Wednesday 25 January 2012

Social Media Learnings From the Front Lines | ClickZ

There is nothing like experience to teach you some hard lessons. After numerous, successful social media launches, campaigns, and sweepstakes, our team has accumulated our share of well-earned bruises and scrapes. We have tried to learn from our experiences in order to alleviate some of the pain that can result and also to catalog a growing understanding of the best practices that drive brand results. Here are some of our social media life lessons.

Your clients (internal or external) are new to this and will react in predictable ways. They will be watching the pages intently, almost hourly, and may not know how to interpret what they see. They will expect daily or more frequent updates and reports on any metrics that they can't see, and they will need guidance. Is this a good response? Average? Poor? Be prepared in advance with a schedule of reporting that recognizes the need, particularly at launch, for regular updates and provide them with context on the results. Have a glossary of terms available to make your jargon understandable. Better yet, don't use jargon.

Plan for the impact of social media across channels. A social effort touches the website, the mobile experience, and most of the other social spaces. The strategy, budget, timeline, creative, and technology all need to be prepped in advance for those impacts. Don't forget to adjust your offline and digital media efforts to help support your social campaigns. Get a link and a line of copy into the print ad or FSI or even as a closing frame of the TV ad or radio spot. Produce new search ads and banner ads and rotate them into the digital media campaigns. Track the results.

Caution - good ideas tend to grow. It's critical to have the social media team and, in particular, the community managers who will be the face of the effort involved in the campaign strategy and formation. Have them map out all the touch points and implications of your core idea in advance of sign off to make sure you have accounted for all the impacts. It's very tough to resist the impulse to enhance or connect additional populations or channels mid-build when you could "just" add this one element to the campaign. That's how budgets are blown and unexpected consequences occur.

The technology will crack - just a little. Plan for it. Facebook will change something mid-campaign and consumers will mysteriously revert back to IE6 just to vex you. Be prepared to troubleshoot on an almost daily basis and think about posting the desired browsers and other environments that you built your app to support. Have your servers prepared for a ridiculous amount of traffic; more than you could ever hope for in your wildest dreams. Server capacity is cheap. Watching a promotion go down - even for a half hour - when response overwhelms the technology is a disheartening event.

Plan for the end of campaign before you launch. Does that app need to come down at midnight? Do you have the copy and graphics ready to transition? Did you change the corresponding images and copy on the website? Most importantly, how do you plan to continue to engage with your audience now that you have them fired up? Listening and collecting feedback will help you plan for what's next and apply your learnings as you move forward.

Don't put all your eggs in one basket. If you're running a contest or sweeps, plan for more than just one grand prize winner with some instant wins, daily or weekly wins, or giveaways to spread the wealth and keep people engaged. If you have instant wins, make them something that has perceived value even if it's small. Digital downloads, screensavers, and ringtones may not fit the bill unless you have a truly passionate fan base or it's an entertainment brand.

Prepare everyone for the Negative Nellies. Clients struggle with a proportional response when they see some cranky person making negative comments about the brand, promotion, or campaign in the middle of their tightly planned social campaign. There will always be that one, probably several or more cranky souls if you have sufficient scale. Prepare clients in advance for this eventuality and let them know how you plan to handle the situation. Often other members of the community will begin to police and control the negative elements and, if at all possible, you should let them.

Be careful with absolute dates. Don't promise to announce something or do something on day X if you don't have 100 percent control of the timing. Winners of promotions, for example, often have a few days or a week to respond to notification in the rules. If they don't check their email or mistyped it in your form, you might need some extra time to get in touch with them or disqualify and replace them. In the meantime, your audience may be getting antsy waiting to find out who won. Awwkward…

Not all social media participants are created equal. If you're running a sweeps, you're going to draw some consumers who don't care about your brand, may unlike you shortly after you announce the winners, and who won't engage fully or at all with the community. To the extent that you are building a remarketing database, acknowledge and note those consumers who came to your brand through different doors so that you can create relevant messaging and promotions for them down the line.

Get your language squared away up front. If you play in a regulated industry or have other legal concerns, get clearance in advance for specific language you can use, but also ask for general guidelines that allow you to respond quickly in the unscripted world of social media. You simply won't have time to play phone tag with the legal team before you post responses. Even if yours isn't a legal concern, it's still a good idea to have some sample language vetted by the key stakeholders to make sure everyone has the same idea on messaging and voice. This allows your community managers the autonomy they need to react and respond.

Social media is a quickly evolving space, and consumers, vendors, partners, and brands are all learning and adjusting together. What lessons has social media taught you?

Social Media Learnings From the Front Lines | ClickZ

There is nothing like experience to teach you some hard lessons. After numerous, successful social media launches, campaigns, and sweepstakes, our team has accumulated our share of well-earned bruises and scrapes. We have tried to learn from our experiences in order to alleviate some of the pain that can result and also to catalog a growing understanding of the best practices that drive brand results. Here are some of our social media life lessons.

Your clients (internal or external) are new to this and will react in predictable ways. They will be watching the pages intently, almost hourly, and may not know how to interpret what they see. They will expect daily or more frequent updates and reports on any metrics that they can't see, and they will need guidance. Is this a good response? Average? Poor? Be prepared in advance with a schedule of reporting that recognizes the need, particularly at launch, for regular updates and provide them with context on the results. Have a glossary of terms available to make your jargon understandable. Better yet, don't use jargon.

Plan for the impact of social media across channels. A social effort touches the website, the mobile experience, and most of the other social spaces. The strategy, budget, timeline, creative, and technology all need to be prepped in advance for those impacts. Don't forget to adjust your offline and digital media efforts to help support your social campaigns. Get a link and a line of copy into the print ad or FSI or even as a closing frame of the TV ad or radio spot. Produce new search ads and banner ads and rotate them into the digital media campaigns. Track the results.

Caution - good ideas tend to grow. It's critical to have the social media team and, in particular, the community managers who will be the face of the effort involved in the campaign strategy and formation. Have them map out all the touch points and implications of your core idea in advance of sign off to make sure you have accounted for all the impacts. It's very tough to resist the impulse to enhance or connect additional populations or channels mid-build when you could "just" add this one element to the campaign. That's how budgets are blown and unexpected consequences occur.

The technology will crack - just a little. Plan for it. Facebook will change something mid-campaign and consumers will mysteriously revert back to IE6 just to vex you. Be prepared to troubleshoot on an almost daily basis and think about posting the desired browsers and other environments that you built your app to support. Have your servers prepared for a ridiculous amount of traffic; more than you could ever hope for in your wildest dreams. Server capacity is cheap. Watching a promotion go down - even for a half hour - when response overwhelms the technology is a disheartening event.

Plan for the end of campaign before you launch. Does that app need to come down at midnight? Do you have the copy and graphics ready to transition? Did you change the corresponding images and copy on the website? Most importantly, how do you plan to continue to engage with your audience now that you have them fired up? Listening and collecting feedback will help you plan for what's next and apply your learnings as you move forward.

Don't put all your eggs in one basket. If you're running a contest or sweeps, plan for more than just one grand prize winner with some instant wins, daily or weekly wins, or giveaways to spread the wealth and keep people engaged. If you have instant wins, make them something that has perceived value even if it's small. Digital downloads, screensavers, and ringtones may not fit the bill unless you have a truly passionate fan base or it's an entertainment brand.

Prepare everyone for the Negative Nellies. Clients struggle with a proportional response when they see some cranky person making negative comments about the brand, promotion, or campaign in the middle of their tightly planned social campaign. There will always be that one, probably several or more cranky souls if you have sufficient scale. Prepare clients in advance for this eventuality and let them know how you plan to handle the situation. Often other members of the community will begin to police and control the negative elements and, if at all possible, you should let them.

Be careful with absolute dates. Don't promise to announce something or do something on day X if you don't have 100 percent control of the timing. Winners of promotions, for example, often have a few days or a week to respond to notification in the rules. If they don't check their email or mistyped it in your form, you might need some extra time to get in touch with them or disqualify and replace them. In the meantime, your audience may be getting antsy waiting to find out who won. Awwkward…

Not all social media participants are created equal. If you're running a sweeps, you're going to draw some consumers who don't care about your brand, may unlike you shortly after you announce the winners, and who won't engage fully or at all with the community. To the extent that you are building a remarketing database, acknowledge and note those consumers who came to your brand through different doors so that you can create relevant messaging and promotions for them down the line.

Get your language squared away up front. If you play in a regulated industry or have other legal concerns, get clearance in advance for specific language you can use, but also ask for general guidelines that allow you to respond quickly in the unscripted world of social media. You simply won't have time to play phone tag with the legal team before you post responses. Even if yours isn't a legal concern, it's still a good idea to have some sample language vetted by the key stakeholders to make sure everyone has the same idea on messaging and voice. This allows your community managers the autonomy they need to react and respond.

Social media is a quickly evolving space, and consumers, vendors, partners, and brands are all learning and adjusting together. What lessons has social media taught you?

Digital Trends: Strategies for Reaching and Influencing Connected Consumers

In 2011, the digital landscape underwent a significant shift that will have profound effects on business in 2012.

The challenge is that hardly any business leaders noticed. That’s not their fault however.

Although the impact of technology on business and consumer behavior was widely reported, in-depth reports on what to do next or how this will affect their business specifically were scant at best.

I’m sure you heard it from experts everywhere, “You need a Facebook brand page! Why are you not on Twitter yet? Have you checked-in on Foursquare? Hurry up and get set up on Google+. If you don’t get on social media, you’re going to go out of business!”

And, here you are…still in business. But like any keen business leader or entrepreneur, you’re avidly thinking about your next move. You already know that running the show in a mode of “business as usual” is not only limiting, it’s terribly complacent. But if you are to change, you need to better understand exactly how technology is influencing the behavior of your customers and why.

The truth is that you can create brand pages on every social network you can imagine and you won’t succeed unless you know whom you’re trying to reach and where, what it is they expect and value, and how these channels represent a meaningful opportunity for you and your consumers to connect. You first must answer what’s in it for them and what’s in it for you.

What the social media gurus aren’t telling you is that the landscape for business isn’t changing because of social media, it’s changing because consumer expectations are evolving.

Your customers are empowered through technology where social media becomes only part of the disruption.

Your job in 2012 is to not embrace new technology with arms wide open, but instead understand it and learn which disruptive technologies separate you from existing and potential customers.

What’s unique about “connected” consumers is that they find and share information differently than their more traditional counterparts. They make decisions differently than the everyday consumers you’re used to engaging as well.

But keep in mind, the connected do not displace your traditional customer, they simply expand your opportunity to grow your business.

How you’re marketing, selling, and servicing customers today is largely missing this new breed of consumer, and thus limiting your overall opportunity for growth.

To reach the connected consumer, you must first walk in their footsteps. It takes research, not guesswork. It takes understanding, not skepticism. And it takes a dedicated, not generic or approximated, approach.

Why? Because while your traditional consumer relies on tangible media such as TV, radio, newspapers, direct mail, email, Google search or static websites, the connected consumer is not blindly seeking information, they are reliant on the right information finding them, in the right places.

For example, your new prospective customer lives on their smartphones and tablets. They network with friends, family and the businesses they support in mobile and social networks.

They check in to locations to signal to people nearby that they’re in the neighborhood and to alert businesses that they’re ready to interact live.

Consumers install apps to better make decisions and to broadcast those decisions to their social networks.

What’s more, they research products and services based on the experiences of their peers in real-time, and in turn, share their experiences with everyone else to shape and steer the experiences of others.

In doing so they expand the idea of “audiences” to something far more efficient and expansive — an audience with an audience of audiences.

While it seems foreign or dismissible to those who are not actively embracing or even dependent on disruptive technology, connected consumers are only growing in size, magnitude and influence. Ignoring them is a step toward digital Darwinism.

Today, no company is too big to fail or too small to succeed. Simply knowing your customer is one thing. But, understanding how they make decisions and participating in that process influences behavior while building meaningful relationships.

Digital Trends: Strategies for Reaching and Influencing Connected Consumers

In 2011, the digital landscape underwent a significant shift that will have profound effects on business in 2012.

The challenge is that hardly any business leaders noticed. That’s not their fault however.

Although the impact of technology on business and consumer behavior was widely reported, in-depth reports on what to do next or how this will affect their business specifically were scant at best.

I’m sure you heard it from experts everywhere, “You need a Facebook brand page! Why are you not on Twitter yet? Have you checked-in on Foursquare? Hurry up and get set up on Google+. If you don’t get on social media, you’re going to go out of business!”

And, here you are…still in business. But like any keen business leader or entrepreneur, you’re avidly thinking about your next move. You already know that running the show in a mode of “business as usual” is not only limiting, it’s terribly complacent. But if you are to change, you need to better understand exactly how technology is influencing the behavior of your customers and why.

The truth is that you can create brand pages on every social network you can imagine and you won’t succeed unless you know whom you’re trying to reach and where, what it is they expect and value, and how these channels represent a meaningful opportunity for you and your consumers to connect. You first must answer what’s in it for them and what’s in it for you.

What the social media gurus aren’t telling you is that the landscape for business isn’t changing because of social media, it’s changing because consumer expectations are evolving.

Your customers are empowered through technology where social media becomes only part of the disruption.

Your job in 2012 is to not embrace new technology with arms wide open, but instead understand it and learn which disruptive technologies separate you from existing and potential customers.

What’s unique about “connected” consumers is that they find and share information differently than their more traditional counterparts. They make decisions differently than the everyday consumers you’re used to engaging as well.

But keep in mind, the connected do not displace your traditional customer, they simply expand your opportunity to grow your business.

How you’re marketing, selling, and servicing customers today is largely missing this new breed of consumer, and thus limiting your overall opportunity for growth.

To reach the connected consumer, you must first walk in their footsteps. It takes research, not guesswork. It takes understanding, not skepticism. And it takes a dedicated, not generic or approximated, approach.

Why? Because while your traditional consumer relies on tangible media such as TV, radio, newspapers, direct mail, email, Google search or static websites, the connected consumer is not blindly seeking information, they are reliant on the right information finding them, in the right places.

For example, your new prospective customer lives on their smartphones and tablets. They network with friends, family and the businesses they support in mobile and social networks.

They check in to locations to signal to people nearby that they’re in the neighborhood and to alert businesses that they’re ready to interact live.

Consumers install apps to better make decisions and to broadcast those decisions to their social networks.

What’s more, they research products and services based on the experiences of their peers in real-time, and in turn, share their experiences with everyone else to shape and steer the experiences of others.

In doing so they expand the idea of “audiences” to something far more efficient and expansive — an audience with an audience of audiences.

While it seems foreign or dismissible to those who are not actively embracing or even dependent on disruptive technology, connected consumers are only growing in size, magnitude and influence. Ignoring them is a step toward digital Darwinism.

Today, no company is too big to fail or too small to succeed. Simply knowing your customer is one thing. But, understanding how they make decisions and participating in that process influences behavior while building meaningful relationships.