Bunk, Lies and Hype - Bad Advice

In a post on Fastcompany entitled "21 Twitter Tips From Socially Savvy Companies",  Brian Sollis uses examples from a number of companies to provide suggestions about how to use Twitter effectively. While Brian is a cut above most social media commentators, his article is very misleading. He has loads of company when it comes to: "Look, these guys did this and succeeded so you should too". It doesn't work that way.

Below are the comments I tried to make on his post, but there appeared to be a technical error at that time. Come on Brian. A little more depth here.


With respect, this article presupposes something that is not true. That one can emulate successful company's actions and succeed. That is simply not so. If you are Zappos, you can do what they have done. None of us are Zappos. You cannot transplant something from a company with a unique culture, market position and resources to another company with different characteristics. Same with Dell.

It's great that we can get researched articles such as this, but let's understand how superficial this is. Again, with respect, it's true that Dell leveraged Twitter for coupon delivery, but it's pretty much understood at this point that they cannibalized sales they would have had from other channels, making the sales figures faulty in a business sense. BTW, the figures quoted are about double the $3 mill, coming it at about 6 million. In addition, while Dell did good tracking to link their coupon distribution to sales (a rare thing to establish causal relationships), could they have done even better with sales by handing out coupons on the street, or using some other method.

We NEED proper analysis if we are going to pay attention to "thought leaders" like Brian.

The problem of superficiality and not verifying facts is so rampant that I cannot even take as credible anything else in this article. Brian has tons of company, I'm afraid.

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MicroThoughts

Shrunk Brain

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MicroThoughts

One of the biggest issues about microblogging occurs when otherwise intelligent people send short soundbyte messages (<140 characters) and believe that they have said something original, profound, complete or significant. Dude, there's almost nobody who can do that on the entire planet. Stop believing what you write!  

Social Media Frauds

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You know someone isn't worth following if they retweet compliments given to them by others. They are either frauds who are better at self-promotion than they are in their alleged area of expertise, or they are so insecure that they have to -- just have to, make sure that everyone knows how wonderful other people think they are. Hint: Run away. These folks are like empty drums. Bang on the outside and you get a cool sound. Empty inside -- nothing to offer.

 

OhMAGod on Social Media

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How come we never see a press release from a company that makes its living with social media that says:

"OMAGOD. Our research shows that 78% of expenditures on the part of businesses, and in social media are wasted, and the rest doesn't add anything at all but to make things worse. So we're pleased to announce that as of next week, and based on our research, the BillyGoat Social Media Company is closing its doors, but not before we refund all the money to our clients that we, in effect, stole on the basis of false claims?

 

 

 

It's Not WHAT is said, but WHO Says it

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Watching hundreds of retwitterations of Godin/Solis every day, and what strikes me is that a lot of the quotes people resend are lacking in thought, insight or are incorrect. NO thought on part of readers, just blind clone - new social dittohead behavior. Not to say these fellows don't say good stuff, but just that they could be completely wrong, and everyone would still applaud.  

Being Heard

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The psychological need or desire to be heard is so powerful that we are willing to pretend that our tweets and status updates are being attended to, read, and thought about, even when it's clear that almost nobody is paying much attention. That's why people actually continue to talk about the trivialities in their lives even if nobody ever responds. That's one strong need!!

 

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