Category Archives: Uncategorized

Who Would Jesus Shoot?

I’ve been working with companies on building effective consumer and B2B brands for many years. It’s always interesting to view organizations through the “brand lens”. The church is a particularly interesting subject since it’s so easy to point out inconsistencies in behavior – actions that sit in complete or more often apparent contradiction to the organization’s purpose. Last week Oklahoma Channel 5 News ran a story about Windsor Hills Baptist Church in Oklahoma City who had decided to give away an assault rifle to a lucky youth participating in a week-long revival. I know, Christians have as much right to protect themselves as pagans but I grew up in church. I went to church camp and confirmation. I just can’t imagine Pastor Wally at my church passing out automatic weapons during youth night.

Transportation and communication technology has been “shrinking” the world for hundreds of years. Social media dramatically accelerates this process through the intimacy of the information, the size of the audience reached and judgment that inevitably follows. It’s impossible to say what the long-term effects of the assault rifle give-away will be for the Windsor Hills Baptist Church. But I guarantee the Windsor Hills board will be asking that question from now until the end of the internet — that alone will change their brand.
Who Would Jesus Shoot

How to Fail Miserably at Integrating Social Media

This is one of those stories that just make you shake your head. A new prospective Sprint/Nextel customer tries to sign up for a  two-year mobile contract. She’s told she can’t sign-up until she resolves a previous contract balance, even though she’s never had an account with Sprint before. The balance? Four cents. That’s right. Four. Cents.

It gets better.

Sprint tells her that she can’t pay the balance right then and there by phone, and she can’t add it to the balance of her new account, she has to drive to a Sprint store and pay it in person. The customer flips Sprint the bird and hangs up.

And then she blogs it. http://www.sportingnews.com/blog/HotfootLori/159019

Now, Sprint has a story burning a wildfire through the blogosphere highlighting bureaucratic incompetence. The company spends hundreds of millions on advertising, and now their bureaucratic bungling results in a free windfall of earned media for their competitors. I’d love to see an economist calculate the ultimate cost of that $.04 decision.

Update: I was contacted by a Sprint representative within 24 hours of writing this post, and given information that has been posted by the same representative in the comments below. He sought to inform me about Sprint’s side of the story, but did not ask me to remove the post. Later, in the comments below, after more information about the story came to light, he suggested I might want to change the title of the post. But honestly, I don’t think that’s the best course of action to take. I think Sprint has demonstrated that, at least on the social media side, they’ve done a very good job of tackling this issue head on, and I think it’s the whole story, in context, that marketers should get, and not just the outcome. We can argue about what Sprint might have done differently to avoid this problem in the first place, but once the ball was in play, I think Sprint’s marketing executed well, and I think the post should remain as a case study.

A Conversation with Francois Gossieaux

Hi Francois

Thanks for replying to my post yesterday. I think we’re probably more aligned than not. We both think social media is a major phenomenon that requires marketers to behave differently, and we both think marketers must truly understand that difference, and not simply embrace social media techniques as a new way to implement the same old manipulative, message controlling tactics. That’s a good foundation.

I guess our main difference is our belief about ~what~ exactly has changed, and how that impacts marketing as a practice. Clearly the technology has changed, and has opened the floodgates to a higher degree of consumer participation in the shaping of brand image and purchase influence. But the imperative for companies to engage with customers directly, and to build meaningful relationships with customers has seen many iterations–including just in my career, one-to-one marketing and CRM as the prime examples. We can argue over the efficacy of these movements in *truly* developing customer intimacy, but I’d argue that the rules haven’t changed so much as the equipment used for playing the game. To me, it’s less of a radical shift than it is a transformative stage in an iterative process that’s been playing out for well over a decade. But certainly the tipping point is dramatic.

My caution in embracing the "radical change" bandwagon is that I believe marketing as a discipline is already dangerously light on grounding. Most marketers have no grasp of marketing history, which makes it not so surprising that as a profession we tend to flit from trend to trend. The effect is that minor trends are blown out of proportion (can I sell you some land in SecondLife?), and major trends like Social Media start to seem "old" to marketers after the excitement wears off. Marketers need a more grounded perspective on what’s going on, and I think that perspective comes from being clear about what’s changing, and where the fundamentals are holding true.

In my mind, a historical perspective shows clearly that social media represents a return to a broader balance of power between businesses and consumers that has existed since the beginning of commerce. The assymetrical control of communications technology by businesses in the past 150 years threw the relationship between companies and customers out of balance, but the commoditization of communication technology taking hold today is leveling the playing field once again. When I hold that perspective in view, it helps me put social media into a broader context, and helps me understand ~why~ this is happening, and how important–and in fact inevitable–it really is. It also helps me cut to the core of *why* people are compelled to connect online. It isn’t the brilliance of Facebook or Twitter. It’s a fundamental drive to share knowledge that helps us each make better decisions. That’s something anyone can understand, and which cuts through the trendy hype of Web 2.0.

On a side note, this is not the first time there has been a surge of interest in social phenomena. There was a huge interest in sociology in the mid-1900s, and the academic literature is packed with ideas that will undoubtedly gain new interest in the age of social media. Just as likely, a few years down the road, we’ll find ourselves moving on. The cycle keeps going.

I look forward to your thoughts. This is a great conversation to have online. 

We Don’t Do Marketing With Social Media? ???

Francois Gossieaux has a post up today that kind of confuses me. I think the point Francois is trying to make is that marketers shouldn’t view social media as just another marketing tactic, but instead should understand that the entire game of marketing is being changed by social media. While I agree with the general sentiment, I think it’s merely an outcome of something larger, a fundamental truth that is even more important for marketers to understand.

The game of marketing hasn’t changed. Neither have the rules. What’s changed is the way marketers have learned to play it. I’ve talked about this before as the exploding of the marketing Bubble.

Marketing has always been about creating relationships with customers to sell things, and customers have always compared notes with others to try and minimize the risk of buying things. Word-of-mouth was not invented by the internet, it goes back thousands of years. What changed was the evolution of technology that enabled mass communication.

For a couple of centuries, the cost of leveraging mass communication–print, radio, television–was prohibitively expensive. It was mainly businesses who could afford to use the communication tools, which they used to assymetrically flood their market with messages designed to influence customers. The concept of building meaningful relationships with customers gave way to a mercenary sales funnel that looked at customers as targetable commodities to push through a mass production cycle. Marketing focused less on relationships with customers, and more on relationships with power brokers. PR is not about relationships with customers, but about relationships with reporters. Advertising is about relationships with media brokers and their channels. Most marketing organizations today don’t even manage customer support!

But as the technology continued to evolve, mass communication became cheaper and more accessible to everyday consumers–an ironic development, given that the companies who held all the power continued to build their profits by creating new markets for the very tools that would undermine their hold on power (computers, software, high-speed connections, etc.) Once the critical mass in technology and social media adoption was reached, the bubble started to burst. Suddenly consumers can compare brand experiences and shopping preferences in ways that compete effectively with the existing paradigm of one-way controlled messages.

The point is, social media is not a fundamentally new concept. The technology that has enabled it to scale and compete with mainstream media is new, and the scaling itself is a new socio-economic power that no one really yet understands. But the idea that consumers, and employees, and partners and competitors would compare notes about your products and your business is as old as business itself. We’ve just grown up in a bubble where most companies were able to whitewash reality with carefully controlled messages, and to leverage that huge advantage to produce customers without building meaningful relationships.

So now the bubble’s burst. For those marketers who learned to play the game by building relationships with influencers rather than customers, it’s going to be a long, hard road ahead. But for those marketers who knew all along that customer relationships are paramount–and there are many of them out there–this isn’t so much a strategic challenge as a tactical one. And in that regard, I also disagree with Francois. Francois says that, unlike email, for example, Social Media is not a new channel. Well, no. Social Media is a collection of new channels. Twitter is a new channel. Facebook is a new channel. YouTube is a new channel. And these channels are an order of magnitude more potent than email ever was, because the interactions among participants massively multiply the power of the channel.

One final nit. Francois takes issue with monitoring social media. Monitoring is indeed a buzz trend that many marketers are seizing as if it were a life preserver, and it’s true: Monitoring is not an end in of itself. Knowing what people are saying is not a prescription for what to do about it, any more than just listening to the other side of an argument constitutes a resolution. But if you don’t listen, you don’t even know what the argument is about. And if you don’t monitor social media, you won’t even know what your market is talking about. To me, just like social media is a democratizing of communication, social media monitoring is a democratization of listening. The only people who should be really afraid of monitoring are the market research and polling firms, because for better or worse, I think they’re the ones who have the most (control) to lose.   

Red Cross Uses Social Media to Help Flood Victims

ReadWriteWeb has a great story on the impressive mashup of social media tools the RedCross is using to engage with flood victims in the midwest.

The newsroom site runs off of WordPress, and it’s being used to push out press releases, media, and information about shelters. The Red Cross is using Utterz to post audio reports from the field, Flickr for photos and YouTube for videos, as well as a Slide-powered slideshow widget that allows anyone to upload photos of disaster areas. The site also features a Google Maps mashup that depicts the surprisingly large number of relief operations currently being run by the American Red Cross (hint: click the "view larger map" link, because viewing the informative popups inside the widget on site is next to impossible).

I find this a particularly poignant trend marker. When lives are in the balance, social media shines as a more effective way to connect people than traditional tools like print, radio and television. Social Media enables many-to-many communication that allows citizens to notify each other and authorities of danger zones, people in need of help, and available resources. It’s simply a far more efficient and effective means of communication. It’s only when budgets, rather than lives, are in the balance that the usefulness of social media comes into question. 

CMO Club San Francisco

I’m speaking next Tuesday night at the CMO Club in San Francisco about Deeper Trends in Social Media. Pete Krainik, a long-time marketing executive (Avaya, DoubleClick, Siebel, M&M/Mars), launched the CMO Club a couple of years ago to fill a void in the sea of marketing organizations: a club by, and for, CMOs, with frequent, regional gatherings of top marketing executives to network and share ideas.  It’s been fun to watch the Club grow–now over 500 members, and they just hosted a successful summit in New York.

Tuesday night will be a dinner format, hosted at Il Fornaio in San Francisco. I’ll be giving a short presentation and then leading a discussion on social media, and how it’s impacting enterprise marketing organizations. I’ll be brief about the obvious issues, like social media’s impact on brand management and messaging, and drill down into deeper trends, like the pressure social media causes on marketing teams and programs, it’s role in the changing structure of marketing as a corporate function, and its impact on global markets and international marketing. I have a couple of short case studies from work I’ve been doing with SocialRep that I’ll share as well.

If you’re the top marketing executive in your organization, your invited to join the dinner and dialog, Tuesday at 6pm at Il Fornaio in San Francisco. You can sign up online.   

The Emperor’s New Clothes Factory

Positioning is a funny thing. You want to hoist a flag that others will rally around–something unique and compelling, something easily understood and valued. It has to be different enough that you stand apart from the competition. But it has to be familiar enough that customers quickly understand what you’re selling. That simple dichotomy–be different, be familiar–sometimes produces a viral feedback loop that can slow innovation across an entire industry.

Take the marketing software industry. A few years ago, I ran a research program at the CMO Council studying the adoption of CRM and related applications. At the time, I identified nearly a thousand vendors creating applications that in some way integrated with CRM. Campaign management. Lead scoring. Sales force automation. You name it.

Some of these applications were truly innovative, some were flavor-of-the-month knock offs. Many were simply automating some small piece of annoying manual labor. But all were targetted toward the same audience–marketing executives. Now, historically, marketing executives haven’t been the most sophisticated consumers of technology. Most marketers with the experience to be a senior executive today went to school before the rise of the Internet, and any new wave of technology can be a learning curve. There are plenty of savvy early adopters, to be sure, but taken as a whole, the marketing profession is still in the very early stages of technology adoption.

So when hundreds of technology vendors meet up with marketing executives, they have a fundamental challenge. How do you communicate a value proposition that senior marketing executives will understand and appreciate? Well, you listen of course. What do marketing executives say they need? Not surprisingly, marketing executives frequently list the challenges that keep them up at night. Generate actionable leads. Demonstrate marketing ROI. Deliver performance metrics and accountability.

And this is where the ideal of differentiation meets the survival imperative of finding common ground with your customer.

As a wide spectrum of application vendors face the obstacle of communicating their Techonology Difference to non-technical marketing executives, the vendors tune their message to the familiar things marketing executives want to hear. Leads. Metrics. Accountability. ROI. Which is fine in the isolation of a sales cycle, but rather problematic as a general trend. Soon, the vendors are all singing the same tune as a chorus, and everything starts sounding the same to marketers. Everything is about generating leads, delivering metrics, providing accountability. And then you find, as I did when I was doing my study, that anything remotely related to CRM that you put in front of a marketer elicits the same response. "I already have Salesforce. Why do I need this?"

This is the Emperor’s New Clothes Factory. Who’s going to tell the Emperor he’s naked when it’s vastly easier to sell more nakedness? And there’s plenty of nakedness to sell. Selling ROI is great, until marketers stop innovating in the absence of a proven business case. Selling metrics is fine, but to paraphrase Einstein, not everything that can be measured is important, and not everything that is important can be measured. Selling accountability is wonderful, but accountability doesn’t guide execution. The problem is a general trend toward easily digestable selling points that minimize innovation and slow the marketing technology adoption curve.

Sure marketers will figure this all out in time. SaaS applications are gradually pushing back IT control over marketing technology, and the emerging next generation of marketers has come of age in a far more wired world. But the evolutionary cycle is excrutiatingly slow and littered with dead bodies. Can’t we speed this up?

What we need as a marketing ecosystem is a big crucible where enterprise marketers and technology vendors can meet outside of the selling cycle. A forum where marketers can learn about technology innovation, and where vendors–particularly their product marketing teams–can better understand enterprise marketing challenges. With more common ground in our understanding of the marketing challenges technology can solve, vendors can develop applications that are not only compellingly different, but meaningfully familiar.

As it happens, I’m in the planning stages of this year’s Elite Retreat in Hawaii, and this issue is shaping up to be one our tracks. If you’re a senior marketing executive with an interest in marketing technology, or a marketing technology vendor, drop me a note and let me know what you think.  

Score One for Spoke

Few qualities are more important for marketers these days than candor…

Hi Chris,

Thanks for getting back to me and sorry for the delayed response.  It’s been busy since the launch last week as other duties related to product planning, system application management, and website designing have monopolized my time. 

As I was preparing this email today, I took a second to revisit your blog where I noticed your response to my initial inquiry.  I hope that you are not too tarnished on my efforts, this was my first PR/Product launch without an agency tethered to my side and I acknowledge it was not perfectly executed.  But I’m learning and moving forward and your sights into the effectiveness of my process were helpful.

Because your blog focuses on enterprise marketers, the specific release of the ConnectUs email service in Spoke is not an exact match.  That I will admit.  However, many of our corporate customers are in fact enterprise marketers who utilize Spoke to build relationships with other companies in order to broaden their marketing reach.  Targeted lists of potential partners for alliances can be developed, managed, and contacted from within Spoke by enterprise marketers; hence the reason your blog was included in my launch campaign.  I thought that since you review many different approaches and tools for enterprise marketers that our launch would have been something of interest to your audience.

For marketers Spoke fits into the resource mix alongside LinkedIn or Plaxo while offering a complimentary value to each.  Simply put, businesspeople you would like to contact via LinkedIn or Plaxo must be members.  You can’t reach out to someone who is not a member of either service.  Spoke’s business connection service does not have that limitation.  Hence if you need to reach someone who is not a member of LinkedIn or Plaxo, then you need Spoke.  Spoke provides an extra layer of privacy by not giving away direct contact information of members (or non-members) to anyone, bust still providing a way for members to reach any businessperson found in Spoke.

I hope this addresses your questions.  Again, I apologize for the delayed response.  From the tone of your blog it has done our corporate (and my personal) brand harm in your and your audience’s eyes.  I don’t want you to think that you got this response solely because of your post on Monday, as noted at the end of you last post.  I had full intention of responding to you, I just got side tracked with other projects.  I do appreciate the bump in my title to Director level, just wish my pay scale mirrored your perception J.

If you would like to discuss my comments further personally or have additional questions, please feel free to contact me directly through my information below.

Best,

John Dering
Senior Marketing Manager
Spoke

Please Donate to Relief Aid

In many ways we are becoming a world without borders–we can make friends with people from all over the planet and share ideas and information without ever meeting in person. And yet, in a time of disaster, when you can’t reach out physically and help in a rescue effort, or comfort someone who has lost a child, or a husband, or a mother, you realize how distant we can be. Pain and suffering somewhere else in the world is just another part of the news cycle.

Jeremiah Owyang has been really banging the drum on every forum where he’s active to inspire donations to relief agencies coming to the aid of disaster victims in China and Myanmar. He’s been encouraging people on Twitter, on Facebook, and on his blog, recently posting a series of his own pictures from a trip to China.

I really respect the effort Jeremiah is making to leverage his large network of friends and colleagues to show solidarity and support for the victims of these tremendous disasters, and so I’m adding my voice in the small way I can on this blog to encourage you to make whatever donation you can to the Red Cross. Please help and make the world a little smaller.