@bryanjones

I'm paid to lead the @cjrwInteractive team as Interactive CD/Strategist (these views are my own), but really I'm just a father of 3 and @sarabethjones's husband
Pages
Categories
Tags
Advertising advertising blogs Beatles Bill Gates Biz Markie blue room Churro Clorox commentary CPB Group dell summer rocks ea sports Faris Yakob G-1 GE Google Heineken Honda Joshua Radin Marriot Microsoft Miller New Family nfl.com Nike Nuked The Fridge Rabbit Red House Furniture Rhett and Link Seinfeld Slideshare Social Media T-Mobile Thao The Dodos Throw Me The Statue tiger woods Traditional Media Twitter viral video W+K Walmart Weiden Kennedy youtube Zee Avi
-
RSS Links
Flairification’s AdFeed- Google Vs. Facebook And How Marketers Win (Or Lose) In 2011
- Article: Mobile Devices a Must for Millennials
- Sales still an important factor behind brand social media efforts
- Google vs. Facebook and How Marketers Win (or Lose) in 2011
- Understanding the audience and developing a planning style
- Study: Be prepared for the smartphone takeover
- Before You Seek Business
- Planning a Community Is Like Planning a Wedding
- Going Beyond Social Media Reach
- How to be awesome. And greasy. In a good way.
- Why Flash Cookies Should Be Banned for Advertising
- Productizing Ideas
- The first step is to start
- Magazines Post Gains in Ad Revenues, Pages
- Mature Consumers Seek Edgy Brands
- Watch Out Twitter & Facebook, the Viagra Generation is Taking Over!
- REPORT: Facebook and the New Age of Privacy
- The Long-Term Value of Community Relations
- This Week’s 10 Most Explosive Facebook Pages
- CMO Matrix: How Social Technology Must Integrate with Traditional Marketing, a Horizontal Approach
Elsewhere
-
Meta
Long Live Engagement
I’ve been following this idea around my head for the last week: “All media is social.” It did not start out as a mantra, it started as more of a “i think i think this” kind of idea. Clear, huh?
A year ago, I began speaking on the topics of social networks/social media/social influencers and from that point I’ve been a sort of social enthusiast, evangelizing the lost to enter into this new world of connectedness. In the advertising world, where I spend most of my life, this is THE sexy genre of the moment, so it pays for me to lead the cheering as much as I can. But every once in a while, I have to stop, and let everyone know that THIS IS NOT NEW.
Media, defined as “a set of tools for communication” has always been social. There cannot be communication without a sender and a receiver. Simple enough. Newspaper – social. Movies – social. TV commercials – social. Radio spots – social. The weekly Target circular – social. Message sent/message received/message shared, the criteria for social has been met.
And none of these communication channels are new. The new channels are the ones that know-it-alls like me champion as the new era of social media. Do I need to mention them by name? Just watch the 10 o’clock news and you will hear at least one mention of Twitter or Facebook…that’s one mention per segment. I don’t care how much I love Twitter, if I hear about it on again on TV, a warranty is going to get cashed in.
In our fascination with the new, and the race to be a part of social media, we sadly neglect the most valuable asset of communication – Engagement. “Who cares?” and “Why?” need to take precedence over “Where?” and “How fast can we get there?” Engagement is addressed by asking the right questions. Can a newspaper be a platform for effective engagement? Dear God yes, just look at the letters to the editor following the printing of a well-crafted insightful article. Can Twitter be a platform for effective engagement? Post something about Dell, and you’ll quickly find the answer to that question. How about a flash mob in a train station?
The point of engagement is this, are people being treated as people? Are they being drawn in to be a part of an exchange of ideas or an experience? Are they benefiting in such a way that they feel like their life is better as a result of associating with a product/service/brand? Adopting the new tools is easy. Using them to make a difference is the challenge.
Faris Yakob brilliantly sums it up this way:
And on that note, I’m off to Tweet something to my wife who is sitting across the room.