Social Media and the Brain: A Business Anthropologist’s View
August 1st, 2009
A number of innovations have changed the face of commerce in my lifetime. Credit cards greatly enabled commercial exchanges. Email and FedEx both sped up communication and reduced cost. The internet both transformed information transfer, and introduced people around the world who would not have otherwise found each other. In each case, exchanges – the fundamental unit of commerce – became easier. Barriers were lowered and trade flourished.
One of the aspects of social media that I find most fascinating is the proliferation of free – non-monetized, and non-negotiated – exchanges. There’s an ethos around that practice, to which participants are finely-tuned. It’s OK to make commercial offers, and to be compensated for touting others’ products, as long as a) you’re up-front about it, b) it’s deemed appropriate to the specific site and subject , and c) that’s not the only kind of stuff you talk about. In the recent surge of activity around the Iran election on Twitter, for example, those few who sought to reach participants with anything commercial were immediately and soundly slapped.
There is plenty of commercial activity on social media. Even so, many corporate marketers are not so happy with its power – the loss of control is counter-cultural for them - while small businesses are faster to use it to advantage . The explosive growth of Twitter confounded the pundits and sparked controversy for months. Much of that chatter quieted when the State Department asked Twitter to postpone scheduled maintenance soon after the Iranian election.
I’m struck by the way social media simulate community. The earmarks of community are 1) Shared concerns and 2) Free exchanges addressing those concerns, in addition to monetized or quantified trading. In the 17 years I had my office in Napa, CA, the river flooded half a dozen times. People of all ages jumped in to assist – with whatever equipment and know-how at their command – with no thought of quantifying the exchanges. And they loved it; stories abounded for years. The mood of the entire country shifted when a now-famous commercial airline pilot landed in the Hudson in January of this year, and locals leaped into every available craft to get people out of the water. This month, untold numbers of people from all over the world changed their Twitter profiles to confuse Iranian secret police, and offered proxy sites as internet communication inside the country was disabled.
I suspect that our forebears lived by means of free exchanging – in ordinary life as well as in crises – starting with the earliest communities – perhaps as long as 350,000 generations ago. Human groups are characterized by coordination and cooperation. When did those exchanges become widely monetized? After the Industrial Revolution, perhaps 12 generations ago. So for 349,988 generations human communities thrived by virtue of exchanging [mostly] without quantification.
I’m not speaking here of Free as a ‘new radical price’, like the book of that title, though I agree that trend is important. I’m speaking of exchanging freely, with abandon, the way children learn in play. Sparking curiosity and enabling Neuroplasticity: the power of our brains to move with the new, in the moment – perhaps the most important skill of this century.
From Fast Company, “Enterprise MicroLearning”,
No comments:
Post a Comment