To Honor Social Media Day: “Hug Your Community”

Social media is a misnomer. It’s not about “media” — which is the channel by which communication gets delivered.  It’s about “community”:  people getting — and giving — help, advice, and support from others.

The Silicon Valley Executive Social Media Council (SVESMC) is my favorite example of this type of community. Earlier this month, the SVESMC met for it’s second practioner’s meeting.  Measuring the impact of social media was among the topics discussed. So, in light of Mashable’s self-proclaimed “Social Media Day”, I’d like to share a few insights from my favorite community – and echo thoughts that Petra Neiger shared in her Cisco post on this topic also.

During the gathering, a few folks took some time out to shoot impromptu videos to share lessons learned and to remind us about the impact social media has had on our lives.  The first video is a series of tips from people I consider top practitioners at prominent high tech firms here in the valley.  I found it very “telling” that both Gurmeet Dhaliwal (CA) and Jeannette Gibson (Cisco) both chose “listening” as the key strategic tip they would give others.

Listening is the first of five key social media objectives Forrester identified in the Groundswell book. I later wrote research to help B2B marketers set social media plans and incorporated the POST strategy into this work. Successful social media means knowing who you want to engage and how you want to change the nature of your relationship with them as a result. To do this right requires listening to that audience, not just shouting at them with an online bullhorn.

The second video is a series of personal stories about how social media changed some of the member’s lives — in both big ways and small.  Watch and see if you can relate. 

These are just a few examples that remind me how important a community can be to helping us navigate and learn about this new socially-connected, online world.  Happy Social Media day!  And in honor of it, find your favorite community and show them your appreciation.

Four Ways to Engage Your Socially Active Customers

If  I have any (small) regrets about leaving Forrester Research, it’s that I miss working with folks like Augie Ray each day. I found his recent research on the growth in the number of people who update their statuses using social media – tools like Facebook, LinkedIn, MySpace, and Twitter – interesting and worth a read.

Forrester has long counseled marketers to follow a simple four-step planning process called POST to set social strategy. POST is an acronym Josh Bernoff coined to remind business people to keep audience first and objectives second on their list of social media priorities.  Understanding your audience involves more than knowing profile information.  In this new social world, marketers must also know where your customers go online and how they interact with social tools already.

Social Technographics is the tool Forrester analysts, including myself during my tenure there, use to categorize online, social behavior.  From a B2B retrospective, I have to say that the tool did not always uncover distinct differences between business technology buyers, IT folks, and technology marketers in various demographic groups. Techies love technology and this fascination produces extensive experimentation with all variety of tools, hence they tend to profile high in most categories.

I found that it was important for marketers to know if the target audience is participating (as Creators, Critics, Joiners, and now Conversationalists), observing (as Collectors or Spectators) or simply inactive socially.  Three categories are easier for B2B marketers to understand than seven, especially since the conversation quickly turns to “So, where do buyers spend their time — on Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn?” (BTW, Augie’s report offers some good insight on this question in Figure 1.)

Putting the nuances of Social Technographics aside for a moment, I think Augie offers some solid advice for marketers wanting to engage with potential buyers and current customers through social media. For B2B marketers, I would summarize Augie’s list of ways to engage socially-active customers to read:

1) Listen to social conversations. Listening helps marketers learn how to engage socially as well as understand what buyers think about your brand.  Online monitoring tools – like Google Alerts, Radian6, or Biz360 — help here.

2) Use customers to energize others. Social updates are a viral element of online branding – and yes, there can be risks to the brand of doing so. Read Groundswell for a number of examples of what not to do.

3) Support customers as they support each other. Many companies have begun to support customers by listening to status updates and intervening on behalf of those currently experiencing problems. Most of the examples of what to do – or not do – involve consumer brands. But tech companies adopt this approach with success. The jury is still out about whether responding socially helps to lower customer support costs overall or simply papers over inadequate support processes.

4) Solicit customer feedback and ideas. Those who use your products can be the best source of innovation that other buyers will also want and use.

Most of all, I agree whole-heartedly with his recommendations, namely: listen before you leap, use social tools internally to understand the uses and limitations of each technology, and empower your employees. Marketing alone cannot run the whole social show – it’s definitely a group undertaking.

Get Organized For B2B Community Marketing

After testing the social media waters through much of 2009, I see B2B marketers waking up to the fact that successful social execution requires more than setting up group pages on LinkedIn, opening a corporate Twitter account, or posting videos to YouTube. To have the greatest impact, marketers will need to focus social media marketing efforts at the tail end of the customer acquisition and selling process — at creating long-term, vibrant customer relationships — not on building brand or generating leads. To turn social opportunity into marketing advantage requires marketers to adopt a community (in contrast to broadcast, direct, or one-t0-one) marketing mindset. It also requires new organizational structure, roles, processes, and incentives to help your company “get smart” about how it interacts with prospects and customers online.

Unfortunately, B2B marketers treat social like yet another media channel, not as a fundamental change to how business gets done. 

Source: Forrester Report "Organizing For B2B Tech Community Marketing" February 3, 2010

In research I published last week, I explore recent Forrester survey results where we asked over 300 B2B marketers how they are gearing up for social interactions with customers. Most say that their social organizational structure and governance is ad hoc or managed by different business units with little oversight (see the figure).  

While decentralized and ad hoc are good adjectives to use when describing any approach to social activity, the lack of oversight and governance creates (real or potential) risk for those blazing new trails in the social landscape.

To execute social strategy in ways that build deeper customer relationships and foster more transparent communications — without panicking executives or legal overseers — requires firms to create more flexible, decentralized ways of engaging with buyers that shake up traditional reporting structures but give employees the tools they need to be successful. To help marketers think through these changes, in the research report, I advise:

1) Organize for flexibility, not bureaucracy. Getting organized means creating some form of central governing body chartered with establishing shared resources and fostering communication. It also means distributing social execution responsibility — and accountability for results — widely in business units or regions. Rather than commanding and controlling, the central team guides activity, spreads best practices, and monitors progress continuously while giving product teams and customer-facing functions leeway to manage social activity in a local, transparent, and relevant manner.

2) Align social objectives with business goals. To mature social processes from ad hoc activity to consistent disciplines, marketers must specify what they expect to result from engaging with customers socially, and then make the functional areas involved responsible for achieving those goals.  Easier said than done, but picking the right objective is a core tenant to the POST methodology I’ve use to help many client get social media marketing right. To make progress quickly, start with social plans where you can limit the impact to one or two functional areas. This keeps internal competition on external social channels to a minimum and compels departments to collaborate as they experiment with social activity in a coordinated manner.

3) Run initial social forays like a corporate program, not a campaign. Social transformation requires dedicated budget, change management, and cross-functional coordination on a scale similar to other major programs, like sustainability or outsourcing. Some firms need temporary executive assignments and staff to hit major social milestones, such as establishing a listening process, creating a thought-leadership agenda, or inviting customers to engage in new community activity. This core team should also validate the business case for each social ”program” undertaken.

4) Open boundaries to facilitate internal collaboration and external outreach. Social requires employees to step outside their functional comfort zones and work with outside partners and influencers. Rather than opening borders completely, top firms progressively allow more access to resources, opportunities to interact, and incentives to do so by establishing a community hub. The community hub (aka community portal, social networking site, forum, etc.) creates structure, but offers enough flexibility, to allow social interactions to evolve. Encourage employees to collaborate with each other first because this will foster the skills, norms, and creative thinking needed to make the transition to external interactions go faster and remain permanent. To see how one marketer is wrestling with this today, take a look at Paul Dunay’s blog post titled “Fire Your Director of Social Media!”

What does all of this mean?  That B2B marketers should advocate for a social core team, under their leadership, to foster new process, structure and — ultimately — culture that supports online interaction where it matters most — at the touchpoints that customers choose to use daily.  Take a look at the research and let me know what you think.

(P.S. I am backdating this post to more closely correspond with the publication date of the research. Hope you don’t mind!)

New Research Details 2009 Forrester Groundswell Awards Winners

In my last post, I talked about the 2009 Forrester Groundswell Awards winners. I would like to echo Josh Bernoff’s recent blog observation that anyone can do a successful social application, (and from my perspective) especially those in industries that sell primarily to other businesses. In research published earlier today, I explain how the winners and finalists — and the activities I follow at other top firms — show that more companies are taking steps to enter the social world. To keep create successful social discourse with customers that drives real business returns, B2B marketers should:

1) Pick an audience, listen to them, and then join the conversation. B2B marketers keen to get involved in this groundswell of social activity should start with a specific group of customers or target buyers in mind. Actively listen to this audience in the venues they visit. Interact by tracking which topics they discuss and how frequently they discuss them. Engage in active social listening, summarize your findings, and present your experiences to your marketing, support, and sales teams.

2) Make specific business outcomes the goal of social activity. Cut the social goal-setting process short by convening five, 2-hour executive meetings that tackle, in turn, audience profiles, business objectives, measures/outcomes, resources, and responsibilities. Share the outcomes of this discussion with the primary teams who need to implement the chosen objectives for the chosen audience.

3) Rationalize your public social presence with your Web site. Most B2B Web sites focus too much on the company and not enough on what buyers want. Put your Web site at the center of your social media plans. Inventory official and semi-official presences on public social networking sites like Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter and look at what you find when you put audience and objectives first. Chances are, it won’t be pretty.

4) Organize for social success. My former colleague, Jeremiah Owyang, recommends adopting a hub-and-spoke model for social organization, and I agree.  Hub-and-spoke supports a central, cross-functional group that facilitates resource-sharing and cross-team communications with those in distributed product groups, divisions, or geographies closer to strategy execution. It also gives business units flexibility while providing a central authority that enables your organization to act efficiently and to account for the impact of social activity.

Take a look at the winners, finalists, and other examples of social application excellence in the report and let me know what other examples you have seen that equal these accomplishments in innovation and business value.

B2B Marketers: 2009 Forrester Groundswell Award Winners Offer Great Examples

Moments ago, Josh Bernoff posted this year’s winners of the 2009 Forrester Groundswell awards on the Groundswell blog. If you scroll down to the middle of the post (be forewarned; it’s a long one) you will see the winners and finalists in the B2B category winners. The images are great to look at as well.

In my research, I see marketers approach social media with a mix of enthusiasm and skepticism. Most want to know which firms execute social pursuits well and what tangible outcomes occur. Take a look and I think you will agree that these winners show how B2B firms can lead the way in achieving real business results.

As social activity expands – and business people seek out peers online to exchange ideas and validate their purchase decisions – these award winners and finalists demonstrate 6 types of objectives B2B marketers can use to connect – and ultimately change their relationship – with customers. Briefly, here’s what those 6 objectives are and why our winners took home the prize:

1) Listen to what customers talk about.  Listening to prospects and buyers may seem boring, so B2B markers tend to overlook this objective as an important start to setting social strategy. Yet, researching and analyzing what customers talk about pays off in deeper insight that leads to measurable benefits. CDW teamed with Communispace to listen to customers who participate in its community and apply those lessons to their sales interactions. As a result CDW increased the average of their total customer purchase revenue by 17% when comparing June 2009 to June 2008.

2) Talk with your customers (not at them): Successful marketers turn online activity and content into rich conversations. Eloqua’s self-guided sales tool, called the Conversation, treats users to an interactive discussion that hones in on their most pressing marketing problems using a combination of tongue-in-cheek humor and straight talk. Between 18 and 20% of buyers who engaged with an integrated campaign featuring this tool became prospects for Eloqua’s solutions.

3) Energize your best customers to talk about you. In B2B, using social media to energize customers around user meetings and conferences is a great example of making social media produce results. Depite restrictions on travel due to the economy, Sonic Foundry boosted Unleash 2009 attendance by 15%, and created a healthy pipeline of opportunity riding in on the coattails of this event.

4) Help your customers support each other. Social tools will accelerate the transformation of support forums from simple question/answer tools to communities where business-minded individuals network, share best practices, and seek business-oriented advice. In EDR’s case, commonground — a communityfor environmental professionals – resulted in over 90% of its customers giving EDR’s service a big thumbs up.

5) Encourage your customers spread success. In B2B, community succeeds when participation gets customers in a market — or users within buying organizations — to help others to adopt a product or service. ComplianceOnline, which I have written about previously, demonstrates this very well by attracting 500,000 subscribers, allowing members to share/purchase each other’s services, and generating approximately 30% of MetricStream’s leads.

6) Embrace customer ideas and suggestions. Ask customers for their opinions and ideas, and you will likely be overwhelmed with a huge number of responses. This was a hard category to judge because most of the submissions seemed to prove this conventional wisdom. Archer Technologies stood apart because, in their entry, they talked about how 2400 members contributed 1529 ideas resulting in new mobile and continuity products. That’s how to use the social power of your customers to drive business.

Will you join me in congratulating our new, B2B Groundswell Award winners?  And thank all of those who participated, especially after I badgered — uh, “reminded” you to do so . . .

And let me know about other B2B examples you find winning in the groundswell; I’d love to hear — and share — more.

Social Media Use Soars Among B2B Marketers: Really?

On July 20, BtoB Magazine, in conjunction with the Association of National Advertisers (ANA) published findings from the June 2009 online survey of 172 client-side marketers, 77 self-identified as primarily targeting B2B.  You can find the online version of the article here.

My colleague Josh Bernoff spoke at the ANA/BtoB conference today, called “B-toB Marketing in the New World“, and dropped me a quick note to say that his presentation — where he talked about “The Social Imperative in B2B Marketing” – was well received. He also shared an offhand remark along the lines of “those B2B marketers could sure use your help.”

At first, I found Josh’s comment a bit out of kilter with the title of the BtoB Magazine article, “Social media use soars among b-to-b marketers”. How can Forrester’s leading expert on social media strategy, co-author of Groundswell, find the ANA audience needing to know more about how to use social media successfully?  Then it dawned on me: use and success are not necessarily the same here.

The online article doesn’t include a key chart from the physical publication. The chart shows the percentage of b-to-b marketers using, or planning to use, the following “newer media” platforms.  (Again, planning and doing are two different things.) Reading directly from the July 20 chart, the data looks like this:

Your own Web site = 99%, email marketing = 94%, SEO-organic = 79%, Online ads/banners = 73%, SEM-paid search = 71%, Webinars = 66%, Social networks/social media = 57% (question: why lump these two together?), RSS feeds = 46%, Viral video = 42%, Podcasts = 38%, Video-on-demand and Wikis = 36% each, and Mobile, Gaming and Second Life bringing up the rear at 18%, 7% , and 6% respectively.

Surprisingly, not too different from Forrester survey findings published earlier this year. (See Figure 6 in particular).

The title touts the main finding, that among the 77 who responded, 57% of b-to-b marketers in this survey say they are using social media as a marketing tactic (remember, this is labeled as social network/social media), up from a mere 15% in 2007.

But let’s look at the numbers a little more closely: the first 6 items in rank order are not typically considered “social” media, but rather interactive tactics that many marketers have embraced gradually during the past number of years.

I think combining social networks and social media gums things up a bit because most marketers look at things like blogs, podcasts, microblogging (Twitter), open social networks (Facebook, LinkedIn, etc.), wikis, and even video as the more “social” tactics emerging in the new campaign toolbox. So, having a corporate blog, for example, could lead respondents to say “yes, I am using social media,” and inflate the number a bit.

I’m guessing subscribers to the ANA can get a final version of the report and look at the data directly. But this article highlights how — despite the hype — “social media” is an emerging concept and the definition of what is “in” social media (and what is not) is not commonly shared.

What is more interesting is a paragraph from the August 3 press release published by the ANA prior to the start of the conference.  To quote, it says:

“In 2009, the most effective newer media platforms were as follows: Search engine marketing (SEM) (65 percent), Own Web site (59 percent), Search engine optimization (SEO) (55 percent), E-mail marketing (45 percent).”

Ah, so when evaluating whether these marketing approaches are ”effective,” the “social” media don’t yet meet a majority of B2B marketer expectations. While use is soaring, that use is still fairly experimental, and questions about how this activity pays of in direct business value begin to arise.

Today, Josh told the Chicago conference audience, “to reach B2B buyers with social technologies, concentrate on objectives.” This is a key theme in Groundswell, a tenant of our POST method for setting social strategy, and the principle behind Social Technographics – you have to understand how your audience engages in social activity, and what you want to achieve by engaging with them, to make social media succeed.

Perhaps the most interesting points were made by several of readers who left comments about the July 20 article online, in particular Liz Stott, Marketing Strategist, Penton Media.  You should read the whole thread, but I can’t help but quote Liz to close this post:

“My only word of caution to marketers would be to determine if your prospects/customers are really using SM for business decisions, before you dedicate full time employees to community building roles. Marketers see SM as “free” – but it’s not free at all, especially when you consider the Value of Time, and the high costs associated with community building personnel.”

Couldn’t of said it better myself.

B2B Marketers: Where Are Your Groundswell Award Submissions?

At the end of May, we opened up nominations for the 2009 Forrester Groundswell awards.  Well, the contest closes SEPTEMBER 2 — that’s less than a month away — and so far we have just 4 (ONLY 4!?!) submissions in the B2B categories. C’mon folks, I know there are plenty of B2B marketers out there doing interesting things in social media. You now have less time to submit, so shake out of the summer doldrums and show us how you use social media to listen to, talk with, energize, and spread success among your customers and prospects.

Just to refresh your memories, this year the Forrester award committee divided the categories for the prototypical groundswell objectives (listening, talking, energizing, supporting, embracing) into business-to-consumer (B2C) and business-to-business (B2B).

Specifically for B2B, we added a new category, “spreading,” to recognize social applications in which you promote ideas, products, or best practices to employees of a company, then get them to similarly promote their successes with others at that company or in their respective/broader industries — thus speeding adoption of your technologies or services through social channels and activities your customers engage in internally or through business partners.  Right now, we have 3 submissions in the Supporting category and 1 in Embracing.

That leaves a lot of room for more entries and more winners.

Share with other B2B marketers what you do to listen to customers and prospects tell you what they like and don’t like about your products or services.  How are you using social activity to talk with them via video, podcasts, integrated online media, and other social channels?  What are you doing to energize customers — and encourage them to join and participate in your events like IBM did with LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, and a myriad of other social venues at their May 2009 IMPACT conference?

Big companies or small, if you sell highly-considered products with long sales cycle through direct or partner channels, it time to share your social media successes and nominate your campaign, online site, community, or marketing programs for a 2009 Groundswell award.

The submission form is here. And mark your calendars: the entry deadline is September 2, 2009.

(You can also check out the current award submissions on the Groundswell site; might give you some ideas about what other firms are doing.)

Sharing Social Media Insights With Business.com

Through LinkedIn and Twitter, the folks at Business.com found me and invited me to interview with Ben Hanna, VP of Marketing, on the B2B Online Marketing Blog. I met Ben Hanna when he was at eBay and I was writing a report about best practices in B2B search marketing. I found his perspectives grounded in reality and jumped at the change to speak with him again.

Ben wanted to get the “big picture” perspective on the B2B social media opportunity and found Forrester’s groundbreaking study, that I authored with G. Oliver Young, of how business technology buyers use social media. He thought it was a wake-up call for B2B marketers, and asked me to share perspectives that any marketer looking to better understand B2B social media would value.  Here is what we talked about:

Ben Hanna: I’ve had this experience, and I’m sure you have it all the time – an experienced B2B marketer comes up to you and asks “I keep hearing about social media, Facebook, Twitter and all that. Is any of this relevant for B2B marketing today?” How do you respond?

Laura Ramos: Social media is clearly relevant for B2B marketing today for two reasons. First, at Forrester we’ve studied how B2B buyers participate socially and found that participation is much higher than U.S. adults in general. Second, business buyers are always looking for new sources of information and are actively turning to social media channels these days for information to support their purchasing decisions.  Using social media to engage your target business buyer audience may seem daunting, but it’s possible to be successful if you focus first on your audience and what you want to accomplish by engaging with that audience socially.

Ben Hanna: How is B2B social media marketing different than B2C?

Laura Ramos: Today, most of the B2B social media is buzzing around the front of the sales funnel – about driving awareness. However, I expect that B2B social media will ultimately have a much bigger impact on the end of the funnel – on things like customer loyalty and advocacy.  For example, take the idea of customer references which are so integral to much of business buying. With social media, you can give customers a way to engage with other customers and like-minded individuals and talk about how to best use your products and services. Seeing a community like this is a much more compelling experience for prospective buyers than a written case study or a brief call to a pre-selected happy customer.

In addition, because trust is so important in business buying, I think we’ll see the user side of B2B social media gravitate to gated, private experiences. Rather than throwing out your question to the world as folks do today on so many social networking sites, you’ll direct your question to people in specific industries, specific roles, etc. or be able to filter responses to your question by these characteristics. In B2B, it’s about connecting with ‘people like me who have experience I trust’ – not strangers.

Ben Hanna: How has Web 2.0 changed the B2B marketing landscape and sales process?

Laura Ramos: The landscape has changed a lot and will change more. I see B2B activity shifting from using social media in ‘broadcast mode’ to get the word out like you might do with a press release, to actively looking for prospects on social media sites.    There’s tremendous activity right now because social media is a novelty to the B2B world. I hear, ‘Oh yeah – now we use social media to do cold calling!’ However, novelty does not last over the long haul.  For B2B companies, social success will be about creating community – offering your customer base different levels of access for different levels of participation and advocacy. The relationship is what’s important, not the channel.

Ben Hanna: It’s a challenge for B2B marketers to look at a new communication channel and not immediately focus on how we can use that channel to broadcast our message. You’re saying we need to make that shift in mindset from pushing information out to thinking about how to use social media technologies to foster interaction among our community of customers and prospects. Is that right?

Laura Ramos: That’s correct. Business buyers get hundreds of emails a day and then there’s Twitter, Facebook and everything else that contributes to information overload. You can keep layering on more messages from more channels but, then folks start to tune out. People are going to want to listen to people they know they can trust – and not just people they know directly, but people that have similar backgrounds, experiences, or who faced similar challenges in the past.

We advise our clients to start with objectives and think about how social media will change your relationship with customers. In B2B, the first objective is listening. A lot of people want to jump right into talking but when they do, no one listens or talks back.  For example, look at many corporate blogs. Who’s the audience? Everyone online? That doesn’t work, so blog authors find it hard to get people to listen and comment. B2B marketers who get blogging right succeed because they have a very clear understanding of their target audience.

To listen the right way, marketers need social monitoring tools to help them figure out what’s being said about their company and brands online and in traditional channels. It’s important for B2B marketers researching social listening tools to understand that there’s both a technology and service component to these solutions right now. While it can seem straightforward to just search for brand mentions, you can easily miss something important since people use jargon, abbreviations, etc. and the tool and service should help you sort all of that out.

Ben Hanna: Are many B2B companies using social monitoring tools today?Laura Ramos: The number is growing. Nielsen BuzzMetrics, TNS Cymfony, Visible Technologies and Radian6 are ones I hear mentioned most frequently.

Ben Hanna: I’m seeing two different perspectives on B2B social media during the current recession – on the one hand there’s great interest, but we also know that companies are cutting back on marketing programs without proven ROI. Do you expect the vision of social media as an efficient communications channel to drive rapid adoption in B2B, or do you expect companies to hold back?

Laura Ramos: Our data shows that both buyers and marketers believe they need to move to more digital channels. Social media channels definitely attract interest because of the economy, but B2B companies that get started find social media to be relatively expensive terms of resources and time commitment.

Ben Hanna: So it sounds like you’re seeing companies wrestle with the question “We need to do this but how to do we get started in this challenging environment?”

Laura Ramos: It’s actually very easy to get started with social media by starting a blog, creating a Twitter account, participating in discussions on social networking sites or staring a wiki. The tough part is figuring out what the second step is. Starting a blog is easy, but it’s a different story when you realize you need at least 1-2 high quality posts per week, need to engage readers in discussion, build traffic, and keep them coming back.

Ben Hanna: What advice would you give to a B2B company that wants to develop a social media strategy?

Laura Ramos: Follow Forrester’s POST methodology. People. Objectives, Strategy, Tools. I’ve already mentioned people and objectives, so strategy is about how you’re going to measure and execute. Unfortunately, many marketers want to jump to the tools first. Instead, go check out your own Web site – that will become the center of your social media universe. If your Web site is all about broadcasting how great your company and products or services are, rather than inviting engagement and participation by your customers and prospects, then your Web site is not going to be a place community members are going to want to hang out.

Forrester has done over 1,000 website reviews – many of these B2B sites. Our scores on B2B Web sites show they lag behind B2C sites because they promote the company and products too much and fail to engage an audience. Consumer sites have had to be more engaging because they are more transaction-focused. The best Web site experience helps people achieve their goals, it doesn’t talk nonstop about your features and capabilities. So fix your website – it’s not about usability, it’s about making hard business choices.

Another thing is segmentation. Who are you going to talk to in these social channels? Most high tech companies just want to address to whomever comes by – they don’t want to limit their positioning by providing clear value-messages targeted to specific segments. However, you simply can’t talk effectively to everyone. What are you going to help them achieve? When you are more precise about segmentation and targeting, your marketing – and social conversation — gets better.

Ben Hanna: What are some good ‘get started now’ tips for B2B marketers who want to take the social media plunge?

Laura Ramos: First, pick an audience. Understand who you’re going to talk to. Listen, talk with them online, and use those experiences to shape your strategy. Don’t be afraid to go out and talk to sales and support people in your company as well to get a better understanding of your target audience. You don’t always need fancy tools to get started, and you can do a lot with TweetDeck, Google Analytics, and systematic searches on your product names. This will tell you whether you need to invest further in tools that I mentioned earlier.
Second, put together an editorial calendar for any social activity that creates content. Know not only what you want to say now, but what you want to say later, and how you’ll build upon those later topics or issues. Always know where you’ll take it next.

Ben Hanna: Do you have examples of B2B companies that are doing really well with social media today?

Laura Ramos: IBM is a great example of a company that started using social media to broadcast but now there’s a real interest in how to create community – a logical next step with a tech audience used to online forums and bulletin boards. I see IBM making the transition from ‘let’s use these tools for tech talk’, to ‘let’s have our customers tell our story.’

Cisco is engaging in social media and communication as well, and is proving to be a real B2B social media innovator as they launch products only on digital channels. Early on, I would say, Cisco focused too much on broadcasting their message and not enough on measuring sales results. For example, they launched a product on Second Life but when we asked, ‘How many more units did you sell as a result?’ they couldn’t really give us an answer because it is hard to trace the impact this social activity through their channel. Did they sell a lot of product? Sure. Did social media help to do that? Don’t know yet.

Ben Hanna: Great question since there’s debate about whether B2B companies should look at social media as simply an awareness driving activity or whether there must be a tangible connection to revenue. What would you say – should B2B companies let social media off the hook for driving sales?

Laura Ramos: No, I don’t think we should let social media off the hook. As engagement and community activity increases, the positive vibe influences sales because there’s proof that shared experiences of loyal customers are real and prospects can see that the claims the company makes about its products/services are trustworthy.

That said, I think that’s hard to connect social media to revenue. I don’t want to appear critical about Cisco, because understanding social media’s impact is a hard thing to figure out. Cisco’s launch goals focused on awareness and consideration but the challenge they faced is one every company eventually faces – you only have so many dollars to spend on marketing, so how do you split these across the marketing mix? To answer this companies will need to know if a dollar spent on social channels gets you more revenue than a dollar spent on traditional channels I’ve only seen IBM demonstrate that they can measure how social activity helps them to increase event attendance and extend event lifespan and value.

In B2B marketing, we always focus on the sales funnel – how do we attract and close deals. What we don’t realize is that inside customer organizations, there’s another funnel, but it’s flipped around. A small group of employees figure out they have business problems they must to solve, and they need  the products or services they apply to solving those business problems to get wide adoption inside their firms. How do we, as B2B marketers, help not only our direct customers successfully deploy new technology purchases, but also help their organization adopt the new technology more quickly and effectively? Social media holds great promise in B2B for creating this type of internal community and for efficiently sharing those ideas that make it possible to speed up the adoption process and create lasting customer loyalty.

New: Social Buyer Profiles and Groundswell Nomiations for B2B

Social media continues to be a hot topic in 2009. If you have been following my posts on this subject, here are two developments that may interest you.

Try Out Forrester B2B Buyer Social Profile Tool

Social media give a voice to buyers who can now describe their experiences, accomplishments, and disappointments to a global audience. Earlier this year, Oliver Young and I published Forrester’s first research describing the social behavior of technology business buyers. We surveyed more than 1,200 business technology buyers and found that they exceed all previous benchmarks for social participation.

If you’d like to know how social media fits into the marketing mix based on how willing your target customers are to engage in social activity, can use the Social Technographics® profiles of B2B buyers tool. This tool can help decision-makers to design marketing programs that not only capitalize on emerging social behaviors but also fundamentally change the nature of the marketing relationship between B2B buyers and sellers. Try it out for yourself and let me know what you think.

Forrester’s Nominations for Groundswell Awards Are Now Open

For the third year in a row, Forrester will recognize the most effective social technology applications at the Forrester Groundswell Awards. Starting now, anyone is free to submit an entry and I’d like to encourage those of you using social media in your business marketing efforts to consider doing so.

The submission form is here. The entry deadline is September 2, 2009.

If you’re going to enter, please read the Forrester Groundswell Awards Rules before submitting your entry. You can submit each entry only once, and once submitted, you cannot modify it. Sorry, but that’s the rule.  I plan to blog and write about the most interesting ones, regardless of who wins. Although, judging from past winners, this year is bound to include many new and interesting examples.

This year the Forrester award committee divided the categories for the prototypical groundswell objectives (listening, talking, energizing, supporting, embracing) into business-to-consumer (B2C) and business-to-business (B2B). Specifically for B2B, we added a new category, “spreading,” to recognize social applications in which you sell ideas or products to employees of a company, then get them to sell others at that company — thus speeding adoption of your technologies or service sthrough social channels and activities your customers engage in internally. Besides the objectives categories, we also include a category for pro-social applications (“social impact”) and applications within an enterprise (“managing”).

That’s 13 categories in total, so while we expect even more entries than the 150 we received last year, there are more ways to win this year. To learn more about the awards and how to submit your applications, please visit the Groundswell microsite.

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