From Event to Action: Accelerate Your Decision Making with Real-Time Automation
Brands and engaging in the art of conversation final
1. The Art of Conversation Social Media is Here. Brands Need to Adapt. A Lesson in the Evolution of the New Media and its Revolutionary Impacts on Business
2. Web 2.0 and the Long-tail Audience What is Web 2.0? It is a living term describing changing trends in the ways software developers and end-users use the Web that have helped shape this new creativity, information sharing, collaboration and functionality of the web. Web 2.0 concepts have led to the development and evolution of web-based communities and hosted services, such as social-networking sites, video sharing sites, wikis, blogs, and folksonomies. An important distinction is that Web 2.0 has huge implications for what we call the Long Tail i.e. niche communities. Pareto’s Principle states that 20% of the population control 80% of the wealth. These include big brands like Coke and Mcdonald’s. What’s more important is the immense opportunity for the remaining 80% of the web population, who NOW can leverage 2.0 to help move the needle to their own advantage.
3. Participation is the New Consumption Before social computing, the web was static, centrally managed and slow to change. Top down information flow was the standard from established research institutions to corporations to governments. These were sources we didn’t question. In this new space there is a shift:1) From centralization to decentralization. This means the move away from what we remember as the “mainframe computer” to the emergence of peer to peer networks. 2) From one-way information flow to multiple conversation exchanges. The audience is contributing to conversation and information exchange is taking place. This is creating new knowledge streams through user generated content. Simultaneously, this audience is not readily accepting the content provided by mainstream media and traditional sources as truth. Peer Influence is tantamount to the traditional marketing message. Marketers must realize their marketing messages only contribute to a fraction of consumer conversion. On top of this, social computing has made it easier to amplify conversation and influence, creating an ability to spread messages farther and faster.
4. The Digital Evolution Reach Old Media New Media Reach Mass Media Mass Media Niche Media Before media became digitized, we saw: A few media with massive reach. As consumers, we were easy to access. We read the same papers, listened to the same radio programs, and watched the same television shows as everyone we knew. Marketers had it easy…but it was rare for a consumer to see an ad that was relevant to him/her. Now we see tons of media choices, allowing marketers to reach massive amounts of people, via a massive amount of extremely targeted media experiences. Users are moving down the long tail of media and this presents big challenges as well as big opportunities for marketers. Two key marketing challenges now exist: Marketers need to be where the users are and also need to be relevant to those users. Marketers need to re-think the message and re-think the media distribution. Reach Niche Media Mass Media
8. Billions of pagesAnd that doesn’t even account for the new platforms: iPhones, MP3s, satellite radio, video on demand, PVRs, and peer-to-peer gaming. Now add in the millions of websites, and the billions of web pages and you begin to see the erosion of reaching an entire market with one simple media buy. Access Proliferation This trend has big implications for the media business: What does this mean for traditional advertising principles like reach, frequency or even primetime? Networks are investing in multi-platform programming like NBC’s Hulu; Google is already experimenting with measuring audience in the soon-to-be web/TV integration; and TIVO announced the user‘s ability to program TIVO from the mobile phone. Consumers are empowered with choice and are now squarely in control: they’re in control of how, when, & what kind of media they consume. 2 3 Product Proliferation and availability means more choice for the buyer. It's a buyer’s world today. For any good or service, the number of brands and the number of sellers who can instantly reach the buyers anywhere in the world has grown dramatically over the past decade. In addition buyers have gained access to an enormousamount of information that they can “pull”whenever they want, while ignoring themajority of the marketing and advertisingthat are “pushed” at them. 1
9. Generation C: The Consumer is in control The web has given birth to a new generation. It is the generation C. CONTENT by the Creative Class using the web as a CHANNEL to Communicate… …Turning Conversation into Community. Today media is controlled, by co-creators…. Turning their creativity into CASH. THIS IS THE POWER OF BEING CONNECTED. THIS IS CONSUMER 2.0 The power to define and control a brand is shifting from corporations and institutions to individuals and communities. The consumers today are Multitaskers. They are Intelligent. They are Individuals. They are part of the Community, the Participants. They are the Audience. They are the Customer. They are the Influencer. They are the User.
10. Cluetrain Manifesto A radical change has occurred in the World of advertising and marketing Consumers are not listening anymore…Interruptive Marketing has seen its day. The Cluetrain Manifesto recently celebrated its 10th Anniversary. Defined (source Wikipedia), Cluetrain “ is a set of 95 theses organized and put forward as a manifesto[…]for all businesses operating within what is suggested to be a newly-connected marketplace. The authors assert that the Internet is unlike the ordinary media used in mass marketing as it enables people to have "human to human" conversations, which have the potential to transform traditional business practices radically. The ideas put forward within the manifesto aim to examine the impact of the internet on both markets (consumers) and organizations. In addition, … the manifesto suggests that changes will be required from organizations as they respond to the new marketplace environment.” The Audience is Creating…The Audience is Selecting…. The Audience is Changing…and as a result the audience is telling brands…… “We are immune to advertising. Just forget it. ” “You want us to pay? We want you to pay attention. ” “ The Internet has become a place where people could talk to other people without constraint. Without filters or censorship or official sanction — and perhaps most significantly, without advertising ” “Don't talk to us as if you've forgotten how to speak. Don't make us feel small. Remind us to be larger. Get a little of that human touch. ”
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12. Intranets are enabling your employees to hyperlink themselves together, out the side the org chart. They’re incredibly productive and innovative. They’re telling one another the truth in very human voice.
13. There’s a new conversation between and among your market and your workers. It’s making them smarter and enabling them to discover their human voices.There are brands finding out about this NEW conversation. And they are taking action and joining the conversation. eMarketer, October 2008 recognized the prevalence of the new media and announced its benefits spanning engagement, direct customer relations plus sales, brand reputation, PR and even impacts to product development, and operations. You, as an organization have two choices: You can continue to lock yourself behind the facile corporate words and happy-talk brochures. Or you can join the conversation.” Clutrain 1999
20. 83% have watched video clipsDespite the media fragmentation, social networking sites are experiencing high adoption rates 50% or greater among 18-34 year olds. Among the 35-44 demos, 30-39% are adopting this medium. Sources: 1) IBM 2007 Digital Consumer Study 2) Universal McCann Wave 3 a study in 2008 across 17,000 respondents from 29 countries
21. Social Media: Global Stats While most social-net activities have witnessed some growth, the emergence of Twitter has contributed to the plateauing effect of blogging. Micro-blogging has made social media more efficient and allows opinion-leaders to collaborate and share at a faster rate. Universal McCann Wave 4 a study in 2009
22. Social Media is Practical Mass Marketing Social Marketing Learn what people are saying about you Createbuzz for events & campaigns Increase brand exposure Identify and recruit influencers to spread your message Find new opportunities and customers Supportyour products and services Improve your search engine visibility Gain competitive intelligence Retain clients by establishing a personal relationship Be an industry leader – not a follower Create sustainability and long-tem relationships. Unlike Mass Marketing, Social Media has the unique benefit of targeting consumers already talk about your brand. The immediate relevance has the ability to spread through word of mouth recommendations.
23. Social Media continues to Evolve “Top 10 Gadgets for Social Media Addicts” “STATS: Young People Are Flocking to Twitter” “Transparency Triumph. Reviewing is the new advertising.” “How to Stalk your Kids on Facebook and Twitter” “Newspapers are dying” “IBM's social media guidelines were first of the kind!” “10 tips for building brand communities” “Corporate Employee Twitter guidelines being written around the world” “Zynga Is Twice As Big As Twitter -- And Actually Profitable!” “Movie Rentals Might Be Coming to YouTube” “5 Ways to Attract and Empower Your Crowd” “Socia media wars - mommy bloggers vs PR Econsultancy” “Google makes a grab for Hollywood Dollars with contextual ads for Movie Trailers” “Hulu Has More Viewers Than 2nd Largest US Cable Company, Time Warner” “RIM tops the 100 Fastest-Growing Companies 2009 ...defying the downturn” As social media evolves, so do the responses, expectations and practices behind it. Everyone is trying to figure it out. Companies are trying to understand the immediate impacts to their businesses. Customers are becoming receptive to big brands willing to engage with them. The question whether Social Media is here to stay is one that is answered readily through the continuous development of technologies that create more seamless peer to peer interactions; the allowance of individual IDs connecting across multiple platforms; the dominance of share technologies through open source; and the strong adoption of leading brands willing to jump into the fray and test social’s strength.
24. Isobar: Our Strength in Social Media We are bloggers and social networkers by nature. We love technology. We understand social media and its inherent rules of engagement. We build relationships in this space and stay connected personally and professionally. We help clients navigate through complexities of this medium and help them understand the strategic implications to their brand, their category, their products and their operations. Through our proprietary technologies, we identify people who are talking about brands; where they’re talking; what they’re saying. We can tell whether there is a gap between how companies want their brands perceived and the actual consumer perception. We help clients listen. We identify the most recent conversations and counsel clients how to respond. Through constant monitoring and engaging we will identify influencers and influencing conversations that ignite into strong advocates for client brands. We will help clients develop a new mindset about social media and leverage deep insights to help inform marketing and operational strategies as they apply. We are passionate about stimulating enduring brand conversations. We go beyond the “buzz” to create relationships with the right influencers and consumers that result in long term loyalty and authentic advocacy for your brand.
25. Contact us: Office: 416-682-3783 Cell: 416-417-1708 Hessie.jones@isobar.net http://twitter.com/hessiej Hessie Jones VP, Social Media & Word of Mouth Marketing Isobar North America