard about the shorty awards?

The Shorty Awards honor the world’s top Twitterers.

Wow. Did you know you could be the best when you started to Twitter? The things that the community comes up with continue to delight me.

I nominated some of the people I follow:

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  • @shortyawards I nominate @jennyholzer for a Shorty Award in #artist for sharing her art on twitter
  • @shortyawards I nominate @fireland for a Shorty Award in #humor because even though I cringe, I also always guffaw
  • @shortyawards I nominate @jowyang for a Shorty Award in #business because he illustrates how social media sharing reaps biz rewards
  • @shortyawards I nominate @armano for a Shorty Award in #advertising because he is helping to seriously advance the conversation
  • @shortyawards I nominate @whitneyhess for a Shorty Award in #personal her tweets make me feel connected to my community and she is so upbeat

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As I thought about who to nominate, I ruminated about what people really did enhance my life because of their Twitter stream. And then I thought, I’m actually happy to get a chance to recognize these people in some way because their stream has made my life better in one way or another.

Maybe their is opportunity there. Where there is value, often you find a world of opportunity.

If you want to nominate an awesome Tweeter, check out the Shorty Awards. It’s simple and kind of fun if you enjoy giving people kudos or just saying thanks.

i m msg

Individual as a medium
medium is the message
i am msg

These are some deep thoughts I’ve been trying to wind my brain around lately. Twitter has made me think about this more deeply, because I am seeing this occur in action.Twitter is fairly easy. The barrier to adoption is fairly low if you are already an Internet or mobile texting user.

250px-mediatetradsvgSo now we can all talk to each other. We all have the power to be curators and to be publishers. The power of the printing press is in our hands.

Mobile devices bring the ability to publish everything and anything in a heartbeat. Live blogging from a concert to reporting from the scene of horrible human tragedy.

Some of the tools can be hard to understand. So that’s the next thing we can work on. Now that we have this platform, let’s make it easier for people to create with it instead of wrestling with tools.

i m msg

When we think about the statement, ‘i m msg’ it’s multi-dimensional meaning is inspiring and mysterious.

It looks like something you would see in a live chat conversation. The small ‘i’ the ‘m’ abbreviation for ‘am’ and the word ‘message’ shortened to ‘msg’.

It sounds ominous and omnipresent.
marshallmcluhan>It is derived from Marshall McLuhan and current thinking about social media.

It is imperative to participate in order to understand. In essence BE the message.

Represent what you believe in.

We are all ‘i’ and so how do we use this new ability to get some good stuff done?

That’s what we should be thinking about.

Succumbing to Social Media Peer Pressure

A few months ago I posted about signing off Facebook. Alas, being in the social media and User Experience space, I have been forced back on to participate in a few things I will miss out on otherwise.

1) Some members of a professional organization I belong started a conversation about making the organization more open and transparent to the membership. Ironically, this conversation is happening in the Facebook walled garden.

2) Clients are referencing interface elements that I can’t look at without being on Facebook because specific examples are being cited.

3) My friends have all abandoned MySpace for Facebook. I’m missing out on information about them that they assume I’m getting – I guess I’ll be catching up now.

Begrudgingly, I have signed back on to Facebook.  Since I signed back on, over a dozen people have found me. It was an interesting experiement to try to stay away but sometimes you have to go with the flow because taking a stance can have unintended consequences.