I have just read an article by J-P De Clerck on how important or successful Klout is as a measure for social media influence (find it here). It got me thinking.
Before I start waxing lyrical on my thoughts on Klout, I should first stress that I do use Klout and check it a great deal — my reasons for this will be explained throughout this post.
There is no shortage of discussions surrounding Klout, which bills itself as 'The standard for influence' — notice 'the' not 'a', as far as Klout is concerned it is the only measure. This is important because if Klout can gain the monopoly in its field then it gains the coverage and measure needed to rank people more effectively. If half of people use Klout and the other half use PeerIndex, for example, then the measure is harder if they do not follow the same algorithm, which I assume they don't. This is a major flaw. Not everyone uses, or cares, about their score. Equally, people may use other measures. So the scores are not necessarily comparable, despite people's desire to make them as such — I have a higher score than the MD of one of the largest PR firms in the country, but I bet he's quite a bit more influential than I am! The score measures that I influence people (read 250 people) on social media more than he does, yet he is more influential than me. The score is within a niche area and not necessarily indicative or comparable to other people.
That's the fundamental flaw with Klout. That and the fact that it is a business, so has every need to maximise exposure and make more money by engaging more people.
But, I find Klout exceptionally useful for what I do, and here is my explanation. I am a job-seeker, looking to work in PR, in particular to work in digital. For this purpose I use Twitter a great deal to stay abreast of developments, discussions, topics, controversies, jobs, movements. And, more than that, I use Twitter to network and engage with the industry in a way I could not do any other way — see my previous entry on 'Tweeting you way to the Door'. I've even started taking a screen grab of my morning score to job interviews to show that I am aware of the ways in which the digital sector moves.
The reason that Klout is so useful for this is that I can see whether I'm doing it right. That is not to say my score reflects my successes, if it did I'd probably be writing this on a company blog as opposed to my own. But, it shows whether I'm using social media in the way I need to be using it: to network.
I know that to get noticed I need to be engaged, but engaged with the right people. If all I did was tweet about my lunch-time sandwich filling and was followed by fellow sandwich lovers then my score would potentially be huge but only within the specific area of sandwiches. As it is, my area is digital and I tweet about it. For that reason, Klout works for me because I can see that I am engaged in the digital world by looking at my digital score. If someone was influential about digital but had a woeful Klout score...well, I can't fathom it, it isn't possible. If you are genuinely engaged with something and are influential about it then, were there to be a measure, you would rank highly on it. Klout, then, is relevant to me because it is a measure of what I want to be measured by: my engagement with the digital world.
I don't go lauding my score around as a way of saying 'look how awesome I am, hows about we draw up a contract and I'll start on Monday', I use it as a way of saying 'I tweet, and I tweet relevant, engaging content that shows a passion and connection with what it is I am here to talk to you about'. Is that such a bad thing?
If my Klout score drops by a few points it isn't a huge deal (though my vanity suffers). If it rises, again it isn't a huge deal. What is more important is the consistency. I got Klout when my score was around the mid-twenties, it now sits in the high forties and has done for nearly 6 months. This means more to me than the score now: the consistency of my score. If I tweeted something that went viral and my Klout score shot up to 76 for a day before crashing back down to wherever, that isn't helpful as a measure, it just says you said something a lot of people thought was great. But, if your score stays level it means you're consistently delivering relevant and interesting content for people to engage with, which is surely the foundation of digital media; not to do one great thing, but to do it on the foundation of consistency and reputation.
On this basis I find Klout a useful tool because it measures what is relevant to me: digital media. If there was a sandwich equivalent for the sandwich networking site 'FaceWich' then that would be great if you were searching for a career in sandwiches. Make sense?
Whether or not Klout is applicable to PR, Marketing, SEO in general is not something I could argue for or against. But, whether Klout is good for digital media, I certainly think it serves a very specific and useful, if not necessarily comprehensive, purpose that I buy into and use to support my hunt for employment within than industry. The point is, if you're passionate about something you should know enough to be influential about it too; therefore a measure of influence is a great tool when it measures the right factors.
Got another take on Klout? Think I'm as wrong as the idea of a sandwich networking site? Leave a comment and we'll see if we can't get a discussion going.
Showing posts with label PR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PR. Show all posts
Monday, 12 September 2011
Tuesday, 17 May 2011
Early consensus on The Conversation?
The Conversation launched, buzzed, and now what? Made an impression? Filled a much needed hole in social media and online blogging? Changed the way the creative industry accesses and shares information?
I've bookmarked it, I check it most days as I do with many other blogs, and, quite frankly, I am far from captivated by it. Rather than let my tongue form too much of a barb I decided to bullet-point my impressions of it; keep it simple stupid, if you will.
- It seems to me that a lot of The Conversation is shameless self-promotion. Far from criticising self-promotion (as a graduate I need to jump on that band-wagon as much as the next job-seeker), I do, however, object to having to sift through the dust to get to the diamonds.
- The majority of decent blog posts from the big names are featured on their personal/company blogs anyway, so it seems The Conversation serves as a kind of character-limitless Twitter where people can promote their blog posts for the time they can keep them in 'recent entries'. Surely Twitter does a similar thing, right? In all honesty, I'd rather read a blog post that someone tweets about than puts on The Conversation. I say this because the people I follow on Twitter are people I follow for a reason; The Conversation has no such filter system. Is this too cynical/snobbish an opinion?
- I know there is mixed opinion regarding where the line is drawn between Marketing and PR; however, I feel The Conversation would certainly benefit from some such differentiation. Granted, I am interested in what both sides of the coin have to say, but I like to know which side of the coin I'm listening to before I engage. Could The Conversation be split a little into more specific field areas? Perhaps I'm naive, but would a tech PR really care what a marketer in finance thinks about stuff, or vice versa?
- It's a little cumbersome. Put simply, the website isn't the slickest I've ever seen, and is a little disappointing given the size and reputation of the body it serves. My main issue is the inaccessibility of past content. If I neglect to log on for a day or two, I may miss a wonderful article by someone unknown to me because it is not displayed and I cannot check up on the author since I am oblivious to them; ergo, opportunity missed.
Perhaps I'm being a little harsh. In fact, I am being a little harsh. The website is clearly still in the development stage and, no doubt, much consideration is being taken to improve it according to the feedback (positive and negative) they have no doubt received from many areas. But, I can't help but express the same concerns I first voiced upon hearing about the endeavour: should there be more exclusivity similar to a LinkedIn group, for example. More policing of content and marking of content that is irrelevant.
My last post on this topic got some great responses from a great mix of people, and one concern I particularly liked came from Lyanna Tsakiris who pointed out that exclusivity rather defeats the object of social media and networking. I agree, and realise my rather exclusivist stance wasn't ideal; but, The Conversation seems to have landed a little too close to my conservative worries. There are posts on there that bear no relevance to anything and are surely of little interest to many people. Do others share this concern?
I can't help but feel like the website needs to open up a little in terms of feedback from those who contribute. Similar to Tripadvisor, for example, where each contributor builds up a profile of involvement, if you will. If a post is irrelevant then people should be able to label it as such and put it up for verification. Equally, those contributors who most interest you should be able to be put into a kind of 'favourites' section for you to gain easy access to who you pay most attention to. Much like Twitter, you can choose to pay attention to the people who interest you, and ignore those who do not — and I mean that in the most liberal way where we are free to make those decisions ourselves.
The consensus upon launch was 'wait and see'; I wonder what people think after the initial introduction?
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