Social Flare

Helping brands with Social Technologies and the New Media - by Pete Simon

Live or Memorex?

I am finding myself increasingly interested in alternate reality games ( ARGs ). This is a game that uses the real world as the gameboard, with clues and actions being all present in real time, in real life. You might have to go to a certain website or a certain address and do something, talk to someone, or whatever. I played a kind of lame-but-still-interesting version of this kind of game at GenCon last year... and now I'm interested in making one go.

It would bring into one tight little package several areas of interest I have: viral flow of information across social networks, social media, game design, and writing in particular.

I have an idea for a sort of starter-game. We'll see what I can come up with.

Here's a story from Wired that discusses one such ARG.

Posted at 07:52 PM in branding, community building, info flow, marketing technique | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Always On, and going vertical

So, the most recent Stanford Summit came and went. Innovators and technologists ( a Who's Who, of course ) gathered for two and a half days to discuss, among other things, future trends. Of interest to me was a discussion about the evolution of the space occupied by social network sites. Predictably, the voices from the Summit speaking on this topic thought it "very unlikely" that another biggie such as MySpace or Facebook would come to dominate across the whole of the web.

That is to say, the future is probably with more niche-oriented social networks; people looking for other rabid pulp SciFi fans or canning enthusiasts or renfaire participants ( not to mention personal finance aficionados,  usability professionals, and other such non-hobbyist communities ) will likely gravitate towards their own corner of the social network webspace.

Duh.

For a time now, various entities ( WalMart, Microsoft, etc ) have attempted to develop the "next MySpace", dreaming dreams of going head to head with that phenomena and competing in its own space. After the first few got there and expanded beyond all  prediction, the space is proving exceedingly difficult to penetrate, just like any market dominated by  major players.  Not impossible to be the Next Big Thing, but desire and millions of dollars are not a guarantee you'll succeed at getting a place to the table.

The point of my post, and yes I have one, is that technology that supports portability between networks is going to be coming into its own, and someone smart will become quite rich helping to facilitate this.

We, members of the social networking masses, have one or two presences on the biggies like MySpace or Facebook. Maybe one on something more specialized or in a different area like Virb or Digg. I'm not giving up my membership in the communities I've been a part of for some time now, and there's a definite bandwidth limit, here: I can't track my info ( let alone other people's info ) on more sites.

So, what to do?

As vertically-oriented social networks emerge and grow, some way of making "me" ( that is, my online presence ) portable would sure be helpful. FoaF is a tiny step in this direction. This is a first step in a Rosetta Stone for all the different social networks I might want to participate in.

Don't make me learn 5 or 10 languages; help me learn one, and get me a good translator.

Posted at 08:15 AM in community building, info flow, social media basics | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Data and knowledge, and passing both along the web

Subtitle- Seeing the beacon and passing it on, as opposed to understanding what it means, and internalizing it. Not turning data to knowledge is a bad thing, probably.

I’m wondering about our ability to learn from what we see and read on the web. I know a thing or two about the flow of information on the internet; specifically how it flows through online communities. A message works its way along trusted pathways from one person to the next; received like the beacon lights from Gondor to Rohan in the movie version of "Return of the King". There’s the nuance of how the information is passed and flows to consider, but what of how is the message is processed and digested once it is received at each node? The simple message passed in Tolkien’s story need not be understood by the people passing it along ( though it certainly was ). It just had to reach the terminus of the chain to be effective.

I am thinking about this because I am engaged in a great swelling of knowledge at the moment, by doing… but also very much by reading. In undertaking this business effort, I approach it as I do most topics I have a keen interest in- I read everything I can about it. I become a subject-matter expert ( as I can ) on the topic of choice. I have a diverse background with management and some general business acumen; but it is not my first language, so to speak. I do more than read, certainly; I try to-do- the thing that I am learning about as well. I wouldn’t just read about surfing… I’d take a board out into the waves and get beaten down a bit. The same thing goes with the books I’m reading now, for Social Flare. When I can, I stop at Borders or the library and in between other tasks I read a book or so. I surround myself with sharp, motivated people whose gifts lay in areas mine do not, but I seek to build up my talents as best I can.

And I get a bit brighter, maybe.

But probably not much wiser, with reading the messages of sages who have gone before me. This would be my point.

It’s one thing to get information, to accept it. It’s another to internalize it. One can listen to Jimi Hendrix all day long… but maybe not -hear- him. I can read books all day long about surfing, though it is another thing entirely to head out into the breaking waves, leashed up at the ankle, breath coming up a bit short as you see the size of the surf from the prone position, heading your way.

So, experts write books. Our parents try to teach us the lessons they learned. We receive this information as data, rarely turning it into knowledge. We see the beacon to the west, we light ours, and in doing so the watchtower in the East sees our light, and lights its own beacon, passing the message. And the message varies with life: Never give your bookkeeper check-signing ability. Don’t get into a car with a stranger. Never eat yellow snow. There’s war in Gondor, send help. Fast.

I think that merely passing the message along is part of it, and a vital part. But passing it to others in a form that makes it more digestible, more easily turned from data to knowledge, info to wisdom, and is just as important. As most any insightful school principal will tell you, there’s a vast difference between being a subject matter expert, and being an insightful teacher. Communicating the message is different than doing all you can to assure that message is taken up. Merely making a message passable is not the end. It is very surely an important, necessary beginning… but not the end.

I read the books to develop my business acumen, and although no one can learn –just- from books, some are very helpful. Some have the message crafted in such a way that it will very likely be taken up. That’s the goal, of course it’s one thing to put wisdom in a book, and make that book available. It’s quite another to deliver that wisdom in a way that will be taken up, that can benefit someone.

One of the many things that distinguishes Social Flare, I think. We don’t’ just pass your message from one mountaintop to the next; we understand a bit about who’s watching for your message, and we craft it in a way that helps enable that transition from data, to knowledge.

Because it’s not just how many eyes see a message, it’s how many people react to it. There’s war in Gondor, after all.

Posted at 07:20 AM in info flow | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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