Read Always Eat Left Handed: 15 Surprisingly Simple Secrets of Success Online
Authors: Rohit Bhargava
Tags: #Business & Money, #Job Hunting & Careers, #Guides, #Self-Help, #90 Minutes (44-64 Pages), #Career Guides, #Health; Fitness & Dieting
Author’s Note:
Parts of this section were excerpted (and edited) from my second book
Likeonomics
, which focused on the principle of Timing in Chapter 8.
Chapter 14 - Let Ideas Travel
Lesson - Share The Credit
At the end of 2006, the then-popular blog search engine
Technorati
released a list of the 100 most popular blog posts of the entire year (ranked by the number of other sites linking to them). Almost all the posts mentioned centered either on politics or technology. Among the top 100 posts were articles about Stephen Colbert’s performance at the White House Press Correspondent’s Dinner and a post about a Saturday Night Live skit titled “What if Al Gore Were President?”
In between the geeks and wonks, there were also a handful of business posts that managed to make the cut. It was a list that I had been watching closely for some time. A few years earlier, I had started a blog called
Influential Marketing
, where I shared marketing ideas and thoughts. By August of 2006, I was steadily getting about 25 visitors a day … hardly what you would consider a major audience.
Then everything changed.
On August 10
th
of 2006, I published a post I titled “The 5 Rules Of Social Media Optimization (SMO).” In it, I described what I believed was a new field of marketing that would be a companion to the already popular practice of Search Engine Optimization (SEO). Within hours, several other respected Internet marketing bloggers added their own suggestions to the original post and my original five rules had gone up to 17.
Don’t “Own” The Idea
Over the course of the following week, dozens of people commented on the post. My blog visitors shot up to several thousand each day. More sites linked to the original post and elaborated on the concept and idea. SMO went viral.
The conversation was happening at a speed that only the online environment can really enable. And I had a choice to make. I could claim the idea as my own and become the “SMO guy.” I could build my entire blog around that concept and register all the relevant domain names. Then maybe one day I would write the book.
That was the way to own an idea, and I knew it … but instead I chose to do the opposite.
I shared the other blog posts and rules as addendums to my original post. I invited others to take the rules, remix them and share them again. I asked anyone interested to take the idea and write about it freely. They did. Within a matter of months, it was cited enough times across the web to make the list of Top 100 posts on Technorati for the entire year of 2006.
Thousands of people a day started visiting my blog to read the post about SMO, and many stayed and subscribed to read my other ideas. Thanks to the traffic and visibility, my blog was selected by
AdAge
magazine as one of the Top 25 marketing blogs in the country. The
Wall Street Journal
even profiled it and called it “intellectual and educational.”
Two years later, thanks in part to the popularity of the blog, I successfully pitched and won a contract with McGraw-Hill, one of the largest publishers in the world, to write my first book
Personality Not Included
.
Being Internet Famous
My story of going viral online and building an audience is one that has been duplicated on the web by writers, musicians, entertainers and all sorts of others over the past decade. The Internet is helping individual obscure voices get recognized and discovered. Most of them are finding success by openly sharing content and ideas and watching them spread organically.
Letting ideas travel changes everything.
But in my case, there was something more than just having a good idea that made the difference. The idea was only the beginning. What allowed this idea to catch on was the open choice to allow anyone to take it and use it freely – and the smart influencers in the digital marketing community that jumped into the idea immediately and started talking about it.
In perhaps the perfect full circle illustration of the journey that SMO took, six years after initially sharing the idea on my blog, I happened to be sitting in a meeting with a client listening to a new potential partner pitch their approach to work with us.
They promised they were a pioneer in digital marketing, and offered a roster of “SMO experts.” They even had a Powerpoint slide about it. I didn’t know them, and they didn’t know me. In that meeting, I wasn’t the “creator of SMO” – and that was just fine with me. SMO had been good to me. Thanks to the idea, I had jumpstarted a platform for myself, made amazing connections with very smart fellow marketers, and landed a five figure book deal. I didn’t need anything else.
The only thing I had to do was remember the lesson it offered.
How To Let Your Ideas Travel
Letting ideas travel starts with a philosophy of unselfishness – because it can sometimes be hard to see your ideas taken and used by others. Aside from this broad advice, there are three things that can help you to promote your ideas to travel.
Chapter 15 - Walk In High Heels
Lesson - Learn Empathy
In 2001 Frank Baird had a crazy idea.
While working as a community advocate and family therapist in California with women and families broken apart by domestic abuse, he wanted to find a new way to create more visibility and dialogue around the cause. At the time, holding a march was a popular way to show support - but Frank wanted to do something different.
So in 2001 he proposed to call his march “Walk A Mile In Her Shoes” – and then invited men to do exactly that by agreeing to wear bright red high heels and walk a mile. Doing it, they would create a spectacle that no one could ignore, and bring awareness to this important cause in the process.
Making It Real
More than a decade later, domestic abuse is becoming a highly visible topic, rightly getting more and more media attention than ever. Today there are large global concerts featuring stars like Beyoncé performing to support causes like domestic abuse. There is a major film called
Girl Rising
that depicts stories of hope and change to bring education to more girls and women around the world and break the cycle of the many ways that women are held back in societies around the world.
The aim for all of it is to bring awareness to the issue – but Frank’s march has something that many of the other campaigns miss. His has the power to create true empathy. Once a man actually walks a mile in high heels, it is hard to forget that experience. It is a reminder of a pledge taken to support women and fight against all forms of domestic abuse.
Wearing high heels changes everything.
The $42 Million Dollar Question
When you have empathy, people start to understand one another in real ways. This is true for relationships between the genders – but also for other kinds of relationships. One example of a relationship that has become strained over the past decade is the one between a doctor and patient. With the rapid explosion of healthcare content online – anyone can immediately self diagnose their own problems with a startling level of frequency.
Of course, that doesn’t always mean a doctor will listen.
It is a good thing Carolyn Bucksbaum didn’t see a doctor who listened nearly twenty years ago. Back then she was just a patient with a feeling something was wrong and a doctor who refused to listen to her ideas of what it might be. Her story was profiled in a
New York Times
article in 2011 which focused on the sometimes dysfunctional nature of doctor-patient conversations.
Bucksbaum’s story had a special significance, mainly because of her dramatically different experience receiving treatment from another doctor at the University of Chicago Medical Center. He took the time to listen and explain everything. He made her feel at ease. What he perhaps didn’t expect was just how she would choose to repay him.
The Bucksbaums had built a small fortune for themselves building retail shopping malls. And they wanted to give back. So they decided to donate $42 million dollars for the creation of a new clinical center that would focus on teaching medical professionals how to have more empathy in communications with patients.
Can that money really make a difference? One reason for hope is that in multiple studies, researchers have proved there is a strong link between better doctor patient interaction and better healthcare outcomes.
The business world is learning the same lesson. One of the most popular topics right now in the typically ROI focused world of corporate organizations is just how creating more human organizations can be good for the companies, employees and customers. The ability to show empathy is now a key leadership skill.
Learning empathy changes everything.
How To Learn Empathy
Can you really teach someone to be a better person? That’s a question I have heard before at several workshops from skeptical adults who doubted that something they considered to be an element of someone’s personality can actually be changed. The good news is, the answer is yes. I have seen it happen many times.
And empathy is often at the center of that change – because it involves someone stepping outside their own point of view and developing their ability to see things from a different perspective. Here are three techniques that I have found helpful to train business leaders and students alike:
Conclusion
Lesson - Always Eat Left Handed!
By now you’ve had the opportunity to read this collection of lessons and tips on personal success that I gathered and curated after years of watching and talking with others about how our seemingly small choices actually have a big effect on our future successes (or failures).