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Why does Wall St’s business as usual seem to be gaming the rules, gambling away other people’s money, and cooking the books to hide the losses? Because Wall St’s operating system has a single instruction: my job is to rip your face off.

The Finance 2.0 Manifesto - Umair Haque - HarvardBusiness.org (via brooksjordan)

tedr says: steal your face right off your head

(via tedr)

(via rahmin)

rahmin:

If the last 100 years was about gaining efficiency and innovation through scale and tight control of resources and communications, the next 100 will be about finding more fluid, open models of collaboration and cooperation. Playing on this new field has different rules. It requires shifting our concept of business from a legalistic model to a social one. Social contracts are very different from the business contracts that dominated the 20th century corporate mentality. In the business contract, the organizing metaphor is the binding, legal document, and the motivator that constrains bad behavior is the lawsuit.

By contrast, the organizing metaphor for the social Web is relationship, and the building blocks are trust, reciprocity and authenticity. The motivating force that constrains bad behavior is social pressure and cultural norms. This is not to say that we will see the disappearance of legal contracts—they remain necessary. But in a social world, your reputation is everything. Your word is your bond, and sometimes admitting a mistake or saying you’re sorry is the best method of keeping both.

Businesses that ignore the call to be “social”—that is, to abide by a social contract with their constituents (customers, partners, resellers, employees)—run the risk of appearing pathological. I see “social” business as an inherently healthy change. Social contracts generally involve listening and talking, give and take, and trust—built over time through honest engagement.

Why Business Needs To Get Social - Forbes.com

[Fred] Wilson suggests the media universe comes down to a blend of paid media and earned media, the latter of which is becoming increasingly important in this age of consumer expression and conversation. “There are still a lot of marketers out there buying their media when they could earn it, and earn it a lot less expensively,” he notes.

This is why our entire marketing debate must shift to the tougher operational decisions we need to make to maximize earned media. And we also need to be brutally honest about the upfront investment and choices we need to get this right. Long term, we’re likely to save a ton of money, but short term we may need to invest in pulling out the old wires.

Robert Scoble on the red couchImage by niallkennedy via Flickr

Earned Media May Be Efficient, but It’s Far from Free

Rafer sez:
We also need to discuss the complementary idea of Earned Access. Part and partial of the paid access that Journalism Online will attempt, the significant social sharers need to be compensated for spreading the word. Charging the free riders might be ok in some circumstances, but there are a lot of Scobles and mini Scobles out there. They are the people who bring publishers a lot more readership then they use. They are resources to be rewarded, not pure consumers to be taxed.

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