Tag: Jonah Berger

Trading Compliments, not Insults

Over the last three and a half weeks, a Facebook page called Penn Compliments has inspired University of Pennsylvania students to post more than 500 compliments about their fellow students, according to a recent article in the Daily Pennsylvanian student newspaper.

The creator of Penn Compliments prefers to remain anonymous — as are those who post compliments on the site — but told the DP that he had seen a similar compliments page at Columbia University in November and decided to start one at Penn. Since September, when the first such page appeared at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, more than 50 schools around the world have adapted the idea to their own campuses, according to the DP.

The goal of Penn Compliments is to “learn to do good and spread good,” the Penn Compliments founder told the student newspaper. Penn “can be a pretty high-stress, competitive environment, at times even negative.”

Can such a high-minded initiative last at a time where one is more likely to see Facebook posts with snarky insults and innuendos rather than uplifting, affirmative praise?

“This can definitely work,” states Maurice Schweitzer, Wharton professor of operations and information management and an expert on trust and emotions in business. “There are real benefits from positive thinking, and self-confidence can be boosted in many ways. This site is unlikely to be popular with everyone, but there are some people who will gain a positive boost episodically and others who may become ‘regulars.’”

The premise behind Tesser’s Self Evaluation Maintenance model — which assumes that people behave in a way that maintains or increases self-evaluation and that people’s relationships with others have a substantial impact on self-evaluation — is that people seek to maintain a positive self-image, Schweitzer says. “The self-image is easily threatened — by, for example, negative feedback on a project — but can be maintained by seeking positive feedback in a different domain.”

 Schweitzer predicts that the Penn Compliments site will have staying power. “I believe there are some people who will derive significant benefits from this. For these people, a positive boost at the right time could make the difference between success and failure. For example, it could be that someone teetering on the edge between staying in a program or dropping out could be tipped to stay because of this.”

Wharton marketing professor Jonah Berger — who studies social contagion, social influence and viral marketing, among other topics — applauds the site for its positive nature. “It’s contagious because it’s self-propagating,” he told the DP. “Getting a compliment informs people about the site and encourages them to pass it on and compliment others.”

A Time.com article two weeks ago featured the four original founders of the compliment site at Queen’s University, who say that their Facebook account now has more than 4,000 friends and 1,300 compliments. Posts on the site have called the student founders “the human equivalent of a ray of sunshine” and “the inspiration for Aretha Franklin’s ‘Respect.’” The founders themselves, according to Time.com, say they want to contribute to anti-bullying crusades and increased awareness of mental health issues, especially following several student deaths — both suicides and accidents — in 2010 and 2011.

Of course, even something as benign as complimenting others comes with a few rough edges and quirks. The Penn site’s founder has commented on his need to delete foul language and inappropriate political comments from some of the compliments. But he didn’t delete one especially popular compliment directed toward a long-standing syndicate firmly embedded in the Penn community — squirrels.

The compliment reads: “UPenn squirrels, don’t ever change. You guys are so fat and furry, always with an oversized piece of food/garbage in your cheeky little cheeks…. I love all you guys.”

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The Pope on Twitter: 140-character Sermons?

As probably the whole word knows by now, Pope Benedict XVI plans next week to start tweeting in eight languages. His Twitter handle is @Pontifex, and he has already generated several hundred thousand followers even before his first official tweet, scheduled for December 12.

The pope’s decision to open a Twitter account raises a number of questions, including: Is this a good marketing strategy? Will it help the Catholic Church reach out to younger generations, and will those younger generations tweet back? What kinds of messages should the pope tweet? Finally, does the pope seem a little late to the game, since, as FastCompany.com noted today, he joins “an impressive, highly retweeted group of religious leaders,” including such names as the Dalai Lama, Joel Osteen, Rick Warren, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr. and Rabbi Shmuley Boteach.

Wharton marketing professor Jonah Berger suggests that the pope’s new communication strategy is a good marketing decision for the Vatican. “As technology advances, religion often gets less attention. This raises the church’s profile and reminds people it is relevant to [our] day and age.” As to whether this strategy will help the church reach the coveted younger generation, Berger predicts that most of this age group won’t respond, “but some will. Churches have a target market just like Pepsi does. And this is another channel to reach that market.”

What kinds of messages should the pope tweet — and what kinds should he avoid? Berger’s advice: “Be authentic. A formal ministry in Japan started tweeting using slang, but people found it incongruous. No one wants to hear the pope talking about YOLO [you only live once] or using phrases like OMG. Tweeting useful information about faith or inspiring stories will spread their ideas while staying true to the [church’s] core message.”

Wharton marketing professor Peter Fader says the pope’s foray into Twitter “seems entirely sensible and natural to me. Twitter is nothing more than a personalized broadcasting channel. No one would think twice if the pope had his own radio station or cable channel. Perhaps he already does.” It makes sense for him, “and any other highly visible person/organization, to have a way to share information, perspectives and other relevant content with followers.”

In that respect, Fader sees Twitter as “very different from Facebook. I actively use the former, multiple times a day, but very rarely use the latter. I find it very valuable to be able to offer one-way broadcasting about my work, and find it equally valuable to read the broadcasts from other people/organizations that interest me. I’m not interested in having conversations.”

Fader laments what he describes as Twitter’s “cutesy name. If it were just called ‘micro-blogging,’ no one would think twice or raise eyebrows that the pope is doing it.”

According to an article in The Wall Street Journal, the Vatican already uses other social media tools such as Facebook and YouTube. In addition, the pope’s “first tweets will be in response to questions put to [him] via Twitter about faith; the pope isn’t likely answer queries unrelated to religion.” The Vatican’s media advisor adds that the pope “won’t physically write each tweet, [but] will be personally involved in what it says,” the Journal reports.

Given that other religious leaders are already tweeting, does Pope Benedict XVI seem a little late to the game? “So maybe he’s a little late, but better late than never.” Fader says. “And as long as [Twitter] is used in an appropriate manner – and I’m sure that will be the case – then I don’t see any downsides to it at all.”

Adds Berger: “No one is counting. Or expecting the pope to be on technology’s bleeding edge.”

 

 

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Gibson Strums a Twitter Chord to Empower Small Business

Gibson Guitar, the maker of the iconic Les Paul and Firebird guitars, is using social media to build support from around the world as it battles the U.S. government over allegations of illegal wood imports. A Twitter campaign launched by Gibson CEO Henry Juszkiewicz (hash tag “#ThisWillNotStand”) has rallied thousands of Gibson Guitar fans, with nearly 4,400 tweets at last count. Wharton experts say Gibson may be tapping into social media’s true power, regardless of the outcome of the allegations.

 On August 24, armed agents of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service raided two Gibson manufacturing facilities in Tennessee along with the company’s Nashville, Tenn., headquarters, and confiscated $1 million worth of rare Indian ebony, finished guitars and electronic data. The federal agency hasn’t yet filed any charges, but the Justice Department alleges the wood was imported illegally from India, which bans the export of most types of unfinished wood. The Lacey Act of 1900 requires American companies to observe the laws of foreign countries in the trade of animal products, plants and wood, among items. Gibson faced similar trouble in 2009, when federal agents raided the company and seized wood they say was illegally imported from Madagascar. The Justice Department last June sued Gibson in the Madagascar case. Juszkiewicz maintains Gibson is innocent in both cases and just today posted an online petition urging the President to resolve the inquiry against it and “make the Lacey Act fair.”

Meanwhile, Juszkiewicz’s current Twitter pitch has David vs. Goliath undertones. “Each step in the democratization of access to these communications tools has been empowering to some — typically the less powerful — and threatening to others, typically those who hold the traditional reins of power,” says Kendall Whitehouse, Wharton director of new media. Wharton marketing professor Jonah Berger describes social media as “a new engine for social movements,” citing its role in the uprisings in Egypt and elsewhere. “It allows people to garner support for issues where public participation may not be safe until enough of a movement has formed,” he says. “It also allows companies and groups to build momentum and advocacy quickly and effectively, even over vast geographic distances.”

 The rise of instantaneous, global communications has changed much of the way the world works, Whitehouse notes. “In particular, the lowering of the barriers of access to these tools is having a profound effect — not only on government and small businesses, but on everything from political movements to major corporations.”

Social media is only the most recent link in a long chain that extends back to at least the rise of the Internet, Whitehouse adds. “The students during the uprising in Tiananmen Square got much of their message out — and learned of the reaction of the world — through fax machines. It’s the communication of the message rather than the mechanism that’s important. Social media further allows people and enterprises to connect and collaborate online.”

Gibson may have enlarged its fan base with its Twitter campaign, but its reputation has not been spotless. In 2009, Gibson was voted the “worst place to work” by its own employees, according to a Reuters report, which cited an analysis by jobs website Glassdoor.com. How successfully Gibson can defend itself in court, if and when federal charges are filed, is also an open question. It isn’t clear if this is the first time a company has used social media to fight a legal case. “But I agree it could lead to under-informed supporters backing a cause that ends up to have no merit,” says Berger. “As with many situations, consumers may be showing their advocacy even if they don’t have the right information.”

In an unwitting twist, Juszkiewicz’s campaign has also become a platform for Tea Party enthusiasts targeting President Barack Obama over unemployment. Accusing “big government [of] spending our money to harm ordinary citizens and small businesses,” Juszkiewicz has warned that if the raids lead to the closure of Gibson’s Tennessee factories, 700 jobs would be lost. At Obama’s jobs address last Thursday, Juszkiewicz was the special guest of Marsha Blackburn, Republican congresswoman from Tennessee. Says Andy Meek in The Daily Beast: “The invite was a definite nose-thumbing at the President, whose administration inadvertently helped turn Gibson … into a rabble-rousing battle cry for the Tea Party and conservative media establishment.”

Others point to some bizarre situations that could result from the Lacey Act, such as requiring guitar owners to prove their instrument was not made out of illegal wood. As The Economist writes in its September 3 edition: “Guitarists now worry that every time they cross a state border with their instrument, they will have to carry sheaves of documents proving that every part of it was legally sourced.”

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