demandbase blog:

Oh, Cluetrain Sounding Louder…

I happen to be the leader of the San Francisco Salesforce.com user group, and we had an absolutely fantastic meeting this morning on social network marketing. Clara Shih, author of the forthcoming book The Facebook Era, spoke to a room packed with close to 100 people interested in learning how to use social networks like Facebook or Twitter for business.

I'll try to pull some thoughts together on that and post it to my user group blog, but it reminded me of something my wife shared with me a few weeks back. She was listening to talk radio, and they were talking about marketing and modern business, as well as social networks – and the host kept referring to a book called The Cluetrain Manifesto.

Wikipedia defines The Cluetrain Manifesto as "…a set of 95 theses organized and put forward as a manifesto, or call to action, for all businesses operating within what is suggested to be a newly-connected marketplace." The entire book is available online, for free,  but there are a few of the 95 theses that really stand out in this context…

# 8 – In both internetworked markets and among intranetworked employees, people are speaking to each other in a powerful new way.

# 9 – These networked conversations are enabling powerful new forms of social organization and knowledge exchange to emerge.

#10 – As
a result, markets are getting smarter, more informed, more organized.
Participation in a networked market changes people fundamentally.

#11 – People
in networked markets have figured out that they get far better
information and support from one another than from vendors. So much for
corporate rhetoric about adding value to commoditized products.

Did I mention these were all written in 1999? Almost 10 years ago!

Good stuff, and again, the whole book is available for free here.

About Jason Stewart

Mr. Stewart leads demand generation programs for Demandbase and is a recognized marketing technologist and thought leader in the B2B lead generation and lead management space. He founded and leads the Salesforce.com user group in San Francisco and was one of the first 500 people to complete the Salesforce.com Certified Administrator process. He has spent 12 years in B2B telesales, demand generation, lead management and marketing operations with a variety of public and privately held software companies. He earned his BA in English from Rutgers University.
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6 Responses to Oh, Cluetrain Sounding Louder…

  1. Holy crap holy crap! Perfect timing, J-man. For some reason Twitter has been buzzing with Cluetrain stuff. I confess I’d never read it… for slackers like me, here’s a great highly condensed slide deck summary.
    Woe is me for not having read it. We’re just starting up our blog, and (relatively speaking) dumb luck has led us to the right approach, apparently. Would have saved me a lot of evolution if I’d picked up that clue ten years ago.
    Darn good summary on Wikipedia, too. Thanks for that link.
    btw, IMO the measure of a good blog is that you keep finding useful stuff on it. This one’s in that category.

  2. Hey, what are you doin’ not allowing links in comments?? Here are the links I embedded:
    Twitter search on Cluetrain: http://search.twitter.com/search?q=cluetrain
    Slideshow summary:
    http://www.slideshare.net/mspecht/cluetrain-review-presentation

  3. Connie says:

    I know that I read the Cluetrain Manifesto before 1999. I was working at my firs start-up when I read it – and left that company in 1998. So….
    …Now granted I read it online via some message board link. But it was circulating well before 1999.

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