The Net Generation and the future of social media marketing
Jul 22nd
I saw Don Tapscott speak at SXSW and was inspired to read his excellent book Grown Up Digital. Through extensive research, he identified the new norms and expectations of the “Net Gens,” the first generation to grow up entirely digital. How has this changed their outlook, their lifestyle, and their expectations of society?
It’s a fascinating perspective and I began to think through the implications for marketing. Clearly, understanding these norms is essential to the future success of our organizations. So here are the trends he identified with a few of my thoughts on the impact this might have on social media marketing.
Customization
The Baby Boomers take technology for what it is and hope it works. Net Geners make the technology theirs. They want options. They love to customize, and even the option to customize makes a product more attractive.
- Impact – Have you noticed how people decorate their iPhones? What would it look like if your readers could customize their experience with your blog? Customize exactly what they see from your RSS feed? Why would they want your news stream when they can create their own? Ho do we enable our content consumers to determine HOW, WHEN and WHAT they receive from us?
Scrutiny
While there is an unprecedented amount of content on the web, there is also an unprecedented amount of unreliable content — spam, phishers, photo shopping, inaccuracies, hoaxes and scams. Net Geners have a high awareness of the world around them and accept few claims at face value.
- Impact – The irony is that the web is not as faceless and anonymous as we thought. The rising generation can sniff out a fake. There is little room for error. However Net Geners also are apt to forgive companies who apologize and try to make up for mistakes.
Integrity
Net Geners care about being honest, considerate, transparent, and living up to commitments. There may be some truth in pegging them as a narcissistic generation but they also care about community, close relationships, and security. The one exception here is an entitlement mentality when it comes to content. Next Geners do not want to pay for music, books and movies, even when they know it is wrong to go around the system.
- Impact - Net Geners live a double standard. While valuing honesty, they have been conditioned to steal content and think it is OK. This is the gathering storm — content publishers who depend on copyright protection for their livelihoods versus an entire generation who will not pay for it. The implications for the future of the arts and all content creators is vast.
Collaboration
Working together comes natural for a generation accustomed to chat groups, multi-user video games, and file sharing. They bring a culture of collaboration to work and the marketplace. Ubiquitous access to the web via mobile technology makes them feel they have a constant friend in their pocket. They value contributing to product design, and feedback unless they feel a company might misuse it.
- Impact — To win loyalists to our content marketing efforts, how do we involve this generation in the process? What does open-sourced company content plan look like beyond one-off contests and promotions? Collaboration is an opportunity for creativity, engagement and unprecedented loyalty.
Entertainment
Net Gener’s expect work to be play. At Microsoft’s campus, employees can play baseball, volleyball or soccer. There is a private lake, a gym, and 25 cafeterias. Xbox consoles are everywhere. They even sponsor whale-watching excursions. There is also an expectation of constant connection to web entertainment, even on the job.
- Impact — “Entertainment” is a value I have been talking a lot about in my classes. How do we institutionalize ”fun” as a content strategy? How many of our companies even think about being “more entertaining?” Three quarters of Net Geners agreed with this statement: “Having fun with a product is just as important as the product doing what it is supposed to do.”
Speed
Growing up wired means this generation is used to instant response. They have an expectation that their lives and careers will progress at the same fast pace as their online lives.
- Impact — To this group, delays of any kind result in irritation, creating an overwhelming expectation of service providers. If your typical service response to a complaint on Twitter is more than an hour, you’re going to lose customers.
Innovation
This generation has been raised in a culture of real-time innovation. Favorite mobile devices and apps improve – sometimes dramatically — every few weeks. Net Geners live to stay current. Owning the newest device contributes to social status. To stay cool, you need “new.” They are addicted to ideas and contributing to the latest innovations. Anything short of the leading technology is considered passe. Many teens I know will not even watch a movie if it is more than a year old.
- Impact — You can already see the impact on consumer electronics where product life is measured in months or even weeks. If you are in an industry that is slow to innovate, is this an opportunity for differentiation and competitive advantage?
These trends are coming at us fast and are probably already showing up in your marketplace. What ideas do you have to capitalize on this information and re-invent yourself and your company?
Illustrations courtesy of BigStock photo and Microsoft.
The link to Grown Up Digital is an affiliate link.
Enhancing your personal social media power
Jul 21st
Click here if you can’t see this interview about social media influence.
I don’t often put myself in front of the camera, so it helped a lot when Mike Stelzner of Social Media Examiner made me do it! He did a great job with this interview, which originally appeared this week on his excellent site. In this video, I discuss my philosophy about creating influence through social media, the networking power of Twitter, the democratization of influence, and a host of other timely social media subjects.
Thanks to Mike for the great job he did with the interview and for getting me on the other side of the camera!
The Age of Gurus. A {growtoon}.
Jul 20th
Join the growtoonists each Friday for a humorous take on marketing, social media, and current business events.
Mars Dorian describes himself as a creative marketeer with a moon-melting passion for human potential and technology. You can follow his adventures at www.marsdorian.com/
Why content marketing will make your small business sexy
Jul 19th
By {grow} Community Member Craig McBreen
There’s a monumental shift going on and it’s affecting my little world in a profound way.
The world of visual branding solutions is kinda, sorta my bailiwick. I work with a company on their positioning statement, logo, tagline, and a website. You social media pros might call this horse and buggy stuff.
But here’s the thing. The type of companies I work with are finally beginning to smell the new media scent wafting into their little realm. I’m even getting inquiries about this supposedly newfangled term: content marketing.
So why is a “visual” kind of guy excited about content? Digital online marketing energizes me because I see the endless possibilities and guess what? It all revolves around this soon to be ubiquitous term, content marketing.
What really gets me going is transforming a company’s brand into something with a little emotion and that’s a heck of a lot easier than it ever was. Why? Because we have this wild and wonderful world of new media … and standing out involves telling your story.
Sure a firm can dive into analytics to measure traffic, find the search words people are using to find them, and the type of content they seek. But if you only focus on the numbers, you’ll miss something important.
Telling stories is fun. Fleshing out a company’s essence and making them shine kinda rocks, at least for me.
Tooting the company horn and telling the world how special you are is not passion. That’s milquetoast, downright boring and frankly won’t cut it much longer. You get that, right?
There’s a crap ton more to your little brand than the company mission statement or a well-crafted “About Us” page. It’s about telling a deeper, more meaningful story. And social media is the platform many small companies need to embrace, but also the medium so many get so wrong. In fact they are royally blowing an opportunity to be the cool, black sheep that breaks from the flock.
Brand differentiation is now easier and a more enjoyable process than ever and our friend, social media, um, content marketing, is the ticket to the dance.
So, how does your little company break from the flock?
1. It’s all about the content
I don’t think every small company needs a blog, but I strongly believe most need a content strategy. It’s part of that old fashioned thing we call branding. It might take the form of a well-developed PR page or even better, crafting an in depth success story about a client. If you don’t have time, why not focus on micro-content?
2. Learn to tell your unique story
What if your engineering firm has a strong focus on community? Bring some visibility to that not just by writing how generous you are. Instead focus on the groups you’re supporting, or better yet, individuals within those groups. Or write about why you are so passionate about giving back. Let that emotion seep out, people love that and want to do business with folks they know and trust. Be human.
3. Discover your sweet spot of delivery.
If you own a basement waterproofing business, why not put your own gurus in front of the camera? This delivers your expertise and shines a light on your own wizards. With that comes personality and your company’s essence will come out in a way that just might surprise you.
4. Find your home-grown brand evangelists.
There might be several people within your company who posses an undiscovered talent. If you have a new content focus, why not test it and see who wields the golden pen? Part of a brand story is getting employees on board and what better way than to let them tell this story in their own special way, right?
Say you own an accounting firm and one of your employees is positively bat crazy about Auditing and Assurance? Sounds like a great blog post, at least with the accounting crowd. Why not write a 10-step plan about the process and allow users to download it. Maybe it could become a series of 10 blog posts.
I’ve been in the traditional world of branding for a while. I now want my clients to get on board because I see this as the only way forward. But the added benefit is this: Businesses have the ability to truly stand out like never before. Each company has its own special form of genius and what better way to make it shine? Embrace the content.
Is your company finding any content successes yet? How are you telling your story?
Craig McBreen is the owner of McBreen Design and writes at craigmcbreen.com. A Seattle-based branding consultant who also likes to write about social media, breaking out of routine, and the power of creativity as a daily practice. You can follow him on Twitter @craigmcbreen.
Illustration courtesy of BigStock Photo









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Grow your company, reputation, customers, impact, profits. Grow yourself. This is a community that will help. It will stretch your mind, connect you to fascinating people, and provide some fun along the way. I am so glad you’re here.
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