Tag Archives: social media

Social Media Reading List for 2010

Steve Cunningham of Polar Unlimited posted recently on Mashable with a list of Top 5 Must-Read Social Media Books – it was a great post and defines the books in terms of major lessons to be learned from each. Here is the list of books but read the post on Mashable for the full scoop.

  1. Trust Agents by Chris Brogan and Julien Smith
  2. The Whuffie Factor by Tara Hunt
  3. Six Pixels of Separation by Mitch Joel
  4. Crush It! by Gary Vaynerchuck
  5. The New Community Rules by Tamar Weinberg

It is a great reading list for 2010, but to be honest I will likely read more than that next year. So I will add 5 more books to my social media reading list in the new year. I am interested now in the needs of a very professional company and must employ social media within very strict confines while still fostering communication between vendors, clients and potential clients. I will base the rest of my reading list on these needs as the above list covers much of the basics.

6. The Corporate Blogging Book: Absolutely Everything You Need to Know to Get It Right by Debbie Weil

7. Facebook Cookbook: Building Applications to Grow Your Facebook Empire by Jay Goldmann (this is more for development, but it is social media development)

8. Email Marketing By the Numbers: How to Use the World’s Greatest Marketing Tool to Take Any Organization to the Next Level by Chris Baggott and Ali Sales

9. SocialCorp: Social Media Goes Corporate by Joel Postman

10. Building Social Web Applications: Establishing Community at the Heart of Your Site by Gavin Bell

socialnomics

What I am reading right now? Socialnomics: How social media transforms the way we live and do business by Erik Qualman and Winning Results with Google Adwords by Andrew Goodman (bought it at SES Toronto… forgot all about it until recently).

What is on your social media reading list for 2010?

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It’s In the Bag Duane Reade

Let’s face it, the past decade has not been so great for this “uniquely New York” drugstore and Duane Reade had to do some heavy damage control. Now, equipped with a new attitude towards customer service,  Duane Reade is building a community around its’ brand. If you track their interactions with customers on social channels over the past few months, you see a pattern of relationship building efforts in line with the Duane Reade “Prescription For Change”, as they call it.

Recent developments in the Duane Reade digital marketing plan that have come to my attention:

Twitter @DR_DuaneReade

Tweets by Brian, Duane Reade uses Twitter to interact with their customer base, aiming to enhance their customer service and of course spreading the news about new Duane Reade products, and posting links to their weekly online flyer. In the spirit of their customer-centric new vision, tweets about Duane Reade on the site are responded to in the hopes of resolution or help.

Facebook

Duane Reade has a new Facebook account, and their participation here is again much as on Twitter. They represent themselves on both social networks to be accessible in more places online. They are listening to consumers and they are acting on what they are hearing.

HardOrSoftNY.com

Duane Reade is asking New Yorkers if they like them hard or soft – cookies that is. I am sure the sexual innuendo was intended. This poll is being plugged online and in their print promotions. This is a good start in the right direction. I think this a good beginning project for a brand relatively new to more social forms of marketing.

Online Flyer

Available in both Flash and HTML, Duane Reade is now featuring all their promotional print materials on their website, including new publications like the Duane Reader. This means that those who opt out of getting flyers to reduce paper waste, or those who plain old don’t get them, can still access them anytime. In addition, and this is the best part, and accessible version of the flyer is available that can be printed on a braille printer or read by a screen reader.

Duane Reade has not just upgraded their digital marketing strategy. Thirty of their 250 stores have been revamped in the new branded look that will become trademark of the new Duane Reade. Fresh and healthy food is being made available in-store, and in a few locations on-site physicians are there to treat minor ailments and provide recommendations.

But as they say, for Duane Reade, it’s in the bag. Their locations, perhaps not ideal for most companies, are in prime locations that will ensure their survival over the years. If they stick to their plan to revamp, re-brand and resolve, this New York staple will win back the hearts of New Yorkers.

Duane Reade Bag Sad Panda

Now, in my opinion…

Wall Street’s Sad Panda should ONLY carry the Duane Reade bag. The Duane Reade bag is likely their biggest brand asset – there was a New York Times article devoted to the joys of getting a Duane Reade bag. They should leverage their reusable bag – it has a mythos that is achieved after years and years.

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Build Customer Relationships Online: Digital Support Costs Less & Gives More

Digital channels offer more than the opportunity to sell products – turning customers into loyal customers, ones that will refer business, are more profitable than the one time buyer. Managing customer relationships and offering customer service in the channels preferred by the user offers some insights that cannot be obtained in traditional customer support situations. For example, shifting primary forms of customer service to a digital sphere indicates weaknesses in your company even if the commentary is not directed at your support staff.

Shoppers don’t want to wait on hold on the phone, they do not want to have to go into the store to be frustrated in person and clearly they do not want to send a letter via snail mail. If you can even still buy stamps. This is all common sense, right? Making a shift to digital channels is a logical and potentially very effective solution to the customer support dilemma.

Customer Support and Social Media

Here are some social media statistics to illustrate my point:

Community users remain customers 50% longer than non-community users. (AT&T, 2002)

Community users spend 54% more than non-community users (EBay, 2006)

In customer support, live interaction costs 87% more per transaction on average than forums and other web self-service options. (ASP, 2002)

Cost per interaction in customers support averages $12 via the contact center versus $0.25 via self-service options. (Forrester, 2006)

Customers report good experiences in forums more than twice as often as they do via calls or mail. (Jupiter, 2006)

Answer Questions to Boost Sales – Best Buy USA and @Twelpforce

Best Buy USA is using Twitter to help boost sales and increase interaction with consumers:

Best Buy’s “Twelpforce” will search Twitter posts to find people seeking information about flat- panel televisions and other electronics, Chief Marketing Officer Barry Judge said in a telephone interview today. More than 500 employees at stores and at the company’s Richfield, Minnesota headquarters are signed up to participate, he said.

In addition, shoppers and customers can Twitter TwelpForce with their questions. It is important here that Best Buy makes a real effort to focus on the customer relationship building as opposed to spam marketing. There are some criticisms to the “service”, but I think that this is a good move in the right direction. Best Buy is making a real effort to participate within the digital space, and it is clear they are looking to increase the one to one contact consumers can have with Best Buy associates.

twelpforce1

Pitney Bowes and the User Help Forum

What I find interesting about Pitney Bowes is not necessarily the use of the user forum. This is not an innovative or new idea, but it how the value of the forum was quantified that caught my eye. The Pitney Bowes example illustrates how companies can cut back on support costs by providing self-serve online options, as opposed to a call center format where the cost of each call can range from $5 to $10. They reported that:

the main question “How do I update rates on my machine?” was viewed upwards of 37K times, which would equate, according to the industry benchmark, of about a $70K support cost savings just for that question alone.

In addition, they have a Think Tank where customers can submit ideas or suggestions for products and services. These ideas are reviewed monthly by an executive steering committee.

Online Support Not Just For Online Retailers

Once again, it is time for brick and mortar retailers to take their cue from internet retailers and take advantage of the lower cost alternative available through digital channels. Interactions can occur quicker, and in some cases, no interaction is required and answers can be obtained quickly through self-service user-powered solutions. Either way, offering these alternatives increases a company’s ability to turn potential or one-time customers into loyal, referring brand fans.

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