What Open Really Means

It’s hard to be a medium or large corporation these days.  The demands are not small, with expectations of investors, disappointing market performance, employee needs, government regulations and oversight… there’s almost no time left for the most important part of any business: customers.

Of course, that’s where the current craze around social media comes in.  The expectation is that any company can use all sorts of free tools to stretch marketing and PR dollars, and maybe make the customer feel more welcome picking up your brand at Wal-Mart.

But that whole scenario is bound to bust as surely as your pick of economic bubbles.

The reality is that to really engage using social media and realize honest benefits requires more than a passing interest in new shiny things.  Social media requires real openness, and if you’re not willing to be open, people can tell.

The power of this new ideal comes from the willingness to have an open culture. That means that there are no artificial barriers between departments, positions, business units, or people. It means that interacting with the public is a part of every position, not just the domain of marketing, PR, and an occasional press release from the CEO.

Openness means that the C-level is talking in public forums alongside the shipping department, or accounting, or human resources.  Bringing openness to a culture means that everyone is able to talk about nearly anything.

With that being said, it’s ok to still have intellectual property and protect that.  You’re right in protecting developing business plans, or new products, or several other types of information an organization holds and makes money from.  However, beyond that, an organization can talk openly about the challenges it faces, or hold up a consumer enthusiast group as a model, or any such thing that shows a human side of a company.

Sometimes we, that is companies, worry too much about what the competition may think.  Organizations can get wrapped up in being too professional.  Being open about things doesn’t take away from any of this.  When done from a position of transparency, and honest intention of open interaction, a company can grow a much more loyal consumer base, and open source their own PR army. But that’s another post.

Thoughts on Social Media Careers

My Career Path in Ten Words by Jay Dugger I’ve been working in the technology field for a long time and the thing that really keeps me engaged is the fact that it’s always changing.  Technology evolves and there is a constant need to be upgrading or planning on upgrading.  It’s made a great career for myself with a number of great projects and experiences that I can look back on with fond memories.

"IT" as it’s called has also enabled me to push boundaries that were uncomfortable for me, allowing me to grow and continue to learn about things that I needed to but was uninterested in. To my mind, this is what a career should deliver; experiences, personal growth, team participation, leadership, and providing a decent living for a family. This is something that a technology career has rewarded me with for my investment.

So with that knowledge, experience and expectation, I wonder just how big the social media market is for it’s practitioners. As every site integrates more social media and "web 2.0" technologies and methods, how will social media professionals remain in demand? Ensuing generations will be even more well versed in the concepts, tools, technologies than even the much celebrated millennials today.

As the online world continues to circle around and pick up the once-forgotten "human face" that it lacked in the .com boom/bust, it becomes harder to distinguish just what a social media professional is.  I fear that most of them will simply be absorbed into the existing professions as Marketing and Public Relations – already, the social media sphere is mostly made up of this demographic.

Am I off base here or is there really a career path for social media specialists or professionals as we know them today? Or will it just become another skill listed by bullet point on the resume of future marketing professionals? What do you think?

Photo credit: Jay Dugger

Interesting Visto PR Tactic

Check out this post over at Pocket PC Thoughts by Ed Hansberry. After reading the blog they’ve linked to, I believe it to be a simple PR tactic going into the extended Christmas holiday weekend. Make sure to read the comments, there are some good ones!

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