One reason we might be struggling with social media’s “fit” within companies is because we’re trying to put it in a box. Is it PR? Is it marketing? Is it customer service? What are the rules? How do we behave? How does this relate to what we’ve done before?

It might just be time to stop thinking top-down, and start considering what lies beneath.

Engineering Foundations

The architect Daniel Burnham and his partner John Wellborn Root broke barriers in architecture in the late 1800s in Chicago. They learned how to defy the soft, clay-ridden ground in Chicago that caused buildings over a few stories to sink and falter. Bedrock in the city was over 125 feet underground, and it was impossible to sink caissons that deeply in order to allow for a taller building.

Until Root had the idea to engineer a new bedrock. He designed a system for pouring concrete slabs that were interlaced with a grid of iron bars that ran the span of the building base. A fundamental support structure that touched every part of the building.

Once he engineered this foundation, Root made it possible for him and Burnham to design and construct the first of the country’s skyscrapers.

Social Media Underneath

We’ve been trying to set social media on top of what we’ve already built, sometimes whether or not that structure is sound. And we’re attempting to tuck it neatly away in a marketing- or PR-related box because that’s what’s familiar and accessible to us when we think “communications”.

But perhaps social media needs to be woven into the foundation of our organizations instead. Not the tools, mind you. Forget about those for the moment. In fact, skip the term “social media” altogether.

Think instead about how you would create communication across your organization if you could start from scratch today. What constants would you impart to make sure that information could flow seamlessly both inside your company and between you and your community? What barriers exist now that you’d tear down? Where are the outdated processes that are hindering your agility, your ability to create and share information?

Even more radically, what if you could redefine the departments in your organization not in terms of their function but in terms of creating a more uninhibited flow of information and results from company to customer? Maybe by making them just a bit messier, less rigid?

Imperfect Communication

There’s so much more to social media’s implications than just reconnecting with a high school buddy on Facebook or having your company tweet product discounts. It’s not about just another communication channel. We’ve got plenty of those, for crying out loud.

What social media is changing is the foundation of all that communication. Its very fabric. We’re engineering new bedrock for how communication works, whether we realize it or not. And whether that makes you uncomfortable or not doesn’t change it.

If all you see is a collection of tools with silly names, you’re missing the fact that the splintered, nimble communication that’s happening around you is what’s really at issue. The ease, portability, and networked nature of media. All those careful, controlled processes that we all deluded ourselves into trusting because they were oh-so-carefully crafted and thought through in endless meetings? Breaking. Because they were built on a crappy foundation.

Yes, You Can Evolve

I can hear it now. “But Amber, you’re talking about shaking the very foundations of business! Some companies will never change! They’ve always done it this way and are afraid to evolve, to change, to do anything different. We need to understand the risks. The ROI. The dos and don’ts.”

To a point, I say that teaching and understand and education are all wonderful things. Learn. Take baby steps. Grow in context and with business goals in mind. I believe in forward progress, even if it’s methodical.

But for Pete’s sake. If the building is sinking but you’re determined to build skyward, you don’t curse the soft ground. You engineer a new bedrock.

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