Steve Rubel's blog A Devaluation of "Friends" May Be Driving Trust in Thought Leaders
says “someone like me” and regular employees are losing authority to experts.
“Trust in credentialed experts (70%) and company technical specialists (64%) is soaring”
I think that is certainly true and a maybe pinhole look at what is going on. Allow me to extend.
Readers want credibility and authority.
Authorities are constantly being discredited under the glare of always on social media. Journalists deride bloggers and then use them as uncredited (discredited?) sources of stories and research.
Talking heads or newsreaders used to matter. Now I want to find someone who is passionate about one area, who goes deep into it...over time...and provides a frame of reference I can rely on.
Years ago I read Malcolm Gladwell's The Tipping Point and learned about Dunbar's Number, that our mind is set for a village of about 150 acquaintances with maybe 30 close relationships. At the time I was struggling with the uselessness of morning television news. I wanted the weather and they were focusing on people getting shot, because that was what they knew how to report in an exciting manner.
So I took a lesson from Dunbar and built my own news organization using Google Reader. My information sources are posted in the right hand column on my blogs, and I add and delete sources to get better information within the time I want to spend learning, less than an hour a day.
My favorite sources of education are John Battelle, Gina Trapani, Dana Blankenhorn, Phil Baker, and Will Boehlke.
John Battelle wrote the first book I read about Google. He wanted to join the social media industry but wasn't technical, so he started a new type of social media derived company, Federated Media. He explains companies and strategies as a veteran company builder and a strategist.
Gina Trapani started Lifehacker, and “makes stuff on the internet.”. She has written books about new technology and every post is about how to do something. She is credible because she knows how to do things and shares that knowledge so I can use it.
When I was building an open source company, I had an awful lot to learn. Dana Blankenhorn was my most valuable open source blogger, my instructor. He was feeding me what I needed to know for a year before I ever commented on a post. He writes that alternative energy is now where computing was in the late '60's, and he is teaching me about the players, the companies and the technologies in play right now.
30 years ago, Phil Baker was a contract inventor and I was a sales turnaround guy. I was sent in by his venture providers after they were told Phil had invented the wrong box. Turned out he had invented the right box, they were selling the wrong the box, and after we figured out how to sell the box Phil had created, all was happiness and goodness.
Best thing he showed me was that inventing was carefully gathering requirements and then building to specification.
Best thing I taught him was sales works the same way. Just before he invented the Apple Newton, he invented an early PDA. After they had made a couple thousand units, they discovered a fatal flaw. Phil thought about that, figured out which international company would use the flaw as a benefit, and sold the whole lot.
Phil's blog, From Concept to Consumer is an abundant source of user information, and he had just been asked to do a guest blogger spot for The Atlantic. Go Phil! Good guys win!
My wife says I wear, “white shirt, blue suit, red tie.” Actually there is a lot more to it than that and Will Boehlke's A Suitable Wardrobe is a daily dose of new ideas about dress and blogging. He posts daily, is a headfirst Blogger user and new technology aficionado, and he has attracted a stable of exceptional commenters.
Readers like me want information they can use to make their lives better. There has never been a time when it has been so easy to become a trusted source. We may not be Oprah, but in a short period we can develop a voice and attract an audience.
Care to share what you have learned?
This blog reminds me of a finance class I took at the University of Texas. The prof explained to us how to read the Wall Street Journal, as it was then layed out in a pattern with the news article on the left, who's and what's news next to it and the human interest article on the far right. My shock in getting the WSJ at my hotel the other week. They changed...dang.
ReplyDeleteWhat I am trying to say is that we expect our information in a certain format that is predictable and consumable. Look at the old magazines like Time, Life, Newsweek, etc. All are slowly disappearing. Whether you know it or not they were all layed out in a specific format that we became familiar with either consciencely or subsconsciencely. To make a point, evey guy and most women know the centerfold is in the middle of a Playboy magazine. Now I have your attention.
Format predictability makes information easier to obtain and absorb. Maybe I am going out on a tangent here, but this point is important in collecting and interpreting information just like Google Reader set-up leads you to what you are looking for.
Good point, Randy!
ReplyDeleteCome to think of it, I always expand the browser window to full size when I come to XKCD, the comic blog!