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About Ian

  • I'm the principal of august communication consultants, where I assist clients with online communication strategy, campaign planning, project management and content development. I work both directly with client companies across a range of industries, and in collaboration with marketing and design agencies that have short and long term needs that align with my skills.

    My industry experience includes apparel, hospitality, technology, life sciences, consumer package goods, logistics, recreation and education. I’m happy to share relevant examples and case studies.

    Want to know more? You can read a bit of trivia about me here, or send me an email.

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Review: "Naked Conversations"

I previously mentioned that I was reading Robert Scoble's and Shel Israel's Naked Conversations: how blogs are changing the way businesses talk with customers, and would offer a review at some point. Well, "some point" took longer than I expected. Sorry.

Agency folks and corporate marketers who haven't spent much time in the blogosphere will help themselves by reading this book. It's a well-researched primer on why to blog (or not), how to blog (and not), and who's blogging (or isn't, shouldn't, or won't). There are minor inconsistencies - Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, who counter to Scoble/Israel's advice doesn't encourage anyone below him in his organization to blog, gets a pass because he's "consistently interesting." And there is flawed reasoning, like the authors' tendency to align corporate fortunes with those corporations' stances on blogging. Their sense that the "fortunes of [Apple and Google] are slipping a bit" comes off as wishful thinking; there's nothing to substantiate that the lack of blogging cultures at those companies is responsible.

Naked Conversations ultimately falls flat by not addressing some bigger issues that come with corporate blogging. And you can see those failings in the fallout from Scoble's bad week that followed announcements and subsequent news stories that Microsoft is going to be late shipping their new operating system, Vista. Suffice to say, he took plenty of heat, let loose with some intemperate posts that called for the firing/shunning of a writer and editor, and then followed up with something of a mea culpa. Some bloggers applauded him, some accused him of being a corporate shill.

There's a strain of technoutopianism in Naked Conversations that implies that if you do the right things - get off the sidelines and into the conversation - you always have a competitive advantage over those who aren't blogging. This could be so, in the most general sense, but the reality is a whole lot more nuanced and the book does little to demonstrate what to do when the conversation isn't going the way you want. There's no scorecard for the Vista conversation debacle, but I'd be hard pressed to put this whole episode in the win column for Scoble and Microsoft. It's by no means a disaster - the conversation, that is - but you'll have to make up your own mind on the Vista delays.

Beneath all this is the question of staking your personal equity on the company you represent. Scoble and Israel address it from the corporate angle: Should companies trust employees to blog? But they have less to say on the issue of how a staffer comingles her identity with that of her employer. Face it, when you blog for a company you become identified with that company, for better or worse. You ride their highs and you can try to mitigate their lows, but make no mistake, those lows reflect on you, too. We're in a transitional period where companies are testing notions of transparency, but when business and blogger are out of sync it's the blogger whose reputation takes a direct hit. That's not to say that Scoble doesn't see more reward than risk, but he and Israel could have written a far more interesting book if they had addressed the implications (beyond simply being fired) of blogging for companies that are out of step with their customers, staff, and stakeholders. So if you're a communications manager considering blogging, you're left to sort out whether you're comfortable fronting a global forum for discussion of your company.


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Biz Lit

business books

The folks at InBubbleWrap.com have been too kind. Four additions to my bookshelf, so far. If you haven't signed up, it's not too late.

At the moment, however, I'm deep in Naked Conversations. The subtitle sums it up: "how blogs are changing the way businesses talk with customers." It's worth a review, and once I'm finished I'll post one. Check back.

I'm a longtime, avid reader of business books. During a couple of phases in my professional life I sent out periodic reviews of relevant biz books to colleagues and friends. Apparently these adhoc e-zines were a hit, since I got many (generally positive) comments and some encouragement to keep doing it. My interest might seem out of place for a guy who studied Southern US literature in college, but the whole business genre has spawned some excellent reading. It's fertile ground - ideas, passion for the subject and good writing come together to create engaging books. 

There's also a load of vanity-driven dreck (I'm thinking of you, Jack Welch), but that's easy enough to avoid. What's the alternative? Here are a few I've found particularly worthwhile:

  • The Great Game of Business, Jack Stack. Forget the all-too-easily-forgettable Who Moved My Cheese? The Great Game pointedly shows that while crisis is a great motivator, it's better to change before you have no other choice. Not to mention the empowerment that results from giving employees responsibility for their futures, and a share of the rewards.
  • Leadership is an Art, Max DePree. A brief, simple, and very human look at the qualities of a leader from the founder of Herman Miller.
  • The Eng@ged Customer, Hans Peter Brondmo. It was written in 2000. It's about email. Not too relevant anymore, right? Nope. The underlying ideas are still valid.

Lightning strikes twice

I'm a winner. Again. First, InBubbleWrap.com picked my name completely at random and sent me The Ape in the Corner Office. Now, they have once again plucked my name from their vast database of winners in waiting, and gifted me a copy of Lost and Found.

If they keep this up, they're going to become my favorite site.

The irony is that I have little time to read these days. A very busy December is about to lead into an even busier January.