Posts tagged social networks
10 Musts for Marketing to Women on Facebook
Jan 13th
Posted by Brette Borow in Social
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href=”http://www.twitter.com/brette” >Brette Borow is the President and Founder of
href=”http://GirlsGuideTo.com” >Girls Guide To, the “ladies only” guide to life, and spends most of her days engaging with the community’s over
href=”http://facebook.com/GirlsGuideTo” >140,000 members.
There are over href=”http://mashable.com/2009/10/03/women-rule-the-social-web/”>56 million women using Facebook in the United States, and for marketers this means one very important thing –- if you have a brand, product or company that targets women, Facebook is the place to be.
Unfortunately, unless you’re a brand that every woman knows or loves, then just being on Facebook is not enough. Facebook has done a great job of giving marketers a powerful tool with its Pages product, but like most things in life, it comes down to execution. To help, here is a list of 10 tips for marketing to women on Facebook.
1. Quality Counts
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The first thing I tell marketers, whether it’s a Fortune 500 company or a friend launching an online jewelry site, is to remember that women are bombarded by marketing messages all day, every day. On the surface, Facebook is no different than the “real world” –- constantly being pitched to and spammed is annoying. The main difference between Facebook and the “real world” is that on Facebook, fans can “hide” your marketing message much more easily than they can avoid the billboard on the way to work. As a result, you are going to have to try your best to connect with them. On Facebook, quality rises to the top more often than not.
2. Create an Emotional Connection
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So quality rises to the top, but what does that mean? For starters lets take a look at what href=”http://facebook.com/dove” >Dove has done on Facebook. Dove is one of the few brands that seems to grasp the fact that on Facebook, content really is queen and that brands must deliberately create an emotional connection with their fans. This is a great strategy to emulate because in order to reach women on Facebook, you are going to have to connect with them by providing content that women can relate to. Something that ignites a reaction like “Wow, that’s me!” will encourage women not only to respond to your messages, but actually remember them. Making an emotional connection is one of the best ways to motivate women to use your brand or service.
3. Provide Utility
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Utility should be synonymous with your brand. It will allow you to create a relationship with your fans. Create a series of posts that your fans can look forward to on a daily or weekly basis — something they will feel a real connection to and will teach them something they can use. If you run a fashion web site, for example, provide a piece of advice from a designer every Friday –- it will make it much harder for your fans to block your updates if they have something to look forward to.
4. Give Fans a Voice
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Women like to be heard. Stand out from the crowd and engage us. By creating a two-way conversation, you are personalizing your brand and making it one that can be trusted.
Your Facebook Page is also one of the best “focus groups” on the web. Not sure if you should add a product to your line? Trying to decide which functionality to add to your iPhone app? Just ask your fans. A great example of this type of interaction is href=”http://facebook.com/HM” >H&M. They are constantly asking their fans what pieces they want to buy, what they would pay and what they want H&M to carry. This type of feedback is invaluable and brings the fan into the overall experience. Women can share their thoughts, and you can enjoy the free insight you’re receiving straight from your target consumer.
5. Listen!
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Not only do we like to be heard, we also like to know we’re actually being listened to. If a fan posts a question on your page, answer it. If she compliments your brand, thank her. And if she complains about it, address her concerns and reassure her that you’re working on fixing it. This is a great way to build trust and showcase the great customer service and support your company offers.
6. Complement Her Life, Don’t Complicate It
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If you’re doing a giveaway, running a great promotion or launching a new product, you need to keep the process simple. href=”http://facebook.com/cosmopolitan” >Cosmopolitan Magazine, for example, constantly offers giveaways and discounts, but always do it in a clear and simple way. The lesson here is not to overthink your promotions. Your fans will look forward to the next time your brand has something new and exciting to share, as long as taking advantage of the offer is relatively pain-free.
7. Don’t Be Redundant
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Unlike Twitter, where most people are following a plethora of people and information is passing by at lightning speed, Facebook has a tendency to draw attention to “spammy posts.” Facebook users do not want to see the same message posted multiple times in their feed. So if you’re promoting something through your Fan Page be sure to reword it and provide additional value before you post it a second time.
8. Keep the Shopping Experience Seamless
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You need to remember that women tend to be the CPOs (Chief Purchasing Officers) in their households, and that they tend to ask friends for advice about brands and products. Women are more than happy to share a good deal when they find one.
href=”http://facebook.com/thelimited” >The Limited was one of the first brands to really grasp that Facebook represents a huge opportunity to reach their CPOs. They have started to embed actual retail offers into their newsfeed. But unlike other brands, they do not drive their traffic off of Facebook. Instead, their feed stories open up into widgets on Facebook that can handle the entire transaction right there. This clever use of technology is a prime example of ways that brands need to think outside of the box to reach their social shoppers.
9. Remember: She’s a Social Shopper
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Women also tend not to be shy about sharing their distaste about a brand or product or talking about their poor experience, so never take advantage of your fans. The last thing you want is your target demographic badmouthing your brand on a viral platform like Facebook.
Keep your offers and processes clear and honest and always respond to feedback and criticism.
10. Keep Your Fans in the Loop
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Fill your fans in on the positive but don’t be afraid to address the negative. As we all know, the web is transparent. Allow it to work in your favor. Just launched a new Android app? Let your fans be the first to know. Just got nominated for 6 Grammy Awards and want to share it with the world? Then do what href=”http://facebook.com/LadyGaga” >Lady Gaga did and let your fans know the moment you find out. In a transparent world, you can share your news with your fans, and the sooner the better.
Last but not least, if your company is experiencing difficulties like supply shortage or a down web site, be the first to let your customers know. Be upfront and straightforward. Your honesty will speak volumes about your brand.
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More Facebook resources from Mashable
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- href=”http://mashable.com/2009/04/02/facebook-personal-brand/”>HOW TO: Build Your Personal Brand on Facebook
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/05/27/facebook-page-vs-group/”>Facebook Pages vs Facebook Groups: What’s the Difference?
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2010/01/12/facebook-privacy-detrimental/”>Why Facebook’s Privacy Changes are Detrimental to Users
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/10/06/facebook-blog-integration/”>HOW TO: Integrate Facebook With Your Blog
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/10/07/facebook-groups/”>HOW TO: Manage a Facebook Group
/>Reviews: href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336868-Android” >Android, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336650-Facebook” >Facebook
Tags: href=”http://mashable.com/tag/brand/”>brand, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/branding/”>branding, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/business/”>business, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/facebook/”>facebook, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/facebook-fan-page/”>facebook fan page, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/list/”>List, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/lists/”>Lists, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/marketing/”>MARKETING, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/small-business/”>small business, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/social-media/”>social media, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/social-networks/”>social networks
5 Tips for Creating a Successful Social Media Contest
Jan 13th
Posted by Clay McDaniel in Social
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src=”http://cdn.mashable.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/social-trophies.jpg” alt=”trophies image” class=”alignright size-full wp-image-143936″/>Clay McDaniel is the principal and co-founder of social media marketing agency,
href=”http://www.springcreekgroup.com/” >Spring Creek Group. Find him via
href=”http://twitter.com/springcreekgrp” >@springcreekgrp on Twitter.
One of the best ways to drive engagement and build word of mouth traffic about your brand is to run a contest via social media channels. Not only does it engage consumers with your brand in a fun and exciting way, it results in a treasure-trove of customer information, preferences, and feedback you can then mine to improve your business. And, best of all, launching an online contest can be very inexpensive.
However, there is a subtle art to social contests. Your brand needs to appear neither too “cheesy” nor too “salesy,” and you must deliver a prize that people really want. This can be a standard product or gift card, or a “notoriety” prize, such as publishing a winner’s video. What’s more, the contest itself has to be fun and easy to participate in. Few prizes are worth doing something extremely boring, monotonous, or complicated.
Here are five specific strategies you can follow to launch and manage a social contest, and leverage it to deliver real business value.
1. Define Your Marketing Goal
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Every contest you launch should meet a specific marketing goal. Do you want to drive awareness of a new product or service? Collect a list of customers interested in a specific product segment? Encourage new participants to use your company’s social networking channels? There are many valid reasons to launch a contest, but it’s important to know ahead of time what you’re trying to accomplish. This goal will set the tone for your contest strategy.
2. Get Creative
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Here’s the fun part: Creating your contest. The sky’s the limit when it comes to the type of contests you can launch. Here are a few ideas:
– A video contest inviting users to create a new commercial for one of your products
/> – A user-generated content contest that awards the best ‘personal experience stories’
/> – A photo contest related to your product or service
/> – A product invention contest with a large cash prize
Of course, your contest can be short and offer a small prize, or longer and more involved. Check out the href=”http://www.startupnation.com/homebased100″ >Startup Nation Home Based 100 business creation competition that received thousands of entries and high-profile sponsors for an idea of just how big a contest can become.
3. Leverage Social Channels
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/> The best part about online contests is how easy it is to take them viral, encourage participation, and link them into your social marketing activities. Promote your contest via Facebook, Twitter, your company blog, and all other social channels, as well as via traditional marketing channels such as print, e-mail, and in-store signage.
Just search the word href=”http://search.twitter.com/search?q=contest” >contest on Twitter to see hundreds of contests going on right now. The best contests are intensely social by nature, because people like to play games and contests together, and most people love to share the chance to win a cool prize with friends and family. Ensure your contest is easily sharable by embedding “share this” links on the contest site, on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and everywhere else people will come across it.
Use a social media tracking tool like href=”http://www.meteorsolutions.com” >Meteor Solutions to see which people and sites are sharing your contest, then promote your contest more heavily to those communities. Make sure your contest spreads like wildfire by encouraging easy “copy/paste” sharing using the href=”http://www.bit.ly” >Bit.ly URL shortener for the links to your contest location online. Most importantly, allow the contest participants to vote to choose the winner, which keeps the audience interacting with one another and engaged long after each person has submitted their entry.
4. Finish the Contest
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Everyone loves a winner, so make sure you don’t let your contest drag on too long. A typical social contest runs about four weeks –- longer, of course, if it’s more complex (e.g. programming a software algorithm or inventing a new product). When the winner is chosen, do a PR push to publicize their win. Of course, use Facebook and Twitter to promote the winner like mad. Go back to your social media tracking software and find out which people and social sites are talking most about the winner, then post comments on those networks to drive even more interest in the winner.
5. Measure the Contest
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Of course launching a contest wasn’t just for fun, it was to achieve a specific marketing goal. So after the contest is done, you need to measure the impact it had on brand engagement, clickthrough to your site, conversion, and bottom-line sales. Again, you can use your social media tracking tool to measure all of these success metrics. Find out whether your contest drove as much traffic to your site as you had hoped, and whether this traffic resulted in conversion, however you may measure that (e.g. purchases, newsletter subscriptions, Twitter followers, etc.).
Many brands have done a great job with social contests. Spring Creek Group, for example, created a social media contest to drive interest and traffic during the launch of the Microsoft Bing search engine last summer. Bing launched href=”http://mashable.com/2009/07/20/bing-jingle/” >The Bing Jingle Contest, and invited people to upload user-generated video “jingles” about Bing to their official YouTube channel. Bing then promoted the videos via its Facebook Page, Twitter updates, and other social channels. The video with the most views and highest ratings would be crowned the winner, with the creator receiving a $500 gift card.
Overall, the contest garnered 27 video entries, over 238,000 views, 550 comments on the videos, and 2,200 tweets. The word of mouth generated by the contest was phenomenal, and was covered by many top blogs. The contest took on a life of its own, generating both defenders and detractors over the href=”http://mashable.com/2009/08/05/bing-goes-the-internet/”>winning video.
More Great Contest Examples
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Marin Software’s href=”http://biggestsearchgeek.com/” >Biggest Search Geek Contest: This is a fun and very popular contest, now in its second year, that pits smart search marketers against one another for a free pass to SMX West — double points for creating a cool B2B social contest.
#TriviaTues: Fancast, Comcast’s competitor to Hulu, promotes href=”http://twitter.com/search?q=%23triviatues” >#TriviaTues, a weekly trivia event where Twitter users who follow href=”http://twitter.com/fancasttrivia” >@FancastTrivia and answer twenty trivia questions can win free DVDs, movie tickets, and t-shirts.
Moonfruit’s Win a Macbook Pro Everyday for 7 Days: Moonfruit, provider of do-it-yourself web site building tools for small businesses, recently completed this href=”http://mashable.com/2009/07/01/moonfruit-macbook/”>hugely successful contest. You can see results and entries href=”http://www.moonfruit.com/macbook-pro.html” >on their web site.
More business resources from Mashable:
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- href=”http://mashable.com/2010/01/11/social-media-integration/”>The 10 Stages of Social Media Business Integration
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/10/27/social-media-roi/”>HOW TO: Measure Social Media ROI
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2010/01/09/social-media-connect-entrepreneurs/”>HOW TO: Use Social Media to Connect with Other Entrepreneurs
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/28/social-media-business-strategy/”>HOW TO: Implement a Social Media Business Strategy
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2010/01/11/start-page/”>HOW TO: Use a Start Page to Stay Organized
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/03/news-reader/”>HOW TO: Choose a News Reader for Keeping Tabs on Your Industry
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/09/30/small-business-strategies/”>5 Advanced Social Media Marketing Strategies for Small Businesses
Images courtesy of rel=”nofollow” href=”http://www.istockphoto.com/mashableoffer.php”>iStockphoto, rel=”nofollow” href=”http://www.istockphoto.com/user_view.php?id=2196459″>adventtr, rel=”nofollow” href=”http://www.istockphoto.com/user_view.php?id=2131247″>WendellFranks
/>Reviews: href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/393174-Bing” >Bing, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336650-Facebook” >Facebook, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/337063-Hulu” >Hulu, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336651-Twitter” >Twitter, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336658-YouTube” >YouTube, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/393944-bitly” >bit.ly, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/393797-iStockphoto” >iStockphoto
Tags: href=”http://mashable.com/tag/bing/”>bing, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/business/”>business, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/contest/”>contest, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/contests/”>Contests, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/facebook/”>facebook, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/marketing/”>MARKETING, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/moonfruit/”>moonfruit, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/small-business/”>small business, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/social-media/”>social media, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/social-networks/”>social networks, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/twitter/”>twitter, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/youtube/”>youtube
The 10 Stages of Social Media Business Integration
Jan 11th
Posted by Brian Solis in Social
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href=”http://www.briansolis.com/” >Brian Solis is a principal at new media agency
href=”http://www.future-works.com/” >FutureWorks. You can connect with him on
href=”http://www.twitter.com/briansolis” >Twitter or
href=”http://www.facebook.com/pages/Brian-Solis/180669933654″ >Facebook.
An overnight success ten years in the making, social media is as transformative as it is evolutionary. At last, 2010 is expected to be the year that social media goes mainstream for business. In speaking with many executives and entrepreneurs, I’ve noticed that the path towards new media enlightenment often hinges on corporate culture and specific marketplace conditions. Full social media integration often happens in stages — it’s an evolutionary process for companies and consumers alike.
Here are the ten most common stages that businesses experience as they travel the road to full social media integration.
Stage 1: Observe and Report
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src=”http://cdn.mashable.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/observing.jpg” alt=”observing image” class=”alignright size-full wp-image-143936″/>This is the entry point for businesses to better understand the behavior of an interactive marketplace.
Listening: Employ listening devices such as Google Alerts, Twitter Search, href=http://www.radian6.com >Radian6, and href=http://www.prnewswire.com/products-services/targeting-monitoring-measurement/social-media-monitoring/Social-Media-Monitoring.html >PR Newswire’s Social Media Metrics to track conversations and instances associated with key words.
Reporting: Distill existing social media conversations into an executive report. This early form of reporting is merely designed to provide decision makers with the information they’ll need for continued exploration of social media and its potential impact on business.
Stage 2: Setting the Stage + Dress Rehearsal
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Once the initial intelligence is gathered, businesses will set the stage for social media participation. This is an interesting phase, as it often joins Stage 1 as a more comprehensive first step. Instead of researching the best ways to engage, many businesses create accounts across multiple social networks and publish content without a plan or purpose.
However, those businesses that conduct research will find a rewarding array of options and opportunities to target.
Presence: Create official presences across one or more social networks, usually Twitter and possibly Facebook (Fan Pages), YouTube, and Flickr. Early on, this is often experimental, and less about strategic engagement.
Analysis: Review activity for frequency (the rate of mentions), the state of sentiment allocation, traffic, as well as the size of connections (friends, followers, fans, etc.). Provide managers with a limited glimpse into the effects of presence and participation.
Stage 3: Socializing Media
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src=”http://cdn.mashable.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/social-network.jpg” alt=”social network image” class=”alignleft size-full wp-image-143936″/>The next stage in the evolution of a new media business is the proverbial step towards “joining the conversation.”
As companies take the stage, they will eventually pay attention to the reaction of the audience in order to respond and improve content, define future engagements, and humanize communication.
Conversation: Representative of an early form of participation, this stage usually evokes reactive engagement based on the nature of existing dialogue or mentions and also incorporates the proactive broadcasting of activity, events and announcements.
Rapid Response: Listen for potentially heated, viral, and emotional activity in order to extinguish a potential crisis or fan the flames of positive support.
Metrics: Document the aforementioned activity in order to demonstrate momentum. This is usually captured in the form of friends, fans, followers, conversations, sentiment, mentions, traffic, and reach.
Stage 4: Finding a Voice and a Sense of Purpose
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This is a powerful milestone in the maturation of new media and business. By not only listening, but hearing and observing the responses and mannerisms of those who define our markets, we can surface pain points, source ideas, foster innovation, earn inspiration, learn, and feel a little empathy in order to integrate a sense of purpose into our socialized media programs.
Research: Review activity for public sentiment, including negative and neutral commentary. Observe trends in responses and ultimately behavior. This allows for a poignant understanding of where to concentrate activity, at what level, and with what voice across marketing, sales, service, and PR.
Strategic Visibility: Introduce relevance and focus. You don’t have to be everywhere in order to create presence, just in the places where you would be missed. Understanding that the social web is far more extensive than Twitter, blogs, and Facebook, brand managers search across the entire web to locate where influential dialogue transpires.
Relevance: “Chatter” or aimless broadcasting is not as effective as strategic communications and engagement. This stage reflects the exploration of goals, objectives, and value implementation. Companies begin to learn that exchange is based on trust and loyalty.
Stage 5: Turning Words Into Actions
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src=”http://cdn.mashable.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/runner.jpg” alt=”runner image” class=”alignright size-full wp-image-143936″/>Actions speak louder than words. Businesses must act. Once the door to social consciousness is opened, bring the spirit of your company through it to affect change.
Empathy: Social media personifies companies. It allows us to see who it is we’re hoping to reach, and what motivates them. Listening and observing is not enough. The ability to truly understand someone, their challenges, objectives, options, and experiences allows us to better connect with them.
Purpose: The shift from simple response to purposeful, strategic communication will be mutually beneficial. It is in this stage that we can truly produce captivating content and messages. In order to hold it, we have to give the audience something to believe in — something that moves them.
Stage 6: Humanizing the Brand and Defining the Experience
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As href=”http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/doc/” >Doc Searls says, “There is no market for messages.” Indeed. Through the internalization of sentiment, brands will relearn how to speak. No longer will we focus on controlling the message from conception to documentation to distribution. We lose control as our messages are introduced into the real world. Our story migrates from consumer to consumer. This chain forms a powerful connection that reveals true reactions, perception, and perspectives.
The conversations that bind us form a human algorithm that serves as the pulse of awareness, trustworthiness, and emotion.
The Humanization of the Brand: Once we truly understand the people who influence our markets, we need to establish a persona worthy of attention and affinity. A socialized version of a branding style guide is necessary.
Experience: Our experience in dynamic social ecosystems teaches us that online activity must not only maintain a sense of purpose, it must also direct traffic and shape perceptions. We question our current online properties, landing pages, processes, and messages. We usually find that the existing architecture leads people from a very vibrant and interactive experience (social networks) to a static dead end (our web sites). As we attempt to redefine the experience of new customers, prospects and influencers, we essentially induce a brand makeover.
Stage 7: Community
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src=”http://cdn.mashable.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/community1.jpg” alt=”community image” class=”alignleft size-full wp-image-143936″/>Community is an investment in the cultivation and fusion of affinity, interaction, advocacy and loyalty. Learned earlier in the stages of new media adoption, community isn’t established with the creation of a social profile. Community is earned and fortified through shared experiences. It takes commitment. As
href=”http://twitter.com/kathySierra” >Kathy Sierra once said, “Trying to replace ‘brand’ with ‘conversation’ does a disservice to both brands & conversations.”
Community Building/Recruitment: While we are building community through engagement in each of the previous stages, we will proactively reach out to ideal participants and potential ambassadors. We become social architects, and build the roads necessary to lead customers to a rich and rewarding network, full of valuable information and connections.
Stage 8: Social Darwinism
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src=”http://cdn.mashable.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/business-evolution.jpg” alt=”business evolution image” class=”alignright size-full wp-image-143936″/>Listening and responding is only as effective as its ability to inspire transformation, improvement, and adaptation from the inside out. Survival does not hinge solely on a company’s social media strategy. The social element is but one part of an overall integrated strategy. It’s how we learn and adapt that ensures our place within the evolution of our markets.
Social Media as embraced in the earlier stages is not scalable. The introduction of new roles will beget the restructuring of teams and workflow, which will ultimately necessitate organizational transformation to support effective engagement, production, and the ongoing evolution towards ensuring brand and product relevance.
Adaptation: In order to truly compete for the future, artful listening, community building, and advocacy must align with an organization’s ability to adapt and improve its products, services, and policies. In order for any team to collaborate well externally, it must first foster collaboration within. It is this interdepartmental cooperative exchange that provides a means for which to pursue sincere engagement over time.
Organizational Transformation: The internal reorganization of teams and processes to support a formal Social Customer Relationship Management (sCRM) program will become imperative. As social media chases ubiquity, we learn that influence isn’t relegated to one department or function within an organization. Any department affected by external activity will eventually socialize. Therefore, an integrated and interconnected network of brand ambassadors must work internally to ensure that the brand is responding to constructive instances, by department. However, at the departmental and brand level, successful social media marketing will require governance and accountability. Organizational transformation will gravitate towards a top-down hierarchy of policy, education, and empowerment across the entire organization.
Stage 9: The Socialization of Business Processes
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src=”http://cdn.mashable.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/social-crossword.jpg” alt=”social crossword image” class=”alignleft size-full wp-image-143936″/>Multiple disciplines and departments will socialize, and the assembly or adaptation of infrastructure is required to streamline and manage social workflow.
Social CRM (sCRM): Scalability, resources, and efficiencies will require support, resulting in a modified or completely new infrastructure that either augments or resembles a CRM-like workflow. Combining technology, principles, philosophies and processes, sCRM establishes a value chain that fosters relationships within traditional business dynamics. As an organization evolves through engagement, sCRM will transform into SRM — the recognition that all people, not just customers, are equal. It represents a wider scope of active listening and participation across the full spectrum of influence.
Stage 10: Business Performance Metrics
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Inevitably, we report to executives who may be uninterested in transparency or authenticity. Their goal, and job, is to steer the company toward greater profits. In order to measure the true effects of social media, we need the numbers behind the activity –- at every level.
While many experts argue that there is no need to measure social engagement (much the way that some companies don’t explicitly define the ROI of Superbowl ads or billboards), make no mistake: Social is measurable, and the process of mining data tied to our activity is extremely empowering. Our ambition to excel should be driven through the inclusion of business performance metrics, with or without an executive asking us to do so. It’s the difference between visibility and presence. And in the attention economy, presence is felt.
ROI: Without an understanding of the volume, locations, and nature of online interaction, the true impact of our digital footprint and its relationship to the bottom line of any business is impossible to assess. An immerssive view of our social media goals and objectives allows us to truly measure ROI. Stage 10 reveals the meaning and opportunity behind the numbers and allows us to identify opportunities for interaction, direction, and action.
Conclusion
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There is a great distance between where we are today, and where we need to be. Our work in 2010 will be dedicated to narrowing the social chasm.
The thing about social media is that it’s always new, and as such, these stages represent a moment in time. They will continue to evolve and expand with new technologies and experiences.
In the end, social media is a privilege and a tool — one more opportunity to run a more meaningful and relevant business.
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More business resources from Mashable:
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- href=”http://mashable.com/2010/01/09/social-media-connect-entrepreneurs/”>HOW TO: Use Social Media to Connect with Other Entrepreneurs
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/28/social-media-business-strategy/”>HOW TO: Implement a Social Media Business Strategy
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/20/document-collaboration/”>9 Great Document Collaboration Tools for Teams
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/28/new-years-resolutions-smbs/”>5 New Year’s Resolutions for SMBs
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/03/news-reader/”>HOW TO: Choose a News Reader for Keeping Tabs on Your Industry
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/09/30/small-business-strategies/”>5 Advanced Social Media Marketing Strategies for Small Businesses
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/>Reviews: href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336650-Facebook” >Facebook, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336659-Flickr” >Flickr, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/567989-Radian6″ >Radian6, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336651-Twitter” >Twitter, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336658-YouTube” >YouTube, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/499834-eXperience” >eXperience, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/393797-iStockphoto” >iStockphoto
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HOW TO: Use Social Media to Connect with Other Entrepreneurs
Jan 9th
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rel=”nofollow” href=”http://www.openforum.com/idea-hub/topics/technology/article/using-social-media-to-connect-with-other-entrepreneurs-ben-parr” >This post originally appeared on the
rel=”nofollow” href=”http://www.openforum.com” >American Express OPEN Forum, where Mashable regularly contributes articles about leveraging social media and technology in small business.
Starting a company is often a lonely and nerve wracking process. One day, you’re working at a big company with tens of thousands of people and health benefits, and then the next day it’s just you, maybe a co-founder, and a lack of steady income.
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Yet you’re really not alone. There are thousands of others making similar journeys around the world, and even more who have not only gone down the entrepreneurial path, but succeeded. These people are more than happy to share their advice, insight, and stories — if you know how to find them.
That’s where social media tools come into play. Forging new connections has never been easier due to the increasing accessibility of people, ideas, and information. Web communities based around business, entrepreneurship, and programming are thriving all over the place. Twitter, Facebook, and other social networks have become an amazing way to learn new lessons and keep in touch with other entrepreneurs.
If you’re looking to enrich your entrepreneurial journey by sharing with others, I have a few social media suggestions that will help:
Follow Entrepreneur Twitter Lists
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A few months ago, Twitter launched a feature called “Lists,” which gave users the power to create lists of their favorite users. Many have used this to create Twitter lists of top entrepreneurs and startup founders.
Following these people and interacting with them is a good step towards building connections. Check out Listorious’ href=”http://listorious.com/tags/entrepreneur” >collection of entrepreneurship Twitter lists to start.
Connect With Amazing Entrepreneurship Communities
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Entrepreneurs are already gathered in a lot of great places on the web. Finding these hidden gems of community and startup enthusiasm could be just what you’re looking for.
To start out, we suggest checking out href=”http://news.ycombinator.com/” >Hacker News (a community sharing some of the best articles on startups, development, and human nature), href=”http://thefunded.com/” >TheFunded (focused around raising money for your startup), and href=”http://www.partnerup.com/default.aspx” >PartnerUp (helps you find business partners and co-founders). For more, check out a list of href=”http://mashable.com/2009/03/12/entrepreneur-networks/”>Mashable’s favorite entrepreneur communities.
Use Social Media to Find Local Events
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While connecting online is great, there is no substitute for shaking hands and meeting in person. Luckily, social media can help you in this regard by helping keep you in the loop about events you’ll want to attend. Tools like href=”http://www.meetup.com/” >Meetup and searches for Facebook Events are good ways to get started.
Just Reach Out
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In the end, social media only helps make it easier to connect – you still have to do the hard work of building a relationship with fellow entrepreneurs. Use social media to find them and reach out, but be sure to take it the next step and start a long-lasting conversation.
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More small business resources from Mashable:
/>
- href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/28/social-media-business-strategy/”>HOW TO: Implement a Social Media Business Strategy
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/20/document-collaboration/”>9 Great Document Collaboration Tools for Teams
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/28/new-years-resolutions-smbs/”>5 New Year’s Resolutions for SMBs
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/03/news-reader/”>HOW TO: Choose a News Reader for Keeping Tabs on Your Industry
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/11/26/mobile-productivity-tools/”>Top Mobile Productivity Tools for the Small Business
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/09/30/small-business-strategies/”>5 Advanced Social Media Marketing Strategies for Small Businesses
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/09/22/social-media-business/”>4 Ways Social Media is Changing Business
Image courtesy of rel=”nofollow” href=”http://www.istockphoto.com/mashableoffer.php”>iStockphoto, rel=”nofollow” href=”http://www.istockphoto.com/user_view.php?id=193954″>Cimmerian
/>Reviews: href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336650-Facebook” >Facebook, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/393890-Hacker-News” >Hacker News, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336651-Twitter” >Twitter, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/393797-iStockphoto” >iStockphoto
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NFL Wildcard Weekend: 3 Things to Watch on Twitter
Jan 8th
Posted by John Thornton in Social
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src=”http://cdn.mashable.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/twitter-helmet.jpg” alt=”twitter helmet image” class=”alignright size-full wp-image-143936″/>John Thornton (
href=”http://www.twitter.com/johnthornton” >@JohnThornton) played in the NFL for 10 seasons with the Titans (1999-2002) and Bengals (2003-2008). He now runs
href=”http://www.jockbiz.com/” >Jockbiz.com, hosts “Bengals Rountable” on 700WLW in Cincinnati, and blogs at
href=”http://www.allproblogger.com/” >Allproblogger.com.
This is the first full NFL season where a large number of players have used Twitter and other forms of social media to engage with fans. The off-the-field life of a pro athlete was previously limited to MTV Cribs or tabloid web sites. Now, all you have to do is follow your favorite athlete on Twitter to find out everything you need to know. And for the most part, players have not href=”http://mashable.com/2010/01/04/social-media-athletes/”>abused the rules that NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell set before the season — no tweeting 90 minutes before the game, and no tweeting after the game until the media session is over. The NFL knew it had a monster on its hands, which is why they opted not to outlaw social media altogether.
NFL coaches hate the fact that players use Twitter, and certain teams don’t allow their players to tweet. But the majority of coaches just tell their players to be careful. Now that the playoffs are here, players and coaches will get extremely tight with information. Still, some players will still rely on Twitter to talk to fans during down times before the big game. Here are three things that I’m looking forward to on Twitter during this NFL Wild Card Weekend.
1. Chad Ochocinco (Bengals) Vs. Darrelle Revis (Jets)
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These two have been going at it for over a week now. Last week it was all fun and games. The teams played in a game that was basically meaningless for the Bengals, but meant everything to the Jets. Chad started off the week by href=”http://twitter.com/OGOchoCinco/status/7132703279″ >letting Darrelle know what he was in for and how Darrelle couldn’t cover him one on one. Darelle href=”https://twitter.com/Revis24/status/7159117358″ >fired back by letting Chad know that he would cover him with ease. Both guys had fun with it, and Darrelle’s Jets went on to beat Chad’s Bengals 37-0 on Sunday night.
Luckily for football fans, there will be a rematch this weekend in Cincinnati. But if you’ll notice, both players are putting the brakes on the tweeting. Why? It’s the playoffs, and there’s a lot at stake. Players don’t want to be accused of causing a distraction or providing bulletin board material for the other team.
If Chad Ochocinco repeats last week’s tweeting and then goes out to have zero catches like he did in the 37-0 game, people would speculate that Chad’s tweeting was a distraction that contributed to a loss. I played with Chad for six years in Cincinnati, and he is the one guy I know who could talk all week and back it up when the game rolled around. But I’m sure he doesn’t want to give the fans and media a reason to blame him for distracting his young team in the playoffs.
I have also been good friends with Darrelle for five years, and he is normally a quiet and focused guy. I know he won’t let Twitter get in his way this week. But if Chad decided to stir up another online rivalry, Darrelle wouldn’t back down — it’s all in good fun. This will be another great match-up in Cincinnati on Saturday, both on the field and on Twitter after the game.
2. NFL Reporters
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Social media has changed the way that journalists cover sports, and Twitter has become a great platform for NFL reporters. I don’t even watch ESPN, CBS, or Fox as much as I used to — I just follow all of their football reporters on Twitter to get the same info. I am also looking forward to seeing which reporters break news stories first.
The fun for me is in watching a “breaking news” tweet come in, only to be followed by ten other “breaking” tweets with the same information. I can picture the reporter who broke the news first, holding his iPhone in one hand and pumping his fist, so happy his tweet got out there first. Twitter has given the fans instant info from reporters the same way they get it from the athletes that they follow. If you want to get up-to-the-minute information, even while the game is going on, follow some Twitter-savvy NFL reporters for the entire scoop.
Start href=”http://tweepml.org/NFL-Insiders-and-Team-Reporters/” >here for a list of some great reporters and NFL insiders to follow. Pro tip: create a href=”http://mashable.com/2009/11/02/twitter-lists-guide/”>Twitter List with NFL reporters that cover your team so you can watch an undiluted stream of football tweets during the game.
3. Post Game Tweets
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I’m always interested in how players handle their new found fame via Twitter. During my 10 year NFL career, I would always go into hiding after losing a game, not because I was embarrassed, but because I just didn’t want to deal with the public and have to answer questions.
Some star athletes have hundreds of thousands of followers on Twitter just waiting for them after a game. And if that player’s team happens to lose, watch out. Some fans love to get under players’ skin by making negative remarks and daring the players to respond. This is where players need to be careful. One bad tweet by an athlete can end up on ESPN’s SportsCenter and all over the web in a matter of minutes, and team fines and suspensions could follow. Just ask former Kansas City Chiefs and current Cincinnati Bengals RB Larry Johnson how losing your cool via Twitter can href=”http://mashable.com/2009/11/09/larry-johnson-released/”>almost ruin your career.
During this past NFL season, I have noticed that players on winning teams are quick to tweet after games, and players on the losing end usually take a few days to resurface. The one player who usually bucks this trend is Bengals’ WR Chad Ochocinco. He is pretty consistent, and shows his Twitter face no matter what.
So while you’re watching this NFL Wildcard Weekend, see how long it takes your favorite player to tweet after the game. I even have some fun with my followers where we guess which Cincinnati Bengal will be the first to tweet following the game.
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More sports resources from Mashable:
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- href=”http://mashable.com/2010/01/07/nfl-playoffs-resources/”>5 Essential Online Resources for the NFL Playoffs
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2010/01/04/social-media-athletes/”>When Social Media Gets Athletes in Trouble
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/17/athletes-predictions-social-media/”>5 Predictions for Athletes on Social Media in 2010
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/11/sports-tweets/”>5 Most Memorable Sports Tweets of 2009
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/04/youtube-sports/”>5 Best YouTube Sports Moments of 2009
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/>Reviews: href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336651-Twitter” >Twitter, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/393797-iStockphoto” >iStockphoto
Tags: href=”http://mashable.com/tag/athletes/”>athletes, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/celebrities/”>celebrities, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/espn/”>ESPN, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/nfl/”>nfl, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/social-media/”>social media, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/social-networks/”>social networks, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/sports/”>sports, href=”http://mashable.com/tag/twitter/”>twitter
How Social Media Has Changed Us
Jan 7th
Posted by Mike Laurie in Social
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href=”http://www.mikelaurie.com/” >Mike Laurie works at London agency
href=”http://madebymany.co.uk/” >Made by Many where he helps design social digital stuff. You follow him on Twitter
href=”http://www.twitter.com/mikelaurie” >@mikelaurie.
Over the last 10 years, we’ve seen social media galvanize thousands over politics, create as many industries as it has destroyed, and offer an abundance of visual and audio entertainment. But has all this incredible change actually changed us, or just the world we live in?
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Below are some areas in which social media has had lasting, and arguably permanent effects on the ways in which we live. The question is, are these changes all for the better?
Child Literacy
It stands to reason that children who read and write more are better at reading and writing. And writing blog posts, status updates, text messages, instant messages, and the like all motivate children to read and write. Last month, The National Literacy Trust released the results of a href=”http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/8392653.stm” >survey of over 3000 children. They observed a correlation between children’s engagement with social media and their literacy. Simply put, social media has helped children become more literate. Indeed, href=”http://thenextweb.com/europe/2009/12/16/report-active-online-educated/” >Eurostat recently published a report drawing a correlation between education and online activity, which found that online activity increased with the level of formal activity (socio-economic factors are, of course, potentially at play here as well).
Ambient Intimacy
Lisa Reichelt, a user experience consultant in London coined the very pleasant term “ href=”http://www.disambiguity.com/ambient-intimacy/” >ambient intimacy.” It describes the way in which social media allows you to “… keep in touch with people with a level of regularity and intimacy that you wouldn’t usually have access to, because time and space conspire to make it impossible.”
Consider the many communications technologies through history — the telephone, Morse code, semaphore, carrier pigeons, smoke signals — they are all fairly inconvenient and labor intensive. Lisa has hit on the idea that communication has become so convenient that it’s actually become ambient around us. It surrounds us wherever we want it, not necessarily when it wants us. We dip into it whenever we like.
Knowledge Was Power
From his Meditationes Sacrae, published in 1597, Francis Bacon was paraphrased as saying “knowledge is power.” Fundamentally, the more you understand about life, the more chance you have at success. But these days, Wikipedia and Google have democratized information to the point where anyone is able to acquire the knowledge they may want.
As a case in point, I had never even heard of Meditationes Sacrae until I looked up the term “knowledge is power” on Wikipedia. In Bacon’s time, the only people that had access to books and the literacy to unlock the wisdom within were the wealthy with the time and inclination to learn.
Of course, books weren’t the only source of knowledge. Consider blacksmiths, dressmakers, cobblers or sailors who passed their skills and techniques from mother to daughter, from father to son. Back then, the friction that held people back from learning was low literacy, a lack of access to books and very little time. Now, that friction is almost non-existent. That is because of both the ability of computers to replicate information for distribution, and the the way that Google, Wikipedia and blogs have empowered people to share what they know. Now, the only real friction that exists is our own desire for knowledge. It’s there for you — if you want it.
The Reinvention of Politics
A recent report by href=”http://www.pewinternet.org/Media-Mentions/2009/Online-politics-reserved-for-rich.aspx” >PEW found signs that social networks may be encouraging younger people to get involved in politics. You only need look at Twitter’s recent impact on the href=”http://mashable.com/tag/iran/”>Iran elections, the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, and even the election of href=”http://mashable.com/2008/11/05/obama-social-media/”>Barack Obama to see that more and more people are getting involved in politics and are feeling they can make a difference.
One of the most popular blogs on the web, The Huffington Post, is mainly political. Politics has a fast pace, and that lends itself well to social media. UK Prime Minister, Gordon Brown href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/jun/19/gordon-brown-internet-foreign-policy” >said in June last year that because of the Internet, “foreign policy can no longer be the province of just a few elites.” Twitter even href=”http://mashable.com/2009/06/15/twitter-iran-election/”>postponed an upgrade because of the important role it was playing in the Iran elections.
These are all signs of both social media’s growing influence in politics, and the growing interest in politics from users of social media.
Marketing Flux
Marketing and advertising is transforming itself from an industry reliant on mass market channels to one which must embrace the power of the consumer and (attempt to) engage in conversations. The traditional approach of wide reach and repetitive messaging is now being replaced by many much smaller, niche and people-centric activities. Advertising isn’t dying, it’s merely changing form. We now have more power and more choice.
News as Cultural Currency
We’re no longer lazy consumers of passive messages. Instead we’re active participants. We now get news through the network we’ve created, and the news we pass to one another says something about us. It tells others what we’re interested in and what’s important to us. We used to call this gossip — and to a certain extent it still is — but unless you were a journalist at a local daily, the amplification that’s now possible through the likes of Twitter, Digg or StumbledUpon hasn’t been experienced before.
Conclusion
Clearly there are skeptics. Susan Greenfield thinks that social networking is href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/feb/24/social-networking-site-changing-childrens-brains” >turning us into babies, shrinking our attention spans, our ability to empathize, and eroding our identity. She even suggests a correlation between the rise in prescriptions for drugs used to treat ADHD with an increase of time spent at computers. Similarly, Vincent Nichols, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Westminster href=”http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1203745/Transient-friendships-Facebook-Bebo-lead-increase-teen-suicides-warns-Archbishop.html” >recently suggested that social networking causes increasingly “transient relationships,” is “dehumanising” community life and, as a consequence, we are “losing social skills.”
I think they couldn’t be further from the truth. Anyone with the slightest experience of using social media knows that it’s about being more social. We are more engaged with friends, we are more literate, more connected, more open to creating new relationships, and generally more interested in the world around us.
What do you think? Has social media changed you? How? For better or worse?
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More social media resources from Mashable:
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- href=”http://mashable.com/2009/10/16/social-media-changing-lives/”>5 Ways Social Media Is Changing Our Daily Lives
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/21/social-media-fashion/”>5 Ways Social Media Changed Fashion in 2009
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/12/09/5-tips-online-friendships/”>5 Tips for Building Lasting Online Friendships
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/11/13/social-media-book-review/”>Top 5 Must-Read Social Media Books
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/11/15/world-changing-social-media/”>Social Media Can Change The World Through Common Ground
/> – href=”http://mashable.com/2009/11/10/local-news-social-media/”>How Social Media is Taking the News Local
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/>Reviews: href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336668-Digg” >Digg, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336661-Google” >Google, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/492793-Iran” >Iran , href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/336651-Twitter” >Twitter, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/337045-Wikipedia” >Wikipedia, href=”http://www.blippr.com/apps/393797-iStockphoto” >iStockphoto
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8 Things to Avoid When Building a Community
Jan 6th
Posted by Leah Betancourt in Social
Simply having a presence on various online networking platforms won’t work in the social media sphere. The key is spending time to build relationships to not only engage with site users, but to get them to interact with each other. While a lot has been said about how to do it, there are also ways to kill off an online community effort.
Here are some pitfalls that online organizations should avoid when trying to foster engagement.
1. The Gaping Hole Perception

Site visitors need to know that there is someone at the other end of the online community who’s listening, and who will respond and engage with them.
“The absolute biggest inhibitor is the perception that your contribution is just going into a gaping void,” according to Matt Thompson, interim online community manager for the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, in an e-mail interview.
For example, on a blog post that doesn’t have comments, few people want to be the first to comment. Thompson suggested prodding friends and colleagues to add a few quick thoughts to your site’s posts each day and if someone you don’t know leaves a comment, respond. Then if it’s a great comment, make a blog post out of it.
Content curation is an easy, simple way to maximize a return on online community investment. It rewards contributors, keeps the conversation going, brings in new members, and keeps them coming back. Mathew Ingram, communities editor of the Globe and Mail, recently tweeted about the newspaper’s Fifth Column blog, which highlights reader comments on Globe stories, for example.

2. No Community Cohesion
User-generated site activity doesn’t necessarily translate into a community. Thompson said a typical case with news sites is that there is a lot of noise, but no community. People tend to respond to the story in the comments section, but not to each other. As a result, there’s a long stream of essentially unrelated comments. He said the best communities tend to cohere around leaders (i.e. community managers) and that the best leaders inspire leadership in others.
“Work to reward contributions, especially early on. Even a quick response is a type of reward. Use screen names. If someone leaves a particularly thoughtful comment on something, keep their username and e-mail in a private [file]. If a related thread comes around later, e-mail them and ask what they think about it,” he recommended.
He said it’s easy to distinguish a community from a graffiti wall.
“In communities, people make jokes, observe protocols, use each others’ screen names. When you dip into a community on successive days, chances are you’ll see a name or two repeat from day to day,” according to Thompson.
3. Don’t Downplay the Audience

Dismissing the audience doesn’t get any community engagement effort very far.
Continuing to dictate, not offering choices and acting as though the audience doesn’t matter doesn’t work, according to Angela Connor, WRAL’s managing editor/user-generated content, and author of 18 Rules of Community Engagement: A Guide for Building Relationships and Connecting With Customers Online, in an e-mail interview.
“With the infinite amount of choices consumers have at any given moment, you can’t afford to stick to the status quo,” she warned.
Furthermore, why would users keep returning to a site to weigh in to the community knowing that they’re going to be blown off or their contributions won’t be appreciated? Building a strong community means paying attention to what that community thinks and does.
4. Don’t Betray the Community
Seamus Condron, community manager at Mediabistro.com, said in an e-mail interview it takes a long time to build trust and that it can be lost in the blink of an eye.
“Whatever initiatives you’re thinking of developing and launching, you need to maintain a constant dialogue with the community. If you don’t, you can find yourself in the middle of a community and PR crisis,” he said.
Keeping members in the loop can also lead to valuable insight on web site changes or even new products. Think of it as a built-in focus group.
5. Don’t Try to be Everywhere

Organizations should use well the social media platforms they’re already on rather than spreading themselves thin for the sake of being everywhere online.
Condron said this is one of the hardest battles of a community manager — making sure you’re not diluting a community presence by having several outposts, but no nerve center.
“I often see an over-emphasis of organizations ‘being everywhere’ online. Having a blog, or a presence on Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn is only a good idea if you’re able to support it,” he said. “In my role, Twitter has always been the nerve center, and where I’ve been able to have the most meaningful engagement. Of course there are opportunities on other platforms, but at the end of the day, I’d rather have one vibrant hub of consistent engagement than several that I don’t feel very connected [to].”
Not sure where to start? Then find out which social media platforms your audience is using, how they’re using it, and whether it makes sense to be on there. If so, reach out to them in those places.
6. No Internal Support for the Community Manager
Connor said the community managers should be allowed to immerse themselves in the community and talk to people because the relationships have to be able to develop.
“Community managers need support and they don’t need ultra-sensitive editors telling them what they can and can’t do if they don’t understand how social media works. News organizations have to get beyond dictating the message and open themselves up a bit,” she said. Instead, community managers should be given the resources so they can find out what the community needs and wants.
“The users need an advocate and that is what the community manager becomes. We speak for the users and the news organization,” she said.
Community managers can only do the job if they’re allowed to have the tools to do it. Support of the newsroom and management is essential.
7. Don’t be a Dictator

Connor recommended letting the community develop its own personality and be willing to embrace and support what it becomes. She said this notion can be especially hard for news editors who are used to calling the shots and setting the tone.
“I am not indicating that you must let your morals and ethics fly out the door, but you are not managing your peers. This is the public and we don’t own them. Stand by your guidelines, but don’t make them so rigid that they turn people off. There are too many other fish in the sea for them to stay loyal,” she said.
Work with the community so they can feel a sense of empowerment. That can be a matter of doing tasks such as suggesting user-generated content topics, like CNN’s iReport Assignment Desk. Communities develop from the ground up, and cannot be ordered into existence, no matter how much they might need help getting there.
8. Avoid Social Media Staffing Bottlenecks

Newsrooms should train other staff to use social media because one person can’t be the eyes and ears for everyone else.
Andy Carvin, senior strategist at National Public Radio’s social media desk, said in an e-mail interview that it’s better to have several journalists with basic social media literacy and an understanding how to build relationships with potential sources online, rather than one social media reporter who’s expected to keep up with every meme or news story that happens to be breaking online.
“I’m skeptical when people suggest a news org should have a reporter ‘covering Twitter’ or whatever, because each social media platform is a reflection of all the people participating in it,” he said.
For example, a science reporter would engage with different people on social networks than would a crime reporter. Carvin pointed out that it wouldn’t work well if both of them relied solely on a social media person to pitch social media-related stories to them, since the social media person doesn’t necessarily have the subject matter expertise or contacts with people who do have that expertise.
More journalism resources from Mashable:
- Mashable’s Social Media Guide for Journalists
- 7 Ways News Media are Becoming More Collaborative
- 10 News Media Content Trends to Watch in 2010
- 8 Must-Have Traits of Tomorrow’s Journalist
- 10 Ways Journalism Schools Are Teaching Social Media
Images courtesy of iStockphoto, KathrynHatashitaLee, chictype, TadejZupancic
[Image credit: Intersection Consulting]
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Tags: community, community engagement, journalism, List, Lists, MARKETING, social media, social networks
