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Archive for the ‘Sustainability’ Category

Examining ‘United Breaks Guitars’ – Lessons Learned the Hard Way

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

by David Armistead

[Note – The ‘old economy’ is the world economy, now shrinking and transforming, that produced the global consumer society.  The ‘new economy’ is the world economy emerging now that is producing a global sustainable society. The old economy created wealth by resource consumption, leading to resource overuse and depletion. The new economy produces wealth by resource amplification – doing more with less by continually substituting knowledge for energy, material, labor, finance and time. This new strategy is leading to wealth creation that lives always lighter on the Earth.]

Continuing our ride on the Clue Train down the rail to the global sustainable society…

Last week major media finally broke a story, following lively blogspace coverage, about Dave Carroll’s fun youtube song release, “United Breaks Guitars.” (Song: http://bit.ly/z2GU5; full story: http://bit.ly/mch2A)

The short version of the story is that Dave Carroll, another one of those great Canadian singer songwriters (in Austin, we love singer songwriters) wrote and produced a YouTube music video for $150 that told the tale of how United Airlines broke his guitar in luggage handling as he flew out of Chicago to a gig, and how a 9 month saga ensued in which he sought compensation, ending with United just saying ‘no.’ At the end, Dave told the United rep handling his claim that he intended to make a music video telling the whole sad tale if they refused to take responsibility for the damage. They declined. He made the video. And he posted it to youtube.

As of this morning (07/21/09, 5:40am) the video has been viewed 3.5 million times in about ten weeks.

Unsurprisingly, various follow up news stories indicate United has had a major change in attitude around all this since the YouTube video went ballistic. And the incident has apparently also resulted in a lot of well-deserved attention for Dave and his music (which I like). There have apparently been offers by equipment makers to give Dave new stuff, and offers by other air carriers to give him free rides, etc.

BUT HERE IS THE BIG POINT –

After 9 months of engaging United’s ‘customer service’ process with no result, for a cost of $150 Dave Carroll, a lone voice, self-published to the open web a message that immediately cut completely through all of United’s many layered, inaccessible, murky, confusing, difficult, complex, well funded, ‘customer service’ process – and established direct connection for Dave to the tip top layer of real control over the whole airline, with United’s top executives and board tracking the relationship minute by minute. Dave got, and has retained, very senior, very top level attention at United – for $150.

Consider Dave Carroll’s own words on this point: “…it occurred to me that I had been fighting a losing battle all this time and that fighting over this at all was a waste of time. The system is designed to frustrate customers into giving up their claims, and United is very good at it. However I realized that as a songwriter I wasn’t without options. In my final reply… I told her that I would be writing three songs about United Airlines and my experience in the whole matter. I would then make videos for these songs and share them on YouTube…. My goal: to get one million hits in one year.” (http://bit.ly/mch2A)

In the old economy, which is opaque and favors finance capital over everything else, it paid to push the costs for damaging passengers’ luggage back onto the customer. This is a profit-enhancing strategy called ‘cost externalization.’ It’s an old economy strategy that only works in a world of top-down hierarchical relationships.  In the new network world, where everyone has equal access at almost no cost to the ears of everyone interested to listen, the ‘cost externalization’ strategy is gradually falling apart. And in this case it failed badly.

Perhaps because he is a communicator and artist, Dave Carroll understood what the United senior executives did not.  Transparency can be forced onto any organization now for almost nothing. And there was nothing United could do to hold the consequences of Dave Carroll’s music videos back.

United failed to keep pace with reality, and continued playing the old economy strategy of cost externalization wrapped in opacity and layers of hierarchy, even though the value of that approach has now turned into a nest of liabilities. Consequently, in a moment when airline revenues have declined 20%+ each month for the last six months, United executives, by failing to adapt to the changing reality, have cost their firm massive amounts of critical social capital, in the consumer market and the equity market, at exactly at the wrong competitive moment for such a mistake. So for the United the change is not coming.

Executives – listen up.  In a world in which 3.5 million views can be gained through YouTube by anyone in a few days at a cost of $150 – you must embrace some serious change.  Adapt now. Don’t be United. The lesson does not have to come the hard way.

In case the point is not getting across, let me remind you of the Virgin Air social media disaster that happened earlier this year. It could have been anybody. It happened to be the most social media hip of all airlines, but they still tried to play by the old economy rules. Virgin had established an external blog for air passenger, i.e. customer, comments. Eighteen Virgin employees, stymied by an old economy-style internal run around processes to ‘handle’ employee complaints and suggestions, jumped out to the open and public passenger blog site and posted comments about Virgin’s engine maintenance and rat infestations on planes. Virgin responded, in old economy fashion, by firing all eighteen.

A blogspace fire storm followed, with significant loss of opacity, increase of transparency, to Virgin’s internal affairs. Virgin capitulated and rehired the employees, with apologies, and opened up an internal employee blog for uncensored and protected communications from employees about internal conditions. Since then Virgin has been racing headlong into the new economy and the new strategies.

We are already deeply into a real sea change, a transformation of the way we organize and coordinate and relate. It affects all our social capital, all our stakeholder relationships. This sea change is technologically based and cost driven, and it is being profoundly accelerated by the emergence of the new social media technologies which are deeply socially enabling. Adoption of these transforming technologies is not optional. Your competitors are doing it right now, along with your customers and employees and investors and lenders and suppliers. And this sea change affects every level of every organization, every moment of the day.

Don’t be United.

Embrace the change and use it to help your organization. Get on with developing a comprehensive, integrated social media strategy for your whole organization now.

Cutting through the fog: what social media actually does

Monday, April 6th, 2009

At Social Web Strategies, we see the internet as a continually unifying ‘converged digital media,’ which is the fusion of all forms of media – video (television), audio (radio), print and images (newspapers and magazines) into digital formats delivered, or, actually, shared over the Internet.

What we’re calling “social media” are actually media converged and shared many-to-many over the Internet rather than one-to-many via more limited broadcast channels. Now anyone can create and publish media, and common attention is divided over a multiplicity of channels – we’ve evolved from three major television networks to 200 million or more web sites, and counting.

In the realm of business strategy, the emerging social media technologies have two relevant and critical effects:

1) they lower the cost of connecting and coordinating, and
2) they connect the user/customer/recipient directly to all points, including the front-end, of the creation/production process.

The first is a driver of social media technology adoption. The second is a driver of self-organizing within the self-generating processes of the organization.

Used properly, these technologies are powerful tools enabling accelerated and strategic creation of knowledge and social capital within and between organizations (i.e. – within and between social networks, understanding that all organizations are bundles of constitutive social networks).

In this light we can see that core social media technologies and patterns (such as email, sms, chat, instant messaging, blogs, microblogs, wikis, forums, digital community platforms, etc.) are rapidly becoming key elements of all professional work experiences. They can be used to enhance learning, work and play; broaden access to information; and augment connectivity in society, as well as to promote knowledge creation and the potential for commercialization.

The key to successful adoption of these technologies by any organization is to define the strategies for their appropriate use in the specific context. This is part of what we do at Social Web Strategies.

We also note that this has a deep connection to sustainability in that the global sustainable culture is emerging from the activities of the new global sustainability economy (the economy that provides for the production of sustainability). And in this transformed global economy, the base capital forms are knowledge and social capital, unlike in the old economy where the base capital forms were finance, labor, energy and materials. So the emerging social media technologies are to the new economy as industrial tooling was to the old economy, in that they instrument the new economy, thereby enabling and producing and amplifying the emergence of sustainability.

Eco-economics in Texas

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

In addition to our web strategy, social media, and web development work, David Armistead and I are instigating an “eco-economic” development initiative for Central Texas. Texas Business Review of IC2 Institute has just published a foundational paper we co-authored with John Motloch, called “Eco-economics in Texas: Competitive Adaptation for the Next Industry Revolution.” Link to pdf