How Will Social Media Impact Your Business

by Eric Tsai

I saw a video on the State of Social CRM post on Web Strategy by Jeremiah Owyang in which Paul Greenberg talks about how companies are having difficulties with cultural changes internally to execute against the new bread of customer, the social customer.

In case you don’t know what CRM is, it’s Customer Relationship Management as described in Wikipedia as a “technology that allows companies to organize, automate, and synchronize business processes—principally sales activities, but also those for marketing, customer service, and technical support. The overall goals are to find, attract, and win new clients, nurture and retain those the company already has, entice former clients back into the fold, and reduce the costs of marketing and client service.”

What an ear full!

My version would be just an application that keeps track of customer facing activities so you can find the gaps in your service and make adjustments to be more efficient.

The point both Jeremiah and Paul are making is that businesses are still figuring out how to integrate CRM and Social Media so the combination provides meaningful business value.

The shift in how customers use social media is forcing companies to add the social element into their CRM system. They’re both spot on.

It also raises the question that if you’re not in the business of generating value and serving to keep the customer, then what are you in business for?

Social media encourages interaction which leads to generating a new type of intelligence that CRM system were not tracking before. Data such as reactions, activities, sentiments, locations, behavior and preference are converging providing a never seen before clear picture of each customer.

So how does this change the dynamics of your business moving forward?

Well, for one thing you have more leverage as a result of having more available data to target your niche and identify your prospects. In fact, as social CRM matures, I would expect to see companies shift their corporate strategy to ensure that every aspect of customer touch point is aligned with their marketing and sales strategy.

And this is the reason why it requires a true “cultural” change, a mindset really, for businesses to not just think from the perspective of their customer but to become their customer, to feel and empathize with them.

Furthermore, this would mean that the employees may have to do the same by constantly thinking and enhancing the customer experience to the fullest. Instead of just using tools to do sentiment analysis by listening in on what customers are saying, companies can anticipate what customers will say and do before they’ve done it.

Checkout how Salesforce is making their CRM social with Twitter.

This would probably be the ideal desire outcome for most businesses: to proactively facilitate prospects and customers toward a market funnel and minimize customer frustration as problems are addressed before they happen.

Imagine a prospect is interested in finding out more about your product before a purchase, not only would you be able to answer questions using social CRM data to anticipate them, but to personalize your communication and create real-time offering to increase the rate of conversion.

By delivering relevant communication crafted with exactly what the customers want at the right place at the right time, this will be the next phase of effective social influence marketing.

The take away: It is important to recognize this emerging trend in CRM and social media. Even though a cultural shake out would be necessary for companies to fully utilize the benefits of social CRM, it would be wise to start making some basic evaluation of how going social may impact your operations and bottom line.

What’s needed to make that jump and if you’re already using a CRM system, think how you can rally your staff to start thinking about new marketing processes and research more on how you can streamline social media into your CRM.

Technology Paradigm Shifts How We Work

by Eric Tsai

We are in the middle of a second major paradigm shift in IT (information technology).  This is not about simply going from web1.0 to web2.0, but something that’s going to have a major impact on how we work. I am referring to the disruptive force of “cloud computing.

I’ve been focusing on brand strategies in the technology sector for quite some time now and I’ve seen some resemblance in cloud computing hype similar to that of social media on the web.  Further investigation led me to identify some of the underlying implications and the cumulative impact of them on businesses.

605px-Cloud_computing.svg

Image courtesy of Wikipedia

Primary Characteristics

Cloud computing is basically a dynamic computing environment that’s delivered over the internet with on-demand resources that are scalable and flexible. In the old days businesses had to purchase hardware, software and then hire IT staff to manage them.  With cloud computing, you simply pay for the service on a per usage model, as known as software-as-a-service (SaaS).

Benefits: Eliminate the risk of owning and maintaining software, hardware and hiring resources. It allows business to shift from capital expense to operating expense (think of it as leasing instead of buying) typically with little to no upfront costs.

Concerns: Still in the early stage of the hype cycle, unproven ROI, and slim margins.  Market is not completely ready to accept this model, but few early adopters have incorporated cloud with existing infrastructure forming a hybrid hosting model.

Social Media is a dynamic publishing technology that’s highly accessible and scalable taking place on the internet. Traditionally, brands have mostly monologues with their customers via old media such as TV, newspaper, magazines and PR.  With social media, you have real-time dialogues (such as Twitter) that encourage interactions allowing people to connect globally to form relationships.

Benefits: Potentially an inexpensive low barrier to entry marketing vehicle compare to traditional media channel. Allow businesses to expand their reach and own their channel of media distribution. Great for customer relationship management, reputation management, and has the ability to go viral.

Concerns: Also in the early stage of the hype cycle with indirect, difficult to measure ROI.  Consumers aren’t all ready to use social media to communicate with brands, and there is a lack stickiness in user adoption (with the exception of Facebook maybe).  Brands that had success leveraging social media use it in the hybrid marketing model in conjunction with traditional media.

There are some similar characteristics with both cloud computing and social media.  Mainly both are fresh concepts that challenge the traditional mindsets. In addition, both adoptions are accelerated by the current economic downturn forcing companies to reduce financial and operational risks associated with technology (so going with cloud makes more economic sense) while evaluating new ways to market  their products and services (more cost-effective brand strategies).

Frankly I find it interesting that one of the earliest form of cloud computing is ironically the first online social media tool – email.

When I created my very first email account on MSN Hotmail back in 1995, little did I know that’s the first form of cloud computing. Since then I’ve been socializing with family and friends sending emails back and forth, reading replies like comments on a blog post, or simply write short messages in the subject line without content similar to micro-blogging.

Today, email is mostly delivered via the cloud (over the internet) and is arguably the original online social media tool.

Relevance to Businesses

Even in these cost-conscious times, the moniker “trusted advisor” or “trusted brand” still holds value as customer relationship is the top priorities for many businesses. This is why social media became an attractive tool for companies now because it’s all about servicing the customers and optimizing client engagement. End users look to experts to guide them via the decision making process of purchasing branded products and services.

As the IT landscape continues to evolve, we need to rethink how we work, how we sell, the tools we use and the processes we implement.

Nobody wins competing on price alone, even private label brands are thriving by providing excellent value-for-money propositions against premium brands.  We have entered into a new era of converged technologies where IT solutions are driven by business needs and management needs to focus on building meaningful trusted relations moving forward.

The secret is to stay relevant with IT and seek new ways to abstract value out of your business.

This is the time to strengthen your brand and focus on your brand strategy.  Review your operational status and plan for future growth is the key to success when economy starts to rebound.