Is it Still Social Media if it Works?

By PhilS

Is it Still Social Media if it Works?

by Lithium Alumni (Retired) Lithium Alumni (Retired) on ‎12-14-2009 06:25 PM - last edited on ‎12-15-2009 11:39 AM by Lithium Alumni (Retired) Lithium Alumni (Retired)

smaller-snake-oil.jpgThere has been lots of discussion on the social web today about Stephen Baker's BusinessWeek article about social media snake-oil salesmen.

Articles like this are common in the tech world: take an overhyped subject, point out some wretched excesses, and warn the audience that bubbles have burst before.

But Baker is on to something when he calls upon practitioners to "shift the focus from promises to results," and he's done his readers a service if he causes them to ask two important questions:

* Do I have a well-defined reason for undertaking a social media initiative; and
* Does whoever I'm dealing with have a track record in helping organizations who had similar reasons.

As anyone who reads Lithosphere knows, there are lots of enterprises working on successful social media initiatives, and there are a number of proven ways to measure success. In fact, I would venture to say that Social CRM as we define it is one of the more quantitatively rigorous new disciplines to emerge in a while.

So does that mean it's not social media? One wonders.

An interesting observation from that article, made by Saatchi's digital creative director James Cooper, is that people embarking upon social media projects take a "VC" approach: one bet out of 10 is going to pay off. This is a really unfortunate way of thinking about social media projects.

If your goal is only to generate momentary buzz -- 20 million hits on YouTube -- then that's a high-risk endeavor (with questionable rewards, as Cooper notes). But if your goal is to create lasting relationships with your customers and create value in partnership with them, then this stuff is practically blue chip at this point. We see it every day among our customers, and we see the results every day in their deployments.

The real tragedy will be if the industry defines "social media" in such a way as that only risky or silly projects qualify. You can almost hear the snake oil salesman's response, "Oh, customer communities -- that's not social media. People have been doing that forever." Or, perhaps more honestly, "Oh, customer communities -- that's not social media. They actually work."

Well, yes. Customer communities have a track record. We can measure whether they are healthy. We can define whether they are succeeding or failing. They generate ROI.

And, by the way, they're a great way to improve your probability of success in other social media projects -- that's why we're so excited about Social CRM. It's social media that works.

comments
VIP Council on ‎12-16-2009 03:31 PM

Paul, Phil,

 

Objectives - Yes.  Sustainability, momentum, equity... those seem important to me, and one of the reasons I really like working with community vs a campaign type social endeavor.

 

I enjoy seeing the scale increase every day, and know that I'm reaching more and more people, and creating influence and being influenced in turn by the people in the community.   And, it creates equity.  I'm starting to have customers come back and reach out to me for help on a new purchase, or for help on a different product.  When they open the dialog by citing past experiences in the community, I know we have generated equity that pays forward.

 

Mark

 

 

 

 

Lithium Alumni (Retired) Lithium Alumni (Retired) on ‎12-16-2009 04:08 PM

I think that equity is something people overlook on a regular basis - primarily as it's a little squishy as a measure. But you're spot on that positive past experiences really generate equity moving forward, not only between the individual and the company, but for all the other users that read and interact with that particular user or post. 

 

We know that WOM marketing activities are particularly more successful with a great community to foster the message... we've known it instinctively for a long time, but now with the research we can actually prove it.  Yes there is a long way to go with creating measurable, provable techniques for demonstrating social effectiveness, but that wasn't that different to 1996 when everyone said why on earth would you need this internet fad?!

 

Yet another nail in the coffin of the social naysayers. As always thanks for the comments Mark, we really appreciate the feedback.

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