B2B Brand Voice Speaks through Social Media — Successfully

Yesterday, Xerox retired the ACS brand. It was a huge day for our brand team.  The culmination of a lot of work. 

Did Xerox put out a big press release?  Call up the Wall Street Journal?  The local news?  No. 

Our CMO, Christa Carone (@ChristaBC) explained the change to the world in a simple, well-written blog post.  I point this out because it’s a wonderful use of social media to help get out some news that not all of the mainstream media may consider newsworthy. The post also offers B2B marketers two important lessons:

1)  Top B2B brand masters can stay on message AND come across as personal.  Of course, this is a subjective assessment that you may debate. Some may find the post language a bit arrogant.  Others may find it reflective of the pride many of us feel for the Xerox brand and our story.  (I know Christa feels this way, deeply.) However you view it,  I think a clever, engaging, pithy voice comes through clearly that, while representing brand message, tells a unique and interesting story about why we will ask the ACS brand to ride off into the sunset. I also know that this post reflects Christa’s voice, not that of a Xerox agency.

2) Sometimes a personal touch is all that’s needed for a big event.  Sure we talked to the analysts and Wall Street beforehand, handled millions of internal inquiries, and armed our account managers with letters and talk tracks to enable them to explain this change to Xerox and ACS clients alike. But it’s also nice to hear from the head lady behind the change about what it means to Xerox, in a voice that respects the significance of the event but remains true to her role as the chief marketer. And to hear it through a medium that is geared toward social sharing, not just broadcasting.

So here’s a big “hats off ” to Christa for demonstrating one great way for a B2B, Fortune 150 brand to use social media to lend a little insight into an important company milestone.

Top 10 List of Social Marketing Practices to Avoid in 2012

Copyright 2011 Cisco Systems: Reproduced with Permission.

Everywhere you look, folks offer B2B marketers social media marketing advice. (In fact, I’m guilty of that!)

But how about a few lessons on what NOT to do?

Petra Neiger leads the Center of Social Media Excellence at Cisco Systems. I met her through the SVESMC and, this past week, she joined me for a panel that I moderated on Forecast 2012: The Challenges and Opportunities with Social Business

During our talk, she mentioned this clever, tongue-in-cheek blog post that she wrote recently with another Cisco colleague about those special practices guaranteed to give any marketer nightmares. 

I think the graphic is a scream, so with her permission, I include it here.  (Hint: You can turn each of these nightmares into a best practice by doing the opposite…)

From a mainstream B2B marketer’s perspective, here are five more “worst practices” that I’d like to add to Cisco’s list:

1) Switch to social media from traditional online and physical media because, well, social is “free”!  Did you ever count up the hours people spend (and waste) on this medium? Or what kind of effort it takes to keep a blog interesting?  Or a Twitter handle active? Still think it’s cheap?

2) Start a Facebook fan page and wonder why only your employees like it.  Lesson: Facebook is a social networking site, not a substitute for a Web destination. Search engines don’t pick up the content you put there as readily as they do Web pages. And if you don’t do anything social, like offer promotions, coupons, contests, games, funny/ironic observations, controversy, etc., few will notice.

3) Use Twitter to promote business services that require assessments and have long sales cycles. (https://twitter.com/XeroxMPS)  After about 20 tweets, what can you really say that’s interesting and specific enough to garner a following?

4) Encourage your sales and service people to get involved in social media.  Lesson: except for LinkedIn, this idea stands a snowball’s chance in Hades on so many levels.  (Customer support is another matter, however.)

5) However, do let your sales executives blog.  Especially when clients might find the posts just a little bit insulting. See: Why does everyone hate us?   And the winner is….  So things are looking better or aren’t they  (Enough said.)

Here’s hoping your social media marketing plans continue to shape up well for 2012. Remember: True success is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration — so keep experimenting with your social marketing, but keep the client in mind as you do.

SVForum Marketing SIG Hosts SVESMC Community to Talk about Social Business

Like the title of this post? I’m trying to fit in all the right buzz words and acronyms to describe a panel discussion that I will moderate December 12.

Speaking of buzz words, here’s one that has become so broad and overused as to be practically meaningless: SOCIAL MEDIA.

For all the hype and interest around social media in B2B marketing, a realistic survey of the landscape shows that there’s more talk than actual practice and, of those practicing it, most aren’t getting the results they expect. To go beyond “social media 101″ — and the useless puzzling over whether to use Twitter, LinkedIn or some other platform is the right choice for B2B marketing — a group of folks that I highly respect will get together during a meeting of the SVForum’s marketing special interest group and talk about the challenges and opportunities for making business more social in 2012.

You can register for the event at the SVForum site, or learn more about the panel from this great blog post by Mark Helfen. The event takes place Monday, December 12 at EMC’s 2831 Mission College Blvd address in Santa Clara.

As business moves beyond social media to social interaction, many B2B marketers still struggle to understand where social fits in daily business activity. As social spreads from early-adopter, technical enthusiasts through marketing, sales, customer support, and product/service development, business people need to consider how to use social to collaborate with customers and support, engage, and delight them. And how to include technology partners, channels, and suppliers in the process. And how to do this without adding unwanted risk to the business.

The Silicon Valley Enterprise Social Media Council (SVESMC) is an informal community of social practitioners who influence strategy or lead programs at predominant valley companies like Adobe, CA, Cisco, eBay/PayPal, Symantec, and Xerox. We don’t claim to know everything about social media or to have solved all of its intractable problems.  But we will share our perspectives on where we have been successful, where we’ve fallen short, and where we believe the true future of social belongs in business.

If you are local to the Bay Area, please join us two Monday’s from now to hear first-hand about how social continues to shape corporate culture, customer interactions, and innovation in the fast pace of the valley. I promise an evening of interesting conversation with a few laughs thrown in. (But I can’t promise that the buzz words won’t flow freely…. see you there?)

Successes and Shortfalls of Marketing Technology: As Shared with the Milwaukee BMA

Xerox Document Services - Example of Thought Leadership on Sustainability

From social media to sales enablement, I have found new marketing technologies are abundant, often replacing established tools in the marketing programs and operations toolbox.  In my relatively brief time here at Xerox Document Services, we’ve enjoyed the opportunity — and challenge — of adopting a variety of new technologies with a mix of successes and shortfalls.

On November 10, I had the honor of delivering the keynote presentation to the Milwaukee chapter of the BMA. (The BMA is an organization I shamelessly plug to all B2B marketers.) I shared a few lessons that we’ve learned rolling out social media, lead management automation, and guided selling tools in our professional services organization where sales coverage runs the gamut from geography to industry.

It was a frank recounting of the challenges and problems many marketers face with new technology adoption across a range of programs, campaigns, and operations. It was the ”practical experience” view to the perspective  that Debbie Qaquish, Chief Revenue Officer of the Pedowitz Group, shared on how revenue marketers are changing the landscape of the industry through lead management automation. 

You can find the presentation on the Milwaukee BMA site, scroll to the bottom as the presentation is the last one featured on this page.  In it I talk about:

1) The state of B2B marketing and how the explosion of online tactics has made it harder for marketing to escape the execution treadmill and demonstrate its true value to the business.

2) How Xerox Document Services uses an online destination and social media to share thought leading perspectives from some of our key executives.  On this site, we talk about sustainability, change management, transforming enterprise marketing, innovation, and the future of documents.  Topics completely unrelated to copiers and printing.

3) Demand generation and lead management: how we use industry experts and clear, specific targeting to develop a perspective on key issues — like the future of the insurance industry — and share these with current clients and prospects. And how we keep the conversation going.

4) A cautionary note about guided selling and sales enablement and how the most exciting new technologies may be a bit much for your sales people to digest in one swallow.  Instead start with something they know (powerpoint slides) and give them a tool that enhances their effectiveness and professionalism when presenting in front of clients.

I also shared the following lessons with the 40 or so BMA members and guests who joined us for dinner and the evening presentation:

  • We are never finished.  Technology makes many new marketing approaches possible, but you have to keep feeding the machine.
  • Choose carefully, understand impact/risks of the new technology approaches you want to try.
  • Get inside your business financials to select metrics. If your programs and technology don’t show results in the language of business, you will fail to gain support.
  • Partner with sales, but gain senior management support. If the “big boss” doesn’t demonstrate both interest in and commitment to your implementations, then the road to success will be long and difficult.
  • Focus on audience and objectives first, the rest will follow. This is the POST principle.
  • People, process, and change management are more important than technology. Technology for technology’s sake is never a good thing.
  • Content generation is biggest success factor and hurdle. Figure out how to keep the content coming.
  • Use reporting to improve marketing, not just “prove” it.
  • Don’t be afraid to fail.

If you can relate to the contents in the presentation, let me know how.  Also, join your local chapter of the BMA. It’s a wonderful organization that I know helps to improve the business marketing profession.

I’m “Honored” To Be A “Top 25 Digital Marketer”

Here's the award and plaque -- nice, huh?

Last week I had the pleasure to join 17 senior executive B2B marketers at the Julia Morgan Ballroom at the Merchants Exchange in San Francisco for the BtoB Magazine Top Digital Marketer awards luncheon. This event truly brought together a ”who’s who” of business marketing professionals. I thought I would share a picture of the awards with you in this post. 

I was humbled to share the stage with Scott Anderson from Hewlett-Packard, Julia Atalla from Microsoft, Kevin Cox from SAP, Pam Didner from Intel, Paola Dovera from Sybase, Martyn Etherington from Tektronix Inc. — many of whom I’ve met through BtoB Magazine events or from my prior experiences with Forrester — along with others from Corning, Oppenheimer Funds, National Starch, Intuit, Motorola Solutions, AT&T, USG , Cisco, Makino and American Express OPEN. The stars were certainly out in the afternoon that day.

Congratulations go to Linda Boff, executive director-global digital marketing at GE, who was named BtoB’s Top Digital Marketer of the Year.

After lunch, Linda and the honorees assembled on stage for a panel discussion where BtoB’s Kate Maddox asked each of us to comment on the following two questions:

What is one important lesson you’ve learned about using social media for marketing?  Of course, no one could limit their advice to one lesson. I followed the crowd and said “know your audience — and understand whether they are socially active” and “relevant, rich content is the key to attracting those active, online audiences”.  If you don’t have something of value to share, it won’t get noticed in the social media world.

As you look to next year, where will you invest in online marketing?   I said, “Video.”  Used in two ways: for thought leadership (to demonstrate Xerox Document Services unique, executive points of view) and to tell our customer/success stories. I also said database and analytics because online allows you to be much more targeted, but you need to know HOW to be more targeted.  Data is the cornerstone to that success.

If you would like to learn more, check out the recorded video responses to these questions at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=msZxDnNaYG0  and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NvKGfkTWm8E

During the award presentation, BtoB singled out Xerox Document Services digital marketing work in thought leadership, customer testimonial, and industry blogging as highlights of our digital achievement.

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.

SVESMC Brings Bay Area Social Media Execs Together

Like you, I get hundreds of invitations to join LinkedIn Groups.  As a B2B marketer interested in industry services marketing and the implications of social media on an integrated marketing mix, I find very few of these groups to include true peers. Instead, these groups appear full of consultants wanting to make connections and peddle their services to larger organizations. It’s hard to find true affinity in LinkedIn groups and more rare to find one that functions as a true community.

The exception I have found is the Silicon Valley Executive Social Media Council (SVESMC). 

Ted Sapountzis, VP of Social Media Audience Marketing at SAP, introduced me to this group after we met for lunch in December of last year.  Ted and I met previously when we spoke on a Global Social CRM panel moderated by Esteban Kolsky in September at Cisco’s TelePresence Suites in Santa Clara. Social networking maven and meet-up extraordinaire, Tanya Kanzaveli, found me and extended the invitation. (I agreed to speak on the panel to experience Telepresence first-hand, if truth be told.)  

I am very glad Ted introduced me to SVESMC. This group works for me is because it starts with personal connections and then leads to the online world, not the other way around. As an example of another personal connection, Gurmeet Dhaliwal, VP of Internet Marketing at CA, who also spoke on that same panel is a member of SVESMC as well.  (Do you start to see how this networking thing works….?)

SVESMC’s mission is to help members create the most effective, extraordinary social media programs possible. It is a private community for social media leaders at predominantly high-tech, large companies. Through the Council, members share insights, ideas, and best practices in a peer-to-peer environment. Members hold conversations under strict confidentiality, allowing for open and candid discussions. There are no vendors, no sales pitches, and no outside “experts” — just honest advice and dialogue.  I like that.

Last week, SAP hosted the first summit for this council. Natascha Thomson wrote a great blog post summarizing the event. For me, the highlight was Ted’s talk about how SAP developed a marketing “dashboard” for measuring the impact of social activity around developer/user events in a business-meaningful manner (note: nothing confidential exposed here). If you’d like to know more, apply to Natascha to join the group (natascha.thomson@sap.com).  The group is closed — so you have to hunt for it on LinkedIn — and it takes the confidentiality promise very seriously. 

If you join, I hope to see you at an upcoming dinner, summit, or meet-up sometime soon.  Or to connect virtually through the group site on LinkedIn. Virtual or in-person, if you are responsible for social media strategy or execution at your firm – and want to connect with others who share the same enthusiasm and concerns around this new communication medium – this group is for you.

Twitter Popularity May Soar, but the Noise-to-Value Ratio Remains High

Sysomos, a Marketwire company that provides social media monitoring and analytics capability, recently published an interesting study it conducted on Twitter´s growth in 2010. In comparing Twitter usage between 2009 and 2010, they found:

  • Users with 100+ friends have increased by three-fold to 21% since 2009.
    (Note: I’m assuming “friends” means “friends on Facebook”, but I could be wrong.)
  • 22.5% of users accounted for about 90% of all activity.
  • 80% users have made fewer than 500 tweets.
  • “Justin Bieber” is one of top two-word phrases and top name in user’s bios.
  • Significantly more users are disclosing their location, bio, and Web information in Twitter profiles.

For me, the second finding in the list is the most interesting – that just over 22% of Twitter users account for 90% of the tweets.  It’s amazing that the “old rule of thumb” — that 20% of any population accounts for 80% of the activity, consumption, or item of interest — applies here.   Even more, 80% of all Twitter users have tweeted fewer than 500 times in total. (I am not a heavy-duty tweeter and I’ve post more than 800 tweets in about 2 years of participation.) There are a few ambitious individuals who have tweeted over 100,000 times (one is a recruiter and the other is a writer, so maybe it’s possible they have that much to say.)

Looking at the bio descriptions, I am struck by the fact that the Twitter population, as judged by their bio terms alone, appear to be younger in age, female, self- or unemployed, and fascinated with pop culture (reference the”Justin Bieber” statistic above).  However, I find it interesting  that “marketing” was the 20th most popular single word descriptor, and “business” was the 26th.  Twitter participation reflects a dominant consumer population, and there is only a modicum of B2B activity that makes it to the top of the popularity list.  Sifting through the noise will continue to be a daunting task without a social monitoring capability.

Bottomline: Twitter is very early in its lifetime — and remains an interesting combination of social phenomenon and communication channel. According to the study, 44% of users joined Twitter between January 2010 and August 2010.  That’s a microsecond in the history of media. Maybe my analysis reflects my own biases, so please take a look at the Sysomos study and let me know what you think.

If you have seen another study specific to business use of Twitter, please post a comment with a pointer.  Or tweet it to me at @lauraramos.  Thanks in advance.

Holiday Cheer from Xerox’s Managed Print Wonderland

This is what I find both endearing and silly about working at an enormous company like Xerox. Folks taking time out from the daily grind to spread a little holiday cheer.  Click here to see what I’m talking about.

Amateur video production, singing that is a little off-tune, and cheesy staging – it defines the camaraderie and culture that is Xerox Corporation.  I especially like the fellow in the St. Nick hat.  This little video was making the rounds, so we decided to add it to Managing Print — A Xerox Page for Business, on Facebook.  There are three in total. Little did we know that these videos would become some of the most popular notes on our page, with over 2000 impressions each (compared to a few hundred that the typical post receives.)

The Xerox Services team started this Facebook page in the late summer to build awareness around our organization, our offerings, and capabilities. We also hoped the page would provide a forum for clients and professionals who manage print processes to engage with us and each other in dialogue about specific topics of interest in enterprise print management.

The goals of the page are simple:
Share best practices around client success, change management, cost reduction, and future trends in managing print.
Highlight all the great content available on Xerox.com from a popular, social destination.
Express our point-of-view and share our expertise.
Encourage open, active participation – building a community of like-minded enthusiasts is our ultimate desire.

Who would have thought that holiday carols would become part of these lofty objectives?  But therein lies the beauty of social media and the social network. Funny holiday songs — with the lyrics altered to talk about what we do in Xerox Services — are the type of content that draws the most attention and traffic. I think the two things lessons here are 1) video is a popular medium in B2B and B2C alike and 2) there’s no predicting what will become popular and what will not, so try a variety of approaches and content as you experiment with social media.

I hope you enjoy the videos as much as I do.  Happy holidays to you all and a very happy New Year!

SocialTech 2010: Building A Social Media Marketing Discipline At A Major Brand

Earlier this week, I had the good fortune to attend and participate in the first social media conference geared to B2B marketers. MarketingProfs sponsored an excellent event. I believe the 200+ who attended in person, and the 400 or so who listened in virtually, would agree. For a round-up of conference activities, here is a list of the best posts and articles I found on the event:

1) Ann Handley’s coverage of the event: http://www.mpdailyfix.com/the-state-of-the-b2b-marketer-in-social-media-3-trends-from-socialtech-2010/

2) Aaron Pearson from Weber Shandwick wrote a great post: http://www.b2bvoices.com/

3) #mptech daily read: http://paper.li/tag/mptech  (Search the #mptech tag on Twitter for more.)

For me, the price of admission was listening to Brian Ellefritz, Senior Director of Global Social Media Marketing, talk about his plans for creating a new social media marketing discipline at SAP. While “SAP” and “discipline” are synonymous to many, one might think that SAP’s top-down culture may struggle with the unruliness of social media a bit. To move SAP along, Brian adopted the “Social Engagement Journey” — a view of the stages large brands progress through when establishing social media marketing practices. Brian credits Sean O’Driscoll, and the team from Ant’s Eye View, with the concepts and framework he’s bringing to SAP.

According to Brian’s talk, the four stages along the Social Engagement Journey include:

Stage 1: Grass roots – characterized by lots of activity but little focus; lots of variation but little conformity. Individual teams pursue social media opportunities bottoms up. Charismatic personalities, who want to grab the spotlight as early adopters, tend to drive this stage where overarching strategy and leadership has yet to form.

To move along from Stage 1 to Stage 2, Brian offered the following observations and guidelines:

1) Find leadership – corporate entities like Legal and Marcom calm their social media concerns when adult supervision enters the room.

2) Don’t discourage the experimentation with too many rules or too much oversight.

3) Begin informal education – workshops – to form consensus around what needs to happen and how.

4) Increase and improve listening. In turn, better listening will improve content proficiency and efficiency.

5) Let standard tools and governance emerge. Grass roots teams find they need operational models, process, and a common tool platform to progress further.

Stage 2: Silos form – independent efforts start to coalesce around functional areas and some leadership, whether by design or accidental, starts to emerge. Co-opetition among silos can happen in this stage and can be disconcerting. Teams experiment with more tools, but a lack of focus on business objectives means processes have yet to align. Content generation continues to happen through enthusiasm and personal initiative more than strategy.

To mature Stage 2 activity, Brian suggested:

1) Don’t get caught up in inter-team competition. Those who stay true to good social principles – who walk the social talk – will rise to the top and others will adopt their ideas.

2) Progress tool strategies from ad hoc to formal vendor relationships and benefit from all the attendant training, support, etc.

3) Pay more attention to metrics. With tenures of 18 months or more, social media teams now need to answer tougher questions about investment returns and justification.

4) Focus on creating conversational content. Most marketers gear their writing around messages, lead generation, and holding prospects hostage to sales. Social marketing writers must get to know customers better and learn how to deliver content customers value.

5) Formalize roles. Social initiatives can no longer afford to run off of employee enthusiasm and activities executed during nights and weekends.

Stage 3: Operationalize – in this stage, the silos of activity merge, leaderships becomes clear, and the activity starts to feel more like marketing and less like chaos. Firms in this stage truly understand how their customers/prospects use social channels and engage with them in those channels. These firms also invest more in education and communication since practitioners now come from all areas of the business. Listening informs both tactics and strategy.

To evolve in this stage, companies should:

1) Focus training on roles and objectives, not just the tools. Instead of holding a “Twitter class”, sponsor “how to build a social conversation with <audience>” workshop.

2) Reset your listening strategy. Invest in tools like Visible or Radian 6 to learn more about where customer conversations happen, what your competitors are doing, and how strong your share of voice is. Use the data to determine where the market will take you next.

3) Advertise the heck out of successes, and invest in them further. Resist the temptation to focus on the laggards. Competition and public visibility will give them ample motivation to keep from being left behind.

4) Push silos of activity together. Create virtual teams of bloggers for example. Combine conventional email aliases and meetings with a community platform where practitioners can share successes, policies, and practices.

5) Don’t wait too long for governance to happen. Actively create discipline around strategy, ownership, priorities, and metrics.

Stage 4: Lifestyle – the ultimate stage is one where few firms reside today. Zappos may be the lone example of a company where social activity is part of it’s core structure and culture. Business units earn more autonomy to act socially based on business objectives, positive outcomes, and a common understanding of success examples. More rigor in metrics helps to keep employees engaged and competent in social discourse. In this stage, tools are optimized, systems are integrated, everyone buys in, and angels sing. (Well, the last won’t happen, but I wanted to see if you were still with me.)

A successful journey from social chaos to social engagement depends on many factors besides those outlined: your company culture, momentum, environment, funding, and the extent to which your audience is willing to engage with you socially. Yet, I think this model offers a good place for companies to assess their progress and to think about what they need to do strategically to move from one stage to the next.

Thanks for the enlightening talk, Brian, I really appreciated it!

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.