Web 2.0 has been hailed as the business revolution in the computer industry, changing how the world uses and views the World Wide Web.
Technologies such as blogs, wikis, podcasts, RSS feeds, social software and more are an increasingly integral part of business success today.
How does Corporate America define and use Web 2.0 and what are the key characteristics, issues and innovations of Web 2.0?
We also talk with coaches and other experts about working with Web 2.0 and its potential to transform companies and result in business success.
Guests
* Robyn Logan, Strategy Director and Founder, International Coaching Academy
* Larry Magid, Co-Author, MySpace Unraveled, Co-Director, ConnectSafely.org
* Derrick Sorles, Co-Owner, BusinessBloggingConsulting.com
* Dave Taylor, Founder and Principal, Intuitive Systems
Summary
According to Forrester Research, there will be “strong demand” for Web 2.0 tools across enterprises in 2008. Even though 42% of enterprises say adding Web 2.0 tools is not on their agenda, according to a Q3 2007 survey, Forrester expects that half of those will change their mind and embrace Web 2.0 tools by year end.
Additionally, the April 17th, 2007 issue of The Economist: states that “Web 2.0 has moved from buzzword to reality in many of the world’s largest corporations”, according to a survey of 406 senior executives worldwide by the Economist Intelligence Unit. According to the survey, almost 80% of corporations believe Web 2.0 has the potential to increase revenues.
But what exactly is Web 2.0?
How can both large corporations and entrepreneurs understand and harness its capabilities?
And how can coaches use Web 2.0 to both expand their business and interact with clients in new ways?
Our panel of experts address these questions, discussing how coaches can use blogging, social networks, and other online collaboration tools to their advantage.
1. Insight on Coaching
Coaching Successes with Web 2.0 Transcript
Prepared for: Prepared by:
Insight Educational Consulting Ubiqus Reporting
(IEC)
2. Time Speaker Transcript
00:28 Tom Floyd Hello everyone and welcome to Insight on Coaching.
Insight on Coaching explores the many facets, flavors and size of the emerging
professional coaching field.
I’m Tom Floyd, I’m the CEO of Insight Educational Consulting and your host for
today’s show.
Well this week our topic is Coaching Successes using Web 2.0 technologies.
We’ll discuss what Web 2.0 is, we’ll talk about why it’s become such a phenomenon,
we’ll talk about how Web 2.0 is changing how corporations are doing business both
externally and internally and most importantly we’ll talk about what Web 2.0 means
for our coaches out there. How can they use it to grow their businesses, how can
they use it in working with their clients and what technology should they leverage.
Well, with me to explore this topic today are four guests and let me give you a quick
overview of who we have with us on the show today.
Our first guest, Robyn Logan, is the founding director of the International Coach
Academy (ICA), a global coach training school with students in more than 40
countries.
With more than 20 years experience as a consultant, corporate trainer and business
coach, Robyn’s current fascination is the growth of Web 2.0 technologies and
concepts, in particular online social networks and their relationship to learning and
coaching. Robyn has more than 15 years experience building strong international
networks with coaches, trainers and consultants.
Prior to founding the International Coach Academy, she spent more than 10 years in
education and training in both teaching and leadership roles including managing a
Registered Training Organization.
She later founded and operated a successful multimedia and business planning
consultancy, Logan Strategic.
Welcome to the show Robyn.
02:03 Robyn Logan Thanks Tom.
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3. Time Speaker Transcript
02:04 Tom Floyd Our second guest, CBS tech media personality Larry Magid, is the co-author of
MySpace Unraveled and the Co-Director of ConnectSafely.org.
A syndicated technology columnist and broadcaster for more than two decades,
Larry regularly contributes technology reports to CBS News, the New York Times,
San Jose Mercury News, and other major media outlets.
His reports can be heard regularly on CBS Network and CBS affiliates throughout the
U.S. and daily on KCBS in San Francisco, the CBS Evening News and local TV news
stations. His columns and reviews also appear on CBSNews.com.
An Internet safety advocate, Larry is the founder of SafeKids.com and
SafeTeens.com, and is the Co-Director of BlogSafety.com.
Larry has made repeat appearances on “The Larry King Show,” “The Today Show,”
“CBS This Morning,” NPR’s “Talk of the Nation Science Friday,” and many other
programs. He also has written for Fortune, ForbesASAP, Family Circle, PC World,
PC Magazine, Upside, Information Week, Modern Maturity, ComputerWorld and
numerous other publications.
Welcome to the show Larry.
03:14 Larry Magid Thank you very much.
03:16 Tom Floyd And our next guest, Derrick Sorles, is a Web 2.0 strategist and a blog coach and
consultant.
Derrick is the Co-Owner of both BusinessBlogging Consultants.com, and
YourBusinessMDs.com.
Upon investigating some of the unique Web 2.0 tools available, he began to
submerge himself in learning everything he could about these new technologies.
Today, he helps businesses and entrepreneurs expand their Web presence utilizing
new social media such as blogs, podcasts and video podcasts.
His emphasis is on helping clients accelerate sales and expand online communities
and conversations through a combination of Web 2.0 strategies, social networking,
and leading-edge business blogging skills, and growing their Web presence.
Welcome to the show Derrick.
03:59 Derrick Sorles Thank you for having me Tom.
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4. Time Speaker Transcript
04.01 Tom Floyd And our fourth guest Dave Taylor has been involved with the Internet since 1980 and
is widely recognized as an expert on both technical and business issues.
Dave founded Intuitive Systems, a consulting firm that helps companies develop
marketing strategies and build better software systems.
A prolific author, he has been published more than 1,000 times, launched four
Internet-related startup companies, and has written 20 business and technical books.
Dave also maintains three blogs which help companies learn how to grow through
savvy use of business blogging: The Business Blog at Intuitive.com (focused on
business and industry analysis), “Ask Dave Taylor” which is devoted to tech and
business Q&A, and The Attachment Parenting Blog, discussing topics of interest to
parents. Dave also most recently authored The Complete Idiot's Guide to Growing
Your Business with Google..
Welcome to the show Dave.
04:50 Dave Taylor Thanks Tom, great to be here.
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5. Time Speaker Transcript
04:53 Tom Floyd Great to have all of you.
Well, as we do with each show I’d like to share some data that our research team
pulled together to set the stage.
Just published last week, January 28th, in fact, on ReadWriteWeb.com,
according to Forrester Research, there will be quot;strong demandquot; for Web 2.0
tools in enterprise in 2008. Even though 42% of enterprises say adding Web
2.0 tools is not on their agenda, according to a Q3 2007 survey, Forrester
expects that half of those will change their mind and embrace Web 2.0 tools
by year end.
Now according to Forrester, their definition of Web 2.0 is, quot;A set of
technologies and applications that enable efficient interaction among people,
content, and data in support of collectively fostering new businesses,
technology offerings, and social structures.quot;
According to Forrester, “Web 2.0 technologies include podcasting, flash
video, and wiki, which has replaced contact management systems as the
current user-preferred technology for editing online content.
Also according to Forrester, “Web 2.0 is distinguished from “old” Web
technology by the wide-scale harnessing of collective intelligence and
enlisting of virtual users as content co-developers.”
Now the results of another survey, these results being from an international
Web 2.0 survey conducted by Booz Allen Hamilton that was published on
March 2nd, 2007, showed that online interaction is changing consumer
behavior worldwide. The 2007 survey concluded that, “Web 2.0 is a massive
phenomenon applicable to all users regardless of age, social class, gender,
or education.”
The Booz Allen survey revealed that more than half of all Internet users
already rely on advice from a massive worldwide user community,
indicating a wide acceptance of new ways to form opinions and make
buying decisions.
Well, Dave, I’d like to start with you.
To set the stage can you build upon the Forester definition of what Web 2.0 is and
give us a little history with things like, what it is, how did it get started and why has it
become such a hot topic over the past year especially?
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6. Time Speaker Transcript
07:16 Dave Taylor Sure, thanks Tom.
I have to say that I kind of laugh and cringe simultaneously every time I hear the
phrase Web 2.0 because no one really seems to know what it is and I’ve heard so
many differing definitions.
I think perhaps the best way to characterize it is that it represents a higher level of
interactivity with on-line applications.
If you go back maybe five or six years ago and look at things like say the original
hotmail. Everything you clicked on generated a new page and it worked, but it
certainly wasn’t something that was flashy and you didn’t look at it and say, now this
could replace my major applications.
But if you look at things like Google maps. I think Google maps is probably an under
sung Web 2.0 application in as much as it’s very sophisticated behind the scenes
and there’s a lot you can do with it and really I don’t know anyone that actually runs
a mapping program anymore because the Web based applications are so
sophisticated.
And not just data, but I mean in the way you interact with them. I think that that’s an
evolution that’s been happening over the last at least five or ten years as the need for
internet based interactive applications has increased.
I go back far enough that I can remember when there wasn’t any network at all. And
things have definitely evolved from there.
But it’s really been just in the last couple of years that Web 2.0 and if you will, social
media have collided. And I think that it’s the social media.
You know, you hear that it’s citizen journalism for example. I know Larry talks about
this a lot. I think that’s really where this has become very interesting.
08:57 Dave Taylor When you look at things like FaceBook or MySpace or blogging or pod casting, all of
these things are basically ways where the common man and the common woman get
a voice.
And from a company perspective, it’s something that is fairly terrifying because what
it means is that you, as a company, have lost control of your message and you no
longer own your brand, you no longer own how the market perceives your product.
You go back, I don’t know, 10, 20, 50 years and a brand was defined by the
advertising and PR agency. That’s no longer true nor relevant.
And for a lot of companies it is absolutely critical that they recognize that this isn’t
something they need to get involved with, this is something they need to have
already gotten involved with because it’s already happening, even if they are not
willing to acknowledge it.
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7. Time Speaker Transcript
09:50 Tom Floyd Do you feel like more companies are taking it seriously?
I thought it was interesting in some of the information from Forester that some said
“well this isn’t really on our agenda for this year.”
Are you starting to see that change, though?
It got my attention when you said they are losing control of their message, for
example and their brand.
10:09 Dave Taylor Yes, and I definitely think that it’s changing and in fact I would go back and go to
people like Charlene and Jeremy over at Forester and challenge them to ask these
companies exactly what they mean when they say it’s not something they are
planning on doing in the next year.
Because I will bet all of those companies have someone, somewhere on staff that,
for example, watches Facebook to see if there are any groups that come up that are
related to their product or service.
Or to see if bloggers have mentioned them.
Or to go to trade shows and even just something as simple as how do you determine
which trade shows to exhibit at, that is something that is a function of modern social
media, just as much as it is the PR agencies that are promoting those events.
10:52 Tom Floyd And do you think that we’ll even start seeing positions and things like Facebook
analyst wanted or things like that where people are starting to actually have job roles
to find around, specifically marketing towards some of these specific media?
11:06 Dave Taylor I would say that that’s exactly what I do. I might not call myself a Facebook analyst,
that just sounds a little ominous.
11:15 Tom Floyd I just made that up by the way.
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8. Time Speaker Transcript
11:17 Dave Taylor It’s not bad, it just sounds a little analytic.
But, in a lot of ways if you think about companies that say well gosh we have this
major chain of car dealerships and we know we have a website, we’ve had that for
years, but now we have to get involved in the conversation going on, on-line. That’s
a whole another ballgame.
We really don’t know how to do that and we really need to have someone help us get
started in the right way. Because this is also, like going into a really popular party on
campus is you go in and you say the wrong thing or you act stupid or you dress
poorly or something, and that’s going to be something you are going to have to
wrestle with for the next six months.
People are going to say, “oh aren’t you the guy that like came in with that pink tie
on?”
11:59 Tom Floyd So like “weren’t you the guy that had that terrible blog and completely handled the
entire thing wrong?”
12:03 Dave Taylor Right.
And there are companies that are doing just that.
Like Dell, for example, is still struggling with trying to figure out how to be consistent
to the vision of someone like Michael Dell and to also embrace the fact that there’s a
much higher level of chaos and noise in the on-line world, but you can’t just turn
away from it.
And then you look at companies like Apple and Apple refuses to even partake and
it’s a fascinating thing that they are as successful as they are because really by a lot
of measures they should be very unsuccessful because they don’t blog, they don’t
get involved in all these social media, they don’t have a Facebook page, they don’t
even like to have Apple employees participate.
But they, I think, are an anomaly for most.
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9. Time Speaker Transcript
12:48 Tom Floyd I thought it was interesting what you said too, where I’m not liking the term Web 2.0. I
actually feel that way myself at times.
My first response was, what is that?
And it seems like in both my professional and personal circles that people still
struggle with that too.
So in terms of what we are talking about kind of, if that’s an umbrella term, some of
the categories that fall within that, another definition that I saw “broke Web 2.0”
technologies into four categories.
So one category was content productions and things like video sharing, blogs, pod
casts, Wiki’s, another was social networking, so on-line social networks and virtual
worlds, etc.
13:20 Tom Floyd A third was Web services, things like mash ups and on-line applications like My
Yahoo and Google docs.
And a fourth one was collaboration pools. So mobile services like Helio and on-line
video communications like scape.
What are your thoughts?
Are those kind of the four major categories, is there anything that you would add
there?
13:47 Dave Taylor This just makes me think of the word folksonomy. I don’t know if you’ve bumped into
that one, Tom. But, you know what a taxonomy is, right, it’s what you just did.
It’s someone trying to take a large thing and categorize it into sub elements.
And a folksonomy is a community generated taxonomy and what makes me sort of
amused by this is that if you really look at what you just said, what you really said
was anything that’s been written in the last five years.
It’s like going into the library and saying, “hmm, how do we organize all of these
millions of books into some sort of coherent organization?”
14:30 Tom Floyd I can’t help it, okay, I always want to organize things all over the place.
14:34 Dave Taylor Yes, but you know maybe we should just call this Web 2.3 beta or something?
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10. Time Speaker Transcript
14:40 Tom Floyd Larry, I’d like to loop you in on the conversation next.
What are your thoughts so far?
Is there going to be a stronger demand for Web 2.0 tools and technologies in 2008?
14:50 Larry Magid Well, first of all I want to echo a lot of what Dave said.
I mean, it is a highly disruptive technology because not only do companies not only
get to their message, but Dave mentioned that back in the old days you had
advertising and PR and of course PR their goal was to influence pundits and
journalists and people like me and people like Dave I suppose.
But we are no longer in control.
So I get to write for the New York Times, well at one point that would have been it.
If the New York Times said it, then it must be true or I get to go on CBS News, but
now when I do write for the New York Times or CBS or anywhere else, I’m competing
with thousands of bloggers, some of whom have a very strong voice, some of whom
have never been anointed by anyone.
No editor in New York ever had to vet their credentials, these guys and gals just
emerged, they developed a following, people liked what they have to say and they
have a great deal of influence.
15:43 Larry Magid And then second of all, when you write for almost any major publication today your
writing will appear on their website and on the Web, every case that I can think of,
certainly every publication that I write for, there is a comment section.
So if you go to CBSnews.com and click on Sci-Tech which is the area I write for and
the PC Answer which is my area, you will see my columns and below every column
there will be comments and I can’t get away with anything.
If I have an opinion people disagree with they are going to say it.
If I were to make a mistake, trust me, I will hear about it. I will hear about it a lot.
Recently I wrote something in the New York Times and I made a small technical error
and people acted like it was a conspiracy, like it was a deliberate attempt to mislead
the public and I went back and said, “wait a minute don’t give me that much credit, I
just made a typo, come on.”
16:37 Tom Floyd And that just sounds so scary hearing that too, I mean what’s the best way to handle
things like that?
I think that some people do have this fear around Web 2.0 because they are like “oh
my god I’m going to get eaten alive.”
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11. Time Speaker Transcript
16:46 Larry Magid The best way to handle it is to, if you make a mistake, admit it right away, thank them
for pointing it out and correct it. And not dwell on why it happened, how it happened,
but just simply say oops you are right and here’s the correct answer and to
thoroughly research it.
And, that’s the way Tylenol handled their tragic situation, when they had the
tampering issue.
Any company today, who is smart, when they seriously make a mistake they should
just acknowledge it and the difference is that the time factor, it’s no longer a question.
For example, look at the Facebook situation when they introduced it as a Beacon
service and then they got pounded on for privacy violations and MoveOn.org wound
up doing a petition. They waited, I think, too long. They waited about a week.
Now in the days of Web 1.0 a week was nothing. In the days of Web 2.0 a day is
something.
And so things move very quickly.
17:49 Larry Magid So one of the things you have to do, whether you have your own Web 2.0 venue,
whether you have your own blog or wiki or social site, whether you are simply being
talked about on other peoples’ sites, which means everyone, so there is nothing in
the public entity, no journalist, no company, no analyst, no celebrity, no anybody who
has a public face who isn’t participating in Web 2.0 either as a participant or as a
subject.
So one way or the other you are part of the conversation.
The question is, whether you actually get to participate in the conversation or
whether you are just being talked about.
And so one of the things you need to do is to be aware of this.
18:28 Larry Magid For example, I would urge everybody to have a Google alert, go to Google news and
have an alert for your name in quotes so it doesn’t – it might be tough with Dave
Taylor because it’s a common name and your company’s name so if someone does
say something about you on one of the thousands of sites and blogs that Google
news poles then you will at least hear about it.
But if something comes up, you should be part of the conversation.
That doesn’t mean you should get defensive, it doesn’t mean you should berate
people, but you should somehow try to figure out what is the intelligent strategy.
And I can give you some hints on this.
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12. Time Speaker Transcript
19:03 Larry Magid Many, many years ago Dave remembers this, he and I go back a ways, I wrote a
column for Prodigy, the now defunct on-line service that was run by Sears and IBM
and CBS and I learned very early that two things happen.
When you are an authority, people want to go after you.
They want to be able to dethrone the king and it doesn’t matter who you are. If you
are Walt Mosberg at the Wall Street Journal or you are at Apple or you are Microsoft
or you are Google or Yahoo, any time you can be caught making a mistake, people
have an ego gratification in correcting you or in showing you wrong.
But if you go in there and you say, “you know what thank you so much, my gosh I
couldn’t believe that happened, yada yada yada, you are right.” Suddenly that same
kind of authoritarian principle where they were anti-authority they become your best
friend.
Not 100% of the time, but I would say in my experience about 85% of the time, no
matter how critical they are of me and I’ve had people accuse me of being in
everybody’s pocket, sometimes I’m accused of being on Apple’s payroll, sometimes
I’m accused of being on Microsoft’s payroll.
It goes back and forth depending on my honest opinion.
By the way, I’m not on either of their payrolls.
20:11 Tom Floyd Life should be so good, right Larry?
20:12 Larry Magid Right, exactly. I’m waiting for the check from Redmond. Maybe if I had Yahoo stock
I’d get a check from Redmond.
But the fact of the matter is that when you simply acknowledge it they tend to
become your best friend.
And so I think it’s just embracing it and realizing you are going to take your knocks,
you are going to get a couple of bloody noses out of this deal, but at the end of the
day you are going to be much more respected if you just sort of go in there and deal
with it.
20:39 Tom Floyd And that’s what I was going to say too, it sounds like it’s a respect thing.
I mean, if you go in there knowing you are going to get critiqued and criticism, but
you take the time to respond back and engage in that dialogue that you are actually
going to get some really good relationships as a result of it.
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13. Time Speaker Transcript
20:52 Larry Magid Right, and also good feedback.
You might actually get some good advice that could lead to improving your products
or your services or your marketing and you need to listen.
That doesn’t mean everybody is right, but you need to listen.
21:09 Tom Floyd As the Booz Allen Hamilton survey said, back to the general question about Web 2.0
that I know a lot of people ask me this in the consulting work that I do, is Web 2.0
indeed a massive phenomena that really is applicable to all people out there
regardless of their age, regardless of their social class, regardless of their gender or
education?
I mean a lot of people ask me, “you know what, this is something that only millennial
generations is using, that generation of Y, so to speak, is using.”
Is it really starting to be embraced by everybody?
21:41 Larry Magid I think it is use driven.
I think that when it comes to young people and by young people I’m thinking 14 to 24.
It is a very much a part of their lives.
I mean they probably don’t even bother with the term Web 2.0, they go on-line and
on-line for them means they are in Facebook or MySpace or instant messaging or
whatever interactive service they are using.
But the fact of the matter is that once again the youth shall lead and companies are
picking up on this and remember that a lot of people who work for corporations today
are out of college, they themselves are digital natives, so we are beginning to see
sort of the class of corporate primarily lower level, but not totally, of people coming up
who grew up with this technology and so it’s increasingly becoming part of all aspects
of corporate America.
It’s certainly part of the campaign. None of the presidential candidates skipped the
Web 2.0. They’ve all had to embrace it to some extent, some more than others.
So it’s definitely part of the culture, but as I said, whether you are driving the bus or
sitting in the back of the bus or being run over by the bus, one way or the other you
are affected by it.
22:59 Tom Floyd Real quick, your book MySpace Unraveled, what were some of the discoveries and
themes that you really highlight there?
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14. Time Speaker Transcript
23:08 Larry Magid Well, we looked at young people, teenagers because part of what we were trying to
do is to counter the myth that social networking was somehow a dangerous chaotic
terrible, frightening thing and of course it is chaotic, but we found that the chaos
actually had a great deal of organization to it.
So one analogy that we had in the book is going onto MySpace for example, is a little
bit like walking into a Grand Central Station in New York.
Now if you are not from New York, you’ve never been to New York before and you
walk into Grand Central Station you see an incredibly chaotic environment with no
organization at all and everything is different, nothing makes sense and things are
very ugly and confusing.
But if you are a commuter, if you regularly take the Long Island railroad to where ever
you are on Long Island, you walk into Grand Central Station, you see a very
organized system, you know where your train is, you know where your friends hang
out, you know what coffee shops and it’s not nearly as chaotic as people think it is.
24:07 Larry Magid We also discovered, again among teenagers, that people are using it for all sorts of
things that’s having an enormous impact on helping to find your place in the pecking
order, helping to validate your opinions, the election has certainly prove this.
I think part of the reason why, for example, Obama has done so well is because he
has helped capture the youth vote largely through the Web 2.0 phenomenon. I’m not
saying he hasn’t done other things, but that’s had a huge impact on his affect among
young people.
24:40 Tom Floyd Interesting.
Robyn I’d like to loop you in next.
Can you talk to me about from your perspective what Web 2.0 is beginning to mean
for the coaching profession?
Is it beginning to change the ways that coaching is done if we start to put a coaching
flare around this and for that matter, how people are preferring to even receive
coaching?
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15. Time Speaker Transcript
25:03 Robyn Logan Well, yes thanks.
I think it definitely is changing the way coaching is done.
In particular I think it’s changing the way business is done and if you see that
coaches are actually small business owners, they coach but also what they do is they
run a small business. Sometimes they run even bigger businesses.
But for me it’s really about the way it changes the way you need to do business.
So I would agree with what Larry was saying about how you handle feedback for
example, or criticism.
In the past you might have been kind to perhaps hide that or not respond.
Now with 2.0, it forces businesses to be transparent and to me that’s very exciting.
What it means is that—
25:49 Tom Floyd And from your perspective too, are most coaches both, from running their own
business from that perspective and from looking at new ways to engage with their
clients, would you say that most of them are ready for Web 2.0?
26:02 Robyn Logan Well that’s a different question.
26:04 Tom Floyd Oh I know.
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16. Time Speaker Transcript
26:07 Robyn Logan Well, that’s interesting because the whole idea of the digital natives, a lot of coaches
are not digital natives.
Many coaches tend to be people who has had one or two professions and they are
moving into a new career.
Coaching itself is a new profession.
So, lots of coaches, in fact, you know, these are not the tools that they grew up with.
However, they are actually embracing them and I think that it really is just about
learning to learn and learning to be open to new technologies.
Not just new technologies, though, I think the whole thing with Web 2.0, sometimes
the focus is too much on the technology and not enough on the principles and
philosophies behind it.
So it doesn’t actually work if you are a coach, for example, and you want to embrace
Web 2.0 to just set up a blog or go to a wiki. That’s not really going to do it.
It’s really understanding what that means and really understanding that it means to
have your clients as co-creators of your business, to have your clients as co-creators
of your brand, to be transparent.
It means having high levels of integrity, being impeccable with your word, and totally
trusting in your users and in your business to open yourself up and that’s what I think
really needs to be embraced by coaches.
27:31 Tom Floyd I really like that, that distinction that you just made.
Now Derrick real fast before our break, you call yourself a blog coach and a
consultant, can you tell us a little bit about what that means and about some of the
work that you do?
27:47 Derrick Sorles Sure.
One of the things, the word I haven’t heard used yet, which I’m surprised because
when I’m talking with people about whatever the label is, the shift from Web 1.0 to
2.0, it’s just a title.
But what happened was that there was a shift in power and so that means that
certainly CBS, the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, I mean they were their
own hubs, but I can be sitting now in my countryside home in Russia and I can be
influencing people on-line through my work.
So I could put a video up on YouTube and be the next superstar overnight.
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28:37 Derrick Sorles So that shift in power I think was tremendous.
We went from, in Web 1.0 it was a push strategy and everything on the Internet was
just all this information being pushed at you.
In Web 2.0 what we have now is we have the opportunity to interact and everyone
can be a publisher, a producer, the great thing about so many of these Web 2.0 tools
is that they are usually free or basically free, very inexpensive, but the problem is that
they are very misunderstood and underutilized, I believe, certainly by mid and large
corporations.
Most of the clients that I work with as a blog coach or an online consultant are small
business owners or entrepreneurs and it makes sense because generally that’s a
group of business population where their early adopters and they can move quickly.
So they look at something like LinkedIn, for example.
29:48 Tom Floyd I hate to cut you off, but I’m hearing the music for our first commercial break.
Let’s go ahead and go on pause.
Stay tuned everyone, more from Insight Coaching when we return.
32:30 Tom Floyd Welcome back to Insight on Coaching, I’m Tom Floyd.
Today the topic is Coaching Successes using Web 2.0 Technologies.
With me are Robyn Logan, founding director of the International Coach Academy,
Larry Magid CBS tech media personality and co-author of MySpace Unraveled and
also the co-director of ConnectSafely.org, Derrick Sorles co-owner of
BusinessBloggingConsultants.com and YourBusinessMDS.com, and Dave Taylor,
founder and principal of Intuitive Systems and author of the Complete Idiots Guide to
Growing Your Business with Google.
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33:04 Tom Floyd Well, in this segment of the show I’d like to focus on a couple things.
One I’d like to focus on the impact of Web 2.0 in corporate America and I’d also like
to spend some more time talking about how some of our coaches out there can begin
using Web 2.0 and benefiting from Web 2.0 technologies as well.
So let me quickly set the stage.
Now according to the Booz Allen Hamilton survey that we mentioned earlier
“The penetration of Web 2.0 sites in the total population is 49% in the U.S.,
45% in Germany, and 26% in the U.K.”
Web 2.0 is contributing to a robust worldwide Internet market currently
worth €40 billion euro, with profits originating primarily through
advertising and e-commerce.
With unlimited potential growth in the Internet economy, the study
predicts that turnover from Internet services in Germany will rise from
€17.1 billion in 2005 to €44.2 billion in 2008.
Now according to another article in the March 23rd, 2007 issue of Business
Week, author Tim Ferguson reports that, “Web 2.0 technologies are
becoming increasingly popular with businesses as they start to understand
its benefits following their initial investment in these technologies.”
And from another article, the April 17th, 2007 issue of The Economist: “Web
2.0 has moved from buzzword to reality in many of the world’s largest
corporations, according to a survey of 406 senior executives worldwide by
the Economist Intelligence Unit. Almost 80% of corporations believe Web
2.0 has the potential to increase revenues.”
Well Dave, I’d like to start with you.
If we think about Web 2.0 from a global perspective, it is truly a global phenomenon,
are you seeing it embraced in some areas of the world more than others, is it being
embraced universally?
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34:58 Dave Taylor Well, nothing is embraced universally, at least not to my skeptical jaded eye.
But it’s definitely something that has a remarkable reach and I’ll tell you that I daily
communicate with people in countries where I sometimes have to go and look on a
map to even see where they are.
And it might well be the western hemisphere if you will or not the third world so much,
but I’ve got e-mail from people in small African nations asking me about questions
that I have written about on my blog or something and yes, the reach really is there.
The thing is, is that if you really sort of think through the implications of everything we
are talking about here with the online world transitioning from a publishing medium to
a communications and conversational venue then the areas where it isn’t as well
embraced are offering up huge opportunities to companies that are willing to try to
get there first.
And so if you really want to have, say a travel agency in Mongolia and get people
from the western nations to come out and really see what the back country of
Mongolia is like, that would be a perfect thing to blog about because you might not
get thousands and thousands of people, but if well might be the case that 10 to 20%
of the small number of people that do visit your site then convert into customers.
It might not be that week or that month, but they will remember and they will go on all
your little photo tours vicariously and they will open up discussions and again, this is
one of the things I think Larry was spot on with is that you are opening up a channel,
a two directional channel of communication with not just your customers, but your
potential customers and not just them, but the people that never would be your
customers because of who you are and how you’ve packaged your product or
service.
36:54 Dave Taylor And you never get to interact with them in real life, but you certainly can in the digital
world and it’s very, very illuminating and from the perspective of a coach for example,
there are people that you’d never think to pitch that would probably never hire you to
do coaching, but if you just had a slight variation, if you maybe did a one weekend
every six months work shop for free and you just covered the expenses out of
pocket, maybe you could get some of them to convert into customers in a way that
you’d never have thought of if you wouldn’t have actually started to put yourself out
there and open yourself up for discussion.
37:31 Tom Floyd And let’s talk a little bit about, and Robyn I’ll turn to you for this, a little bit about the
global affect of Web 2.0 and coaching for a minute.
From your perspective do you think that Web 2.0 is going to have a more profound
impact on coaches in some areas of the world or others?
Do you think it will be more embraced by coaches in certain areas or do you think it
really will be a global phenomenon for coaches too?
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38:06 Robyn Logan Well, I think Web 2.0 is a global thing and coaching is a global thing already so I
couldn’t say that there’s any particular country or area of the world where it might be
taken up.
I know in China it’s a little bit more difficult because the great firewall of China as they
call it and I know we ask students, we implemented a strategy last year where part of
their assessment was to actually set up a blog and to use it as a self reflection tool
and learning about how they were developing as a coach and the reason we did that
is because we think exactly as Dave was saying as a marketing tool when they
graduate to know how to use a blog is a very cheap and affective way of getting a
presence on the Web when you are starting up in business.
And I know that we did have some issues with our users in China being blocked
from, I think it was WordPress, so I think there’s those sorts of issues, but in terms of
the take up, coaching are attracted to coaching already because it is a flexible global
profession.
Most coaching is done over the phone and has been done over the phone for years
now.
I think our graduates, probably 10%, do face to face coaching.
And even that often turns into telephone coaching.
39:31 Robyn Logan So it’s already being delivered flexibly, so to just add on some tools then, like
perhaps a forum for your clients or a blog to talk about your coaching is not such a
big leap to do that sort of thing.
39:48 Tom Floyd It’s interesting that you say it’s already starting to be done.
I have two coaches, both have been former guests on this show and I’ve only met
with either of them once, in person.
I’ve had them both for a year and it’s always virtual and it’s a non-issue for me at this
point.
It’s almost a preference for me at this point.
It’s really interesting and encouraging to hear you say that too.
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40:13 Robyn Logan And our company is the same, International Coaching Academy is totally virtual.
Some staff I’ve never met and they’ve been working with us for six years and you
know for us it’s normal.
We do all our job interviews over the phone. It’s sort of like the centerpiece of our
organization, it’s how we know who is working at any given time during the day.
Instead of having to go and look at timeanddate.com and constantly working out time
conversions, I just look on Skype and if it’s green my client is there, and if it’s green
my colleagues are there, and if it’s not, then I don’t ring them.
40:45 Tom Floyd Got it.
Derrick, question for you and this question I’m sure applies to folks way beyond folks
who are coaches.
But in terms of how somebody goes about starting a blog, I can definitely see that
being a question for a lot of our listeners regardless if their coaches or not.
Where the heck do you start doing that?
What are some of the ways that someone would go about starting a blog for
themselves or for their business?
41:13 Derrick Sorles Well, I’m not on Google’s payroll, I’d like to be, but I mean the biggest and the best
example probably is you can go in and you can create a blog on BlogSpot, through
blogger, in a minute.
And then once you are working in it it’s very similar to me like working in a Word
document or an e-mail.
You see the same drop down screens, icons, I mean it’s something that most people
can figure out quite quickly, the nuances of it.
But yeah, anyone can start a blog immediately through Google’s blogger and it’s
completely free.
41:53 Tom Floyd And what are some of the ways, it was Larry I believe, that was sharing some of the
certain etiquettes and things to keep in mind when blogging for example and other
tools?
What’s the best way to learn what some of those rules are so that you are not the
one showing up at the party in a pink suit so to speak?
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42:11 Derrick Sorles I always would say, it really is just a form of communication.
So you behave, you publish and put out on the Internet where it will stay things that
you would want out there.
But being respectful of other people’s opinions and their feedback and encouraging
feedback and making sure that if someone does leave you a comment that you do
reply and you thank them.
There’s just a common courtesy that you want to instill because that’s what keeps
readers coming back to you.
52:50 Tom Floyd And if you think of a way, let’s go back to using coaches as an example.
So we talked about how coaches can definitely use blogs to help solicit more
business for example, one of the main things that a lot of coaches do are these one
on one interactions with their clients and sometimes for some cases they are
facilitated sessions too, so they could be doing kinds of group coaching if they are
involved in a leadership development program for example and they’ve got multiple
folks that are in that.
Can you speak to us a little bit in terms of how, based on what you know about
coaches and the work that they do, ways that you could see them using blogs, for
example, on either one on one interactions with clients or in facilitated sessions with
multiple individuals, things like that?
What are some of your ideas there?
43:38 Derrick Sorles Well, a lot of times people think of a blog as being a lot of work and extra work and
often coaches are usually publishing some sort of online newsletter or e-newsletter
and I just suggest that information gets repurposed into a blog format because the
difficulty of, if you are doing an e-newsletter to your permission based e-mail list is
that it’s completely off the Internet’s radar screen.
One of the things that we haven’t talked about here is the power of search and how
search has really influenced and changed the way that we will do business forever.
So if you don’t have much of an Internet presence, because what we are really trying
to create when we are working with clients is a way for people to do a keyword
search around you and your business and it’s going to bring them to you.
So it’s a poll strategy as well because when we are doing searches online that
means that we are interested in that news, that service, that information, that
entertainment, and so there’s a continuum that has already been collapsed and so
hopefully when people find us through search and wind up at our site they are ready
to do business because everything has been relevant.
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45:00 Tom Floyd It gives them a way to quickly kind of skim through things, see what the important or
significant points are, it helps them get started quicker.
45:07 Derrick Sorles Right. Absolutely.
45:11 Tom Floyd Got it.
Robyn, let’s talk a little bit about social networking and Internet forums.
How can coaches from your perspective best leverage those technologies in their
practices?
I mean, one thing that I can think of off the top of my head is that they would leverage
them to recruit new clients.
But are there other ways that they can use some of those tools in their
engagements?
45:32 Robyn Logan Yes, they can recruit new clients, definitely.
Also they could use them to start to build a community with the clients they have.
You know, I have seen a couple of coaches do this where coaches possibly have
clients from all around the world and definitely their clients don’t know each other.
But often coaches specialize in particular areas so you might be a business coach,
an executive coach, or you might be a career coach, or a spiritual coach.
So the sorts of clients you get tend to have similar interests and similar issues.
So to open it up and allow them to network with each other, it’s sort of extending the
power of your coaching to peer support and peer coaching that emerges into the on-
line learning area as well.
So I think that’s one option.
46:27 Tom Floyd I love that example. I never would have thought of that. I love it.
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46:31 Robyn Logan It’s a good one. I think the getting of new clients is always a good one.
I mean, joining a social network and just being who you are is a great way to use it to
get new clients.
I think, just for a moment I want to talk a little bit about the back end.
Lots of people focus with Web 2.0 technologies on the front end on what the user can
have or what tools you can give your clients, like blogs or forums.
One of the most powerful I’ve seen for coaches using Web 2.0 technology is the
sorts of technology that can help them run their business at the back end and so I’m
talking about online databases or say online survey tools or project management
tools.
All those sorts of tools are very affordable and easy to set up. For example
Basecamp is a really good project management tool that coaches can use.
47:30 Robyn Logan Survey Monkey is an online survey software and I remember when we started in
business none of this stuff was around and we spent the first three years trying to
either create it ourselves or paying a lot of money to get it from somewhere else.
And now you can very easily survey all your clients, or not even your clients, you can
survey all the people who come to your blog and get an idea of the sorts of things
that they are interested in in getting coaching on.
47:58 Tom Floyd It’s actually a tool that they could use in doing their initial self assessment or their
pre-assessments with clients, for example.
They could use it to get feedback from existing clients, how things are going and all
of that.
I could definitely see where that would be useful.
48:15 Robyn Logan Dave was talking about the power of search and getting people to come to your
website, the thing that you want them to do when they come is fill out a form.
You actually want their e-mail address and their name so that you can build a
relationship with them.
So really you don’t want that just going into your inbox, you really want that going into
something that you can then segment by interest and market and so on to form an
online marketing database.
There are plenty of open source ones available now. There’s SugarCRM for example
and these things are all new in the last three or four years.
48:52 Dave Taylor If I could jump in Tom.
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48:54 Tom Floyd Sure go ahead.
48:56 Dave Taylor This is Dave, and my concern with everything that you are saying and I think that it’s
terrific stuff, but I see a lot of people get lost in the tactics and don’t really think
through the strategy.
It’s just like well there are all these really cool tools, so oh I can put a survey on my
site and then I’ll just come up with some new survey every couple of days and then
I’ll start asking them things like, “what kind of cell phone do you have”, or “did you like
the latest movie that came out” or something.
And it ends up where it becomes very social, but it’s no longer serving the needs of
the business or the needs of the consultant or coach.
And I can’t emphasize enough how that can really sour you for years where you
spend a few months and you get into all this stuff and it’s great fun.
I have to say that from a personal perspective it’s very enjoyable, but you end up
looking back three months later and saying, “I just spent 450 hours and I don’t really
see much gain for that and I’m therefore, going to go ahead and throw out the
proverbial baby with the bathwater and I’m just going to skip all this Web 2.0 social
media stuff” and it’s just not – the people getting the results with that are just, you
know, I think they are lying. This is just not true.
And I really, genuinely encounter this with clients, with some alarming frequency
where the president’s son hooked up some sort of a Facebook page and then started
talking about their favorite bands and then the company says, “oh we already have a
Facebook presence we don’t really need to go any further.”
50:26 Tom Flody So it’s almost like, to use one of my favorite sales phrases that I’ve heard from our
sales clients a couple of times, it almost sounds like you are saying you don’t want to
“spray and pray” with some of these Web technologies.
50:39 Dave Taylor I don’t know why, but my whole imagine with that is of my cat.
50:44 Tom Floyd I have three cats, I get that same visual.
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50:49 Robyn Logan I think you are right David, I think that extends to social networks as well, you know, I
see a lot of coaches, you know, a couple of coaches recently in my inbox starting a
community, starting a social network and my question would be to them, you know,
why are you starting that social network?
I agree, you don’t just use the tool for the sake of the tool.
It has to be built into your business plan and there has to be a reason and a
motivation to use a particular tool.
51:14 Dave Taylor Right and can I just take ten seconds for a crass commercial plug Tom, is that okay?
51:18 Tom Floyd Absolutely.
51:21 Dave Taylor Thank you so much, and Derrick and Robyn, this is definitely for you too, is that my
friend Andy Biel who runs MarketingPilgrim.com and I are actually hosting a strategic
planning new media event in Hawaii next month.
And it would be delightful to have any of you come out and join us.
You can learn more at AlohaSummit.com.
That’s it, that’s my pitch.
51:54 Tom Floyd Any excuse to go to Hawaii.
51:47 Dave Taylor That’s what I say.
51:50 Tom Floyd Derrick, anything that you would add in terms of really having around the strategy
and plan in terms of how people can use Web 2.0 technologies effectively?
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51:58 Derrick Sorles Well, I was going to say that I really do find that most of my clients as well don’t
approach it strategically and so very often one of the first exercises we’ll do is we’ll
Google search the company’s name.
What’s out there, what am I going to find, what am I going to find on page one?
Google the person’s name, but beyond that, you know, many of us, again, our
company, my company could be called CJS and Associates and so it’s not anything
very search engine friendly.
So we spend a lot of time talking about key words, key word searches and usually
coming up with a domain name, it’s a series of a couple of top search engine words
that would help pull people to you and so unlike in the old days where our websites
were always named after our companies, you know, you can call a blog anything that
you would like and then hopefully it will all just be relevant and the content will make
sense when the person showed up there.
But that’s terrific. You know, we have so many different examples where clients have
wanted to be found.
53:11 Derrick Sorles One of my favorite ones is health wellness expert, a doctor that I work with.
His blog site usually sits in the third, second or third spot on Google page one
alongside WebMD, you know, and he’s not paying to be there, he’s there organically
showing up on page one and he’s gotten a couple speaking engagements, he’s been
on talk shows, TV, so that’s a pretty good place to be.
53:40 Tom Floyd Yes, definitely, that’s like the ultimate Web success story that everybody really thinks
of.
For my company too, I mean I own a small management consulting firm and we’ve
had an SEO vendor for about three months now and I have to say it was like a ray of
light shining down from the heavens in terms of the feedback and things they
provide.
It was like o”h my god, wow this is so, so helpful!”
54:02 Derrick Sorles Well, I think the great example is my being on your show today.
One of your producers found me by googling Web 2.0 coach or business blog
consultant and that’s how I was connected.
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54:18 Tom Floyd Fantastic!
Well I’m starting to hear the music so that means we are up at the end of our show,
unfortunately, but a huge thank you to all four of you for joining us today and as
always a huge thank you to our listeners as well.
For information about our show don’t forget to visit our website,
www.ieconsulting.biz.
Don’t forget you can also download the podcast version of this show through Apple
iTunes as well.
Just go to the music store and enter Insight on Coaching in the Search field.
Thanks everyone, we’ll see you next week.
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