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Corporate & Clueless

Heresy I know, but I have never read The Cluetrain Manifesto from cover to cover. I could almost quote you the 95 theses but never sat down and read the whole lot.

Well I am now. And what an eye-opener! Well .. slap in the face actually.

For those who have not read it, The Cluetrain Manifesto is one of those rare business books that causes definitions to be rewritten. It is (note: I’m not using past tense) a watershed in thinking. Thinking about communication and how it has been impacted by the internet.

The book just makes sense. It talks lots about talk: human conversation. In a delightfully subversive and provocative way it tilts at corporate wind mills and challenges them to engage in a conversation.

At heart it is a lot about heart: being human and humane in how we communicate.

Squirm, Jump, Scratch

It is one of those rare texts that make you squirm: jump up and scratch your head. Well it does for me as a corporate affairs exec with just over two decades in the game. I found myself putting it down and needing to go for a walk to take in the last few pages.

It was written in 1999 but, surprisingly after a decade, it is still fresh and relevant.

It’s hard to find a typical quote. I gave up my usual scribbles of highlighter and pencilled asterisks as each page started to look like a graffiti wall.

For those in corporate PR there are many painful jabs in the ribs. Marketing however cops both barrels at close range: here, like most in PR I suspect, I confess to some schadenfreude.

ifyoutalkedtopeople-thumb1

But please know: this is not anti-business.

I can see that many could take it this way. But for those with an open mind (even just a chink) this book opens new vistas for improving communication - especially for corporations.

I found the first chapter after the theses, titled ‘Internet Apocalypso’, superbly written. The author is Christopher Locke. He is one of the four who wrote the Manifesto.

I leave you with a quote from him (p8) that I trust will spur my fellow corporate PRs to pick it up - or download it for free - and read it:

“The Internet is inherently seditious. It undermines unthinking respect for centralized authority, whether that “authority” is the neatly homogenized voice of broadcast advertising or the smarmy rhetoric of the corporate annual report.”

via parkyoung

[Illustration: Hugh Macleod: Gaping Void]

 

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Comments (2)

Feb 08, 2010
Hi David, Trevor actually introduced me to The Cluetrain Manifesto. I am about half way through and find the book subversive, engaging and eye opening. More than anything else, this book has really caused me to re-think my approach to PR/ media/ engagement. Personally, I love the ideas around markets as conversations, the end of secrecy and the need for companies to rear down walls and join the conversation.
Feb 08, 2010
Hi David,

Have to agree with you- despite being written some 10 years ago, Cluetrain for me remains THE text that changed the way communicators viewed and approached the internet as a dialogue, rather than simply one-way monologue to transmit corporate speak to market segments.

As a recent PR grad, texts like this really make me excited about the future of the PR and corporate communications industries, and the new channels that are being opened to connect and engage with people.

I think it's been nearly three years since I first read Cluetrain... perhaps it's time for me to re-read it and re-discover the wonderful quotes and ideas that the authors left behind for us to ponder and carry forward in our everyday practice?

Cheers, Jamie

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