4. Partners
Stockholders
Clients
Employees
How can the social business
enhance customer value?
Social Business strategies help us understand the motivations,
experience and objectives of the internal and external
clients of the organization
The Key Question Experience
5. Focus Improve Knowledge Leverage Measure
CRM Processes Explicit Transactions Efficiency
Social CRM Relationships Implicit Interactions Effectiveness
Social Networks Networks Emerging Community Innovation
Quantified Self Individual Self-
Knowledge
“Dasein” Self realization
The Answer Experience
6. Customer Acquisition
• Gain the greatest number of new “Best”
customers as early in their “lifespan” as
possible.
Customer Retention
• Retain and expand your business and
relationships with your customers through up-
selling, cross-selling and servicing.
Customer Loyalty
• Offer programs to ensure that your customers
happily buy what you offer only from you.
Customer Evangelism
Enable loyal customers to become a volunteer
sales force.
Cost Reduction
• Reduce costs related to marketing, sales,
customer service and support.
Improve Productivity
Enhance your e-business strategies.
CRM Processes Experience
9. • How would you define "social business"?
• Which functions of the company are
impacted by social business?
• The article argues that technology does not
change the value of social interactions. With
what "currency" do we measure social input?
• Which four categories of technology are
associated with social business? Give an
example of each.
• How would a "social chief financial officer"
contribute to our understanding of finance?C’est quoi le social CRM ?
The Business of Social Business
Social
11. • Social CRM is a business strategy
rather than technology, tools or
platforms
• Social CRM is all about engagement –
drawing customers into the
organization.
• Social CRM enhances rather than
replaces “traditional” CRM
• It’s by defintion customer centric - the
ultimate goal of Social CRM is building
trust and the brand
Harish Kotadia, Ph.D..
Social CRM Social
12. Technology
Landscape Channels Processes
Mindset
Your company
Competitor Supplier / Partner
Customer Customer
CustomerCustomer
Customer Customer
Customer
Customer Customer
Customer Customer
Customer Customer
• Phone
• Fax
• Email
• Service
• Letters
• Personal contact
• Company’s website
• SMS
• Instant Messenger
• Chat
• Media
• Phone
• Fax
• Email
• Service
• Letters
• Personal contact
• Company’s website
• SMS
• Instant Messenger
• Chat
• Media
• B
l
o
g
s
+
• Social
Bookmarking
• M
i
c
r
o
b
l
o
g
s
• RSS
• Wikis
• Social Networks
• Widgets
• Podcast
• Video sharing
• Forums
• Wish lists
• Price comparisonwebsite
• Reviews and ratings in retail sites
• Photo sharing
• Slides sharing
• Auction website
Fabio Cipriani
What changes? Experience
13. • Customers are not listening to
what you have to say
• Customers know more about your
business than you do
• Customers create their own
experience
• Customer interactions are complex
and unpredictable
• Customer communities are where
the knowledge is.
Esteban Kolsky
Social
14. • The three most important factors that
influence consumer behavior are :
• personal experience (98%)
• company’s reputation or brand (92%)
• recommendations from friends and family
(88%)
• 41% of customers believe that companies
should use social media tools to solicit
feedback (Cone Business in Social Media
Study, 2008)
• 43% of consumers say that companies
should use social networks to address
customers problems
• Only 7% of organizations understand the
CRM value of social media, according to
the Brand Science Institute, European
Perspective, August 2010
Jacob Morgan
Outside In Social
15. The Conversation Prism v2.0
• You are at the center of the prism
• The first layer of circles displays the
activity of learning and organizing
engagement strategies…
• The second ring maps specific
authorities within an organization to
provide a competent and helpful
response.
• The third ring represents the continual
rotation of listening, responding, and
learning online and in the real world.
The Conversation Prism
Social
16. • KLM has sought to differentiate itself
by offering a superior customer
experience
• Strategy of “Circle of Contacts” to
make its customer relationships as
intimate as possible
• Facebook + Twitter = KLM Surprises
and Fly2Miami
• Staff of 16, 230 000+ fans, wide press
coverage
KLM Social
17. • Finnish maker of fine cutting tools
• Customer communities of crafting
enthusiasts have transformed the way
this 300-year-old company does
business.
• Brings customers into the product
development process
• Fiskars also leverages these groups of
advocates to market to small retailers
• Virtual + Real events – 6000 members
FIskateers
Social
19. • Moving from design to the store front
in less than three weeks
• Benneton, H&M, Topshop, Wet Seal,
Zara
• Collaborative design, social CRM,
electronic store fronts
• Fast fashion retailer Wet Seal used
their technology platform to help
their customers create 50 000
garment designs over the past two
years
Boutique Social
21. • Why are users are failing to complete proposed
activity?
• Monitor conversion rate using unique visitors and
click-through rates.
• Landing pages provide the biggest challenge to
digital challenges.
• Reduce number of steps to facilitate engagement.
• Reduce the number of fields that require user input.
• Check for leaks: visitors might not be dropping
completely but using other routes.
Cian O' Sullivan
Funnel Analysis Metrics
22. • What aspects of your app are influencing the
mindset of your users?
• Monitor the « stickiness » of your message
through number of visits, time spent per
visit, citations and redirects.
• What customer challenges/opportunities are you
addressing?
• What skills and knowledge are you targeting?
• How does your application fit into the story that
your customers are trying to tell?
Social Stickiness Metrics
23. • Why your user base does what it does?
• Tracking time and location to map out the
spaces where "what's going on" happens.
• Context is a means of measuring the extent
to which a vision (product, service, idea) can
be shared
• Social spaces are constructed from a vision,
“actors”, repeatable events, and outcomes.
Mapping Context Metrics
24. • How does your data elucidate user
behavior?
• Social graphs are the global mapping of
your customer base and how they're
related
• Capture and monitor identity, quality and
structure of relationships with others
• Emergent behaviors – what new business
opportunities might be explored?
Alex Iskold
Emergent behaviors Metrics