Skip to main content
Uncategorized

Dear Alicia. You are not famous. Sorry …

By 11/03/20128 Comments

I had a nice convo with some fellow bloggers in the Samsung Blogger Lounge. On people. I admit, it was none too pretty. See, bloggers hate people with augmented egos. The Austin Convention center is packed with everyone that has a say in interactive, digital, and social media. Guy Kawasaki, Brian Solis, Jeremiah Owyang, Gary Vaynerchuk,… they are all here, sharing their knowledge and experience passionately with the #SxSW audience. That is what makes #SxSW so special, and different with other conferences: the people that are on panels and keynotes mingle with the audience like bourbon in Martini. No gap, no distance… there might be some ego, but it is cute and manageable.

Unfortunately, swarming this year through the hallways, hunting for fame like the undead people hunt for blood,   is a whole army of wannabees. People that are on panels, or try to sell me their book, and force upon me their business cards. People I’ve never heard off. People that are not showing up on Google. People with less followers on twitter that my neighbor’s dog. People with no hard-wired verifiable results in any business or consulting endeavor.  People that ask me to do an interview with them. People with strange titles and strange behavior: Ninjas. An Online Merlin (kidding you not), some GuRus, Social Rainmakers, a Connection engineer (!), an EVP social connectivity: you name it.

When you engage with them, you notice immediately the empty shell, and the self-promotional complex. A girl with a video blog introduced herself at my blogger table with: “Hi, I am Alicia, and I am kinda famous”. Dear Alicia. You cannot be a bit pregnant; you cannot be a bit famous. You are famous, or you are not. And… we will be the judge of that.

Honestly, the social space is not that big. If you were good, influential, remotely brilliant, thought provoking, funny or even vaguely interesting… we would have found you by now. Becoming famous, first starts with becoming good in something. Good luck, Alicia, maybe next year…

8 Comments

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from Heliade

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading