Jeff Jarvis tells an incredible story of airline cluelessness, illustrating why that industry's focus on wringing every last dollar out of the customer is repelling the people it most needs to attract.
Army reacts to shoddy barracks
A video posted on YouTube spurs the US Army to award $250 million to clean up the filthy barracks. Citizen journalism in action?
Forrester: B-to-b marketers fail community marketing test
Companies that delegate community engagement to their marketing and PR departments are setting themselves up for failure. They need to involve people at all levels of the organization. Unfortunately, the recipe-for-failure model appears to be the more popular one at the moment.
Richard Binhammer is charged with monitoring and engaging with the active ecosystem of people who blog about Dell. In a keynote interview with John Cass, Binhammer talked about negativity, a concern often voiced by PR people. Dell has had its share of blogger criticism, going back to the famous Dell Hell incident of three years ago. But by methodically reaching out to complainers, the company reduced negativity from nearly half of all online posts to about 20% in a little less than a year. The secret? "Just talk to people," Binhammer said. Most of the time, all they want is to be heard. Demonstrate that you're listening and you can resolve most complaints.
But here’s an interesting fact: After reducing that negativity factor to 20%, the Dell team has been unable to bring it consistently below that level. Binhammer, whose background is in politics, theorizes that 20% is a natural floor, in the same way that 20% of the population always votes for the same political party, regardless of who runs.
This is worth remembering. Even the best businesses have a few unhappy customers. Your mileage may vary, but you should never expect to achieve 100% satisfaction. It’s more likely that your blogger relations program will get you to a manageable yet stubborn base level. That's your floor, and you probably can't do much to break through it.
Finding Resources
Binhammer also shed some light on how Dell allocates its communications resources. With so many tech bloggers out there, you'd think the company would have a small army of communications folks monitoring and responding to conversations. In fact, it has just two people sharing the job. The reason? Dell is lining up the whole company behind the effort to get more engaged with customers. PR monitors the airwaves, but doesn’t try to resolve every issue. Most comments are forwarded to the appropriate group for response.
I wish more companies would do this. Bloggers tend to be well-informed and passionate, which means that their inquiries and comments demand knowledgeable responses. Companies that simply delegate the response to PR are failing to benefit from the really rich conversations they can have with their most informed customers. Everyone from sales to engineering should want to speak to customers whenever possible. Why let marketing have all the fun?
Labels: blogculture, blogging, corporate_blog
Gartner Says Social Networks Are Attracting Too Much Traffic for Retailers to Ignore
But don't just dive in. The research organization has a list of 10 factors retailers should consider before leveraging social networks. The opportunities are too good to overlook.
Twitter Apps and Tools Becoming More Plentiful
Bloggers Blog has a whole bunch of new Twitter tools.
Southwest Airlines' Blog Re-launches
...and it's a big improvement, says corporate blogging expert Debbie Weil.
Online Journalism Blog gathers up a variety of online measurement metrics and applies them to a set of top UK journalism blogs. There are some tools listed here that I wasn't aware of. This is well worth reading if you want a holistic view of your blog's popularity
28 Tips To Make You a StumbleUpon Superstar
The more I use StumbleUpon, the better I like it. This post goes into some of the finer points of the SU culture, particuarly how to manage the limited friends network.
Influencer marketing is moving into the mainstream, with seven of 10 respondents to a recent study indicating that they'll target influentials in the coming year. The trend is most pronounced among marketers the researchers classified as "leaders," of those who use the most sophisticated tactics and tools.
20 (Rare) Questions for Google Search Guru Udi Manber
Google's vice president of search quality gives rare insight into how the top-secret search algorithm works in an interview with Popular Mechanics. of all things.
U.S. Lags in Social Media Creation
The US is a nation of online voyeurs, according to the author of a study on international online usage. A little over 60 percent of Internet users in the U.S. said they read blogs, but just 26 percent had created one, compared to over 70 percent of Internet users who blog in South Korea and China. There are more good stats in the article
Shopping 3.0 In A Web 2.0 World
The CEO of ThisNext describes the concept of the "product graph," in which influential early adopters help other people discover products they didn't previously know existed.
What impressed me about this story was the tactic that agency used to get Segway's business. Read at the very end.
How-to videos are becoming a huge new Web 2.0 category, with lots of start-up activity and millions of views for top productions. Some instructors are making good money, too.
A new class of social media aggregation tools is enabling people to tie together their activities in blogs, social networks, Twitter and other forums. The resulting feed is called a "lifestream." Dosh Dosh digs into FriendFeed, which is the current market leader.
Facebook vs. Twitter and Communities in General - Direct2Dell
Dell's chief blogger compares Twitter to Facebook and tells why he likes Twitter better. Lionel Menchaca's bulleted list of the pros and cons of each service will have a lot of people nodding in agreement. The comments are useful, too.
Menchaca points to this instructive video that explains the appeal of Twitter in 2 1/2 minutes. I think there's a lot more to Twitter than this, but for those people who just don't get the appeal, this video is a nice summary.
Can User-Generated Content Generate Revenue?
EMarketer says user-generated content isn't a fad any more: "The number of user-generated content creators will rise from 77 million in 2007 to 108 million in 2012. The number of consumers of user-generated content will increase from 94 million in 2007 to 130 million in 2012." The similarity of these numbers would indicate that the majority of people who are consuming user-generated content are the ones creating it. Still, eMarketer sees ad revenues for the category exceeding $800 million by 2012.
Consumers in Chrysler’s Boardroom?
Ted Mininni comments on Chrysler's new Customer Advisory Board, which aims to bring 2,000 customers and prospects into a dialog about the company's products. He asks what took Chrysler so long.
Paul is a writer and media consultant specializing in information technology topics.
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