Archive for the ‘Community’ Category

Only 35% of Content Management Vendors Take Social Media Seriously

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Social Media has become mainstream according to Forrester and IDC predicts that over 70% of the content on the web will be user generated content. Content management conferences such as Gilbane Bostons 2008 - “Where Content Management Meets Social Media” are specifically dedicating conferences to the topic of social media.

Although, what I found impressive is that only 5 out of the 14 content management vendors (35%) who were attending really mentioned social media in their bios.  This is specifically interesting considering the conference is focused on how content management vendors address social media.

With other topics such as SharePoint, Search, SEO, Multi-Channel Publishing, SAAS, and Content Management content management vendors have to choose their focus, given their limited resources. Consequently, it looks like many of the sponsors will be learning from the conference. Maybe next year we will see their social media offerings.

For those who are attending the conference to seek integrated content and social solutions you should for sure stop by the following vendors:

1. Vignette

2. Kentico

3. Red Dot

4. Sitecore

5. Fatwire

Then you can let me know how the show turns out.

Social Media Company Rocks and Secures $17 million in Funding

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Rock You

Rock You (www.rockyou.com) a company that develops social media applications including a multimedia slideshow creation tool popular on Facebook and MySpace has secured $17 million in series C funding. To date they have secured $52 million in funding.

The funds will primarily help Rock You develop applications for PC and mobile devices in Asia-Pacific. They also plan to open new offices in New York, Los Angeles and Detroit, and look for potential acquisitions.

The funding of Rock You at this time validates that social media is mainstream and has great potential not only in the US, but internationally. The Asia-Pacific market is a hot bed for social media and social media companies should seek alternative global markets that are still growing.

Barack Obama Rides The Social Media Wave

Monday, November 3rd, 2008

Recently Prime Visibility (PrimeVisibility.com), a rapidly growing integrated online marketing company specializing in Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and Pay-Per-Click (PPC), released a study showing which presidential candidate was most preferred by social media sites.

Sites such as bookmarking (digg, del.icio.us), video (YouTube, MetaCafe), widgets, podcasts, image/photo-sharing services (Flickr, Photobucket), social networking (MySpace, Facebook), social knowledge (Yahoo! Answers, Wikipedia), directory submissions (Google Directory, DMOZ) and online reputation management (ORM) were monitored.

Results showed that through Oct 17th Obama was leading 20 of the 43 sites monitored, McCain led three, and both tied in one site.

The two candidates tied on Yahoo, which had over 1.1 billion comments each.

Obama won on Google Blog Search with approximately 227.7 million comments versus 93.2 million for McCain, while Google search produced 201 million page views for Obama versus 141 million for McCain.

In the following video clip, Barack talks about his use of social media and how internet volunteers helped his campaign succeed in many states.

This recent study shows the power of the web and how candidates can no longer discount the need to leverage social media in their campaigns. Tomorrow’s election results could potentially validate if a win in cyberspace could be a good indicator of a true election win.

Financial Impact Blogs Can Have on Your Brand

Monday, August 4th, 2008

Do not buy a dodge

Brad and his wife bought a brand new 2003 Dodge Grand Caravan in 2003. It was a nice looking car, but the car had not been assembled properly and the roof started to leak. The leak, which the dealer could not find for 6 months, led to several other issues such as electric problems and mold and mildew growth. Daimler Chrysler Canada and McIVER Dodge did not immediately resolve the issue and Brad created the site “Do Not Buy a Dodge” (www.donotbuyadodge.ca) to document their ongoing fight with Daimler Chrysler and McIVER Dodge. Since May 2008 over 4.2 million visitors have visited Brad’s site.

Brad was not the only person to use blogs and the internet to point of Daimler Chrysler’s quality problem. Brad’s site points to at least 16 other sites that have also made it their mission to become customer advocates pointing out faulty Daimler Chryler product issues:

The internet has not only allowed companies to virally spread their marketing message, but it also has allowed consumers to virally spread their bad experiences with other potential customers. Companies like Daimler Chrysler who do not react fast enough, are greatly exposed to consumer backlash that can greatly cause PR nightmares.

An example of how easy customers can impact a brand is clearly identified by looking at the Diet Coke brand. If you type Diet Coke into Google you will see that the third highest post is a blog written by John McManamy, Don’t Drink the Diet Coke, who points out that Diet Coke can cause depression and fatigue because Diet Coke uses Aspartame.

Google has become a brand’s home page and information customers post by way of blogs, microsites, or comments can truly affect a brand image and sales.

Tim Anderson a blogger for IT Week documented an experience he participated in that affected Sony’s music sales. In 2005, a developer named Mark Russinovich posted a blog showing how a Sony BMG music CD, when played on a computer, would install a piece of software to prevent piracy that would scan the PC’s hard drive every two seconds and greatly slow down a PC’s performance. Since Mark was a computer expert, he was able to remove the piece of software and posted a blog to make others aware of this issue.

Mark’s post was viewed by many and several hundreds of bloggers also posted about the same issue. Within 24 hours, the story was picked up by Slashdot, the Register, and several other popular news sites. User reviews appeared on Amazon.com warning customers not to buy. Some of the most dramatic postings stated:

“It is a grave security threat” another said, “Do not buy Sony music CDs.”

Just in a period of 24 hours, hundreds of blogs were posted and I imagine 1000’s of potential Sony music buyers saw blogs and comments, on leading online CD retail sites, warning other customers not to buy Sony music CD’s. Bad news not only travels fast, but can be greatly exaggerated, which all can impact sales.

Dell went through a similar incident a few years ago when several customers started to post blogs and comments about the horrible experience they were having with Dell products and Dell’s customer support. The series of posts were called “Dell Hell” and they drew hundreds of comments from customers with similar negative experiences.

Dell chose not to ignore the posts and found a few ways to react to customers feedback.

1. Open Communication through Blogging

Dell started a blog called Direct2Dell (www.direct2dell.com) to officially start communicating with customers. Customers could now come to Dell and quickly find out about what really was the issue and how Dell would be solving the problem. Dell chose not to censor negative comments about problems, which was a contributing cause for its blog success. A post last August about the delay in shipping new In-spiron notebooks drew hundreds of comments from frustrated and irate customers. “Taking the criticism when the company screws up builds authenticity, said Bob Peason, from Dell.

2. Monitor and Respond On-Going Conversations

Over 15,000 posts mention Dell each day. Dell has implemented a tool from Visible Technologies that allows the Dell team to monitor all these conversations and route them to a team at Dell who responds to postings. Over 100 posts per day receive responses.

Also, Dell leverage’s other users responses to help solve problems. If a user likes a response provides by the community, then the user tags the response as an “accepted solution” to the problem. Dell’s community now lists over 6000 accepted solutions.

3. Capture Customer Ideas and React

Dell released IdeaStorm, a customer suggestion site, to capture customer ideas and to leverage the community to vote on the most important ideas. IdeaStorm has taken in 9,000 ideas, recorded 600,000 visitor votes, and implemented 120 suggestions. One of those suggestions was a Linux-based laptop that was developed in large part to customer responses.

Dell still has a long way to go. 21% of their customers still post negative comments about Dell, but compared to where Dell was several years ago, this is a significant improvement.

Companies such as Dell, Daimler Chrysler, Sony, and Coke have all learned the hard way that Blogs and User Generated Content can really hurt a brand and sales.  Like Dell, companies need to open up communication with customers to quickly resolve customer issues, ensure that the full truth is being told, and to prevent potential PR nightmares.

Do you have a Chief Executive Blogger (CEB)?

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

Recently Bill Marriott in a MSNBC news interviewed called himself the blogger and chief of the Marriott hotel chain.  He told MSNBC that he writes all of his blogs on paper first before posting them. He also proudly boasted that his blog has helped his hotel chain generate over $4 million in hotel bookings.  Bill has set the bar for other companies who are looking to blog.

As Marriott has proven, a Blog can help a company generate sales and for a $4 million return a Chief Executive Blogger dedicated to blogging initiatives may prove a great return-in-investment.  Out of the Fortune 500 companies, 60 companies are taking blogs seriously.  This number has tripled from two years ago.

Some of these companies include:

Coca Cola
Dell
Southwest Airlines 
Kodak 

As Marriott has done, companies should start thinking about blogging and how to drive and track revenues from this new channel of conversation and customer engagement.

 

Why Online Communities Fail

Wednesday, July 23rd, 2008

Failure to Prepare

Ed Morgan, a consultant for Deloitte, recently completed a study of more than 100 business who have invested in online communities.  One of the key discoveries in this study is that many of the online communities started have failed to gain traction with customers.  Specifically 35% of the 100 online communities started had less than 100 members and less than 25% have more than 1,000 members.Some of the key reasons for failure include:

 1. Failure to Think About the Customer First - When companies invest in communities they think about what is in it for them and forget to focus on customer needs and wants.  Companies who focus on their needs first, end up launching products that customers do not want to use.

2. Technology was the First Priority - Some companies approach online communities by thinking about the technology problem first and spending all their money to address this problem, verses thinking about marketing and content that will help the community become attractive and grow.

3. Inexperienced and Under Resourced - Marketing departments spend money deploying and marketing a community, but when it comes to the day-to-day management, they only allocate a part-time inexperienced resource to managing a community.   30% of the business Deloitte studied have only one part-time worker in charge of their communities.

4. Lack of Success Metric Development - A majority of communities measure success by the number of visitors.  Although, this is a good metrics, it does not match-up to original community goals such as word-of-mouth marketing and community loyalty.  Better metrics may help better determine if a community is successful and what could be done to increase the chances for success.

As companies look into deploying a community, they need to make sure they understand their goals, how they want to track success, and what is needed to attain success.  Companies need to start thinking about the why first and then think about the how.  They should not make this a technology project, but a marketing initiative.  Finally, companies need to ensure that they have a experienced community manager in charge of driving a communities success.  By thinking about some of the strategic and positioning issues ahead of time and resourcing the community will for sure help increase success rates.

Enterprise Marketing Management Company Makes a Play in Web Content Management

Wednesday, July 16th, 2008

Alterian


This last week, Alterian, a provider of marketing resource management and enterprise marketing management software, announced that it intends to acquire Mediasurface, a Web content management (WCM) vendor.

 

Mediasurf will be acquired for $35.6 million.  Now a part of Alteria, Mediasurf  will have the opportunity to sell into 1,000 marketing departments and leverage a network of 100 channel partners across 26 countries.

 

 Alterian’s goal from the acquisition was to provide a platform to allow business units to take control of their Web content authoring and help turn “visitors” to a Web site into “users.” The move empowers marketing managers to have greater control of their web campaigns, visibility into their campaign progress, success in driving their online sales, and ability to report on a campaign’s ROI.

 

This latest consolidation marks the beginning for further consolidation in this space.  In the end, my bet is that the analytics, enterprise marketing management, content management, and social software vendors will primarily consolidate to create a single platform that can drive and show ROI for web investments.

 

It will not only be interesting to see the success from this acquisition, but to see how the market consolidates.

Microsite Overnight Success - This Viral Tactic Really Works

Sunday, July 13th, 2008

new 7 wonders

This success story is a little old, (June, 7, 2007) but I just ran across it and think it is a good example of how a microsite can be a great marketing tool.

In 2oo1, Bernard Weber, a Swiss-born Canadian, started a foundation to raise money to preserve human built and natural heritage, while fostering the respect for the cultural diversity.  The foundation started a project called New7Wonders and committed that 50% of the new revenue raised from this project would go to funding monument documentation and conservation efforts worldwide.

As part of the project, a website was created (www.new7wonders.com)  and users were asked to vote on what would be the new 7 world wonders of the world.  The response was overwhelming ,and Alexa research showed how this new website out ranked some top brand sites:

  • un.org-the United Nations website
  • fifa.com-the Federation Internationale de Football Association’s website;
  • olympics.org-the website of the Olympic Games and the Olympic Movement
  • coke.com-the Coca-Cola website
  • adidas.com-the Adidas website;
  • levis.com-the Levi’s website;
  • bmw.com-the BMW website.

New7Wonders is a good example of how a microsite can be successful overnight.

Most Mentioned Community Sites at Community 2.0

Friday, May 16th, 2008

By far the most mentioned community sites at the Community 2.0 event were Dell’s Idea Storm and Starbuck’s My Starbucks Ideas. These are great sites that truly allow customers to interact and provide direct feedback to large enterprises.

Idea Storm

From my conversation with many customers at the Community 2.0 event, it seems like the dominant reason for deploying a community is for research purposes.

Companies find it cheaper to create a community and harvest their own data, then to hire a research firm to hold focus groups. Most of the research communities being deployed are closed communities for top tier customers. As research communities are deployed successfully, executives feel more comfortable in further investing into communities.

I send my congratulations to Danw Lacallade at Dell for such a great idea and to Nori Yoshida at Salesforce, who invented the technology.