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Leadership

Jed Hallam

Chapter Chapter 6 in The Social Media Manifesto, 2013, pp 46-62 from Palgrave Macmillan

Abstract: Abstract Building a social business is not about having a Twitter or Facebook strategy, it is about stitching back together the constituent parts of your business that have become silo’d and disparate over the course of its history to create a fl uidentity that allows data and insights to flow freely across every department of your business. Social business is about relinquishing corporate control, and building an open culture, where anyone within your organization can make suggestions and improve the performance of your business. It is about actually listening to and understanding your market, not from behind a camera listening to twelve people discuss what they do and don’t like about your products or services, but about being present at 4 a.m. when a mother is asking a forum of her peers what to do because her washing machine has broken and it is leaking water throughout her home. Social business is about getting so close to your market that they feel like a part of your business, because they are, your market is your business. Without them all you have is a building full of people in starchy suits showing presentations filled with graphs pointing optimistically upwards and making predictions about “what our core demographic” wants. These presentations are unnecessary, because your “core demographic” is telling you what they want, what they need, what they hate and why they hate it, it is just that your organization is not listening to them. Becoming a social business is about stepping back out from behind your desk and engaging with your employees, trusting them, encouraging them and making them feel like they are part of something much bigger than a nine to five. The world has fundamentally changed over the last twenty years—we are in a time of economic uncertainty when people cannot afford to take risks on products or services that might not work, but fortunately for consumers technology came to the rescue, giving them access to their peers like they had never know before.

Keywords: Open Business; Corporate Control; Social Technology; Social Data; Great Idea (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2013
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:pal:palchp:978-1-137-27142-6_7

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DOI: 10.1057/9781137271426_7

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