22 December, 2009 | Written by Amber Naslund 2 Comments

Tools Can Be Strategic

No, it’s not all about the tools. If, by “it”, you mean the Big Ultimate Goal of All of This Stuff and Why We’re Doing It In the First Place. I don’t think we need to debate that point any further, do we?

But it’s important to point out, as a bookend, that tools can be strategic, or at least part of developing sound strategy.

Blogging can be a strategy that helps you reach a larger goal of awareness or reach or idea testing or personal exploration or whatever. Twitter can be a viable part of a distribution network strategy or engaging the community you have in other places. You can vet its adoption or value for your audience, test ideas, track its usefulness as a traffic driver for your website.

For many companies, forays into social media include testing and experimenting with the mechanisms that are available, and let’s face it, familiar and comfortable. And it’s hard to ask an established business to commit to a full-blown social media strategic plan if they can’t kick the tires on a few of the tools to see how they might work (or not).

What’s important is that the company take the approach of testing and seeking tangible experiences that might relate to larger goals. That help provide some experience, some evidence, some immersion. A starting point.

As my friend Tamsen says, it’s the why that matters, not the what. If the mechanical experiments help shed some light on what the bigger strategy should look like – the why – I think that’s an okay thing indeed.

The trouble starts when we forget to connect the dots, make presence on a tool the goal in itself, and stop at “hey, look, Facebook!”

Having a strategy isn’t about having all the answers. It’s about mapping a process to try and find them, and constantly checking progress and adjusting along the way. Sometimes, tinkering with a tool or two can be just the way to do that.

See the difference?

image by comedy_nose

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Comments

RSS feed | Trackback URI

2 Comments »

Comment by DustinNo Gravatar Subscribed to comments via email
2009-12-23 09:08:21

Wonderful insight Amber. I totally agree with the following statement:

“Having a strategy isn’t about having all the answers. It’s about mapping a process to try and find them, and constantly checking progress and adjusting along the way. Sometimes, tinkering with a tool or two can be just the way to do that.”

This has been my personal experience with creating a higher level of engagement while branding myself on Twitter and promoting my blog. There are some tools I have fallen in love with (i.e – TweetDeck, Yahoo! Pipes, and SocialOomph) amongst many others, and there are still more that I really cannot connect with. It’s a trial by error process, and finding your voice above and beyond everything else.

 
Comment by Breitling watchesNo Gravatar
2010-03-13 08:54:02

REALY WOW!!! And the picture is beautiful!!!! Breitling watches

 
Name (required)
E-mail (required - never shown publicly)
URI
Subscribe to comments via email
Your Comment (smaller size | larger size)
You may use <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong> in your comment.
CommentLuv Enabled

Trackback responses to this post