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8 Posts tagged with the integrated_marketing tag
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The best content is genuine, not automated. It is posted with the intention of not only being viewed but talked about. The question is, how do we get readers to talk about our content? And how do we get readers to share that conversation with us so that we can participate and further engage?

 

As patrons of the social web, we now have access to an endless amount of interesting and FREE content, so much so that content quickly becomes nothing more than a commodity. Content is shared, copied, altered, and distributed through an endless number of channels.  This mass distribution ultimately removes any sense of exclusivity of intellectual assets as well as the ability to track a reader’s allegiance to any one source for content, if they have a preference at all.  Great content alone becomes not enough to keep people coming back; it now must be combined and interlaced with an alluring, value-adding user experience that is appealing to the audience.

 

Hand shake from computer.jpgA great deal of businesses spend a significant amount of time and resources creating content to share and engage their audience with, but many don’t know how to turn that content into an all out experience.   At our agency we see many companies using sites such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc, as distribution channels for their content, integrating and linking their accounts to automatically redistribute information with little thought as to how it could be used to create a worthwhile experience for their reader.  While open social sites can be a valuable platform for increasing visibility, they should also be seen as a platform for interaction and an extension to a user’s experience with that company or brand.   As dicussed in a previous post, content should be designed to travel to the social web.

 

I like to compare this online interaction to meeting someone for the first time.  After all, that’s what you’re doing with your content, meeting a reader with the hopes that you will hit it off and meet again another time, whether with further content or at the point of purchase.  To engage in a meaningful introductory conversation, you might ask the other person questions about themselves, invite them to share their opinions, or even increase your likeability by sharing a weakness and asking for their advice.   After engaging in this initial conversation, you would promptly respond to the other person’s comments and questions, creating a TWO WAY conversation and a personal experience for your cohort.   After the initial conversation (or visit to your website, blog, or profile), you would hope to keep in touch, and would make it easy to do so by exchanging phone numbers or email addresses.  In terms of content, easily keeping in touch could take the form of a prominently displayed signup page for your RSS feed, or links to your Facebook and Twitter pages.

 

That being said, we are extending our hand for a virtual shake.  Please provide a comment telling us how you create an experience surrounding your content for your readers, or possibly choose to keep in touch via subscribing to our RSS or visiting and interacting with us on our other social sites, as we would love to learn more about you, our valued reader.  It is very nice to meet you.

95 Views 0 Comments Permalink Tags: applied_social_media, connected_social_campaigns, integrated_marketing, user_experience, online_interaction
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When considering launching an on-domain community many organizations struggle with where it will fit within their current organizational structure and who will be responsible for taking ownership of it, e.g: Sales/Marketing, Communications/PR, IT, HR and or Support etc.

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Once this organizational decision has been made most organizations then struggle with where community fits within their current suite of digital platforms and initiatives.

 

Initiative(s)System(s)Owner(s)
WebsiteWeb Content Management  (WCM) + AnalyticsMarketing, IT
Online CatalogeCommerceMarketing, IT
Demand GenerationSalesForceSales, Marketing
RecruitmentApplicant Tracking System (ATS)HR
IntranetSharepoint, PeopleSoftCommunications, Operations, HR
Social/CommunityJive SBS 4.5Distributed?

 

 

Confused on where a community fits into their current suite of platforms and initiatives, some organizations experiment and create another entirely separate digital silo for community lacking any integration into those projects already in place. However, by thinking of community as an experiment and burying it deep inside your corporate website a great opportunity is being missed.  To truly activate and benefit from community it must be integrated with all of your digital initiatives and efforts, and this in turn will ultimately drive user adoption and success of the community.

 

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Again, the key to success lies in unifying and integrating community everywhere. Two companies that do this extremely well are Dell and Intuit.  While using and interacting with the Dell and Intuit websites and or products you get a sense that they see community as an enabler for their business not an isolated initiative. For example, this past week I was having an issue entering in my time tracking worksheet for the week, we use an Intuit web-based product for time keeping that integrates with our accounting systems. Sure enough when I clicked "help" I was directed to their support community, and within their knowledge based tool was my answer. This answer had been ranked and rated by the community as helpful and relevant. Intuit also does a great job of embedding community within their desktop applications. On many occasions I've had questions about my taxes while at different steps in the process, contextual answers from the Turbotax community were easily surfaced directly within the application often answering my questions.

 

When launching a community learn from the experts, and like my Intuit example, turn your community into a business enabler versus just an experiment. Granted Dell and Intuit have been doing this a while, but that doesn't mean their success can't be emulated.Think of the money Intuit saved on my two support questions that could have resulted in calls, and the frustration that was circumvented by offering me the answer to my question right there and then. Unifying your digital efforts and integrating community into your existing efforts is the key to driving engagement and ultimately adoption within your community.

 

James Davidson

7Summits

@jdavidson

194 Views 0 Comments Permalink Tags: community_adoption, community_activation, web_marketing, strategy, integrated_marketing, social_business_strategy, social_business_software, applied_social_media, social_media_marketing
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Find Your Social Spark!

Posted by paulstillmank Feb 20, 2010

We’ve talked (and we’ll keep talking) about the need for a strategy to apply social media to your business.  The islands of Facebook Fan Pages, Twitter accounts, Youtube Channels, and one-off blogs need to be reigned in and managed. A strategy integrating them into an overall marketing and execution plan is needed.  These new media components can become important to how your organization grows its business, or they can become paid hobbies for fervent employees leaving you to ask later on whether any value was gleaned from their activities.  Even after your strategy is developed, even after HR and Marketing have aligned your brand with your employees’ online behaviors, even after you’ve figured out how to reach a relevant target audience in their media; you need one last item to activate your social media strategy.  You need to find your social spark.

 

 

socialsparkmedr2.jpgTime and again, we see overzealous companies trying to ignite a fire, but with no real spark. They’re trying to build a bonfire that can be seen all across the social web. They want to attract as many people as possible to their brand, their product, their service.  They’ve amassed their best content and product information (the wood for that bonfire); they’ve even stacked the cards in their favor and dumped a little kerosene into the mix with some blogger outreach and paid blogger programs; yet things just aren’t igniting as they’ve planned. They still don’t have any fire. So what’s your spark? 

 

 

We’re finding that the answer can be different for different organizations. For Zappos, it was a Twitter aggregation model. For Siemens it was a focused Info-Center for employees to channel their social power. Dell lit a fire with IdeaStorm and @DellOutlet. Starbucks lit several raging fires starting with mystarbucksidea.com and then adding a blazing hot Starbucks Fan-page. Blendtec lit their fire with a viral youtube series Will It Blend? It takes a little creativity to find your spark, but it starts with a mindset change.

 

 

We see traditional corporations that move into Social Media adopting a defensive posture.  They take the standard PR position of trying to manage the message.  They might hire a PR Social Media Agency. This is the mindset change that needs to occur.  You don’t want to manage the message, but engage the conversation.  Think of it as a party with a room full of people.  Don’t worry about the two people in the corner talking trash about you.  Get the rest of the room to look to you as the conversation catalyst.  Have everyone else want to get into your conversation. There will always be negative noise in the digital world.  Don’t focus on snuffing it out.   Focus on building the positive, collective voice so big that any negativity gets drowned out.

 

Sure moderation needs to occur, but it’s not the focus.  Every time I see a job posting for a ‘Social Media Moderator’, I wonder how much different that organization would be if they hired a ‘Social Media Catalyst’ or a ‘Social Media Evangelist’ instead.

 

In the book, Groundswell by Charlene Li, Charlene lays out the requirements for sustaining a social networking site.  She suggests that to be successful the site must:

 

  • Enable people to connect in a new way
  • Be effortless to sign up for
  • Shift power from institutions to people
  • Provide an open platform that facilitates partnerships

 

These points are all true, but they alone are not enough. Twitter had everyone one of these, but that fire smoldered along for over a year before igniting when Ashton Kutcher competed with CNN for the most followers.  That event brought Twitter’s bonfire to life. Of course, the answer isn’t to go out and engage a movie star for your strategy, but asking these questions may help find your spark:

 

  • How do you monetize all of the user-generated content out there about your products/services?
  • What will spark the conversation?
  • What’s your ‘pick up’ line?  What do you hope the response to be?
  • How will people even know about your conversation to begin with?

 

In your quest for the answer to these questions, you will hopefully discover your Social Spark.

 

Paul S.

7Summits

702 Views 0 Comments Permalink Tags: relevancy, applied_social_media, social_media_marketing, connected_social_campaigns, strategy, integrated_marketing
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Thought of the day. There is a lot of discussion about the good things and the bad things that social media can do for companies. From a Marketing, Product Development and Customer Support POV, we believe this is the best thing to happen to your respective departments in a long time!

 

Back in the pre-web and web 1.0 days, companies would conduct expensive research through 3rd party analysts, focus groups, customer surveys, feedback cards and various techniques and tools to try to understand what their consumers wanted and or did/didn't like about their products or services. Conversations about your company in past decades went unchecked in living rooms, events, and the work place across America - good or bad - without any ability for you to:

 

  • Monitor
  • Influence
  • Intervene
  • or Interject.

 

If a customer had a negative experience with your company, chances are they would tell many people and the damage was done - unless of course they took the time to call or write a letter. If they had a positive experience there was no efficient way to hear about it.

 

Among the many benefits of social media, the best attribute is perhaps transparency. Company’s now have complete unfiltered and open dialog with their customers and prospective buyers. People still talk offline, but more and more they are talking online through blogs, discussion forums, consumer reviews and tools like Twitter. If you want to find out what Joe consumer thinks about your product or service, a quick pulse of the social web will reveal a wealth of real-time conversations good or bad. And wouldn't your rather know what people are saying about you company?

656 Views 0 Comments Permalink Tags: product_development, customer_service, marketing, integrated_marketing, reputation_monitoring, listening, social_media_marketing
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It has been over a week since Jive World 2009 and the vibe is still going strong! From the time we arrived at Jive World in San Francisco, the sense of community was everywhere.

 

TogetherJiveWorld.png

Companies, Partners, Speakers and Jive Software all gathered together to discuss the forefront of everything Social. Stronger, more integrated marketing and sales performance.  Better connected employees. Improved product ideation and development. More efficient and responsive customer support. These are the topics that wafted through the event from the intimate round-table sessions to the partner expo area.

 

This was educational. Participants learned about techniques for growing and managing communities. They learned about building the business case for social business software and how to measure success. Jive Software provided details on their product roadmap and attendees cheered as new feature sets were revealed. The analysts agreed as newly published reports showed Jive to be an even more strongly positioned leader.

 

I think one of the most compelling things that happened though, was the connection among Jive’s customers. We saw people sharing ideas on content strategy, community management and business integration - these are case studies in the making . And how appropriate that the discussion continues on line in a JiveWorld Community.

 

I was honored to be invited as a speaker on Jive’s expert panel “Community – Bringing It All Together”. The conversation during the panel was thought provoking. Why is the ROI-bar higher for Social Business Software than other marketing programs? How will the social context change business models? What is the future of eMail? How will we navigate the abundant streams of information in the years to come? The answer to this last question: the information will present itself to us – based on our context, our proximity to others, our recent activities, our needs, and more. That makes sense and concepts like “serve not search” and  creating a more socially designed business are at the forefront of our thinking at 7Summits.

 

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JW09boothcopy.jpg

Our booth at the expo focused on our key concepts of Social Business Strategy, Connected Social Campaigns and Applied Social MediaSM for business. Many attendees stopped by to share that although they had “broken through” and established a strong and viable community, they had not taken the time to devise an overall Social Business Strategy. They are now being asked to do so – measuring their success and then propagating it to other parts of the organization. Marketing extending toward sales enablement. Customer Service and Opinion Leaders providing product feedback to Product Development. Human Resources leveraging community for recruiting, employee indoctrination and sustained involvement. We’ll share some models for a more socially designed business in detail in the coming weeks.

 

 

 

As we headed home, community was oozing from every corner of our minds. Even the Kansas City airport terminal layout (shown here) reflects the type of imagery that we have been applying to Social Business Models. Community is everywhere!

 

Paul Stillmank

7Summits

 

948 Views 0 Comments Permalink Tags: applied_social_media, connected_social_campaigns, integrated_marketing, jive_world, socially_designed_business
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We are now meeting with dozens of prospective clients and we are seeing a pretty wide range of approaches being taken when it comes to Social Media. Many companies feel somewhat behind and they are tryin to "catch up" by throwing up fan-pages, twitter accounts and Youtube channels hoping that something positive will happen. We also see some companies starting to “listen” online by using online tools like SocialSense and Radian6. That’s good. Online listening should be one of the first Discovery steps when planning your Social Business Strategy. Overall though, one theme stands out more than any other: companies are applying social media without a solid plan for doing so. Even those companies listening online aren't sure what to do next. Here is a sample of what we see every day:

  • Facebook pages that are virtual islands with no integration to other marketing efforts and no links into or out of the pages.
  • Youtube videos shot by high-end ad agencies (that’s expensive) with no more than 40 or 50 views over 6  months.
  • Companies with fan-pages for every sub-brand, but with no plans to moderate them and no forethought on how to handle an irate comment.
  • Twitter accounts launched without a full understanding of the range of tools available, without knowledge of how to drive a relevant follower-ship, without a hash-tag plan, and/or without understanding how to really leverage this channel to reach consumers.
  • Solid product reviews on sites like ePinions, Yelp, InsiderPages, ViewPoints, and MerchantCircle that are not being pulled into the parent website, fan-page or other web property.

This is standard fare out there. However, it does not (should not) have to be that way. Our last few posts resonate with one theme: social media should be integrated with your other marketing efforts. Our Strategic Framework for Applied Social Media illustrates how social media has taken its place in all phases of consumer engagement: awareness, relevance, conversion, involvement and ongoing engagement. Offline marketing, online/web marketing, social and ecommerce all come together here. An integrated approach simply garners the best results. Interactive Marketing has matured to the point that it has its own department in some larger organizations. Perhaps the word “integrated” should be substituted for “interactive” – it is a more powerful concept.

Another way of thinking about integrated marketing is to think about connections. Here, we mean connections that consumers perceive among your marketing efforts.

  • ATTRACT prospective buyers and make them aware of your products or services.
  • INFLUENCE the prospective buyer by using both search and social to establish relevancy for your product or service.
  • ENGAGE your prospective buyer by directing them to the appropriate channel for conversion including the possibility to transacting in their desired media.
  • RECRUIT new customers to get involved with your product, service, company and brand. Encourage ongoing engagement by inviting them to join your own community or relevant social venue.

To illustrate this point, we’ve tipped our Strategic Framework on its side.

Picture5.png

 

In this model, you can see how all of the consumer touch-points across the social web come together around your product or service, from the initial search or word-of-mouth reference to the satisfied customer advocate.

 

At the beginning of this cycle, a consumer becomes aware of your product or service. They may have been struck by a need and then gone online in search for a solution. Or your may have worked to ATTRACT them. Yes, you can drive awareness by using both search and social to attract prospects. They might have been prompted by any number of stimuli including an offline ad, a radio spot, a TV commercial, a press release, a referral from a friend, or a host of other motivators in a range of appropriate venues.  A well-integrated plan begins with these earliest stimuli in mind. A product, its genre and targeted key-words are strongly correlated from the very beginning. The connection is planned from the start. Now when your audience moves online, the initial behavior is biased –they will be searching with a specific genre or terminology in mind. Those companies with savvy SEO and SEM execution will affect their product being presented near the top of the search results.

 

From this point onward, a prospective customer will be comparing the results of their search. Your product’s relevancy is established through combinations of ratings, reviews, blogs, discussion forums, and other user-generated content (UGC). They may also consult their “social graph” meaning the fans, friends and followers across their own networks. This is what we refer to as Social Commerce: using your social graph to INFLUENCE your buying decision.

 

Once a prospect reaches that point of conversion, you will need to ENGAGE them: directing them to the appropriate channel (eStore, retail or dealer network) to complete the sale. They will have been influenced by your positive position in social, search, ratings and reviews.

 

To help perpetuate the cycle, one more connection is made. RECRUIT new customers by asking them to join a community, fan page or other venue and submit a product review when they are ready. These product reviews are an important step toward getting your new customers involved, but they also represent fresh content that will influence the purchase of other prospective buyers. In time, some of these customers may become advocates for your brand, lauding its attributes, products and innovation. Consumer advocacy is a much sought after aspect of the social web and an entire science is springing up around Social Influence Marketing. Mining for this information and elevating it through social venues sways future customers. This is what we mean by “connected”. Now we are back to online listening and making sure that all of this is working as planned – and this is making more sense.

 

I’ll close this post by pointing out one remaining aspect of this model: measure and refine. Social Media has made it easier to measure online consumer behavior. This allows us to create models that connect both conversations and activity on the web to business results. The right data can be collected and analyzed to provide insights on the value of your content as well as your products and brand. Consumer behavior is monitored and refinements are made throughout the cycle. This helps to get prospective buyers the right information at the right time to speed the process along. It also helps determine which venues and user-generated content are the most relevant toward affecting that transaction.

 

Social Media can be a powerful accelerator when properly integrated with the rest of your marketing efforts. Think about Connected Social CampaignsSM as the outcome of a well orchestrated Integrated Marketing Strategy.

Paul Stillmank - 7Summits

1,292 Views 2 Comments Permalink Tags: connected_social_campaigns, applied_social_media, b2c, web_marketing, b2b, integrated_marketing, customers, marketing, sem, social_media_marketing, social_influence_marketing, relevancy, awareness, measurement, strategy, sales, conversion
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Most marketing organizations are finalizing their 2010 plans. As they do so, many are looking at social media and how it aligns with other investments and ongoing programs that will be in effect in the New Year. Websites are already being updated with fresh content and e-stores already reflect new products or services. Current web and online marketing already include search engine marketing as well as paid advertising. Given this reality and the increased pressure to drive more of your marketing spend online, where does social media fit?

 

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The very clear answer is that social media can compliment your overall marketing strategy very effectively when it’s truly integrated.  Conversely, when treated as a separate channel or kept in a silo, it can actually work against your other efforts.  This isn’t a revelation to any good marketer: online focused or not. A poorly planned and executed print or paid ad campaign without a specific focus or the right content and plan to back it up, can actually damage your brand and leave consumers feeling confused. The same is true with social media. When executed in isolation and without a solid strategy and plan, you run the risk of creating noise and missing real opportunities when consumers stumble across your efforts.

 

The key to making social media work for your marketing efforts versus against them is integration across all channels. Make sure you are connecting social media with all of your other online efforts from search engine marketing to ecommerce. I threw together a quick diagram to help illustrate this concept. Empower individuals to participate and interact with your brand by giving them the right information and tools at the right time. Integrated campaigns that include social media as part of your pre-click (off-site) and post-click (on-site) web marketing strategy can amplify the effect of your marketing efforts, helping to stretch your budget further by reaching a greater audience.

640 Views 0 Comments Permalink Tags: web_marketing, social_media_marketing, strategy, conversion, integrated_marketing
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We talk regularly to brands about where to begin with social media. As we shared in our last blog post, eMarketer recently published a survey touting the many benefits of social media presence for brands: 

  • Influence brand reputation
  • Increase brand awareness
  • Improve search engine rankings (SEO)
  • Increased Website Traffic
  • Lead Generation
  • Improved Internal Commuication
  • Increase Online Sales

 

Well, the inverse also is true. Especially for brands that have no effective or coordinated social media presence. All too often, we see the situation where a negative blog or discussion thread is ranking higher than a brand’s corporate website – or at least in the top 10 results in Google. We see negative user comments, ratings and reviews on social sites like Facebook, YouTube, Glassdoor or business listing sites like CitySearch or Yellow pages. Again, with no response from the brand involved. Most marketers remember the scramble in the late 90’s to register a domain name and get a web presence in the Web 1.0 brochure-ware days. By early 2000, marketers started to realize that they needed search engines (specifically Google) to help online audiences find them. The craft of SEO was born. Next, there was an emphasis on brand protection. Everyone started to compete for search real-estate by using paid ads (Adwords) to better position their brand, their company, and their products or services. New practices evolved like registering variations of domain names, including misspellings, so that competitors couldn’t hijack a brand. These same concepts apply to social media, but with a twist. By its very nature social media is a two-way conversation. Simply setting up a Facebook page or parking a Twitter account with no monitoring or moderation only amplifies your issues. A business that doesn’t invest here risks dilution of their brand, hijacking of new and existing customers by competitors, and a truly negative perception by consumers that expect their favorite brand or product to accessible and enabled via the social web – in their media.

 

Whether you’re a small or big brand, B2C or B2B, you can’t afford to delay developing a social media strategy for business. Just like the last two iterations of the web (web 1.0 and 2.0), you can’t do everything at once, but you also can’t afford to sit still. The bottom line here is that Social Media is now an important part of the mix. Investing the time and effort to create a proper social media strategy helps avoid poorly executed social campaigns with little or no positive impact. Set the right objectives, create the strategies to support delivering on them, and then prioritize your efforts to reach that overall outcome. There is a craft here. A well-planned approach to social media integrates your other marketing efforts, amplifying the overall effect. That’s how you gain ground on your competitors with the social web.

Paul Stillmank

7Summits

902 Views 1 Comments Permalink Tags: social_media_marketing, strategy, competitors, b2c, b2b, integrated_marketing