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In command and out of control - more on Blink and social media

Tunnel of Fish by Arne Kuilman.

This is the second of a few posts reflecting on Malcolm Gladwell's 
Blink in the social age, five years since its publishing. Read the first.

The premise of Blink is that the intuitive, instant judgments (i.e. gut reactions) we make on a subconscious level are often highly accurate. Gladwell shows that with a little direction, we can empower people to make these spontaneous judgments contribute to an overall goal.

Two Examples from Blink
Gladwell looks at a New York improv comedy club and explains that the key to good improv acting is to always accept everything that happens to you. In other words, no suggestion should be denied. With this direction (and lots of practice), members of an improv troupe seem fluid and even telepathic with one another.

If you've ever seen good improv, you know what it's like when they're on. It can seem scripted, but really they're just making spontaneous decisions based on a rule.

Lieutenant General Paul Van Riper calls this being in command and out of control. Gladwell tells us how Van Riper used this philosophy to command military forces in real life and in a war game called the Millenium Challenge. Rather than giving forces with intricate orders, he provides only general guidance and overall intent.

It seems like a risky strategy to let go control like this. But doing so actually empowered Van Riper's troops to rely on their own intuition and initiative in the field, when there's no time to deliberate. While the enemy was analyzing reams of data, Van Riper's forces were already on the offensive. And they won.

Social Media/Business Application
As business integrates social media into more of its functions, every employee becomes a voice for the company. It's impossible to monitor every interaction employees have online, but setting the rules of engagement ensures that everyone is interacting with the same intent. The larger the organization, the more important this becomes.

Best Buy took a big risk when it launched Twelpforce. It had the potential to be very messy having hundreds of store employees engaging thousands of customers and prospects online. But by setting a simple set of social media guidelines, they set the direction and trusted their blue shirts to do the right thing, and they did. And I'm willing to bet the employee satisfaction levels for Twelpforcers is through the roof.

Losing Control of the Brand
Much has been said about how in the social age, brands are out of the business's control. But businesses are still in command of whether they're useful, interesting, open and honest. If they get those right, the out-of-control brand will take care of itself.

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Blink Again - Thoughts on Gladwell's Book in the Social Age

Five years old and more relevant than ever

When Malcolm Gladwell's Blink released in January 2005, 'The Facebook' had launched just nine months earlier and Twitter was still a year out. Yet when I recently read the book, I was struck by the relevance of the concepts to the current media environment. This is the first of a few posts reflecting on Blink in the social media age.

Blink is about thin slicing

Thin slicing, or our ability to gauge what's important and make accurate decisions based on a very narrow experience, is the central concept of Blink. The idea is that our immediate, intuitive reactions, which occur subconsciously and in the blink of an eye, are often highly accurate.

Social media is a world of thin slices

Gladwell cites thin slicing examples from sports, music, warfare, mind reading and several others. But at that time, the social web - which today must be one of the richest examples of thin slicing - had not yet come to fruition. If you think about, it thin slicing is a constant occurrence in social media and the web at large.

Think of what you do when someone follows you on Twitter. If you're like me, you take 2-3 seconds to scan their bio and recent tweets (and maybe even click on their URL) to determine if you want to follow back. Or consider your Facebook news feed. You probably have friends or acquaintances with whom you've fallen out of touch, but as long as you read their occasional one-sentence updates, you still feel connected and have some sense of their lives.

Then there are information sources like Twitter searches and Amazon ratings. Social media make it easier than ever to size up people, places and things based on a limited data set.

Tweets could reveal more than you think

According to Blink, those instant assessments based on narrow windows of experience may actually have a high degree of accuracy. Gladwell writes about a study in which complete strangers were asked to enter a college dorm room and then answer questions about the student's personality. The strangers were nearly as accurate as friends in their evaluations.

Now imagine the same experiment based solely on a person's Twitter or Facebook page. Your assessment could be scarily accurate, rivaling those of that person's close friends. If you are a heavy social media user, you've probably been honing your ability to thin slice in this way without thinking twice about it.

Business applications - What do your thin slices look like?
I recently visited the website of a real estate firm in preparation for a meeting. Although the site appeared clean, well-designed and professional, my first reaction was that something was wrong. The site had a closed-off, impersonal vibe.

Then I realized what it was: the site had no points of access or interaction besides an email form on the contact page. Later I was surprised to learn that the company actually was active in their niche social networks.

Did the website give me an inaccurate reading of the company? Or was my thin slice true because it showed that openness and interaction are not integrated into the company at a high level? I believe it's the latter.

Consider some of the ways that people can instantly thin slice your brand online:

+ Your search engine results page 
+ Your website
+ Your blog or lack thereof
+ Your relevancy and alacrity in social media
+ The social sentiment around your brand
+ Your product/service ratings and recommendations
+ Your news/blog coverage or lack thereof

Summary

A brand's web presence is now dispersed over a multitude of online platforms. Each one is a potential thin slice and a point of entry to the brand. Brands need to provide an integrated experience across all those touch points to serve up a favorable thin slice no matter where they're found online.

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On the Pleasures of Being a Re-Reader

Re-reading books can be more valuable/pleasurable than always reaching for something new. I'm partial books that reward repeated readings. That's when things sink in and you really pick up the nuance. I found myself particularly nodding along with the following paragraph from this NY Times editorial, even the part about Gatsby:

Part of the fun of re-reading is that you are no longer bothered by the business of finding out what happens. Re-reading “Middlemarch,” for instance, or even “The Great Gatsby,” I’m able to pay attention to what’s really happening in the language itself — a pleasure surely as great as discovering who marries whom, and who dies and who does not.

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Andy Giefer

Andy Giefer

Strategic PR/marketing guy with a love for all things digital. Passionate about connecting remarkable brands + people.

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