Archive for the ‘Social Media’ Category

Social Media Tools

Sunday, January 24th, 2010

Here is a short list of my favorite social media tools and reading material:

  • MarketingProf’s “Get to the Point emails keep you on the razor’s edge of social media. Topics range from Tapping the Potential of Online Demos to Dare to Go Viral Part One and Part Two.
  • Mashable “Social Media Guide illustrates how viral video is once you realize that many of these videos have probably landed in your email box at one time or another. Here you’ll find links to Sneezing Baby Panda, Evolution of Dance and William Hung She Bangs. Imagine your company’s product getting that much play!
  • “Mashable’s 30+ Apps for Doing Business on Facebook.” Learn how to create a LinkedIn badge on your Facebook Fan Page or promote your blog via Facebook or add applications to share documents and tasks within Facebook.
  • Skillfoo post questions and get answers to your Facebook questions from “The Unofficial Facebook Dude.”
  • Twitter Search to see what is being said about you or your company right now (or not)!
  • “Twitterholic” to check out your ranking on Twitter. Egads, I’m ranked 1,141,730th on twitterholic! Oh I get it. Ashton Kutcher is numero uno.
  • Tweetmeme to see the hottest links on Twitter.
  • “How Sociable Are You” on Twitter? You may not be the social butterfly that you think when it comes to this social networking tool.
  • “LinkedIn Group Social Media Marketing.” This discussion group will keep you up-to-date on the latest tools, techniques, trials and tribulations of using social media for marketing. Here you will find thoughtful critiques about how effectively social media is being used to pitch products and respond to breaking news stories and crises.

Feel free to add to this list in the comments and/or tell us how these are working for you.

 

The JAG Wire Blog Returns

Tuesday, May 15th, 2007

The JAG Wire Blog has returned after a two year sabbatical spent building up the tech PR biz. My doesn’t time fly!

We’re going to continue commenting on PR issues and reporting on PR-type events, but mostly we are going to focus on providing links to resources that PR pros will find useful. These will include Webinars, White Papers and articles.

We hope you will share your own insights and discoveries with us to make this a useful repository.

– The JAG Wire

Online Communities — The New PR Challenge

Thursday, August 4th, 2005

community6On the edge of San Francisco’s Presidio, 130 people gathered on July 27 to hear how four companies — Digital Places, Edmunds.com, CivicSpace Labs and QuickBooks.com – are using discussion forums to serve their customers and online users. SofTECH and SDForum, two non-profits that host regular speaking and networking events for the local technology community played host.  Ron Lichty, director oftechnology at Avenue A/Razorfish, produced the event. He kept a running progress report in his Weblog leading up to the event just to show that he practices what he preaches.

Introducing the Panelists

Moderator Eugene Eric Kim, co-founder and principal of Blue Oxen Associates, prefaced the evening’s events by saying that he doesn’t believe in online communities. Actually, he just has a problem with the term. He
stressed that communities are about the people, not the tools that are
simply a means to an end to bring people together. His company markets
itself as “a think tank devoted to studying and improving
high-performance collaboration.”

Scott Wilder, group manager of Intuit’s QuickBooks.com community,
talked about how community forums can be a low-budget way to create
content for corporate Web sites. His experience spans SGI, America
Online, Borders.com and KB Toys. It was at KB Toys that he first
encountered “Tina the Toy Mom” and saw this enthusiastic (and
well-qualified) user morph into a paid online collaborator. Tina,
mother to nine, built a name for herself as she and her kids reviewed
toys online. Wilder then went on to Intuit where he discovered that
Intuit has “a lot of passionate customers that want to talk about
Intuit.” This was a good thing because he only had a small budget to
create a community forum, and Intuit did not plan to provide content.

Sylvia L. Marino, community manager of Edmunds.com,
a Web site with interactive forums for car shoppers and enthusiasts to
chat about cars, told the audience how her online community provided
information that helped fix a member’s software problem after the
member’s Toyota Prius locked up. The woman found herself stranded with
her two kids after her Prius got what the forum members dubbed “the
blue screen of death.” When she tried to explain to a Prius mechanic
what had happened, “he told her she was crazy” because he hadn’t heard
of this happening before. Marino explained that information had not yet
filtered down from corporate headquarters to the mechanic shops. Yet,
others had experienced this problem too, and they rallied around the
Edwards.com message board to tell the woman how to fix the problem. It needn’t be said, but this is the point where Toyota’s PR machine ought to weigh in.

Tony Christopher, founder of Digital Places,
a consultancy that plans and implements Internet and portal Extranet
services, talked about how he is helping the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) architect an intranet to communicate with their
400,000 employees. The FAA uses something called the Knowledge Sharing
Network Center. According to Christopher, this communication tool has
already resulted in a significant cost savings because people don’t
have to jump on a plane to communicate with each other face-to-face
anymore. He noted that portals can reduce departmental silos within
organizations.

Zack Rosen, founder and director of CivicSpaceLabs.org,
a site that is an online peer support community for users of CivicSpace
software, explained that his site is an open-source platform. People
can commission work on their Web sites. When asked by Kim how customer prospects could be sure they would stick around, he replied that his non-profit is mission-based not profit based. This is the guy who sparked the “DeanSpace” volunteer open-source development project for the Howard Dean campaign.

Lessons on the Fly

So what did we learn from this group? Here’s a grab bag of tips – and some conclusions – from the evening’s discussion:

– Edmunds.com and Intuit use Web Crossing as their community software;
– Don’t bother dictating topics or content to the community, users will define their own. Just give them their space;
– Community forums provide cheap content for corporate Web sites with enthusiastic customers;
– Communities are not about entertainment, they are where people go for support or information;

Corporate PR needs to engage in the discussion when the company’s
reputation starts to go south (The “Blue Screen of Death” thread on the
Toyota Prius is a case in point);
– Corporate
writers/editors need to be coached on how to communicate with users,
who are after all, what the community is all about;
– Users can become online collaborators or “answer people,” but they are rarely paid;

As community collaborators grow more prominent due to their expertise
they want to be compensated by more than rating systems. Subaru is said
to have flown community leaders “Bob” and “Juice” to one of its events
in Las Vegas, thus paying homage to their star status;
– Subaru PR knows how to work the community. Their product PR people are even featured guests in the online chat forums.


Community managers worry that they are exploiting their valuable
“answer people, and will consider some form of compensation;
– Groups anoint community leaders;

Good community managers are protective of their users, and implement
policies to prevent press and market research people from coming into
their sites and asking questions or spamming their top folks;

“No Solicitation” policies can be tough medicine for entrepreneurs who
are tempted to use the community to promote or build their small
businesses;

– Active monitoring of discussions results in high quality discussions;

It’s a time-consuming job to monitor appropriate language and content
on community sites. Edmunds.com hires freelancers to scour the site day
in and day out;

– Always take the time to tell people why their post has been removed;


There are different tolerance levels for profanity depending on the
community. Not surprisingly there is low tolerance for it in the
minivan community forums with their family orientation;
– Expect some death threats if you are a community manager.

Virtual Business Networking

Friday, July 15th, 2005

Does virtual business networking work? Here’s my experience after being a member of LinkedIn for a year and a half.

LinkedIn sent me an email alert the other day. Two former colleagues had come across my name in the network and wanted to know if I would like to connect to their business circles. LinkedIn conveniently serves up the names of everybody in the network who identifies themselves as having worked for any of the former employers you list in your personal profile. My LinkedIn home page tells me that there are 50 people I may know at my former company VERITAS Software (now Symantec),
and others in the network from my now defunct companies, SmartAge and Niehaus Ryan Wong. It even tells me how many new people from those companies have joined since I last logged in.

Up until recently people were saying that the social networking “clubs” aren’t useful for anything beyond dating and keeping up with friends, but I’ve got to tell you that my dance card has been filling up lately with colleagues I thought were long lost. It was less than a month ago that two other lost colleagues tracked me down. It’s almost like bumping into people on the street, only its virtual.

Most of my associates have moved on to interesting new jobs as they’ve climbed the corporate ladder. Some have stayed with dot-coms, others with the Fortune 500s, and some are re-entering the tech industry after several years’ hiatus while they rode out the downturn. I have to wonder how else we would have tracked each other down after all these years and our hectic work schedules if not for this online business network that seems to exponentially grow every time I log in? Today, LinkedIn tells me that since I last logged in a couple of days ago there are 15,529 new people associated with my current 31 direct connections.

I haven’t used the network to its full advantage. I’m like the wall-flower at the dance who sits patiently hoping to be asked. Others I know have been more proactive and have contacted me to get to a business or job prospect three or four degrees removed from them. These are the more enterprising people in my immediate circle of 31 direct contacts. The network map tells them that I am connected to the next person closest to their target, and so they ask me to make an introduction to that person who will in turn be asked to make an introduction to the next person closest to the target.

A couple of months ago, a woman who sits with me on the Board of a software organization approached me in her quest to get to someone four degrees separated from her. It was fascinating to me that her network chain identified my connection to Anne Holland, publisher of MarketingSherpa. Anne won’t be happy with me saying that we used to work together in Washington DC at a magazine called Defense & Foreign Affairs in the 1980s. We haven’t seen each other since, but she and I linked via the network about a year ago when I came across her name. Yes, I was proactive that time.

Most people join these networks because someone they know sends them an invitation to join the network. I signed up after a client invited me into his “network.” How could I refuse?

There are others out there like Spoke Software, which is also great for sales prospecting and lead generation, at least according to the articles I have read. I think I am a member of that one too because at one point a client of mine was talking about partnering with them. I can only handle one of these networks at a time so I am focusing on LinkedIn unless someone makes a compelling argument for why I should have more. It’s kind of like a loyalty program in that if I am going to grow my circle of contacts I want to see all my miles, er people, accounted for in one place.

An Awkward Moment
I can see where I might get into a bit of an awkward situation as more people start using this network. What will I do if someone that I don’t really want to be linked to invites me to connect? I guess I can just ignore it and pretend that I didn’t see the invitation, but I still bristle when I remember the one person who never replied to my invitation a year ago — did they do that intentionally or did it get routed to junk mail? I will never know because I don’t have the guts to ask. Then there’s the added inconvenience of having to write recommendations for people to connect with the next person in the chain of linked connections. And what do I do if someone in my circle gets tied to a scandal or big, public SEC investigation, for example? Do I have the courage to dis-invite them? No probably not, so I guess I will forever be tied to them in the hall of infamy.

Aside from those troublesome concerns, I am quite happy to be one of the first to explore this new medium. LinkedIn calls me a Beta subscriber, which I think means I get the service for free until they decide how to charge for it. A while back they sent me a questionnaire asking how much I would be willing to pay for each connection. At the time I thought I would pay $5 or $10 to keep it a somewhat exclusive club. Yeah, money talks!

So now I’m still waiting for someone to track me down from my former company Worldview Systems. We were a tight-knit bunch all working in the trenches 10 years ago together to launch Travelocity. My one remaining friend from those days isn’t even on LinkedIn. Yes, I guess I could take the initiative and invite her.

Do you blog or wiki?

Monday, July 11th, 2005

If you are in the San Francisco Bay Area on July 27 and want to hear a
panel discussion on how companies are successfully using blogs, wiki’s,
RSS feeds and other online collaboration solutions to build a sense of
community, there’s a SofTECH event you shouldn’t miss. JAG Wire will be reporting on the event.