SMCQ17 Doing Social Media differently

July 12, 2009

Is Social Media doomed to make the mistakes of traditional broadcast media, favoring popularity over quality and providing a platform for relatively few points of view? So wondered The Social Media Social Media Club Chris Heuer, Dave Peck and Deborah Crooks on Friday as they discussed how to keep Social Media as revolutionary as it already is. How can we ensure we stay open, flexible and willing hear new insights? What action would need to be taken to keep Social Media diverse and inclusive? We’d love to hear how you’re doing media differently in your social media reading and interacting.

#SMCQ17 What will keep Social Media from falling into the same traps as traditional broadcast media?

How to join the Social Media Clubs Question of the Week discussion: Our goal with the Question of the Week initiative is to create a truly collaborative conversation within and around the most up-to-the-minute issues affecting Social Media. Each week, the Social Media Club editorial board looks at trends, topics and news affecting social media during a Blogtalk Radio broadcast. During the call, the editorial board forms the question. This is where YOU come in: we’d love for you to post your thoughts on your blog, via Twitter or by commenting on the Social Media Club site. Please tag your blogs and posts with a hash tag, ‘#’, so we can track the conversation. For example, if you wrote a response to Social Media Club Question of the Week 13, please tag your post ‘#SMCQ13’ and we’ll be able to find it, track back, and link the post to the original post. Your answers will all be included in the weekly Conversation post & Blogtalk Radio broadcast review of the answers we received. We also invite you to call in to the shows to share your viewpoint. Instructions about how to call in will be given on this site by the end of each week. Thanks for joining the club!

More Notes on Influence

July 9, 2009

Our SMC Question of the past two weeks, #SMCQ16 How do you measure social media influencers and/or influential online communities? yielded the following responses:

@schmediachick: Measuring influence in social networks demand quant & qual elements. Most important is being part of conversation

@enicholson: #SMCQ16 We need some sort of “influence” cookie that can follow ideas rather than people. a “meme tag” that follows key words, actions

@Rickbischoff: How do I measure influence? By the evident passion they have for the subject they are delivering

The SMC Editorial Board will be reviewing the responses and talking more about measuring influence, this Friday 10am PST on BlogTalk Radio Social Media Club. We welcome your participation. Please join in!

More quotables on influence from the blogosphere:

“Authenticity, Blogs, & Spencer Pratt,” Punk Rock HR, June 18, 2009

“Here are some questions you may want to ask yourself if you’re concerned about following the advice of career gurus and business leaders on the internet.

  • Do you trust that the blogger is operating beyond his self-interest? If not, does that matter if you still learn something?
  • Does the blogger respond to your questions or care about you as part of his community? If not, are you visiting the site because the blogger’s posts fill other needs in your life?
  • Are you following the blogger because of his popularity or because he has a perspective that you can’t find anywhere else?”

“Spinning the Web: P.R. In Silicon Valley,” New York Times, July 6, 2009

“Gone are the days when snaring attention for start-ups in the Valley meant mentions in print and on television, or even spotlights on technology Web sites and blogs. Now P.R. gurus court influential voices on the social Web to endorse new companies, Web sites or gadgets — a transformation that analysts and practitioners say is likely to permanently change the role of P.R. in the business world, and particularly in Silicon Valley. …Instead of calculating the impressions an article gets by estimating a publication’s circulation and pass-along rate, [Brian] Solis counts the number of people who tweeted about a company and their combined following, the number of retweets or clicks on links, as well as traffic from Facebook and other social networks”

#SMCQ16 How do you measure influence?

July 6, 2009

Because influence, perceived or real, is affecting so much of how we interact and conduct business today, the Social Media Editorial Board decided to roll over last week’s question of the week into this one. We’d love to hear your thoughts about how you quantify and rank influential bloggers and platforms:

#SMCQ16 How do you measure social media influencers and/or influential online communities?

We welcome your input. Please tag your comments, tweets and posts #SMCQ16. We’ll be continuing the discussion later in the week on Blogtalk Radio. Tune in!

How to join the Social Media Clubs Question of the Week discussion: Our goal with the Question of the Week initiative is to create a truly collaborative conversation within and around the most up-to-the-minute issues affecting Social Media. Each week, the Social Media Club editorial board looks at trends, topics and news affecting social media during a Blogtalk Radio broadcast. During the call, the editorial board forms the question. This is where YOU come in: we’d love for you to post your thoughts on your blog, via Twitter or by commenting on the Social Media Club site. Please tag your blogs and posts with a hash tag, ‘#’, so we can track the conversation. For example, if you wrote a response to Social Media Club Question of the Week 13, please tag your post ‘#SMCQ13’ and we’ll be able to find it, track back, and link the post to the original post. Your answers will all be included in the weekly Conversation post & Blogtalk Radio broadcast review of the answers we received. We also invite you to call in to the shows to share your viewpoint. Instructions about how to call in will be given on this site by the end of each week. Thanks for joining the club!

#SMCQ16 On Measuring Influence

July 2, 2009

Earlier this week, the SMC Editorial Board posed the question “How do you measure influencers and/or influential social media platforms?” having wondered aloud which combination of measurement and know-how equaled influence. As the community response demonstrated, influence is equal parts quantitative and qualitative. From ‘listening platforms’ such as Radian6, eCairn and ScoutLabs which track and calculate conversation volume, page rank, comments and frequency as well as a host of other data garnered from Sales Force and CRM tools, to  good old intuition, influence is subject to the eye of the beholder. Some notes from the online response field:

“I look for the number of followers and the number of participants who add comments. Equally important is the quality of the content and the comments. They should be well-written, intelligent, supported by references to sources, focus on the positive, succinct, and not reflect a strongly biased opinion.” — James O’Connor, Owner, Clutter Control, O’Connor Communications,

“So effective, efficient messages are key.  Regularly is another.  Transparent, non-promotional communications essential.  Self-effacing humor is nice.  But the most important aspect is just to be a part of the conversation and thought stream.  One person with one comment at the exact right moment in time who we never hear from again can be a profound influencer.” —How Do You Measure Influencers,” by Bob Stewart,

@the_sophist: #SMCQ16 The act of measuriing influence, influences. Especially in the state of social consciousness. u can’t measure u can only approximate

Suggested Reading:

“How to Measure Influence Online,” Mashable, by Micah Baldwin, March 2, 2009

“Do You Know Jack About Social Media Measurement,” MetricsMan, June 15, 2009

“Is PageRank the Ultimate Measure of Online Influence?” Nine By Blue, October 8, 2008

“Social Media Metrics Superlist,” Interactive Insights Group,  by Robin Broitman, February 2nd, 2009

The SMC Editorial Board will be reviewing the responses and talking more about measuring influence, this Friday 10am PST on BlogTalk Radio Social Media Club. We welcome your participation.

#SMCQ16 How do you measure influence?

June 28, 2009

Metrics, popularity, comment counts, network buzz or simple word-of-mouth credibility? There are a huge number of factors that go into determining the influence of a blogger or online platform, but how can you tell who or what truly influences both individual and community behavior. What does true influence even mean?  On this week’s Social Media Question of the Week call, our Editorial board discussed how we rank influence in an ever-more-vocal online environment. When do you listen and when do you tune out a blogger’s opinion or other online source of information? How do you choose and rate your sources? We want to know:

#SMCQ16 How do you measure social media influencers and/or influential online communities?

How to join the Social Media Clubs Question of the Week discussion: Our goal with the Question of the Week initiative is to create a truly collaborative conversation within and around the most up-to-the-minute issues affecting Social Media. Each week, the Social Media Club editorial board looks at trends, topics and news affecting social media during a Blogtalk Radio broadcast. During the call, the editorial board forms the question. This is where YOU come in: we’d love for you to post your thoughts on your blog, via Twitter or by commenting on the Social Media Club site. Please tag your blogs and posts with a hash tag, ‘#’, so we can track the conversation. For example, if you wrote a response to Social Media Club Question of the Week 13, please tag your post ‘#SMCQ13’ and we’ll be able to find it, track back, and link the post to the original post. Your answers will all be included in the weekly Conversation post & Blogtalk Radio broadcast review of the answers we received. We also invite you to call in to the shows to share your viewpoint. Instructions about how to call in will be given on this site by the end of each week. Thanks for joining the club!

#SMCQ15 Who to trust? Verifying social media information

June 21, 2009

Receiving retweeted information that doesn’t have a clear source, mail from hijacked email accounts and coming across yet another poorly fact-checked blog post represent the down side of the instant information age. How does one determine the accuracy of information found online? And how do you verify sources to ensure that you’re getting the truth, be it business, personal or political? During last Friday’s Question of the Week call, the Social Media Club Editorial Board discussed the conundrum of finding the most accurate sources of news amid a vast ocean of information. Now we want to hear from you. We welcome your thoughts on this week’s question:

#SMCQ15  How do you know who to trust within the social media environment?

Please tag your response, posts and tweets #SMCQ15.

How to join the Social Media Clubs Question of the Week discussion: Our goal with the Question of the Week initiative is to create a truly collaborative conversation within and around the most up-to-the-minute issues affecting Social Media. Each week, the Social Media Club editorial board looks at trends, topics and news affecting social media during a Blogtalk Radio broadcast. During the call, the editorial board forms the question. This is where YOU come in: we’d love for you to post your thoughts on your blog, via Twitter or by commenting on the Social Media Club site. Please tag your blogs and posts with a hash tag, ‘#’, so we can track the conversation. For example, if you wrote a response to Social Media Club Question of the Week 13, please tag your post ‘#SMCQ13’ and we’ll be able to find it, track back, and link the post to the original post. Your answers will all be included in the weekly Conversation post & Blogtalk Radio broadcast review of the answers we received. We also invite you to call in to the shows to share your viewpoint. Instructions about how to call in will be given on this site by the end of each week. Thanks for joining the club!

RE: SMCQ14 Dumbing Down or Getting Smart?

June 17, 2009

“Now along comes Twitter, which totally reduces our collective thought leadership to 140 characters or less and in doing so, belittles and minimizes every big thought into a punch line or social limerick. It’s premature articulation if you ask me and it’s very unsatisfying.” — Joseph Jaffe, “Blogging is Dying, Twitter is to Blame,”

In this week’s question, the editorial board asked “What are the consequences of exposure to a constant high-volume stream of info?”#SMCQ14

A quick tour of the blogosphere (I picked up one actual book this week, a novel, which give you a hint of how much information I get online), revealed many pundits, theories and postulations on how hyperconnectivity may be damaging our ability to pay attention as much as it opens up a door of infinite knowledge.  We’ll be summarizing the comments we received, but in the meantime, here are some notes from the field:

“I learned that instant feedback from the web had caused me to change the “voice” of my writing.   Over time I had learned how to post messages and content that maximized chances of “retweets” “blog postings” , blah, blah, blah.Instead of saying what I believed – I was writing based on what I thought the audience wanted.  The result was a “dumbing down” of my messages.  And, a lack of authenticity. —Doug Hall, “Why Instant Feedback on the Internet Can be Bad,” Communty Marketing Blog

“In the digital age, with its overabundance of information, the modern newsweekly is in a particularly poignant position. Designed nearly a century ago to be all things to all people, it Chaplin-esquely tries to straddle thousands of rapidly fragmenting micro-niches, a mainframe in an iTouch world. The audience it was created to serve—middlebrow; curious, but not too curious; engaged, but only to a point—no longer exists.”—Michael Hirschorn,  “The Newsweekly’s Last Stand,” The Atlantic

“Multitasking messes with the brain in several ways. At the most basic level, the mental balancing acts that it requires—the constant switching and pivoting—energize regions of the brain that specialize in visual processing and physical coordination and simultaneously appear to shortchange some of the higher areas related to memory and learning. We concentrate on the act of concentration at the expense of whatever it is that we’re supposed to be concentrating on. ” —by Walter Kirn, “The Autumn of Multitaskers,” The Atlantic

“The sheer volume of information which many of us are exposed to every day may actually impair our performance and add stress to our lives.” Data Smog (thanks @matt_klein)

Have thoughts to share on the subject? Please add your comments or tune into BlogTalkRadio this Friday @ 10am PST.

#SMCQ14

SMCQ14 Media overload? Consequences of the stream

June 14, 2009

At the same time social media has created a wealth of opportunities to create, consume, interact and react to information, the diversity of media can be staggering as quantity and immediacy often overshadow quality. The Social Media Editorial board discussed how this ‘web of now’ is trumping deeper context and how exposure to a constant stream of information may be shaping our behavior for better or for worse.

We’d love to hear how you are making meaning in an increasingly shallow media landscape. What have we lost, if anything, and what are we gaining? Do you have any strategies for negotiating media overload? We’d love your comments on our 14th Question of the week:

SMCQ14 What are the consequences of exposure to a constant, high-volume stream of media and information?

How to join the Social Media Clubs Question of the Week discussion: Our goal with the Question of the Week initiative is to create a truly collaborative conversation within and around the most up-to-the-minute issues affecting Social Media. Each week, the Social Media Club editorial board looks at trends, topics and news affecting social media during a Blogtalk Radio broadcast. During the call, the editorial board forms the question. This is where YOU come in: we’d love for you to post your thoughts on your blog, via Twitter or by commenting on the Social Media Club site. Please tag your blogs and posts with a hash tag, ‘#’, so we can track the conversation. For example, if you wrote a response to Social Media Club Question of the Week 13, please tag your post ‘#SMCQ13’ and we’ll be able to find it, track back, and link the post to the original post. Your answers will all be included in the weekly Conversation post & Blogtalk Radio broadcast review of the answers we received. We also invite you to call in to the shows to share your viewpoint. Instructions about how to call in will be given on this site by the end of each week. Thanks for joining the club!

Conversation SCMQ13: Social or Socialism

June 12, 2009

“When masses of people who own the means of production work toward a common goal and share their products in common, when they contribute labor without wages and enjoy the fruits free of charge, it’s not unreasonable to call that socialism.” — The New Socialism,” by Kevin Kelly, Wired.

This article prompted much conversation when it was published in May, which led the editorial board to this week’s question. However, when we asked point-blank whether Social Media was indeed the new Socialism, most SMC readers noted more differences than true parallels:

“It isn’t the new socialism. If anything, it’s the new expression of liberty — commented Allen Taylor on our blog.

“I think that politics of the internet are – and have always been – closer to pure Anarchism than anything else. Socialism is mandatory, and based on coercion. Therefore, the analogy to the Net instantly falls apart.” —Alex

“Socialism’s hallmark is government control of industry and other aspects of society. Our government would have to be in control of our activities and dictate them to some extent. In fact, social media’s ability to connect people for collaboration outside of the reach of government’s tentacles makes social media anti-socialist,” —Shaine Mata

@keeling: true socialism has never existed (all of the communist states have had a ruling elite), so maybe it’s the first

@matt_j_kendall: “With no allegiance to state or market, could it b a 3rd way? ”

And some posed that it perhaps wasn’t completely relevant to even bring political labels into the conversation:

“If my research showed me anything, it’s that the word itself—no matter how accurate or inaccurate—is too charged to be of much use to us in this context.” — Kimberly Turner wrote on Regator. Kimberly  also conducted a slew of research tagged on Delicious that you may want to read. We’ll be fielding calls to further discuss Social-or-Socialism, this Saturday, June 13, 10am PST on BlogTalk Radio. We invite you to listen, and call in, and share your thoughts.

#SMCQ13 Is social media the new socialism?

June 6, 2009

“Just like the ant-communist Red Scares of the early part of the century,  Republicans today are throwing about ’socialism’ as the great ‘Blue Scare,’” noted Chris Heuer, during the Social Media Club Editorial Board’s weekly discussion.
The comment was inspired by one of the more compelling surveys of Social Media published in the most recent issue of Wired, called “The New Socialism: Global Collectivist Society is Coming Online,” by Kevin Kelly, May 22, 2009. Given the heavy baggage that the term holds, we wonder if such a tag will help or hinder all that social media has to offer society. That said, if Social Media — with its distributed power, collaborative, communal aspects  — isn’t socialism, what is it? And if it is the new socialism, how do we leave the worst of socialism’s reputation behind?

So we’re curious to know how you answer this weeks Question of the Week:

#SMCQ13 Is social media the new socialism?

We welcome your comments, posts & tweets. Tag: #SMCQ13

How to join the Social Media Clubs Question of the Week discussion: Our goal with the Question of the Week initiative is to create a truly collaborative conversation within and around the most up-to-the-minute issues affecting Social Media. Each week, the Social Media Club editorial board looks at trends, topics and news affecting social media during a Blogtalk Radio broadcast. During the call, the editorial board forms the question. This is where YOU come in: we’d love for you to post your thoughts on your blog, via Twitter or by commenting on the Social Media Club site. Please tag your blogs and posts with a hash tag, ‘#’, so we can track the conversation. For example, if you wrote a response to Social Media Club Question of the Week 13, please tag your post ‘#SMCQ13’ and we’ll be able to find it, track back, and link the post to the original post. Your answers will all be included in the weekly Conversation post & Blogtalk Radio broadcast review of the answers we received. We also invite you to call in to the shows to share your viewpoint. Instructions about how to call in will be given on this site by the end of each week. Thanks for joining the club!

Conversation 12: Empowering the workforce with social media

June 4, 2009

Last week, the board asked for examples of companies using social media to empower its workforce. While it’s ever more common for companies to fold social media marketing tools into their customer communications kit, how transparent the workplace is in terms of its use of Social Media by employees is a little stickier. A survey of the blogosphere yielded some opinions of whose making it work…and where in-house social media runs into issues:
Setting Limits
JacksonMG: @socialmediaclub internal train. for individ, corp strategy to define limitations, get employees excited FIRST so they will join in. #smcq12

“Employee Involvement: An Unreachable Utopia?” by
Kieron Shaw, portrays the often unspoken fear about full internal use
of social media, with some solutions from the business world: WAKE-UP, CEO: Your employees expect to tell you how to run the business’

“”It’s a matter of degree,” says Monika Stafford, head of group
internal communication for LloydsTSB. “In terms of shaping the company
strategy, there have to be clear limits and specific focus around who
gets involved on what. But, equally, if you’re involving everyone in
what goes on the canteen menu, it would be a waste of everybody’s time.
So structure and limitations are essential.”

In Practice:

Sales: “Social Media for Knowledge Management and Sales: Fast Facts” by Nicki Jameson

“While smaller business focus their social media efforts outwards,
according to Aberdeen’s research [Aberdeen Group Report on Social Media for Knowledge Management and Sales Collaboration], larger companies are first of all
focusing inwards, on the (internal) collaborative power of social
media. What’s constant is that  it is driven by the business challenges.Thus, obtaining more leads doesn’t necessarily translate to having
10,000 “followers” on Twitter, or 5,00 “Friends” on Facebook (if at all
they are on Facebook), rather, it may in fact begin with understanding
the customer’s unique challenges then meeting them, then connecting
with more customers through collaboration tools with a shared outcome.”

Engineering:

“Should Engineers be Social or Not?” By Jim Cahil “I believe engineers, on their plant intranet networks, outside the firewalls and DMZ,
which separates this network from the plant’s control network, should
have access to these social media applications…I also believe there is benefit in experience sharing with some
of these social media applications like wikis, blogs, and microblogs
hosted internally, inside the firewall, but also not connected to the
control network….My thoughts in summary… keep that pressure on the IT folks to
open up the plant networks to social media applications, but not the
plant control networks.”

Doing Social Media Right:
Mari Smith opined in an interview on “Most Valuable Tweeps” that many companies are getting it right, with online shoe store Zappos leading the pack: “Zappos is among my top pick for social media role models. CEO, Tony Hsieh, has a wonderful attitude and culture that empowers his entire workforce to utilize Twitter with the simple directive of a) be authentic and b) use your best judgment. Zappos’ use of social media helps augment their exemplary customer experience, which is at the very heart of their brand.Other brands I give the two thumbs up to are Ford’s @ScottMonty and Comcast’s Frank Eliason @ComcastCares.”
Related Links:
We’ll be talking more about this topic on Saturday, June 7 10am PST on Blogtalkradio.
#SMCQ12

SMCQ12 How are companies using social media to empower their workforce

May 31, 2009

Last week, the SMC Editorial board focused on how to best provide education toward preparing for the workplace of the future. This week, we realized, much of that future workplace is happening NOW. And many companies, comprised of employees representing several different generations of the education system, are slow to embrace (or are simply having a hard time getting their arms around) social media tools. At the same time some companies are stymied by fear of the new, weariness about getting too much information or concern that the use of social media at work will cut into productivity, others can’t imagine a desktop without several browser tabs opened displaying common social media URLs.  Is there a sweet spot for using social media at work?  If so, we’d love for you to share your tips. Which leads to our Social Media Question of the week #12:

#SMCQ12 Find examples of how organizations are empowering their workforce with [using] social media?

Please tag your posts, Tweets & comments #SMCQ12. On Friday, the board will reconvene to review your responses.

SMCQ11 Preparing for the workplace of the future

May 28, 2009

SMC members and readers had far ranging responses to the topic of educating toward a future workplace we can only begin to imagine. From teamwork to new media tools, online training to new models of socializing youth, its clearly a topic ripe for discussion and innovation. One common denominator among our respondents: a need to listen to the student as much as instruct.

Notes from the field:

On what we need to to:

“What do we need to teach kids? How to solve problems, work in teams, and access information to succeed. At present, that’s not what schools teach.” — Francine Hardaway

“…the real question is to ask how can we get the younger generation to teach educators and businesses about using social media” — Peter Williams

julesac: @davepeck Sometimes I wonder if we will educate them or they will educate us. I think it will be a 2 way street of enlightenment.
kim_hollenshead: I think we need to help the younger generation understand the importance of connections and networking in social media outlets

“We need to shift managerial thinking from a “sage on the stage” mentality to a “guide on the side” where we actively learn from our newest employees and find ways to incorporate their communication styles and approaches into “older” ways of thinking.” — Amy Smith

“Only by identifying what products and services will be in demand in the future, can we anticipate the type of goods that will need to be produced and the type of employee that will be needed to supply businesses who will produce things to meet society’s needs going forward. — David Ligon , http://etoolkit.org/etoolkit/

What some are already doing:

“At Laguna Playhouse, I use college interns and empower them with the responsibility of monitoring and updating all of our social media (Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, Myspace, etc), so they have first hand experience of how to incorporate social media into the workplace.” — Christopher Trela

“Has anyone heard of Skoodat? It’s a brand new application using Salesforce.com and their software which will allow schools to provide leadership training to staff and monitor individual students skill sets before stepping foot in the classroom.” — Jessica Murray

More than one Twitter respondent pointed out a recent post on Business Week by  Jim Goodnight and Keith Krueger that took a deeper look at the issue as well as government involvement and support:

“Why Obama Can’t Ignore Education Tech Business Week, 12/25/2008

“School technology investments enable 21st-century learning and provide our current and future workforce with the tools they need to compete and succeed in our globally integrated world. To accomplish this goal, Obama’s reported $850 billion Economic Recovery Plan should include two critical components: 1. Investments in school technology and broadband; and 2. Investments in home-to-school technology targeted at low-income families. Specifically, the federal stimulus package should cover expenses for schools to install or upgrade Internet connections to broadband; hire technical and instructional technology support; and purchase or upgrade hardware, software, and services.”

Other reading:
“Cultivating the Workplace of the Future,” Finance Tech, By Scott McKay, SVP and CIO, Genworth Financial, April 20, 2009
Tune into Blogtalk Radio Friday @ 10am PST for more Conversation from the SMC Editorial Board

SMCQ11: How do we educate the younger generation to prepare for the modern workforce?

May 24, 2009

Not so long ago, Social Media didn’t register as a factor in the professional world. Fast forward to today, and social media has become a valid sector of the communications industry. Marketing, business and how we interact across and within our various personal and professional communities have undergone a huge overhaul, but whether education is keeping up is subject to debate. The Social Media Club editorial board convened last week to mull the current educational landscape for social media. How would you go about developing a curriculum to teach social media business and communications practices? And given that the field is so recent, who is qualified to teach and mentor students? Do you have any ideas on how to educate our youth? We gladly welcome your thoughts, creativity and considerations on this weeks question:

#SMCQ11 How do we educate the younger generation to be ready for the modern workforce?

Please tag your comments, posts and Tweets on the matter as #SMCQ11 and stay tuned for a report later in the week.

SMCQ10: Free content, friend or foe? The jury is out

May 21, 2009

Last weeks question,
#SMCQ10 Is the EASE with which we are able to share content — be it music, words, pictures, etc. without payment — hurting creative industries or ultimately, helping advance society? By what measure does this matter? and the responses it generated, demonstrated that its simply too soon to tell whether we’re advancing or retreating. The new economy so to speak is very much in process, and we will either make the most of it culturally, or not.
Notes from our online respondents:
NotSoFreshPeel: FreshPeel: I believe it is hurting organizations that don’t know how to leverage this shift. But that’s all part of evolution.
hisisMojaveThe web has cut out middlemen, same will happen with information. Info wants to be free. #SMCQ10
aolsenTech. advances promote innovation in any industry. Smart people adapt, and we are all better for it.
Forward thinking companies, like the initiative music site Reverbnation recently launched to give its artists access to a level of major brand relationships usually reserved for arena size acts, demonstrate a willingness to adapt:
“Traditionally the music business has been synonymous with the record business where the lion’s share of revenue came from selling music. With reduced emphasis on music sales, the music business must develop new revenue streams that leverage the artist as a brand,” Michael Doernberg, CEO of ReverbNation said in a statement on Thursday, in conjunction with the announcement. Increased access to content isn’t bad, thought it does force one to apply an equal amount of creativity to generating income.
Yes, industries based on traditional models are suffering,  but many see this as an opportunity as much as it may look like a crisis.  Bruce Houghton, owner of Skyline Music believes that culturally, this is not a bad thing. “… my greatest source of optimism for the music industry comes from the rising musical middle class - a middle class not just of artists who from Jill Sobule to Corey Smith and other artists are finding success on their own terms – but also of indie labels like Asthmatic Kitty, Park The Van, Suburban Home and ABB who are finding success by nurturing great music music and embracing music 2.0 instead of swimming against the rising tide. …Despite all of the real gloom and doom; the sky is not falling on the music industry. Gone are the helicopter rides from Cannes to Monaco for lunch; and MIDEM may have to start running buses from the train station instead of just from the airport. But this was always about the music. Some of us just let the money get in the way.” — Bruce Houghton, MidemNet Blog
Money used to be the incentive for some to get into a field. Those people aren’t lasting:
ModernBuccaneer: Participants in an economy are motivated by incentives. Remove the incentives, and participants leave the industry. My opinion.
And power of ownership is yours to keep or give away, as SMC board member Kimberly Turner pointed out on her Regator Blog:
“If you’re a band who chooses to give away your album to draw more concert-goers or sell more merch, if you’re a writer who wants to give away one book in hopes that familiarizing the public with your work will help you push your other material, if you’re a playwright who chooses to allow works based on your work, if you’re a photographer participating in Creative Commons for credit (see photo by Dave Wild [publicenergy] above) to build your name or reputation. Those are all smart choices. But they’re CHOICES that you as the artist and creator of the content are making. Sharing is good until we forget that it’s optional.’ — Kimberly Turner
As we’re in an evolutionary state, whether we are advancing or regressing is not wholly discernible. Nonetheless, questioning how we are going about sharing our content is perhaps the best practice to ensure we do progress forward rather than backward. The trick is to steer the change in the direction of benefiting everyone equitably, which, IHO, is advancing society from one of extremes to one of moderation.
More responses to #SMCQ10:
kristiewells: @johnpwalker1: Free content IS benefical to greater community & think it will last as long as some1 pays some1 2 keep developing it. #smcq10
matthewray: @socialmediaclub Depends. Yes, we can find answers fast. But we may start relying on just answers vs actual learning #smcq10
The editorial board will be discussing the question more on  Blogtalk Radio Friday, 10am pst. Tune in and join the conversation.

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