Archive of tag "Ramon De Leon"

2:10 — Bergen Anderson introduces Domino’s Ramon De Leon.

2:11 — Ramon: I am the operating partner of a six-store Domino’s franchise in Chicago.

2:12 — One thing Ramon believes in: “Tweetable facts.” Ramon: I cannot make money selling pizzas for one dollar, but I can make money from the conversations.

2:13 — Going beyond using the tools of social media: Ramon wants to inspire people to take games to next level.

2:14 — Ramon: My goal is to get people addicted to the Domino’s experience

2:15 — Why is he here and how did he get here? In 1998, Ramon’s store launched online ordering. Then in 2004, he began using AOL Instant Messenger.  In 2005, he noticed how college students were using Facebook groups — they would take student offers and share them with their friends. To get past the college email address requirement, he used his college-aged nephew’s network to spread the word about his brand.  Now everyone uses Facebook. In 2005, Ramon actually thought about going back to college to get a .edu email address in order to use Facebook!

2:18 — Social media is made up of tools to work with the core business plan. Give customers positive reasons to talk about you. Get to know their names. Smile.

2:19 — Ramon’s rules of engagement in social media: Be a part of the conversation or start one, and use lists to categorize things.

Ramon has created social media uniqueness – 90% of his twitter time is to promote customers, not himself. He uses monitter.com to follow tweets by zip code so he can monitor and respond.

2:22 — Ramon: “Social media fire needs to be put out with social media water.” For example, a customer ordered online, and posted negative feedback. They missed it in real time. In response, they made a video using a store manager, and said they’d wow the customer. The video has been embedded125, 855 times around the world! Experts couldn’t believe a brand like Domino’s would admit they messed up!

2:24 — Ramon put a face on the Domino’s brand by responding directly to issues, not waiting. He uses video often.

2:25 — He creates conversation by not talking about pizza. Sometimes he talks about giving cooking lessons in the store. He looks for ways to respond. Ramon: If my print prices don’t inspire people to order a pizza, I hope they inspire them to talk about it.

2:26 — Ramon: It will be hard to lose customers if we’re giving them something great. We print out customer feedback on pizza boxes. Then we post their feedback on Twitter to promote our customers. “You’re never alone with Ramon DeLeon.”

2:27 – Ramon: Use our hash tags, join our Facebook group, use Foursquare. The Foursquare ‘mayors’ of Domino’s get something for their status. They get something and it’s fun for them.

Make friends with media, and they, too, will spread the word for you.

2:28 — Ramon targeted Theresa, who’s a big talker—and she spread the word! Customers blogged about it when they ordered from one of his stores. Now, Theresa “feels guilty” if she doesn’t call Ramon’s store.

2:29 — Use Foursquare and let people know where you are—promote on Foursquare via pictures. It’s not about what Ramon says about his brand, it’s about what his customers say about it.

2:30 — Ramon follows all his tweets and responds to them. He engages his audience and they engage with him. He’s passionate about his customers. He really loves them and gives them incentives to come back. It’s not passion about things, but passion about people.

2:30 — Ramon is taping the session and talking to the camera. He’s addressing his audience even when they’re not present. He even inspires people like MC Hammer.

3:31 — He talks about how he gets customer video “thank yous.” He even gets responses from people in London and Mexico.

He engages conversation by showing live pictures of pizzas coming out of oven.

Raising money: Take videos and pictures of money-raising campaigns and the “big checks.”

Invite a blogger to cover you when delivering 600 pizzas!

Always be ready to share and post! Ramon shares pictures of the Chicago Blackhawks going past his store.

Ramon: Does anyone think social media’s a fad?

The world has gone mobile. Have you and your message? Are we as mobile as our workforce?

Life’s new milestone is preteens, who can’t wait to get on Facebook.

3:32 — Face the direction of travel. Trust your absolute gut instinct to go to next level. You will find it so clear you will kick yourself if you don’t get it. You will get a sign if you’re going the wrong way. Turn around.

Q&A

Q; Roger from Allstate: did Domino’s always love you?

A: I used to tweet before Domino’s had social media guidelines, and so I had to adapt to their guidelines. They work well on the corporate level. Now, I can tap into celebrities who are in Chicago.

Q: Virginia Sanchez: How do you compete in those markets?

A: I had to alienate myself from the rest of the Domino’s restaurants in the area. I mentor many franchisees. Many are afraid of negative comments, so we show people what to do with them. Remember Domino’s fiasco last year? We responded directly and showed people what health department and good customer were saying about our stores.

Q: Robin Scott from Computer Explorers: You’re speaking for Chicago, but you’re not talking about what the rest of Domino’s is doing? Are others watching what you’re doing?

A: Yes, they are!

Q: Drew of Renegade: How much time do you spend doing this on a daily basis and do you have a staff support?

A: It’s a one-man show. But I want to get people to order. I’m not making every pizza. That’s where the crew comes in. So the store management team is a huge part of this. They might not be tweeting, but they’re backing us with good operations. I check RSS feeds and alerts that come in overnight.

It’s become integrated in my day. At least 25% of 10 hr. day is for social media. I spend this time talking about stores, taking pictures, etc.

Love this live coverage? It’s all thanks to the amazing Tish Grier.

Share This Post

Comments

1 comment. Read them below or add one. (Trackback)

[Welcome back to the You Can Be a Word of Mouth Marketing Supergenius! newsletter. This is text of the great issue all of our email subscribers just received. Sign yourself up using the handy form on the right.]

As a preview for Word of Mouth Supergenius on July 20 in New York, we’re taking a look back at some of the amazing presentations from our last “How to be Great at Word of Mouth Marketing” conference in Chicago.

Here, Ramon De Leon of Domino’s shares how he’s making connections with his fans. His big ideas:

1> Focus on the conversations that matter
2> Put out social media fires with social media water
3> Always be prepared to share
4> See Ramon’s live presentation

1> Focus on the conversations that matter

As a local franchisee, the brand-related conversations that really matter to Ramon are taking place near his six Chicago-area locations. He uses tools like Monitter to search Twitter conversations within a specific geographical radius. While the overall brand image of Domino’s is important to Ramon, he can make the biggest impact for his business by focusing on the local discussions.

2> Put out social media fires with social media water

An advantage to being active in social media is that you can quickly turn around negative buzz about your company. When a customer tweeted to vent about Domino’s, Ramon quickly responded with a video apology that the customer saw and shared with the online community. The video has since been embedded some 87,000 times.

3> Always be prepared to share

Ramon is always ready to post and share everything and anything. When an order was made for 600 large pizzas, Ramon hired a live blogger to document how Domino’s went about placing the order and shared it with his customers. Always be on the lookout for things to share, because you never know when you’re going to have a chance to capture something great.

4> See Ramon’s live presentation from Word of Mouth Supergenius

Check out Ramon’s presentation from Word of Mouth Supergenius — and join us live in New York on July 20 to see a bunch of amazing marketers share case studies like this:

Share This Post

Comments

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

Companies who consistently go out of their way on behalf of their customers are the ones everyone loves to talk about.

More than stunts, fancy website widgets, the latest social media tools, or sophisticated marketing techniques — a dedication to delivering amazing experiences for your customers is still the best way to earn real word of mouth. Great service will never go out of style.

How a word of mouth marketing supergenius does it:

Ramon De Leon — a true word of mouth supergenius — loves going above and beyond for his customers. Ramon manages seven Chicago-area Domino’s locations, and is always looking for an opportunity to deliver a “WOW” experience.

One of the most famous examples of Ramon going the extra mile is when an upset customer posted a tweet about how her pizza arrived an hour late and — when it finally showed up — was the wrong pizza.

Ramon responded, promising to make it up to her and sent her this video (which has since been embedded 87,000 times):

Learn more: Social Media Examiner

Share This Post

Comments

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

2:20 — Kurt Vanderah introduces Domino’s Ramon De Leon.

2:21 — Ramon introduces himself as the guy behind the pizza counter. He is the operating partner of six Domino’s stores in Chicago.

2:22 — Ramon says he cannot make money selling pizzas for a dollar, but he can make money off the conversation it generates.

2:24 — Ramon: I measure stuff three ways:

- Are my sales up?

- Am I making money?

- Am I having fun?

2:25 — Ramon: We launched online ordering 7 years before Domino’s the company did it. In 2004 we launched AOL Instant Messenger. It was my micro-blog before Twitter was launched. Students loved this.

2:26 — Ramon: We started building communities, and suddenly someone was congratulating me about my Facebook groups, which I didn’t know about.

2:27 — Ramon says despite not creating the groups himself, he gave his fans something to talk about.

2:28 — Ramon: In 2005, I considered returning to college so that I can open a Facebook account.

2:29 — Ramon: You need a plan.

2:30 — Ramon: Everything we do in social media is in addition to the business plan.

2:30 — Ramon: I want my customers to know that i’m the 911 of pizza in Chicago.

2:31 — Ramon uses Monitter.com which allows him to search within a certain geographical radius.

2:31 — Ramon: Social media fire needs to be put out with social media water.

2:31 — Ramon explains how a customer tweeted a vent about Domino’s. Ramon reached out to ask how he could help. Ramon then went to the store and made a video apologizing to the customer. The video has since been embedded 87,000 times, and more importantly, the customer saw it and shared it.

2:33 — Ramon talks about how the video has since gone around and shown to people all over the world.

2:34 — Ramon: A business without customers is not a business.

2:34 — Ramon uses hashtags for his products to lead the conversation.

2:35 — Ramon: Follow the media and make them your friends because when you have valuable content, the word gets circulated.

2:35 — Ramon also sponsors events.

2:36 — Ramon then shows examples where customers blog about buying Domino’s pizza.

2:36 — Ramon: Where else do you see people blogging about buying food?

2:37 — Ramon: Always be ready to post and share.

2:38 — Ramon: Let’s not just stand around and watch. Let’s get up and make things happen.

2:39 — Ramon: Domino’s is #1 in Customer Satisfaction.

2:39 — Ramon: Are we making money? We just set record sales in a down economy.

2:40 — Ramon: I am the pizza guy to know here in Chicago, and I am outta here!

Q&A

Q: Can you tell me about your marketing staff?

A: I consider myself the umbrella and the radar. I try to monitor the conversation and then hand them off to each store. This is all in addition to regular job responsibilities.

Q: Has anybody else tried to copy your style?

A: There have been instances, but they can’t copy the passion I have in executing.

Q: Have you looked at how many people above the age of 35 get involved?

A: Am I probably leaving some interactions? Yes, but I go back to how I monitor it.

Q: If you’ve got to explain Twitter to someone who has no knowledge about why they should use it, what are the top reasons you would give them?

A: It’s a goldmine of conversation. Use it if your customers are there. If my customer demographic were librarians that don’t tweet or are online, I’d be in libraries.

Q: What kind of impact have you had at the corporate level?

A: When they came up with social media guidelines, I think I gave them a lot of material to work with. This is also why I moved my Twitter to a personal account.

Q: There’s a consensus among the people I know in the restaurant world that it’s easier for independent restaurants to use social media compared to chains. You’re a franchise owner. What was your experience like?

A: I existed in this realm before the corporation did. Some of the stuff gets grandfathered in. But once the guidelines have been established, things just start to make sense. It’s like in school: they don’t teach you how to buy a home, how to get married, etc, but once you do it, the process becomes clearer.

Q: Do you teach other franchises to do what you do?

A: Not under the corporate umbrella– they don’t ask me to go around and teach their other franchises, but the individual franchisees, associations, have asked me.

Q: Where does your passion come from?

A: Whatever keeps you awake thinking “I could be more productive doing this” is your passion. Mine is delivering the WOW. I’m looking for that one person I can blow their mind so that they share it with others.

Q: Would I want a personal brand or do I want it under my company? Is it a drawback to have it in both?

A: I just wanted to have my personal brand so I could keep track of my personal area. I was able to centralize when I moved to a personal brand.

Share This Post

Comments

1 comment. 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.