As 2011 comes to a close, it’s only natural (and for a blog, virtually mandatory) to reflect on the year that’s passed. Since that first post more than three years ago until now, this blog has served as the foundation for everything I’ve done in creating and building the social media practice at Booz Allen. During the first year, it was the pioneer, carving the way for others throughout the firm to feel empowered to create their own blogs as well. The second year was probably my most enjoyable year authoring this blog because I had moved beyond the “justifying my existence” stage, the Gov 2.0 community was active and engaged, and I found myself really in the trenches with a lot of my clients helping them work through many of the issues that I got to write about. This third year though, was a little different. As my firm’s social media capabilities matured beyond the start-up phase and expanded to other areas of the firm, I found myself struggling with how to scale and sustain these efforts and this was reflected in my writing too.
I wrote about a lot of different topics this year – from community management to higher education to public relations, and even personal introspection – reflecting the many different focus areas I had in my own career over the last year. Was I going to focus on Enterprise 2.0? Or Public Relations? Social Media? Social Media and Higher Education? Sports? Change Management? Management? While I remain interested in all of these topics (and many more), I’ve realized that I have do a better job of focusing, both professionally and personally. As I look forward to 2012 and my fourth year of blogging here, I’m going to do a better job of focusing my energy on a few areas instead of trying to get involved with every opportunity I’m interested in. Now, I just need to identify what those focus areas are….
While I think through that, here are my top five posts of 2011, as determined by how much you liked them, the reaction they generated, and how much I enjoyed writing them:
- Rest in Peace, Social Media Ninjas – Probably my most controversial post of the year as some applauded it and others (predictably, some social media ninjas) heartily disagreed. While I used stronger language than I usually do, that’s because I really do think social is better when integrated into other functions rather than operating in a vacuum.
- Seven Things About Social Media You’re Not Going to Learn in College – This post actually received a lot more interest over on the PRSA blog, comPRhension than it did here, but I was still very proud of this post as I heard time and time again from students and professors alike who referenced it in their classes.
- The Many Roles of an Internal Community Manager – One of my favorite posts I’ve ever written because I lived it and because this was one of the best ways I found to really show other people what it is a community manager actually does and why the role can’t be filled by just anybody.
- More Than Words: How to Really Redefine the Term, “Public Relations” – This one hasn’t gotten as much traffic as I would have hoped, but I’m including it here because I’m tired of the bum rap us PR practitioners get and because we’ve got an opportunity now, as an industry, to change this perception. We have the tools to put the relationships back into public relations.
- Insulate Open Government Efforts from Budget Cuts – This post became one a frequent soapbox of mine over the course of the year, as I frequently found myself asking both my team and my clients, “what’s the business objective you’re trying to achieve? Your goal isn’t to get more Facebook fans – what’s your real goal? How does this effort tie back to your mission?”
This blog, much like myself, was a little all over the place this year. I’m looking forward to this next year, to meeting more of you who read and share my thoughts, to working on projects that really make a difference, and to sharing my thoughts and experiences with all of you. I hope everyone has a great holiday season and finishes out 2011 having a great time with great friends. See you all in 2012!!
I can completely relate to not being able to focus my blogging. 🙂 Good luck in 2012.