Posts Tagged social technology

Guest Blog- Social Technology in a Tough Economy

Blog excerpt from Gary Koelling at www.garykoelling.com.  Get it all here:

Social Technology in a Tough Economy

My social Network on Flickr, Facebook, Twitter...

Image by luc legay via Flickr

Here’s how it goes. When times get tough people get a bunker mentality. Lots of de-risking behavior.  Cover up. Cut costs. Consolidate. Anything that looks like it might not work out is set aside. Any exposure to dependencies, internal or external is scrutinized and minimized. Most anything ‘new’ gets a bullet. New products, ways of doing things and new ideas in general are eschewed in favor of the familiar.  Everyone is thinking this way, you and your customers.  No new spending. No new initiatives.  New? No.  Whatever companies or brands were making or doing before the downturn looks and feels highly experimental. Anything ‘experimental’ or ‘unproven’ makes a natural target in a down market. And for a lot of companies, social media or social technology will fall into the category of new.

So this is bad news for social tech / social media. Right? Not really.

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Who we are

We were recently asked what we do and what we’re passionate about.  We put together a doc that outlined it- then did a Wordle.

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Why Retail Employees Can’t use Social Technology

I’m not a lawyer.  I’m a guy who works in Social Technology at Best Buy.  In the last 2 years, I’ve become more educated on Wage and Hour laws in the US.  Laws that were written in the 30’s to protect hourly employees from abuse.  I’m for those laws- protection is good- abuse is bad.

But in the last 2 years, I’ve seen examples of these laws getting in the way of how people work, collaborate and innovate.  Best Buy is a retailer with over 140,000 employees.  The majority of those are paid hourly.  Because of the nature of the work they do in our stores, they don’t have a choice to be anything but hourly. Because of the laws, we can’t choose to pay our employees a salary- unless they’re in a management position.

In the last 6 months, Best Buy has come out and publicly stated that our future growth will be a direct result of our employees ability to innovate and serve our customers on a local level.  We’re betting the farm on our employee’s ability to think differently and try new things.  And I believe our culture is set up for them to succeed- its extremely entrepreneurial.

Here’s my rub.  For those employees who are living like most 16-24 year olds do, the line between work and life is blurred and sometimes non-existent.   Many bring their whole self to work- they don’t differentiate between on the clock and off the clock.  I’ve met these employees, I’ve worked them, and I believe that these types of employees will make all the difference in the company’s future.

But we hold them back (we as in Corporate).  And today we need to.  We can’t allow them to work off the clock.  We can’t allow them to be on Twitter, to write a blog, to connect with customers on Facebook.  We can’t allow them to be themselves and an extension of Best Buy (even if they insist).  We can’t because we can’t track their time they put into these activities outside of the store environment- which we would need to do to make it legal.  

This may sound like a small deal, but imagine someone tells you to be an entrepreneur but you can only  do it from 9-5 with two fifteen minute breaks and a thirty minute lunch. 

Doesn’t work.

A salaried approach helps break down those barriers.  Doesn’t solve it- employees still need to be compensated well for their job.  But it essentially lets the employee choose how involved they’d like to be- not to be dictated by 4000 people at a Corporate office.

I recently had a chance to present to Best Buy legal and HR- about 500 people.  I tried to help them understand the way people are living today with social technology and the potential it has to our business if done right. 

Here’s the presentation- hit me with comments, ideas, or criticisms.

 Streaming the Brand
How Employees Could Use Social Media to Earn Trust
Audience:  HR and Legal- Hyatt Offsite
7/31/08

Has anyone here heard of Julia Allison?  Because she’s famous.  She can’t sing, she can’t dance and she
doesn’t tell jokes and she’s not rich.   And 4 years ago, given her lack of talent and money, she’d be someone like you and me- only with a lot of pent up energy.

But social media has allowed her to be famous.  She’s opened her life to anyone who will listen.  And it turns out, it’s kind of entertaining.  A new version of reality TV- you can follow her schedule of fancy dinners, read dating advice, see photos of her latest outfits.  You can watch videos of Allison playing with her dog or hanging with friends.

Her blogs, her videos, and her pictures have given her a way to feel important and to matter- at least to some people.  And the web has provided her an unlimited audience- without a huge Branding or PR campaign like days of old.

The technology she uses is common place, its free; it’s easy to use and master. 

Social media goes beyond blogs and MySpace- it’s becoming a way of life.  A way of life that doesn’t differentiate whether you’re on the clock or off the clock.  People who use social media in ways that Julia does (or even a fraction of the way she does) put their whole self out there.  It’s slowly becoming the norm.

Who here has heard of Twitter?  Twitter is a site where people describe what they’re doing.  Users have 140 characters to tell anyone what they’re reading, eating, thinking, learning, who they’re meeting etc….

Anyone here know Zappos.com?  What if I told you I know the CEO of Zappos?  I’ve never met him, never shook his hand, and never heard his voice.  But I follow him on Twitter and he follows me.

Would you be surprised if I told you the CEO of Zappos is 33 years old, lives on Slim Jims washed down with Redbull, and just threw a party for his company at his house and had 4 live penguins in the pool?  Oh, and the company is on track to break $1 billion in gross merchandise sales for 2008. 

Now I don’t know about you, but I like this guy.  I want to buy shoes from this guy.  I want to have a drink with this guy. 

This is the future of what our employees should and will be doing- it fits perfectly into our local market strategies- let customers get to know you and more importantly, get to know your customers.  And get to know them as people- help them, earn trust with them.  Trust doesn’t come if we’re not willing to give out some of who we are and what we’re into- both good and bad.

And the effect that something as simple as Twitter can have is pretty amazing.  There was a recent blog post by one of the top guys in social media- Shel Israel- about his use of Twitter.  He claimed in his blog, that he felt Twitter was a better search tool than Digg, or Yahoo or Google.  When he’s looking for a book, or a place to eat, or advice on travel, he posts a Tweet.  He gets hundreds of responses.  But the thing is he gets those responses from his network- the people he trusts and knows.  It’s like Amazon ratings and reviews on steroids.

Now imagine a Best Buy store employee using Twitter.  She’s built a network of people she knows and trusts.  She Tweets about her life- her weekend out, her boyfriend, stuff she’s doing, things she’s reading, technology she uses, likes or reads about.  She invites customers to follow her if they want. They can get to know her.  They start to have a relationship beyond technology.  She has the opportunity to become part of their trusted network. Someone to be asked an opinion when that customer needs it.

Now let’s start talking about what’s on everyone’s mind.  Holy Shit-  she can’t do that.  What if she Tweets about sex, drugs, and rock and roll! How would we ever track all those conversations?  What if she said something bad about Best Buy.  How will we pay her when she’s Tweeting about work- would we use a giant spreadsheet? 

Those are realistic questions.  But the thing is she’s going to do it.  When our employees and customers adopt things like Twitter on a broader scale, they’ll do it with or without our permission. 

And this is just the start- this isn’t a fad.  It’s becoming a way of life, how people communicate, how they interact.  Like how some of us pull out those dusty books called photo albums.  Or how we stay connected through email.

 We have time to start prepping, to get good at not only minimizing the risk, but encouraging employees to do this kind of thing.  These types of communications let us be human- to be trusted- to serve better.

The reality is, today we can’t knowingly let or encourage our employees to use Twitter in that way- or any other social media.  The labor laws today dictate that we have to have clear separation from work and life- and pay employees based on that difference.  But all indications of how people are living today show that work and life and the line between are blurred and sometimes non-existent. 

To some degree, this will affect our growth strategy.  Maybe not this year, but over time, we’ll suffer from the inability of our employees to bring their whole self to work. We’re asking employees to innovate, to collaborate, and to grow this company by billions.  To know our customer’s as individuals, to serve them.  We’ve openly bet the farm on an employee’s ability to do this.  

How do we use our position in the market to challenge some of the laws and regulations that tie an older definition of work with the new realities of how people work and live?

How are we going to act?  Are we going to react or act now and start to plan for it?

I don’t have the answer.  And with all the companies I’ve talked to, I don’t know any that do.  But we’re in a unique situation.  The work that’s happening around the company in social technology is industry leading- it’s getting recognized and studied.  And more and more teams are seeing how important it is and are trying new things.  We need to get a head of it.  We need to take some risks. 

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Understanding how important culture is in a Social Network

Below is a presentation I gave this week in Boston at Intranet Week.  Some of the content is similar to what we’ve talked about before.  But something hit me about 2 weeks ago after I read a blog in Read Write Web.  It talked about how companies using White Label networks are struggling.  The reasons they stated for the failures were largely based on technology.  I feel they missed a big consideration- the need to understand and adapt to a culture- and the need to turn ownership over to the community.

Cam Gross had a nice post last week on the topic- see it here.

 

Here’s the presentation…

Today I was going to start in on the story of BlueShirt Nation- a social network inside Best
Buy for our employees.  And I’ll still get into  detail about the site in a little bit.  But last week, I
read a blog post on Read Write Web.  It was talking about white label social networks and
how companies are sinking millions into "creating communities" and no one is showing up. 
They asked the question "How would you feel if you spent more than $1 million throwing a
party and less than 100 or even 1,000 people showed up? "

According to Wall St. Journal coverage of this study, "Thirty-five percent of the [corporate]
online communities studied have less than 100 members; less than 25% have more than
1,000 members – despite the fact that close to 60% of these businesses have spent over $1
million on their community projects."

According to the study’s author, the biggest problems are the following:
    * Overpriced, shiny features.
    * Insufficient and inexperienced community management. (See our massive post on
community management earlier this week.)
    * Bad metrics and criteria.

Those might be true, but from our experience, I can tell you they missed a few things.  

I would bet that the companies who rolled them out took the approach everyone is used to-
build it big, push it down from the top, and they will come. 

I’d guess they didn’t ask the users decide what the community should be, how it should look,
and what it should do.  In other words- adapt it to your unique culture. 

Like most corporate initiatives, they probably tried and expected to "build a community"
overnight. 

So I make those comments because this is familiar territory- we went through a journey that
took us down every path you can think of.  And we failed a lot.  And we learned a lot.  And
quite honestly, what BlueShirt Nation became was completely different than what we set out
to do.

As it sits today, BlueShirt Nation is a robust community of people with a common interest,
they all work for Best Buy. They share knowledge and best practices. Frustrations, aspirations
and jokes.

24,000 employees have signed up. All have come to the site voluntarily from referrals or
through word of mouth.

They form groups, make friends, stay in touch and prop each other up. They help each other.
They generally seem to like each other.

Like I said, BlueShirt Nation today is not what it set out to be. Not what its architects had in
mind.

So here’s how it started…
Ours started very much the same way as others. We – Corporate – wanted to talk to our store
employees about our customers. Find out what they were saying. What they were doing. How
they were feeling. We wanted to know how we could talk to them differently though our
marketing.

Here we have 140,000 live bodies breathing the same air as our customers.
Surely they can’t wait to tell us everything we want to know, can’t wait to co-create with us.
We’d simply input a question and for the price of asking, an answer would be given. Like
soda from a vending machine.

ROLL UP
In June of 2006 blueshirtnation.com went online. We planned to launch it big.
Roll Up was our first slogan. The concept of Roll Up had all the tricks we learned from
advertising.- tight design, a bus tour across the country with rock bands and Dane Cook. It
was a big splash to launch this awesome new social network for Best Buy.

But after a few days of concepting, we realized it sucked. It’s embarrassing now but it’s
important to recognize why it sucked. It sucked because we came up with the concept in a
vacuum. We didn’t talk to the people we thought would want to use the site. We thought it
was cool for a day. It was dorky. The important thing is we dropped it. Luckily for us, we had
to admit we were in new territory and we didn’t know enough.

Roll Up helped us realize we needed to do the one thing that didn’t feel intuitive- give up
control. We invited 20 volunteers from our stores to what we called Hack Slams. The purpose
was to tear apart BSN and try to get a little smarter.

We all sat in a room, talked politely about what it is and then went bowling. We went bowling
to get to know each other. We took cameras. We ate pizza. We came back and got honest.
We talked about what really sucked about the current site. We took the pics and videos from
bowling and posted them to the site. We talked about what it would take for them to use the
site. We made changes to BSN right there in the room. Then we talked about those changes.
We talked about things like trust and anonymity on the site. We talked about things that
would ruin the experience for them and make them never come back. We talked about the
things that would make them want to tell others to join.

Whether we knew it or not, in that room over those 2 days, we wrote the social contract that
we were all bound to. We walked away knowing that this wasn’t going to be the vending
machine we thought it would be. We couldn’t insert question and an answer wouldn’t plop
out.

Because in our culture, in our stores, with our 19 year old employees, trust was the only thing
that could make the site work. People would only use it if they trusted it. If they could talk
about whatever they wanted- not just Best Buy. Our employees needed to own the site-
determine how it evolved, what was acceptable, what it did, even what it looked like.  That
being the case, we needed to talk to the people that we wanted to use the site.

To help build that trust, Gary, myself and a handful of volunteers personally visited 130 stores
across the country. We brought stickers and t-shirts. We met with thousands of employees
face to face and told them a simple message. “We built a site that’s kind of like MySpace,
Facebook, YouTube, and Digg. Its just for Best Buy employees. Here’s a t-shirt- will you
check it out?. If you like it, tell others. If you think it sucks- go ahead and post it on the site.”

Through all these conversations, we learned why people in our culture would use a social
network.  Why it would be meaningful.  Essentially they told us they were interested in a place
where employees could address a bigger problem- the feeling that – “My opinion doesn’t
matter.” A re-org had started. An organic movement that made people feel they had a say.
That they mattered.  And we supported it and fed it with things that people could rally behind.

U R BIG
And it worked. People started to show up. Then they went beyond showing up and actually
started to stick around. They talked about what was important to them. Like a Geek Squad
Agent who had a niece that was born 12 weeks prematurely. He was asking for people’s
thoughts and prayers.

Or a Supervisor from Iowa who was serving in Iraq giving her fellow employees an update.
It was open to the user as to what they wanted to talk about. The one thing they all had in
common was Best Buy. Since that was the case, the majority of the conversation revolved
around their collective experience as employees of Best Buy. In general, they talk about how
to make Best Buy a better place. Improve on the things we don’t do well, share the things
that we do do well, talk about and express the culture that we have, talk about customers-
both good and bad.

The site began to answer a fundamental question or problem most employees (if not all
employees) were facing. I feel small. I feel like I don’t really count.

YOU CAN’T KNOW ENOUGH
So why did it work?  The first reason is a blessing.  We didn’t have a budget.  Because of
that  we used free software, free as in open and free as in no cost. Because we weren’t
experts in software building or site building or even community building, the tools we needed
had to be

1) easy to learn and master.

Because we were working without the corporate IT safety net we needed to be able to share the work we were doing with anyone who could help us which meant the tools needed to be

2) widely accessible.

And because not only did we not really know what we were doing, but we were sure that whatever we did would be wrong and need to be changed quickly, the tools needed to be

3) easily adapted.

The second is failure. We’re good at it. We fail weekly and we kind of like it. We try tons of
new things, some stick and some don’t. Most don’t. But we do it in a low criticality
environment. We do it so it doesn’t cost us a lot of money or make an investment on our part
that we’re too proud to give up.

And when we fail, people forgive us and we learn. We do our best to be human on BSN- to
be Gary and Steve on the site- not the BlueShirt Nation admin team. We built real
relationships with the users, protect them when they need it, respond as quickly as we can,
and ask for forgiveness when we screw up.

By doing that, its turned into a community of our best employees. We have 24,000 of them
on the site. 50-65% are active meaning they come back at least once a month. In a company
with a 60% turnover rate, the members of BSN turnover at a rate of 12%. We are getting the
most engaged employees on the site and talking about how to make the company better.
Now I realize that all of you can’t go off and work with an open source platform and your
culture is different.  But I can offer this advice, whether you look to a white label or something
more custom. 

Remember you’re at the mercy of the people that you’re trying to influence. If you try to force
it, it will stink.  It will feel contrived – you’ll have 100 people at your million dollar party. 

Understand the social contract you need to write with your employees, for your company, for
your culture.

And start to understand that by admitting that it’s a two-way street: It’s less about what we
(Corporate or branders) want to say, and more about what our employees and customers
want to tell us, and how we respond to them. Which leads to the next theme…

The need to listen: We need to acknowledge that, in order to participate in the social media
conversation, we don’t control the communication any longer. To succeed here, we need to
learn to listen better, then respond in ways that your customers and employees will value
Develop your social skills: For us to succeed, we had to act like a sociable person. That
means listen. Be interesting. Be relevant. Offer something of value. Be worth being heard
and attended to.

Brands are going to have to figure out how to behave like people.  You’re going to have to
show up and behave like a decent human being.

The need to try: Large corporations haven’t figured all this social media stuff out, either. No
one has “cracked the code” on harnessing it, controlling it, measuring it, etc. – and maybe
never will. It’s more about the opportunity cost of not being there, than its ROI.
So what do you do? Try. Fail. Fail fast. Then try again

Good Luck. And have fun.

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Advanced Learning Institute presentation

Yesterday I presented a different perspective on BSN at the Social Media Summit put on by the Advanced Learning Institute.  Gary was supposed to join me but he got sick so I went solo.

Lately we’ve been applying a lot of the same things we’ve learned on BSN to other projects.  We’re developing a process that’s proving itself to some degree or another.  In this presentation, we tried to shift the from the general story of where BSN came from to some of the principles that helped keep it moving.  So here you go- here’s the meat of the presentation-  hit me with comments or questions if you have them.

 

Best Buy’s BlueShirt Nation

What is BlueShirt Nation? BSN?

BlueShirt Nation is a robust community of people with a common interest, they all work for Best Buy. They
share knowledge and best practices. Frustrations, aspirations and jokes.
Within a year of launching, 22,000 have signed up. All have come to the site from referrals or through word of
mouth.

They form groups, make friends, stay in touch and prop each other up. They help each other. They generally
seem to like each other.

BlueShirt Nation today is not what it set out to be. Not what its architects had in mind.

So here’s how it started…
Ours started very much the same way as others. We – Corporate – wanted to talk to our store employees about
our customers. Find out what they were saying. What they were doing. How they were feeling. We wanted to
know how we could talk to them differently though our marketing. We wanted our store employees to tell us.
Many call it market research, we called it co-creation. Here we have 140,000 live bodies breathing the same
air as our customers. Surely they can’t wait to tell us everything we want to know, can’t wait to co-create
with us. We’d simply input a question and for the price of asking, an answer would be given. Like soda from a
vending machine.

ROLL UP
In June of 2006 blueshirtnation.com went online. We planned to launch it big.
Roll Up was our first slogan. The concept of Roll Up had all the tricks we learned from advertising.- tight
design, a bus tour across the country with rock bands and Dane Cook. It was a big splash to launch this
awesome new social network for Best Buy.

But after a few days of concepting, we realized it sucked. It’s embarrassing now but it’s important to
recognize why it sucked. It sucked because we came up with the concept in a vacuum. We didn’t talk to the
people we thought would want to use the site. We thought it was cool for a day. It was dorky. The important
thing is we dropped it. Luckily for us, we had to admit we were in new territory and we didn’t know enough.
Roll Up helped us realize we needed to do the one thing that didn’t feel intuitive- give up control. We invited
20 volunteers from our stores to what we called Hack Slams. The purpose was to tear apart BSN and try to get
a little smarter.

We all sat in a room, talked politely about what it is and then went bowling. We went bowling to get to know
each other. We took cameras. We ate pizza. We came back and got honest.

We talked about what really sucked about the current site. We took the pics and videos from bowling and
posted them to the site. We talked about what it would take for them to use the site. We made changes to
BSN right there in the room. Then we talked about those changes.

We talked about things like trust and anonymity on the site. We talked about things that would ruin the
experience for them and make them never come back. We talked about the things that would make them
want to tell others to join.

Whether we knew it or not, in that room over those 2 days, we wrote the social contract that we were all
bound to. We walked away knowing that this wasn’t going to be the vending machine we thought it would be.
We couldn’t insert question and an answer wouldn’t plop out.

Here’s good place to ask why. Why didn’t we make it mandatory? Why didn’t we just require people answer a
battery of questions on a regular basis the answer to which could be collated, indexed and tracked? The
simple answer is we didn’t have the authority. We were two guys buried just beneath middle management
who were supposed to be churning out straight-up marketing communications. So when we went and asked
retail employees to answer questions about customer behavior, they did so only as volunteers. As peers. And
besides, there were plenty of other groups making demands of retail employees with limited success.

Trust was the only thing that could make the site work. People would only use it if they trusted it. If they
could talk about whatever they wanted- not just Best Buy. Our employees needed to own the site- determine
how it evolved, what was acceptable, what it did, even what it looked like.  That being the case, we needed
to talk to the people that we wanted to use the site.

After the Hack Slams we went out on the road. Gary, myself and a handful of volunteers personally visited 130
stores across the country. We brought stickers and t-shirts. We met with thousands of employees and told
them a simple message. “We built a site that’s kind of like MySpace, Facebook, YouTube, and Digg. Its just for
Best Buy employees. Here’s a t-shirt- will you check it out?. If you like it, tell others. If you think it sucks- go
ahead and post it on the site.” They did both.

While all of this was going on, we tried to stick to a few key principles. Build the site fast, be able to adapt
quickly, listen closely, and fail often. We focused on winning the trust of the most skeptical audience which
was our store employees. We did that by talking 1:1 with them in our store visits. Promoting the site in ways
that were frankly counter culture.

Using these principles led us to using free software, free as in open and free as in no cost. Because we
weren’t experts in software building or site building or even community building, the tools we needed had to
be 1) easy to learn and master. Because we were working without the corporate IT safety net we needed to be
able to share the work we were doing with anyone who could help us which meant the tools needed to be 2)
widely accessible. And because not only did we not really know what we were doing, but we were sure that
whatever we did would be wrong and need to be changed quickly, the tools needed to be 3) easily adapted.
As a result we ended up building a tool, a site, that was 1) easy to learn and master 2) widely accessible and
3) easily adapted.

The site’s purpose evolved from a place where we could try to get answers to a place where employees could
address a bigger problem- the feeling that – “My opinion doesn’t matter.” A re-org had started. An organic
movement that made people feel they had a say. That they mattered.

U R BIG

And it worked. People started to show up. Then they went beyond showing up and actually started to stick
around. They talked about what was important to them. Like a Geek Squad Agent who had a niece that was
born 12 weeks prematurely. He was asking for people’s thoughts and prayers.

Or a Supervisor from Iowa who was serving in Iraq giving her fellow employees an update.
It was open to the user as to what they wanted to talk about. The one thing they all had in common was Best
Buy. Since that was the case, the majority of the conversation revolved around their collective experience as
employees of Best Buy. In general, they talk about how to make Best Buy a better place. Improve on the
things we don’t do well, share the things that we do do well, talk about and express the culture that we have,
talk about customers- both good and bad.

They bring their perspective- whether its a cashier from store 264 in Columbia South Carolina or a GM from
Las Vegas. Each brings their point of view and each has the power to create real change.
They’ve impacted huge changes to Best Buy. Like the 401K Challenge- a video contest hosted on BSN to
promote enrollment in our 401K. The simple assignment of creating a video in your words that tells others
about the benefits of the 401K program.

The buzz and impact of the contest resulted in a 30% increase in 401K enrollments. That’s 40,000 employees
signing up for the 401K that hadn’t before.

The site has also helped push our culture to embrace innovation and collaboration from anywhere. Here’s a
video that 2 users put together- its had a huge impact on employees and leadership. It challenges people to
think differently.

The site began to answer a fundamental question or problem most employees (if not all employees) were
facing. I feel small. I feel like I don’t really count.

YOU CAN’T KNOW ENOUGH
BlueShirt Nation is the result of a reorganizing force that’s coming to bear on American Corporations. Its the
result of the spread of social technology that’s easy to learn and master, widely accessible, and easily
adapted.

The result is that the social contract is being rewritten. The nature of our relationships to each other is being
redefined. Organizing as a hierarchy is no longer enough. A network is no longer defined as names in a rolodex
or an outlook address book – it how we organize, connect and collaborate. To make stuff. To do stuff. To know
stuff.

As we learned fast (because we failed fast)
It’s a two-way street: It’s less about what we (Corporate or branders) want to say, and more about what our
employees and customers want to tell us, and how we respond to them. Which leads to the next theme…
The need to listen: We need to acknowledge that, in order to participate in the social media conversation, we
don’t control the communication any longer. To succeed here, we need to learn to listen better, then respond
in ways that your customers will value

Develop your social skills: For us to succeed, we had to act like a sociable person. That means listen. Be
interesting. Be relevant. Offer something of value. Be worth being heard and attended to.
Brands are going to have to figure out how to behave like people. You can’t show up at the party in a leisure
suit anymore and expect to get laid. It’s not going to happen. You’re going to have to show up and behave like
a decent human being.

The need to try: Large corporations haven’t figured all this social media stuff out, either. No one has “cracked
the code” on harnessing it, controlling it, measuring it, etc. – and maybe never will. It’s more about the
opportunity cost of not being there, than what is its ROI.

So what do you do? Try. Fail. Fail fast. Then try again

Good Luck. And have fun.

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