November 14, 2010
Facilitating Integration: Functional lines blurring due to social media
At this point there seems to be few parts of traditional organizations and the functions within them that will not be touched or even perhaps radically altered by the forces of social media connectivity and communications. But there are still many naysayers out there asking
Why do we need social media?
Some typical responses from those who still don’t get it:
To share inane updates with random persons only hungering for us to follow them back?
To expose ourselves to just one more medium where avid advertisers can spam us into submission?
No if there wasn’t more than this, I would set the Twitter Fail Whale as my screensaver and never turn the application on again! (exercising maximum restraint to avoid mentioning obvious parallel to recent Twitter service uptime issues; oops I guess I just did, sorry @biz =)
Fortunately there’s more, much more to social media that can and will make a difference. A difference in one to one communications, one to many communications and most importantly to all manner of human organizations.
So what is functional integration and why should we all want more of it?
Easiest place to start is to think about what are all the things we hate most about typical organizations today?
Departments which have become little fiefdoms dedicated only to the glory of their self important manager to the detriment of all else.
Companies to whom suppliers and customers have become no more than predatory targets to latch onto and suck their blood until they die.
So what’s new, isn’t that just the way most big companies have been for the last 100 plus years?
And how’s social media going to make a difference in the face of such utter dysfunction?
Well first off there’s nothing better when it comes to Smashing the Silos with Social Media. So whether it’s between departments in one company or between companies needing to work together for improvement, the nature of hypercommunication via social media makes quick work of any little emperors who might try and get in the way.
Through social media, the truth always seems to find its way through any attempts to distort or stop it. There’s now just too many eyes and voices feeding a collective pool of information available to all for the truth not to emerge sooner or later.
So the bottom line for those companies or people who think they can go on treating their customers and co-workers like garbage is that their days are numbered.
Before, except in the most extreme of cases, they could easily divide and conquer those customers who dared to speak the truth about their shoddy service or products. Now a simple keyword search on Twitter reveals what the world really thinks of them. And if they also treat their employees in a similar manner, just what their employees also think of them.
Add to this their environmental record, product quality, social responsibility and even customer service and you get the picture of this new era of accountability and transparency.
And if we really would like to have some fun with this and truly make a difference, the simple application of the above to politics, countries and even the entire planet will reveal the ultimate potential.
Jeff Ashcroft