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Growing Your Brands’ Digital Footprint
Like the simplicity of the diagram..easy to walk through with clients.
(tags: web2.0 socialmedia digital+strategy brands)
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#6 "Interact w/ Legacy software" separates players from posers.
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Mostly Media – Definitely Digital
George Dearing On Media, Marketing And Technology
Posts tagged as:
by on March 15, 2009 · Comments
in Collaboration, Digital Strategy, Enterprise 2.0, Interactive, New Media, Social Computing, Social Media, Social Networking, Social Software, Telligent, Web 2.0
Tagged as: digital+strategy, social+media, social+networks, Telligent, web+2.0
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by on January 22, 2009 · Comments
in Announcements, Blogs, Business, Collaboration, Digital Strategy, Marketing, Media, New Media, Social Media, Social Networking, Social Software, Telligent, Web 2.0, Word of Mouth (WoM)
by on January 1, 2009 · Comments
in Blogs, Brand, Digital Strategy, Marketing, Media, New Media, Social Media, Social Software, Telligent, Web 2.0
Our marketing group at Telligent is ramping up on some client case studies, so I thought I’d share some from time to time. The latest one is from a company called Goozex, who’s built an online community for trading video games. What’s most interesting is some of the data they’ve shared as the community has matured. Goozex says its online community is now responsible for more than a one-third (33%) if its recurring transactions, something that lowers the incremental cost of additonal sales. The other piece that stuck out was how Goozex reduced its customer service workload. The company tells us nearly half of its service issues are resolved through its forums.
Clearly all this didn’t happen by just implementing software. As with any digital strategy, it takes a well thought out plan that addresses how social media and collaboration map to your business goals. Even though Telligent’s platform can work wonders, it’s still just the enabler.
Telligent & Goozex ROI Case Study
Tagged as: Collaboration, community+server, goozex, ROI, social+computing, social+media, Telligent
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by on April 25, 2008 · Comments
in Blogs, Brand, Enterprise 2.0, Marketing, Marketing Rants, New Media, Social Media, Social Networking, Social Software, Tech Rants, Web 2.0
I read this PCWorld story and I couldn’t help but think how indicative it is of of the typical command and control mentality within enterprises. I know there’s a balance between fighting the external social network (SoNet) effect and creating a corporate one of your own. With all the technology horsepower and APIs gone wild, shouldn’t we be able to figure out how to create some harmony between the two? The quote from one of the Gap’s web engineers sums it up pretty well:
“Do you really want Facebook to manage it for you in the outside world, or do you want to do it yourself so you have control?”
Control. It’s a word I hear over and over: How will we maintain control of what’s being said by the community?
I’ve talked to more companies than I can count about social publishing, social media, and setting up communities. The enterprises that typically lead the charge tend to be the ones that want to sell software or services to setup the community. But like communities in the real world, who wants to pay for the roads that others will use? When we talk to the brands in the community cross hairs, well that’s when you see the cold sweat start to break out.
The big brands hire in teams of marketing folk from the best B-schools to manage their content. They pay the most expensive consultants to determine what color has which meaning for their brand; what word has which association in middle America vs. big cities; heck how does this kid think vs. that adult. It’s been done this way for years, decades, and now, that level of tight brand control is showing cracks.
For the last decade or more, people with passion for products are expressing their views over the web – the enterprise fear originates when the views aren’t all that rosy. With all of their collective experience, too many companies still have the fear of shelling out big bucks to develop a social publishing strategy. Do they really want to give the rest of the world a forum to say what they’re really thinking?
The bus has already left the station folks; the negative views are already finding their ways through other sites and locations. I try to encourage brands to embrace both the negative and positive discussions their consumers have, preaching that it’s important to learn from the negative and leverage the positive.
But for all of those brands who don’t want to build the roads that provide more interaction with their consumers: your consumers are taking other roads already available. Enable them to speak freely with and about you.
That’s social publishing.
Tagged as: blogging, brand+monitoring, brand+strategy, community, content+management, enterprise+social+networks, enterprise+social+software, social+media, social+publishing
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