techguerilla talk

Matt Ridings

Social Media Enterprise Context

Due to my last post I've been fielding a lot of questions on what a true Social Media Enterprise is.  I have a long presentation which also touches on that topic so I've ripped out one of the slides to try and provide some context.  I'm not sure if it will display here on this Posterous based site or not so I've also provided a SlideShare link to it here: Social Media Enterprise Context .  There are notes there as well which should give a brief explanation of the visual.

SLIDE NOTES:
*Please note that the visual does not, and is not meant to identify all areas that are contained within each grouping.  
When first discussing the Social Enterprise there is a great deal of confusion of exactly what I mean. This slide is taken from one of my decks that attempts to clarify that. This particular one was meant to demonstrate how large and inclusive an impact social has on the truly integrated Social Enterprise and to explain how it is differentiated from SCRM. Most efforts to date in organizations tend to center around just one or two of the various silos (Marketing and Customer Service for example) and the activities take place in isolation from one another. Social CRM then attempts to integrate the various customer touch points into a single dataset of leverageable information. The Social Enterprise collects *all* of the “social impact zones” under a single strategic framework and toolset, which extends far beyond SCRM and the multitude of silos.*This slide does not, and is not intended to represent all possible variants in each container, additionally there are extensive workflows and groupings interconnecting the social impact zones that at times merge silo functions into new arrangements that did not exist before (a simple common example might be the merging of various social Customer Service functions under the auspices of Marketing).

Cheers,

Matt Ridings - @techguerilla
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The Trade-offs Between SCRM And Privacy

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There have been a few recent articles like this one in the Washington Post about how companies are gathering relevant data off the internet to combine with their in-house customer databases.  In the social world this is one of the attributes of Social Customer Relationship Management (SCRM), which is an emerging but important movement within the social media community.

Given all of the hullabaloo going on regarding privacy right now (Facebook) I'd like to hear from you about where you think the lines should be drawn when it comes to SCRM.  Where is the line drawn in YOUR mind when it comes to collecting data on the web?  There is no right answer to this question by the way (other than crossing a LEGAL line, but that's another topic), it's subjective.  Please feel free to address these scenarios in the comments, but I would very much appreciate it if you took 30 seconds and filled out the related survey questions using the link below.  The survey is anonymous, but there is a optional field for your twitter handle if you want to give it.

Matt Ridings - @techguerilla

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SAMS - Social Media 3.0 - The Importance Of Advocacy

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Those leading the social customer service charge look to the future to try and find meaningful ways of scaling what is currently unscalable.  Those in the branding, marketing, and PR sectors think through the most effective means of developing relationship oriented approaches.  Those in sales struggle with the notion of "sideways selling".

My belief is that at the end of all of these thought processes is a single word.  Advocacy.

To maintain any semblance of the current quality levels and ratios existing in social media customer service will require an army of advocates that become your first tier support.  Your de-facto forum leaders as it were.  On the marketing side they'll need to launch tiered recognition programs for their most valued advocates who become a portion of their marketing arm.  Sales will need long sales cycles based on establishing trust relationships, yet require a means of expanding that circle of trust as quickly as possible, customer advocates will be a primary way that occurs.

To that end I believe a new sector of tools will need to emerge for managing this base of customer advocates, Social Advocate Management Systems (SAMS) for lack of a better term.  While the word "social" is plugged into the beginning, I want to be clear that I mean the word in the relationship sense, not in the sense of "social tools" like twitter, etc.  Yes, those tools will be initial focal points, but the concept is not dependent upon them.

These advocates will come to represent far more than just a recommender of a product, more than just a "influencer", and be far more critical to a companies success.  It will be necessary to insure that you are monitoring, communicating, developing, and rewarding these advocates at a much, much deeper level.  Yet the management of an effective advocate program goes beyond existing CRM, or proposed SCRM systems that I'm currently aware of.  I do however envision the possibility of incorporating SAMS functionality into these products.  The complexity of such a system on its face may appear similar to an advanced affiliate system, but it is far more involved than that.  There are the subtleties of indirect influencer type activities for example, as well as direct hands-on quantifiable activities (customer service, sale facilitation, etc.) by the advocate.  Properly determining, predicting, and rewarding the value an advocate brings is critical but not easy to do.  In addition, you must balance the level of reward with the "type" of advocate.  If there are rewards of actual monetary value for example, detecting a true advocate vs. someone simply seeking enough volume activity to qualify for the reward might be necessary.  The latter, while perhaps influential in the short term, actually represents less value to your organization and has less incentive to provide quality interactions.

We've executed advocacy programs in traditional marketing for years, why is this so different? Because historically those programs are campaign driven exercises, there were always finite start and stop periods of internal focus on the program.  You execute, you collect your data, you analyze your data, you publish your results, and you move on to the next creative endeavor.  In the social world, it is a never ending cycle of constant development and evolution or relationships.  There is no "end".  This means we need a better lens through which to view and manage our advocates, better metrics, behavioral analysis, automated reward systems, etc. so that we can offer the highest level of value to these advocates (with the least number of people).  So yes, it's complex, but at least it's far easier to build than a "sentiment analysis" system that actually works for example.

So this is my vision of what comes after SCRM, what's yours?

Cheers,

Matt Ridings - @techguerilla
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