Checking in on Share War: Survey Findings

This book review in The Economist reminded me to check in on the survey I put up a couple weeks ago concerning the Capitalist vs. Collectivist dichotomy on the Internet. The basic premise of my Share War concept is that a collectivist mindset fueled the early expansion of the Internet and many of the disruptive technologies of today but that capitalism has been the driving force behind the rapid growth of the Internet as a world-changing phenomenon. The word ‘share’is a common term to both. One advocates that we all share information, the other is concerned with controlling market share.

Below are the five ‘fronts’I asked people to provide input on. The question for each was simple… given the state of the world, who is winning capitalists or collectivists. Here’s where it netted out:

THE PRICE FRONT
Collectivists fight under the banner of ‘information wants to be free’.
Capitalists fight under the banner of ‘priced to drive profit’.

Collectivism received 55.6% of votes with capitalism at 44.4%. Rather close. Opinions were also interesting:

“The value is in the sharing not the creation”

“Innovation follows the ability to pay for it.”

THE STANDARDS FRONT
Collectivists fight for open standards.
Capitalists fight for proprietary standards.

The standards front was also fairly evenly divided again with collectivists beating capitalism by about 10%.

Open standards tend to ensure greater flexibility, freedom, and interoperability (although sometimes at the expense of reliability and consistency). Nonetheless, it’s clear that closed systems now create vacuums that are quickly filled by open alternatives.”

THE ORGANIZATION FRONT
Collectivists fight for flat structures based on egalitarian collaboration.
Capitalists fight for hierarchical structures and closed collaboration in the name of competitive gain.

Here capitalism enjoyed a greater lead with 67% voting the capitalists ahead. That said several respondents had trouble with the dichotomyy here noting that hybrid models were becoming popular.

“Far closer than the previous questions… the real answer is that the capitalists allow a collectivist-style environment, as long as they maintain a “top” position.”

“Probably a false dichotomy. Capitalists are increasingly using decentralized governance and so-called egalitarian collaboration to increase customer buy-in and extract more value from the workforce. True decentralization (decentralizing ownership and goal-setting) is rare.”

THE GROWTH APPROACH FRONT
Collectivists favor giving it away for free to spread it by word of mouth.
Capitalists prefer marketing strategies designed to conquer and defend marketshare.

From the commentary, the influence of social media marketing seems to have swayed a number of respondents to favor collectivism as the growth method of the moment. Fully 75% of participants believed collectivism was the dominant growth philosophy of the day.

“Word of mouth really works now that people can shout across the Internet. Even Capitalists are aware that they have to capitalize on word-of-mouth now more than ever.”

THE PERSONAL DATA FRONT
Collectivists favor personal data being 100% controlled by the individual.
Capitalists see personal data as business asset.

This front was pure capitalism… literally 100% of participants gave the upper hand to the capitalists all the while citing apprehension about the decided lack of privacy in data handling.

“Facebook, Google and Apple are greedy pigs.”

“No brainer, no one owns their information any more.”

The comment that struck me the most was this one:

“Items like phone numbers, social security numbers, birthdates, credit scores, etc. are only “data” because they have economic value in the capitalist world system–value that is assigned by capitalists. In non-capitalist societies nobody cares what your birthdate is, and you don’t have a credit score.”

I want to thank those of you who contributed to my survey this far. It is the genesis of a longer term research endeavor I am beginning and your input has been very useful. For those who would like to chime in, the survey remains open. Please feel free to cast your vote and offer your thoughts:

Is news 2.0 dangerously dumbed down?

I have a soft spot in my heart for Newsweek. Growing up, my father had it around the house and I associate it with breakfasts before school where he’d sit with me munching Cheerios and catching up on current events. I recall thumbing through Newsweek myself as a youth, more interested at the time in the photos than the articles. Even today during visits to my parents’house I will happily kill some time reading articles in Newsweek. My father even got me a gift subscription of my own a year or so ago. However, a year into it, I found little time to devote to Newsweek what with the Economist, WIRED, Nat Geo, Smithsonian, the Wall St. Journal and the New York Times lying around the house. Plus the books, blogs, and work-related literature.

That said, I have for some time now been following Newsweek as it struggles alongside its brethren to find a new place in today’s media environment. Doing so forced me to ponder the role of news publications in a world of real-time Twitter feeds. I followed with great interest Newsweek’s decision to significantly alter its format. I had come to much the same conclusion as Newsweek did; namely that the news itself was parity and couldn’t be provided fast enough by a formal corporate entity to compete with pro-am Twitterers. This was not because of being a printed product. Even a digital version (iPad, Kindle or otherwise) does not free a professional company from the organizational layers that slow down the process of getting news to market.

I believed (and largely still do) that what professional outfits could deliver that amateurs could not (at least as well or as easily) was depth, perspective, and the resources to gain access where amateurs with Tweetdeck and Flip cameras could not go. Newsweek and I weren’t alone in this thinking. The Economist came to a similar conclusion – which didn’t surprise me as I think it reflected the organization of that magazine’s business in the first place. I was hopeful Newsweek’s decision would help turn them around.

Fast forward many months and I am saddened by the news that Newsweek is on the auction block. Despite cuts, reorganization, redesign and a new editorial format, the publication is still losing money. This at a time when apparently some newspapers are seeing a rebound and even – gasp – profitability. Candidly, I am a bit perplexed as to why. Perhaps it has something to do with the cost of operations. However, I can’t right-mindedly hide behind that. The circulation continues to drop (see inset at the start of this post) so obviously interest by consumers is waning. So why is Newsweek failing?

The Internet-era expectation of ‘free’hurts for sure. Why pay for something when you can get an approximation for free?

Our increasing focus on multitasking, skimming and toplines vs. reading deeper has an adverse impact as well. In fact, WIRED just published a fascinating article on the impact of the Web on our brain discussing these very effects. (I will have more to say on that topic in another post.)

Then there is the ‘good enough’factor. From MP3 compression to single-feature Flip camcorders, we are again and again turning down rich feature sets for ‘good enough’convenience. This is not inherently wrong, but it is a compromise with consequences. In a world of 140-character headlines piped to my desktop, perhaps the market for deeper investigation is just smaller than anticipated.

Lastly, the prosumerization effect has dealt  a blow to the cause of getting to the ‘truth’(and I would argue it is the pursuit of ‘truth’that is important, not the establishment of some objective absolute truth). I am all for anyone having the right to publish. There are huge collective political, economic and innovation advantages to our world with its incredible and widely available publishing tools. There is also a price tag. Today anyone can call anything news. When millions and millions of people do exactly that, we encounter a two-tiered challenge. Simply to digest the volume of superficial information is all consuming. Worse, it leaves little time (or energy) for sorting out the thoughtful from the thoughtless.

Translated into social circle terms; struggling to keep up with 150+ Facebook friends is hard enough. Having anything deeper than a status-update level of intimacy with any one of them is extremely difficult indeed (and I would argue reliant on a relationship outside of digital media). It is the same news I believe.

Right now, I can go out and find a ‘news’headline (in a blog, publication, forum, etc.) on any topic, however irrational, that confirms what I want to believe*.

*I do not believe Obama is a Nazi by the way, I chose that topic for its absurdity

If so much of my time is spent simply digesting these headlines, and I choose only those headlines which fit my existing world view, then in effect I am creating a cognitive bubble. Everything becomes both myopic by nature of the media channel I choose and dumbed down because I never get much further than the headlines.

Personally, I find this very troubling.

There needs to be a place in the world where depth is important. Watching publications that pursue depth as a business go on to fail is disheartening. I have thought for a while now that the term ‘news industry’was a misnomer. The news industry is less and less about ‘new’.

What then should it be about?

I would like to add as an addendum here that I by no means claim Newsweek is a source of absolute truth. I recognize its left-leaning political slant and would even go so far as to say that without an editorial slant there is little likelihood anyone would be interested. My point is that I would much sooner have the option to read, compare and weigh the perspectives of lengthier articles in Time and Newsweek, each trying to go deep on a topic, than to merely take the televised evening news headlines from Fox or MSNBC at face value. It seems the market for depth in news is waning and that is cause for concern.

Paradigm Drift – TV in the Internet Era

The Economist just ran a terrific feature on television. The piece underscored a mantra I constantly preach to clients, “now not new.” I’d link to it, but you need a subscription to get the articles.

The thrust of the feature is that despite the numerous cries of paradigm change and a death sentence for TV, the good ol’boob-tube has fared quite well – better in fact that the rest of the media industry (music, news, publishers).

To quote:
“As a study through the Council for Research Excellence has shown, Americans spend more time watching television than they spend surfing the web, send emails, watching DVDs, playing computer games, reading newspapers and talking on mobiles phone put together,” [my emphasis]

The feature went on to note that overall time spent watching TV continues to increase. Interestingly, attempts to make TV-viewing more feature rich, portable, interactive, etc. have all met with resistance from television viewers. From DVRs to MobileTV to Hulu, Joost and YouTube, numerous alternatives and peripheral devices have been offered but fundamental viewing habits have not changed. In many cases the devices have had trouble finding large audiences.

This gets to the essence of Now Not New, which is the idea that what makes something novel – the newness of it – is not the driving factor businesses should focus on. Rather executives should look at how people use technology ‘now’, today, when the money is being spent and markets are being made. It’s easy to become infatuated with new devices and there is always a group of early adopters who wait in line for whatever is next simply because it is. The masses though, always trail, and often this trailing adoption takes much longer than the media hype machine would have us all believe.

Getting back to TV, one article amusingly titled The Lazy Medium points out that TV viewing remains a largely live and passive experience. That is, even with TiVo’s and such, 85%+ of programs in England are still watched at their live time slot and 60% of shows recorded on a TiVo are watched within a day. In this supposedly paradigm-shifting new digital world we are not only watching more TV than ever but even with the power to enjoy our programming on demand still largely plunk ourselves on the sofa at the time broadcasters ask us to. The technologies available may be new but they’ve yet to fundamentally changed our behaviors en masse.

Slow to change, at least by today’s standards.
Behavioral change among any sizable population tends to be much slower than people think. While celebrities and sensations seemingly appear overnight, in truth they often labor in obscurity for quite some time before flashing upon our collective radar. Just as with watching the stock market daily (or hourly), tracking too much media buzz (a symptom of our age) creates a sense of erratic, endless flux where we’re all always playing catch-up as something new is introduced by the minute. This can obscure more useful trendlines like broad adoption. We also don’t tend to notice the failures that just silently drift away after their 15 seconds of fame. They don’t make good news stories so why cover them? In our media, the story is always about what’s new, what’s coming and what’s next. Even if there’s no reason to believe it is anything more than just new at the time the stories run.

Admittedly, relative to centuries (or even decades) passed, behavioral change is happening faster. The relevance of this, however, in business terms, is a matter of which perspective you choose to take.

Futurist Alvin Toffler wrote a terrific book called The Third Wave which was a treatise on the increasing rate of change and the new third wave of innovation that was sweeping across the planet at the time it was written (1980). Viewed as he did, in terms of centuries, there’s no doubt things changed much faster in 1800 than in 1200 and are changing faster now than in 1800. That’s a useful observation in some contexts.

For companies working in today’s frenetic environment however, the rate of change – and by this I mean behavioral change that leads to market leadership shifts and lucrative new categories of business – is much slower than often expected.

For example, Apple’s Newton appeared in 1993. The PDA concept didn’t really catch on until around the new millennium and it’s only in the passed few years that smart phones have seen some broad utility. Part of this is due to continued technological innovation, part is due to infrastructure (broadband, 3G, etc.) and part of it is behavioral – it took people a while to figure out what they really needed a PDA-type device for. This latter piece is still being ironed out by thousands of app developers building tens of thousands of apps – very few of which, its important to note, see much broad usage.

To be sure, the path to the future is paved by experimentation. However, companies should be cautious before deciding to be one of those pioneers. Being first doesn’t always mean being number one in your category should that category actually emerge as a marketplace.

The bleeding edge and bleeding out.
I would offer that experimentation is on the leading edge of change waves. It is followed very closely by industry sensationalization. This happens because there are a lot of media channels all competing to ‘break news’(and thereby stay in business). As such, the media will latch on to anything, regardless of how unproven, and present it as the beginning of seismic change.

This frontline of experimentation and subsequent hype turns into first-mover entrepreneurialism. Small start-ups get funded and develop largely experimental products and services to offer consumers.

Then there is often a culling of the herd where new technologies and the numerous startups that cluster around them begin to suffer because the aggressive adoption they expected doesn’t happen quite as fast as anticipated. The venture capitalists sometimes pull out, or the technology becomes obsolete before it reaches a tipping point. Still at other times the companies themselves become unsustainable due to how they’re structured (see ‘DotCom bust of 2001′). Finally, at some point still later one, broader acceptance is gained. This happens when the improved versions of these technologies – which reflect the hard-learned lessons of market realities and consumer demand – are taken up by enough people to deliver broad utility. Then, and only then, does a meaningful change take place wherein markets arise and empires are built.

As an example, look at digital music, a technology held up for its paradigm changing, industry decimating, distruption. MP3 players made their debut in 1998 (it was a RIOPMP300, not an iPod). Apple’s first came out in late 2001. But even Apple’s first few iPod versions had very modest sales. It wasn’t until 2005 that iPod sales began to escalate. So while today it seems like MP3 players blew up the music industry overnight, even by 2005 only 11% of the U.S. population had MP3 players. In fact, according to a 2010 Arbitron study, only 44% of Americans own an MP3 player today (get the study here). That’s still less than half the population a decade into the “paradigm shift”. More people have PCs, TVs, and mobile phones. This makes MP3 technology more of a paradigm drift in my eyes. I’m not contesting that digital music technology has made a mess of traditional music industry models and changed the way we engage with music. However, it did not happen overnight, it happened over a decade and still has a way to go before the technology becomes truly ubiquitous.

Compared to the 1800′s, a decade might represent rapid change. Compared to today’s business environment with Moore’s Law and increments defined in ‘Internet Years’, not so much. It’s all about perspective. For academics looking across centuries is enlightening. For businesses having a clear look across years is probably more helpful.

Paradigm Drift – TV in the Internet Era
My intention here is not to say change is happening so slow it can be ignored. It is, however, to note that change is happening slowly enough – from a business perspective – that it can be addressed. The Economist piece points out that while digital technology has created havoc in industries like music and news (and more recently, book publishing) the television industry has adapted quite well. That should offer a ray of hope to businesses contending with change.

Television still faces hurdles – from a declining portion of revenue coming from advertising to a polarization whereby mass hits are sustainable and smaller, less popular programs struggle more. There is also the matter of interactive media and the blurring of lines between TV screens, laptop screens, smartphone screens and possibly tablet computer screens (which I believe will neither has the paradigm shifting rate of change or broad adoption currently being set as an expectation by the media machine). However, goliath, bureaucratic, television is faring okay. It is still the dominant medium of our time, even though its death was predicted with urgency decades ago.

Businesses, take heart. Paradigms don’t shift, they drift. Change happens but it is not something that will necessarily uproot an enterprise overnight. It can be addressed if it is attended to (vs. denied, as the new and music industries did during those years change was permeating mass culture).

Sure, keep an eye on the road ahead, but don’t let the deluge of hype and hyperbole that is at the vanguard of change unbalance your business. Focus instead on how people engage with change the here and now. Waves of change might be impossible to predict, but if you surf along with your customers, you can align what you’re building now with what they’re asking for now. This is supply and demand and one sure way to keep the register ringing as the months, days, years and decades drift by.


‘Experimentation’is a process, not a policy.

franksA week behind on my reading due to work, I recently came across this article in the Economist. Of particular interest is this quote:

…In the early 1900s Frank Gilbreth, one of the pioneers of industrial psychology, tried to raise his 12 children according to Frederick Taylor’s principles of scientific management. He discovered that you could cut the time it took to shave if you used two razors at once—but then abandoned the idea when he found that it took an additional two minutes to bandage the resulting wounds…

The remainder of this column is about guruism in business. The column talks about jargon and the re-skinning of old ideas with new language. It calls into question the wisdom of naming outstanding companies only to watch them fall on their faces. And most interestingly to me, it calls out the lack of rigor behind many of the assertions of business gurus.

I’ve seen a recent parallel to this latter point in the common social media refrain, “Don’t be afraid to experiment! You must experiment! If you’re not experimenting you’ll miss the wave!”

This is a very convenient rallying cry for all gurus. It removes them from accountability if something doesn’t work (‘failure is part of the experimentation process’), and rewards them when it does.

Not surprisingly, a willingness to experiment is being held up as the must-have policy of any organization seeking to profit from social media. Of course, experimentation is never defined as a scientific process in this instance. Instead, it’s presented as published brainstorming. The logic is that digital media is cheap, if you have an idea, just try it. Try everything. Load that social media shotgun and fire away.

This may be acceptable to companies with unlimited resources, but for most businesses profiting from social media is one of a thousand items they need to focus their resources on at any one time.

My father is a polymer chemist. I grew up around scientific process and even though my career path  took me elsewhere (marketing and business strategy), I have always found myself relying on science in addressing business challenges.

Scientific process begins with an Objective. Companies are familiar with objectives so this one should be easy to understand, I’ll
move on…

Making an Educated Guess
Next comes the hypothesis. This is an ‘educated guess’as to how to achieve the objective. How does one make an educated guess about social media? Given that it’s inherently social, I might start with how different types of people group and utilize communities for support, action, belonging etc. I might investigate how they perceive and define government, family, institutions like banks, and their own communities. By knowing the context of the lives of a target constituency, I can formulate a hypothesis as to which social media tactics might be useful in achieving an objective.

That said, when was the last time you heard the word ‘hypothesis’used in a social media discussion? More to the point, when was the last time a conversation about social media began with human behaviors and community constructs instead of technology-of-the-week gadget jabber? Yet without a hypothesis – an educated guess – we wind up shooting in the dark and hoping for the best. It’s that simple.

Experimentation should be focused.
From the hypothesis the scientists then design an Experiment. This experiment is specifically constructed to test the hypothesis. It’s very execution is reliant on the needs of the hypothesis. In creating the experiment the scientists must apply rigor. They must create a control group to benchmark results. They must define the metrics that will prove the hypothesis and the means to test for them experimentally. They must consider all the details of the experiment to make sure it does indeed test the hypothesis. They must take all necessary precautions not to pollute their experiment with contaminants that might skew the data or deliver misleading conclusions.

Once designed, an experiment is conducted under disciplined conditions. Data is carefully logged and critically analyzed. A good scientist is looking objectively at the data, resisting the temptation to cherry pick results to prove the hypothesis. In fact, scientists are careful in drawing conclusions to properly attribute them to the causal reasons for the outcome. Social media experts, in my opinion, don’t always do this.

The goal of any experiment is to come to a conclusion that leads to a theory. To do so, the experiment must be a repeatable process that achieves consistent results. Again, social media pundits are quick to run to the press with a single success story and call it ‘proof’of ROI or paradigm change. Scientists would be appalled.

This brings us to failure. After ‘you must experiment’the next most popular  refrain among social media advocates is ‘you must be willing to fail’. This is often presented superficially as simply not being afraid to fail. And its true, innovation requires risk taking and penalizing failure will rarely get you to meaningful innovation.

But…

The scientific benefit of embracing failure is the importance of the data failure delivers. Failed experiments that are simply abandoned offer no benefit. If an experiment doesn’t work, one must endeavor to figure out why it didn’t work. Scientists, working toward a stated objective and testing a hypothesis against that objective, will use the data of failure to tweak the parameters of their experiment before trying it again. Any experiment that’s not worth pursuing after a failure probably isn’t worth doing in the first place. That means the objective and a hypothesis are critical preconditions that necessitate experimentation (vs. just including it as a corporate cultural policy). The necessity of the experiment then makes the data of failure valuable which is what gives meaning to ‘embracing failure’as a cultural value.

In terms of social media, this means resisting the urge to abandon something that fails initially. someone should be thinking, ‘But if we keep doing failed experiments we’ll run out of money and resources to fund them.’Precisely. Which is why the objective and hypothesis are so important. They will help sift through the many social media options to find those most worth experimenting with.

Experimentation and embracing failure are indeed necessary elements if business is to benefit from any new technology, idea or insight. But experimentation and embracing failure are not an excuse for stumbling forward recklessly with a shotgun approach to solving problems – in social media or otherwise. Simply glomming onto the technology of the week and firing off an execution against it is not experimenting in the most useful sense of the term. At best it is tinkering.

Without an objective, hypothesis and reasoned experiment to test it, the chances of success are minimal and failure, when it happens reveals no new insight to make future experimentation smarter. Conversely, the cost of failure in wasted time, energy and resources increases when using the shotgun method. Eventually, these costs outweigh the very benefits of embracing the values and policies of experimentation and willingness to fail in the first place.