Social technologies provide a powerful collection of marketing tools, and they are inexpensive
compared to other forms of marketing. Companies including Starbucks,
Nike, Pepsi, Dell, Dirt Devil, IBM and JetBlue have already seen
tremendous results from social marketing methods, and they are gaining
traction with tools like customer intelligence, email, word-of-mouth
campaigns and viral video—all tailor-made to provide huge benefits for
businesses.
Let's take a closer look at three techniques that can make an immediate positive impact on your marketing efforts:
Customer Intelligence
-- Most organizations simply maintain a database with a name, contact
information and company. A customer intelligence strategy would
increase the data to 20 or 30 fields of information and would include a
mix of business and personal data. This data can be gathered by simply
asking, or through harvesting the information from online social sites
where your customer already belongs (LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, etc.)
Many
businesses now automate this process by connecting their CRM systems to
services that find every new customer online and harvest social profile
information automatically. It is now possible to monitor online
actions of customers for keywords that might create alerts at the
business so action can be taken. For example, if a customer updates a
LinkedIn profile with a job change or promotion, your database could be
automatically updated, and you could send a congratulatory message.
Other
actions that could be monitored include blogs, posts or tweets that
customers put online. By using social listening and setting up alerts
on keywords that are important to the industry, you can stay aware of
what is on customers' minds, or where they are leaning on topics.
Acting on this information by engaging customers, or promoting what
they have written can be invaluable in building tighter relationships
eWord of Mouth marketing
– Word of mouth has always been the most powerful driver of human
behavior. People believe their friends or a trusted expert. They
rarely believe advertising. Social sites and tools have created a
dynamic in which people now “talk” to thousands of connections with the
touch of a button—in some cases many times a day. An eWord of Mouth
strategy involves identifying centers of influence (e.g. bloggers or
Twitterers) in your sphere and providing them with content they want to
pass on to their audience. This will help you create entirely new
distribution paths for industry information that will cost you nothing,
and yet expand your reach. With a few simple searches on sites like
Twellow.com, Listorious.com and BlogSiteList.com, you can find these
people who are centers of influence. There are people connected to many
thousands of readers in every industry and on every topic. When people
read content delivered from these human broadcasters, they have a high
degree of trust for it. This new marketing method must become a staple
for every organization.
Viral Video – Most people
welcome the occasional viral video emailed or sent to them via one of
the social sites. These can be cute cat videos, or clever
business-to-business videos. They are viral because people like them
enough to share them at escalating rates. What is amazing is that many
of these videos will get millions of views and cost the video producer
ZERO. Distribution is free and completely scalable. Sadly, most
organizations are wasting the opportunity to create viral videos that
would be popular within their industry, or could be used to promote it.
After studying what makes videos go viral, I believe it is not magic or
luck. There are clear formulas that, when followed, afford a great
chance of getting a large audience and high pass-around velocity. The
mistake that most organizations make is having an unclear strategy for
the development of a video that will actually be intriguing. They
compound the problem by not engaging the right specialists to script and
create the video.
There is a formula for producing winning
online videos; they must be funny, clever and somewhat true. This
combination provides the best odds for getting a video passed around— in
some cases, to millions of people.
Another concept to consider is
creating a series of five or six videos, labeled Episode One, Episode
Two, etc. In this way, you have multiple properties. If one strikes a
chord with viewers, they will come to your Web site to see the rest.
Don’t
overlook these three marketing techniques. They have the potential to
yield a huge return on investment for the savvy marketing team.
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