"Social business" is a term you can't escape these days---even if your work just remotely touches on social media platforms, such as Facebook and Twitter, or collaborative technologies, such as IBM Connections or Yammer.



But what does "social business" mean? And why should you care?

After months of discussion and debate with my Dachis Group colleagues Jeff Dachis, Kate Niederhoffer, and Ellen Wescott, in January 2009, I was the first person to publish and use the phrase "social business" in a blog post. That post, titled "It's Time To Transform," touched on the fundamental need for a new concept---something that would get us past incremental changes in marketing and technology, and would unlock much greater value creation for businesses.

(Note: The phrase "social business" was in use prior to January 2009 in reference to the work of Professor Muhammad Yunus. That definition is quite different than our use of the term as applied to evolutionary marketing and technology strategies.)

Later that year, with David Armano and Jevon MacDonald on board, we wrote about the concept of Social Business Design, which explained what social business is, why it matters, and where to apply it in the organization.

In brief: Social business draws on trends in technology (e.g., powerful mobile devices, widespread availability of high-speed Internet access, low cost of data storage), work (e.g., always-on culture, globalization), and society (e.g., propensity to share). Companies should care about social business because they can improve business outcomes (i.e., increase revenue or decrease costs). The core principles touch on all areas of a business, whether for business-to-customer engagement, employee-to-employee collaboration, or supply chain optimization. Making social business work requires focus on a company's culture, connections, content exchanges, and measurement and analytics.

Let's pause for a second. As you can see, the definition of "social business" is already unwieldy.

Why You Should Care About the Definition


Here's where we get to the part that explains why you should care about the definition of social business.

The thing about social business---and what is true to its original definition---is that it's a BIG IDEA. Again, go back to that original blog post, and see that social business intends to transform marketing and technology. Companies have always listened to customers and have empowered employees. Companies have also been exploring new media and implementing new technology for decades.

But here's the difference: Social business harnesses the trends in market today, helping us change business models of yesterday and driving brands forward into the operating modes of tomorrow.

Dion Hinchcliffe and I wrote a book called Social Business By Design to explain how to make social business work. A graphic model for thinking about the concepts in this post is included below.
Social Business Design
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Social business is huge, and it's not going away. Three years after the phrase "social business" was coined, at least 101 examples of social business ROI exist. Momentum is building. Companies are using the core social business principles to create competitive advantage and drive business results.

I cringe a little bit every time I read a post that tries to "define" social business but ends up marginalizing the concept. Social business stands for what companies need to become---not a description of an incremental feature or business function. And now that you know what "social business" really means and why it matters, you need to preserve the integrity and expansiveness of the definition.

If you can stay true to the big idea, you'll have the blueprint to transformative success that others clearly have a tough time grasping.

Peter Kim is chief strategy officer of Dachis Group.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Peter is Chief Strategy Officer of Dachis Group and a leading advisor on social business. He co-authored the book Social Business By Design and drives global industry discourse at beingpeterkim.com and as @peterkim on Twitter.

Peter has been quoted by media outlets including CNN, CNBC, NPR, and The Wall Street Journal and featured as a speaker at events including SXSW, Web 2.0 Expo, and Dachis Group Social Business Summits.

Peter was previously an analyst at Forrester Research and head of international marketing operations, e-commerce, and digital marketing at PUMA AG. He holds degrees from the Darden School at the University of Virginia and the University of Pennsylvania.