The chicken & egg of groups

One of my consistent themes has been the power of a group to get stuff done, and the ways the web facilitates, and empowers the processes needed to get the stuff done by the group.

However, which is the chicken, and which is the egg?

There are no groups without members, and the “members” need a motivation to form, be a part of, and contribute to a group, in a way that enhances the outcomes for the group.

As a marketer, it is our task to find that motivation, and use it to build a network, group if you like, of those to whom the value proposition of the product/service being marketed adds value.

 

 

The geometry of networks

It is pretty clear to most that the number of connections in a network grows more quickly than the number of people in the network. It is a mathematically consistent relationship captured by Metcalf’s Law, but in summary, you double the size of a network, you quadruple the number of potential connections.

 This relationship between the  nodes in a network, and the number of (potential) connections is the foundation of social media, as the increase of the potential connections comes at little or no cost.

This is in complete contrast to the past, where these added connections added cost at a consistent rate, each new potential connection required someone to spend the time to make the phone call, mail the brochure, meet, discover if there was a potential value in devoting the resources to nurturing the relationship. All this cost prevented the development of the relationships that creates a network.

The relationship maths is  the same, but the transactions costs associated with the “old economy” ensured that many things that now can happen, simply could not because of the costs involved. Hugely successful sites like Flikr simply could not have evolved with the transaction costs of the past involved.

The new challenge is harnessing the potential energy in these connections, and leveraging it to benefit  the individuals in these potential networks enabled by the removal of the transaction costs.

 

 

Parliamentary performance measured.

On the “Insiders” show on Sunday, there was a review of the current Parliament, and how it had responded to the challenges of being ‘hung”.

Notable was the interview of the Labor leader of the house, Anthony Albanese, and the clips of his review speech on the last sitting day. He listed the achievements of the Government by reading out a list of the bills passed, 53 from memory, but who cares?

The purpose of Parliament is to make our society and individual lives better, not to pass bills, but that appears to be the metric used, and he also used the phrase “Government  53, Opposition Nil”. What in heavens name did he expect? for the opposition to be passing bills? That would really raise some comment!

How long would a MD of a commercial organisation last if he measured his performance by the number of memos written, but that is the sort of meaningless metric that the our elected representatives use to measure their performance, at least when questioned about their performance.

Irrelevent, meaningless, theatrical crap, and an absolute lack of leadership!

 

15 uses of Twitter

    I am indebted to Alan Rustbridger, editor of the Guardian newspaper whose recent Andrew Olle lecture articulated many of the challenges facing traditional media owners as the new social media destroys their business model.

    Among  the gems in this lecture is a list of 15 uses of Twitter, as Alan says, it is far more than useless information on what Twits are having for breakfast, and should be considered for what it can do that has value, rather than just the nonsense accumulating in some places of its ecosystem, it is a disruption of the first order.

    Here is an edited version of the list, with a few bits of my own thrown in, it is a fascinating view of a tool many over 50’s see as just a piece of nonsense our kids play with.

  1. It is an entirely new form of distribution, it may be 140 characters, but the power is in the linkages it can create
  2. It happens first. Then contributors to twitter, millions of them, have the power to be in the right place at the right time. News of the London bombings a few years back came in first from social media, predominantly twitter.
  3. It is a search engine, one that uses the algorithms of Google, and adds human curiosity, ingenuity, on top of the maths
  4. It is an aggregator of information. Set your tweet deck to a subject, and it will assemble the “wisdom of the crowd” to your device
  5. It is a reporting tool, that can find and communicate and co-ordinate knowledge, insight, and news, almost instantaneously
  6. It is a marketing tool of great power. Anyone can put a link to their website, alerting the community of followers, and others looking for info on a subject to the post,  or information, and then encourage linkages. It is a tool that both drives traffic to a site, and can engage at the same time, the slam dunk of marketing.
  7. It is a series of parallel conversations, real conversations where you can agree, disagree, bring more information to the table,  express ideas, and have views shaped, and it all happens in almost real time.
  8. It is a place where diverse voices can be heard, a place where the views of those who previously had no hope of being heard have the potential to find an audience
  9. It has changed the way the written word works. No longer  are we as serious as we were in the days of “proper journalism” now we know much better the impact of pictures, humor, and diversity in the way we write
  10. It is a level playing field, anyone can be heard, no longer do you have to own a printing press or a TV station to get your message out there
  11. It has redefined what is and what is not news. No longer do we rely on a few editors curating what we see and hear, there are now thousands, millions out there putting stuff out into the ecosystem, and we can pick and choose which bits we pick up
  12. Twitter has a long attention span, much longer than a newspaper, whose headline today is wrapping paper tomorrow. Twitter can build, and build as more people become engaged, and bring information to the table for consideration, and as an argument evolves, move in directions and into spaces a 24 hour news cycle would never consider.
  13. It creates communities around thoughts, ideas, and causes.
  14. It changes our notion of authority, everyone is equal to start off, and it is the value of an idea or view that attracts authority, not the role played in an organisation that gives authority
  15. It is an agent of change, harnessing the power of collaboration, at potentially lightening speed.
  16. Pretty good for a tool whose only redeeming feature was that is allowed us to find out what some wannabe celeb was doing right now!!

Measuring adjacencies

 Innovation programs always throw up the word “adjacency” and it has lots of interpretations, depending on who is doing the talking. So here is my two bobs worth.

Measure each of the following parameters on a 1-5 scale, (or 1-10 for a more nuanced outcome) 1 being the same as current, 5 being completely different, requiring new processes and infrastructure. Have a debate about the scores, collect more data, seek council of those with a different perspective, as it is generally a qualitative score rather than one that can be easily quantified.

  1. Channels to market
  2. Current sales force knowledge and relationships in the adjacent market
  3. Behavior of potential customers, the factors that drive their business model
  4. Existing potential customer relationships and the barriers to entry/exit in the market
  5. The nature of the competitive environment. (A “Porter” type analysis often assists here)
  6. The strength of your value proposition
  7.