Monthly Archives: February 2012

Book Review: “The Social Media Strategist” Offers a Deft Guide to Corporate Social Media Success – Guest Post by Vickie Bates

The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit Gets Social: The Social Media Strategist Offers a Deft Guide to Corporate Social Media Success

By Vickie Bates

Christopher Barger’s new book bridges two of the biggest gaps in the proliferating social media category: strategy and how to manage an effective social program in a large organization.

“Demands and expectations of big companies – and even laws governing their behavior – are different from those for individuals or small shops,” Barger notes in the introduction to The Social Media Strategist: Build a Successful Program from the Inside Out.

This is welcome insight for anyone working for corporations, institutions and other large organizations. Far too many popular social media tomes miss this basic distinction: “If you haven’t been inside a company or organization – if you don’t know corporate culture and bureaucracy, or have no experience navigating internal minefields – then you don’t know how to make social media work inside a company.”

Barger is just the person to tackle this subject from the insider’s perspective, having led early social media efforts at IBM and built the social program from the ground up at General Motors – two of the largest organizations going.

The Social Media Strategist provides a blueprint for communications and marketing professionals spearheading social programs in large organizations. It’s also for PR and marketing firms with large corporate clients.

The book walks you, chapter by chapter, through the seven elements required in an effective organizational social media program, including:

  1. The executive champion – the leader who secures adoption of the vision, backs the program with budget and headcount, and stops the spread of parallel programs.
  2. Organizational “ownership” of social media – and how to bring HR, Customer Service, IT, PR and Marketing to the table to collaborate.
  3. The social media evangelist – not a “rock star,” explains Barger, but “a business leader who is equally adroit inside your walls as outside – someone with the brand not just to represent it online but also to build social media into a business practice within that company.”
  4. Tangible metrics to track progress and effectiveness – solid information about establishing baseline metrics and creating, implementing and measuring social media activities that have a positive financial impact.
  5. Partnering with the legal department – beyond Federal Trade Commission guidelines and regulation of online activities to understanding the legal nuances of your own industry, vetting social media policy, developing a genuine partnership with lawyers, supporting their learning curve, and even getting the legal team to engage in online communities!
  6. Social media policy – what to include in policies and usage guides.
  7. Educating employees – an in-depth discussion about training, from policy adherence to teaching staff social media best practices to dispersing expertise throughout the organizational functions.

The book doesn’t really explore using social media for internal communications and offers minimal practical tips for gaining buy-in for functional ownership of the social media program if there are disagreements within your organization. But these could be topics for entire books and are minor quibbles when viewed against the strategic perspective of the whole.

Barger shares strategies for starting small – taking advantage of social media’s ability to target and engage customers where they live and in the local communities where you do business. Plus, there’s an intriguing chapter, entitled “Dealbreakers,” which provides astute advice for both organizations and practitioners when it comes to hiring or being hired into a social media team.

Social in Serious Situations

Barger’s expertise orchestrating large-scale social media programs is never more
apparent than in the last two chapters on crisis communications.

“When All Hell Breaks Lose” shares six case studies, including self-generated social media crises, customer service issues, and how to combat campaigns against your organization.

The final section is a full-chapter case study of the social media communications
program Barger and his team implemented at GM, announcing the company’s
Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing. You couldn’t ask for a better roadmap for a social crisis communications plan than this chapter, which also focuses on what brands must do in the aftermath.

“Reputational recovery and repair requires follow-up. Lots of it,” he emphasizes. The people representing large companies need to remain in the social space, acting like human beings. They need to ask lots of questions, and, above all, listen to feedback.

Barger gets – and has worked inside – organizations that “cannot behave quite as openly as they might wish.” His experiences offer tremendous insight to those engaged in creating corporate programs that audiences want to be part of.

“Ultimately,” Barger concludes of organizational social media, “it still is about
relationships, humanizing, and people liking your brand or organization because they like your people. Humanizing your brand does no good for you unless people like the humans they meet from your brand.”

 

 

Vickie Bates - @nobadlanguage

Vickie  Bates is a communications consultant specializing in social media and employee communications. She is also a member of SMCLA. Her blog, No Bad Language, focuses on great writing and ‘no bad language.’ Follow her on Twitter and add her blog to your RSS feed!

Loving Your Customers: Social CRM is Making It Actually Happen! – Guest post by Dr. Natalie Petouhoff

Loving Your Customers: Social CRM is Making It Actually Happen!
by Dr. Natalie Petouhoff

Without customers there isn’t a business. Yet companies often operate like the customer isn’t a priority. In comes social media and changes everything. How a company treats customers is no longer behind the wall. It used to be just between the customer and the company, whether the interaction channel was email or a call… But now, companies behaving badly, can’t hide behind the wall. Social media is outing them.

What is great is that the customer’s voice is now heard; echoed in fact from the bowels of Twitter to the tips of Facebook and more. What’s sad — at least to me — is that it took “outside in” technology to drive change.

I used to be a systems integrator, giving advice on how company’s should treat customers. You know, the technology they should buy to make great experiences- for employees and customers… What processes to change that make more sense and how to treat people.

It felt like a large boulder, being pushed up a steep mountain. Change was difficult, resisted and well down right mind boggling. You’d think if you could help a company be more customer-centric, they’d realize they could be more profitable. Message often not received.

“Outside in” technology, meaning social media, which gives the customer the voice, is driving change. Change that has long been needed. Ask any room full of people- I do when I speak – and they will tell you for the most part they down right hate Customer Service.

Many companies are now doing the right thing, but its taken a Witness Factor to get them to change. That Witness is the ears and eyes of millions of people who see what people say about companies in social media. Like cave painting on walls that last forever, reviews, comments, ratings… are plastered all over the internet. And customers read them and make decisions to buy or not based more on peer reviews than PR and Advertising.

So what is social CRM? What is our topic at Social Media Club LA about? It’s about this transformation of business to a more conscious, kind and present way of being and interacting in the world. It’s real-time and its authentic (meaning you don’t speak in social media channels like a scrubbed and pruned corporate press release- you use you real voice- like a human being).

source: http://mashable.com/2010/05/21/social-crm/

Our topic is about looking at the customer lifecycle- Marketing, Sales, Customer Service and determining how to drive not just satisfaction, but loyalty and advocacy. It’s about how to use technology to make that happen, easier and better.

If you are a small business – you might want a system like Nimble that can help you with contact management- both traditional and social. If you are a large company- you might want an integrated system that combines traditional and social media interactions like SAP for marketing, sales and service.

Whatever technology you choose, remember one thing- putting customer’s first means that you have a chance to drive loyalty and profitability.

Many people have written about Zappos. I have. What I find extraordinary about them is that they choose– as their main profit strategy – to make Customer Service the best it could be. This flew in the face of all tradition. Customer Service had been at the bottom of the barrel of priorities for most companies. But what their leadership knew was that a new type of company was to be born. One that put customer’s first.

Many people say, “Hey don’t compare me to Zappos. We aren’t them.” I ask, “Why wouldn’t you want to be?”
They went from $0 to $1 Billion in ten years…
Ya know.. maybe there is something to this customer-centric stuff, this CRM stuff, this social CRM stuff.

Come find out! http://smclascrm.eventbrite.com/ See you there! Learn. Share. Grow!™ - @DrNatalie

You can see more of Dr. Natalie’s musing here:
Ebook: Social Media ROI Myths and Truths | YouTube Videos: On ROI of Social Media | White Papers:  Social Media ROI | New Book on Facebook: Like My Stuff – How to Monetize Your Facebook Fans With Social Commerce & A Facebook Store | Twitter: @drnatalie | LinkedIn: DrNataliePetouhoff | website/blog: www.drnatalienews.com/blog


Feb. 21 Speaker Spotlight: Gary May

Have you met Gary May? He’s one of our guest speakers at next Tuesday’s panel on Social CRM! Gary is the President of imacsweb, an interactive marketing and consulting service. His blog is pretty interesting as he is an expert in the automotive industry. Consider keeping an eye on his thoughts in the auto industry, social media and online marketing.  Better still, stop by at the ING DIRECT Cafe LA next Tuesday, February 21 when we grill Gary and the rest of our speakers on social CRM!

 

IM@CS continually evolves to build, educate on and support platforms in critical sales, branding, process, media and best practice application for forward-thinking companies and those trying to grasp the online space. We work with retail, manufacturers, portals and service providers that have a large consumer-facing business, primarily in the automotive industry as well as luxury and specialty markets and other high-end services. IM@CS also specializes in working with companies investigating opportunities within the automotive market to make sense of a diverse and dynamic environment, providing insight, direction and solid fundamentals to achieve success.

Overall IM@CS provides greater opportunities through brand awareness, reputation management, process improvement and sales organization coaching for companies looking to create sustainable improvements and add to their bottom line.

What IM@CS does is more relevant than training, enterprise processes, networking or guidance. We offer solutions based on your real world needs, not what others do nor what worked last year.

Gary also co-founded and head efforts for a social media marketing and promotion company focused on multi-vertical success called PromoSPARK. We allow businesses to get the SPARK for their social networks! www.promospark.net

Feb. 21 Speaker Spotlight: Jon Ferrara

If you’re a geezer like me who has worked in tandem with sales, you’ll know what GoldMine is. If you don’t know what GoldMine is, that’s ok. The founder of GoldMine, Jon Ferrara, is also the founder of Nimble!

Nimble is a social CRM program. If your company has a customer service team that also answers customer questions on social media, you might want to take a look at Nimble. I like to see the numbers – number of customers assisted via social media vs number of calls decreased/increased as a result. If you’re a small business, you might want to dig around the Nimble website to see whether you could use a streamlined, robust program for your customer service needs (and social media).

Got questions? Ask Jon on next Tuesday, February 21 when he joins the panel at our next SMCLA event! RSVP now, and we’ll see you there.

A social entrepreneur at heart, Jon Ferrara founded GoldMine Software in 1989 where he served as the executive vice president of the company until it was sold in 2000. GoldMine is one of the best selling CRM products that helped pioneer the entire Sales Force Automation (SFA) and Customer Relationship Management (CRM) market. During this time, Ferrara was awarded the
Ernst and Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award while GoldMine was named PC Magazine’s Editor’s Choice in 1993 and again in 1995, 1996 and 1997.

After selling GoldMine and watching the immense rise in power social media was experiencing, Ferrara entered the start up world again when he noticed a distinct lack of any products that effectively combined Relationship Management, Social Listening and Engagement, and Collaboration with Sales and Marketing. In 2009, Jon founded Nimble to create an extensive Social Business platform to fill this gap.

Feb. 21 Sponsor Spotlight: SAP

The wonderful team at SAP are sponsoring our Tuesday, February 21 event on Social CRM. Please welcome them into the SMCLA family!

As market leader in enterprise application software, SAP  helps companies of all sizes and industries run better. Today, SAP is on an innovation hyperdrive.  With a user-centric lens on Big Data, Mobility, Cloud, and Social, SAP is helping people like you to have relevant and smarter 360-degree customer conversations like never before – without requiring you to dig up your ERP and CRM foundations.  In addition to solutions for the B2B sector, SAP CRM extends its reach to companies representing B2C consumers – delivering the entire customer experience unified across multiple channels.  Stop by and experience the new SAP. http://www.sap.com

“It’s incredibly exciting to be a part of Social Media Club LA,” says Vinay Iyer, VP of Global Marketing for SAP CRM, “not only can our offerings inspire the social CMO, but we are exemplars of social inbound and outbound marketing – we grew our own social channels two-fold last year and we’re leveraging best practices through our participation in Social Media Club.

For further information on SAP CRM, visit them at http://www.sap.com/crm and follow them on Twitter @sapcrm.