I’m producing, or helping with, four GameChangers events next week as part of Social Media Week in Los Angeles:
1) A two hour GameChangers workshop, ‘The Revolution Will Be Improvised: Brand Narratives in the Networked World,’ at KCET television studios. This will be a quick introduction into the fundamentals of improvisation for business communication, and an exploration of how, to be effective, brands must be prepared to improvise their narratives in the social media space.
2) A workshop billed as ‘Communication Trifecta: Levels of Meaning in Presentations’ at the Institute for Multimedia Literacy. This will be for students at USC who are learning to use new media tools and platforms to help them ‘get their show on the road,’ as my dad used to say. We’re going to focus on how to give good presentations. (Hint: It’s not the presentation, it’s the presenter.)
3) A science communication workshop based on biomimicry–using processes found in nature to produce sustainable designs and business strategies–at the Viterbi School of Engineering at USC. The workshop continues a program begun by the actor Alan Alda and science journalist K.C. Cole to help scientists improve their communication skills. Cole, who was mentored by (and has written a book about) Frank Oppenheimer, creator of the Exploratorium in San Francisco, will be co-facilitating with me. Alda will be viewing segments of the workshop via teleconference from Stony Brook U. in New York.
4) A program on fan culture hosted by the Cimarron Group that will be moderated by the legendary Henry Jenkins of M.I.T. and USC, who’s like a Professor of Fanthropology. The program will look at the ways that fan culture affects the marketing of motion pictures.
Only the GameChangers workshop at KCET is open to the public. If you’re in Los Angeles next week, please plan to attend. The biomimicry workshop will be streamed live online (follow @socialmediaweek on Twitter for the video link.) You’ll also want to check out the full schedule of events for Social Media Week. There’s something in it for everyone. And a lot of it will be streamed live. You can track it via @socialmediaweek on Twitter, and on the Facebook page and lots of other channels, too. The new networks have thousands of channels, dontcha know.
Ultimately, all human discourse is social media. The fact that we have new platforms for doing it doesn’t guarantee we’re going to be any good at it. For organizations and individuals alike, getting good at social media means getting good at human skills like listening, finding agreement, and synthesizing different points of view into a brand new whole. That takes improvisation. And that is why GameChangers is so committed to Social Media Week. Social media platforms are the stages, and every stage needs its play.
Social Media Week in Los Angeles is being produced by Erick Brownstein and The New Agency. The event began last year as the brainchild of Toby Daniels and his company, Crowdcentric, in New York City.
I used to play a lot of golf, and the game taught me a lot. One bit of wisdom came my way one Sunday afternoon from a golfer named Jim Bishop, while he and I were playing the classic old Wilson Course at Griffith Park in Los Angeles. He told me that one reason he plays golf is that it that offers a person the chance to experience perfection. “Every now and then,” he said, “you make a perfect swing.” As any golfer who took the game seriously would, I understood exactly what Bishop was talking about.
Underneath his fright wig and his goofy screen persona, Harpo Marx was one beautiful human being. In his autobiography, Harpo Speaks, he lists his family’s rules. It’s some of the wisest advice a father ever gave his children:
A friend of ours working inside a large U.S.-based organization marvels at how much time gets wasted on what he calls Empty Arguments. Empty Arguments, he observes, result in too many unfocused meetings and conversations involving too many people, and require too much follow-up and clarification.
5. How to spin a story. Scripting, editing, re-writing, getting bottlenecked on approvals, and then spinning a narrative for your audience is a really Empty Argument. As much as I abhor her politics and her prideful ignorance, Sarah Palin gets a lot of credit as an improviser. The reason she can stay relevant and a beat ahead of the news cycles is that, unlike John McCain and most other politicians, she’s not scripting or trying to spin anything, she is relating to her environment in real time, in her own authentic way. It drives the liberal news spinners crazy. (President Obama does the same to the righties.) Nosy neighbor? Build a fence! When Palin makes notes on the palm of her hand during a speech, the Ivy League-educated (I do not include Brown grads in this) grademaking machines in the liberal media try to spin it as “Doesn’t do her homework.” Palin, however, knows intuitively that 90% of the people who see this image will have it made this move themselves. We can relate. The lesson: Living your narrative is more effective than trying to live up to a narrative you’ve scripted, then convincing others to buy into it, too (see Woods, Eldrick “Tiger”).











