By Jeff Cross, Executive Editor, Cleanfax
I think most of us have played or heard of the “Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon” game where one is challenged to find the shortest path from any Hollywood actor to Kevin Bacon within six steps. I’ve tried it. It’s impossible to find someone more than six actors away from good old Kevin.
If you are confused because you have never played, let me simplify. Your goal is to name a string of actors from the first one that starts the game, all the way to Kevin Bacon. Each actor must have worked in a movie with another to move forward.
Stop scratching your head, wondering where I’m getting at. I think you see the angle… each one of your customers knows someone else, who knows someone else… basically, you can reach a lot of people from just one contact, one happy customer.
But it shouldn’t happen by default.
Shrinking degrees
While the old six degree game might be interesting, it seems that with communications the way they are today, it is outdated data.
I found one source that indicates it might be closer to five degrees of separation, the number of links from one random person to another. Wait a second. I just Googled it. I found another source that says it is really closer to four degrees of separation. Here’s a quote from an article by The New York Times: “Using data on the links among 721 million Facebook users, a team of scientists discovered that the average number of acquaintances separating any two people in the United States was 4.37.”
I imagine if you went to Google you would find even a smaller degree of separation number, by another team of analytical scientists, but we better just go with four to make it simple and get this article over with before you fall any more asleep than you already have.
In your local marketplace, this number is probably even smaller. It has to be. People know other people. They connect easily on social media. If you have a customer who works at an office, and let’s say there are 50 employees, your customer will be connected to a handful of them, and the spider web just grows from there.
So are you using social media to take advantage of these shrinking degrees of separation?
Many wonder what they can do with their favorite social media platform in order to get more customers. Don’t make the mistake of just posting stuff. Be engaging.
Try just this one thing: Create a Facebook contest. Take a picture of a neat building, or a nice lobby in a local hotel, something you can post and people can identify the location. Make a nice, worthwhile prize package for the winner.
What will be the result? People love contests. They will talk about it, especially the winner — that is, if the prize is worth talking about. And since your customer knows someone else, who knows someone else… well, you get the picture.
I think most of us have played or heard of the “Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon” game where one is challenged to find the shortest path from any Hollywood actor to Kevin Bacon within six steps. I’ve tried it. It’s impossible to find someone more than six actors away from good old Kevin.
If you are confused because you have never played, let me simplify. Your goal is to name a string of actors from the first one that starts the game, all the way to Kevin Bacon. Each actor must have worked in a movie with another to move forward.
Stop scratching your head, wondering where I’m getting at. I think you see the angle… each one of your customers knows someone else, who knows someone else… basically, you can reach a lot of people from just one contact, one happy customer.
But it shouldn’t happen by default.
Shrinking degrees
While the old six degree game might be interesting, it seems that with communications the way they are today, it is outdated data.
I found one source that indicates it might be closer to five degrees of separation, the number of links from one random person to another. Wait a second. I just Googled it. I found another source that says it is really closer to four degrees of separation. Here’s a quote from an article by The New York Times: “Using data on the links among 721 million Facebook users, a team of scientists discovered that the average number of acquaintances separating any two people in the United States was 4.37.”
I imagine if you went to Google you would find even a smaller degree of separation number, by another team of analytical scientists, but we better just go with four to make it simple and get this article over with before you fall any more asleep than you already have.
In your local marketplace, this number is probably even smaller. It has to be. People know other people. They connect easily on social media. If you have a customer who works at an office, and let’s say there are 50 employees, your customer will be connected to a handful of them, and the spider web just grows from there.
So are you using social media to take advantage of these shrinking degrees of separation?
Many wonder what they can do with their favorite social media platform in order to get more customers. Don’t make the mistake of just posting stuff. Be engaging.
Try just this one thing: Create a Facebook contest. Take a picture of a neat building, or a nice lobby in a local hotel, something you can post and people can identify the location. Make a nice, worthwhile prize package for the winner.
What will be the result? People love contests. They will talk about it, especially the winner — that is, if the prize is worth talking about. And since your customer knows someone else, who knows someone else… well, you get the picture.