About a year ago, I ran across a video in a friend’s Facebook called Frozen Grand Central. I thought it was hysterical. I didn’t know at the time, but this is called a flashmob, which Clay Shirky discussed at Gartner Web Innovation Summit a couple of weeks ago. It struck me that this was a great example of the Internet’s potential to rally and coordinate people to a cause, albeit a fairly farsical one. Mentally ‘fast forwarding’ this concept and searching on YouTube shows some interesting ways this has been applied: entertaining a crowd, poking fun at retailers, and even as coordinated protests.
The other day I read Daryl Plummer’s post On The Death of 20th Century Thinking! and it dawned on me that flashmobs are a great example of what Daryl was talking about. In business and IT, we are not used to the idea of customers, employees, suppliers – anybody for that matter – rapidly rallying around a cause and coordinating mass actions. This should dramatically change our notions of ‘governance’ when it comes to who has ‘decision rights’ to make a change with significant impact. Those of us who grew up thinking that we could dictate terms to users, because we designed the business process or the application are in for a rude awakening.
What does this mean we should do? First, realize that this is possible, and put in some kind of ‘forward listening system’ to quickly detect that a mass action is occuring. In the IT world, this can be as simple as looking at usage patterns of an application and noticing when something significantly different starts to happen. Second, think about finding ways to harness this to our advantage rather than trying to somehow shut it down. Think about how this type of thing can quickly drive awareness around something that you have been struggling to get people to pay attention to or embrace. If you want some more ideas, Malcolm Gladwell - who happens to be giving a keynote presentation at Gartner’s AADI Summit - is also onto the notion of leveraging these types of social concepts and has some great ideas.
