Archive of tag "BlogWell Atlanta"

4:20 — Kurt Vanderah introduces Nick Ayres, New Media + Content Manager & Corporate Communications Manager, and Sarah Molinari, Corporate Communications Manager for The Home Depot.

4:21 — Nick walks us through the overall social media approach by The Home Depot.

4:22 — Nick: It’s easy to forget that we’re a relatively young company, and we’ve only been in business for about 30 years. We’re still learning as a business, frankly, how to best manage our business, not to mention social media.

4:24 — Nick: In our early days, we had a customer who came in to our store and wanted to return tires, but we didn’t sell tires. The cashier tried to tell the customer that they didn’t sell tires, but the customer swore he bought them there. The cashier called the manager, and he said to go ahead and take them back — and from then on kept the tires behind the customer service desk to remind the staff that they were there to serve customers. Nick says this mentality guides them in social media.

4:26 — Nick says we’ve all heard that you need to listen, and that their caveat to that is that you need to really be prepared to deal with those responses.

4:29 — When it comes to monitoring, Sarah stresses the importance on focusing on how to pull out the content that matters, and to figure out what insights you want to walk away with — because that will draw out what tools you use.

4:32 – Sarah lays out the four buckets they use that involve themes like general commentary, customer comments, and employee comments.

4:33 — Sarah says they started very early on Twitter with deals on their website, and says they had some really great early followers who said they didn’t care about deals because those were already well published. They said they wanted to know about the people behind it all.

4:34 — Sarah explains how they really got going in Twitter during the hurricane season by letting followers know important details on things such as where to get supplies, what stores were open late, etc.

4:35 — Sarah says The Home Depot is not in a race to gain Twitter followers, and shows a chart highlighting steady, modest rise in Twitter followers over the past 20 weeks. She says the importance is developing relationships and connecting on a deeper level.

4:35 — In one example, Sarah shows how they reached out to someone on Twitter who was upset, and fixed the problem — and later, the customer reminded her followers of the great help she received.

4:36 — Sarah’s big point on listening: What are you looking for? Is it actionable stuff? How will you resolve it?

4:37 — Nick says video syndication is another area they spend a lot of time. They realized that people don’t just come to HomeDepot.com for videos, but they also go to YouTube and Google — and since syndicating content on these channels, they’ve had great results.

4:38 — Nick: It’s not just about YouTube. There are also sites out there, like 5 Minute, Howcast — and sites like this that are all about helpful videos that their target audience looks for. Nick recommends remembering the niche sites that the people you’re trying to reach might use.

4:39 — Nick: Really think about content based on what the customers are seeking. With your listening tools in place, you can find what your customers are looking for as well as how to get it to them.

4:40 — Nick: We didn’t do that much with internal blogs and wikis. Much of our stuff, was forward-facing. In retrospect, if we could have started over, we might have approached it differently, because we’re really having to dig down to find internal evangelists.

4:41 — Nick says it’s important to be remember that while you may have short-term wins, it’s really going to take a long time to develop relationships.

4:42 — Nick says you need to work past the reality that some folks just will never get social media. It’s important to work with them, as well as focusing on the people within your organization who do get it.

Q&A

Q: What would you say was the tipping point in getting senior management to realize that social media was important?

A: Sarah: We’re a very entrepreneurial brand, and if someone has an idea, our culture supports them. Nick: It’s probably been a series of moments, and probably around the time we helped with the hurricanes was when execs really saw how we could effectively use a new tool to help customers in real time — it really helped capture a lot of people’s imaginations.

Q: How do you handle staffing?

A: Sarah: It takes passionate people who are willing to do this — whether it’s between meetings or after hours. But also, we’ve had great success with our customer service team — and the idea overall of having our company focus on customer service is what’s helping us be successful. We’ve been able to take some people who were working on the phone who we’ve been able to take off the phone and help with social media outreach and response.

Q: Do you have a policy that allows employees to be online ambassadors for employees?

A: Sarah: It’s been great. We have folks on other teams that have approached us and said, “OK, we need to make some changes.” We’re excited to pilot an internal social collaboration tool, and that’s help some people warm up to the concept. Nick: We swing very dramatically from one direction to another on that issue, and what we focus on is what the bulk of customers expect from The Home Depot — and the reality is that as customers walk in to a store, they expect an associate to help. The last thing we want to do is block that for our associates who are trying to help customers online. We’ve got to think about how our policies at the corporate level affect our associates in the field.

Q: Are the training programs home-grown? Or are there resources out there we can look to?

A: Nick: It’s a mix of that. The Social Media Business Council is a great resource for that — and we’ve been able to leverage our peers for help on how to create these policies. But there’s also some stuff we have to do internally, and stuff we have to create on our own. There’s different degrees of training for say, someone in the marketing department vs. a store manager.

Share This Post

Comments

0 comments. Read them below or add one. (Trackback)

4:20 — Peter Waldheim introduces Valeria Maltoni, SunGard’s Director of Marketing Communications.

4:21 — Valeria: How did we sell social media in a company that needs to be conservative by nature of what it does – business continuity management and planning.

4:22 — Online,Valeria is the supporting actor to the business to make them successful at what they do.

4:23 — Valeria: I can say with confidence that they have improved service offerings, become more helpful, and shaped category elevation for business continuity.

4:24 — SunGard is a very data driven company. The branding for SunGard is the infrastructure in sales and customer service, so that the applications can run smoothly.

4:26 — Valeria embraced both advertising and PR. In PR, she moved from just a stream of news releases to people relations. She switched content to educate, and contribute to media stories.

4:27 — Because I’m the PR contact, I’d get calls from customers who wanted to reach someone but were not sure whom to reach. The first step was to let them know we wanted to be helpful and tell them exactly what we would do.

4:28 — Valeria: What if we reach out to our customers and ask them to tell a story about how they rely on SunGard? We took our advertising from: Here are our products and services to here is our customers’ story (Valeria showed a video of SunGard CIO discussing the people that make SunGard).

4:32 — Valeria connected with leadership by tracking results from PR and advertising. The data built reliability, which built credibility, which led to trust internally. That’s how you can develop a connection with customers.

4:35 — Internally, SunGard has 20,000 employees globally. They launched Yammer internally. There was thirst around SunGard to do something to contribute.

4:36 — Valeria: We have an internal network with community facilitators to make sure every question is answered in a timely fashion.

4:38 — Valeria: We have an external community of users of our products and services consisting of more than 500,000 people globally. SunGard provides a platform for peer conversations to learn from each other about business continuity and crisis communications.

4:39 — Valeria reads business continuity and disaster recovery blogs, and she makes connections online for SunGard.

4:40 — Valeria: You cannot buy trust back.

4:41 — Though her customers are not online, analysts, media, CIOs, and people she needs to meet are there.

4:42 – In integrating the marketing team, the service delivery team, customer touch points and product development, she brings a cross section of all the groups to get together. The company’s tag line is: “Keeping people and information connected.”

Q&A

Q: Yammer is your internal blogging tool. Are there any limitations you need to place there?

A: Internal communications started seeding conversations to provide examples. When we had our official launch, we set official guidelines with suggestions of how to use it. People are eager to join stuff that is happening. It is important to give people something to do.

Q: How often do you monitor posts? Do you find issues with people hi-jacking topics? Do you allow anonymous posts?

A: We have identities attached to every account for Yammer. We use Radian6 for outside monitoring. Internal communications report to me so I make sure. When you show the monitoring and if you aren’t telling your story yourself, your customers might wonder what’s going on.

Q: How do you measure success because it isn’t based on revenue?

A: We go after the issues and talk about business continuity – and it got picked up by bloggers. I reached out to someone, connected with that person, and was introduced to a whole community. The interaction with business continuity folks was a success.

Share This Post

Comments

0 comments. Read them below or add one. (Trackback)

3:40 — Phil Nieman introduces Debbie Curtis-Magley, Manager, Corporate Public Relations at UPS.

3:42 — Debbie: I’m going to talk about protecting your reputation. This conversation centers around a labor law that was passed that affected FedEx, and that UPS was already following (Debbie shows a video of FedEx’s effort to target UPS).

3:45 — Debbie: So I had a really fun summer. This was an attack and they used provocative language. They said it was going to be the Armageddon and it was all UPS’s fault. They started brownbailout.com. They were on Twitter and YouTube talking about us.

3:48 – The public was buying into the conversation, but UPS was actively engaging and responding to what people had to say.

3:49 — UPS had been providing extra support on Twitter, and they needed to provide more information about the matter at hand.

3:51 — Debbie is showing a chart about monitoring conversation during July. It helps to show data to people in your company who are not communicators.

3:53 — Debbie: We conducted outreach through twitter, blogs, and discussion forums. We didn’t participate in every conversation – only the ones where we could add value.

3:54 — Debbie: We corrected misinformation or directed them to more cites with third party perspectives that could add value.

3:55 — Debbie is showing an example of how she chimed in when a political figure spoke out about the issue. She handled the conversation as if it were a reporter.

3:56 — When a conservative union spoke out and wasn’t interested in what Debbie had to say on behalf of UPS, she chose not to post it. Debbie wanted readers to be more informed about the issue.

3:57 — What UPS (and their small team) did not respond to:

  • A Politico story that had over 700 comments, where discussion was more about lobbying and congress and not about the issue at hand.
  • Another blogger talked about how brands shouldn’t use social media calling out FedEx. Debbie agreed, and did not need to chime in.
  • With Brown Cafe, an online discussion forum for UPS employees, Debbie felt she did not need to add a corporate perspective.

3:59 — 5 Tips for Social Media Defense:

  1. Start monitoring now.
  2. Build a credible online voice now.
  3. Train and empower your staff.
  4. Know when to respond and when not to.
  5. Issues can offer advantages (heightened awareness and heightened nervousness).

3:03 — Debbie: Tell upper management what you need in order to move forward with issues. While they aren’t fun opportunities, it is a chance to ask for what you need.

Q&A:

Q: How did you monitor change before and after your issue?

A: It didn’t. We had a good monitoring program in place over the past year. We had an understanding of what people were saying and when things percolated. Our monitoring team is divided among admin at UPS who have an assigned term to report, with quarterly reports on common themes. It just reinforced us being out there.

Q: How long did it take you to roll into action in terms of the issue?

A: We had a feeling that something was coming down the line. We had communication teams with messaging in place. We started getting online and responding right away with the truth.

Q: How did UPS respond to the employee who posted the letter on his blog?

A: We passed it along to our employee relations group because they would want to know about it. At times, there is a limit of what they can do in terms of discrete details. UPS reached out to the training teams as well.

Q: Did you use the tools to assess public opinion post attack?

A: This is the ultra-marathon of issues. This legislation is still in place. Our monitoring showing overall commentary has settled down from where it was at the start of the campaign.

Q: Of the metrics that you are monitoring, which ones have integrated into your marketing plans?

A: The information hasn’t really shifted our marketing and PR efforts, but it has shown the influence and power of these conversations and shows how UPS can best serve customers. We have generated enough reports that have internal interest at UPS from other groups about social media and responding.

Q: How did you measure success?

A: We look at success through individual conversations online and when people give second consideration to comments they have made and pass it along to their followers. Another telling factor is that commentary has dropped off, which shows the issue isn’t sustaining interest. It also has stress-tested our company tactics in managing within this channel.

Share This Post

Comments

2 comments. Read them below or add one. (Trackback)

3:40 — Andy Sernovitz introduces Seth Miller, Turner Broadcasting System’s Digital Marketing Director.

3:41 — Seth highlights TNT, TBS, and TCM as the networks he’ll cover in his presentation.

3:42 — Seth: I’m going to go out on a limb and say the killer app here for social media is people.

3:44 — Seth says his social media platform consists of four things for Turner, beginning with “self expression.”

3:47 — Seth: Before 2004, TBS was the Superstation. And we were trying to position ourselves as very funny, and so we saw an opportunity with political blogs, which were very hot.

3:48 — Seth says they set up a bunch of blog ads for “Vote Carrie” (a reference to Sex and the City’s character) — but they weren’t able to convert it to anything because it was a blog in name only.

3:50 — Seth: So, listening was one of the first things we learned.

3:51 — Seth’s second key to the social media platform is “creativity.” Seth uses the show “Leverage” as an example, and says a lot of fans were doing creative things on YouTube about the show. Seth reached out to a particular fan who put up a video, and said the fan inspired the people who created the show.

3:52 — Seth’s third fundamental of social media is “community.” Seth says they’re looking at existing communities and looking to help those communities do what they want to do.

3:54 — Seth: People are already creating these communities, so we don’t need to reinvent the wheel on this. If we’re really listening, we should take our cues from what they’re doing.

3:55 — Seth says fans of “The Closer” wanted to meet in person. The community’s message board said they wanted to meet together in Atlanta, and Turner’s marketing group reached out to them and offered to take them on a tour. They kind of came back and said that’s cool and all, and we’d like to make time for that, but the important thing is that we’d like to get together and do what we want to do.

3:56 — Seth: The main point – social media really is about the people, as much as we’d like to make it about us sometimes.

3:57 — Seth’s final key regarding social media platform is “collaboration.” Seth says the audience often knows best about how to find new fans or how to reach them, and so it’s a huge opportunity to collaborate with these experts.

3:57 — Seth: It’s not how loud you can be, it’s how targeted you can be. It’s about reaching the people who matter most. You’re going to get scale because people are going to pass along stuff.

3:58 — Seth says one of their main missions in social media is to encourage good behavior. Seth says it’s easy to do by highlighting great content, such as “retweets” on Twitter or “likes” on Facebook.

4:00 — Seth says one of the things we should be doing in social media is moving people along the chain of hierarchy to ensure their needs are met. This is an effort to turn fans who like you into fans who love you.

4:01 — Seth says that social media should be an opportunity to tell those fans ‘thank you’ for all the things they do, which make what you do that much more awesome.

Q&A

Q: You said that you use Twitter lists to reward fans – what’s the response been, and how does it work?

A: I’ll be honest, it’s fairly new. But thus fair, people are really excited. I think for anyone to be acknowledged by a brand they love is exciting. People have gone so far as to ask to get on a particular list based on their tweets.

Q: TBS has some pretty significant brands, and the stuff you talked about was with specific brands instead of about TBS as a whole. How do you balance your fans, such as on TCM, for example?

A: TCM is a great example, because it’s been historically commercial free, and it has a big cult following. Lately, TCM has been releasing their own Top 5 lists, and getting fans engaged. Seth says that TCM has had some of the most vocal fans, and says that they differently treat those fans in special ways.

Q: We live in a little world of a marketing fishbowl. How much are you guys thinking about the FTC disclosure rules? Do you think a lot of the industry is?

A: I think we’ve given it a lot of thought, because our shows rely regularly on heavy press and traditional print and traditional journalists. So, in specific to how we use social media to maybe get folks to review, yes we think hard about conforming to FTC standards. When we send folks screeners or invite them to invents, we take precautions to ensure they disclose that if they choose to talk about those events.

Q: Could you describe the resource mix that you have as far as executing your strategy? What percent is external, or internal? How about the employee breakdown?

A: It’s a very large collaboration between our marketing groups and our PR groups. Specifically, timing wise, Facebook still gets the majority of our time. Twitter, even though we have a different number of followers, it’s still very much a show-based strategy. Turner has a lot of people touching social media, and most of them are tied to the listening portion of it.

Q: You talk about encouraging good behavior. How do you staff that? How do you teach people to encourage good behavior.

A: Everyone has had a really horrible customer service experience. All I have to say is that you’re representing this show, this network, and all you have to say is: Don’t be a dick. People want to know that there’s another human being on the other end. Seth says he had his phone number on the Twitter account, and he got two calls, and both were to ensure he was a real person.

Q: What has the response been from the content creators regarding fan-generated content?

A: It depends on the show. Some actors and producers are really in to it, while others aren’t.

Share This Post

Comments

0 comments. Read them below or add one. (Trackback)

Email Newsletters

*We will never, ever release your email. (Privacy Policy)
**Third-party newsletter (Privacy Policy)

About GasPedal

GasPedal will help you get started with word of mouth marketing, blogs, social media, communities, and viral marketing.

We're not an agency, and we don't do campaigns. We teach you how to do it yourself, create an action plan, and manage the program. Learn how to spend your time and money wisely for best results.

Our fast, how-to marketing strategies are affordable, easy to execute, and deliver measurable ROI in 60 days.

Tell a Friend

We will not use email addresses for any purpose other than sending this recommendation. (Privacy Policy)

Thanks for the word of mouth! Your message has been sent!

Please enter a valid email.

Your email failed. Try again later.