The Albert Einstein Guide to Social Media

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Albert Einstein knew an awful lot. And if you pay attention to his work and his most famous statements about it, you might just think he was talking about us, the social media crew.

We might not be looking for a unified theory for all things quantum in our day jobs, or pondering the discrepancies between particle theory and relativity, but here are a few things Einstein has managed to summarize for us just the same. Funny how some concepts apply pretty universally…

A perfection of means, and confusion of aims, seems to be our main problem.

It all starts with the goals and objectives, but look around you, and you’re sure to see the folks that still think the Facebook Page is the holy grail of social media success. Know what you’re aiming for before you choose any one path to get there.

Any intelligent fool can make things bigger and more complex… It takes a touch of genius – and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction.

We’re hell bent on creating convoluted indexes and formulas to calculate and measure the fuzzy stuff like influence, affinity, or loyalty. As if somehow putting an algebraic formula to it will make it legitimate. Are there simpler ways we can be approaching these seemingly complex problems from a more human level? Is it ever enough to just say “this feels like the right thing to do”, even if we don’t have a spreadsheet upon which to demonstrate the results?

Everything that can be counted does not necessarily count; everything that counts cannot necessarily be counted.

You can count a zillion fans and followers but what are you going to do with them when you have them? Are they moving you toward something, or are they just there? And things like having genuine intent or an authentic mindset (not one on a mission statement somewhere) are much harder to quantify and put on a report, but they matter a great deal. They’re part of the untouchable essence of outstanding companies. It’s like porn. You know it when you see it, but it’s awfully hard to define.

Information is not knowledge. Any man who reads too much and uses his own brain too little falls into lazy habits of thinking.

Case studies, case studies, case studies. Oh, how we want to read about what everyone else has done in hopes that it will be the safety net for us not having to do our own planning and strategizing. There are, however, no shortcuts. Precedent isn’t proof, and someone else’s story isn’t likely to be in the right context. There’s a fine line between not wanting to reinvent the wheel, and not wanting to do the thinking for yourself and be accountable for your decisions.

Few people are capable of expressing with equanimity opinions which differ from the prejudices of their social environment. Most people are even incapable of forming such opinions.

Loosely translated: majority isn’t truth. Just because “everyone” is doing it doesn’t mean it’s great. Conversely, just because you’re being the perpetual contrarian doesn’t mean you’re any smarter than the rest, you’re just joining the complaint flock. It takes courage and thought to go against the grain, illustrate a new approach, own it, and take actual risks in execution, not just on paper.

Everyone should be respected as an individual, but no one idolized.

We don’t need a bunch of internet famous people and a confluence of empty personal brands. We need people that do good work and make a difference to the people in their universe, whether on a business or personal level.

If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.

We need more clarity, accountability, and translation of social media into terms that everyone can relate to. Enough with the buzzwords and lingo already. “Joining the conversation” doesn’t explain anything.

Peace cannot be kept by force; it can only be achieved by understanding.

Teaching and guiding adoption of social media can be an arduous task. But forcing too many rules without context and understanding is a recipe for resistance and resentment. And dragging people unwillingly into the social web before they’re truly culturally equipped will undoubtedly end in failure. Understanding new concepts and ideas takes time, patience, and the willingness of some to make small strides instead of huge leaps.

People love chopping wood. In this activity one immediately sees results.

We all wish that you could just throw up a blog and instantly see a lift in your sales numbers, but it doesn’t work that way. Cultivating a social media community takes more time than many businesses would like. They’re so anxious to know whether they’ve made a good or bad investment, so they demand results and guarantees before they start. But much like the business relationships you’ve built the old fashioned way, creating trust and loyalty is an investment, not a transaction.

Strive not to be a success, but rather to be of value.

In a world where content is everywhere, it’s not enough to just have a bunch of eyeballs see what you do. Value is a wonderful aim, if you understand that value is defined differently for everyone. Your definition of value doesn’t matter when it comes to offering it to someone else. You have to figure out how your customers, prospects, and community define it, and deliver that to them, relentlessly.

We can’t solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.

Social media is, in many ways, a solution to some of the problems we’ve created ourselves. The divide we’ve created between the company and the customer is one of our own design, and social media is helping to shorten that distance again. As a result, we cannot try and cram social media into the same mindset we’ve used for sales, marketing, and customer service for the last several decades, or we’ll just end up right back where we started, and end up blaming social media itself for not living up to our expectations.

The road to perdition has ever been accompanied by lip service to an ideal.

Authenticity. Trust. Transparency. Community. They’re a bunch of buzzwords – and empty ones at that – unless they’re backed up at a root level, and driven by concrete intent and execution. A poster on a wall or a vision statement drafted in a boardroom doesn’t mean jack unless you’re empowering and allowing the actions that help people deliver on those promises. Period.

Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.

We collected impressions for ads as if having a million people see a billboard without any notion of what they did with that information was actually effective. We build call centers to automate customer service. We talked in “key messages” and soundbites, and we buried our mistakes under PR gloss-overs. Customers are now pushing back on those ideas and demanding better from businesses. Yet, we’re approaching Facebook as an eyeball collection tool, or Twitter as a press release distribution service, or throwing interns to manage our customer support forums, and we’re wondering why we’re having trouble seeing value in these tools?

Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new.

We’re talking about new approaches to business problems, here. We’re talking culture shift. Adjustments to our approach, the courage to evaluate our weaknesses, and the willingness to invest in things that aren’t the same as we’ve always done. All that means that mistakes are inevitable. And rather than lynching and publicly vilifying those that fall short, let’s learn from each other, from ourselves, and start allowing social media a legitimate place in business process innovation.

Not bad for a guy with crazy hair who never tied his shoes, but who managed to single-handedly and drastically change our understanding of the universe around us. I’m thinking we can help businesses do the same for the online world we’re creating here. You?

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  • http://www.joeboughner.ca joeboughner

    Great post. Far too many good points for me to hit on all of the ones that triggered thoughts in my own mind.

    However, as the organizer of an event series dedicated to sharing case studies, I am compelled to comment on that point. I agree that endlessly seeking out examples of what others have done eventually leads to the sort of oversaturation that I think is taking over Facebook Pages right now. If everyone follows the same script, it’s harder and harder to stand out. For a community that so loves to praise innovators, there’s a discouraging number of people desperately trying to follow.

    That being said, though, I think good case studies offer more than a snapshot of the end result. I hate ‘best practice’ and ‘case study’ sites that simply link to a finished product. The real meat comes when you dig into the process. What led someone to choose one tool over another? How did an evangelist convince skeptics in the c-suite to open themselves up to some risk?

    The tools are going to keep changing. The underlying principles and processes aren’t. That’s where you find good case studies.
    .-= Joe Boughner´s last blog ..Social Media Event: Case Study Jam #2 =-.

    • Amber Naslund

      You’ve highlighted well the distinction I’m after, as well as the weak points in many existing “case studies”. The problem is that too few companies see that difference, and are looking at case studies as verbatim scripts and shortcuts rather than guideposts and pieces of insight from which to draw conclusions of their own.

      I like the questions you pose, and can only hope that more companies publish case studies that truly look at their approaches from more than a publicity mindset. :)

  • http://www.joeboughner.ca Joe Boughner

    Great post. Far too many good points for me to hit on all of the ones that triggered thoughts in my own mind.

    However, as the organizer of an event series dedicated to sharing case studies, I am compelled to comment on that point. I agree that endlessly seeking out examples of what others have done eventually leads to the sort of oversaturation that I think is taking over Facebook Pages right now. If everyone follows the same script, it’s harder and harder to stand out. For a community that so loves to praise innovators, there’s a discouraging number of people desperately trying to follow.

    That being said, though, I think good case studies offer more than a snapshot of the end result. I hate ‘best practice’ and ‘case study’ sites that simply link to a finished product. The real meat comes when you dig into the process. What led someone to choose one tool over another? How did an evangelist convince skeptics in the c-suite to open themselves up to some risk?

    The tools are going to keep changing. The underlying principles and processes aren’t. That’s where you find good case studies.
    .-= Joe Boughner´s last blog ..Social Media Event: Case Study Jam #2 =-.

    • Amber Naslund

      You’ve highlighted well the distinction I’m after, as well as the weak points in many existing “case studies”. The problem is that too few companies see that difference, and are looking at case studies as verbatim scripts and shortcuts rather than guideposts and pieces of insight from which to draw conclusions of their own.

      I like the questions you pose, and can only hope that more companies publish case studies that truly look at their approaches from more than a publicity mindset. :)

  • http://www.microsoft.com/localimpactmap @tgrumm

    Relativity and Social Media! What a great way of combining the challenges we face online to create something tangible with science that strives for absolutes.

    Your line “Precedent isn’t proof, and someone else’s story isn’t likely to be in the right context.” is so important now. We can’t get into a rut where we all want to copy the Whopper Sacrifice campaign.

    The evolution of culture is more important today than ever before. Everyone should look to the music industry and remeber that in our lifetime, we saw the rise and fall of the compact disc.

    • Amber Naslund

      Culture is everything, if you ask me. The companies succeeding have the right attitude and intent to embrace a LOT of different things, social media being one of them. The ones that fail repeatedly never really intended to open communication with their customers to start with, and then they turn around and blame the tools or the constructs for their failures.

      Attitude matters, as does the mindset.

  • http://www.microsoft.com/localimpactmap @tgrumm

    Relativity and Social Media! What a great way of combining the challenges we face online to create something tangible with science that strives for absolutes.

    Your line “Precedent isn’t proof, and someone else’s story isn’t likely to be in the right context.” is so important now. We can’t get into a rut where we all want to copy the Whopper Sacrifice campaign.

    The evolution of culture is more important today than ever before. Everyone should look to the music industry and remeber that in our lifetime, we saw the rise and fall of the compact disc.

    • Amber Naslund

      Culture is everything, if you ask me. The companies succeeding have the right attitude and intent to embrace a LOT of different things, social media being one of them. The ones that fail repeatedly never really intended to open communication with their customers to start with, and then they turn around and blame the tools or the constructs for their failures.

      Attitude matters, as does the mindset.

  • http://www.360Connext.com Jeannie Walters

    Case Studies…case studies…the real question really is what case study shall we make today? EXCELLENT points, Amber. :)

    • Amber Naslund

      I’m all about creating our OWN case studies. Learn from others? Absolutely. Copycat because we can’t flex our own brain muscles? Nope.

  • http://www.360Connext.com Jeannie Walters

    Case Studies…case studies…the real question really is what case study shall we make today? EXCELLENT points, Amber. :)

    • Amber Naslund

      I’m all about creating our OWN case studies. Learn from others? Absolutely. Copycat because we can’t flex our own brain muscles? Nope.

  • http://thecorporatewoman.org/ Tabitha Dunn

    Well written! A key thread for me is about time – it takes time to build something worthwhile and deliver something of value.
    .-= Tabitha Dunn´s last blog ..Mapping your customer experience =-.

  • http://thecorporatewoman.org/ Tabitha Dunn

    Well written! A key thread for me is about time – it takes time to build something worthwhile and deliver something of value.
    .-= Tabitha Dunn´s last blog ..Mapping your customer experience =-.

  • http://lava7.com Jack Hadley

    Amber, we use Einstein quotes a lot when we talk to clients about social media marketing. One of my favorites is, “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.” Here it is, in context, on our site: http://lava7.com/we-teach
    .-= Jack Hadley´s last blog ..BlackBerry Campaign Is Tired And Boring =-.

  • http://lava7.com Jack Hadley

    Amber, we use Einstein quotes a lot when we talk to clients about social media marketing. One of my favorites is, “Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.” Here it is, in context, on our site: http://lava7.com/we-teach
    .-= Jack Hadley´s last blog ..BlackBerry Campaign Is Tired And Boring =-.

  • http://www.potluckmama.wordpress.com Beth Coetzee

    Inspirational post, Amber. I do agree with Joe…I’ve pulled many a useful idea from a case study. I know what you mean about the benefits of moderation, though…am trying to streamline and moderate my work today, in fact…

    Thanks for the food for thought!
    .-= Beth Coetzee´s last blog ..Date Night =-.

  • http://www.potluckmama.wordpress.com Beth Coetzee

    Inspirational post, Amber. I do agree with Joe…I’ve pulled many a useful idea from a case study. I know what you mean about the benefits of moderation, though…am trying to streamline and moderate my work today, in fact…

    Thanks for the food for thought!
    .-= Beth Coetzee´s last blog ..Date Night =-.

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  • http://www.mindstructures.com Annemieke

    Wow, loved the post. Especially how you translated that quote with ‘majority isn’t truth’.

    And to ‘information is not knowledge’ I would add ‘knowledge is not understanding’.
    .-= Annemieke´s last blog ..Creative Development =-.

    • Amber Naslund

      That’s another Einstein gem. :)

  • http://www.mindstructures.com Annemieke

    Wow, loved the post. Especially how you translated that quote with ‘majority isn’t truth’.

    And to ‘information is not knowledge’ I would add ‘knowledge is not understanding’.
    .-= Annemieke´s last blog ..Creative Development =-.

    • Amber Naslund

      That’s another Einstein gem. :)

  • http://twitter.com/cr8tivejen Jen Grant

    whoa. I haven’t even finished reading the entire post yet, but seriously–I already clipped out 5 lines I’m quoting and sharing with everyone. …back to reading… :)

  • http://twitter.com/cr8tivejen Jen Grant

    whoa. I haven’t even finished reading the entire post yet, but seriously–I already clipped out 5 lines I’m quoting and sharing with everyone. …back to reading… :)

  • http://talesofadisorderedeater.org/ Melissa

    Insightful as always, Amber. I am bookmarking this for sure. Thank you!
    .-= Melissa´s last blog ..First Lady Tackling Childhood Obesity =-.

  • http://talesofadisorderedeater.org/ Melissa

    Insightful as always, Amber. I am bookmarking this for sure. Thank you!
    .-= Melissa´s last blog ..First Lady Tackling Childhood Obesity =-.

  • http://marketinghitch.com David Wiggs

    Great article, Amber~
    .-= David Wiggs´s last blog ..Ad Industry Innovator # 23: Victors & Spoils =-.

  • http://marketinghitch.com David Wiggs

    Great article, Amber~
    .-= David Wiggs´s last blog ..Ad Industry Innovator # 23: Victors & Spoils =-.

  • http://artificialsimplicity.blogspot.com Scott Karambis

    Lots of great advice, but not sure if any of it is specific to social media, or even marketing at all. Good general rules for critical thinking. Thanks for sharing

    • Amber Naslund

      That’s part of the fun, Scott. Taking a concept that’s not specific to anything and seeing how it applies. :)

  • http://artificialsimplicity.blogspot.com Scott Karambis

    Lots of great advice, but not sure if any of it is specific to social media, or even marketing at all. Good general rules for critical thinking. Thanks for sharing

    • Amber Naslund

      That’s part of the fun, Scott. Taking a concept that’s not specific to anything and seeing how it applies. :)

  • http://twitter.com/mckra1g mckra1g

    Brilliant.

    I see social media as chaos theory in action overlaid with fractal equations. It’s a million interconnected people that exist at once, but when the right energy aligns, it’s a relationship of one person to another within the same instant.

    This is a great post – required reading. Thanks for taking the time to share it. Best, M.
    .-= mckra1g´s last blog ..mckra1g: Staring at the screen, waiting for the Muse… ? http://blip.fm/~ksaw5 =-.

    • Amber Naslund

      Wow, you just made my brain hurt in a good way. :) I’ve often thought of writing a post about how the very act of observing something online alters its course and existence, but that might be a tough parallel. :)

      • Julia K. Wakefield

        mckra1g, that’s a really interesting point to make!

        Social media is a very interesting and exemplary case of chaos theory. Much like the weather, there is an incredibly vast number of minuscule influencers which, over a relatively short period of time, can alter the course of events on a shockingly powerful level. (I.e., the effect of a couple RTs or pingbacks on the exponential spread of information.)

        I’d interpret your point about fractal equations to imply that relationships and networks on the micro level mirror those on the macro level, which I think is an emerging phenomenon as more social media platforms begin to connect and integrate with one another much like individual users do.

        As a physics/mathematics/philosophy junkie, I loved this post and the discussion it’s generating. Kudos, Amber!

        Julia Wakefield
        http://twitter.com/juliawakefield
        http://www.facebook.com/julia.wakefield
        http://www.juliawakefield.wordpress.com

  • http://twitter.com/mckra1g mckra1g

    Brilliant.

    I see social media as chaos theory in action overlaid with fractal equations. It’s a million interconnected people that exist at once, but when the right energy aligns, it’s a relationship of one person to another within the same instant.

    This is a great post – required reading. Thanks for taking the time to share it. Best, M.
    .-= mckra1g´s last blog ..mckra1g: Staring at the screen, waiting for the Muse… ? http://blip.fm/~ksaw5 =-.

    • Amber Naslund

      Wow, you just made my brain hurt in a good way. :) I’ve often thought of writing a post about how the very act of observing something online alters its course and existence, but that might be a tough parallel. :)

      • Julia K. Wakefield

        mckra1g, that’s a really interesting point to make!

        Social media is a very interesting and exemplary case of chaos theory. Much like the weather, there is an incredibly vast number of minuscule influencers which, over a relatively short period of time, can alter the course of events on a shockingly powerful level. (I.e., the effect of a couple RTs or pingbacks on the exponential spread of information.)

        I’d interpret your point about fractal equations to imply that relationships and networks on the micro level mirror those on the macro level, which I think is an emerging phenomenon as more social media platforms begin to connect and integrate with one another much like individual users do.

        As a physics/mathematics/philosophy junkie, I loved this post and the discussion it’s generating. Kudos, Amber!

        Julia Wakefield
        http://twitter.com/juliawakefield
        http://www.facebook.com/julia.wakefield
        http://www.juliawakefield.wordpress.com

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  • http://www.zyozy.org Steve Jennings

    Amber, outstanding. Steve

  • http://www.zyozy.org Steve Jennings

    Amber, outstanding. Steve

  • http://www.leancommunications.com Liz Guthridge

    Great post with very thoughtful insights. Einstein is a helpful guide not only for social media but also for communications. I often quote him in my LEAN COMMUNICATIONS work. I’m helping people add value with less resources to communicate more effectively and efficiently with better results. Besides some of the quotes you’ve cited here, I like “Always look for the simple solution.”
    .-= Liz Guthridge´s last blog ..5 Tips for Rearranging Meeting Rooms for Better Communication =-.

  • http://www.leancommunications.com Liz Guthridge

    Great post with very thoughtful insights. Einstein is a helpful guide not only for social media but also for communications. I often quote him in my LEAN COMMUNICATIONS work. I’m helping people add value with less resources to communicate more effectively and efficiently with better results. Besides some of the quotes you’ve cited here, I like “Always look for the simple solution.”
    .-= Liz Guthridge´s last blog ..5 Tips for Rearranging Meeting Rooms for Better Communication =-.

  • http://GlobalPatriot.com Global Patriot

    I’ve always been a fan of honing the old-school elevator pitch, which is perfectly expressed “If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.” When my son understands me, I know I’ve got it right.

    As to the quest for a “unified theory” in social media, I guess that would be the holy grail, and to some extent, we may all be on that quest!

  • http://GlobalPatriot.com Global Patriot

    I’ve always been a fan of honing the old-school elevator pitch, which is perfectly expressed “If you can’t explain it simply, you don’t understand it well enough.” When my son understands me, I know I’ve got it right.

    As to the quest for a “unified theory” in social media, I guess that would be the holy grail, and to some extent, we may all be on that quest!

  • http://sectorgawed.com.mx/blog Gawed

    I think this is one of your best posts ever. I applaud the creativity of thinking about einstein, his quotes and linking them to Social Media. Actually I think that Einstein and you were talking more about management and business that a single area. That doubles the value of this post as being useful for everone in every area.

    Congrats on it. so true in so many levels.
    .-= Gawed´s last blog ..Otro uso de Google Wave =-.

  • http://sectorgawed.com.mx/blog Gawed

    I think this is one of your best posts ever. I applaud the creativity of thinking about einstein, his quotes and linking them to Social Media. Actually I think that Einstein and you were talking more about management and business that a single area. That doubles the value of this post as being useful for everone in every area.

    Congrats on it. so true in so many levels.
    .-= Gawed´s last blog ..Otro uso de Google Wave =-.

  • http://www.annholman.co.uk Ann Holman

    Fabulous post and insight, one of the best I’ve read in a while. We are in danger of getting sucked into ‘doing the same thing over and over again’ in social media just because it’s easier and because we think it will still bring results. We need to reinvent and renew what we are doing and what we are saying constantly. I guess social media isn’t a spectator sport.

    Great article Amber. Thanks.
    .-= Ann Holman´s last blog ..“Ignore Everybody” Hugh MacLeod =-.

  • http://www.annholman.co.uk Ann Holman

    Fabulous post and insight, one of the best I’ve read in a while. We are in danger of getting sucked into ‘doing the same thing over and over again’ in social media just because it’s easier and because we think it will still bring results. We need to reinvent and renew what we are doing and what we are saying constantly. I guess social media isn’t a spectator sport.

    Great article Amber. Thanks.
    .-= Ann Holman´s last blog ..“Ignore Everybody” Hugh MacLeod =-.

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  • http://www.brickmarketing.com/ Nick @ Brick Marketing

    Excellent post and analogy to Albert Einstein!

    The point about:
    Strive not to be a success, but rather to be of value.

    Is one of the most important points I think. I have found over the years that if you only think about yourself (in life and in social media!) then that comes across in the output, thoughts and social media efforts. If you build your network and become an expert, become one that shows value to your audiences.

  • http://www.brickmarketing.com/ Nick @ Brick Marketing

    Excellent post and analogy to Albert Einstein!

    The point about:
    Strive not to be a success, but rather to be of value.

    Is one of the most important points I think. I have found over the years that if you only think about yourself (in life and in social media!) then that comes across in the output, thoughts and social media efforts. If you build your network and become an expert, become one that shows value to your audiences.

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  • http://www.FletcherPrince.com Mary Fletcher Jones

    You’ve expressed your point of view, but your arguments would have been more clear and compelling to me if you had supplied some examples from your work (you must have plenty to share!), or other examples you have observed that would support your assertions. Stating your opinion is not enough.

    Just for future reference, the plural of the noun “index” is indices. Indexes is a verb.

    • Amber Naslund

      Mary – you’re right about indices.

      But you know what, sometimes opinion and thought is what writing is about. I’ve supplied countless examples of practical application on my blog for months on end. Not everything here is always a textbook course. Sorry. Thanks for sharing your point of view.

  • http://www.FletcherPrince.com Mary Fletcher Jones

    You’ve expressed your point of view, but your arguments would have been more clear and compelling to me if you had supplied some examples from your work (you must have plenty to share!), or other examples you have observed that would support your assertions. Stating your opinion is not enough.

    Just for future reference, the plural of the noun “index” is indices. Indexes is a verb.

    • Amber Naslund

      Mary – you’re right about indices.

      But you know what, sometimes opinion and thought is what writing is about. I’ve supplied countless examples of practical application on my blog for months on end. Not everything here is always a textbook course. Sorry. Thanks for sharing your point of view.

  • http://martinpigg.com Martin Pigg

    Wow! Talk about content rich. I’m printing this post out right now. I’ll need to read it a couple of times to absorb all of the valuable information.I love how you’ve taken some well-known concepts/ideas and applied social media to them. Extremely relevant.
    .-= Martin Pigg´s last blog ..Snow Angel Memories =-.

  • http://martinpigg.com Martin Pigg

    Wow! Talk about content rich. I’m printing this post out right now. I’ll need to read it a couple of times to absorb all of the valuable information.I love how you’ve taken some well-known concepts/ideas and applied social media to them. Extremely relevant.
    .-= Martin Pigg´s last blog ..Snow Angel Memories =-.

  • http://www.vongehrconsulting.com/Finding-Answers-Blog/feed/ Erroin Martin

    Amber,

    The chopping wood quote is very appropriate for the clients that I work with. When coaching businesses about a social media strategy many of them want instant results. I have to remind them that when they opened the doors to their business people were not beating a path to it instantly. That patience is a virtue.

    I have clipped this post to my Evernote. I am going to point to it when I coach my clients.

    Erroin

  • http://www.vongehrconsulting.com/Finding-Answers-Blog/feed/ Erroin Martin

    Amber,

    The chopping wood quote is very appropriate for the clients that I work with. When coaching businesses about a social media strategy many of them want instant results. I have to remind them that when they opened the doors to their business people were not beating a path to it instantly. That patience is a virtue.

    I have clipped this post to my Evernote. I am going to point to it when I coach my clients.

    Erroin

  • Mike Randazzo

    I recall the “chicken and the egg” debates that the PR, marketing, and advertising execs at my agency had as they vied for the lion’s share of a client’s budget (and PR usually lost). It’s interesting how the lines are blurring. As a government communicator the rules of engagement are a little different, and I absolutely see the value in objectively written case studies that adress both sides of the Franklin Closing and not just how this or that product saved the day. The “channel” is not the ends but a means to realize the ends, which, where I live, is appropriate, aligned, message-driven content that educates and, hopefully, garners the informed support of our publics. Very nice post and thanks to all for your comments!

  • Mike Randazzo

    I recall the “chicken and the egg” debates that the PR, marketing, and advertising execs at my agency had as they vied for the lion’s share of a client’s budget (and PR usually lost). It’s interesting how the lines are blurring. As a government communicator the rules of engagement are a little different, and I absolutely see the value in objectively written case studies that adress both sides of the Franklin Closing and not just how this or that product saved the day. The “channel” is not the ends but a means to realize the ends, which, where I live, is appropriate, aligned, message-driven content that educates and, hopefully, garners the informed support of our publics. Very nice post and thanks to all for your comments!