Prattle & Jaw

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Filtering by Category: Social Media

Saturated Social

Another article for The Danish Communication Association. This time, a questionning one - would love to have comments.

I’ve been talking to my friends at work recently about when Facebook arrived and how we adjusted to it. I for one was (very amusingly) not convinced. I was active on MySpace (as it was called then), and loved the customisation it offered. Facebook, in my eyes, was a dull, generic platform, and anyway – I didn’t know anyone on it.

Oh dear.

Today, as we all know, Facebook has seen the death of multiple other social platforms, and has evolved into the massive network it is now, with over 500,000,000 active members, not to mention an Oscar winning film made about it.

Impressive, or overwhelming?

The same can be said of YouTube and other networks; they’re huge and they’re pretty much saturated. Try finding the genuine ‘official music video of XXX’ and you’ll be gone for days. Facebook a brand (it’s even a verb!) and chances are you’ll be offered community pages, places, groups, fan pages – both official and actual ‘fan’ fan pages – links, posts, photos – the lot. Viral videos aren’t what they used to be – one pops up every minute, from sneezing baby pandas, to people loving cats a little too much – it’s hard to put something online with impact that lasts for more than a day. It’s definitely safe to say that social media are integrated in to our daily lives, our daily routines, our personal habits, our shopping habits and our learning habits. Would it be too wrong to say that it’s about time they moved from being called ‘new’ media, to just other media?

Often, it’s all a little too much. Of course, we don’t have to ‘like’ brands, companies or people, but if we want to stay up to date with, well, everything, or if we want that special Facebook/Twitter/Foursquare deal, then you’d better like, check in, follow or become the mayor. I can’t help but wonder how far we are away from becoming sick and tired of all the social media marketing we have to put up with. We’re already familiar with the various quotes about how many advertisements we’re bombarded with daily in terms of TV, radio and outdoor – how many do social media contribute towards this today? With sponsored tweets (when a company pays to have it’s tweets show up first when it is searched for on Twitter – aka. adverts), Facebook ads, YouTube ads, blogs with ads – it’s overwhelming.

This combination of constant – and in this day and age, I really do mean constant – bombardment of adverts, and with such a large amount of brands and companies active on social media, is really taking the ‘new’ out of new media, and making it, in my opinion, exactly the same as any other media. It’s exhausting.

I’m pretty sure this wasn’t the reaction I was supposed to have after watching the video below, but all I could think was, ‘but for how long?’

Encouraging or oppressive?

Sure, you might hear that companies heavily engaged with social media marketing make more profit, revenue and bring in more customers than those who neglect it, but how long is that going to last? To quote Groove Armada, if everybody looked the same, we’d get tired of looking at each other. When every brand and business are tweeting, Facebooking, Foursquaring and everything-else-ing – what then? As with TV, we’ll see the odd ingenious marketing effort popping through, but the vast majority? Yawn.

Don’t get me wrong – I’m more than aware of the need to be on social media, and we’re a long way off seeing every brand and company active, and of course there is also a vast difference between simply communicating and marketing.  Yet social media are what websites were in the 90s. If you’re not there, you might as well not exist. I firmly believe that brands and companies should be on social media – those that aren’t today most definitely should be. Their entire present and future customer base are probably active there, so they should be too, and it’s precisely in that point that the quandary lies. You have to be on social media – everyone is. So how do you stand out? Sound familiar? TV and radio ring a bell? Back to square one.

This post might seem a bit rambling, and I apologise if it does, but it’s something that has been on my mind for sometime, and I’m eager to see what other people think. I don’t mean to imply that social media marketing has had its day, just that it will, and that I don’t think that day is all that far away.

What do you think?

An interview with Bill Johnston, Director of Dell's Global Online Community

So it was time for my third article for The Danish Communications Association, and it just so happened to be around the same time as Community Conference 2011 - of which there'll be more in just a tick. Bill Johnston was giving a keynote there, and as I was heading to the conference on behalf of Designit, I volunteered to interview Bill for my next article. Here it is.

Today I was lucky enough to meet Bill Johnston, Dell’s Global Community Manager. Bill was in Copenhagen for Community Conference 2011, a “conference that focuses on the business value of social media and communities for established brands and organizations, as well as emerging companies. 

The conference, organised by Seismonaut and Update, was a complete success – at least that’s what I, as a participant, felt. Every talk proved to be thought provoking and relevant, and the subject matter was broad enough to keep your mind active, yet not so broad as to bore or confuse. Along with Bill, we heard from David Armano from Edelman, Astrid Haug from Berlingske, Max Schorr, from GOOD Magazine; Lars Damgaard Nielsen, from DR; Christian H. Kamhaug from SAS, Oliver Majumdar from Lufthansa, Benjamin Elberth from The Social Democrats (Socialdemokraterne), Susanna Rankenberg from DR, Mette Lykke from Endomondo, Rolf Ask Clausen from Ingeniøren, and Filip Rasmussen from Gyldendals – a really good line-up. Well done, Seismonaut.

The location was superb too; Mogens Dahl Concert Hall; Smart, yet casual, and being a concert hall – great acoustics. Of course, the glorious weather we had put everyone in a good mood, resulting in a happy, bright, and inspiring. I hope you can make it to the next.

The conference was very well covered by bloggers, Twitter (search for #ccdk) and of course, Seismonaut themselves. Hardly surprising really with such renowned speakers, but I hope that in this interview I touch upon some subjects that weren’t covered, or at least not in as much detail.

I managed to steal Bill for around 30 minutes, and throw some questions about Dell, strategy, and social media his way. He was kind enough to let himself be stolen, and more importantly, answer my questions. Now, I will put my questions and his answers down on paper, and hope that I manage to convey just how excited and passionate I felt Bill was about social media, and his work at Dell.

Lara – So Bill. Tell me, what did you study at university?

Bill – I actually studied graphic design, and very quickly discovered I did not want to go in to advertising.

Lara – Understandable.

Bill – So, I took a position as an industrial designer. The process of learning design and design thinking has actually helped in my career. I’ve primarily been a community architect throughout various stages, so understanding and matching a company’s intention and business goals, with their customers and their needs to create a successful strategy has been almost a natural progression.

Lara – So what got you into social media? What was the break from design?

Bill – I started on the web first, the year I was graduating college, I was having these thoughts that I didn’t want to go into advertising, and I wasn’t entirely sure what to do. I saw a TV show on public television that showed the Mosaic browser on the NASA site, and I just thought it was fantastic. I’ve always been interested in computers, so I’ve always had this certain spot at the back of my mind thinking that this internet thing will eventually be big. So, I’m an industrial designer for two years, the president of the company where I’m at knows I’m kind of a nerd, and asks me to help create an e-commerce site for a framing product division [picture frames]. So I design an e-commerce site for picture frames and then I just knew; I love the web, and this is what I want to do. I completely lucked into an interview with a company that became Tech Republic which is now part of CBS Interactive and I took the job as essentially an interaction designer, and within about 3 months of launch I’m working late one night and I’m monitoring something on our forums and it’s an IT admin in the States talking with someone in Latin America and they’re solving a problem. It suddently occurs to me that there are probably 15 people in the world who have this kind of expertise to solve this problem and we’ve managed in our community to match two of them. Now that’s amazingly powerful. From that point forward I was hooked.

Lara – So that was it, brilliant. Well in Denmark we’re yet to see the full acceptance of social media, there are still quite a lot of companies who see it is a one-hit-wonder, and even more who are still treading very cautiously around it. When did you see the tipping point in the States for businesses using social media as a tool for crisis management, reputation management, HR, support and so on?

Bill – Well it was really interesting as there was this huge amount of energy around online communities leading up to the dotcom burst, then in 2001 the bottom fell out of everything. I was at Autodesk at this time and I saw this happen across all the technology companies in the Bay area [San Francisco]. The investment in communities, essentially social media, pulled way back, everybody dropped their community initiatives. I managed to hold on to our support forums at Autodesk and that was about it. So 2001 we ride out the storm, 2002 blogging starts to emerge, and I start to lobby for our tech evangelists to blog. They were two people, and all they did was go on the road and talk about how great Autodesk’s products were, so we started to set up Typepad blogs for about 100 bucks a year and very quickly, their blogs started climbing up our hit counters eventually ending up in the top 10. I was then able to pitch social media engagement because I could just point to the screen and say, ‘see that folder that costs us a million dollars a year to maintain? See this blogs folder that’s climbing the charts? That’s 200 bucks plus two people’s time.’ That was when the social media wave really crashed and it became accepted as a valid business tool, at least with leading edge type companies. I do still think there is some suspicion with online communities even today because of the dotcom burst and a little bit of stigma attached, but at Dell we find it’s one of the most valuable activities we have, it’s one of the things we can point at real ROI from.

Lara – Ah yes, ROI, I’ll come back to that. While marketing and advertising are pretty well recognised on social media, what about HR and support? How are these tackled with social media back home?

Bill – Well support is one of the easiest things to quantify from an ROI perspective. There’s a generally accepted principle Stateside that an avoided support call is 5 to 7 dollars saved, so when someone sees a Q&A on a technical forum the accepted value of that call deflection is 5 – 7 dollars. You just have to multiply that to see the cost savings, and thus, the ROI. In terms of HR and recruiting, I get pinged constantly on LinkedIn and Facebook. I scour Facebook and LinkedIn for positions we’re trying to fill, I mean, finding quality candidates via 2 degrees out from people that are already working for Dell – it’s almost completely frictionless,

Lara – I think ROI puts off a lot of businesses; they want to know what’s in it for them. Apart from the direct cash saving, what other kind of ROI do you think social media can offer businesses?

Bill – We’re seeing value in social media engagement across the entire customer lifecycle from acquisition to retention. Just being out there, and having a Dell branded presence on Twitter, Facebook, etc, direct sales from Twitter and Facebook, I mean, we’re able to tie pretty direct ROI back from that. We’re seeing engagement, specifically in communities, shortening sale cycles, increasing order volumes, so across the board we’re seeing value. And then from a reputation management perspective, conversations are happening about most any brand. I mean, I challenge any brand just to do a simple Google search or social media and not find a conversation – a potentially negative conversation – about the brand, so why wouldn’t you want to participate in that, just from a reputation protection perspective? 

Lara – Well said. How do you cope with all the information coming to you through Dell’s social media? There must be a huge amount!

Bill – We do staff to handle it. We have something call the Social Media Listening and Command Centre in Round Rock, and we’ve worked with Radion 6 to monitor, and we have monitoring screens up to show us things that influencers are saying, based upon comments and sentiment, by market, by region, so we’ve done a lot of work in instrumenting our tools to be able to gives us top line information to show where to point the actual human staff and engage and respond if necessary. But it is a lot of information.

Lara – Too much to respond to everyone?

Bill – We definitely try, definitely. Because the ability to reach through social media to where customers are is there, to be able to reach out and solve a problem in 140 characters, or offer them the right support document or even escalate it if needed and have a direct message exchange on Twitter to get them routed to the right support agent, that’s nothing but delight. Especially in local markets, we even have two command centre folks in Denmark so that allows us to monitor local language conversations about Dell, which is awesome.

Lara – Has Dell been a huge learning curve from your previous job at Forum One?

Bill – It’s been really interesting, at Forum One I spent 3 years organising conferences like this, Stateside, building a network of community professionals, that did research around topics like ROI, engagement, staffing, salaries, so essentially just building this massive professional network of people on the leading edge of community development and strategy management. The Dell job has allowed me to take the theoretical frameworks and put them into action which has been really fascinating. For instance, before I came to Dell, I thought this concept of listening in general and doing customer service outreach via social media was completely bogus, a complete waste of time, and then I walk in the door, I look at the frameworks we’re developing and the effect on satisfaction and the effect on customer delight that if offers, and the cost savings, and I’m convinced.

Lara – What do you see happening for Dell’s social strategy in 2012 – don’t feel like you have to divulge anything!

Bill – For me, specifically, it’s going to be three main things potentially. A focus on reputation management, specifically reputation management systems – think of the eBay rating system for sellers, as opposed to this general concept of brand reputation management. I’m focused on evolving our reputation management systems at Dell online in order for our customers and communities in social media to make better-informed decisions about the value of content, the value of participation. The other thing we’re really digging into is the concept of advocacy, so the concept of having advocates more prominently working within our communities, our support forums, IdeaStorm [during Bill’s presentation later in the day, we discovered that after a number of meetings with someone who gave a lot of criticism on IdeaStorm, he actually hired them as a Community Manager], etc, to act on Dell’s behalf in an informed way to create engagement in communities. The last thing is this concept of federation, working with our partners, like Microsoft, to share things like reputations, to mash up identities kinda like Empire Avenue was trying to do, but that juxtaposition of reputation across contexts. I think those are our three key areas that we’re digging into.

Lara – Exciting! Do you think we’re yet to see the full potential of social media realised or are we reaching the peak?

Bill – Well going back to the reputation thing, I do think reputation is going to become increasingly more important and I wouldn’t be surprised to see a more quality version of Empire Avenue, something that’s not so much about your friends trading each other and trading influence, but something more objective for people and brands, I think that’s definitely coming. I also think niche communities and niche social networking, will emerge, like mini-Facebooks, maybe evening including private collaboration, like clouds of people working on things like global hunger or AIDS vaccines. I think there will be a big revolution in terms of internal collaboration to support social efforts, establishing specialists to deal with certain topics and responding to them and so forth. I think we’re starting to see the benefits of having an internal group collaboration service in order to support the social media efforts and external communities.

Lara – Sounds good. Well, thanks a lot Bill. It’s been great.

So there you have it. Clearly a man possessed, and I mean that in an extremely positive way. Meeting people like Bill is always a bit of a slap in the face but also an inspiration.

His slides are available on Slideshare, he writes a blog, he can be found on LinkedIn, and of course Twitter. Now if you’ll excuse me, I have to go see if I can make sure my reputation is secure…

People Talk. You Should Listen

Below is my second article for The Danish Communication Association, this time about social media and customer service. Enjoy!

People are talking. You must be there to listen.

Social media has pushed customer service from being something that used to involve a two-hour phone call at your expense, to something that is an intrinsic part of an organisations marketing and communication. 

As I mentioned in my last article, intangibles have become the new currency. Choice and cost are no longer as pivotal in decision making as they once were, and as a result, organisations must now focus on these intangible methods, such as customer loyalty and reputation, in order to stand out from the crowd.

A good reputation is an extremely valuable asset – maybe even more valuable of tangible or physical assets – yet it is also uncontrollable. Reputations are bestowed on us – on organisations – by society in an intrinsic effort of self-preservation, and are built on and destroyed by consumers’ conversations – conversations that are going on every minute of every hour of every day on social media.

Just a phase?

So when I read Social Semantic’s latest report on social media use in Danish businesses I was flabbergasted to find out that just 9% use social media for service and support. If 40% believe that social media can increase customer loyalty and sales, and if 87% of management believes that social media can be used to create a positive reputation, then what better way to increase loyalty and create a positive reputation than via social media?

Apparently 12% of Danish businesses still see social media as a one-day wonder, and 21% haven’t carried out any kind of social media search for their own organisation as they don’t deem it to be important. Words can not express my incredulity at these figures. In the 1990s, interactive marketing and design agency Razorfish started with the simple premise of everything that can be digital, will be. Today, this has changed to everything that can be social, will be. It’s really very hard to overemphasize this statement. With 2.6 million Danes on Facebook (according to the report), and about 28,000 Danes on Twitter, all of whom are talking about brands and organisations, making and breaking reputations, it’s nigh on impossible to understand the opinions of those 12 and 21 percent.

Fullrate break the mould

Earlier this year, I had an experience with what I considered to be outstanding customer service from a Danish company, Fullrate. My internet connection kept cutting out, and one evening I tweeted, ‘Getting really sick and tired of #Fullrate. Massive complaint email coming soon.’ The next day, I received this email;

fullrate.gif

Once over my shock, I answered, and within hours the problem was solved (faulty router, new one on the way). I posted a screen dump of the email on Facebook, where it was picked up by a journalist, and before you can say customer service, Fullrate were being accused of breaching my privacy and being ‘big-brothery’. My Twitter profile is set to public precisely because (amongst other reasons), I hope that brands and organisations will be carrying out searches and will hear me. While others might have been put off by receiving such an unsolicited email, I was positively overwhelmed. My email address can easily be found online, and how different is it to a letter in my letterbox?

BerlingskeB.TKlean, and of course Fullrate were among those which covered the story (with varying levels of sensationalism), and I’m happy to say that Fullrate emerged unscathed – and with a new loyal customer. B.T’s headline of ‘Beware of companies monitoring your moaning on Facebook’ (link is the same as the other BT one so wasn’t sure if I needed it?) might have been intended to worry people, yet for me – and many, many others – it simply confirmed what I had hoped was true in the first place; that companies were monitoring social media.

A Danish mindset?

What worried me the most about the whole episode was that other Danish businesses might have been put off by the initial reaction, the melodramatic shock and disbelief that organisations are using social media as a research tool. There’s always a first, and as is so often the case, the first tends to be received warily. But what about abroad? The internet is positively packed full of cases;Easyjet on Twitter, Air Asia on Facebook, Twelpforce Best Buy on Twitter, and let’s not forget KLM, Lufthansa and Eyjafjallajokull – Google ‘social media and customer service’ and take a look.

Act now

While 93% expect to invest in social media in the next one to two years, I believe that that is far too long. Invest now. It doesn’t have to cost a penny. I know I speak for many when I say that I hope many more Danish businesses will follow Fullrate’s example and use social media as a channel through which they can deliver efficient and effective customer service. It doesn’t have to be a whole dedicated channel – just use the search functions available. Search in Facebook, check pages, groups, and posts by everyone. There might be blog posts, Tweets, or comments that can give feedback.

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You don’t even need a profile to search on Twitter – just use the search box.

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Overskrift.dk allows search in Danish blogs, Twitter feeds, tags, content etc, providing a wealth of information for any organisation.

overskrift.dk.gif 

Google blog searchSocial MentionAddict-o-matic – there are a lot of free tools available for keeping track of what is being said, and there’s a lot being said. It’s not a breach of privacy. If someone hasn’t set their profile to private, then it’s public knowledge.

In short; if something is found; act. Make contact, no matter if it’s a compliment or complaint. Companies have to monitor social media, just as they monitor traditional media. People want to be heard, they want their voice to be acknowledge, and just sitting back and thinking that this social media lark is just a fad is not going to help you.

P.S. Fullrate actually have an advert in the report; 'Social networks demand good relations. For us, social media are a natural part of our customer service, and are essential for the future to make sure we have the happiest broadband customers.' I can vouch for that.

P.P.S. I do not work for Fullrate.

Copyright © 2022, Lara Mulady. All rights reserved.