Five Stages of Twitter Relevance
I'm already fielding internal (as well as
external
) questions about the application of Twitter in a manufacturing company,
and I'm developing a reasonably good model, I think - one that will
apply to the hard-core, salt-of-the-earth, manufacturing business leader
that I've worked with at many organizations. This "maturity model"
approach has been used before; back in December of 2008,
Bhagarva
sketched out the
Five Stages of Twitter Acceptance
- but that model only helps existing bloggers and social networkers
understand this terse little idea
spitter
. Kind of like explaining OOP to a COBOL developer -
I get the general idea of coding
(communicating),
but you've changed some of the basic rules like procedural vs.
event handling
(short and immediate vs. in depth and permanent). This doesn't help
explain YACMTTCDFE (Yet Another Communication Method That They Can't
Distinguish From Email) for those still struggling with Web 2.0 and
Social Networks. If it doesn't arrive in their Outlook inbox, I'm still
facing an uphill struggle getting them to understand the mechanism, let
alone the concept. However, I'm getting a decent level of results when I
draw parallels to concepts that these folks "grew up" with. The level of
understanding and acceptance directly correlates to the level of
relevance
that the Twitterverse might have for their current information sharing
needs. They typically ask ...
How exactly do I understand Twitter and it's relevance to my work
day?
- Pointless: This has absolutely no value add, a complete
waste of time - get back to work!
- Cute: An interesting and different communication
medium, but I gotta get back to work. Maybe over lunch ...
- Web-Based Texting: Conversations about nothing in
particular, but at least you're starting to connect. Not sure how it is
better than IM, but some don't even use that ...
- A Cocktail Party (or maybe the corner bar): Twitter is
filled with cliques that are easy to eavesdrop / butt in on - a chance
to develop your skills and awareness, and engage larger, targeted
networks with pointed conversations about specific topics that I deal
with every day. But no pressure, we're just hanging out ..
- A Community: Like a trade group, guild, or local
Chamber of Commerce, one that requires and rewards participation. At
this highest level, Twitter is both a source and a use of awareness,
knowledge and understanding; conversations are multi-directional, real
business value is being generated.
I can illustrate these levels with examples from my favorite Twitter
Search columns in my
Tweetdeck
(
Search:SAP
)
- Do I really care if the sap
is running this spring?
- Funny, I get hits when people watch sap-py movies. Oh, those wacky homonyms ...
- Twitter as a job board - every SAP job listing pops
up. Wait, did I just see a trend tweet by?
- Hmm, lots of interesting SAP practioners are talking about
live projects and cutting edge programming work ...
- Interesting conversations pop up when Oracle buys Sun, or SAP
announces the latest product enhancements - I can get a near-real time
pulse on market sentiment
I've piqued their interest, but now they want to know what "real
business value" really means. I'll post on that next time ... stay
tuned!