Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Social Media Marketing: Four Social Media Questions Answered

The top questions asked by people, corporations, and the media - and some answers that should help you with your social media strategy.
ClickZ
View Online | News | Blog | Experts Columns | Stats | Tools | White Papers | Jobs | About
ClickZ Experts  Social Media Marketing
ClickZ - News and expert advice for the digital marketer since 1997 ClickZ Events - Solutions for Interactive Marketers Search Engine Watch - Search Engine Marketing Tips & Search Engine News Search Engine Strategies - the Event for Search Engine Marketing & Optimization
Subscribe to Newsletters Subscribe to RSS Feeds Free Webcasts How to Advertise on ClickZ Contact ClickZ

Top Jobs

Online Marketing Manager
Modern Postcard Carlsbad, United States

Marketing Manager
Variety Los Angeles, United States

Senior Client Service Manager
Marin Software San Francsico, United States

Senior Manager, Online Media
Vonage Holmdel, United States

Account Executive Outside Sales
myYearbook.com New York, United States

ClickZ Expert - Erik Qualman Four Social Media Questions Answered
More SOCIAL MEDIA MARKETING SOCIAL MEDIA MARKETING
By Erik Qualman, ClickZ, Feb 3, 2010
Columns  |  Contact Erik

I periodically find it helpful to put together a list of the top questions I'm asked by people, corporations, and the media. Hopefully, you will find my answers helpful.

  1. Do most companies seem to have clear strategies and direction with social media or does it seem like people are still trying to figure out what to do with it and how it can help them?

    Some of the good companies have a clear strategy, while others are just dipping their toe in the water. The key with social media is to fail fast, fail forward, and fail better. You aren't going to get it right the first time, but you aren't going to learn anything if you don't take that first step. The beauty of social media is that your customers are very forgiving and at the same time, helpful at expressing exactly what they need from you as a company. It is the world's largest focus group on steroids.

  2. Do you think most companies will go "in-house" with their social media, or will there still be a place to hire the freelance person who gets paid to tweet, or the consulting firm?

    Since social media touches every facet of the business, it inherently lends itself to the majority being taken in-house. Also, the conversations need to be genuine and it's easier to establish that trust if it's coming from you, not a surrogate. Social media is not an "or," it's an "and" in marketing. Dell recently indicated that they originally had 40 people focused on social media. They soon realized it's not just the 40 people that need to own social media, it's the entire company. Every person, whether it's someone on the phone answering customer service, or any other employee, has a Facebook and Twitter account, and they are representing Dell, whether it is working hours or not.

    While a majority will reside in-house for certain components, it still makes a world of sense to bring in help from a HubSpot, Mari Smith, Chris Brogan, Tamar Weinberg, Kami Huyse, David Meerman Scott, Charlene Li, Sarah Evans, Lee Odden, Brian Breslin, etc.

  3. What, in your view, are the most common ways that corporations have embraced social media? Is it making a Facebook page, sending official tweets, or maybe a mix of things?

    The good companies know a sound social media strategy is much more than a Facebook Fan Page or setting up a Twitter account. However, there are some companies that think putting up only a Facebook Fan Page is a sound social media strategy. The good companies know that social media has to be integrated into everything that they do - it's a part of their overall strategy since it touches every facet of the business.

    I was fortunate to share the stage with Alan Mulally, CEO of Ford, which has used social media as a driver to help not only change the external perception of the brand, but also change the internal culture. He was also a recent keynote speaker at CES (Consumer Electronics Show) - this spot is normally reserved for Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, etc., not a car company CEO. That is a radical change in a short period of time. Ford has shifted its spend from 10 percent digital to 25 percent. Historically, its competition spends less than 10 percent of marketing dollars on digital initiatives. It's no coincidence that Ford hasn't had to take out a government loan and that its stock has increased from $1.5 to $11. In fact, the Altimeter Group did a study that showed companies actively engaged in social media had higher revenue increases than those that weren't active. Also, it has flowed downstream to production to where Ford's cars are enabled with WiFi, MP3 Sync Technology, the ability to tweet and status update via voice commands while driving, etc. This is a reflection of the great work that James Farley, Scott Monty, and others are doing there.

  4. Where do you see the future of social media?

    Much will be around data aggregation and the sharing of this information with the social graph. What have my friends purchased? What services or restaurants have they rated highly? You will see search and social media begin to merge with the end result being we will no longer search for products and services via a search engine, rather they will find us via social media. This is one of the true powers of social media! I care more what my friends and peers link to than about what an algorithm or opaque rating system spits out.

    Also, consumers will demand more control of their privacy. In a simplified example: there are some photos a consumer doesn't mind sending to the universe, while others they only want to send to five select people.

    Oh, and 30 other things we haven't even dreamed up...that's what is exciting!

» Print this article   » Send article to a colleague   » Post a comment   » Share Tweet it on Twitter Share it on Facebook Share it on LinkedIn

» Contact Erik Qualman


Article Archives by Erik Qualman:
Social Media All-Stars - Jan 13, 2010
» More Articles by Erik Qualman

ClickZ Experts Today

Four Questions of Client Management by Harry Gold
Five Statistics That Matter (and Why) by Gary Stein
Three Ways to Improve Your Voice-of-the-Customer Program by Neil Mason

ClickZ Yesterday

Persuasion Principles: Back to the Future by Tim Ash
What Apple's iPad Means for Marketers by Sean Carton
Getting Real About Results by Jeanniey Mullen
Tools for Search Marketing Intelligence by Julie Batten


White Papers

Send Feedback | Technical questions or bug reports | Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints & Permissions | Privacy Policy

To unsubscribe, sign up for other newsletters or to change your e-mail address:
Update Your Profile

Incisive Media Plc. 120 Broadway, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10271
Incisive Interactive Marketing LLC. 2009 All rights reserved.
EmailLabs - High Performance Email Marketing
Get a Free Email Marketing Demo
All ClickZ newsletters are sent from the domain "newsletters.clickz.com".
When configuring e-mail or spam filter rules, please use this domain name rather than the sender address, which may vary.

0 comments:

Post a Comment

statcounter