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Entries categorized as ‘Leadership’

Bringing your compay to the social media party? Be prepared.

July 17, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Recent post from Fast Companies  Rohit Bhargava’s discusses expectations for your companies entrance into social media:
Many brands like to treat social media like a big party at the cool kids house. Everybody’s invited, and having a great time. The conversation is flowing and it’s the place that everyone wants to be. Eventually, you realize that your brand is not there yet, and someone (usually someone with a big title) decides that your brand should be. So you put on your best party clothes, show up at the door and loudly announce your arrival. The only problem is, the party is already in full swing, people already have their drinks, and no one was waiting for you to show up in the first place.

Sound cynical? Unfortunately, for many brands that’s the welcome they can expect as they finally start to turn to social media as a part of their marketing and communications strategy. Launching a blog, or a Facebook page, or Twitter account isn’t hard to do–the hard part is deciding how to use these tools. Ironically, the thing that most brands have to worry about isn’t negativity (as they often fear), it is indifference. The most common “backlash” against company sponsored social media initiatives are the embarrassing sounds of crickets. No one visits and no one cares.

It doesn’t have to be this way. The one thing people respond to is other people. So instead of focusing on your shiny new blog or cool new Facebook app–the place to start is to figure out who will be the people behind it. Find the individuals who will be interacting on behalf of your brand in social media, and then give them the tools and support to do it well. All the companies that get credit today for doing social media well–Zappos, Dell, Comcast–have all become comfortable with letting individuals from their company become the faces for their brand. These are the voices that I often call “accidental spokespeople.” Within them is the real secret to using social media to be a brand that actually matters: offering a real human connection.

Categories: Leadership · Social Media for Community Organizations
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Tinkering can spark creativity? You bet!

July 11, 2009 · Leave a Comment

It seems like letting the mind work in a relaxed but productive manner is what keeps us innovating.

Categories: Leadership
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Is Your Company Ready To Change Its Culture?

July 10, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Peter Bregman wrote recently about changing a corporate structure. In the article he cited a study by the University of Illinois researcher Leann Lipps Birch. In the late 1970’s a series of experiments was conducted on children to see what would get them to eat vegetables they disliked. This is a high bar. We’re not talking about simply eating more vegetables. We’re talking about eating specific vegetables, the ones they didn’t like.

You could tell the children you expect them to eat their vegetables. And reward them with ice cream if they did. You could explain all the reasons why eating their vegetables is good for them. And you could eat your own vegetables as a good role model. Those things might help.

But Birch found one thing that worked predictably. She put a child who didn’t like peas at a table with several other children who did. Within a meal or two, the pea-hater was eating peas like the pea-lovers.

Peer pressure.

We tend to conform to the behavior of the people around us. Which is what makes culture change particularly challenging because everyone is conforming to the current culture. Sometimes though, the problem contains the solution.

First we have to decide why we want to change the culture. Think carefully because this is not going to be easy. It took a long time to build where you are and the people, even though it may not be pleasant are used to it. The rules are established, changing them now will bring resistance. Want to proceed?

Then you need to change the story.

“You change a culture with stories. Your culture tells one type of story. Those who toe the line get promoted. No value of an employee or their personal life. Micromanaging of projects or no trust . Whatever it is it’s the story everyone knows.

If you change culture change the story. Begin rewarding the behavior you want to see. Let others see the reward and talk about it. Keep moving forward with the new stories.

Here is an example from Bregman: if you want to create a faster moving, less perfectionist culture, instead of berating someone for sending an email without proper capitalization, send out a memo with typos in it.

Or if you want managers and employees to communicate more effectively, stop checking your computer in the middle of a conversation every time the new message sound beeps. Instead, put your computer to sleep when they walk in your office.

Don’t begin by changing  the performance review system, the rewards packages, the training programs. Don’t change anything. Not yet anyway. For now, just change the stories. For a while there will be a disconnect between the new stories and the entrenched systems promoting the old culture. And that disconnect will create tension. Tension that can be harnessed to create mechanisms to support the new stories.

To start a culture change all we need to do is two simple things:

1. Do dramatic story-worthy things that represent the culture we want to create. Then let other people tell stories about it.

 2.  Find other people who do story-worthy things that represent the culture we want to create. Then tell stories about them.

What about your company? Are you changing culture? If you are I would love to hear your stories.

Categories: Company Culture · Leadership · Organizational Effectiveness
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Are you a Leader?

July 8, 2009 · Leave a Comment

“A boss creates fear, a leader confidence. A boss fixes blame, a leader corrects mistakes. A boss knows all, a leader asks questions. A boss makes work drudgery, a leader makes it interesting. A boss is interested in himself or herself, a leader is interested in the group.”  (Russell H. Ewing)

Categories: Leadership
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FREE Read the Book

July 7, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Here is the book FREE by Chris Anderson. If you are looking to add value to your business or even your personal brand you will want to look at the concepts in this book.

Categories: Company Culture · Leadership

Transforming The Future Part II

June 29, 2009 · Leave a Comment

 Earlier this month I posted an article by Future of Work that talked about transformation and what fundamental change looks like. It’s irreversible, substantive, changes our identity, and shifts our purpose. This is part two. Addressing the dramatic change that is happening and considers what it may mean for our collective future.

Scotty, Take It Up To Warp Factor 5.6!

We believe that western society (and quite possibly the entire planet) is being transformed in five very specific ways:

  • Forecasting and understanding change:  the arts and media
  • Individual rights and collective choices:  government
  • Buying, selling, and trading:  economics
  • What we know and how we think:  education
  • Where we belong and are welcomed:  community

This is about as basic as it gets.

Back Story:  The Drivers of Change

Johann Gutenberg’s printing press was by far the most significant change of its time.  It shifted the world at large from an oral means of communication to printed, reproducible documents.

Today we are shifting again—from analog to digital forms of communication. Our ability to communicate with one another has gone from one-to-one(pre-Gutenberg days), through the print-based and “broadcast” media of one-to-many, to a many-to-many model (through the Internet) where everybody has the possibility of communicating with everyone else (at least among those who are on-line). And of course, our notion of “many” has gone from a small number to literally millions of people. Just as importantly we are using multiple kinds of media to communicate with each other—print, sound, and now video (e.g. YouTube and other web-based video systems) being the most common.

In its day the printing press changed basic perceptions of space and time. We went from focusing on the past (what had already happened) and being able to experience only those things that we could directly sense, to being able to experience interactions with people who are completely outside our everyday experience (and in some cases don’t even exist in the real world—ala SecondLife). Today our focus is also changing from the present to the future—a world in which we can now actually create sights, sounds, and even smells that don’t exist anywhere in nature; they “live” only in an explicitly-created digital world.

In addition, our mental energy has moved from being largely automatic (simply reacting to external stimuli) to becoming formally conscious of our place in a larger social context. We believe we are now at the threshold of shifting from ego-based behavior to purpose-directed behavior. That means that with the Internet we’re now learning who we each are (e.g., Facebook), all for the purpose of discovering why we are (e.g., communities of interest supported by tools like Ning, Facebook. LinkedIn, and all the other social networking sites).  Communication technologies have transformed human society several times in the past, and they are doing it once again.

Component Printing Press Internet
Technology Oral to Print Analog to Digital
Time/Space Perception History to Present Present to Future
Mental Energy Automatic to Conscious Conscious to Intentional
Behavior Reactive to Ego Ego to Purpose

The Deep Dive

Given that, let’s go back to those five big societal changes. The arts and media have changed considerably. In the 1500s, people’s ability to appreciate and understand only those events and objects in their immediate, direct experience evolved into to an ability to appreciate people and ideas outside their “normal” experience (think of the power of a written text to make places, people, events, ideas, and emotions come “alive” to a reader—even they are entirely fictional). The media transformed from one-to-one or person-to-person to one-to-many.

Today we are creating a dynamic, “virtual” environment in which we “live” every day—including many of our social networks. Not only do we have access to many things outside our direct experience, but because of that we must also learn to question the authenticity of almost all of what we see, hear, and sense. We’re now moving into an age in which the media actually lets us construct the environments that we want to be in and experience.  

Fueled by the power of the printed word, governmentsmoved from feudal communities to empires to nation states. Now those nations are struggling once again to take the next step in their evolution, both as independent cultures and as members of a global community.  What does it mean to be a “global citizen?” The Internet is at the heart of this evolution. The last Presidential election in the United States was a prime example; U.S. voters could not avoid taking into account how the candidates and the issues “played out” in other countries, and many non-U.S. citizens played active roles in the online conversations about both the issues and the candidates.

In the 15th century economies shifted from agrarian to mercantile models that were designed to speed up the pace of transactions in the rapidly expanding marketplace. This mercantilism matured into a capitalist structure supported by democratic forms of government. Now the old economic rules of mercantilism, based on scarcity, ownership of private property, and economies of scale are running out of gas.  (Don’t worry; we’ll come back to this assertion at a later date.) Something new is emerging as global financial markets converge and electronic commerce brings everyone into what may soon be a unified planetary marketplace.

Educationhas undergone, and is once again undergoing, equally dramatic change. The informal, almost pre-literate, form of education in the Middle Ages gave way to a centralized structure built upon the printed word and books. The 15th-century model of education (what we now call the University) was spatially centralized; students traveled physically to specific places—centers of learning—to get their education.

Today learning is becoming accessible to “students” wherever they may live and/or work (and the whole concept of “student” has broadened to include just about everyone, all the time). Earlier, basic education was the private responsibility first of families and then of local communities. Now, however, we believe that all sorts of learning venues, funding models, and methods will soon replace, or at least augment, existing public school systems. Education—beyond the very basic level needed just to survive—will be delivered by the extended communities and the work organizations to which we belong.

Lastly, our whole idea of community has changed and is changing once again. “Community” used to reflect the largely homogeneous views of a few relatively authoritarian religious institutions. The printed word began to pull apart those societal structures, and its impact was immediately seen in the way communities began splintering and differentiating. Many new communities arose, often espousing distinctive belief systems. During the Renaissance, many people gained the freedom to move physically into the communities that they wanted to belong to.

Now we have thousands of on-line, virtual “communities” that thrive completely independently of any one geographic location. We can reach out beyond our local neighborhoods to discover other people anywhere on the planet who share our interests, beliefs, fears, and desires. We can then use digital technologies of all kinds to establish communications directly with them and ultimately band together, first electronically and eventually even physically, as a market or political force, if we want to do so.

  Printing Press Internet
Media Direct to Indirect Experience Physical to “Virtual” Experience
Government Feudal to Nation States National to Planetary
Economy Agricultural to Mercantilism Industrial Capitalism to Supra-National Market Regulation
Education Informal to Formal and Spatially Centered Universal at elementary level; work-based and continuous for adults
Community Cultural or Religious, based on geography and tradition Cognitive or Spiritual, based on unity of purpose

Why It Matters

Simply  put, if somebody could have told people in the Middle Ages what was about to happen to their lives, they probably wouldn’t have believed any of it. The changes that were about to occur were quite simply beyond their capability to imagine. And we are convinced the same thing is true today.

We are at the very front end of an incredibly broad and fundamental transformation. And we all have the opportunity—and the responsibility—to look for emerging patterns and make important choices about how we shape the future, both individually and collectively. So what are you going to do this Monday morning?

Categories: Community Development · Leadership · Organizational Effectiveness
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Happiness is Contagious

June 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment

This wonderful video shows how easy it is to spread happiness. In these difficult times when people are nervous and scared a little fun can go a long way. As a leader when you look at the people who work for you or you do business with think about creative ways to provide joy.

Categories: Company Culture · Leadership
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Moving Your Traditional Marketing Online

June 27, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Everyone’s telling you to do it but you are not sure how. Online marketing is through the roof in popularity for a reason. It is cheap and powerful when used correctly.

boxesHere are twelve ideas from Channel V Media to help you get started.

  1. Audience Identification. If you know who your audience is, you’re already one step ahead of the game. The next step is to figure out where they interact online.
  2. Platform Development & Design. Figuring out how to engage and interact with this audience.
  3. Brand Campaign Integration. It’s possible for a social media program to piggyback off a good brand campaign, but it has to be transformed into its cooler younger brother.
  4. Content Creation/Coordination. You must create a consistent message.
  5. Goal Mapping. In other words, how do you measure your success? Is it brand mentions? Traffic? Email sign ups? Leads? Sales? 
  6. Brand Identity. Everyone that is engaging via social media on your team must understand your goals and messaging.
  7. Audience Attraction. Larger brands like to start spreading the word of their new, fancy and glossy initiatives at the outset, but if your social media program is good, your audience will find them on their own and the spread the word for you.  
  8. Social Media Listening. If you don’t know what people are saying about you and your products, their related interests and more, how are you going to interact with them?
  9. Community & Social Responsibility. Social responsibility is increasingly expected of everyone – and this engagement is an essential part of your online identity. 
  10. Internal/External Community Engagement & Response. Be everywhere. All the time. It’s up to you to let people know that you are listening, engaging, helping, and offering solutions.
  11. Brand Advocacy. Authenticity and transparency are such huge aspects of social media, your social media and management team must be 100% on board.
  12. Customer Service. Good customer service involves listening (within and outside of social media) and responding appropriately. 

Categories: Company Culture · Leadership
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Want To Be An Agent of Change?

June 25, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Harvard Business Review recently published an article on change. Before we embark upon a change in Business or Career we need to make evaluations by asking ourselves some relevant questions….

1. Do you see opportunities the competition doesn’t see?
IDEO’s Tom Kelly likes to quote French novelist Marcel Proust, who famously said, “The real act of discovery consists not in finding new lands but in seeing with new eyes.” The most successful companies don’t just out-compete their rivals. They redefine the terms of competition by embracing one-of-a-kind ideas in a world of me-too thinking.

2. Do you have new ideas about where to look for new ideas?
One way to look at problems as if you’re seeing them for the first time is to look at a wide array of fields for ideas that have been working for a long time. Ideas that are routine in one industry can be revolutionary when they migrate to another industry, especially when they challenge the prevailing assumptions that have come to define so many industries.

3. Are you the most of anything?
You can’t be “pretty good” at everything anymore. You have to be the most of something: the most affordable, the most accessible, the most elegant, the most colorful, the most transparent. Companies used to be comfortable in the middle of the road — that’s where all the customers were. Today, the middle of the road is the road to ruin. What are you the most of?

4. If your company went out of business tomorrow, who would miss you and why?

I first heard this question from advertising legend Roy Spence, who says he got it from Jim Collins of Good to Great fame. Whatever the original source, the question is as profound as it is simple — and worth taking seriously as a guide to what really matters.

5. Have you figured out how your organization’s history can help to shape its future? Psychologist Jerome Bruner has a pithy way to describe what happens when the best of the old informs the search for the new. The essence of creativity, he argues, is “figuring out how to use what you already know in order to go beyond what you already think.” The most creative leaders I’ve met don’t disavow the past. They rediscover and reinterpret what’s come before as a way to develop a line of sight into what comes next.

6. Can your customers live without you?
If they can, they probably will. The researchers at Gallup have identified a hierarchy of connections between companies and their customers — from confidence to integrity to pride to passion. To test for passion, Gallup asks a simple question: “Can you imagine a world without this product?” One of the make-or-break challenges for change is to become irreplaceable in the eyes of your customers.

7. Do you treat different customers differently?
If your goal is to become indispensable to your customers, then almost by definition you won’t appeal to all customers. In a fickle and fast-changing world, one test of how committed a company is to its most important customers is how fearless it is about ignoring customers who aren’t central to its mission. Not all customers are created equal.

8. Are you getting the best contributions from the most people?
It may be lonely at the top, but change is not a game best played by loners. These days, the most powerful contributions come from the most unexpected places — the “hidden genius” inside your company, the “collective genius” of customers, suppliers, and other smart people who surround your company. Tapping this genius requires a new leadership mindset — enough ambition to address tough problems, enough humility to know you don’t have all the answers.

9. Are you consistent in your commitment to change?
Pundits love to excoriate companies because they don’t have the guts to change. In fact, the problem with many organizations is that all they do is change. They lurch from one consulting firm to the next, from the most recent management fad to the newest. If, as a leader, you want to make deep-seated change, then your priorities and practices have to stay consistent in good times and bad.

10. Are you learning as fast as the world is changing?
I first heard this question from strategy guru Gary Hamel, and it may be the most urgent question facing leaders in every field. In a world that never stops changing, great leaders can never stop learning. How do you push yourself as an individual to keep growing and evolving — so that your company can do the same?

Categories: Company Culture · Leadership · Organizational Effectiveness
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6 Social Media Information Sites

June 23, 2009 · 1 Comment

 Social-Media Sites

Here are sites that can help businesses to advertise; promote specials, events or services; and help you connect with potential employees.

  1. Wikipedia: Besides creating your own business reference page on Wikipedia, you can connect with other users on Wikipedia’s Community Portal and at the village pump, where you’ll find conscientious professionals enthusiastic about news, business, research and more.
  2. Newsvine: Feature top employees by uploading their articles, studies or other news-related items to this site. A free account will also get you your own column and access to the Newsvine community.
  3. 43 Things: This site bills itself as “the world’s most popular online goal setting community.” By publicizing your company’s goals and ambitions, you’ll gain a following of customers, investors and promoters who cheer you on as you achieve success.
  4. Wetpaint: If you’re tired of blogs and generic Web sites, create your own wiki with Wetpaint to reach your audience and increase your company’s presence online. You can easily organize articles, contact information, photos and other information to promote your business.
  5. Twitter: Is a social networking and microblogging service that allows you answer the question, “What are you doing?” by sending short text messages 140 characters in length, called “tweets”, to your friends, or “followers.”
  6. Yahoo! Answers: Start fielding Yahoo! users’ questions with this social-media Q&A service. Search for questions in your particular areas of expertise by clicking categories like Business & Finance, Health, News & Events and more. If you continue to dole out useful advice and link your answer to your company’s Web page, you’ll quickly gain a new following of curious customers.

Credit to InsideCRM for these fantastic lists.

Categories: Leadership · Personal Coaching
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