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12 Comments- Add comment Written on 12-Nov-2009 by cristian.saracco__34__.jpg)
For a couple of weeks, I was in a rush and only updated my status in Webjam, continue with some conversations here and in LinkedIn, invite people in Facebook to read/re-post old things that I revisited and thought they are still relevant (at least for me)... So, I'm back!
During this period of time I was also thinking (at least for a couple of hours a day) and paying attention to social networks, communities... and specifically, I was looking at our interaction...
To give a framework to my thoughts let me present some figures:
So, I'll talk about interactions between a good number of people (it's not a direct sum.... some people belong to several networks at the same time)... Let say 4,500 approx. Fair?
It's interesting to see two issues:
Adam and Eve talked... Actually they also mantained several dialogues with God, situation that could be considered as the first online virtual dialogue... They also talked with a snake...
The points are that neither them, nor us (in our offline life) use to talk about the tools that we use to be connected... At least in my case, when I use the phone I don't establish dialogues about the terminal that we are using, or when we are drinking a beer with friends we don't talk about our vocal cords... The other point is more complex and perhaps a psychiatrist and/or psycologist is able to explain it better... We were, are and probably will be gregarious; so, by default we are rational dialogical animals (we also smile... which is an unique characteristic of human beings).
As Alberto mentioned in WOW 2.0 and yesterday in the iBGC '09 (Bilbao, Spain), activity is essencial in social networks to produce dialogues. I agree with this, however, in some cases (more than you can imagine) activity generates activity. Period.
Examples:
Activity could generate dialogue if it mantains certain relevance. And if this dialogues are generated at corporate level, they should be carefully thought. Dont' you think?
For companies, dialogues help to build their brand experiences... Alleluia!...
This is not new. Actually, almost every experience is based on dialogues. The experience exist because we talk about it. Social networks allow us to tell more people, more easy and more quickly the sort of experiences that we are living.
But, before social networks, we also talk about our experiences... and now, for those companies that still do not have their own social network, people are talking about that experience...
Control is a pre-Methuselah historic illusion. To try to control dialogues is futile; we can only observe and give some intention.
A side effect of paying attention to social networks has been to see all the efforts to build, sell, promote... personal branding.
We wish to be different, unique, cool... Following an online process to improve our personal brand (I would say "personal brand" because it's understandable, actually, we should say personal image) looks, at least, funny... If we all follow the same process we will become a sort of "Mini-me" of others.
You can build your image online promoting activities that generates good dialogues. And to do that, you have to be honest and show you as you are... and not as the manual suggests that you should be. No? (Canadian question)
Yesterday in one of the valuable Twitts that I read, there was one from iBGC '09 so interesting when one of the speakers defined Twitter... He said: "Twitter is a sort of dialogus interruptus".... He was right!
'Whatever interruptus' is unproductive by default... Babies aren't born, ideas don't see the light, dialogues aren't generated.
Experiences are based on dialogues, on fluid dialogues... And fluid means:
The day has 24 hours and there is no plan to change it. Neither hours of 120', nor days of 36 hours. Pregnancy takes 9 months (at least till now)...
We have certain time to read, to interact, to talk... certain time to work, to think... certain time to enjoy with our family, friends... Time is a scarce resource... As talent, knowledge, creativeness.
We have a real limitation to belong to an infinite number of social networks and seriously participate on them.
The message is simple: "Become relevant, create activity, generate dialogues, be passionate... and before all that, please, consider that on the other side of the cable there is another person"... That should be a great experience!
I'm learning this!... It takes time! :)