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8 Harsh Truths about Social Media (and 1 Pretty Awesome One)
31st March 2015 • Confessions of a Pink-Haired Marketer • Sonia Simone
00:00:00 00:28:43

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Saying that the internet isn’t working for us is like saying the solar system isn’t working for us. It’s our job to learn how it works, and then learn to be smart about working with its nature

In this episode, I talk some lessons I’ve learned from being on the social web for 26 years now. Which is, yes, a pretty darned long time to spend fooling around on the internet.

In this 28-minute episode, I talk about:

  • Why “digital sharecropping” is so dangerous
  • Why you don’t own the conversation — and how you can benefit from it, if you’re smart
  • Why outrage is like meth
  • How the room is bigger than you think it is
  • Why everything on the web becomes 100% visible just at the moment you don’t want it to be
  • Why you should never get into a flame war (but what to do if you need to defend yourself)
  • Why personality matters, but train wrecks die broke
  • How to use natural disasters or other terrible events in your marketing (spoiler: You don’t)
  • The awesome way that social media can make you a much, much better writer (or artist, or musician, or whatever you happen to be)

Listen to Confessions of a Pink-Haired Marketer below ...

The Show Notes

The Transcript

8 Harsh Truths About Social Media (and 1 Pretty Awesome One)

Sonia Simone: Greetings, superfriends! My name is Sonia Simone and these are the Confessions of a Pink-Haired Marketer. For those who don’t know me, I’m a co-founder and the chief content officer for Copyblogger Media.

I’m also a champion of running your business and your life according to your own rules. As long as you don’t lie and you don’t hurt people, this podcast is your official pink permission slip to run your business or your career exactly the way you think you should.

The Confessions of a Pink-Haired Marketer have been brought to you today by Authority Rainmaker, a live educational experience that presents a complete and effective online marketing strategy to help you immediately accelerate your business. If you want more details on that, head over to rainmaker.fm/event.

And before I start today, I want to thank you all for such lovely comments, reviews and your likes on iTunes. I really, really appreciate that. They are all very welcome, so thank you so much. If you feel so moved today to add such a thing on iTunes or add a comment on the Rainmaker.FM platform, that would be swell. I would love to talk to you there and reach out to you there.

Today I want to talk about nine things I ve learned about social media and making a living on the web.

I ve actually been online since 1989. That s when I first got involved with the social internet, and the main thing I have seen is that things have hardly changed at all in 26 years.

I heard a pundit the other day on the radio, talking about the Internet revolution being broken. That the promise of the Internet revolution has not been kept and we have a lot of problems with the changes that the Internet has made to society, to culture, to the economy.

And I certainly see his point, but the issue I have with that is that this whole idea is based on the premise that the Internet owes you something, or that the Internet is capable of promising us something. And if that s how you are going to approach the web, you are going to have a bad time.

The Internet doesn t owe the recording industry anything, and it doesn t owe journalism anything or the government, or you, or me, because it s not in its nature to owe. It just is.

So saying that the Internet revolution is broken, is like saying the solar system revolution is broken, because the solar system is not giving us what we hoped it would give us when we first understood its existence. That s just not the way the solar system works.

The solar system is the solar system. It runs according to its own rules. It does its thing and we pretty much just have to deal with what we get.

The same is true of the Internet. And one thing the Internet does provide is an unsurpassed collection of tools for small businesses, which is where jobs come from, at least in the US. The Internet gives us an unprecedented set of ways to go out into the world and find people who would like to do business with us. There are some really powerful ways the Internet can be used for that, and that s a lot of what I talk about day in and day out.

You have to understand how the net works and how to work with its nature. All that the Internet is, is the collective behavior of people who are joined together with modern communication technology. That s all. It s just the collection behavior of a whole bunch of people.

So instead of getting frustrated by what it s not doing for us, or what we thought it would do, that it didn t do, I want you to focus on the behaviors that are going to get you more of what you want, and less of what you don t want.

I m going to dive into some do s and don t do s that I have learned from being on the net a seriously long time. I see the same patterns of behavior over and over again, and there are helpful, constructive ways to work with them and there are destructive ways to work with them. So I am going to talk about both of those today.

#1: Why Digital Sharecropping Is So Dangerous

The first one being the pitfall, or the trap, of what has been called “Digital sharecropping.” Digital sharecropping is when you build your entire project or business on somebody else s platform.

For example, you are a hairdresser and all of your web presence is on Facebook. So your shop hours, your conversations with customers, your deal of the week, everything is on Facebook.

And then next week, Facebook pulls one of its patented little maneuvers that makes us so thrilled with Facebook — if we are business owners doing business on Facebook — and your salon all of a sudden goes from being a happy, thriving busy little salon, to being a ghost town. And all because of a decision made by a massive third party that does not care what you were doing, who you are, or what your business is.

That pitfall is known as digital sharecropping. And the thing is, social platforms come and go. There used to be this massive network, really popular, one of the first virtual communities what we used to call social media called GEnie.

Genie happened on the servers for GE, and GE was looking for a way to use the off peak capacity of their computer servers. They had all these computer servers that weren t really doing anything at night when their employees went home, so they thought, we ll start this bulletin board or this community, and just let people use our servers at night when no one else is using them. It was an interesting idea.

Genie was a thriving, thriving community. They had some topic-focused boards that were just tremendous. Some of the nicest, best examples of social media, virtual community I have seen. And then one day, Genie said, You know, this is sort of a dopey way for us to use our servers. We re a big company. This project doesn t really bring in that much revenue. And they just pulled the plug on it. It was gone. All this community, all these relationships, all this conversation, all this knowledge that had been shared and actions that had been made, overnight, gone.

[Sonia s editorial note: I mis-remembered the timeline on this slightly, although the overarching themes are right — here s an article on the precise details if you want to know more about it: GEnie on Wikipedia]

That s hard enough in your personal life. It can actually be quite heartbreaking in your personal life, and I don t take that lightly. I don t say that lightly. The relationships we make online can be real, and rich, and valuable relationships.

It s doubly heartbreaking when that s your business, and all of a sudden you have no way to get customers anymore. And customers have no way to connect with you anymore.

GEnie came and went. MySpace came and went. The WELL, which is another community I was a big part of, is still around in a somewhat quieter form, but it s not what it was. But it could go. It could go away.

Social platforms come and go. Facebook is probably not going to be the exception to that rule. It s very strong now and it will probably be very strong next year. Where s it going to be in five years? I don t know. Nobody can tell you that. Truly, nobody can tell you that.

Social media is a content promotion platform for our business. It s not an original content platform, and it s not where your business lives. It s super valuable. It s very valuable. It s a wonderful place to go talk to people, and especially to listen to people, which sometimes businesses get a little confused about. But it s not where your business lives.

Build your business on your own site, your own domain name, on a platform that you can control. Something like self-hosted WordPress is terrific. Put your content on a platform you can control.

That is exactly why the Rainmaker Platform is built on WordPress, on your domain, and it s completely controllable by you. If you decide you don t like it, you can move it to your own self-hosted platform. You can do lots of things with it.

Decisions that the third-party company makes should not be able to tank your business by making your site go away, or by imposing a lot of restrictions on what you can and can t do with it.

#2: You Don t Own the Conversation — But You Can Benefit From It

As I said, social media does provide an awesome place to have conversations that are going to benefit your business, but that takes us to number two. Which is: You don t own the conversation, you benefit from the conversation.

A lot of people online start to think that the conversation belongs to them. That the conversation about their business in some way belongs to them, and then they start thinking they can control it. And people go very sideways when they get into that space.

Conversation online is not something you can control. You can influence it, and mostly you can show up and take part in it. You can show up, be somebody worth listening to, and get your voice heard. But it s not necessarily going to go your way.

People are not necessarily going to agree with you and, most frustratingly, people are going to say things about you that aren t true. People are going to say things about you that are not fair. That is part of the deal. You don t own the conversation.

What you want to think about is how can you benefit from the conversation. And the best way you can benefit from the conversation is listening. Listen to what kind of problems people have that you might be able to help out with. Listen to perceptions maybe about you as an individual or your company or your organization or your profession, that might not be fair but the perception is there, it has to be dealt with. What could you speak to about who you are, what you do, how you do it.

The web provides an incredible opportunity to listen to the public zeitgeist, the public pulse, the public shared brain. Sometimes that shared brain has unpleasant little corners of it and sometimes it has amazing insights.

So think about that. Think about participating in the conversation. Do show up. Do make your voice heard. Do be a reasonable, calm, sensible voice in the shouty Internet, but also listen to what people are having trouble with.

#3: Outrage Is Like Meth

The third thing I have learned from being online for an awfully long time is that outrage is a lot like methamphetamine. It s cheap, it s very addictive, and it is incredibly toxic.

And unfortunately outrage is the most readily available and commonly used fuel on the net. And that is slightly more true now, than it was when I got started.

We have these outrage machines. Facebook is a big one, but it s not only Facebook. There s a great, very clever blogger named Julien Smith, who says:

Oh you are a blogger, what do you complain about?

And it s really true. We use the Internet to gripe. That s a thing that the Internet has always been used for. And outrage — violated moral standards — are a big, big fuel on the web.

We love to share what makes us outraged. The problem is, it kind of corrupts everything it touches. It s very tempting. It s very tempting to use a lot of outrage in your social media presence, even in your messaging, your advertising, your marketing. Just be really wary of it because it is addictive and it is toxic.

#4: The Room Is Bigger Than You Think It Is

And that leads me to the fourth thing that I have learned — at some pain to myself — over the years, which is that the room is bigger than you think it is.

I was quite delighted to hear punk legend Henry Rollins, who was the front man for Black Flag, talk about this exact idea in a conversation he had with Brian Clark .

Let me talk about what that means.

Now if you are going to be giving a talk in front of the NAACP, that is not the time when you are going to roll out that racially insensitive joke your uncle Ben loves to tell at Thanksgiving, and he tells it every Thanksgiving and he laughs at his own joke, and everybody else thinks it s mildly amusing.

Because that would be dumb.

It s not about political correctness; it s about having some common sense and some good manners. You don t use material like that in front of the audience. That is denigrating. Only a dumb or incredibly insensitive person would do that.

So here s the thing about the Internet. Whoever it is that that word choice or joke or whatever it might be, happens to be denigrating is standing right in front of you. The room is bigger than you think it is. There are more people listening in than you think.

Which means No, you can t make dumb jokes at the expense of ethnicities or identities or orientations or whatever it might be, because that person is standing right in front of you. That person is right there.

And there are a lot of casual slurs that we have gotten into the habit of using, and I am not going to repeat them because they bother me and I don t want to be part of that. But there are a lot of casual words that we do still encounter all the time.

We encounter them on YouTube, we really encounter them in the YouTube comments. And they are hurtful and they are toxic. And they are not necessary to the conversation.

So I want you to just think about that, and think about the fact that the person who would be offended by that remark — and sometimes offence gets a bad wrap and people say, Oh, everybody is so offended by everything.

Like I said, outrage is meth, right? It s cheap, it s addictive, and it s toxic. Fair enough. People are ready to be offended by small slights.

However, I m going to argue that a racial slur is not a small slight. It s a big deal. It s incredibly rude, insensitive, and it s dismissive, and it denigrates people on a basis of something that is totally irrelevant to who they are as a human being.

So if this is a habit that you have, or a habit that you occasionally fall prey to, you need to really work on just getting this out of your habit stream.

It s funny how often people will do this when they are nervous or intoxicated and their little control part of their brain is not working so well. Don t do it. Don t make the racial remark. Don t make the joke.

And certainly do not, if you do make such an error, do not come in afterwards and get huffy about how people don t have a sense of humor these days and everyone gets offended by everything. You made the mistake, cop to it, say it was a stupid, dumb, slip of the tongue and I don t think it s cool and I don t think it s cool that I did it and move on.

#4: Everything On the Web Becomes 100% Visible Just at the Moment You Don t Want It To Be

That leads me to the fifth thing that I have learned, and I have really learned this on the web, which is that everything on the web becomes 100% visible at the exact moment you don t want it to be. It is the darnedest thing.

Why is this? Because outrage is the most available fuel on the web.

If you say something that angers someone, hurts someone s feelings in a way that offends their sense of outrage, all of sudden you just gave it a big dose of rocket fuel.

Even if — and I have seen this happen — you have people who only have a tiny handful of people, let s say in their Twitter stream, just a couple of friends and neighbors. They say something that has a little bit of this outrage fuel...

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