Collective Bias News

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Monday, June 8, 2009

Forget the technology, it's about relationships


The Wilkins are some of our best friends. Ceri and Rolf are a wonderful couple with a beautiful family of 2 boys and a daughter who is roughly Mary Catherine's age. We attend church together, have dinners, go to events. We have a shared passion for good food and wine. What's more interesting is that we've only known the Wilkins for two years, (we met them when we moved to Arkansas) but we might as well have known each other much longer.
Rolf is a life-long entrepreneur who owns a pizza chain called Eureka Pizza (@eurekapizza on twitter). I've always admired his business ability and he doesn't know it, but he helped inspire me to take the biggest chance of my life and leave the corporate world where I've spent my entire career to begin a new chapter in the agency world.
The reason I'm sharing all this is I believe that life presents opportunities and often provides some help along the way. I didn't realize this myself until we attended the Art of Wine event last Saturday and Rolf started asking me about my new job. His questions were very directed and made me think about the process I'm going through building this new company. We also discussed his use of social media to build his business and various tactics both he and his competitors are employing. What was ironic is that our entire discussion didn't involve any technology and was more real and authentic and meaningful than many of the electronic exchanges that seem so important. I think in many of the communication plans I've seen lately, the human element is lost in the rush to influence social platforms.
Shannon and I appreciate the Wilkins friendship and are thankful that they are in our life during this transition. Look for those guides in your life, they may already be there and you don't even know. Sure I'll keep up with Rolf using social tools, but the personal influence will always be more important.