One of the many
downsides of the Internet is that anyone with a connection and access to rudimentary
graphics software can produce memes and start polluting the ether with them. This
explains about 90% of the political crap you see out there—in all directions.
But you also see it in the “business” world, particularly among those whose
Twitter profiles are chockers with descriptors like “thought leader”, “keynote
speaker”, “growth hacker”, “ninja” and “author”. (Keep in mind that anyone can
slap together a few pages of drivel, PDF it and offer it online, thus entitling
their self-styling. They don’t ever use the word “writer”.)
Frankly—if your profile doesn’t
include some tangible connection to actual, you know, operational business,
then you can keynote your ass out of my timeline, because first among your
descriptors should be “poseur”. That’s your real defining characteristic.
Anyhoo, this crowd is
really big on tweeting what they consider either pithy or inspirational (or
perhaps inspirationally pithy) “quotes” to up their traffic stats. Then they
get retweeted, which only encourages them to produce more, and so it goes.
Typically they post a meme—even if it’s only putting the words into a graphic—and
often repeat the words in their tweet. In case you find a meme tl:dr.
Someone I follow on my
professional Twitter account, who has a frankly disturbing headshot, claims to
be Chief Marketing Officer of a Utah company that produces a technology
learning platform (yeah—I don’t really care), into tech, marketing, SaaS,
start-ups, and is data-driven and mother of three boys (whew!). Yesterday
morning she tweeted this:
It did not seem like anything
the 16th President of the United States would have said, so I did
what everyone who sees something like this should do: I Googled it. And,
indeed, the first time something like this sentiment was used was in a book
published in 1963, according to
this site, which appears to be the Snopes of quotes.
I replied to
super-marketer-mom pointing out that her little ray of encouragement dated from
about 100 years after Lincoln’s death. (Hey—I was polite. And I provided the
same link that I did here.)
She ignored me and left
her tweet up. But she unfollowed me.
There’s a lesson here—probably
several, actually—about not being such a muppet for aphorisms, or about pushing
them out uncritically to the Twitterverse, or about actual engagement via the social media
you claim to be expert at.
As for me, my lesson is
that I’ve now unfollowed her, as well.
2 comments:
Love that you called her out and you didn't need her as a follower anyways. I did create a political meme out of Spicey boy with the dunce hat, so I am guilty, but we know he deserves it. And I used Microsoft Paint!
Oh--& I hearted your meme. That's entirely different. This is people slapping up inane things (sometimes ones that make no sense whatsoever) just for the sake of posting something.
Then there are those who "reply" with inane comments or counter-memes, which serve the sole purpose of saying, "Look at me! Look at ME!" See a lot of that on Facebook. Especially from people I know didn't read the post.
Fatheads.
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