Archive for the ‘Books’ Category

Social Media for Good and Evil, Strong and Weak Ties, Online/Offline,and Orgs and Networks

Malcolm Gladwell’s article “Small Change: Why the revolution will not be tweeted,” brings the slacktivism social media for social good or evilstrong and weak ties, and organizations vs networks debates to a mainstream audience.  He tries to make the point:  “Social change has been happening before the creation of Twitter four years ago”  but disappoints.  Anil Dash says it is wildly anachronistic to think that the only way to effect social change is to assemble a sign-wielding mob to inhabit a public space or as he says “Take A Bath Hippie.”

The post initially caught my eye because there was a quote from Jennifer Aaker and Andy Smith, co-authors of The Dragonfly Effect (I’m giving away a copy).    I posted a link on FB page and it prompted quite a discussion from nonprofit folks.  There have also been some good critiques of the article that I’d like to highlight here:

Article Isn’t Well Researched:  There Are Good Examples Out There of  Folks Using Social Media for Activism

Nancy Scola at TechPresident, in a post called, Malcolm Gladwell Goes Searching Twitter for 60′s Activism

Rather than comparing Woolworth sit-ins to the much-hyped Twitter Revolution, finding the latter coming up wanting, and stopping there, Gladwell might have given some space in the New Yorker to dig a little deeper to find examples of folks using technology to organize in intriguing, successful ways. The examples are there, too. The Obama campaign, for one. How the Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America is using the web to bring back together their band of brothers and sisters. The aforementioned Greater Greater Washington. They may be few, but it’s still early. We’re only four years into the Twitter era, after all.

My co-author, Allison Fine and I found many great examples of successful activism using these tools as part of multi-channel campaigns in our book The Networked Nonprofit.

Gladwell’s assertion that social movements are based on tight ties and online efforts on, say, Facebook, are participatory efforts based on loose ties is simply not true. When one looks under the hood of a successful activism efforts, as Beth and I did for The Networked Nonprofit, whether part of movements or campaigns, they have a combination of initially tight ties, someone does have to drive the train, and loose ties, others have to join the effort for it to take off. In addition, all of the successful social efforts in the connected age happen both online and on land – see Moms Rising’s onesie campaign, Surfrider’s advocacy efforts, the Humane Society’s Spay Day efforts on Facebook and on land.

He also makes a false distinction between online/offline or as Allison and I have called it “online and onland” activism.  She Jillian York’s critique.

The Tools Don’t Create Strong or Weak Ties, Stories and People Do

Lina Srivastava in her post, “Welcome to the Debatem Malcolm“  points out that this isn’t the tool that creates the strong or weak ties:

The way a campaign engages empathizers, influencers and activists– whether based on what Gladwell notes as weak or strong ties– is really more a matter of strategy– issue identification, context, methodology, desired action, outcome, etc. Use and application of digital tools is a tactical concern– important, but not the endpoint. And so Gladwell creates a false distinction when he claims it is the nature of the tool that creates strong or weak ties. I would argue it’s the content and the context that determines and strengthen ties. The medium is not the message here.”

One of the things that I love about Jennifer Aaker and Andy Smith’s new book, The Dragonfly Effect is that they offer a lot fabulous frameworks for thinking through the points that Lina mentions above – the content and context strenthens ties.

Jennifer Aaker, co-author of The Dragonfly Effect, posted on the FB thread,

As Malcolm suggested lowering the bar, making it easier for people to participate, is one mechanism at hand. But there are other mechanisms at work too.  The level of motivation increases (which increases participation, independent of ability). Where does motivation come from? It is generated partly from the story, and the social network that enables that story to be told. And it is generated partly by social cues. And where are you likely to fine more personally relevant social cues than embedded in a network of your closest friends and contemporaries?  There are stories that people want to share and stories that people want to hear. Social media allows the people who have stories but no resources finally have their stories heard.

Gladwell  Got It Wrong About Strong and Weak Ties

Gladwell argues that real social change occurs when strong, rather than weak-tie networks, organize hierarchically, rather than in a de-centralized network structure.   Many of us in the weeds disagree.   This well-written post by sociologist Zeynep Tufekci spells out why Gladwell missed the point about strong and weak ties.

I will make two main points in this post. One, the key issue facing activists who wish for real social change is the mismatch between the scale of our problems (global) and the natural scale of our sociality (local). This is a profound problem and more, not less, social media is almost certainly a key element of any solution. Second, the relationship between weak and strong ties is one of complementarity and support, not one of opposition.

The first point is one is the thesis of our book, The Networked Nonprofit – in short that the social problems are so complex that single nonprofits can’t solve them along and need to work more like networks.    And certainly, I agree that social media plays an important role.

I agree with the second point about strong and weak ties complement each other – they don’t work against each other.  Here’s how it is explained:

Strong versus weak ties should not be seen as opposites but rather as supporting and complementary dynamics. One key point is that Internet bolsters strong ties directly and indirectly. Directly, because Internet allows for more frequent, trivial “ambient” communication and that is the bedrock of strong-tie formation. All those tweets about what you had for breakfast that everyone makes fun of? A lot of research shows that if you record ordinary people’s conversations with their close friends and family and you will find that this is exactly what they do – talk about the mundane rhythms of life. Current structures of suburbia, distant homes, moving for jobs, smaller families, etc. all make it harder to engage in that kind of daily interaction – and weaken our communities. The Internet is the opposite of these processes: suburbs took us away from other people and locked us into houses; the Internet opens a door from the house into potentially shared places.

Nancy Scola has a post called “Strength of Tweet Ties” where she provides some examples of how this works through her professional connections.  She learned of the Zeynep Tufekci from a tweet by Ruby Sinreich who she has only met in person a handful of times, but follows her on Twitter.   Nancy goes on to describe the relationship as neither weak or strong ties – and absent from Gladwell’s piece.  Nancy suggests that are relationships and interest are no longer defined by geography anymore, whether we’re talking about news or our political interests.

“The two interactions — infrequent passing interactions offline and our near daily reading of each other’s thoughts online — seem, to borrow and slightly twist a phrase from Tufekci, “one of complementarity and support.” We have a good deal in common, even if we live hundreds of miles apart. That’s a sort of relationship that seems neither particularly strong nor particularly weak, but one that’s absent from Gladwell’s take on the nature of modern activism.”

Alexis Madrigal in his post Gladwell on Social Media and Activism also questions the black and white description of strong/weak ties that Gladwell states.

First, a smaller quibble. Gladwell defines Twitter like this, “The platforms of social media are built around weak ties. Twitter is a way of following (or being followed by) people you may never have met.” But the thing about Twitter, at least for me, is that I *end up* meeting the people that I interact with most closely. Twitter acts as a kind of human recommendation engine in which I am the algorithm. In person, I’ve met Clay Shirky himself, Tim Maly, Robin Sloan, and at least 10 more — and I’ve edited dozens of folks that I know exclusively through the service. What Twitter lacks in corporeal contact, I think it makes up in longevity. I’ve been watching some people’s minds work on the service for years. Every day I see their faces in my feed. To label these weak ties is just inaccurate. And it makes me wonder, can’t we know people through their writing? Is face-to-face contact the only way to build strong ties?

Marc VanBree talks about it from his experience as a free agent raising money for disaster relief in Nashville.

When I conducted my #floodofsupport experiment, the results could have been construed as somewhat disappointing. But I did not send an appeal to friends and family, I purely relied on my Twitter network. That was the point. Even then, those who donated were definitely contacts with whom I had more in-depth conversations. So yes, if you build a campaign to solely rely on weak ties, it seldom leads to great involvement and thus could be construed as disappointing.

And a quick take from Aaron Lester from the Nonprofit Quarterly rounds it out.

Top Down Command and Control Organizations Are The Only Way Social Change Happens (WRONG!)

Gladwell is saying that working as networks can’t effect social social change.

The drawbacks of networks scarcely matter if the network isn’t interested in systemic change—if it just wants to frighten or humiliate or make a splash—or if it doesn’t need to think strategically. But if you’re taking on a powerful and organized establishment you have to be a hierarchy. 

Again, this isn’t a black and white – organizations versus networks.   I am reminded of the PDF 2009 keynote from Mark Pesce about the Tower VS Cloud.   He talks about the strengths and costs of the hierarchy (organizational structures) and the cloud – and that the two forms are not compatible.  But nonprofits need to focus on the interfaces that connect the hierarchy to the cloud.   (Allison and I wrote a whole chapter on this in our book, the Networked Nonprofit,  called Social Culture)

In the 21st century we now have two oppositional methods of organization: the hierarchy and the cloud. Each of them carry with them their own costs and their own strengths. Neither has yet proven to be wholly better than the other. One could make an argument that both have their own roles into the future, and that we’ll be spending a lot of time learning which works best in a given situation. What we have already learned is that these organizational types are mostly incompatible: unless very specific steps are taken, the cloud overpowers the hierarchy, or the hierarchy dissipates the cloud. We need to think about the interfaces that can connect one to the other. That’s the area that all organizations – and very specifically, non-profit organizations – will be working through in the coming years. Learning how to harness the power of the cloud will mark the difference between a modest success and overwhelming one. Yet working with the cloud will present organizational challenges of an unprecedented order. There is no way that any hierarchy can work with a cloud without becoming fundamentally changed by the experience. 

The last section of his essay talks about the cloud, tower, and storm, elegantly pushing the metaphors.

All organizations are now confronted with two utterly divergent methodologies for organizing their activities: the tower and the cloud. The tower seeks to organize everything in hierarchies, control information flows, and keep the power heading from bottom to top. The cloud isn’t formally organized, pools its information resources, and has no center of power. Despite all of its obvious weaknesses, the cloud can still transform itself into a formidable power, capable of overwhelming the tower. To push the metaphor a little further, the cloud can become a storm.

Gladwell’s essay casts argument into black and white and ignores the shades of gray.  At best, it was intentional to spark debate.  At worse, it wasn’t a well researched piece.

You can go ask him yourself at 3 PM EST Today during a Chat hosted by the New Yorker.

The Dragonfly Effect: Win A Copy, Leave A Comment, Swab Your Cheek

On Sunday,  I attended the book launch for the Dragonfly Effect, a book about quick, powerful ways to use social media for social change by Jennifer Aaker and Andy Smith.     This book party was different, not because it had kids activities or the fun photo booth (see above), but because it also had a table  from Be The Match to encourage people to sign up for the bone marrow registry.   Let me explain how all these ideas tie together …

Me and Jennifer Aaker

I met Jennifer Aaker about a year ago when she invited me to do a guest lecture in her class, The Power of Social Technology Class, a graduate course, at Stanford Business School. I was honored to be included in the line up of  the invited guests, but also to be exposed to many of the concepts and case studies that are in her new book, The Dragonfly Effect.   All of which deeply resonated with my own thinking, writing, and doing about small actions for social change.

It was my birthday and the culmination of a campaign to raise money for Cambodian children that I used an action learning project for the students.    We actually eat chocolate in class as part of the exercise!

This class focused the question “How to leverage the power of new social technology to effectively create real social good.”   The theoretical framework that became the book is, “Dragonfly Effect: Mindset and Method” was  geared towards helping students create a project with a clear single, focused goal to cultivate social good.  It also helped students learn the process of a rapid prototype experiment that has viral effects, can be measured, and improved with reflection.

Why A Bone Marrow Registry Recruitment At A Book Launch?

In the book, the authors tell the story of Sameer Bhatia, a young Silicon Valley entrepreneur who diagnosed with leukemia.  Bhatia needed a bone-marrow transplant, but he could not find a match within his family or social circle. The odds were improved with a donor of his ethnicity, but there were not many South Asians in the national bone-marrow database.  So Bhatia’s business partner, Robert Chatwani,  used social media tools to implement a Help Sameer campaign.  Eventually, nearly twenty-five thousand new people were registered in the bone-marrow database, and Bhatia found a match.

The book describes their strategy which underpins the framework for the Dragonfly Effect:

  • Stay focused: develop a single goal
  • Tell your story
  • Act, then think
  • Design for collaboration
  • Employ empowerment marketing
  • Measure one metric
  • Try, fail, try again, succeed
  • Don’t ask for help require it.

The book describes the simple first step taken by Robert Chatwani, writing an email that focused the challenge, and ended with a clear call to action that was sent to their circle of close friends.  The message was magnified with social media, but more importantly joining hands with another money marrow registry campaign for a South Asian man, Vinay Chakravarthy, also recently diagnosed with the disease.

The call to action was simple.  You get a cheek swab and—in the  event that your bone marrow is a good match for someone in need—spend a few hours at the hospital.  Donating bone marrow isn’t as easy as giving blood, but it doesn’t involve a substantial financial or personal risk.  It doesn’t require that you change people’s behavior and social practices.  It is an act of kindness that can only bring praise.

So, it was no surprise that this book launch also included a bone marrow registry campaign.    Jennifer Aaker and Andy Smith also announced their plans to go to India to help establish a bone marrow registry there in December.  I filled an application for the registry and got my cheek swabbed – it took ten minutes and I hope you’ll consider it too.

There’s been some interesting buzz generated by the book.

There’s a piece in the New Yorker by Malcolm Gladwell that includes a nice mention for the book and quotes from the author, although it started a debate about the offline-online connection.  Here’s some critiques of the piece (not the book) from Jillian C. York and Zeynep Tufkeci (hat tip Jon Garfunkel)

To close the loop,  I was given a copy of the book at the party, but also received a second copy of the publisher.  So, I’m giving it away.   If you want to win this copy, leave a comment that answers any of the following:

The Dragonfly Model is:  Focus, Grab Attention, Take Action, and Engage.   What campaigns have you seen that use this model?

Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in a Connected Age

Unlike fellow nonprofit book nerd, Rosetta Thurman,  I am way behind on my nonprofit book summer reading list.    My blog is the July 15th stop on Clay Shirky’s virtual book tour for his recently published book, Cognitive Surplus: Creativity and Generosity in A Connected Age.  I received a review copy of the book and was invited to write a post about it.

We were lucky enough to have Clay read a copy of manuscript last November and he was one of our book blurbers.  Here’s what he said about the Networked Nonprofit:

“The Internet means never having to ask permission before trying something new.  In the Networked Nonprofit, Kanter and Fine show nonprofits how to harness this flexibility to pursue their mission in partnership with two billion connected citizens.”

Clay’s book talks about the implications of a society shifting from passive consumption of media to creators of media or being participatory.   As Clay Shirky says, “A society where everyone has some kind of access to the public sphere is a different kind of society that one where citizens approach media as mere consumers.” This shift has come because we’re watching less television, but participating more in online collective actions – from the silly – sharing photos of cute cats to the making the world a better place.

To my joy, he uses the example of how Ushahidi got started as one of the latter.   (Disclaimer:  I’m a proud board member of Ushahidi):

“A handful of people, working with cheap tools and little time or money to spare, managed to carve out enough collective goodwill from the community to create a resource that no one could have imagined even five years ago.  Like all good stories, they story of Ushahidi holds several different lessons:  People want to do somethiung to make the world a better place.  They will help when they are invited to.  Access to cheap,flexible tools removes many of the barriers to trying new things.  You don’t need fancy computers to harness cognitive surplus; simple phones are enough.  But one of the most important lessons is this: once you’ve figured out how to tap the surplus in a way that people care about, others can replicate your technique, over and over, around the world.”

The book give us the 50,000 mile high view.  It  forecasts the changes we will enjoy as social media tools allows people to put their talents and goodwill to use for society.   Each chapter is takes us through a look at the future by examining the past. It’s filled with wonderful stories from for-profit, technology sector, and politics.  There are some great quotes.

Shirky acknowledges as he gets a little closer to the ground with some principles “Looking for the Mouse”  that we can’t count on new kinds of socially beneficial activities just happening.   “Creating a participatory culture with wider benefits for society is harder than sharing amusing photos.  How much of that social change are we going to grasp?” (That is a question that the Networked Nonprofit asks.)

Shirky suggests that the most profound use of social media will come from groups trying new things.   He talks about about the importance of experiments and the listen, learn, and adapt skills required.  This idea of experimentation really resonates.

“Creating the most value from a tool involves not master plans or great leaps forward but constant trial and error.  The key question for any society undergoing such a shift is how to get the most of that process.”

“What matters is not the new capabilities we have, but how we turn those into opportunities.  The question is what we’ll do with those opportunities. “

“With social software, there are no foolproof recipes for success.  And yet we’ve learned somethings about human interaction in the last few decades.  The trick for creating new social media is to use those lessons to eight the odds in your favor, rather than as a set of instructions that guarantees success.”

“Start small.  Projects will only work if they grow large generally won’t grow large; people who fixated on creating large-scale future success can actually reduce the possibility of creating the small scale here and now successes needed to get there.”

“A veritable natural law in social media is that to get to a system that is large and good, it is far better to start with a system that is small and good and work on making it bigger than to start with a system that is large and mediocre and work on making it better.”

“No one gets it right the first time.  If successful uses of cognitive surplus required designers to get it right the first time, you’d be able to count the successes on the fingers of one hand.  Instead, it is imperative to learn from failure, adapt, and learn again.”

“The faster you learn, the sooner you’ll be able to adapt.  The possibilities for continual learning with social media are dramatic. “

“It is more important to try something new, and work on the problems as they arise, than to figure out a way to do something new without having any problems.”


After I read my review copy, I like to give it away. So, if you’ve read this far, leave a comment answering this question:

How can your nonprofit create a way of working that allows it to learn rapidly and adapt? Or, if that is the way you already work, tell me how.

I’ll pick a winner and send you my copy of Clay’s book (with my notes in the margin), along with The Networked Nonprofit.

Knitting Together Your Website, Email, and Social Media Content

Guest Post by Kivi Leroux Miller

Kivi Leroux Miller has just launched a book, Nonprofit Marketing Guide: High-Impact, Low-Cost Ways to Build Support for Your Good Cause.  To help her celebrate,  I invited to write a post with some steps and tips for integrating web content, email, and social media.

You put up a website way back when, then started sending out an email newsletter. Now you’ve added social media. If you feel like your online marketing strategy is made up of a bunch of loose ends, you aren’t alone.

Here are three steps to knit those strings together into an integrated online strategy both you and your supporters will love.

Step 1: Connect Everything

Give yourself some link love! Make sure that you have social media icons connecting to your various profiles in your website template. You can find hundreds of free icon sets online – with styling to match any website — by searching for “free social media icon set.” Add the icons to your email newsletter templates and social media links to your email signatures. Add “share” buttons to your website pages and email newsletters too.

On your social media profiles, include links back to your home page and your newsletter archive and subscribe pages. Where you can, embed your email signup form into your social media profiles.
Ensure that some basic branding (e.g. logos, colors, taglines) are consistent throughout. You shouldn’t try to make your Facebook page or email newsletter look just like your website, but they should match enough that we can tell they represent the same organization.

This may seem like a very basic step, but the reality is that few nonprofits have effectively connected all the pieces of their online presence. Your supporters should be able to effortlessly travel between your website, blog, email newsletter, and social media profiles without having to hunt down those connections. And what they see as they travel from place to place should be consistent.

Step 2: Share Across Channels

With everything connected, now you can start thinking about ways to strengthen the bonds between your online channels, which encourages your supporters to move between them and to connect with you in multiple ways.

The more channels you can use to reach a supporter, the more likely they are to see your updates, to engage in conversation, and to build a positive image of and rapport with your organization.
As you develop your editorial calendar and think about what to say and where to say it, keep in the mind the strengths and weaknesses of various channels. You want to share the same basic message across all channels, but you’ll often vary the specific call to actions.
For example, if you are working on a fundraising campaign, email is a better bet than social media for the direct ask for the donation, with highly visible links back to a campaign landing page and donation form on your website.

But what if you want supporters to connect with others who are also giving to the same campaign? That’s where social media can be highly effective. For example, on your thank-you pages and follow-up emails, you could encourage your supporters to share a story about why they are giving to your cause on your Facebook wall. Both calls to action – donate in email and share in social media – support the overall campaign by capitalizing on the strengths of the two different channels.

Step 3: Reinforce What Works

Track how supporters are engaging with you through various channels online. What are they doing and where are they doing it? What paths are the taking as they move between your website, blog, email, and social media profiles? What types of content seem to work best in your email newsletter versus your blog or Twitter?

Also think about ways you can reuse content across channels. Listen to the conversations and bring what you learn back into new content. Can you post a question on Facebook or Twitter and use the conversation there to guide the creation of a blog post?

You shouldn’t silo your offline marketing from your online marketing, and you shouldn’t silo your website, email, and social media marketing either. Knit those loose ends together and you’ll weave a stronger community of supporters around your good cause.

What are some examples of how you’ve knitted together your web, email, offline, and social content?

What are your best short cut tips for being efficient with content integration?