How Companies Can Leverage Transparency
Question: Can companies learn to promote total transparency?
Clay Shirky: We already know right that, that the highest value way that a
company that sells a product, essentially the highest value from
social media that company can get, is to allow costumer views
directly on the site, right. It is a huge culture shift to do that, but
the difference between a site where I can go in and just look at list
of products, and the site where I can see, this one has three and half
stars and that one has four and half stars. That’s often the
difference between the research strip and a sale strip.
And don’t have a coordinated vision for this because a lot of it is
going to either fail or produce surprises that you could never
anticipated in advance. Have instead ability to both fun and then
kill things in 6 months cycles. You want to try this? Go try it.
There are more thing back off the page whether 2 lines of CSS
Code. And companies that say no, no we only have a site
redesigned about every 18 months so we can’t touch this page, fix
that first, right.
Because if you can’t make small relatively isolated, relatively
independent, and relatively granular attempts to take advantage of
what the internet is currently offering, you always lag your
competitors.
Question: How can companies mitigate negative publicity?
Clay Shirky: One of the things I say to CEOs, whether for profit or non-profit
business, is the lost of control you fear is already in the past, right.
If you are afraid of losing control of the future that just means
you’re not using Google well enough because somewhere someone
is having your nightmare conversation about your business right
this second, and there’s nothing you can do about it if your goal is
to stop that conversation from happening. What you can do about it
is you can either be so clear about what your business stands for or
so clear about the kinds of products and services you ship. But if
there some incredibly rumor out there no one will believe you,
right.
When you saw this in Obama, there’s been no, no rumor mill more
empathic than the one directed at Obama from roughly June to
November of last year. Nothing stuck because people knew what
the guy stood for them. Stuck in certain communities but nothing;
that rumor mill did not have the effect of moving the electorate
because he just, he was so incredibly clear about what he stood for.
And the other is if you can’t prevent people from talking about
your products and offering comments about what they think is both
good and bad and somebody else is generating their profit margin
on the ability to talk about your products. Why don’t you get that
margin?
And if the answer is you fear loss of control, you’re just not paying
attention.
Question: What is the future of the employee-employer relationship?
Clay Shirky The great story is Route 128 versus Silicon Valley. Route 128 was
the home of the computer industry. It was where with the
exception of IBM it was where all of the kind of innovative new
steps coming. Digital Equipment Corporation specially, the avatar
of the certain class of success in the computer industry.
But what Massachusetts does, and California does not, is
Massachusetts enforces none compete agreements which is to say I
can essentially take a computer scientist and put them to the state
that’s very much like endangered servitude because they can’t
change jobs and continue to think about computer science. So what
I meant was anybody who went to work in California could change
jobs in Silicon Valley by pulling into different driveway on
Monday morning and anybody quit in Massachusetts have to move
to California to get any other work.
So the shift from tightly controlled, tightly edge-bounded corporate
hierarchies, to what the guy working for me today could be
working for somebody else tomorrow and the woman of that
company that I want to recruit could come over here, means that
businesses have to compete on something other than contractual
lock up.
That condition that started up in computer industry has now spread
incredibly broadly. And one of the things that I learned, I was the
chief technology officer of a web shop called Site Specific in the
90s and one of the things that I learned at the time when people
could change job by getting out of the different subway stop in the
morning, was if our employees felt like while working at Site
Specific they were learning. Not just working but learning.
That meant that any moment they decided to leave their value
would be higher because they’d stayed with us another three
months, because we’re trying new things and talking with the staff
about it not just making decision in the executive suite.
And the bargain is right, if you’re good people go then you
suddenly find yourself with competitors you have trained. But over
the long haul and I mean it was such a long haul because it such a
crazy, crazy time in those days; everything was so compressed. But
our ability to retain people, the people we really want to keep on
our staff, was really high because if my value was increasing while
I’m staying with the company, that’s the bargain, I’m going to
keep doubling down.
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