Signal to noise
October 30th, 2009 / 5:00 pm
When I was a kid, I was into electronics and shortwave radio in a big way, and one of the technical terms I heard about then was ‘signal to noise ratio.’ In the radio listening context, I took this to mean how much of the radio station you could hear versus the all the noise in the background (and there is no shortage of ’static’ on shortwave, as a dwindling band of fellow die-hard enthusiasts would know).

These days, I notice that the signal to noise expression is being used all the time by people into social networks. In most cases, it seems to mean getting the content online that you want that adds value, as opposed to extraneous clutter information that wastes your time. It strikes me as an apt expression, party because there’s so little quality content these days and way too much junk out there.
I have certainly noticed that people really do appreciate quality content when they see it. On Facebook from 2007, and then Twitter from 2008, and now more recently Friendfeed, I’ve been trying to share what I think is ’signal’ from the media that I consume every day. Usually I’ll post what I regard as interesting articles in areas of personal interest (PR, psychology, media, propaganda, renewable energy, radio, maps and the environment), accompanied by a brief commentary reflecting my own opinion. So, I’ve basically been selecting stories for the ’front page’ of my ‘lifestream’ and drafting comments and questions, leaving the heavy writing to the authors whose articles I forward.
A few folks have proactively let me know that they appreciate this approach; here’s one example:
“Hey Bob! Thanks for bringing the collective IQ of my FB page up. As I scroll down the updates and see lines of ‘How well do you know so and so’ and ‘My kids just spilled the Q-tips’ I see your notes on the demise of the Aral Sea…like accidentally stumbling across NPR during a Jerry Springer episode.”
Lately, though, several people have been encouraging me to articulate my own long-form opinions, so this new blog is my way of transmitting some signal of my own rather than just relaying that of others.
I’m looking forward to sharing ideas and insights with you.

Categories: blog, radio
comments(2)
Tags: analogue, radio, social networks
subscribe
fresh posts
- The Asia-Pacific PR awards
(4/7/2012) - Digital crisis communications infographic
(2/24/2012) - Asia-Pacific social media influence
(2/20/2012) - Crisis communications in 2012
(2/9/2012) - How to optimize social media for PR
(1/2/2012) - America’s new PR offensive in Asia-Pacific
(1/2/2012)
categories
- Asia
- awards
- Burson-Marsteller
- careers
- China
- crisis communications
- CSR
- culture
- digital
- friends
- guest post
- infographics
- measurement
- media relations
- national brand
- news
- persuasion
- PR industry
- psychology
- publicity
- radio
- speaking platforms
- talent
- technology
- thinking
tags
-
apology communications
asia
asia-pacific
australia
b-m
canada
careers
china
cialdini
continuous improvement
crisis communications
culture
digital
digital storytelling
edelman
hill & knowlton
image
india
infographic
japan
journalism
korea
language
leadership
lindstrom
management
marketing
measurement
media
media relations
media training
metaphors
persuasion
PR
propaganda
psychology
publicity
public relations
public speaking
singapore
social media
social networks
thinking
training
zaltman
stream
Heading home to Singapore (@ SQ-865) [pic]: http://t.co/4TOYtLGN >
Singapore skyline at night http://t.co/XxZnpwJK >
RT @MattGodfreyYR: Singaporeans go M-commerce crazy. 8x increase in 18 months http://t.co/06R9aJVv >
I'm at Hong Kong Int'l Airport | HKG (Chek Lap Kok) w/ 40 others http://t.co/TICZ8IwW >
How narcissism sells: http://t.co/Z2IEob8O >
How people spend their time online [infographic] http://t.co/H1aLvM1V >

