Posts Tagged: customers


4
Mar 10

Andy’s Answers: How do I stay in touch with my fans?

You can’t have long-term word of mouth without an ability to regularly communicate with your fans. It’s how you tell them about new stuff you’re working on, it’s how you get their ideas on what you could do better and it’s how you build on the relationships you’ve already established with them. How to keep in touch: E-mail newsletters . E-mail is the only advertisement your customers request. With their permission, you can e-mail your fans hundreds of times a year with news, updates and relevant content that they can then share with their networks. Communities . Give your fans a place to network and share ideas. Not only does it make it easier for them to create lots of conversations, but it also gives you a way to quickly communicate with your followers. Live events. Big or small, live events are still the best way to bring everyone together and re-energize your fan base. The Fortune 100, nonprofits and political parties all use them to connect with their fans and share news.

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Andy’s Answers: How do I stay in touch with my fans?


2
Mar 10

Are you sick of social media?

The shine is off the apple. Even marketers are sick of hearing about how great social media is and how it’s going to change everything for everyone forever. I’m not quite there yet — I still delight in pulling together SmartBrief on Social Media each day — but I can understand how the constant din of the Next Big Thing could be deafening for some folks. But whether you’re tired of hearing about it or not, it’s becoming clear that social-media marketing isn’t the Next Big Thing anymore. It’s just the thing that everyone does . Grasping the important of that transition is key to the success of your marketing endeavors over the next year for two reasons: If you’re sick of hearing about it, imagine how your customers — who have never waxed poetic about mass-communication tools — must feel. They’re not just going to yawn when you proudly unveil your newest social-media account — they’re going to start rolling their eyes. Whatever novelty factor these platforms held is long gone — except, perhaps, for mobile networks. Yesterday, you needed to give your customers a reason to be curious. Today, you need to find a way to be essential. If you’ve figured it out, so has the competition. A lot of businesses, especially smaller companies, have put themselves on the map over the past few years by dominating a space their competitors ignored. You can’t count on that any longer. You don’t just have to compete with your rival’s product; you need to best their social presence, too, if you’re going to maintain your marketing edge. What other big changes does the ubiquity of social media bring to the discipline? Are you personally sick of hearing about social platforms yet? Is mobile really the exception to the rule? Image credit, Ingrid W. via Shutterstock

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Are you sick of social media?


1
Mar 10

Are there better ways to enhance social-media privacy?

Data is the heart of social media. Without the ability to solicit feedback, orders, customer service requests or usage information, it becomes dramatically more difficult to realize a return on your social-media investment. Your followers must be comfortable sharing information online. The problem is that they’re usually not just sharing that information with you. How can we make sure our customers continue to be willing to share information with us? Steve Lohr has an excellent long-view piece on the subject, featured in today’s SmartBrief on Social Media , suggesting that it’s no longer enough for companies to simply disclose information and let consumers decide what to do with it. Lohr argues that the level of complexity and the sheer amount of data we’re sharing make an informed-consent model totally unworkable. Lohr suggests that we need to turn to either more regulation or tougher tools. Regulation has its place, but as last week’s privacy decision in Italy shows, it’s easy to swing too far in that direction. Some tools, such as anonymous browsing capabilities, show promise. Others, such as an alert feature that pops up every time you share data, sound like they would be more annoying that helpful. What are the alternatives? Should we be looking for better ways to anonimize data? Should try to refocus our efforts on finding ways to profit from social media that don’t explicitly rely on personal information? Or should we go the Mark Zuckerberg route and try to obliterate the social norms of privacy by pretending they’re already irrelevant? How should we be working to address consumer privacy worries? Are you concerned that increased user caution will hurt your ability to leverage social platforms? Anybody want to defend the user-choice model? Image credit, enot-poloskun , via iStock What are the alternatives?

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Are there better ways to enhance social-media privacy?


25
Feb 10

Will Italian courts ruin social media?

In many ways, social media can make the Web feel a bit smaller. Instead of spending hours on faceless corporate Web sites, I’m chatting with old friends and making new ones, all on my own personal landing pages. Social networks do such a good job of shrinking the Internet down to my own little social circle that at times I can almost forget that the Web is worldwide. Almost. Decisions such as the one handed down by an Italian judge this week, which served as the lead story in today’s SmartBrief on Social Media , are a painful reminder of the challenges that a global Web represents. Web sites, content producers and Internet service providers aren’t just playing by one set of rules. There are conceivably as many standards at work as there are nations with courts to rule on them. When your business decides to engage your customers on a social platform, you’re not just staying in your own backyard. You’re potentially rubbing up against scores of legal and cultural boundaries. Google is acting as if the Italian judge’s ruling against it in a privacy-violation case means the end of the social Web.  Its argument is that the Italian decision means companies need to vet content for before it is posted — instead of responding to takedown notices later. That standard may make some companies think twice about allowing users to post content at all, they argue. My guess is that it might just mean that social networks will need to rethink how they do business in Italy. This isn’t great news if your business is reliant on traffic from Italian social-media users, but it’s unclear how large an impact the decision will have in other places. Regardless of how this plays, the incident is a great reminder of the need to think of business in a global context — even if your company isn’t closing international deals quite yet. What does the Italian decision mean for Google? For other social-media companies? For users? Image credit, kuzma , via iStock

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Will Italian courts ruin social media?