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What if anything and everything you owned, knew, thought, created or used was
negotiable at any point in time? What if you could sell off your junk, get compensated
for your opinions, or lend, borrow and bet without the need for banks or governments?
What if your creative product had a larger audience than corporate networks?
What if your lone
dissident voice couldn’t
be silenced even
by the rich and powerful?
Before you think this is a utopian scenario, you might want to check out online
tools like Zopa, Fundable, SwapTree, Me.dium, SecondLife, ScreenBites and
other potential previews to the social changes on the horizon.
As
of now, the few still rule the many by beautifully spun stories about how wonderful
it is to be “consumers”, “patriots” and other types of obedient supporters. You know, the stories that make us believe that everyone is “equal” in a democracy or that “anyone” can be wealthy if they work hard enough... But what happens when the communication tools and
technologies that maintained their respective positions become available to everyone?
Today,
individuals are beginning to have more influence than the media machine,
create more value with less investment and thus compete more efficiently
at the same game with corporate giants. Governments are even less efficient
than corporations and the stress of losing their economic controls to globalization
is already starting
to show. So while the idea of true self sovereignty at this
point in time may be arguable, the evidence towards the trend can hardly
be ignored.
Voices at the edges have already spoken about flat
worlds and long
tails and
even the death
of advertising and branding,
but is that what is really happening? Is branding or advertising really
dead, or like blogs
did
they too become tools available to all of us?
Both advertising and branding sophistication
is available to everyone now. Beyond the tools that build
reputations or defends
them, have you also noticed how we describe our professional selves today?
From the “Ace
of Cakes” to a“Change
Agent”, the “Brand
Me”world has now hit the mainstream.
In fact, it’s easier for multinational brands to behave like an individual
challengers than try to hold
on to yesterday’s strategies and global marketing principles.
If
the leverage of communication and information is indeed ubiquitous, is it
such a bad idea to prepare for a new, bolder reality of a world led by the
escalating influence of empowered individuals? Individuals who now define social
groups outside of their geographic boundaries, decide which
factors are critical to determining value, and determine loyalty and
allegiance by their own standards. These powerful influencers of everything
from commerce,
culture, governance and
even society by rules of their choosing?
So
what’s
actually changed and how do we adapt to it?
For
starters, we’re all participants now.The term “consumer” had
implied a one way relationship. The proliferation of multi-sided communication
possibilities of the Internet creates three dimensional relationships. Instead
of the one way flow of mass marketing, it’s a many to many network paradigm
of participation.
As we upload clips on YouTube, mashup our travel
videos with music licensed from RumbleFish and
get paidwith Metacafe
Producer Rewardsor as a Squidoo
Lensmaster, we’re already becoming producers, creators, recommenders,
collaborators, marketers and more depending on where we happen to participate
in the market ecosystem at any given
point in time.
That’s just the beginning of what the value potential
of our actions and thought product might be. When anyone can become a
passive influencer simply by placing a digital
widget on
their personal website or their mobile
profile,
the exponential implications are mind boggling. Just as no action in
nature is wasted, a similar value
equation to human participation might become reality sooner than we think.
In the near future, everything we do can have a
value and thus anything we do, say, think or create become potentially negotiable.
Why? Because technology amplifies human behaviors and motivations which can
create situations and opportunities previously non-existent.
Human motivators
are amplified by technology. Universal human motivators like the desire for
significance, the need for authority, the need for clarity amidst chaos, the
need for community and the need for security are fundamental for most of us.
The interesting part is that these basic conditions are only amplified when
the access to networked communications are readily available. For example,
blogging and social networking profiles amplify the individual need for significance.
Job seekers are enabled to blast resumes, individuals to create storefronts on
Ebay from their basements, and both the MySpace and Eons crowd
can broadcast their life events online with ease. Similarly, just as the need
for significance or recognition is amplified, so is the need for anonymity and
security by services like IdentitySweep and VTunnel.
The
vote is finally real. If you’ve ever visited Digg,
you already see the new eDemocracy in
action. By making individual preferences measurable, otherwise insignificant
information can enjoy network endorsed credibility by those who also care about
the same topics. Measurable human actions, validated by other humans rather
than the impersonal algorithms of earlier ranking systems such as search engines,
amplifies accountability like never before. Democratic voting systems incorporate
both mass popularity as well as peer approval such as ratings on RapLeaf.
While its true that political systems are still struggling with the process,
a quiet evolution of choice accountability is already questioning the existing
systems and their ineffectiveness. It is quite conceivable that real-time democracy
can now be put into action for not just commerce, but cultural and governance
options as well.
Personalized
is the new digital. As of last week there were 100 million websites. Choosing
digestible chunks of all of this is daunting at best. Recommendations become
more efficient than exploration for most people and “found” is
fast becoming the new search. At the same time, advances in both visual and natural
language search are giving new tools for explorers.
The need to personalize this complexity into a
consolidated, easy to use centralized location is likely to be the most significant
aspect managing our newly anointed sovereignty. Simplifying and managing these
cyber-extensions of our online consciousness will obviously require new tools
still to be imagined. Personalized start page types of environments like those
offered by Google, Yahoo, YourMinis, PageFlakes and
others are now the predecessors of the personal digital assistants yet to accommodate
our self-styled avatars.
It will ultimately be about our ongoing questions answered
with tools that we’ve decided to implement. Much like how what we choose
to believe in the physical world determine which ideas we hold on to.
At first,
it may seem strange to think that you could be on the same level playing
field as a multinational corporation, but just consider how business and customers
co-exist in networked spaces. As of now, we both get our basic queries and
network trend data from the same
place. Pending the Net
Neutrality power struggle and censorship issues of the moment, the deeper
resources of the Internet will
likely become available to everyone as well. Given the probability of that
reality and the other factors previously mentioned what do we do to use this
shift to our advantage both as individuals and as companies?
Enable the empowered. Marketing
is no longer about messages. It’s about
motivation. If you want to motivate the new sovereignty, reach them by the
tools they will use to refine their participation power. That means be available
as choices for personalization on start-page like environments where choosing
your brand of service is a self-defining action. For example, if you deliver
travel services, then the new sovereign citizen is both your traveler and your
travel agent. If you sell art then the new sovereign citizen is your art promoter,
using your art in experiential ways to define their personal spaces.
Today, we are at a tipping
point before
the next versions of these types of tools mentioned go mainstream. Most people
don’t use them as extensively as the early adopters like
me for good reason. They take too much effort and exploration to incorporate
into our already busy lives. Though adoption and integration of new tools take
time, the pace of it is quickening faster
than ever.
The next innovations to make them simpler, intuitive and infinitely plug-and-playable
will increase their value to the sovereign, and thus you.
Put
more in, get more out. In real life, you get out of it what you’re willing
to put in to it. The networked world of the sovereign citizen is no different.
As technology amplifies human interaction it amplifies the expression of human
need. When positive contribution like referrals and content are monetized through
emerging business models, the network of sovereign citizens can also reward
back such actions. In other words, if you contribute good stuff, you’ll
get more good stuff back than you might in the “unplugged” life.
Some emerging examples this type of thinking are already evident in services
like FiveLimes and GoodCapital focused
on contributing to the greater good.
The
Era of the Sovereign Citizen has arrived.It has always been those in power
who shape the future. The idea that power has always rested with the people
has not only been around for a while, it has fueled both revolutions and reforms.
However, the people’s feedback and contribution amplified towards change
has never been this powerful in all of recorded history to date.
All of us enhanced
by advances represent what the future can actually be. How you use your emerging
sovereign status is no longer up to corporations or governments to dictate.
M.K. Gandhi had once said: “Be the change you wish to see in the world”.
Right now, we’re actually are at an inflection point in history where
that sentiment can have a more significant meaning than ever before.
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Ray
Podder lives
for dreaming up the next ideas to make our lives easier, more enjoyable, more
connected to each other and hopefully much better than before. He uses his
perspective as marketer, designer, strategist and entrepreneur to create the
when, now. To learn more, please visit GROW.
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