My Facebook foul-up

Take a look at the image below. Is this the type of photo you’d want to put beside a serious business inquiry? I wouldn’t. But I did.

It was an embarrassing experience, and perhaps my mistake can serve as a lesson for anyone who’s considering using social networks to transact business.

Last week was the first time I’ve used Facebook to direct a professional inquiry to a group of my friends. I was looking for some active Facebook users to profile in a book I’m writing, so it seemed a natural place to find them. I used a third-party application called FunWall, which is made by Slide. It looked straightforward enough: type the question, post it and then e-mail a notification to a list of your friends.

So I posted my question and send an invitation to everyone on my friends list, some 225 people. A couple of hours later, my wife sent me an instant message questioning the appropriateness of the image on my FunWall. “What image?” I said. I quickly logged on to Facebook and found my question next to the item below. There were already a couple of e-mails from friends questioning my good taste. I scrambled to delete the original message, which wasn’t all that intuitive, and to post an apology. I received a couple of more snickering responses from my associates, but have no idea how many people saw the offensive photo and thought I was serious.

As far as I can tell, the error occurred when I clicked the button to post my question, I inadvertently clicked the option just below it, which sent a postcard to accompany the question. For some unfathomable reason, the default postcard was the image below. I didn’t bother to check the post after I submitted it, and would probably not have even known of my error for hours unless my wife had pointed it out.

So shame on me for not double-checking my work. And shame on Slide for making it so easy for even an experienced user to make such a dumb mistake. If there are lessons, it’s that you should beware of the new breed of third-party apps that Facebook and other sites are accepting. And use that preview feature! You don’t want your best intentions undermined by a stupid user interface.

I’ll just go crawl back in my hole now…

Daily reading 01/17/2008

Stop The Press Releases! – Mother Jones, Jan./Feb., 2008

tags: newspaper_death_watch, social_media_useful

  • Mother Jones has another one of those opinion pieces by a journalist who is outraged – outraged, I tell you! – over the loose editing and poor fact-checking of citizen journalism. In this case, the villain is the Tallahassee Democrat, which published a popular blog by a local PR person whose topics sometimes touched upon issues that related to her clients. In one anecdote highlighted in the piece, the blogger supported a proposal to build a Wal-Mart near town while her firm was doing PR for Wal-Mart.

    Well, shame on the Tallahassee Democrat, and shame on the blogger, but please no shame on citizen journalism. The problem here is that the newspaper chose to feature prominently someone whose profession should have raised warning flags and then didn’t fact-check her work. In a true citizen journalism environment, the blogger would be subject to community fact-checking, which would have quickly identified her conflicts of interest. She also wouldn’t have enjoyed the unfair advantage of the newspaper bully pulpit. She’d have to earn respect and trust instead.

    In attempting to trash citizen journalism, this article actually does the opposite. It highlights the risks of the hybrid models now being tried by mainstream newspapers as they desperately seek a viable business model. Take the newspaper out of this story and, well, there’s no story.

     – post by pgillin

Wisdom of Crowds, Yes; Democratic Innovation, No

From Innovations, a website published by Ziff-Davis Enterprise from mid-2006 to mid-2009. Reprinted by permission.

Technology makes it possible to involve customers intimately in product development, but experts must still make the decisions.

In 2003, two Australian entrepreneurs accomplished something no one thought was possible. Knowing nothing about the business of brewing and distributing beer, they successfully penetrated the duopolistic Australian beer market and, in four years, achieved a base — and 50,000 customers —  in 46 nations. Brewtopia, which is now a publicly traded company, has since expanded into bottled water and soft drinks.

The secret to their success was their customers. The two founders set up a Web site and invited beer enthusiasts to vote on everything from the style and alcoholic content of the beer to the design of the labels.

Their inspiration was the story of PK-35, a Finnish soccer team. PK-35’s coach tried an experiment, asking fans to vote on nearly every aspect of the team’s operations, even its on-field strategy. What Brewtopia’s founders didn’t know was that the results of the soccer experiment were so bad that the coach was fired and the idea was scrapped after just one season.

Both of these stories are related in an inspiring and entertaining new book, We are Smarter than Me, by Barry Libert, Jon Spector “and thousands of contributors.” Using anecdotes and homespun logic, the authors make a compelling case for involving customers directly in a business’ product design and strategic direction. This idea is all the rage today, thanks to visible initiatives like Procter & Gamble’s pledge to derive half of its new product ideas from its customers by the end of the decade.

IT’s Central Role

IT organizations will increasingly find themselves at the center of these customer campaigns. That’s because only robust technology can effectively harness the contributions of thousands — or millions — of voices.

This is an exciting place for IT folks to be: at the center of corporate strategy. But it’s also an arena that demands discipline. As the soccer experiment demonstrated, community governance is not always the best strategy.

Many business executives will be enchanted by the concepts described in this book and will quickly ask their technology groups to set up forums and voting sites to accept customer contributions. The technology side of this challenge is fairly straightforward, but the business implications aren’t so simple.

Customer input is always desirable, but management by consensus or election isn’t. We know, for example, that democracy is a superior form of government, yet voters sometimes elect terrible leaders.

Businesses aren’t governments. They don’t exist to serve the public good, and they need to make difficult decisions in order to remain viable. Customer input needs to be tested and weighed against business objectives.

Companies that are successfully experimenting with this “crowd-sourcing” concept are finding ways to achieve that balance. Dell Computer, for example, has set up a Web site called IdeaStorm, which invites comments from customers and applies community voting tactics and discussion forums to developing innovations.

P&G has tapped into idea networks like Innocentive to get advice and solve problems. It has had spectacular results, but ideas from the community are still vetted by experts within the company for viability and relevance.

Customer innovation is an exciting opportunity for IT organizations to contribute to the business, but it’s important to resist the temptation to simply throw technology at the problem. Innovative organizations will seek to stretch the limits of what technology can do in order to sift through a mountain of suggestions. But at some point, human beings must still step in and make decisions.

Don’t Become an SEO Junkie

This article originally appeared in BtoB magazine.

Back in my days as an editor at an Internet company, I learned to live and die by traffic. Page views, unique visitors and traffic growth were our gods, and we became very good at driving the numbers.

Too good, in fact. Our editors discovered that there was an assortment of cheats and shortcuts they could use to create traffic spikes. Top 10 lists, stupid customer tricks, contests and “was my face red” anecdotes were guaranteed hits that could ease the constant pressure to achieve number goals.

The problem was that the traffic was junk. Visitors came, but they didn’t stay or register. There was no way to monetize their visits, other than with a few low-cost banner ads. Worse, overindulgence in these tactics made a site look shallow and juvenile, which actually drove away the serious businesspeople we were trying to attract. Most of these practices were eventually discarded.

That experience came to mind recently as my inbox and RSS reader filled up with an assortment of “Best of 2007” collections. Hundreds of these articles dealt with traffic optimization strategies, everything from headline writing to tricks for driving visits from Digg.com and StumbleUpon.com. One blogger posted an impressive 8,500-word list of the top marketing blog posts of the year, most of which dealt with traffic strategies.

A lot of this advice was very good, but I shudder to think that marketers may take it too much to heart. Today, they are at an intersection of opportunity and challenge. Their opportunity is to become content producers on par with the mainstream media that have long been the gatekeepers. The challenge is that the online marketing world still lacks consensus on how to measure online success, but there are companies as indexsy seo agency that can help improve your online results.

With no agreement on metrics, many marketers will fall back to Web site traffic as the gold standard says the CEO of https://placementseo.com/seo-reseller-services. But this puts them at the risk of resorting to gimmickry and sensationalism in order to get attention. When everyone else is shouting, the urge is just to shout louder.

The ever-increasing influence of search and recommendation engines only raises the stakes as Google has become the universal home page, most of those who could really be considered one of the best seo experts right now, would agree that because of this an army of consultants has sprung up to figure out how to beat the system. Marketers that hew too closely to their recommendations risk delivering boatloads of traffic to content that is, well, junk.

It will be years before the industry hammers out a consensus on metrics, so don’t wait. Have a discussion with your leadership about the need to measure success with factors that really count: registrations, repeat visits, sales orders and whatever else affects the bottom line. Make sure your goals and compensation are tied to meaningful results. Learn from the search optimization experts, but don’t let them run your life.

 

Enhanced by Zemanta

Daily reading 01/10/2008

Blogger Shel Holtz on Using Social Media as a Point of Customer Contact – Brandweek, Jan. 4, 2008

tags: social_media_useful

  • Shel Holtz argues that customer and tech support people should report into public relations because those functions have become so critical to a company’s public image. I agree. The #1 topic of blogger complaints is about customer support problems, yet businesses continue to outsource, scale back upon and marginalize this critical function. One bad customer experience can create a small tornado in the blogosphere and a pattern of bad experiences can undercut a company’s public image and valuation. So we do we under-invest in this area?
     – post by pgillin

Please attend my upcoming Mass TLC presentation on The New Influencers

I’ll deliver a presentation about the dynamics of social media and online influence on Jan. 24 in Waltham, MA. If you’re in the area, please consider coming and supporting the nonprofit Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council, which is sponsoring the presentation. Mass TLC does good work promoting the growth of the technology industry in Massachusetts and throughout New England. If we’ve never met before, be sure to come up and say hello!

The New Influencers: A Marketer’s Guide to the New Social Media
Thursday, January 24, 2008
8:00-10:00am Program
7:45am Registration

Where: Foley Hoag Emerging Enterprise Center
Bay Colony Corporate Center
1000 Winter Street, Suite 400
Waltham, MA 02451

The Mass Technology Leadership Council presents Paul Gillin, author of the book The New Influencers.

Blogging, podcasting and other social media are profoundly disrupting the mainstream media and marketing industries. Paul Gillin’s The New Influencers explores these forces by identifying the influencers, their goals and their motivations. The book also offers advice for marketers at both large and small organizations on how to influence the influencers.

This presentation explores:

  • Why social media are now so important in consumer decisions
  • How to leverage the blogosphere to enhance your company’s message
  • Strategies for taking advantage of this new medium
  • The need for transparency and how to make it work for your benefit
  • Action items for both small and large businesses
  • Whether and how your organization should use blogs, podcasts and other social media tools in your marketing strategy

Cost: Members $40.00; Non-members $80.00
Signup form: https://function.masstlc.org/programs_new/event_single.cfm?eventid=808

Knol's greed appeal will make it a winner

In the two weeks since Google announced plans to unveil a Wikipedia-like encyclopedia called Knol, the blogosphere has been buzzing about its potential impact. Is this the Wikipedia-killer? A nefarious attempt to undermine media companies? A market-share play by a near-monopoly?

In my opinion, it’s none of those things. Knol is just a good idea that fills a gap in the market and that is likely to become a rich and useful alternative to Wikipedia. If Google and its contributors make money in the process, what’s wrong with that?

Knol will succeed because (for lack of a better term) it exploits the greed factor in community knowledge-sharing. Think of Wikipedia as public television or radio: it’s a public information source that is endearing, in part, because it’s so free of commercial interest. Sure, some people do use Wikipedia for business benefit, but most do so for the sake of sharing knowledge and contributing to the public good. Wikipedia’s anonymity is a virtue in that respect. There will always be value to that model and an audience for it.

Knol is a commercial play. According to sketchy details provided so far by Google, users will be able to attach bylines and profiles to their contributions and submit to community ratings. Articles will move up the popularity stack based upon a Digg-like process in which visitors identify the most useful content. Contributors could also see some financial reward if their work is heavily trafficked.

The fact that Knol promotes the identity of its contributors will give it significant commercial appeal, particularly for experts who don’t have the benefit of a big forum for their knowledge. I’ve written the past about an experiment called Wikibon that is a precursor to Knol. The creator of Wikibon, David Vellante, spent many years in market research and understands both the power and limitations of that model.

Market research firms charge high fees because they have a reputation for quality. The analysts who work there command big salaries and enjoy considerable influence in their markets. It’s the think-tank model and it’s tried and true.

The problem with think tanks is that they shut out the vast majority of potential experts. In most business-to-business markets, there is a huge body of knowledge locked up in the minds of practitioners, consultants and small businesspeople who don’t have the wherewithal to become part of the giant research firms. Their expertise is available only to the small number of people they can reach through whatever means they have available.

Wikibon is a long-tail experiment that tries to tap into that knowledge and create a quality information resource at a cost that’s potentially much lower than that of the think tanks. The idea is to remove all of the organizational overhead and just let people showcase their own expertise. If they do it right, they can grow their professional profile and improve their chance of landing good jobs or consulting assignments.

The same factors will apply to Knol, and that’s why it will be so successful. Few Web properties have Google’s capacity to showcase individual experts. There are many blogger networks out there, but Knol should quickly become the biggest blogger network of them all.

For individuals with the time, skill and savvy to promote themselves through a vehicle like this, the payoff could be significant. That’s why I say that Knol appeals to the greed factor. People will continue to contribute to Wikipedia because it reaches a vast audience. They will contribute to Knol because it promotes their personal interests. There will be a place for both models on the Web. There’s no reason that either has to be successful at the expense of the other.

Daily reading 12/27/2007

Internet Marketing Best Blog Posts of 2007 – techipedia, Dec. 26, 2007

  • Here’s a fantastic list of links to blogger advice on nearly every imaginable aspect of business social media marketing. Many of these articles are specific to individual services like Digg, StumbleUpon and Reddit. The list is a bit overwhelming in its scope, but you can find just about anything you need there, from effective blogging practices to advice on how to use Facebook in marketing campaigns.
     – post by pgillin