Is PowerPoint Oversimplifying Our Military Strategy?

Computers

Is PowerPoint Oversimplifying Our Military Strategy?

by Matthew Zuras — Apr 27th 2010 at 2:30PM

We like to believe that the U.S. military knows a thing or two more than the rest of us. Your devoted Switched team, for example, would be hard pressed to dismantle an IED, no matter how many times we've seen 'The Hurt Locker.' But it turns out that the men and women in uniform are entangled in the simplifying software magic known as PowerPoint, no different from the soporific strategy meetings taking place on projection screens in conference rooms across the nation. Some military honchos, however, are of the opinion that Microsoft's slide-show staple may be doing more harm than good.

The military has always relied on a hierarchical understanding of the world; rank, priority and power are the watchwords of this rigidly organized system in which one must know one's place to do anything at all. The bullet-point-prone software is perfect for establishing order out of chaos, which is why everyone from General Petraeus to President Obama gets a regular dose of PowerPoint to break down any given situation. But, in the same way that the H1N1-like spread of infographics across the Internet has triggered a backlash against visualized information, some high-ranking officials have had enough already with the slides.


Of course, memos and briefings existed well before the advent of PowerPoint, or even the personal computer. But the underlying issue is not necessarily the software itself, but the culture in which extraordinarily complex issues are condensed to key phrases and action items. PowerPoint is "dangerous because it can create the illusion of understanding and the illusion of control," General H.R. McMaster, who banned the software after his brigade took hold of the Iraqi city of Tal Afar in 2005, told the New York Times. "Some problems in the world are not bullet-izable." And McMaster is not alone in his sentiment.

Some junior officers may spend entire days putting together these presentations, but to what end? The Army, like any other large action-making body, needs clerical staff. But maybe some of that on-the-clock time could be better spent. As the jargon of corporate America seeps further into military culture, vague phrases like "conduct a key leader engagement" and "accelerate the introduction of new weapons" give the illusion of understanding the situation -- all while divorcing strategy further and further from reality. General Stanley A. McChrystal, the leader of American and NATO forces in Afghanistan, was shown this labyrinthine diagram in a PowerPoint presentation last summer, and subsequently quipped, "When we understand that slide, we'll have won the war." We're not laughing. [From: NYTimes]

"Gives the illusion of understanding the situation while divorcing strategy further and further from reality"

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Who Owns Social, Anyway? - Advertising Age #yam

Digital Conference 2010

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Who Owns Social, Anyway?

Beats Me, but There Are a Ton of Things to Figure Out Before We Settle on the Answer

By Pete Blackshaw
Published: April 12, 2010

Pete Blackshaw

Pete Blackshaw
So who the heck owns social?

That's a tricky question, not only because every business stakeholder -- marketing, PR, IT, research, investor relations, media, consumer relations -- seems to have a piece of social baked into their new DNA and delivery road map, but also because its definition and scope keep getting pulled in new, arguably more complicated, directions.

Indeed, take a gander at all the new terms being used to describe our new world order -- social CRM, social commerce, earned media, CRM 2.0, enterprise social -- and you'll quickly find the social juggernaut becoming synonymous with that broader umbrella term known as "digital."

Indeed, I just dug up some notes from a consulting initiative I led at Nielsen for a major marketer. Digital, I noted, "is a new enabling framework for business and marketing grounded in four related characteristics: on-demand, interactive, sensing and connected."

Still, legitimate schizophrenia reigns around the ownership question. After all, as marketers we want leadership roles clearly defined (usually in our favor). We're restlessly -- and rhetorically -- impatient with silos and the "lack of organizational integration" -- even though our "what's next" appetite inevitably feeds the frenetic front line of fragmentation.

The good news is that social media appears to be softening organizational silos, ostensibly laying a runway for that coveted yet elusive marketing goal of "integration."

In my pre-call for the Ad Age Digital Conference panel I'm moderating -- featuring NPR CEO Vivian Schiller, Dell CMO Erin Nelson and Combe VP-Director of Interactive Communications Tom Cunniff -- the vexing "integration" came up repeatedly. Much of this owes the furious pace of "social innovation," which Schiller reminded us is still in early innings. Put another way, we might need to turn over countless new rocks before we find our stride.

Nelson, who leads an impressive medley of activity from community platforms to service innovation, suggested that Dell's biggest need is "where to place bets." Digital and social media, she said, offers countless possibilities, but in the end you have to make choices. And boy, is she right. Combe's Cunniff concurrently hit the integration need hard but also suggested new centers of gravity would emerge in our socially enabled world, like consumer relations.

Personally, I have a love-hate relationship with "integration," calcified by 15 years of marketing experience, from "best practice"-heavy P&G to "start with a clean slate" web startups. Two conflicting rules reign supreme in my head: One, that which forces integration and coordination, or prematurely synthesizes, inevitably slows things down. Two, that which liberates, loosens, decentralizes and draws inspiration from external sources, or walks off the beaten path, speeds things up.

Alas, such is the dualism of social media. We want order, but we can't stand order. Jefferson-Hamilton reincarnated.

I mean, it's not that corporate stakeholder groups don't trust one another. It's just that the group typically holding the social flag most firmly thinks the other groups are too slow, have no business running the social-media show, and are putting the enterprise on the precipice of disaster through naïve embrace of social silliness like transparency and "be yourself" authenticity.

Meanwhile, agencies and supplier networks are all storming the "social media" center: PR firms see social as an extension of their birthright in influencer marketing; ad agencies see it as a new frontier of high-impact ad impressions (for example, earned media); the growing crop of word-of-mouth agencies and buzz-monitoring firms see this as birthright. It's almost as though we have the "internal" version of Bob Garfield's "Chaos Scenario."

Two recent developments really up the ante for both the ownership and integration questions: social HR and social CRM. For all our hype about the wonders of managing influencers and blogger outreach, the folks scoring the biggest wins in social outreach are the HR teams leading recruiting. Indeed, for those struggling with "social ROI" look no further than the fertile fields of open-source, "all content's a resume" web.

Then again, the HR dynamic can also muddle the marketing track, especially when the flow of a Facebook fan page quickly shifts gears from an on-equity brand message to a college recruiting pitch, or vice-versa.

The rise of "social CRM" further complicates the ownership question. Perhaps the IT or tech experts do have a legitimate claim to a space that's increasingly ornamented with enterprise software, cloud computing, scary-sophisticated databases, and scary-high consumer expectations (mostly set by the "marketing guy" freelancing "social engagement") regarding customer service. Social CRM is also introducing aspects of "business-process innovation" (cost-efficient crowd-sourcing, internal collaboration, integrated listening platform, and the like) that halos well above the marketing space.

So what's a CMO to do amid all this? We'll set some of these questions in tomorrow's panel, but in the meantime, don't naively assume you'll solve the social-media "ownership" and digital "integration" questions overnight. Your best bet right now is to manage the flow, sandbag unruly currents here and there, and do everything you can to "path the passion."

Moreover, we all need to become better internal curators and "community managers." Not unlike a devoted greenie, we need to work really hard to manage our social "ecosystem." This is probably less about command-and-control than in establishing thoughtful guide rails, tempered by experience, good judgment, and even the lessons of a few legal hard knocks.

We can also get a few things going that will cultivate more meaningful ownership or cooperation in the enterprise. In my experience, the leader who gets the best (and most inclusive) listening dashboard or radar in place quickly accrues the most organizational legitimacy. Listening pipes, after all, feed many mouths and can drive unity around a common purpose. (I see this all the time -- especially in crisis situations, where everyone has a stake in the outcome.)

Related, credible ownership also accrues to those who start making sense of the madness through smarter metrics. I'm particularly fond of the "paid/earned" model (even in my dialogue with in Nielsen) because it lowers access barriers to social media and speaks a language others in the organization can easily understand versus "shiny new object" gobbledygook.

Lastly, CMOs can make a world of difference rethinking incentive models. We have silos because we're all fighting for a limited budget, often at cross purposes.

So who owns social media? Beats me, but there are a ton of things we can figure out before we settle on the "silver bullet" answer.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Pete Blackshaw is exec VP of Nielsen Online Digital Strategic Services and author of "Satisfied Customers Tell Three Friends, Angry Customers Tell 3,000" (DoubleDay). He is also chair of the National Council of Better Business Bureaus. His biweekly column looks at the relationship between marketing and customer service in the age of consumer control.

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Right on, brother..Right on

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Kip Kosek: Why I banned laptops - Opinions

www.gwhatchet.com/media/storage/paper332/news/2010/02/12/Opinions/Madeline.Tw...">Madeline Twomey's excellent Op-Ed challenges the GW community to think hard about technology and education. Twomey was "appalled" to find that one of her professors banned laptops from discussion sections. As the professor responsible for that decision, I may be able to shed some light on it. I have come to believe that laptops with wireless access can present a major obstacle to learning, especially in small, discussion-oriented classes.

I forbid laptops in most of my seminars and discussion sections, though I do allow them in large lectures. I did not make this rule because I am anti-technology. I agree with Twomey that technology has improved our lives in many ways. Certainly, the courses I teach on American history and culture would be greatly impoverished without online resources. I have no desire to go back to arranging slides in a plastic carousel, as my own professors did, rather than pulling historical images instantly from the Library of Congress Web site or ARTstor.

Nor did I intend the laptop ban as a paternalistic gesture directed at immature children. The addiction to online communication is a societal issue that transcends any particular age group. The embarrassing sight of members of Congress texting their way through the State of the Union address shows us that not even the rich, powerful and old are immune to this compulsion. At the same time, the phenomenon of texting while driving offers clear proof that people will stay online even when doing so endangers their very lives.

These extreme examples demonstrate why a ban on laptops in the classroom is sometimes necessary. For whatever reason, we - not just college students, but all of us - are unable to resist the lure of constant online access. Yet certain activities require the sustained attention that the Internet impedes. Driving a car is one such activity. Discussing complex ideas is another. Everyone knows that students with laptops in class frequently use them for non-class activities such as Facebook and e-mail. At this time, the only answer I can see is to remove the temptation. We can embrace the value of new technologies while also defining contexts where their use is inappropriate.

Twomey claims that "it is a student's individual choice to pay attention - or not - in class." She is right to point out that students ought to be responsible for their own learning, but wrong to suggest that this responsibility is merely individual. Quality education results from the collaborative interaction of engaged thinkers, not from professors imparting content to passive individuals. Distracted students hurt not only themselves, but the rest of the class as well.

Twomey's other objections to banning laptops have merit, but are not ultimately convincing. I require students to print out readings and bring them to class, a practice she estimates will cost between $45 and $75 over the course of a semester. This is a substantial sum, but no more than she would pay for an ordinary American history textbook. Her argument that printing so much paper harms the environment has more weight. However, the fairly small environmental impact would have to be measured against the effects of having every class member's laptop running for fifty minutes each week.

So I'm going to keep my no-laptop rule for now. In the long run, though, banning laptops may well turn out to be, as Twomey says, a "failed answer." The better answer, I think, is to make technology more effective, not just more prevalent, in the GW educational experience. Perhaps the solution itself can be in part technological: The Washington Post recently reported that Bentley University in Massachusetts has installed a system that allows professors to turn classroom Internet access on or off as needed. Whatever the way forward, we must try to reap the benefits of the online world without subordinating every aspect of learning, and life, to its subtle coercions.

The writer is an assistant professor of American studies.

Readers can visit the Forum to comment on this op-ed.


completely agree with this. Also why I hate when everyone comes to meetings with laptops up. How can you engage in productive idea exchange when you are constantly checking your email and Tweetdeck?

Posted

The End Of Big Website Builds | Six Pixels of Separation - Marketing and Communications Blog - By Mitch Joel at Twist Image

If you thought fragmentation was changing the way a brand buys media, just wait until you see what it's going to do to the Digital Marketing space.

Are the days of big websites and long website builds numbered? It could well be. If you think about how people find and connect to most brands, it's not just through a search engine anymore. In fact, more and more people are having their first brand interaction on their mobile device. There are many people who are also connecting to brands for the first time in spaces like Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.

Does this mean that the website is going the way of the dodo bird?

Not exactly, but it does mean that the overall Digital Marketing strategy is going to change dramatically in the next little while. Instead of one, big and centralized website with many digital marketing outposts in the appropriate platforms, it is more than likely that we're going to see more and more brands create multiple spaces and platforms to ensure that they're connecting with the right people in the right communities.

Imagine a world...

Where a Digital Marketing strategy focuses less on one big website and more on creating engaging "things" like iPhone apps, a mobile website, a Facebook page along with a Blog (or whatever), and it's all supported with a simple website that acts more like a hub for all of the other spokes. Yes, there are some (only a few) brands already playing with creating Facebook pages in lieu of micro-sites for promotions and experiential marketing initiatives, but it has not become a commonplace activity where you find a brand doing multiple things in multiple channels and focusing less on driving consumers to their marketing-riddled jargony websites.

It becomes a more complex Digital Marketing play.

The "game" used to be about always driving people back to your own, controlled, website, and the truth is that the more vibrant community for a brand may be happening more through a mobile app or online social network platform... or something else or something in addition to it. Does this mean we need to trim websites back to WordPress Blog-shaped platforms or micro-site sizes? Not really, but it does mean that if a brand's vibrant community is happening in a place like Facebook, they won't have much control or ownership over the content, but they might be able to do things (in terms of connecting and growing that community) that they could not scale to with a big, towering website of their own.

This is just further proof that the conversations are everywhere (and maybe not where we always want them to be). 

By Mitch Joel

Love this idea, and think that it's right on. .com hubs and funnel approach media is less relevant in a world or social media and low click through rates. Need to build tighter environments based on consumer need, behavior and channel.

Posted

Eye Tracking Study: Users Largely Blind To Real-Time Results In Search

Eye Tracking Study: Users Largely Blind To Real-Time Results In Search

Mar 4, 2010 at 6:56pm ET by Greg Sterling

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Online marketing firm OneUpWeb recently conducted an eye-tracking study about the impact of integrating real-time data into search results. The study involved 44 people divided into two groups: “consumers” and “information foragers.” The difference between the groups involved the tasks they were given:

The first group was told to search for a product they might buy, and were called the “consumer” group. The second group was told to simply look for information on a product, and were called the “forager” group.

The study, conducted last month, sought to answer the following questions:

  1. Does the average internet user recognize and understand real-time results?
  2. Are consumers finding and clicking on real-time results?
  3. And simply, the bird’s eye view: what are the consumers saying about real-time results?

At the highest level the results showed the following:

  • 73% had never heard of real-time results before participating this study
  • Only a quarter of the consumers cared for the real-time results compared to 47% of the information foragers
  • The majority of the participants surveyed were indifferent to the real-time results

Here’s the age distribution of the 44 participants:

Picture 19

Below are screens showing the differences in the eye movements of the two groups. Remember the only difference between the two groups was nature of the task assigned. The “real time results” are called out in a box at the bottom in this set of examples:

Picture 20

Picture 21

The study, which contains much more discussion than my short summary above, seems to assert that real-time results so far have limited impact or appeal. While there’s enormous hype and coverage among tech-insiders about “real time search,” the public doesn’t really understand (or perhaps care) what the fuss is all about.


Greg Sterling is a Contributing Editor at Search Engine Land, and writes a personal blog Screenwerk, examining the broader world of media and advertising. He also posts at Internet2Go, which is focused on the mobile Internet.

See more articles by Greg Sterling >

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3 COMMENTS ON Eye Tracking Study: Users Largely Blind To Real-Time Results In Search

Maureen, March 5th, 2010 at 8:02 am ET:

If anyone would like to download the study, you can do that here: http://www.oneupweb.com/landing/10_realtime_results_eyetracking/


eamonc, March 5th, 2010 at 8:24 am ET:

Interesting, but are the results not really representative if it is tracking users focusing on real-time results which are at the bottom of the page? Many of the trending and popular real-time results (for example for ‘climate change’) are in position 2,3,4 of Google and would therefore receive much more attention and higher CTR’s.


Maureen, March 5th, 2010 at 8:46 am ET:

Hi eamonc,

This is actually just one screen shot from the study. Overall, Oneupweb did track all of the real-time results, including those in position 2, 3, and 4 of Google.


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Maybe we are making too much of a big deal about this real time search thing or maybe real time results need to be called out in a different fashion on an index page.

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New Balance 365 Campaign Fuses Content And Commerce - PSFK

New Balance 365 Campaign Fuses Content And Commerce

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March 1, 2010

New Balance 365 Campaign Fuses Content and Commerce

New Balance launched %u201CNew Balance 365%u201D last week %u2013 an online marketing campaign in which they will run a unique short video clip daily, directed by experimental Swedish ad creator Jesper Koothoofd.  Each clip will run under 30 seconds at the dedicated site, and will promote the brand%u2019s line of sneakers for the spring/summer line.

The brand views the campaign as a %u201Cfusion of content and commerce%u201D.  A %u201CPurchase%u201D button is featured at the end of each clip, leading users to that day%u2019s featured product%u2019s details page on New Balance%u2019s e-commerce site. The campaign is ultimately intended to engage users with compelling, entertaining content, while facilitating their purchase of the season%u2019s sneakers.

New Balance will judge the campaign%u2019s effectiveness by measuring unique visitors per month, video views, and time spent on NewBalance365.com.  They will look for consumers to talk about the campaign and spread it virally, by seeding video clips on YouTube, Facebook and DailyMotion.  To round out the campaign and add to its share-ability, the brand has incorporated an iPhone app in the form of an alarm clock with different daily sights and sounds from the videos. Directing all efforts to drive traffic to the dedicated site, posters and image stills from the clips will be featured in stores, and regular traffic at NewBalance.com will be redirected to the dedicated NewBalance365 website.

As a vote of confidence to how compelling and share-able the content developed for the campaign is, New Balance believes running advertising to support it will be unnecessary.  According to Taylor Duffy, integrated marketing manager for New Balance Lifestyle,

%u201CIf the opportunity to run paid media either online or in print presents itself, then we will certainly evaluate it,%u201D Duffy said. %u201CHowever, we don%u2019t believe it%u2019s essential to the success of this effort.%u201D

The campaign was developed for New Balance by New York-based agency Mother, who also developed the 574 Clips campaign for the brand earlier this year.  That campaign used a short online video for each of the line%u2019s 574 styles, and generated sufficient traffic and impressions to give the brand the confidence to repeat, and expand upon the effort. New Balance viewed those results as evidence that engaging consumers with compelling content (vs. running promotional pricing, for instance) would drive sales, and is looking for an expanded campaign via NewBalance365 to continue %u2013 and build upon %u2013 that level of engagement (and sales).

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I think they have the right idea, but asking an awful lot from the consumer on this one.

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