It’s not about the tools. We all know this, right? We say it all the time. But what do we mean?

If we strip out the tools and look at function over form, what do we find? We start to get at the reasons behind using the tools. The potential impact points. The motivations for them, on both sides of the equation. For example:

Communication and Service

  • Faster response or resolution time
  • The accountability and visibility of transacting business in public
  • Increased ability to track touchpoints
  • Connections with names and faces (both for familiarity and accountability purposes)
  • Exponential information carrying through networks
  • Peer-created knowledge bases

Access and Entry Points

  • Direct lines to individual people and personal touchpoints
  • Routes to more immediate and more focused/relevant information
  • Deals, discounts, and cost savings opportunities
  • Insider information and sense of exclusivity
  • Meeting in community-determined territory (instead of, say, having to go to the company website to get information or contact)

Feedback and Voice

  • Ability to express and distribute an opinion publicly, and with a reasonable expectation that it will be heard
  • Increased mechanisms for acknowledgment and action on that feedback
  • Gain a sense of contribution to and impact on ideas or decisions
  • Ability to vet companies or experiences via unfiltered peer networks
  • Ability to vet customers or employees through their online behaviors
  • Strength in numbers: collective wisdom, or momentum behind a movement

Creation and Sharing

  • Ease of publishing and creating
  • More immediate, connected, and free distribution networks
  • Platforms and laboratories for thoughts and ideas
  • Ability to act as an “insider” to others (through access points above)
  • Geographic independence of networks and affinities
  • Potentially more significant footprint for niche interests

When you start talking about why people gravitate toward social tools, and then take it a step further to delineate why and when they use them for business versus personal aims (and when the streams cross), then you’re getting somewhere. Then you’re making progress toward mastering what you’re trying to deliver and why instead of fretting over mastering the delivery mechanism itself. You’re focusing on the end, not the means.

In fact, when you’ve really thought through the former, the latter starts to make itself much more clear, and it can adapt to accommodate the inevitable ebb and flow of the technology itself.

I haven’t thought of all of them, of course. Not nearly. I’m just getting started here, but this starts to beg all sorts of questions. As a customer, what do I net by connecting with you online that I wouldn’t get by simply transacting with you and being your customer in the typical sense? As a business, what value am I infusing into the entire customer ecosystem  – the moments between the sales – that can I can not only recoup, but build upon for long term growth?

See where I’m going with this? See why this upends the discussion a little bit, and why it might be helpful to start your thinking here? What does this get you thinking about?

image by MASH DnArt

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