Prentice Welch is one of Lithium’s Customer Success Directors, providing best practices consulting and helping our customers get the most out of the Lithium suite of social business applications.
You can find him frequenting the Lithosphere, where he is PrenticeW.
At this year’s LiNC, I had the pleasure of attending the first ever, LiNC Social Strategist Workshop. This was a whole afternoon led by well-known industry analyst Jeremiah Owyang, partner at the Altimeter Group. Here, we brought together nearly 20 leading community practitioners and social strategists with Jeremiah to discuss issues relevant to their changing roles.
After surveying over 140 corporate social strategists, Jeremiah and his team were able to offer a unique perspective on the state of “social business” as it stands today.
Sitting in on the presentation were key social strategists from some of the largest brands around: HP, Verizon, and Yahoo to name a few (excuse me while I bend over and pick up those names I just dropped
).
While Jeremiah’s presentation was full of useful data with which any budding social strategist can use to benchmark their efforts (please find the presentation and key supporting reports attached to this article below), the key takeaway was the notion of achieving “escape velocity” – essentially building your social program in such a way that it can scale with the needs of your business without relegating you to managing the so-called “social media helpdesk”.
“To be successful using social technologies, companies must first prepare and align internal roles, policies, processes and education with their business objectives. Social business is a profound change that impacts all departments in the organization.” Jeremiah Owyang
What do you, the social strategist, need to do in order to promote your brand, hold other groups within your organization accountable and scale to meet the growing demands of the business and your customers?
In a word: PREPARE.
Below is a template to follow when getting ready internally to launch and effectively manage your social efforts:
Based on Jeremiah’s presentation and the feedback provided by the group in attendance, we are still quite early in evolution of the social business lifecycle. There is still much to be learned and many more best practices to be developed in the coming years.
Tailoring the framework above to the unique requirements (impediments?) of your business will give you the best chance of achieving the level of scale required for your social efforts to succeed.