Who put the "Social" in Social Media? The answer is… the Community.
As Phil Dworsky recently recently commented about my post on December 11, beyond the ability for anyone to publish, it's the community interaction enabled by the Internet that is the defining characteristic of social media.
Tools are tools, but the dynamic interaction between people – colleagues, strangers, experts, novices, customers, competitors, advocates, detractors, et al – is the driving force behind the social media wave.
Blogs and other social media communication channels do not exist in a vacuum. Whenever a blogger hits "Publish," their thoughts and ideas immediately become filaments in a virtual tapestry collectively woven by worldwide communities of people loosely joined together by shared interests.
The Internet is the loom, and all of us are both potential weavers as well as beneficiaries of that which is woven.
As I suggest in my response to Phil's comment, the fundamental shift that's underway in marketing is from a one-way "tell" paradigm to a model that's multi-directional, interactive and conversational. Advertising seeks to put messages in front of eyes, while social media seeks an ongoing dialog with communities of people that invites and welcomes participation.
Rich Goldman emphasizes in his comment to the same blog post that a key part of the job ahead is to understand how the communities that are important to Synopsys (i.e., design engineers, CAD managers, executives, etc.) want to be communicated with as social media becomes omnipresent.
Where do our customers tend to congregate online? What sources do they trust and view as credible? How can we best serve their information needs without stepping over the line by whipping up marketing fluff?
What are you hearing? What do you think? Let's use the community that is our own marketing team to listen, observe and figure this out together.
