Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Social Networking is a Cultural Revolution

We’ve always networked socially. It is an inherent characteristic of being human. It’s in our genes. We are communication animals…from around the campfire to Twitter. Connecting is the foundation of human culture. Different generations simply do it differently.

Joshua Michele Ross, a social networking luminary, stated it this way in Forbes Magazine: “Human beings are innately social. We are designed to share and connect with others. Period. What's more, we are born into cultures that provide a blueprint for how to communicate and organize.”

Josh believes we are seeing a democratization and acceleration of communications. Everyone has a broadcast tower that is real-time across the planet. Since communication is the foundation of government, business, and culture, when you scale up communications, you change the world.

If you want a new, creative idea every nanosecond about social and generational impacts on modern day culture—meet Lance Dublin (www.dublinconsulting.net). Lance is one of the few over 50-somethings who understands generational differences in terms of how people communicate.

Boomers are One-to-One Communicators. Telephones, network TV, CNN pushing the news 24/7, are examples of how Boomers are comfortable getting information from reliable sources. The communication (cultural) revolution that changed their world was CNN getting and reporting the news during the first Gulf War.

Gen Xers are One-to-Many Communicators. Blast emails, webinars, webcasts, You Tube, and other web-based outlets are preferred modes for getting and using information for this group. Google and Wikipedia are children of the Gen X Web-based revolution.

Millenniums are One-to-Many-to-Many Communicators. When Capt. Sullenberger crashed US Airways 1549 safely into the Hudson River, the news spread through social networks like wildfire. People learned what happened long before Charlie Gibson summarized the day.

The trick is to understand your target user's medium of choice—and to try and tailor your communications and communications style with that medium.

Social networking is a cultural and generational revolution. People are choosing to get and share information not just from an expert source nor only from the people they know and trust. They are getting it from social networks of thousands of people they may not even know.

It’s not about the technology. It’s about the commonality among these generational differences and the need for human connection. There will always be a new technology—that’s inevitable. Therefore, the technology itself is not what this revolution is all about. How we use new technologies to communicate, to keep in touch, and to stay connected is what it’s all about. New ways we think and communicate with each other is the essence of how cultures transform.

2 comments:

Chris Husong said...

Great Post! This is a very important shift in our world

Jim Sutton said...

Ken,
Great post. "New ways we think and communicate with each other is the essence of how cultures transform." is a great thought. Things are changing and generally for the better I believe.
I have LI, FB and Twitter friends from all over the world and it is hard to declare them evil when I know them personal. Imperfect just like I am, but not evil.

Jim Sutton
JimSutton.NAIWE.com