Twitter Ecosystem- Impending Social Media Blunders
Many more good comments on Twitter Fire your Followers, Hire Your Friends so I thought I would do a “round-up” with some interesting comments from Jen Goode, Ike Pigott, Dana Marley and Joe Magennis.
Jen Goode comments:
“I was just talking about this very thing last night with my Husband. Let me preface my view by pointing out, I don’t use twitter as a marketing tool I use is as a way to share thoughts, ideas, comment among multiple listeners - and hopefully learn something while I’m listening. We were both trying to figure out “how do you keep up with it all”. Twitter alone, with the 20 updates at a time view, is difficult enough. Then add in any other single source of connecting and a mess of chatter is soon to follow. I tend to follow whomever follows me - to me it feels like a courtesy. If they took the time to follow me, the least I can do it nod back. But really I can’t hear everyone and the more I follow the more I miss - so who is really listening to me? Very counter productive. My solution as of 9pm last night was to add a new twitter account just so I can keep track of those people I know personally. Who knows how I’ll keep up with a second account.”
Well put. “I don’t use twitter as a marketing tool I use is as a way to share thoughts, ideas, comment among multiple listeners - and hopefully learn something while I’m listening.”
Ideas, thoughts, and comments- while listening and learning.
Ike Pigott, writes:
I just did a presentation for top-level marketing and PR types who want to know what to do with this stuff, but are afraid.
I told them the number 1 benefit is the ability to network with like-minded people, and benefit from human-powered search.
I don’t have to tell them that you can get as much out of following 300 as you can out of 3,000 — because the attention span limits will take care of that. Why introduce them to the concept of considering that metric when Quality trumps Quantity?
Ike, I think top-level marketing and PR types can sense the shift, but in most hierarchies the shift means uncertainty and uncertainty leads to pain. Perhaps the pain of losing one’s job? In our current economy it is a given that brands will or are already feeling the pain. Pain means they have no choice but to innovate and embrace what is coming down the pipe…and something wicked this way comes. Perhaps a new metric? Cost-Per-Influence? They aren’t ready for it yet- still too hard to measure but it will get there.
Dana Marley asks:
“Exactly what do you mean by “Of course that is false- and we know 99% of businesses out there do not understand viral marketing.
Viral marketing is common. Look forward to your answer and love your insightful posts. Thanks to everyone for their two cents.”
Dana- let me recommend two books my mentor recommended to me a decade ago: “The Selfish Gene” by Dawkins and “Media Virus” by Rushkoff. This should give you a meta-blueprint for the construction of a media virus or “viral marketing”. Good case study would be The Blair Witch movie by Haxan Films or see the story-telling aspects in this post on Eldtrich Errors or you might study some of the techniques Paperghost and I used in the security field. (Paperghost is a natural entertainer where every case we investigate was a play and every character viral and hysterical too boot.)
Joe Magennis Says:
Wayne, I think our mutual friend Sam once said “follow ideas, not people” .. which clearly states how I view the act of participating on Twitter. The term I’ve used over and over is “discovery”. I am in awe of our ability to discover, listen in on, and participate in conversations about any interesting topic you can imagine, via a simple messaging platform. These are still early days in an amazing era for communication and real time discovery. Some will miss the point and pollute their streams, while others will maintain some balance that leads to rewards.
Sam does get around doesn’t he? That is a nice maxim and I agree with it. However, most people follow people. They never recognize ideas, or if they do follow ideas I am not sure they act on them.
While I am in awe of many people’s ability to discover these fantastic things I still find it disappointing the masses fail to “discover” so much more. I know that sounds elitist and it isn’t meant that way- well perhaps it is- forgive me. To discover for many simply means finding someone they knew long ago on Facebook and playing Trucker Wars for tokens. I have to admit that is kind of cool, but I wonder if there was a reason I moved on from these relationships?
Many non-technical types I know believe Facebook IS the Internet. Of course many believe the World Web Wide is the Internet too.
The thrill of discovery or even being able to discover is awesome. The thrill of crafting new ideas and putting them into motion is my favorite activity. I am amazed at how connections are made from such diverse people, how we come together and exchange ideas or thoughts or even a comment- even with people we don’t know. If social media is used properly- we probably will get to know them soon enough.
This technological and yet fragile ecosystem validates the best of the human experience. Sometimes it feels like the 70’s- 80’s when I listened to my dad key Morse code every single night so he could communicate and connect with diverse people around the globe. Sometimes it feels like the rush of freedom I experienced when I got my VAX account back 1988. The internet was still “small” and primarily composed of college students, academia, and the hacker scene. The network of machines and friends itself was “discovery”.
- Can one do business on Twitter or social networks?
Sure. I am sure that can be done with good stewardship.
- Can one “market” on social networks?
I believe so, but it won’t be direct marketing (in the vast majority of cases.)
I’d rather see story-telling.
A marketing invasion could go very bad if not thought out well. My first bit of advice to businesses is that they immerse themselves in the medium first. Then hire someone who knows their business- I say that, (yes I am available) because the vast majority of in-house attempts I have seen have been horrible. There are many good people who have the creativity, technical savvy, and they are steeped in how social media works both strategically and tactically.
I still think we are headed for pollution and the fish will leave the waters or we’ll have to close the networks…Case in point I read a Tweet from WarWraith ( Warwick Rendell)who suspected he was getting many followers because he mentioned “networking marketing” in a previous tweet. Naturally I had to try it. I made a few comments, and even some derogatory ones. The follows stacked up and the direct pitches came in…I call it the network marketing flu…sounds like the six pillars in action? (I have created my own master system to help you gain evil mastery over social media and make a quick buck.)
Summary:
I will quote myself- not trying to be smug - but It was something I wrote in February of 2005 and it is still poignant in 2009.
“I will put it at as bluntly as I can: As long as Internet marketers continue to let others crap in their drinking water, they should not be surprised when they come down with dysentery.”
ADDENDUM: Edited for WordPress mangling some words.
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