Tag Archives: Conversations

Social Media 101: The Cluetrain Manifesto

Gaurav Mishra

In 1999, Christopher Locke, Doc Searls and David Weinberger published The Cluetrain Manifesto website –

People of earth… A powerful global conversation has begun. Through the Internet, people are discovering and inventing new ways to share relevant knowledge with blinding speed. As a direct result, markets are getting smarter—and getting smarter faster than most companies.

These markets are conversations. Their members communicate in language that is natural, open, honest, direct, funny and often shocking. Whether explaining or complaining, joking or serious, the human voice is unmistakably genuine. It can’t be faked.

Most corporations, on the other hand, only know how to talk in the soothing, humorless monotone of the mission statement, marketing brochure, and your-call-is-important-to-us busy signal. Same old tone, same old lies. No wonder networked markets have no respect for companies unable or unwilling to speak as they do.

But learning to speak in a human voice is not some trick, nor will corporations convince us they are human with lip service about “listening to customers.” They will only sound human when they empower real human beings to speak on their behalf.

Conversations Are Becoming Fragmented: The Case for a Killer Conversation Tracker Application

Quick Summary: As conversations become fragmented across social networks, there will be a huge business potential for a killer conversation tracker application that allows you to track and publish all the conversations around your content in one place, on your blog.

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Over the last few months, I have noticed a new pattern emerge in how I engage in conversations:-

Step 1: I often use Twitter to pre-test a post idea. I typically tweet the topic I’m planning to write a post on and often get twenty plus reactions and suggested links. This enables me to include multiple perspectives in the post.

Step 2: Whenever I’m writing an involved post, I try to capture the essence of the topic in a graph and post it on Flickr. Typically, five to ten people comment on the graphs on Flickr and Twitter, which further helps me pre-test my post idea.

Step 3: Finally, using the tweets and the graph as a starting point, I write a post on my blog. Most of my posts get five to ten comments on the blog itself.

Have You Watched the New Indica V2 Dicor TVC Yet?

Quick Summary: Watch the New Indica V2 Dicor TVC on YouTube.

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Have you watched the new Indica V2 Dicor TVC yet?

We broke the campaign over the weekend, and uploaded the TVC on YouTube almost simultaneously.

Now, I’m sharing the TVC on my blog, Twitter and Facebook.

It’s my first TVC in my brand manager avatar, so be generous with your compliments and gentle with your criticisms. In either case, do e-mail me your feedback both on the TVC and the concept of brand managers talking about their brands on social networks.

My Mantra for Building Business Relationships: Treat Partners/ Vendors/ Suppliers Like Customers

Quick Summary: Read my mantra for building business relationships — treat partners/ vendors/ suppliers like customers.

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Last week, I wrote about Anita Campbell’s compilation of best kept marketing secrets featuring tips from some of the world’s top marketers, small business experts and bloggers.

Toby Bloomberg is compiling another great list of tips (via Rajesh) from marketers and bloggers around the world by asking them —

How do you build great business relationships with people? Do “clients” and “partners/ vendors/ suppliers” have different points of view about what is important for each?

Toby’s compilation post on building business relationships has a wealth of good advice and I would strongly encourage you to read through it.

Here’s my own mantra for building business relationships — treat partners/ vendors/ suppliers like customers.

All of us know how to build great business relationships with customers. All of us know that we should –

Dell Blogs Its Way Out of Bad Buzz Hell

Two years back, Dell faced serious negative word of mouth from bloggers, but responded by solving their problems, starting its own Direct2Dell blog, asking for customer feedback at Dell IdeaStorm, seriously realigning its customer service processes and metrics, and finding new ways of engaging customers in a collaborative relationship (Jeff Jarvis in BusinessWeek via Rajesh) .

The Dell example is the exception rather than the rule - most companies still haven’t understood the concept of leveraging social media and engaging the customer in two-way conversations - but it serves as a powerful case study of what is possible if they did.

Also see: Mack Collier and Paul van Veenendaal.

Advertising as a Conversation Tool

Michael Parekh picked up my ‘Oneupmanship in the Indian Sky’ post and wrote an interesting post about advertising as conversation -

Not a day goes by where we don’t see high profile bloggers get in each other’s faces, creating drama and soap operas, by saying what they really think, and letting their emotions hang out.

So the question that naturally follows is, why SHOULDN’T this be true for advertisers online?

It’s a radical thought, and I love radical thoughts, but I don’t see corporates using advertising as a conversation tool anytime soon, for the same reasons corporates rarely use CEO-blogging as a conversation tool (and, yes, I have read Naked Conversations). To participate in a conversation, you need to know that the conversation is bigger than yourself, you need to listen more and talk less, and you you need to be ready to admit that you don’t have all the answers. Corporates are not very good at any of these things.

Advertising (and CEO-blogs) will begin to become more like conversations when the three billboards in my previous post look like this -

Jet Airways: “A BIG ‘Thank You’ to all our competitors: you made us change!”

My Piece for the ‘Fine Art of Blogging’ Project

Diogenes at ‘Quasi Fictional Views’ asked me to contribute a piece for her ‘Fine Art of Blogging’ project. Blogging biggies like Liz Strauss and Chris Garrett have contributed to the project previously and I’m truly touched that Diogenes asked me to participate. Diogenes asked me to answer a few questions about my blogging and here’s the piece as it appears on her blog.

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What is my blog to me?

At the simplest level, my blog is a repository of my thoughts and ideas. It is also a white board where I experiment with words and projects, a place where I try to find my voice as a writer, and a project that will become my purpose, my calling, or my legacy. My blog is also a medium to create new conversations with people I wouldn’t have met otherwise, and some of these conversations have already become entrenched into friendships.

Why do I blog?

I started blogging because I wanted to be a writer, to write for a living, but wasn’t sure if I had the voice or the discipline to shape it into literature. Blogging was one way to find out.

Local Search will be the Cause of Google’s Downfall, Heh?

800GOOG411 - Google’s free voice-based local business search 411 service (FAQs) - is only available in the US now, but who knows about tomorrow? It looks as if Microsoft’sTellMe acquisition won’t be enough.

Aditya - Local search will be the cause of Google’s downfall, heh? :-)

Update 1 - TechCrunch points out that Jingle and AT&T are the other players in the free 411 market.

Update 2 - Read/Write Web extends the discussion to other talking search services.