For as digital as my life is, I’m a self-confessed people watcher. I revel in observing people, to the point where sometimes I find myself darn near staring at someone.
Today, I was fascinated by my flight attendant, Doris. She was older than the average flight attendant – I’d put her somewhere in her sixities. She had a gentle, soothing voice and for once I almost *wanted* to listen to the overview of the safety features of this aircraft.
It was a tiny plane so I got to watch her intently for most of the short flight. Her John Sandford book, the way she carefully picked out the cashews from her trail mix to eat first with her black coffee. The colorful yarn bracelet on her well-tanned and toned arms (seriously, for a mature woman, her arms were amazing). The bright pink lipstick she wore and the comfy-yet-funky black shoes she had on her feet.
I find myself doing this more and more; immersing myself in someone’s microworld for a little while, in whatever brief period during which they happen to cross my path (anonymously or not).
And I notice that I find myself missing those subtleties sometimes in the online world.
I can’t hear the intonation in your voice (and I’m big into the sound of voices; I have several favorites even among the people you know, but I won’t embarrass them here by saying who). I can’t see all of your mannerisms, your gestures, or hear the dry and witty way you tell a joke.
So for all the times I get asked why I hop on planes and shuttle around the country to visit events even though my job is driven by the interwebs, I’ll say this.
The very best moments of my job, and often the most lucrative business-wise (even if not immediately), are at events or over drinks or a meal. The way Shawn Morton tells his story about the Man Orgy (you’ll have to ask him about that) and I laugh until I cry. How I can laugh with Brendan Jackson about whether a pink shirt would have been appropriate for dinner.
It’s about when Greg Matthews invites me into Humana’s Innovation Center to see the amazing (!!) things they’re doing like B-Cycle and the experiments they’re doing to tie wellness into video games. And when we can laugh together about something completely other later on.
It’s about when Chris Barger lets me hang out and drive fun cars, learn about the challenges GM is facing, and how then I can feel like every time he sends me a Tweet, our conversation has a definitively more personal dynamic.
People watching is about observing subtle humanity. And it never ceases to amaze me how compellingly different, unique, and interesting some people are. How energized I am each time I get the chance to connect with more people, in analog space.
Is it about some kind of immediate ROI? Does there always have to be an instant and relevant business context to these conversations and interactions? Heck no. Because someday, when and if I do business with the people I meet, we’ll have already laid the groundwork. The relationship is first. The rest fits in where and when (and if) it should.
And no matter how digitally driven my business is, no matter how new the media gets, I will always relish the human and interpersonal connections that are at its very core.
We talk about ROI with social media, and we should (@thebrandbuilder is doing this right now in a terrific series), but it’s well to remember that the purpose of ROI is money, and the purpose of money is…well, isn’t it to make our lives better? Isn’t it HAPPINESS? There is so much happiness in connection with other people, and those connections can be made all the time. I realize that I blaspheme (but Amber did it first!) when I say that those connections can be made even without Twitter and Facebook.
It might be a good thing for us to remember. These things are tools. Tools are for making something – they aren’t the something themselves.
Chris Joness last blog post..Lon’s Cookin’ Shack Review
We talk about ROI with social media, and we should (@thebrandbuilder is doing this right now in a terrific series), but it’s well to remember that the purpose of ROI is money, and the purpose of money is…well, isn’t it to make our lives better? Isn’t it HAPPINESS? There is so much happiness in connection with other people, and those connections can be made all the time. I realize that I blaspheme (but Amber did it first!) when I say that those connections can be made even without Twitter and Facebook.
It might be a good thing for us to remember. These things are tools. Tools are for making something – they aren’t the something themselves.
Chris Joness last blog post..Lon’s Cookin’ Shack Review
Thank you for your elegant post. You’ve reminded me that my own people watching is about the need to feel connected – to love others. And yes, our e-connections with each other are made richer when we have the face-to-face (and voice-to-voice) connections as well.
Jeff Brunsons last blog post..Dangerous
Thank you for your elegant post. You’ve reminded me that my own people watching is about the need to feel connected – to love others. And yes, our e-connections with each other are made richer when we have the face-to-face (and voice-to-voice) connections as well.
Jeff Brunsons last blog post..Dangerous
I like it. For me lots those awareness moments happen on the days that I ride my bike to work. Especially in the spring, the sights, smells, sounds – it’s like waking up all over again. It’s a reminder that I need to unplug myself now and then to stay energized.
I like it. For me lots those awareness moments happen on the days that I ride my bike to work. Especially in the spring, the sights, smells, sounds – it’s like waking up all over again. It’s a reminder that I need to unplug myself now and then to stay energized.
What a great reminder to get away from the screen, at least the one sitting on your desktop. And yes, you must be a pretty good people watcher, for your descriptions — vivid, detailed, concise — create pictures for the reader. I’ve recently had the pleasure of meeting a number of folks I had only known on Twitter and was instantly reminded that this two dimensional view, while a powerful way to connect and communicate, reveals only the surface.
Get out there. There are real people behind those avatars.
edwardbochess last blog post..Learn to give a speech without a podium, without a script, without a teleprompter.
What a great reminder to get away from the screen, at least the one sitting on your desktop. And yes, you must be a pretty good people watcher, for your descriptions — vivid, detailed, concise — create pictures for the reader. I’ve recently had the pleasure of meeting a number of folks I had only known on Twitter and was instantly reminded that this two dimensional view, while a powerful way to connect and communicate, reveals only the surface.
Get out there. There are real people behind those avatars.
edwardbochess last blog post..Learn to give a speech without a podium, without a script, without a teleprompter.
I totally agree with you here, nothing will ever truly replace, nor be as genuine, as the in-person-ness.
Yet at the same time, I also really appreciate how we get to know each other through our avatars/blogs/online-presences before we even meet in person — hell, you knew who I was immediately in person (and vice versa), and I think that only enhanced those later moments of sharing our tattoo stories and discovering a mutual love of Sandman comics. Had we not known each other online first it wouldn’t have been so much fun!
Stacy Lukass last blog post..blip.fm adds YouTube videos, indie musicians benefit BIG TIME
I totally agree with you here, nothing will ever truly replace, nor be as genuine, as the in-person-ness.
Yet at the same time, I also really appreciate how we get to know each other through our avatars/blogs/online-presences before we even meet in person — hell, you knew who I was immediately in person (and vice versa), and I think that only enhanced those later moments of sharing our tattoo stories and discovering a mutual love of Sandman comics. Had we not known each other online first it wouldn’t have been so much fun!
Stacy Lukass last blog post..blip.fm adds YouTube videos, indie musicians benefit BIG TIME
Such a nice post, Amber…
I love the idea of “immersing yourself in someone’s microworld”… Would you say you are more attuned to this now than before your experiences with Social Media?
In one of his recent posts Gil Yehuda talks about a “virtual familiarity” index that Social Media helps establish among remote co-workers in E2.0, and it reminds me that getting to know one another virtually is a fantastic pre-cursor to actually meeting in person and getting to enjoy the subtle humanity of the actual experience of one another.
My photography professor had a saying : “a thing is what it is only in relation to what it is not… I like the juxtaposition of the virtual prepping us for a real experience that is then deeper than it might have been…
Juergen Bs last blog post..Could a bicycle sharing program work in New York City?
Such a nice post, Amber…
I love the idea of “immersing yourself in someone’s microworld”… Would you say you are more attuned to this now than before your experiences with Social Media?
In one of his recent posts Gil Yehuda talks about a “virtual familiarity” index that Social Media helps establish among remote co-workers in E2.0, and it reminds me that getting to know one another virtually is a fantastic pre-cursor to actually meeting in person and getting to enjoy the subtle humanity of the actual experience of one another.
My photography professor had a saying : “a thing is what it is only in relation to what it is not… I like the juxtaposition of the virtual prepping us for a real experience that is then deeper than it might have been…
Juergen Bs last blog post..Could a bicycle sharing program work in New York City?