How I Became Influential About Klout (But Not Soup)
In the introduction of "You Are Not a Gadget," Jaron Lanier recounts a story where he spoke at a conference and encouraged everyone not to tweet or blog during his talk: "If something I said was memorable enough to be worthy of a tweet or blog post later on -- even if it was to register violent disagreement -- then that meant what I said would have had the time to be weighed, judged, and filtered by someone's brain. Instead of just being a passive relay for me, I went on, what was tweeted, blogged, or posted on a Facebook wall would then be you."
The people I follow on Twitter -- mostly those in digital media or technology -- use it primarily for professional self-marketing. Occasionally these tweets contain insightful comments or interesting opinions about a news item. Sometimes they act as teasers for longer form content written by the person tweeting. Most of these tweets are just links to someone else's news story or blog post with a few meaningless extra words appended. I'm sometimes guilty of this behavior, even though I have always been of the opinion that it's not a worthwhile activity. Occasionally I'm inspired to share something I feel strongly about, but usually I'm just falling victim to the standard groupthink that you have to be active on social media to represent yourself professionally. I'm not against professional self-marketing, I just don't believe that simply being a passive relay of information will improve your online reputation.
One former co-worker of mine has a Twitter feed that is a non-stop barrage of re-posts from Techcrunch, Mashable, SAI, etc... This person developed a reputation for zoning out in meetings and turning his attention to his iPhone or iPad where he read and reposted news stories. It was clear to all of his co-workers from the timestamp on his tweets that he was doing this during meetings and all throughout the workday. In his efforts to establish an online reputation within his industry, he seriously damaged his reputation at his own company. If he took one of those stories and gave it some time and critical thought, I have no doubt that he could have produced an excellent post about it. Ironically, he also could have spent hours of time during the workday doing this and no one would be the wiser.
Lanier's line about being a "passive relay" is a very concise way of representing a type of online social behavior that I always thought lacked real value. I'm very curious to see if this opinion is codified in the algorithms that measure online social influence. I recently signed up for Klout and PeerIndex, two products that measure online social influence and issue a score to their users. The true purpose behind these companies will become clear when each amasses a giant store of data that every brand marketer will pay out the nose to get their hands on. Both Klout and PeerIndex have been clear that the number of people you broadcast to is not relevant to your score, and that they have ways of measuring your true reach and influence. They don't reveal more details about this, but there is no doubt that they are betting their future business model on a deep and powerful algorithm that will yield valuable data.
As I spend more time looking at these products it will be interesting to see if the people who act as a passive relay are rewarded for their behavior, or if these algorithms will view this behavior as I do. If it's the former, I think we can all expect a lot more useless clutter in our feeds since adding game mechanics to a relatively mindless activity will only encourage more of that activity. It would be impressive if Klout and PeerIndex rewarded those who took the time and effort to weigh, judge, and filter a news story and produced something that was truly them.