Conversation is not about critical mass; it’s about critical connections. You will forgive me for talking about leadership for a moment. I know you’re all interested in marketing and have recently joined probably one too many social networks, feeling a bit of indigestion in reading yet another title with the word conversation skillfully placed where it can be noticed.
According to Margaret Wheatley, we live in a quantum world. And that might explain a few things. For example, for those of you fond of thinking of metaphors for working together, jazz might be a good one to represent such a world. Because it demands that we be present together, and be willing to improvise.
Isn’t blogging all about improvising? We agree on melody, tempo, and key, and then we play. We listen carefully, we communicate constantly, and suddenly, there is music — possibilities beyond anything we ever imagined.
The music — the conversation — comes from a unified whole we have accessed among ourselves, a relationship that transcends our false sense of separatedness. “When the music appears, we can’t help but be amazed and grateful,” writes Wheatley.
The relationship is what makes the conversation, even if it’s only in someone’s head. We never do know and rarely learn how our small activities will affect others through the invisible fabric of our connectedness.
That’s one of the reasons why I think blogs are excellent internal communications tools. Part environments where to provide transparency into the inner workings of an organization, especially when it is quite large, part places where employees can learn to play jazz/fit together.
Influence does not occur as a direct result of force exerted from one person to another, it ensues depending on people’s engagement with the ideas presented to them. To engage and tap the creativity that is already present, we need to present opportunities that will allow the forming of relationships.
What employees perceive is what ultimately the world and your customers will touch …. your colleagues throughout the organization are also brand ambassadors and company spokespeople …. formal or informal. Listening for a cue of where you enter the conversation is a hallmark of jazz and of great marketing organizations.
Whether you work in the marketing department or not, being part of a culture that understands the importance of connectedness shows in every external touch point and relationship. This is why blogs have become an important tool for communication — it was never a question of critical mass, it was always a matter of critical connection.
Are you using a blog internally? If yes, how? If no, why not?

Valerie
What a terrific post. I love the music metaphor. I frequently refer to my meetings with clients as “jam sessions” and they always grin when i say it.
I run a small company, so i don’t have an internal blog going, but my clients do. But, probably don’t use it as much as they should.
In the article i just did for MarketingProfs (Seven Ways to Monitor Blog Conversations), i tried really hard to avoid the word conversation as it has become overused, to say the least. Lewis Green had some good points in his post about the day the conversation died. http://www.mpdailyfix.com/2007/11/is_this_the_day_the_conversati.html
I realize that an internal blog would be tough to show an audience here due to firewalls and such, but i’ll go ask some internal bloggers i know and see if they would share some pointers and ideas of how they use it, how they’ve structured it and share those in the comments.
Welcome to the conversation, TJ. I blogged asking if the word conversation was getting overused not long ago. I think as long as you actually do it — have true conversations — it’s quite alright to use the word
Maybe a way to talk about it is in the measure and level of energy you make available to connecting.
I’m working on a project to implement an internal blog at my company as an internal collaboration tool.
Thank you for breaking the ice in this warm autumn day. Now I’m off to checking out your post.
Valeria,
What internal blog service/tool are you using? I’ve looked at: http://www.21publish.com/ before and wonder if it is one you’ve seen. Probably.
Years ago, we did some work in the groupware space and some time back i was doing some research and came across a link, with a useful diagram, at Wikipedia that you might find interesting and helpful.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collective_intelligence
I agree on the use of the conversation word…
TJ
We use SharePoint 2007 out of the box and do the design/html internally.
I’ve also talked with Dave Hersh, the CEO of a company called Jive Software [http://www.jivesoftware.com/ ] that provides social community software called ClearSpace, which many companies like Apple adopt internally.