Archives for January 8, 2008

Shirts and Skins

Photo by Siobhán SilkeOn the playground, the most common way you’ll find to divide the teams is Shirts versus Skins. Having been a Skin on a hot day, it makes ventilation a little easier (and the tan a little more even.) It also requires you to learn how to take a few lumps along the way, and develop a thicker skin.

If you’re curious about or new to this stuff called “social media” or “new media,” there is a progression to understanding it. You don’t trot out onto the court and remove your shoes, just because you saw people without shirts. You get in slowly, in a measured way. Learn the rules of the playground, and you won’t embarrass yourself in public.

Your first step is the toughest, because it is nothing more than the realization that you really didn’t control as much of the discussion as you thought. People are talking about you, just like they always have, for good and for bad. But now they have access to publishing tools that extend those conversations across time and space. A conversation that seemingly ended eight months ago might revive, and include people from around the world who found it on Google. These comments about your products, services, competence, and ethics have always happened, but the general public never had a way to reach beyond their ripples to the wider ocean. The internet can carry the circles of influence further than before, and the ripples intersect with greater frequency.

Two eyes, two ears, one mouth.

These same technologies that link so many people and their opinions also leave behind bread crumbs — opportunities for you listen to the people that can give you the best advice: your customers. But that means you’ll hear some things you’ll rather wish you didn’t. Some will be bad news, some misperceptions, some outright lies. You’ve got to resist the urge to run in and fix everything. Remember, know the rules of the playground before you charge in.

Every playground is a little different. In some, you call your own fouls. In others, there are no fouls unless there’s blood. Some people play “make-it take-it” basketball (the scoring team retains possession.) The only way you’ll know how to participate without scorn is to watch and listen. And for that, you need a thick skin.

Obvious libels aside, you need to measure your responses. That takes a little bit of experience and a whole lot of patience. I find myself wanting to drop into a comment stream on a forum, or in the reader comments of a newspaper website. It’s human nature — but you’ve got to count to ten and toughen up the skin.

  1. Some people will never change their mind anyway.
    If there’s nothing you can do to appease, and nothing to be gained, then you likely have everything to lose.
  2. Some people, by virtue of their life circumstances, aren’t worth debating.
    Even if you win, you still look like a jerk.
  3. Many, many people who write on the internet do not influence very many others.
    If a blog has only a dozen readers, it probably isn’t your immediate priority.
  4. You can do more harm than good.
    A poorly-designed response can trigger an even more venomous counter, which is sure to magnify the attention.

In future posts, we’ll look at some of the tools and knowledge you’ll need to know what to do, what to say, and how you can simultaneously contribute value to the community and to your corporate interests. But for now, open up the channels and start listening. Just listen with a thick skin, lest you lose your shirt.

(Photo credit: Siobhán Silke)

(Ike Pigott regularly blogs at Occam’s RazR)

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Picture Perfect Service

After four good years of service, our digital camera died, about a week before Christmas. Of course, the fiscally prudent thing would have been to wait for the post-holiday sales to buy the replacement. But if you have kids, you know that the fiscally prudent answer is not the same as the “these kids will only be 5 and 3 for Christmas once” answer. So we bought a new digital camera.

Canon logoMy wife picked it out, and did a great job nailing down a good value in a short period of time. After all, she uses it more than I do, and needs to be comfortable with it. We got a Canon PowerShot A-570. My job is to make sure it syncs to the computers. Which was not as easy as we’d hoped.

I installed the Canon CameraWindow and ZoomBrowsers, but the computer was not “seeing” the camera for automatic synchronization. We got through Christmas alright – I’m perfectly capable of creating folders and dragging and dropping pictures. But the point of having a camera that syncs is so my wife can do it without an annoying lecture from me about how it ought to be done. Simplicity is implicit.

Looking for answers

I searched through the Canon forums, and found the online support tips less than helpful. The questions in the FAQ weren’t even close to describing my problem, and several iterations Search terms weren’t bearing fruit. I broke down and sent in an e-mail inquiry, late on the afternoon of the 30th.

Before lunch on the 31st, New Year’s Eve, I had a response from Devin. (I don’t have a last name, he didn’t give me one.) The note was polite, and full of information in multiple levels. He explained what the likely problem was, as well as a more detailed step-by-step solution. And it worked.

So, kudos to Canon for getting me back on track. It was timely, professional, accurate, and on a holiday. (And if you’re a Canon PR rep monitoring the blogs, shoot me an e-mail. I am not asking for free merchandise or services, nor will I accept them. I offer my endorsement for your customer service. Just shoot me an e-mail and let me know that Devin got a gold star on his report card.)

Thanks…

Ike.

[tags]Ike Pigott, Occams’s RazR, Social Media, marketing, blogger relations, blog monitoring, Canon, Canon USA, CameraWindow, ZoomBrowser, cameras, customer service[/tags]

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