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Developing A Social Strategy Webinar
1. Developing a Social Strategy Charlene Li Altimeter Group February 24, 2010 1 Jeremiah Owyang Altimeter Group #socialstrategy
2. Research is the foundation of any strategy. Our first webinar (Part 1) of this series focused on how to use socialgraphics to create your own Engagement Pyramid. This webinar (Part 2) will focus on developing a social strategy based on business goals. The next webinar (Part 3) will explain how to get your company ready to execute a social strategy. A 3-part series 2
16. Wells Fargo Supports Customers 16 Ask Wells Fargo supports customers in real time –while keeping true to their bankers hours tradition. Rather than hide behind a logo, they use real human voices and names, increasing trust
18. Starwood guests help each other 18 FlyerTalk has over 20,000 threads on the site, with up to tens of thousands of views each. Starwood guests are visiting the forum and finding answers, while Starwood collects market intelligence.
19. Microsoft’s MVP Experts Support –and Advocate 19 Microsoft’s MVP programs nominates helpful customers and professionals once a year. This unpaid army supports other customers –and becomes community advocates * Disclosure: Microsoft is an Altimeter Client, learn more about our disclosure policy at http://www.altimetergroup.com/disclosure
21. Gauging interest for Bacon Salt 21 Makers of BaconSalt reached out to fans of bacon on MySpace to gauge interest in their new product. Baconaisse and bacon-flavored sunflower seeds were later created after listening to customer requests.
22. Fiat gathers product and market intelligence 22 Contributors submit ideas, and can include pictures and embed videos. Fiat gets valuable ideas for features and design, and marketing and advertising.
38. #4 Practice Open Leadership 33 When people get what they need from each other Have the confidence to let go and still inspire results
39. 34 Open Leadership Having the confidence and humility to give up the need to be in control, while inspiring commit-ment from people to accomplish goals.
45. Like any relationship, the best ones are best on built on listening and understanding. Pick one goal and master that, then layer on more. When choosing a social strategy goal, align it with your business goals and those of your customers. Benchmark your progress based upon your business goals, not “engagement” data. Change your mindset: letting go will yield more results. Summary 40
46. 41 41 Thank you Charlene Li charlene@altimetergroup.com blog.altimetergroup.com Twitter: charleneli Jeremiah Owyang jeremiah@altimetergroup.com web-strategist.com/blog Twitter: jowyang
47. 42 About Us Altimeter Group is a strategy consulting firm that provides companies with a pragmatic approach to disruptive technologies. We have four areas of focus: Leadership and Management, Customer Strategy, Enterprise Strategy, and Innovation and Design. Visit us at http://www.altimetergroup.com or contact info@altimetergroup.com.
Turning to social network MySpace and using publicly avail- able data, they searched for fellow bacon aficionados and found over 35,000 people mentioning bacon in their profiles (Qualman 2009). John and David reached out to these folks in order to gauge their interest in bacon-flavored salt. Their conversations ignited interest and, before a product was even created, people placed advance orders. Easily finding the right people in hefty numbers and leverage- ing social network communication tools, these guys created buzz that spread conversation outward; they remain committed to so- cial media today with presences on MySpace, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.[1] http://www.jdfoods.net
While social media alone does not ensure reach, stories about this innovative project in traditional and digital media amplified project news, created awareness, spawned word of mouth and spurred participation. Ad Age reports that ‘in the two weeks starting Aug.3 2009, the site had 67,000 unique visitors who submitted 1,700 ideas, and more than 40,000 comments were posted on twitter’. As we write on October 18, 2009, the MIO site has garnered 6,683 ideas from 9,301 participants and 1,823 comments in seven categories – general, safety, design, propul- sion, ergonomics, materials and infotainment. [1] http://www.fiatmio.cc