Participation Is Not Passive
By: Chris Saad
Elvis has left the building and he took the audience with him.
The only people left are fellow participants. Social media has made everyone an author, creator,
director, developer, editor, critic and media outlet. There are millions of voices, but they are all
saying the same thing - listen to me.
Participants do not consume passively. They do not sit silently ready to have their eyeballs
converted into cash. Participants participate. They create their own original information,
entertainment and art. They remix their own version of mainstream pop culture - copyrighted or
not. They post their thoughts, publish their fears and fact check faster than any newsroom. They
share with their friends to discover the quirky and interesting, making it an instant blockbuster
- at least for 15 minutes.
Participants have ideas to be declared. Each of them is a market of one. Collectively they are a
trend, a publishing powerhouse and a voice to be heard; a voice that has something to say.
Participants have changed the way media is published and interactions are monetized. But more
broadly and importantly, they have changed the fl ow of global information from top down to
bottom up. They are changing the tone and tempo of the conversation.
Who's Listening
While there are so many buzzwords
surrounding this topic- social media, Web
2.0, conversation - many are overused,
misused and misinterpreted.
The word conversation comes up over
and over, but it's a concept that is as old
language itself - maybe even older. It is not
a new construct invented by the social media
advocates.
And while the medium for conversation
has changed and evolved over time, the
fundamental human need for conversation
remains the same. We want to connect to
each other. We want to express ourselves. We
want to hear authentic voices engaged in a
dialogue with us. Everyone wants to be heard
and feel valued.
But who is doing the talking is also important.
The conversation between customers and
businesses must include people that are
empowered by businesses to make decisions.
This is not just about your support staff or
marketing department interacting with
customers. CEO's, vice presidents, product
managers, and other executives must be part
of the conversations.
The Art of Conversation
It's also what is said and how it is said that is
key. With social media, you must treat these
conversations as you would any face-t-o-face
interaction - act like you would at a dinner
party. After all, this is a social setting like
any other. You say what you would say in any
face-to-face conversation at a dinner party.
Respond respectfully to criticism. Escalate
the feedback. Act on it. Thank people for
compliments. Elevate them. Ask them for
more information. Reward them for their
efforts. Empower them to spread the word.
That all sounds great, but ultimately for
businesses, it's about the return on investment
or quantifying revenue generated by these
conversations. At this point, it's hard to put
a specific value on a human connection or
word or mouth. But imagine the value if all
this "idle chatter" was publicly documented,
archived and spread around to thousand of
friends and connections. With social media
and the web, it is.
The return on investment is nothing short
of identifying your weaknesses in a rolling
and real-time focus group. It is finding your
friends in the marketplace and turning them
into evangelists for your product or service. It
is the new marketing - one-on-one influence
of your market.
More importantly though, it's beyond
influencing your market; It's about your
market influencing you - shaping your
product or service. It's about making your
stuff worth having a conversation about.
Getting Started
First, do some homework. Read some
books - The Cluetrain Manifesto and Naked
Conversations - are a good start. Then move
on to Blink and Now is Gone. Then get off
the beaten track. Start using the tools and
services your market is using - Facebook,
MySpace, Twitter, Seesmic and FriendFeed,
to name just a few.
But having a Facebook profile or a presence
is not enough. That's just like walking into
a dinner party. The next step is finding
someone interesting to talk to. Participate.
Find Facebook groups that matter. Search
Twitter for people talking about your
company, product, service, industry,
competitors and pain points. Respond to
them. Listen to them. And respond again. You
just had a conversation. A dialogue between
two participants where one communicates
something, the other digests the information
and responds.
It's not magic, but it is magical. It is
basic. It is human. And it works.
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