Blogging with Cisco Systems CEO John Chambers

December 21, 2009 | Blogging, Video | Leave a Comment

Good luck trying to get most executives to seriously contemplate blogging. Yet, some of the biggest names in corporate America are bloggers.

Consider this quotation from Cisco Systems CEO John Chambers:

“If you had told me I was going to [be blogging] three or four years ago I would have said, ‘Not a chance.’ Blogging is now the way I communicate with our employees, almost all video.”

Chambers’ remark came during an enlightening interview on a McKinsey Quarterly Podcast . His statement is notable for three reasons that I’ll enumerate and then discuss in a little more detail.

  1. Chambers dismissal and eventual embrace of blogging.
  2. His use of video recordings rather than written content.
  3. His decision to blog internally rather than externally.

Let’s take point No. 1. If you currently see no value or payback in blogging, there are examples beyond John Chambers to consider. Among them are Virgin Cos. CEO Richard Branson, tech entrepreneur and Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban, Sun Microsystems CEO Jonathan Schwartz and management legend and former GE chief executive Jack Welch.

All of them have blogs. Take into account that these are not men who trifle with time-wasting activities. There must be something to blogging if individuals of their power and note are committing their time and energy.

Point No. 2, Chambers chose to use video rather than the written word to communicate with his people. It’s very common, albeit unfortunate, for executives to struggle with the written word.

I have no doubt many business people nix the idea of blogging because writing is simply unmanageable for them. Most of them probably never considered that blogging can be done by video. (Note that blogging done by video is sometimes referred to as vlogging.)

Take a lesson from John Chambers and factor the video option into your thinking. Remember that it’s not unusual for bloggers to use a mixture of writing and video, depending on the nature of the information they have to communicate in that particular post.

Jonathan Schwartz uses both video and written text on all of his blog posts. Subscribers to his blog have the choice of watching and listening to him on video or reading the written text of his postings, which appears below the video window. Check out Jonathan’s Blog.

Point No. 3 is Chambers’ decision to blog internally. Much hoopla has been made about the power of blogging for external marketing purposes and integrating those postings with Social Media networks. With all due respect to those aspirations, Web 2.0 technologies often pay off faster and bigger when used internally – especially at mid-size and large companies with hundreds or thousands of employees, vendors, investors and so on.

Many executives are flatly intimidated by the thought of airing their thoughts in public. Fair enough. But if you’re not communicating internally with your own employees in some fashion, you might want to reconsider your suitability for the role you’ve been given. Blogging – in writing or by video – is an excellent option for internal communications.

On the other hand, blogging externally to customers and other audiences gives you an opportunity to play a role that extends beyond being a mostly anonymous internal decision maker.

Not all leaders are cut out for a public role. Still, could you imagine Apple being the company it is without Steve Jobs very public leadership? Would anybody other than financial managers and investors know Berkshire Hathaway if not for a homespun personality like Warren Buffett? Would GE be the icon it is today without the fierce and charismatic leadership style of Jack Welch?

The list goes on. The question is, will it include you?

Comments

Iff the intent is information transmission, w meaning, and message, meant to motivate en masse . . . .hmmmm ,  then audio-blogging might be even more effective the video—w less bandwidth—as the listener can hear from a distance and start to enact, implement even during the listening interval.  OTOH, since most video bloggering is talking heads rather than show-to-tell, then whatever is most efficient for the writer||speaker||exec who is not trifling with time.

KADAM | January 01, 2010  5:23 AM

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