SXSW ’09 Panel Recap

I participated in a panel at SXSW yesterday called "My Boss Doesn't Get It: Championing Social Media to the Man."  Michael Wilson, CEO of Small World Labs, moderated; my fellow panelists were Miles Sims (also Small World Labs), Rebecca Caroe (Creative Agency Secrets), and Christian Caldwell (American Heart Association).

It's difficult to take great notes and actively participate, so here are some great recaps on the session:
In addition to these, the real-time Twitter reactions were tagged #swl.  Great questions from the audience.  Thanks to everyone who attended, live and virtual!
Before the session, I shared thoughts on SXSW and social business with KXAN, Austin's NBC affiliate.

I've run into lots of great people around town so far.  And there are LOTS of people around.  What I wonder: if registration is up 30% over last year – in this economy – what's it going to be like next year, when things have hopefully turned around?  I'd say it's a safe bet to reserve a spot on your calendar for March 12 – 16, 2010.

Recap on P&G Digital Night

IMG_0237
That was fun.

Last night, P&G brought a group of internal staffers and external partners together for a friendly charity-based event.  I didn't have any details about what we'd be doing before arriving in Cincinnati, but was looking forward to reconnecting with former colleagues, social media connections, and others who I've heard of but never met in person.

The essence of the event was network activation to support Tide Loads of Hope and education for observers.  We were split into four teams, each with a vanity URL (e.g. Tide4.com) which would track t-shirt sales.  If you review the Twitter stream for #pgdigital, you can see most of how the four-hour competition unfolded.  If you search further, you'll also see how creativity played out in online videos, blog posts, and even a music video. And you can still participate, until 11 am EDT on March 12th.

I want to share my key takeaway from the event with you.  Because it has little to do with cause marketing or even social media marketing.
At the end of the evening, P&G's CMO Marc Pritchard remarked that in the future, all employees should get involved in activating connections similar to what had just been witnessed.

The significance of that idea is staggeringly huge.  This is a company with 138,000 employees starting to realize the value from having all of its constituents connected and activated.  They're also learning about new tools to change the process of engagement.  Events like "Digital Night" help recalibrate the company's mindset.

P&G is taking steps to make social business a reality.
By the way, my team won.  But the true winners will be the recipients of relief from Feeding America who will benefit from everyone's generosity in participation.  We collectively raised $50,000 which was matched by Tide.  In the long run, P&G benefits as well by moving along the path to transformation.

Disclosures:  P&G is not a current client.  I was not compensated or reimbursed in any way to attend.  And I have been a Tide customer for as long as I can remember buying laundry detergent.

Other event-related posts:
– David Armano:  Make A Difference. NOW.

– Everything Typepad:  Get A Cool Shirt, Save The World

– Lisa Bradner:  Lessons from Loads of Hope
– Sucharita Mulpuru:  Lessons from P&G's Digital Day

One final note.  During the event, a small volume of snarky tweets showed up.  I'm looking forward to reading commentary from those who weren't here in person.  I believe the ego trap was defused for many participants given a request for silence leading up to the event – but I wonder how many bruised egos will lash out tomorrow from the uninvited.

UPDATE: Word from P&G on final results.  Over 3,000 t-shirts sold, over $100,000 raised.

SXSW ’09: Updates

We're just over a week away from the start of South by Southwest 2009.

Here's some additional stuff I've come across that you might find useful:

Earlier, I posted:

  See you in Austin! 

SXSW ’09


[We will have some of this.]
In case you didn't know, I'm building a company based in Austin, so it's like a home away from home for me.  It's also where the South by Southwest 2009 music, film, and interactive festivals will be happening in a few weeks.

If you won't be attending, we'll miss you.  However, I'm sure there will be plenty of ways to attend virtually.  If you will be attending, here's some information that might be interesting to you.

(This is my first time at SXSW so if you're a veteran, your advice is appreciated.)
  • I've created an area map that you might find useful.  It's based on my personal experiences as a business traveler to the city over the past six months.  I've also asked some locals who have insider knowledge to contribute as well.
  • It looks like a lot of interesting people will be around.  I'm not sure how useful the my.SXSW interface will be for connecting, so if we've never met, connect with me on Twitter instead so we can exchange DMs and more deliberately cross paths.  Also, feel free to leave a comment so I can be sure to keep an eye and ear out for you.
See you in Austin!

Platforms or point solutions?

Commenting Platforms.
Collaboration Platforms.
Etc.

Just what is a platform, anyway?

We can cobble these things together to create a Rube Goldberg social machine.  Imagine this: I tweet a message about a product I like.  Which updates my Facebook status.  That ties into FriendFeed.  Which motivates a blogger’s response.  Disqus picks up the comments.  Radian6 notices and alerts a corporate listening post.  Workstreamer alerts a brand manager.  The product gets merchandised in a social ad.  A customer turns the image into an Obamicon. A friend tweets about how much they’re over everyone’s red and blue avatars…

Long way to go to get to the [   ] – the way social technologies are discussed today as a bunch of point solutions, not platforms.  Think about it – they all function in a pretty similar fashion, really.  So why can’t we tie them together?

A platform needs to tie together all of the point solutions.  I know, easier said than done in part because of industry structural issues.  On the enterprise side, most offerings are incomplete and tied to their legacy purposes as internally-focused technology.  And then you have to add the services to make everything implement, integrate, and operate as promised.

Seems like a market opportunity to me.  But just to be sure, there’s a classic case about Crown Cork &Seal that I need to dig up and rethink about…

Why Web 2.0 still matters

Last week, I wrote about my company's thinking about social media, technology and why it's time to transform.  Here's another comment worth elevating and reblogging to continue the discussion.

"Transformation and revolution are two really different ideas, and the deeper the change you want to drive the more you better be prepared to persevere. Hard, important work gets done incrementally, iteratively and for now, experimentally. Which requires a healthy dose of failure, and often a lot of introspection. This post reads like a mashup of Bruce Nussbaum’s call for transformation and Tim O’Reilly’s Work on Stuff That Matters, but unfortunately tainted with a tone of disdain. There’s a good idea in this post, but it’s lost in the pointless attempt to kill what’s gone before."

Jennifer is the general manager of the Web 2.0 Expo and related events – she knows all about what the term "web 2.0" really means.  Point taken and clarification necessary here.

Tim O'Reilly provided the world with a seminal definition of Web 2.0 on September 30, 2005.  The key principles he outlines in the post are:
  1. Web as platform; 
  2. Harnessing collective intelligence;
  3. Data is the next Intel Inside;
  4. End of the software release cycle; and
  5. Lightweight programming models.

Have we really made good on these ideas?  You tell me, but I dont think so.  We've only scratched the surface on using the web as platform.  

For example, Google may have killed off some applications this week, but they've positioned their enterprise apps for success.  I'm guessing that most readers of this blog may have heard the first story, but missed the news on the second.  Most marketing-types are more interested in putting finished goods to work, rather than focusing upstream in the value chain.

Earlier, I wrote "the term Web 2.0 connotes incremental change and evolution, not revolution."  To be more precise in my thinking, it'll clarify:  the term Web 2.0 has been co-opted for nearsighted purposes that fail to realize the potential of the original concept's vision. In my experience, I've seen a lot of marketing applications that are merely incremental improvement over existing campaign tactics.  That's why it's time to transform.

My intent is not to kill the groundwork that's been laid for us by social computing pioneers (many mentioned by commenters on the previous post).  Quite the opposite – we need to get back to the original principles and work on stuff that matters in our own worlds.

If anything, Web 2.0 can't be "dead."  We haven't even gotten there yet.

For skeptics who predict it'll be DOA – then what are you doing, reading this blog, collaborating with its community of readers?  (Don't leave a comment, write me a letter about why you think I'm wrong.)

Social business is business

Last week, I wrote about my company's thinking about social media, technology and why it's time to transform.  People responded in the comments, on Twitter, and on your own blogs.  Some people supported the idea, some people were dismissive, others were confused.  In any case, many points raised are worth elevating and being reblogged to take the discussion further.

Adam "CoachAdam" Krajchir says,

"Remember when everyone was talking about the promise of eBusiness? You might have been around when we were saying that eBusiness is business, meaning that it's just another set of tools and channels to do what what most every business is interested in: improve productivity, reduce costs, increase sales and earn profits. The application of social media for business is no different and at some point, just like we don't walk around talking about eBusiness, we might not be talking about SM or perhaps even social business."

Absolutely. I'm not interested in turning the phrase "social business" into a new buzzword.  I could go back to strikethrough and replace on the original post, but you get the philosophy – we're thinking about a new way of doing business.  We means the people in my company (Jeff, Kate, and Ellen) and you – whether supporter or detractor – our discussion refines our approach.

I mention detractors; different types emerged to respond to the post.  Believe me, I check out all of the links back to my posts and enjoy the opportunity to learn from a difference of opinion.  And one thing I always do is think about deeper motivations and meanings – as Annie Lennox said, "everybody's looking for something."

Talking about our company's philosophy will take time to fully unwind.  The thoughts I've shared on this blog have always been a manifestation of corporate transparency.  Transparency comes in different forms; BzzAgent's Beelog was a five-year transparent window into the company.  This blog is another.  I've been working at this company (name TBD) since July 2008 and what I've written here reflects what we're working on, e.g. community.  It's part of how we think business should be done.

So what do we care about?  Helping companies increase revenue, decrease expense, and mitigate risk.  Technology is a catalyst, but only one element; society and economy have also created an environment for transformation.  Social business is really just "business" and we haven't yet seen the full potential of what this can become.

It’s Time To Transform


Let’s get serious about social business.

The reverb in the echo chamber has become deafening.

Have you noticed the lack of original content being published lately?  I have.  There’s a term to describe what’s going on and Steve Rubel called it a year ago: The Lazysphere.

“Rather than create new ideas or pen thoughtful essays, [some bloggers] simply glom on to the latest news with another ‘me too’ blog post.”

I use Google Reader as my gateway to social media.  Almost all blog content falls into “to know” (RSS) vs. “to do” (email).  And lately, I’m feeling that there’s less “need to know” content being produced.  The best – and worst – content spurs people into action.  So what I’ve done is unsubscribe from about a dozen advertising, media, and marketing blogs that have lost their edge of insight and/or integrity.

“This social marketing niche is getting way too incestuous and repetitive and frankly, stupid in its repetitive back slapping, re-affirmation, ego stroking, and over amplification of the same desperate case studies.” – “Shooting fish: Blog Sluts,” David Churbuck, VP Global Web Marketing, Lenovo, 12/15/08.

Do we really need any more posts on how to use Twitter?  Early adopters used to scoff, “once it’s in the mainstream news, it’s history.”  If you agree, then please read “Birds Of A Feather Twitter Together,” Wall Street Journal, 12/3/08. Mashable asks, “should tech blogs shut up about Twitter?”  Answer: Yes.

Marketing causes social computing impotence. 

The presence of reverb doesn’t surprise me.  I’ve been thinking about hundreds of social media marketing examples and the majority appear to be the unfortunate output of unevolved agency thinking on channel integration.  The old thinking went something like this:

“Most senior ad execs appear more comfortable with conventional channels, which they claim are ‘integrated’ because they have tacked on a Web site.” – A survey respondent from my work in February 2008.

One way to look at social technologies would be as “social media,” with 22 potential channels to consider for campaign integration.  And once you start thinking about using social tools as campaign support, you’re thinking in terms of one-night stands with your customers, not building long-term relationships.

You want “bad profits?” Then use social technologies as part of a campaign strategy.  Case in point:  Burger King’s Whopper Sacrifice Facebook application.  Funny?  Sure.  Increase in customer LTV?  I don’t think so.

I’ve discovered that social technologies employed for marketing campaigns encounter problems:

Nobody will change the world with social media marketing.  Social marketing using technology, maybe.  But marketing has too much short-term focus to employ social technologies to their full potential.

But before you get too comfortable in your IT role…don’t.  IT’s track record with game-changing technologies has been dismal.  The promise of ERP, KM, and CRM?  Lost in technical requirements, specifications, and internal politics.  Let’s face it: the term Web 2.0 connotes incremental change and evolution, not revolution.

Similarly, the term “Enterprise 2.0” should be discarded as an inadequate moniker to describe the full extent of recommended and required change.  Existing definitions struggle to break free of underpinning technologies.  Calling social business Enterprise 2.0 sets our efforts on a path to fail like to many technologies before.  

We need to set our sights on a bigger goal.

I believe that social technologies have the power to transform the way we live and work.  So why should we have anything less than transformation in mind when putting social technologies to use?

Our efforts need to aim forward, not backward.  We need to improve what we do today with the ultimate goal of changing the way we work and connect with co-workers, customers, suppliers, shareholders, and other system participants.  Social technologies should change the world of work – applied to not just to marketing and IT, but also HR, finance, legal, and every other functional area.  And potentially change the functions that exist at all.

The end game should be an entirely social business.  Not just point solutions to improve existing processes or programs – new ways of connecting and collaborating.  Business models will change.  Customer-centricity becomes a moot concept, as “us” and “them” no longer exist.

I don’t have a neat little acronym for this.  Or a regular business term with a numeric modifier.  Social business is simply how work needs to be done – and it’s different from how it happens today.

Let’s work together on this.

I’m building a company that intends to make social business a reality.  The great thing is, we are starting from scratch with a lot of lessons learned.  Naturally, we’re making it social from day one.  You can access my thinking here and on Twitter, along with Kate Niederhoffer (blog, twitter) and Jeff Dachis (twitter).  But don’t expect us to reveal any critically-sensitive information; social media isn’t socialism.

I’ve added some new voices to my feeds for fresh perspective on social technology.  You might find them interesting as well:  Jevon MacDonald.  Dion Hinchcliffe.  Susan Scrupski.  Sam Huleatt.  O’Reilly Radar.  Andrew McAfee.  Mike Gotta.  Waiting for former colleague Oliver Young to really turn it on.

These people don’t seem to intersect too often with people like David Armano.  Greg Verdino. Max Kalehoff. Mack Collier.  Imagine the possibilities.

Some people are already operating in union between marketing and technology, like Deb Schultz, Jeremiah Owyang, Charlene Li, and Steve Rubel.

There are many others, of course.  Feel free to give me a heads up in the comments below.

I’ll be exploring the building blocks of social business going forward – its elements and archetypes, its opportunities and challenges.  We are collaborating with individuals, companies, and groups, and I’ll talk about those as appropriate.  Soon we’ll have a name – if you understand our philosophy, you likely understand why this hasn’t been a top priority.  I’ll tell you more about how we’re working with businesses – we believe that our approach isn’t offered today and quite a few people have affirmed that position.

The best still lies ahead for all of us…and I believe that so far,

We have merely scratched the surface on the potential of social business.

A Wiki of Social Media Marketing Examples

Over the weekend, I created a framework to port A List of Social Media Marketing Examples into a wiki.  I also invited the 166 people who've left comments on that post to become the initial collaborators in the new effort. (At least I tried to…Google Sites seems to have had a delivery problem. If you think you should have a login, try your existing email address – it may already be setup.)

Soon after inception, several people asked about turning the list into a wiki, which is a natural container for this type of information.  However, I delayed doing this immediately for many reasons.

One of the benefits of doing so manifests in the framework, which allows users to sort information by different categories.  In an early experiment, I had created an alphabetical directory by company name, with 26 pages.  Continuing with that approach would've meant replicating efforts to relist examples by channel, industry, or geography.

Let me say thanks again to everyone who's contributed to help create

A Wiki of Social Media Marketing Examples

I'm looking forward to collaborating on this new community resource with you.

Social Media Marketing’s New Clothes

Lewis writes, “Don’t Say ROI Unless You Mean It.”  Agreed.  I see a lot of bloggers wading into unfamiliar territory, starting to spew opinions on measuring return on investment (ROI).  It’s easy for anyone with an understanding of business finance to see the shallowness of these analyses.  But don’t be surprised – has not knowing anything about a subject ever stopped a blogger from writing about it?

There is one correct approach to calculate ROI.  The result is a financial ratio.

To get to the root of the problem, we first need to go back to school.  Marketing has historically been a right-brain discipline, reflected in academic coursework.  Left-brained marketers end up focusing on direct and/or B2B – staying far away from social media.

Fast forward to the top of the food chain.  CMOs have a shorter tenure than other executive roles.  Why?  According to Spencer Stuart, the firm that publishes the most widely cited statistics on the subject, CEO and CMO agendas are misaligned.  CEOs want to see business results – I’d say now more than ever.  Marketers can’t counter with, “well, I can’t give you a number, but there sure are a lot of people talking nice about us.”

Social media is easy to use.  If you can type in a box and click a button, you can blog.  Click the button that looks like “play” and sure enough the video starts rolling.  There is no secret to using Twitter.  Being a social media user meant that you were an expert…five years ago.  Not today.

Do you know the story about The Emperor’s New Clothes?  Let’s pick it up near the end:

And so the Emperor set off under the high canopy, at the head of the great procession. It was a great success. All the people standing by and at the windows cheered and cried, “Oh, how splendid are the Emperor’s new clothes. What a magnificent train! How well the clothes fit!” No one dared to admit that he couldn’t see anything, for who would want it to be known that he was either stupid or unfit for his post?

We know the Emperor should’ve just used some common sense.  Calculating ROI from social media efforts is no different.

If ROI doesn’t apply to social media marketing, then social media should not be used for marketing.


Being: Peter Kim