Make no mistake, when you get involved in social media as a business, you are setting expectations. You are communicating through actions as well as words that you are prepared and willing to open up the lines of communication. You’re committing to let people see you how you really are, and encouraging them tell you what they think – good, bad, and ugly.

Beth Harte’s main point about the scalability of social media in corporate America – and it’s an important one – is that if companies reach a level where scaling their efforts at more personal communications becomes prohibitive, they’ll disengage and revert to broadcast-type communications and mass marketing. (If you haven’t read the post and ensuing comments, take a few minutes to do so. I’ll wait. It’s worth it.)

Herein lies the danger. My short answer about scalability is that yes, it’s absolutely possible, with commitment to the long term and an understanding that it’s about scaling the practice of conversation as a whole, not just literal 1:1 interactions. (We don’t ask whether our customer service department can scale, do we? We just do it because we recognize that it’s not negotiable.) If you’re after it for the right reasons, you work it into your operations. Period.

So why is it nearly impossible to go backwards?

Internal Expectations
I’d venture to say that the precedent you’re setting with the walls of your business is as critical as any. You are either explicitly or implicitly telling your team members that not only is the customer relationship paramount, but you are telling them that you trust them. That by including them in your team, you are empowering them to have a voice both within and for the company.

Customer Expectations
The only thing worse than not giving someone a voice is giving it to them and then taking it away. If your community has been clamoring to talk to you and you start to do so, you’ll thrill them beyond belief. Want to shatter their trust in an instant? Start the conversation, then walk away as if it never mattered.

External Expectations
People who aren’t your customers are still watching you. They see what you do, how you act, what choices you make and how you treat your customers. It’s likely that their future decisions about whether or not to do business with you will rest heavily on what they observe. So what do you think they’re going to think if you rush headlong into opening your doors to dialogue, only to shut them again?

I say all this because social media is not a plug-in, people. It’s not a joke, it’s not fun and games, and it’s not for everyone. It’s a serious approach to business communications and customer service and if you’re to succeed with it, you had better take it that seriously from the outset. You are making a commitment. To your business, and to the people that keep it in the black.

The single biggest opportunity for social media is that it builds and engenders trust. The single biggest risk for social media is that it builds and engenders trust. Once you have it, you’d better be willing to put in the effort, time, and resources to steward that trust properly.

So what say you? Am I crazy? Is entering social media an all-in play? Can you go backwards once you’ve started? Is fear of coming up short a good enough excuse to stay out of the game? What kind of expectations does it imply to you?

Image by DCJohn

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