Last night, I got a message from Keith Burtis. Keith often pings me just to say hi or chat. We sometimes talk on Skype. He’s a person I know I can turn to to celebrate my successes, and who I can lean on when things go bad. We’ve collaborated on a bunch of things to do with work. I consider him a very good friend.
Alan Isfan is another good friend of mine. We catch up a couple of times a week, have collaborated on some work stuff, and he’s that guy I know I can rely on 100% to help me out in a pinch, whether it’s a work-related challenge or if I am stuck on the side of the road in a blizzard.
I am grateful every day to have such terrific and talented people around me. But what I find fascinating is, even though we have these strong, solid personal relationships, and even though we have built a tremendous amount of trust with one another, we are actually each others’ competition.
You see, Alan, and Keith and I are all in the same business. We use new media, social media and video to help our clients tell stories. Ultimately, we are all drawing from the same well. How is it that we’re not mortal enemies, then?
You must remember this. Think about 10-15 years ago. Competitors were something to be stifled, pushed down, tromped on. If a businessperson didn’t know who their competitors were and how to beat them, they simply weren’t doing it right. It was a wicked game, but one that many played hard. Sometimes, they’d even go so far as to befriend the competition, but their intent was often devious. They just wanted to find out how their competitors ticked. What was tripping them up. So they could swoop in and scoop the business. Now before you jump all over me, it wasn’t ALWAYS like this. That’s where the phrase “If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em!”, came from. I worked for giant corporations for many years; if they couldn’t compete, they just tried for a monopoly. Yah, that’ll show ’em.
Play it again, Sam. Oh sure, fierce competition still goes on today on many levels. Giant corporations certainly haven’t changed THAT much. But I do sense a shift in the small to medium business world, and I wonder if it has to do with the shift in the way we communicate and connect with one another. Think about it – how many people do you know in your social networks that you consider someone you trust? Someone you’d like to do business with? Collaborate with? Partner with? Now how many of those people are your direct competitors?
It’s all about US. If you’re anything like me, you’ll answer the above questions with things like “Oh, so many of the people I know online I’d love to work with!”, “I trust that person immensely!”, and “I’d do anything I can to help that person!”. Times have changed indeed. That’s the thing about community. Instead of us feeling that we’re all working against each other, pushing and shoving our way into the pockets of those people who need our products and services, we’re all helping each other to succeed. Somehow, we realize that there’s enough to go around. Somehow, we realize that even though we are all trying to do similar things, we’ve all got our own strengths and weaknesses. We know that the sum of the parts makes a stronger whole out here in the online world.
But…There is a flip side to this philosophy – a down side, if you will. Whereas competition and community can co-exist happily much of the time, trust itself can be fickle. One false move and you may find yourself having to build up all over again. I’ve learned some lessons in the past few months about trusting too much. I think it’s absolutely wonderful that I have these great friends like Keith and Allan who I love to hang out with and talk to and work with, but it’s taken time for us to build that. Just because someone wants to be your “friend” doesn’t mean you should dive in with both feet and reveal everything right away, especially if that person is potentially a competitor. It is easy to trust people quickly on things like Twitter. It’s easy to take someone’s recommendation and put your trust in another right away without doing the proper checks and balances to see if that person’s reputation stands up. And as a result, it’s easier than ever to get burned. So should you close down? Not at all. But do keep your guard up, until people prove themselves…and I mean with real stuff, not just words.
So I guess what I’m trying to say is…This post stems from a bunch of stuff that has been swimming around in my head lately. It comes from a situation with Keith and Allan last night where we were able to work together to create something that I hope helps Keith out in a big way. It comes from the fact that I’m completely engrossed in Chris and Julien’s book Trust Agents right now (click that big book up on the right side there, so you can buy oh, I dunno, 1 or 50 or 100 or 1000 copies, ok?). I’m totally biased; I’m not making any secret about that. But honestly it’s been a while since a business book has had me thinking so much. To the point of distraction sometimes. It’s definitely wrapping my head around some things that I’ve been noodling with for a while.
What it comes down to is, somehow, this space that we’re sharing out here has made us aware, in no uncertain terms, of who our competition is. As businesspeople, that’s a good thing. But it’s also made us realize that we’re all just people, trying to succeed, trying to live our passions and dreams. It’s becoming clearer that if we’re in this together, we might as well work together, instead of pushing against each other. Because if we’re all moving in the same direction, ultimately, our clients will be better off. Their stories will be richer. And hey, I guess we will be too.
7 Comments
Suze, what can I say here that hasn’t been said already except for the fact that there is no doubt that both you and Alan are amazing folks that I love working with.
Yep, it’s true that at times we might be competing, but I think the chances of us partnering like Alan said are much higher. We are all trying to figure out new business models, new back-end tracking, new customers etc..
I am currently working on a project with a woman that is in Texas, but originally from my home town of Buffalo. She opened a site called oddPodz a couple years ago and has come to be for help in building the community there. The reason I mention this is because I am going to try and help enable exactly what we are talking about here by fostering mastermind groups. It is my contention that what you, myelf, Alan and others have is going on without structure all over the web.
This article rings soooo true for me and very timely. We can all be a team! We are not approaching our business from the mindset of Diminished Returns, but that of Strength in Numbers. W all draw upon the talents of each other to BEST serve the whole. That whole means us, our vendors, partners and the customer! There is no other business I would rather be in than this one. You all mean the world to me and lets keep teaming up to change it for the better!
@KeithBurtis
Sue, This was an early lesson I learned from my career industry side of me. When I started connecting in about 1999, I found I had colleagues not competitors. There are many in the career field that are highly successful and to some extent, we draw from the same pool with the ability to work virtually but I have learned so much from my colleagues and my business has been propelled to another level because of them that I could never see them as a problem.
Continuing on in social networking where I have connected with many of my colleagues on another level has increased our visibility and I hope in the end will result in the general public understanding what gifts and talents are found in our community. We battle a different problem of being misunderstood and mistrusted by people who confuse professionals with fly-by-nights. So I see a presence of professionals in any field interacting in the public as the opportunity for the consumer to see the personalities and qualities of people they want to do business with in the future.
Continue on connecting and I am waiting for delivery of my copy of Trust Agents and two other books from Amazon.
[rq=531334,0,blog][/rq]The Right Tools
Sue,
Very interesting indeed. As always, let me poke at a few things.
1. Being in the same business doesn’t necessarily make you a competitor unless you’re really going after the same customer.
Our business is a bit unspecific and our pool of potential customers is absolutely huge over a very extensive list of verticals. When I was in telecom, I’d always be running into the same usual suspects at every account, going for the exact same business. Not nearly as friendly.
2. We are small.
We have some overlap in our networks but it isn’t huge. In certain cases, we may be in a position to bid for a larger project only if we partner. That has already happened between us specifically and is going on right now between Keith and myself on several fronts. Although I don’t think this way, helping each other may actually be helping ourselves.
Having said that, I’m sure social utilities have something to do with all this, after all that’s how we started in our relationships (I’ve never even met Keith Burtis in person and we’re doing business together!).
Keep on rokin in ottawa 🙂
[rq=530824,0,blog][/rq]ROI on our SXSW campaign – interesting numbers
Great post, Suze. Though I don’t know you or Keith Burtis or Alan Isfan, I’m willing to guess another reason you’re able to be friends as well as competitors is that your goals and motivations are different from what people’s were 15 years ago. I’m guessing young entrepreneurs today are not interested in taking over the world, but in changing it. They don’t want a career that makes them rich, but that makes theirs and other people’s lives richer. It’s easier to be friends with your competitors when you goal is to support each other, not eliminate each other. Just a thought.
And my copy of Trust Agents is sitting on my desk right now – I’m hoping to tackle it this weekend. Thanks for reminding me to read it.
[rq=529826,0,blog][/rq]All it takes is love
Well, well said, Keith. Thank you for expanding on what I think is an extremely important discussion. We’ve all spent the past couple of years building our relationships with each other, and building our own enterprises. Now is the time for us to figure out what are the next steps we can take together. Cheers, friend!
Re: 1. I agree we do have a huge pool to draw from. But ultimately (and especially for you and I, as we both live in the same relatively small city) there’s a lot of crossover. You and I have a lot of similar interests in the type of people we want to do business with. I agree that you and I have a good working relationship, we see opportunities for ourselves but also opportunities to work together. I would hope that other small business owners would want to do the same. But I think that might be a bit of an idealist point of view. The good thing about our line of business, however, is that it’s not restricted geographically. We have the whole world.
RE: 2. I can’t believe you and Keith have never met. You need to fix that. 😉
I think you are bang on with that. And thanks for calling us “young”. 🙂