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PR 101 – Lesson 45 – So you need more reasons to convince your boss or client to use social media?

Jeff Cole | January 18, 2010

Okay, social media scares many C-suite people. That’s no surprise. Because if you are honest when you present, you should make them realize that using social media means acknowledging they don’t have complete control of their brand. Of course, they never really did. A brand’s identity is determined in the marketplace. It’s what consumers think – be they business-to-business or business-to-consumer – that defines a brand

It is hard for most senior executive to admit they really never had control of their brand. Facing that means acknowledging that all the money spent on marketing and advertising did not provide a failsafe way to ensure happy consumers and ever increasing sales.

Social Media will allow them to listen to what consumers are saying

Social media won’t do that either. However, unlike advertising, it doesn’t make that promise. What it does promise is a way to listen into and influence the conversation that is already taking place about a company or a brand. The odds are far better that there will be a positive outcome if a company knows what is being said.

Some executives will respond that they already know what their customers are thinking. After all, people will send emails when they have a complaint. That’s true. But remember, a person who is so upset that they are motivated to send an email is usually not representative of the customer base. Blog and Twitter comments will provide a far more accurate picture of what people are thinking.

Also unlike traditional marketing, those using social media want to hear the negative comments. How else does one get better unless one knows what the problems are? The good thing about this method it is much more inclusive. Rather than relying a focus group or a marketing study, a company has opened up its comments to entire customer base. That is much more representative of what’s actually happening.

How does one listen to these conversations? By creating a Twitter brand, by blogging, by having a Facebook page and a LinkedIn group. In addition, videos posted on YouTube are good. In each of these cases, and in other social media applications, you are looking for people to comment. It is from those comments that you will find what people are thinking.

Eventually what you to do is convert those commenter’s into fans and eventually evangelists for your brand. I will talk about how to do that in another post. But, I have just told you the first step.

Social Media takes time

After you describe all of this, the next objection is going to arise – social media takes time. Writing a blog, maintaining a fan page on Facebook, Tweeting and responding to Tweets, answering questions on LinkedIn, posting videos and monitoring and responding to comments are not something that can be done in an hour once a week.

These are many executives who used to their agency doing all the work. All they have to do is approve the campaign and make sure the agency has access to whomever it needs to work with at the company. It is a kind of “fire and forget” strategy. Now, you are asking them to become an active part of their own marketing effort.

Remember, social media is not a tactic or a strategy. It is an entirely new way of marketing. It requires a commitment to stick with it. Nothing turns off a potential customer more than sporadic, unscheduled use of social media. Blogs especially have to be posted on a specific schedule. Nothing kills a blog following faster than making it hard to find. The same thing applies to a Facebook fan page or a YouTube video channel.

This is, of course, your opportunity. You are there to teach them about social media and maintain their accounts. You are the solution to their problems of time management. It why they will hire you.

One note though – do not, ever, write your client’s blog yourself. You can edit it; you can proofread it, but don’t write it. That’s dishonest. PR firms have gotten into trouble for doing things like that. Tweeting for them is fine, as is maintaining the Facebook page. Just don’t be a ghostwriter. You want those thoughts about the company or product to come from someone who really knows it. Plus, consumers react badly when they perceive something isn’t what it purports to be.

There is more to do on social media. I will discuss the most important element next week. Stay tuned.

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LinkedIn, Marketing, Public Relations, Social Media, Twitter, YouTube, advertising, commercials
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blogs, C-Suite, Communications, Consumers, Facebook, LinkedIn, Management, Marketing, Social Media, Twitter, YouTube
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PR 101 – Weekly Rant #4 When customer service turns from helpful to annoying

Jeff Cole | January 13, 2010

Customer service is something I know a bit about. I have worked in retail twice in my life – once in high school when I worked for a small grocery store and once as an adult when I was a professional bicycle mechanic. I also spend a lot of time in my local Apple store, playing with the toys. And let’s not forget my local Ace Hardware store – another place where I go as often as possible.

When I worked in retail, I learned the right level of customer service. The rule I was taught was to offer help once and then go away. If they want help, they will ask. Don’t annoy the customer. An annoyed customer is much less likely to buy something. They are also going to tell their friends about the obnoxious help. That keeps customers away.

I have three examples of bad customer service I want to rant about. I am going to go more in-depth Monday blog on this in a few weeks. But, I have blow off some steam.

First, why do people still persist in being obnoxious when they try to sell something? I am not going to name any names here, but I have two different companies try to sell me services lately. Both are services I would consider using if business was better. But, it’s not. I have told representatives from both companies I am just not sure right now – yet they keep calling me.

I finally got rid of one, but the other keeps calling and emailing me. That kind of obnoxious persistence guarantees I won’t buy anything from them.

Second, along those same lines, I have a business credit card. I have had it for almost two years. I like the service I receive from the company. They have been very good a couple of times when there were questionable charges. The statements are clear and easy to read.

I know they know who I am because I keep getting bills from them, which is fine. However, I also get constant solicitations from them asking my company to use their business card. They really ought to merge their marketing and customer lists. It is not that hard to do – I have done it myself for clients.

Third, I have a new printer. It is giving me fits. It keeps telling my laptop it is out of ink when I know it is not. I spent a long time on the phone with so-called technical support. The best the person could come up with was to send me two new ink cartridges. He had no clue what was going on.

Now, the company’s technical support was very good when I had an earlier printer problem. The person I talked to then correctly diagnosed when my laptop refused to admit the printer existed. This person was patient and walked me through what I had to do to correct the problem. The entire process took maybe 20 minutes.

Given the two examples though, which experience do you think the average customer is going to remember? It is human nature to remember the bad and forget the good. There is no wiggle room in customer service.

That’s why I love the Apple store and my local Ace Hardware store. In both cases, the employees are expert in what they do, promptly provide help when you ask for it, but do not hover. Give me that kind of experience any day. I will keep coming back for more.

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PR 101 – Lesson 44 – Selling Social Media

Jeff Cole | January 11, 2010

So, you review your new client’s needs and decide social media is the best course. Or, you are pitching a potential client and feel using social media would be the most effective way to meet their needs. The problem is the CMO and CEO are in their ‘50s and think The Wall Street Journal is the be-all and end-all of information dissemination. They think Facebook is a place where their kids waste time in mindless pursuits and tweeting is what birds do.

This is a more common situation than one would think. It is true that more and more major corporations are turning to social media for their marketing needs. However, there are still a large group of executives who frankly don’t get it.

As an aside, I have run into public relations executives who also don’t get it. They have told me they are taking a wait and see posture on social media. I get the feeling these people’s great-grandparents were buggy whip makers in 1908 when the first Model T drove by. They told themselves this automobile thing was a passing fad.

So, how to do you leap that hurdle?

So, how do you convince the person in charge that using Twitter, Facebook and other social media tools are the most cost effective – and just plain effective – way to market? It’s not easy, but it doesn’t have to be as hard as you would think.

The first step I take is to ask the person in charge if they use LinkedIn. According to the latest numbers I have seen, approximately 80 percent of employment managers go to LinkedIn first when looking to hire. So, the odds are fair to even that the CEO and CMO are at least familiar with LinkedIn. If you are really lucky, they have their own LinkedIn profiles.

The odds are also good that they don’t realize LinkedIn is a social media application. If they have a LinkedIn profile, explain they are already using social media. I often see resistance crumble at this point. Once they realize they are already using social media, explaining the rest is easier. You are not home yet, but at least you have hit a solid double.

But, what if they don’t use any social media?

Now, if they don’t have a LinkedIn profile, I sometimes show them social media’s dark side. “United Breaks Guitars,” the Motrin moms, and the Comcast stuff will often make the people in charge sit up and take notice. What I tell them is social media can kill your company before you even know you are bleeding. For instance, I have read estimates that United Airlines lost an estimated $100 million because of “United Breaks Guitars.” Watch a CFO’s ears perk up when he hears that number.

Of course, fear is not the only motivation you should use. After scaring them, tell them of social media’s successes. Southwest Airlines had one of its most successful fare sales ever primarily by using Twitter, Paula Berg, the airline’s manager of Emerging Media said at a conference I attended last fall. PepsiCo has pulled all its Super Bowl advertising. Instead of television ads, the soda company is going to spend $20 million on a social media campaign.

“… the Pepsi Refresh Project is about getting the global community to nominate projects that need funding in local communities, you upload your video/project profile, gather as many votes as you can by spamming the social sphere and the top projects will win finding from $5k multiple times per month up to $250k a few times every month,” according to the Digital Buzz blog.

There are a lot more examples of the successful use of social media. There are thousands of companies using Twitter. Ford, Honda, Jet Blue, the Marriot Hotel chain, Wachovia, and Sun Microsystems are heavily involved in it. You will find the same results for companies using Facebook.

Remember, most CEOs – especially in this business climate – don’t want to be a pioneer. They want to know that whatever you are proposing has worked for someone else. Once they know it has worked for others, they are willing to listen.

Now, if you find their competitors are already using social media, you have broken through another wall. Remember, those C-suite people are judged on results. Their board of directors, their shareholders, their lenders, analysts and journalists are all looking over their shoulders. Those company leaders do not want to discover they are losing market share to a competitor that is using Facebook or Twitter when they are not. In this case, they already see the benefit.

There is much more to talk about when it comes to pitching social media. I will cover more of the topic in next Monday’s blog.

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I post this blog every Monday and Wednesday. On Mondays, I will discuss the how-to of public relations, marketing and social media. On Wednesdays, I will review and discuss marketing campaigns. I am always looking for topics and input. My email address is in the next paragraph. If you want to subscribe to this blog, please use the RSS feed link in the upper right hand corner. In addition, please join my community. In the upper right hand corner, there is a widget marked Google Friend Connect. Please join. This is an example of cutting edge social media. My background: I worked as a reporter for 25 years in central Illinois, upstate New York, suburban Detroit and Milwaukee. I now help clients with marketing communications through my company - JJC Communications LLC. If you want to know more about my company, and myself, click the link. It's a cliché, but it's true for me: no job is too big, no job is too small. I have worked with companies on the Fortune 500 list and I have worked with companies that have one employee. The service I provide is the same for all. Email me at jjcole54@gmail.com.

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