The Never Ending Social Media Interview - Future of Social Media

Q: Now that we're into 2011, have your perspective on social media changed? Do you still see investing in it for business purposes as a low yield thing?

Robert: Yes. I haven't seen any data to suggest otherwise. In the time we've cut back on our social media involvement, we've been able to allocate more time to business critical functions and to customer related activities that we've proven to work for us. Also, for me personally, I'm channeling my time and energy into writing off of social media. In 2010, I completed 3 revised editions for McGraw-Hill plus two books were published that were new or in a new format. There is a limit to what one can do with limited resources, and social media, at least the way the "pundits" tell us to use it, isn't worth it. It simply doesn't scale.

Q: What do you mean by "doesn't scale" in business terms.

Robert: Ok. If I write a book, or even articles for my websites (not blogs), those become permanently useful to me as a business. Eacy day, for as long as things don't change radically, people read them, or in the case of books, buy them. My initial efforts work, or scale no matter how many people are involved. If it's one person, or one million people, there is no additional work involved.

Social media doesn't work that way, because the platforms, including blogs, "treat" content within a chronological context. For example, your tweets, in effect, become invisible after a few hours or days. Blog posts, it turns out, seem to have a similar shelf life, although it's a bit different -- kind of halfway between a tweet or update and a web article.

If you want to use media, for whatever purpose, you want your investment of time and thought to keep working for you. Social media doesn't provide that. In essence, you need to be "there" every day. And for minimal results.

Q: So where are you going from here?

Robert: My PERSONAL interactive involvement on social media has come to an end AS A BUSINESS TACTIC. I may occasionally tweet something or involve myself in a LinkedIn conversation but that's for fun and interest and NOT for business promotion.

I'll continue to post on my blogs, because I enjoy it, and I can repurpose content easily.

However, that's not to say you won't "see" me anymore. We have moved to a "push" mentality, something all the supposed experts tells us we shouldn't do. Everything is automated. New blog posts are sent automatically to social media platforms. Article links and summaries from our huge online libraries are sent automatically. Our involvement on a human level is very limited.

Q: Do you still have an interest in the phenomenon of social media?

Robert: Yes. But not so much as a business tool. I'm interested in it as a mode of communication, and how it will affect society, a little like the stuff that Jaron Lanier has written about in You Are Not A Gadget, but a little more practically oriented. Less philisophical.

I dearly want to finish my book on social media which has kept me more involved in social media far longer than I would have liked. But, after all, if you are going to write a book about a "place", you kind of have to visit the place.

Q: Thank you. Perhaps next time we can talk about the challenges of writing a book on social media.

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MicroThoughts

Scoundrel

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MicroThoughts

You can tell your "social media expert" is a scoundrel or utterly ignorant if they use the phrase "They just don't get social media". The truth is that the expert doesn't get social media, or how human beings work and is unable to come up with anything better to refute arguments or disagreements about social media.

 

Mashable no-no

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In response to a Mashable article about how Starbucks supposedly used social media to bring one million people into their stores in a day:

This is just terrible "journalism". First, the giveaways brought the people in. Second, we have no idea how many people came for the freebies hearing on it from Twitter or not. Third, They could have pulled people into their stores with this promotion in any of a number of ways. This is not a social media success, anymore than having sandwich board guys outside of each store would constitute a success for loitering.

 

Learn From Competition?

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Some believe you should monitor and emulate your competition on social media. Here's a thought:

If you look at your competitors, will you end up looking like your competitors? The ongoing issue in any marketing or even in developing a network is how to standout FROM the competition, and not to BE like the competition.

 

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.

 

Immersion

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You cannot fully understand social media solely by being immersed in it. In fact, one reason why there is so much bad information about social media is that most of it comes from immersed people. The full picture is only available to people who can DISTANCE themselves emotionally and intellectually and see social media from the outside -- as most human beings view it.

 

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