Advertising & social media, art of conversation, & navigating the unknown

Outrage is a leitmotif of our social media conversations. And it is starting to reach a tipping point

Founding Fuel

[From Pixabay]

Dear Friend,

We live in strange times indeed.

Around ten days ago, one of our contributors in our extended network made a dramatic announcement on Facebook: he was leaving a WhatsApp group of close friends. He said he was dismayed by the constant sniping from both ends of the political spectrum. And instead of allowing our biases and peculiarities to co-exist, he said he was fed up by the attempts to beat people who weren’t like us into submission through brute force or clever use of words.

Yet another contributor asked me for a web link to a much talked about recent speech at a conclave so that his wife could share it in her WhatsApp group to bring a semblance of calm deliberation, amidst the shrill nationalistic rhetoric.

Outrage is a leitmotif of our social media conversations. And it is starting to reach a tipping point. Calm, sensible dialogue has been replaced by loud, cantankerous debates that leave no one wiser. Some of it may be spurred on by the upcoming elections. But the real danger is that this is well on its way to becoming the new normal. Unless we do something about it.

I must confess it is easy to get unwittingly drawn into this cul-de-sac. Earlier today, I had to pull myself back from one such endless exchange on Twitter over a raging controversy over two recent advertising campaigns launched on digital media by Hindustan Unilever for two of its brands, Brooke Bond Red Label and Surf Excel.

Even as social media accentuates social divides, there’s no point in blaming just the platforms. The problem lies with us. We need to recalibrate our responses, modes of conversation and learn to listen to people who are not like us.

It isn’t just us. Consumer brands that were built in the mass media era are also learning to adjust to the sound and fury of the social media.

This week we invited Piyul Mukherjee, co-founder and CEO of Quipper Research, a boutique consumer research agency, to use her sociologist’s lens to dissect the social media controversy surrounding Brooke Bond Red Label tea. Piyul’s column triggered plenty of conversation. Make sure you read the diverse set of reader comments and helpful links on our site and also here on LinkedIn. Together, they help us understand the phenomenon better.

A little while ago, I received a forward from one of our contributors on WhatsApp. Take a break from the social media brawl to watch this parody of Bohemian Rhapsody, the song made famous by the rock band Queen. You’ll start to see the lighter side of it.

Best,

Indrajit Gupta 

On behalf of Team Founding Fuel

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Founding Fuel

Founding Fuel aims to create the new playbook of entrepreneurship. Think of us as a hub for entrepreneurs- the go-to place for ideas, insights, practices and wisdom essential to build the enterprise of tomorrow. It is co-founded by veteran journalists Indrajit Gupta and Charles Assisi, along with CS Swaminathan, the former president of Pearson's online learning venture.

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