Foreword.
Acknowledgments.
About this Book.
Introduction: It's a People-Driven Economy, Stupid!
Chapter One Word of Mouth Goes World of Mouth.
Why is there a need for social media? Why has it become the most popular activity on the Web in a span shorter than three years? Despite fragmentation caused by the Web, people still desire an understanding of what the majority of other people are doing. Social media is that mechanism. In the future, we will no longer look for the news; rather, the news will find us, or we will create it. That future is now.
Chapter Two Social Media = Preventative Behavior.
What Happens in Vegas Stays on YouTube.
Two distinct forms of behavior have emerged in the social media age. The first one is preventative; for example, you may hide alcoholic drinks during photos, or you may avoid that "harmless" photo with the two attractive lifeguards on your next business trip.
Similar constructs apply to corporations. Companies are thinking hard about actions that could cause a negative reaction within the blogosphere or social graph. While preventative behavior is somewhat of a drag compared to the socially unaccountable freedom our parents enjoyed in the 1960s, it's a good thing on the whole. It's making us adhere to the old adage "live your life as if your mother is watching."
Chapter Three Social Media = Braggadocian Behavior.
"It's All about Me, Me, Me."
The second, more exciting change is braggadocian behavior. As people continue to Tweet and update their status on social networks, it soon becomes a competition of who's doing the coolest thing. What once took place only occasionally around the watercooler is now happening in real time. As a society, this is a good thing. It allows people to take stock of their collective lives and what they're doing throughout the day, rather than letting years go by and looking back on a wasted youth, saying "what did I do with my life?" Is it any wonder that the television viewing audience is shrinking by the minute? People are actually living their own lives rather than watching others. As a company, it's imperative that you produce products and services so that people not only want to be associated with your brand, but also take ownership of it.
Chapter Four Obama's Success Driven by Social Media.
For an indication of how powerful social media is, we need look no further than Barack Obama's meteoric rise to power.
Chapter Five I Care More about What My Neighbor Thinks than What Google Thinks.
Social Commerce: Billions of dollars will be made in and around social media; a majority derived from search queries around products and services. Consumers will have the ability to see what their friends and colleagues found relevant, researched, purchased, and commented on. We've always valued Word of Mouth; social media puts it on digital steroids by allowing you to search for it. Social media eliminates multiple individual redundancies in society. This is a tremendous benefit in saving people's time, energy, and frustration. It is mission critical for companies to understand that the impact of social media shifts traditional business practices across marketing, recruiting, manufacturing, etc. Products and services will find us in the near future.
Chapter Six Death of Social Schizophrenia.
People play various roles in their lives and take on different personalities depending on where they are or with whom they are interacting. People have their work personas that are much different from their nightlife personas, which in turn are different from their family personas, and so on. The same holds true for corporations; on one hand, a company donates millions to save-the-planet-type funds, but on the other hand, they dump millions of gallons of toxic waste into the clean water supply. The transparency and speed of information flow caused by social media