Here Comes Everybody — Maybe

[photopress:Here_Comes_Everybody.jpg,full,pp_image] If you want to really understand how social media/tools are changing how we work, play, activate change and live, pick up Clay Shirky’s Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations. And if you are seriously considering communities as part of your marketing strategy, Do Not Pass Go without reading this.

Here are some of my takeaways:

There are three essential pieces of a community, starting with purpose:

1. Why: what’s the the promise of the group/community? Why would anyone want to join or contribute? “Creating a promise that enough people believe in is the basic requirement. The promise creates the basic desire to participate. ” Note: in my experience this is where marketers usually spend too little time. Or, rarely challenge their own. assumptions.

2. How: this is where you figure out which tools will help people do what the community is all about. Note: too many companies are buying tools and then trying to make a community fit the tools. A recipe for disaster — or, at a minimum, enormous frustration.

3. Rules of the road: this the what Shirky calls the bargain: “If you are interested in the promise and adopt the tools, what can you expect and what will be expected of you?”

People have always wanted to share and help one another. Pervasive, easy-to-use communications tools and ” the collapse of transaction costs makes it easier for people to get together — so much easier, in fact, that is changing the world.” “Social tools don’t create collective action — they merely remove the obstacles to it. This is why many of the significant changes are based not on the fanciest, newest bits of technology but on simple easy-to-use tools like email, mobile phones and websites, because those are the tools most people have access to and, critically, are comfortable using in their dauly lives.”

Incentives for participating are not financial: Attention, the desire to see your work spread, the desire to help others and be helped.

Why some communities grow and others don’t: “They grow if enough people care about them, and die if they don’t.” (This goes back to getting the promise right.)

How did you do that?: communities where a group of people help one another get better at some share task or interest — called communities of practice — are especially pervasive and appealing. The basic question that can trigger a community of practice: “How did you do that?”

Not everyone needs to be passionate, participate a lot: in the old model we had to work hard to get people passionate enough to act, because acting was a lot of work. Today you can have a handful of highly-motivated people participating a lot — and “people who care a little participate a little, while being effective in the aggregate.”

A small number needed to get things started: “The number of people who are willing to start something is smaller, much smaller, than the number of people who are willing to contribute once someone else starts something.” Tap into a small core of passionate people; don’t expect a lot of people to contribute at the get-go. Many are more comfortable adding to what someone else has started.

Business psychics

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I predict that marketers will have great fun but lose even more credibility with this new strategy: tuning in to business psychics. That’s right. All kinds of businesses seem to be turning to psychics, otherwise known as “intuitionists,” to make important decisions, according to a Newsweek article, “The 10,000-a-Month Psychic.”

Kevin Clancy, author of Your Gut is Still Not Smarter Than Your Head, has a good post on what this trend means to marketers over at The Marketing Fray.

“Aside from the utter lunacy of a business hiring a psychic for anything other than entertainment at the company Halloween party, we’re concerned that when business folk want to make sense of uncertainty in the present, they get completely preoccupied with the future as if they have no control over it. It’s understandable, but it can be dangerous if they forget that the past and future are not mutually exclusive. “

All that said I am looking forward to tuning into a webinar on July 11 over at Learn From My Life with psychic Ainslie MacLeod, author of The Instruction: Living the Life Your Soul Intended. Why? Maybe it’s summer and I just need a fresh point of view that has nothing to do with marketing, the recession, or presidential politics. :)

My Marketing Tragedy: Age of Conversation 2

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This week 275 authors submitted their “chapters” for the new book, Why Don’t They Get It, a follow up to The Age of Conversation. (All proceeds go to charity.)

The sections of the new book, to be published in late August, are:

  • Manifestos
  • Keeping Secrets in the Age of Conversation
  • Moving from Conversation to Action
  • The Accidental Marketer
  • A New Brand of Creative
  • My Marketing Tragedy
  • Business Model Evolution
  • Life in the Conversation Lane

Here’s a snippet of what I wrote for “My Marketing Tragedy”:

“If I visualize what happened it looks like a cemetery. Each gravestone a big, exciting idea on how to talk about an issue, a trend, a company that was stillborn…In the end, all dead ideas, never seeing the light of day because of my mistake. I forgot to burn down the obstacles.”

And here’s a list of the “Age of Conversation 2 – Why Don’t People Get It?” authors:

Adam Crowe, Adrian Ho, Aki Spicer, Alex Henault, Amy Jussel, Andrew Odom, Andy Nulman, Andy Sernovitz, Andy Whitlock, Angela Maiers, Ann Handley, Anna Farmery, Armando Alves, Arun Rajagopal, Asi Sharabi, Becky Carroll, Becky McCray, Bernie Scheffler, Bill Gammell, Bob Carlton, Bob LeDrew, Brad Shorr, Bradley Spitzer, Brandon Murphy, Branislav Peric, Brent Dixon, Brett Macfarlane, Brian Reich, C.C. Chapman, Cam Beck, Casper Willer, Cathleen Rittereiser, Cathryn Hrudicka, Cedric Giorgi, Charles Sipe, Chris Kieff, Chris Cree, Chris Wilson, Christina Kerley (CK), C.B. Whittemore, Clay Parker Jones, Chris Brown, Colin McKay, Connie Bensen, Connie Reece, Cord Silverstein, Corentin Monot, Craig Wilson, Daniel Honigman, Dan Goldstein, Dan Schawbel, Dana VanDen Heuvel, Dan Sitter, Daria Radota Rasmussen, Darren Herman, Darryl Patterson, Dave Davison, Dave Origano, David Armano, David Bausola, David Berkowitz, David Brazeal, David Koopmans, David Meerman Scott, David Petherick, David Reich, David Weinfeld, David Zinger, Deanna Gernert, Deborah Brown, Dennis Price, Derrick Kwa, Dino Demopoulos, Doug Haslam, Doug Meacham, Doug Mitchell, Douglas Hanna, Douglas Karr, Drew McLellan, Duane Brown, Dustin Jacobsen, Dylan Viner, Ed Brenegar, Ed Cotton, Efrain Mendicuti, Ellen Weber, Emily Reed, Eric Peterson, Eric Nehrlich, Ernie Mosteller, Faris Yakob, Fernanda Romano, Francis Anderson, G. Kofi Annan, Gareth Kay, Gary Cohen, Gaurav Mishra, Gavin Heaton, Geert Desager, George Jenkins, G.L. Hoffman, Gianandrea Facchini, Gordon Whitehead, Graham Hill, Greg Verdino, Gretel Going & Kathryn Fleming, Hillel Cooperman, Hugh Weber, J. Erik Potter, J.C. Hutchins, James Gordon-Macintosh, Jamey Shiels, Jasmin Tragas, Jason Oke, Jay Ehret, Jeanne Dininni, Jeff De Cagna, Jeff Gwynne, Jeff Noble, Jeff Wallace, Jennifer Warwick, Jenny Meade, Jeremy Fuksa, Jeremy Heilpern, Jeremy Middleton, Jeroen Verkroost, Jessica Hagy, Joanna Young, Joe Pulizzi, Joe Talbott, John Herrington, John Jantsch, John Moore, John Rosen, John Todor, Jon Burg, Jon Swanson, Jonathan Trenn, Jordan Behan, Julie Fleischer, Justin Flowers, Justin Foster, Karl Turley, Kate Trgovac, Katie Chatfield, Katie Konrath, Kenny Lauer, Keri Willenborg, Kevin Jessop, Kris Hoet, Krishna De, Kristin Gorski, Laura Fitton, Laurence Helene Borei, Lewis Green, Lois Kelly, Lori Magno, Louise Barnes-Johnston, Louise Mangan, Louise Manning, Luc Debaisieux, Marcus Brown, Mario Vellandi, Mark Blair, Mark Earls, Mark Goren, Mark Hancock, Mark Lewis, Mark McGuinness, Mark McSpadden, Matt Dickman, Matt J. McDonald, Matt Moore, Michael Hawkins, Michael Karnjanaprakorn, Michelle Lamar, Mike Arauz, Mike McAllen, Mike Sansone, Mitch Joel, Monica Wright, Nathan Gilliatt, Nathan Snell, Neil Perkin, Nettie Hartsock, Nick Rice, Oleksandr Skorokhod, Ozgur Alaz, Paul Chaney, Paul Hebert, Paul Isakson, Paul Marobella, Paul McEnany, Paul Tedesco, Paul Williams, Pet Campbell, Pete Deutschman, Peter Corbett, Phil Gerbyshak, Phil Lewis, Phil Soden, Piet Wulleman, Rachel Steiner, Sreeraj Menon, Reginald Adkins, Richard Huntington, Rishi Desai, Beeker Northam, Rob Mortimer, Robert Hruzek, Roberta Rosenberg, Robyn McMaster, Roger von Oech, Rohit Bhargava, Ron Shevlin, Ryan Barrett, Ryan Karpeles, Ryan Rasmussen, Sam Huleatt, Sandy Renshaw, Scott Goodson, Scott Monty, Scott Townsend, Scott White, Sean Howard, Sean Scott, Seni Thomas, Seth Gaffney, Shama Hyder, Sheila Scarborough, Sheryl Steadman, Simon Payn, Sonia Simone, Spike Jones, Stanley Johnson, Stephen Collins, Stephen Cribbett, Stephen Landau, Stephen Smith, Steve Bannister, Steve Hardy, Steve Portigal, Steve Roesler, Steven Verbruggen, Steve Woodruff, Sue Edworthy, Susan Bird, Susan Gunelius, Susan Heywood, Tammy Lenski, Terrell Meek, Thomas Clifford, Thomas Knoll, Tiffany Kenyon, Tim Brunelle, Tim Buesing, Tim Connor, Tim Jackson, Tim Longhurst, Tim Mannveille, Tim Tyler, Timothy Johnson, Tinu Abayomi-Paul, Toby Bloomberg, Todd Andrlik, Troy Rutter, Troy Worman, Uwe Hook, Valeria Maltoni, Vandana Ahuja, Vanessa DiMauro, Veronique Rabuteau, Wayne Buckhanan, William Azaroff, Yves Van Landeghem

Sales presentations: how to help customers decide

[photopress:FranklinCovey.jpg,thumb,pp_image] One of the biggest mistakes in selling is not making easy for a customer to make a decision.

That’s some of the advice from Mahan Khalsa, vp of the Franklin Covey Sales Performance Group, in an interview in this month’s Sales & Marketing Management.

I found two points especially interesting.

1. The sales reps job is no longer getting information — or simply developing relationships; it’s about providing intelligence and insight to the prospect. (I’d add that most of marketing should be focused on this today.)

2. Most sales presentations don’t make it easy for the client to buy. We forget to address: what does the client need to believe, intellectually and emotionally, to comfortably and confidently make the decision?

Khalsa’s advice:

  • Start with the end in mind. Within the first few slides the client should know what decision you want them to make.
  • Identify the 3 -5 beliefs that the decision makers need to check off to make the decision, then organize what you say to address those beliefs.
  • Gain a decision on each belief after address it vs. waiting until the end for Q&A. When the beliefs supporting the decision have been successfully addressed, the final decision is much easier.

Sagmeister: 20 Things I've Learned in My Life So Far

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Tonight I’m going to hear the brilliant designer Stefan Sagmeister speak at RISD. His topic is the same as his new book: “Things I Have Learned in My Life So Far.”

He came up with the book concept while taking a year off, and then came back to work with a whole new perspective. Here are the 20 things he’s learned so far.

1. Helping other people helps me.

2. Having guts always works out for me.

3. Thinking that life will be better in the future is stupid. I have to live now.

4. Organizing a charity group is surprisingly easy.

5. Being not truthful always works against me.

6. Everything I do always comes back to me.

7. Assuming is stifling.

8. Drugs feel great in the beginning and become a drag later on.

9. Over time I get used to everything and start taking for granted.

10. Money does not make me happy.

11. My dreams have no meaning.

12. Keeping a diary supports personal development.

13. Trying to look good limits my life.

14. Material luxuries are best enjoyed in small doses.

15. Worrying solves nothing.

16. Complaining is silly. Either act or forget.

17. Everybody thinks they are right.

18. If I want to explore a new direction professionally, it is helpful to try it out for myself first.

19. Low expectations are a good strategy.

20. Everybody who is honest is interesting.

And here’s the talk he gave at TED.

wowOwow and enough is enough

Here are a few of items from my guest blogging duties today over at the Word of Mouth Marketing Association blog.

wowOwow on crisis communications and much more

How to respond when your reputation is under attack? Writing in the fabulous new online community wowOwow, Leslie Stahl offers this advice: “The best way to respond when your reputation has been sullied is to get real LOUD. Go on offense with a noisy, unrelenting, niggling, persistent, bellicose warrior’s attack. If you’re swinging and kicking, that’s what people will see (and the press will cover). And the besmirching of you will fade like an old scar.”

Check out more from wowOwow, now in beta, and featuring conversations among cool women celebrity professionals like Candice Bergen, Whoopi Goldberg, Joan Juliet Buck, Peggy Noon, Joni Evans and Lesley Stahl.

Measuring online community success

Generating word of mouth is the reason many organizations start online communities, but they find much more additional value once the community has been up and running, like lots of new ideas from the community members. That’s an early finding of a new industry study on measuring online community effectiveness. To share your experiences — and get a free copy of the results in April, check out www.communityeffectiveness.com

Rude is rude, enough is enough

Some of the biggest buzz this week was around the audience heckling during Mark Zuckerman’s keynote at SXSW in Austin. A big round of applause to Michael Rudin for his post about the event over at Marketing Profs, “Enough is enough. It’s time that we as a community — especially the A-listers who get quoted everywhere as so-called “experts” — stand up and call it like it actually was: rude and unacceptable.” Go Michael.

PS: Beyond Buzz + Made To Stick honored

One other highlight of the week: Beyond Buzz was selected one of the best business books of 2007 by Library Journal. Beyond Buzz and Made To Stick by Dan and Chip Heath were the editors’ top picks for marketing and branding books. Nothing like a little award news to jump-start the weekend. Enjoy all.

Beyond Buzz wins gold prize

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I’m so honored and thrilled that my book Beyond Buzz has been awarded a gold prize in the 2008 Axiom Business Book Awards in the Advertising/Marketing/Public Relations category. I’m especially honored to share the gold with Andy Sernovitz’s Word of Mouth Marketing. Here’s a list of all the winners.The awards are sponsored by Independent Publisher, Inc, Jenkins Group, and Padilla Spear Beardsley.

The best business books of 2007

Syndicated business book reviewer Richard Pachter of the Miami Herald today published his top business books for 2007:

Beyond Buzz: The Next Generation of Word-of-Mouth Marketing. Lois Kelly. AMACON. 228 pages. How conversational hooks and themes can be used for marketing. Kelly brings the proverbial Cluetrain into the station and unpacks several carloads-full of its bounty.

Do It Wrong Quickly: How the Web Changes the Old Marketing Rules. Mike Moran. IBM Press. 408 pages. The Internet is indisputably a powerful catalyst for the rapid spread of ideas, memes, cultural tics — and commerce. Moran shows how to harness this power by fearlessly allowing mistakes and rapidly learning from them.

Firms of Endearment: How World-Class Companies Profit from Passion and Purpose. Rajendra Sisodia, David Wolfe, Jagdish Sheth. Wharton School Publishing. 320 pages. How companies that do good are also doing quite well; a strong antidote to incessant tales of venal executives and predatory enterprises.

Lifehacker: 88 Tech Tricks to Turbocharge Your Day. Gina Trapani. Wiley. 300 pages.

Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die. Chip and Dan Heath. Random House. 291 pages. Genuine or bogus, concepts and products resonate with authenticity and gain acceptance because of a perception of their legitimacy. The Heaths explain why emotion and simplicity are vital components of successful persuasion.

No Man’s Land: What to Do When Your Company Is Too Big to Be Small but Too Small to Be Big. Doug Tatum. Portfolio. 256 pages. Getting through the treacherous territory between big and small is a killer. Tatum provides an interesting and insightful discussion that also demonstrates his understanding of the personal toll that growing a business often takes.

Rule the Web: How to Do Anything and Everything on the Internet – Better, Faster, Easier. Mark Frauenfelder. St. Martin’s Press. 416 pages.

The Dip: A Little Book That Teaches You When to Quit (and When to Stick). Seth Godin. Portfolio. 88 pages. Should you stay or should you go? There’s no correct — or easy — answer, but Godin helps readers assess the upside of each path, and provides tools to determine whether one is facing a wall or a door.

The Leadership Challenge. Jim Kouzes and Barry Posner. John Wiley. 416 pages. A newly revised edition of a business classic provides a solid set of empirical standards based on observation and analysis of the key behaviors demonstrated by genuine leaders.

Up the Organization: How to Stop the Corporation from Stifling People and Strangling Profits (Commemorative Edition). Robert L. Townsend. Wiley. 260 pages. Forty years ago, an excerpt of the forthcoming volume was published in Harper’s magazine and the next day, people appeared at the publisher’s reception desk looking for the book. This classic ought to be required reading for anyone entering the workforce. Period.

Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes Everything. Don Tapscott and Anthony D. Williams. Portfolio. 320 pages. An interesting and compelling survey of successful collaborative ventures, including a look at how companies you’d least expect to play nice with others are doing so, and benefiting from the experience.

Top 10 Books for Web Workers 2007

WebWorkerDaily has just published a list of the top 10 books for Web workers for 2007. (I’m thrilled and honored to be on the list!)

  1. Rule the Web: How to Do Anything and Everything on the Internet–Better, Faster, Easier by Mark Frauenfelder.
  2. Lifehacker: 88 Tech Tricks to Turbocharge Your Day by Gina Trapani.
  3. One Person/Multiple Careers: A New Model for Work/Life Success by Marci Alboher
  4. Brazen Careerist: The New Rules for Success by Penelope Trunk.
  5. The 4-Hour Workweek: Escape 9-5, Live Anywhere, and Join the New Rich by Timothy Ferriss.
  6. Beyond Buzz: The Next Generation of Word-of-Mouth Marketing by Lois Kelly.
  7. Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die by Chip Heath and Dan Heath
  8. The Myths of Innovation by Scott Berkun.
  9. Everything is Miscellaneous: The Power of the New Digital Disorder by David Weinberger.
  10. Smart World: Breakthrough Creativity and the New Science of Ideas by Richard Ogle.

Good source for keeping up with new business books

I’m a voracious reader but it’s hard to keep up with new business books. Brian Oates over at Daxle.net does quick conversations with business books authors and does a great job at pulling out the most salient points from the book. A good way to keep current. (Heres a link to our conversation about marketing advice — especially for small businesses.)

Vacation reading

I find that my marketing and communications friends are voracious readers. So here’s a list of some  non-business books that I had the pleasure of reading on vacation.  Great stories, wonderful characters, and fascinating insights into parts of the world we Westerners tend to know little about. (And, yes, there’s plenty to talk about after reading them!)

Infidel by Ayaan Hirsi Ali.  A remarkably frank and insightful look into Islam in Somalia and Holland, particularly its implications on women.

Half of a Yellow Sun by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Set in Eastern Nigeria during  during crippling three-year civil war  in effort to  form the independent nation of Biafra.

The Hungry Tide by Amitav Ghosh.  Set in Sundarbans, a vast archipelago in the Bay of Bengal, this page turner is rich in history, culture, marine science and rich characters.

Divisadero by Michael Ondaatje.  Such a beautifully written novel that I am lost for words to how to even big to describe this riveting story, set in Northern California and Southern France.  (A line from the book that I keep thinking about:  "We have art," Nietzsche says, "so that we shall not be destroyed by the truth."   His previous novel, Anil’s Ghost, set in Sri Lanka during tits civil war in 19080s and 90s, is also an amazing read.

Eat. Pray. Love: One Woman’s Search for Everything Across Italy, India and Indonesia by Elizabeth Gilbert. Eating her way through Italy, praying on an ashram in India, and finding love in Indonesia.  My kind of woman! The writing is hilarious, reflective, honest and irrisistable. The line I can’t get our of my head, "I realized that praying is talking to God, and meditating is listening to God."

Why non-profits need Robin Hood Marketing

Forget about trying to convert the world to your cause. Transform from missionaries into marketers into mission. Think in terms of customers not converts. Rather than trying to convert people to our cause by imparting vast amounts of information, focus on getting people to take a specific action.

These are some of the pearls of wisdom from Robin Hood Marketing by Katya Andresen, a must read if you’re in non-profit marketing, development or communications. (Or, in my case, on a board of a non-profit.) Every couple of years a fresh, inspiriting voice emerges, and Katya is one of those voices.

Filled with many “aha” insights, practical advice, fascinating case studies and interviews by some of the most interesting people in non-profit marketing, Robin Hood Marketing will help you see marketing through a new lens.

Some things from pages I’ve turned down and highlighted:

  • We assume that people give to our cause because they value our mission. They probably approve of our mission, but that’s not why they write a check. When we dig into the deeper reasons behind the decision, we find that they are more likely rooted in the person’s fundamental, personal values than in pure ideology.
  • Good causes need to offer rewards for action because most people are not motivated by morality. Unless people see an immediate reward for an action, they may not act.
  • Falsely assuming that information results in action is the single deadliest and most common mistake in marketing good causes. People don’t need to know everything; they simply want what is immediately relevant to them.
  • Good marketing campaigns focus on spurring one audience to a single action.
  • Wild claims don’t work, but bold ones do. Good causes get themselves into trouble by agonizing over whether it’s fair to make bold promises on their audiences’’ subjective reality. We shouldn’t shy away from making bold claims.

Marketing Sherpa book review, giveaway

Thanks to the folks at Marketing Sherpa (also based in Rhode Island) for the Beyond Buzz book review this week, as well as offering five free books to readers in their book contest.


“Enough with the marketing blah blah blah — let’s talk about something interesting.” And so begins Lois Kelly’s new book,’Beyond Buzz: The Next Generation of Word-of-Mouth Marketing.’ …The chapters on establishing a unique point of view are especially crucial in learning how to capture customers’ interest and imagination. Kelly suggests nine fundamental themes to consider in conversation topics; these include personal stories and cutting-edge trends. Best of all, she ...read more if you have time or interest

Reaction to Beyond Buzz: listening, something to talk about

I’ve been on the road this week talking with marketing and public relations people about the ideas from my new book, Beyond Buzz: The Next Generation of Word of Mouth Marketing. What fun this is.

The two big things people seem to be struggling with as they get into conversational marketing and Web 2.0 communications:

  1. How to listen in new ways . (If marketing is a conversation, at least half the process is listening.)
  1. Finding something interesting to talk about. For face-to-face and online communications. And that connects to the business strategy. People seem to understand the mechanics of tools, but they struggle with how to uncover interesting ideas to talk about that are genuine to people in the company and interesting to folks they want to talk with. (My view is that most of our companies don’t have cool, buzz-worthy products. But we all have the ability to talk about our companies in fresh, interesting ways when we uncover points of view that are engaging, and get the reaction, “That’s interesting. Tell me more.”)

I’ve tried to lay out how to do both in the book – as well how to overcome the five biggest obstacles to conversational marketing and operationalize conversational marketing into marketing functions and tactics. If you read the book, please, please let me know what’s been helpful. Or where I need to elaborate.

If you want the Cliff Notes version, you can download the ebook by clicking on the link to the right of this blog post — or check out the podcasts.

If your professional organization or company is looking for a fresh, “how to” perspective on the topic, let me know. While I’m promoting the book I’m willing to do these for free – as long as you pay travel expenses and can pull together at least 30 folks. So far the reaction from the sessions have been really great.

An email from yesterday’s American Marketing Association/New York event:

“I think I am an open-minded, “willing to admit everything I don’t know” type of guy………But it’s rare I go to a marketing seminar and actually learn something new and / or useful. But, yesterday with you, I came away informed and entertained.”