This new age of online communications has unleashed a plethora of platforms through which to communicate with stakeholders. It has also brought democracy to the entire publishing process. Targeted, well-conceived and successful communication need no longer be the preserve of specialist agencies, publishers and marketers. Customers can comment, share and disseminate as they see fit.
There is now a shift to simple, uncluttered websites, supplemented by a value-added presence on social networks and honest, accountable, content via blogs that offers readers and customers something of interest, usually for nothing.
These platforms are easy to understand, harness and develop. They require time, regular commitment and a well thought out strategy from day one. I've blogged on this topic before and will expand in the future.
In the meantime, I am increasingly concerned by the approach individuals and their organisations are taking to the content they post online. These people, often owner-managers or internal communications staff, stand to benefit most from Web 2.0. They can interact with customers like never before, monitor opinion, test new products or ideas and create multiple identities for their brand or mission.
The content on their main websites or profiles is not necessarily a problem (these are treated like any other professional publication), but everything else they publish suffers from a 'fire and forget' approach. LinkedIn groups, for example, are rapidly filling with confusing questions, unstructured discussion groups and shameless spam. A new site - allvoices.com - is already littered with irrelevant PR material.
Worst of all however, is the content produced by people who, in their profiles and biographies, purport to understand the value of Web 2.0 and information sharing, but continue to plug specific products or services when commenting on blogs or contributing to discussion groups. When they do attempt to publish 'independent' content, it is often littered with typos and poor sentence construction. Why? There is no value to this effort and these people are diluting the value of the original communication.
Any form of publishing - whether a comment on an article, a corporate blog, status update or Tweet, should be checked as if it were going to print or to be broadcast. See this earlier post on the value of a gatekeeper.
This leads me to believe that there is still very much a need for publishers, specialist agencies and marketers to provide the quality of content that is lacking. Of course, I would say that. But take a look at the messages, discussions and comments published on your favourite networks and websites, and I guarantee you will be disappointed by the sloppy examples you find.
