Earlier in the year, I was invited to share my thoughts and observations on the state of and vision for socialized media and the networks that connect us. Shot in a mobile studio outside of the Austin Convention Center during SXSW09, I joined Gary Bolles to discuss the theory that ideas are the “ties that bind” us in social networking – over relationships.
In the era of Web 1.0 and instant messaging, we assumed, in many cases, alter-egos rather than embracing full transparency. After all, interpretation was pervasive. We added only those contacts whom we knew, both professional and personal. Now however, we find ourselves following those we know and those we wish to know. We are forming contextual networks based on shared themes, interests, passions, beliefs, and ideologies and it is transforming how we interact and establish relations and relationships online. We now willfully share ourselves with those online and in return, we’re encouraged by reactions and empowered through every new connection we earn.
Watch the series at The Nokia Ideas Project, or view each installment below…
Video 1: Ideas Connect Us More than Relationships
Video 2: We’re Becoming Information Curators
Video 3: Charting a Personal Social Map
Video 4: It’s not the Technology but the Sociology that’s Changing
Other notable interviews include:
Connect with Brian Solis on Twitter, LinkedIn, Tumblr, Plaxo, or Facebook
—
Get the new iPhone app
Read BrianSolis.com on your Kindle
—
Click the image below to buy the book/poster:
pr pr+2.0 pr2.0 public+relations marketing advertising interactive social+media socialmedia brian+solis social media media2.0 media+2.0 2.0 smo social+media+optimization marcom communication publicity advertising expert interactive spin brand branding guru social+architect
Sweet interviews, Brian. Video 2 was my favorite; the idea that we can now show exactly who we are with people using social media to establish truer connections through ideas is astounding. With better filtering in the future, those connections will become easier to make.
Brett, thank you…I absolutely agree. Take a look at My6Sense.com (it's a promising glimpse at the filtering technology that will help us.)
How relevant is a tool like twitter friends? You mentioned it and I looked at it. It lists people I haven't talked to in MONTHS as people I respond to. I have daily conversations with a ton of other people, and yet it keyed in on those from months ago. That implies irrelevance to me.
The sociology of things…interesting phrase. Interesting to me because as I've paid attention to relationships around me, I've noticed, obviously, you. How does it change who you interact with? Do you have a whole new set of relationships based on people you see around the web that you find interesting? Or are your 'friends', those you communicate with on a regular basis, only those you discover based on the influencers on your radar?
I'd like to talk to you about this. I'll send email. 🙂
Hi Sheryl, give a look at mailana.com as well…also klout.com. I find my relationships expanding, contracting and shifting over time based on themes, interest and relevant content. Looking forward to your email.
Hmm..so true.. that's why business or political or other visionaries are successful. Visions (ideas) attract people and make them follow/like someone! Awesome insight.. gonna look deeper in this!
Excellent Adrijus!
they go the same way, if some one lost way, he will leave them, alway so
lamb music
Brian, I appreciate the responsibility and control implied by the notion of a content curator. Your remarks are profound for helping shift the approach to social media away from a “popularity contest” towards a meaningful exchange of ideas. That shift is especially useful to people and companies who aspire to be thought leaders.
I blog about thought leadership marketing, and wrote a post with more commentary: http://bit.ly/5Mn1G9
Hi Paul, appreciate you stopping by to share your thoughts. Thank you very much. Happy New Year!
Brian, these are words of wisdom everyone should reflect on and as needed used to re-evaluate their own social purpose. You're thoughts should resonate widely. Thanks for sharing.