roadSo. I was thinking. I asked. You answered, and you got me thinking a lot about what’s next for me and for this blog and where we’re all headed together. And I didn’t want to leave that thread unfinished, so here’s what I want to share with you.

I started this blog because I needed a place to think out loud, to share the things that I was contemplating at the intersection of social media and business. That part really isn’t going to change, because it’s true to my intent with the blog from the get-go.

But what I’m thinking about has changed. I’m focusing a lot more today on what a socially-equipped business really looks like. I’m thinking about the kinds of challenges and obstacles that businesses and people are facing around social media adoption. Some of them are real, like disclosure and compliance and training and the need to build measurable goals. Some of them are imagined, like irrational fear of what’s not understood, the “phantom ROI”, or the notion of standardized, universally applicable metrics or (ack) “best practices”.

Most of them are rooted in culture and human elements. Some are due to a lack of strategic clarity, but most certainly not lack of available tactics. Lots of them can be helped with more discussion and education.

My hope moving forward is that I can use my experience and my tendency to not pull punches to talk openly about these things. So here’s what I’m planning to focus on:

  • Fundamentals, but only as they relate to building executable frameworks. Not tools.
  • Internal communication in organizations trying to integrate social
  • Breaking down some of the empty arguments against social media, in the context of potential solutions and alternatives
  • Tough cultural conversations and how to start them, like getting to the root of why PR and Customer Service love to bicker
  • Cross-functional application of social media to get it outside just PR or Marketing silos
  • Tangible ideas around community building, internal and external, related to all of the above.

What I’m going to try and stay away from is either preaching to the converted, or trying to convert the obstinate. Thing is, if you’re here, you’re probably already on the train. I want to help us, collectively, noodle out the stuff that’s really at issue. It’s education and discussion for the people that are in the right mindset, but need more thoughts and ideas around how to get stuff done.

I won’t be talking much about the ABC’s of social, because you can likely find those better elsewhere. I won’t be a good resource for the latest meme or the latest tech, because those aren’t the things I do well. I won’t be discussing topics that I think are long past their prime (if they ever had one), like the “social media expert” debate. I WILL, however, be needing you to keep telling me what you need. Because it’ll shape every step of this.

And I’m hopeful that together we’ll find more of you folks that are outside of the social media collective, but still need to understand the role this plays in their work. That’s where the real stuff happens. The people who need this most may not have found us yet. If you have friends out there trying to get beyond Twitter and Facebook, maybe you’d be kind enough to invite them over for a chat with us?

I don’t promise to have all the answers. I don’t promise that it’ll all be easy or simple to pull off. But this is what’s in my mind and is my passion right now, and it’s where I think I can help make an impact in this little world of ours.

I hope you’re with me. This discussion is nothing without your contributions – it’s just me blustering. I need your insights and your professional experience.

So, contemplation over for now. Time to roll the sleeves up.  I’m glad you’re here. The next discussion starts now.

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