We create content and content also creates us
May 15th
Recently I was interviewed by my friend Elizabeth Sosnow and she asked me about an observation in Return On Influence: “We create content … but in a way, content is also creating us.”
It had been a long time since I thought about this and I thought it was timely to reflect on this powerful concept. I think my friend Jason Falls put it very well when he stated in the book:
“Before the social web, there was always a ceiling or a velvet rope – a limit to where you could go with your influence unless you were somebody famous. Now anybody can be heard. Social media and the Internet makes it possible for every person to be published, find an audience, and become influential.”
Let’s face it, most of the people making an impact on the social web today would not have been heard from even a few years ago, including me. Yes, I create content. But as you see, content is also creating me.
A few months ago, I was cornered at a conference by a lady who kept telling me, “You’re a rockstar! You’re a rockstar!” I realize that “celebrity” is something that exists in a person’s head and there is nothing I can do about it, but this kind of stuff makes me very uncomfortable. I’m no rockstar, trust me. This is a perception … a creation … manufactured entirely by what I publish.
And while I am occasionally unnerved by both the positive and negative extremes of fandom, I realize how very fortunate I am to live in a time when my voice can be heard and I can truly have an impact on a global audience.
And you know what? You can have an impact, too.
If you’re not using this amazing, historic opportunity to publish, you’re missing out on one of the greatest technological gifts of our generation. Free publishing tools. Access to the world. The ability to connect with people nearly anywhere.
If you’re not a decent writer, try video blogs. If you don’t like video, start a podcast. If you don’t want to commit to podcasts, how about slide presentations on Slideshare, or even photographs on Instagram?
This is Jason’s time because he found blogging and committed to it. This is my time because I have the courage to create conversational content.
If you haven’t become a content creator, what are you waiting for? This is your time too! What are you going to do about it?
Is it time to embrace the social media faker?
May 13th
By Matt Ridings {grow} Community Member
There’s this guy. He’s become very popular in the “social business” space. He annoys the crap out of me. He tweets nothing unique, mainly just quotes and platitudes of the type that are very retweetable. He writes nothing original, mainly just articles geared to appeal to the masses but without much actual substance.
He has a PR mission for the company he works for, to become known and by proxy make his company be perceived as a social business. He preaches authenticity and transparency but then has all of the employee Twitter accounts set to automatically tweet links to his posts and retweet him. The PR machine gets him onto the right lists, the right panels, the right interviews, the right blogs. They create progressive stunts to get attention.
Why does this bother me so much?
Am I jealous of that attention? I can honestly say “no” to that. What does bother me is that people buy it. Hook, line, and sinker.
It seems crazy to me that someone who has actually done very little for his company in regards to actual change, or even progressive thought for that matter, can become a leading voice for the movement of which I’m a part. It makes me feel like the things that actually matter to me, like the hard work of organizational transformation, are being belittled or devalued.
But here’s the thing. I tend to analyze the things that annoy me, and I can’t help but wonder if maybe I’m wrong about this “charlatan” view that I have.
First off, by all accounts he is a nice guy. People I know and trust seem to like him at least.
Second, there’s no question that this is an “inauthentic” approach, but maybe this is one of those situations where if you say something loud enough, and long enough, you begin to create change by the very fact that you then are forced to become the thing that you say you already are … or risk exposure? The whole “fake it till you make it” thing?
Is faking it OK?
Is there value in that? Am I being too harsh in my judgment of this guy and others like him? Sure, he seems more concerned about image than reality at the moment, but maybe that will help to create a better reality later on?
I’ll never be in love with this approach, and yes it will probably always annoy me when people value what I consider the “wrong” things in this profession. But that’s just life, and I can’t apply my own values to everyone else. It can’t be my mission to be the white knight out there trying to protect the masses from the snake oil. There are already plenty of those people out there and frankly I find them just as annoying. Let’s face it, even this post it can be taken as a form of condescension and elitism. “I’m smarter than you so let me warn you away from your own stupidity”.
The bottom line is that there are things that I wish didn’t work. There are things that make me question my own values and what I’m willing to sacrifice in the name of “success.”
Cognitive dissonance is a bitch, isn’t it? What are your thoughts on the subject?
Matt is a co-founder and CEO of Sidera Works, a marketing and organizational development consulting practice. His work over the last 10 years has focused primarily in developing innovation cultures, change management initiatives, and specialized market research. Follow Matt at @techguerilla.
A different way to think about social media ROI
May 12th
No matter who I am consulting with or where I am speaking, the “ROI of social media question” is bound to come up.
I have a different view of the ideal role of social media in the marketing mix that might be helpful to you, whether you are just starting out, or whether you have an established program.
Before I get to my perspective, I would like to declare two caveats.
First, I am going to give you ONE view. There is no one-size-fits-all social media plan or best practice for an organization. So consider this as one helpful suggestion.
Second, you MUST measure and continually seek to refine your measurement. Do not use the following perspective as an excuse to not measure. Even if you cannot precisely measure the financial return on a marketing effort (which is not unusual) we need to be alert to the key non-financial indicators that demonstrate that we are contributing to stakeholder value.
OK, here we go.
The complex media world
I recently had the honor of speaking at a national automotive conference and learned about the incredible challenges involved in selling a car these days. Yes, buying a car is a big deal, but the purchasing decision is probably complex for any business these days.
Did you know that, on average, it takes 75 days from the point an interested consumer first visits a dealer website to the day a car is purchased? At the point where social media marketing first begins to touch a potential customer, they may be far away from making a purchase decision — maybe years! This makes it menacingly difficult to determine what ultimately led to a purchase. Was it something they saw on Twitter or Facebook a month ago, a newspaper ad, a drive-time radio spot, or a powerful recommendation from a friend? And how was that friend influenced?
Most likely it is a very complex stew of ALL these things that build up over time, and this is precisely where social media fits into the equation. It is a legitimate part of a mix of communications that leads to a customer relationship.
The importance of small, consistent interactions
We build our emotional attachments with companies and brands like the way we build our friendships — through lots of small, consistent interactions that lead to deeper forms of engagement.
In my social media marketing workshops and speeches, I have fun referring to a photo of a person who has actually tattooed a company logo on their body. Isn’t that kind of like getting married to a brand? Isn’t that the ultimate commitment?
Some marriages, like some tattoos, may occur after a night on the town that got out of control. But more likely, these events occurred after months or years of connection through lots of small interactions that lead you to believe that, yes — I am totally in love with this experience.
The drip, drip, drip of content
The biggest measurement problem companies face is that they have been conditioned to think of social media as advertising. You put some ads out there, create attention and awareness and wait for something to happen. And, while it is possible to achieve some fast results with social media, it is unlikely.
The more accurate comparison is not to how ads work, but to personal networking initiatives. Have you ever tried to sell your products and services through networking at a trade show or local networking meeting? It might take months or even years before you connect with people in a deep way that leads them to actually buy something from you. You keep showing up, showing up, showing up. You liesten and learn about their wants, needs, and opportunities. And you patiently try to be helpful over time so that when that purchasing event takes place, you are at least on the radar screen and part of the conversation.
Through our content marketing — and I use that term somewhat interchangeably with social media marketing because content makes the social world go round — we provide this constant drip, drip, drip of small provocations that create opportunities to engage. The goal is to drive that level of interest and engagement up over time until they take some action like a purchase, a registration, a call — whatever you are trying to do to support your business goals.
Think in terms of qualitative measurement
Whether you work in sales, PR, HR or service, I believe this is the most likely benefit of a social media initiative — creating relationships that lead to trust, action, and eventually loyalty. Here is a partial list of tangible benefits social media relationships have created for my business over the last two years:
- Became a contributing columnist to my blog
- Co-authored a book with me
- Provided an invitation to speak at Oxford University
- Hired me for a corporate social media workshop
- Helped me create the Social Slam annual conference
- Donated to my charity
- Helped me get a government contract
- Hired me as a keynote speaker
- Gave a copy of my The Tao of Twitter
book to will.i.am
- Became a regular cartoonist for {grow}
- Became a strategic business partner
- Assigned all of my books as required reading for his college classes
- Contributed a positive review for my book on Amazon
- Became an intern
- Took a day out his time to take me on a tour of his home town of Stockholm
Some of these important and undeniable business benefits — like speaking at Oxford or a positive book review — are exceedingly difficult to record in a financial spreadsheet! Those types of benefits are “qualitative,” not quantitative, because they are a measure of relationships, not sales. And yet, it IS a value, isn’t it? We would be pretty dumb to ignore that and yet most companies do.
To accurately demonstrate the value of social media, you should have an ability to record and acknowledge these powerful benefits or you’re going to miss the social media boat. This is why small and medium sized businesses may have an advantage in this space. If they are closer to the customer, they may have a better ability to be tuned into these benefits.
Again, this is a short blog post and of course there are many, many other values of social media and measurement strategies. This is just one idea, not a prescription for social media measurement for your business and I would really value your perspectives on this in the comment section. Thanks for reading today!
This post was written as part of the IBM for Midsize Business program, which provides midsize businesses with the tools, expertise and solutions they need to become engines of a smarter planet. I’ve been compensated to contribute to this program, but the opinions expressed in this post are my own and don’t necessarily represent IBM’s positions, strategies or opinions.

















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