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Archive for Communities

How to Avoid a Social Media Meltdown

By Kenna Dian · Comments (2)
Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

Social Media Planning4 questions every Web team should answer

The other day, I was thinking about the latest social media snafu HP.com’s Networking zone recently ran into. Its experience is an important lesson about how dangerous displaying the musings, and sometimes wrath, of the masses can be. This led me to ponder: what questions do Website teams need to ask themselves before deciding to pipe social media content onto their Website pages? Off the top of my head, four major questions come to mind:

What is the objective? Why are you planning to use social media in the first place? This isn’t to say that your Web team shouldn’t consider social media; only that you need to ask yourself some tough questions before you start. Read More→

Comments (2)
Categories : Branding, Marketing, Social Media & Social Networks, Strategy
Tags : blogs, brand, Communities, facebook, hp.com, online forums, Social Media, social network, Strategy, Twitter

Flash mobs with a purpose

By Marty Gruhn · Comments (1)
Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Dell’s Storm Sessions aren’t getting much traction, but you shouldn’t count them out

I can remember when flash mobs were a hot topic in the media; essentially a group of people with more time on their hands than good sense. I figured this phenomenon would go the way of the mosh pit.

Who knew that Dell.com would try and harness it as a form of online community behavior?

Here, I’m talking about Dell.com’s Storm Sessions which nestle within its Idea Storm community. In simple terms, this is the place where Dell throws out an idea or question for community members, starts the clock, and lets community members throw in their opinions.

Gabfests can be open for a month or a few days. Once the clock has run out, the session is closed, Dell reviews the comments, and shares how/when Dell will act on the information.

I’ve been watching Storm Sessions for about six months to see if this idea would gain any traction within Dell’s community ecosystem and gauge the kinds of issues and questions Dell would pose. Read More→

Comments (1)
Categories : Communities, POV (point of view), Social Media & Social Networks, Support
Tags : Communities, dell.com, Social Media, Support

Communities – and the law of unintended consequences

By Marty Gruhn · Comments (1)
Friday, April 30th, 2010

It’s 5 o’clock — do you know what your moderators are doing?

I’ve been doing deep dives into some communities on the Web and have decided that many of them are time bombs waiting to go off in companies.

To see why, let me take you on a quick trip down memory lane.

In a previous life, I was a strategic consultant to major IT companies – and once found myself presenting to Wang Lab’s Board of Directors. The topic of the day was customer satisfaction. A cadre of VPs were telling Dr. Wang that customers loved the company. Our customer satisfaction surveys showed that the peasants were getting ready to storm the castle, pitch forks and all.

Wang’s solution to the problem was simple. The company’s engineers and support staffs were mobilized to visit all of Wang’s major customers, chat up product benefits, and listen to their needs. Six weeks later, the company had to sponsor a series of mandatory classes to teach its technical staff how to talk to customers, and wear a suit and tie. Customer satisfaction never improved — and the end game is now industry lore.

Fade out a couple of decades later and we have the same situations brewing in digital form. To see why, consider a couple of examples I ran across the other day.

Read More→

Comments (1)
Categories : Communities, Social Media & Social Networks, Support
Tags : Communities, Marketing, Social Media, worst practice

HP’s Community Reward Programs | What are they thinking?

By Marty Gruhn · Comments (0)
Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

How Web teams feel when they make huge mistakesThere are plenty of ways to design reward programs. This isn’t one of them.

In my recent online communities strategy report, I stressed the importance of designing reward programs to encourage visitors and members to engage in the conversation, rather than lurk and listen. It’s the secret to the success of the largest and most vibrant communities – whether they are targeted at brand building or product support.

The issue is, of course, what kind of reward program? Should companies dangle an iPad or a cruise in front of members or go for bragging rights?

Bragging rights are the most popular and arguably the most effective. These programs are usually based on a point system. Members get points when they answer a question – and receive additional “Brownie points” when the answer actually works.

Point levels create a pecking order where members with the highest points qualify for a particular status – and thus, more community trust. Typical levels range from Contributor (clueless but participating) to Expert (actually knows what s/he’s talking about).

As an aside, it’s worth mentioning that Oracle.com’s Ace program has an interesting variation on the theme. It allows members to vote for other members to become an Oracle Ace – the highest status on the OTN site. It’s a great way to allow the community to decide who really provides value (vs. activity) – although the ballot process requires the company to sponsor the contest and handle the back end logistics. (Think of it as a really complicated Cosmo quiz with some bite.)

And then we have HP, who uses a series of point systems with some very odd twists. Read More→

Comments (0)
Categories : Communities, Strategy
Tags : Communities, hp.com, reward programs, worst practice

Why social networks, communities, and Web 2.0 aren’t B2B shotguns

By Marty Gruhn · Comments (1)
Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

Social network, communities and Web 2.0 aren't shotgunsIt’s time to stop fiddling around and apply them where they matter

The French have a wonderful phrase “plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose”. It’s an elegant way to say that the more things change, the more they remain the same.

That’s certainly the case when you consider the complex B2B buying process. Since our last update in 2006, this process remains the same. It’s still dictated by task forces and committees who must wade through 17 steps to get to the finish line. Participants are still purchase influencers, rather than the decision makers companies crave. Websites still influence only 5 steps in the buying process.

But that doesn’t mean that everything remains the same. Read More→

Comments (1)
Categories : Communities, eSelling, Marketing, Social Media & Social Networks, Strategy, Web 2.0
Tags : B2B buying, B2b selling, Communities, eSelling, Marketing, podcast, Social Media, social networks, Strategy, video, Web 2.0, webinar

Why Tech?

By Marty Gruhn · Comments (1)
Saturday, March 6th, 2010

A lot of people ask me why we focus on technology sites. Their reasoning is simple. There’s plenty of other interesting Websites out there with cooler designs and more doodads.

They’re probably right.

On the other hand, good (and even great) IT industry Websites have something to teach everyone.

They market and sell a complex range of products and software – plus the services that make them work. HP.com, for example, has over 10,000 SKUs. A small tech site can have upwards of 10,000 pages under management.

They reach and woo huge, diverse and demanding audiences.  Consumers who are shopping. CIO’s who are bonding. Project managers who are planning. Tech heads who are developing. Investors and journalists who influence the market’s pace. These sites will easily serve over 14 million visitors a month. When you have that many people knocking on your door, there’s not much time to make mistakes.

And that’s just for starters. Once the deal is done, tech sites must deliver mountains of product support information to cranky users 24/7. Meanwhile, behind the scenes, entitled extranets maintain relationships with huge global customers, and distributors and partners selling the company’s wares.

All things considered, tech sites have more moving parts and business strategies than anyone else on the Web. Amazon.com might have “fall off a log” e-commerce, but it doesn’t have to fix my egg cooker when the cord falls out.  My banking site does a great job of displaying my accounts in real time and letting me pay the bills, but it doesn’t have to deliver a gazillion software downloads a day, or contend with millions of developers who are fiddling with the product.

That’s why we focus on technology sites — and why you should too.

Comments (1)
Categories : POV (point of view), Strategy
Tags : channel marketing, Communities, corporate marketing, Design, ecommerce, eSelling, hp.com, partners, product marketing, services marketing, Support, website design, Website traffic

Why IBM Software, SAS, EMC, Intel, Brocade & Deloitte made the cut

By Marty Gruhn · Comments (0)
Monday, February 1st, 2010

This week we started our Q1 evaluations of 23 Websites, plus additional sites selected by our clients for comparison.

We’ve mixed up the siteIQ eBusiness Index for 2010. In some cases the decision was based on eliminating Websites that haven’t improved over the past year and don’t provide any good or best practices worth tracking. In other cases, sites have fallen off our list because they don’t exist anymore. That would be EDS.com which was integrated into HP.com — and Sun.com which went off the airwaves last week.

In both cases, these sites are a loss to anyone who cares about good and great practices. Don’t bother to follow them to their new homes. Their presence inside of their new parent’s sites is nothing to write home about.

Here’s some more about the new sites added to our roster – and why we’re singing “auld lang syne” to others. (If you are a siteIQ client you can read more about what we expect from these and other leading sites in 2010 in our new executive brief in the siteIntelligence Research Center). Read More→

Comments (0)
Categories : Branding, Communities, Design, eSelling, POV (point of view), Strategy, Web 2.0
Tags : accenture.com, adobe.com, best practice, brand, brocade.com, Communities, customization, deloitte.com, Design, developer, ebusiness index, ecommerce, eds.com, emc.com, good practice, hp.com, ibm global services, ibm software group, intel.com, Marketing, Navigation, sas.com, Search, Strategy, sun.com, Web 2.0, website design, website rankings

Some good communities advice worth considering

By Marty Gruhn · Comments (2)
Thursday, December 17th, 2009

In my last post, I listed the five mistakes companies make when planning and operating their online communities.  Mike Moran, one of the industry’s smartest search marketing gurus (and a former IBM.com’er), offers three pieces of great advice about how to carefully start an online community in his latest blog. Given what we’ve seen, I couldn’t agree more.

Idea communities factored greatly in our new report  about the best and worst  IT communities, and Dell.com’s IdeaStorm ended up as the poster child for an idea community gone off the rails.  For those of you who want to avoid this fate, Mike ‘s related blog Do it Wrong Quickly offers  three  points that can help keep a lot of companies out of the ditch.

Comments (2)
Categories : Communities, Strategy
Tags : Communities, dell.com, IdeaStorm, website development

Online Communities: Fasten Your Seat Belts

By Marty Gruhn · Comments (3)
Monday, December 14th, 2009

Web 2.0 and 3.0 can and will deliver real value to site operators and their visitors and prospects in 2010. Communities? Not so much.

Recently, I presented how we’re defining Web 2.0, Web 3.0 and communities to several clients, including our POV on their futures in 2010. It’s interesting that these three areas are finally moving beyond all the hype and bright and shiny objects that blinded most Web teams to their real potential last year.

Web 2.0 and 3.0 are finally coalescing into two ends of an important spectrum. Web 2.0 is all about content and information – providing these assets in new forms that make them easier for visitors to digest, use and share. Web 3.0 is actually about changing the interface and how users access these new generations of content. Simply put, it’s about creating adaptive sites that intuit or know why the visitor is there.

From my perspective, Web 2.0 and 3.0 can and will deliver real value to site operators and the visitors and prospects they are trying to woo and win in 2010. Communities? Not so much.

In fact, our in-depth evaluations show that most communities represent a high risk business strategy for companies. Why? Let me count the ways. Read More→

Comments (3)
Categories : Communities, Social Media & Social Networks, Strategy, Web 2.0
Tags : Communities, developer, risk, Social Media, Strategy, Support, Web 2.0, Web 3.0

A funny thing happened on the way to the forum(s)

By Marty Gruhn · Comments (2)
Monday, October 12th, 2009

The title of the classic 60’s Broadway play “A funny thing happened on the way to the forum” kept popping into my head as the evaluation results smacked me in the head and led me in an entirely new direction.

We’ve just finished phase one of our in depth evaluations of leading online communities in the IT industry. Phase two launches this week, which focuses on providing insights and recommendations to siteIQ clients.

As I started the insights and strategy portion of this research, the title of the classic 60’s Broadway play “A funny thing happened on the way to the forum” kept popping into my head as the evaluation results smacked me in the head and led me in an entirely new direction.

The Rosetta Stone turned out to be a close look at metrics that show how leading communities are structured and organized, and how effectively they address the needs of four key audiences: non-technical managers & purchase influencers, partners, support users, and developers. When I looked at these results, it became clear that companies are going in two directions.

Some are building (or expanding existing) communities to target classic technical audiences, and are, by and large, looking for payoffs in lower support costs. But others, like IBM, are trying to break new ground through a new generation of brand and social media marketing communities. A third group—and arguably the largest—reminds me of the blind men and the elephant. They have a firm grasp on the tail but they sense there’s some really big ears somewhere. Their inability to see the big picture is creating communities that behave somewhere between a practicing schizophrenic and a “frankensite.”

For my money, the brand and social media marketing activities and strategies are the most interesting for a couple of reasons. First, these communities focus on creating and nurturing brand loyalty (product, strategy, vision, company) — and generating new revenues by using the voice of the corporation & the voice of the customer to woo and win over purchase influencers and prospects. Second, defining and documenting the payoffs is going to be tricky – and failing to do so could be a career stopper for many current advocates.

Oh, and there’s a third one. You can build brand and social media marketing communities all day long – but manning them and making them meaningful requires a HUGE shift in the company’s culture. From what I’ve seen thus far, I don’t think that any of the companies in our study get this (yet).

What’s your opinion about new generation  brand and social media marketing communities? Sound off in the comments below.

Comments (2)
Categories : Communities, eSelling, Marketing, POV (point of view), Social Media & Social Networks, Strategy
Tags : brand communities, Communities, eSelling, ibm, ibm.com, Marketing, Social Media
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Marty Gruhn on Twitter

  • New case study on the way: The IBM SWG Website team is executing its cult of personality strategy to perfection. http://t.co/YuBBODwr about 13 hours ago from web ReplyRetweetFavorite
  • Smart moves. IBM uses "Connect" tab 2 drive visitors 2 high value social media venues & LinkedIn groups to start conversations with IBMers 05:20:29 PM January 13, 2012 from web ReplyRetweetFavorite
@siteIQMarty

Follow Kenna Dian on Twitter

  • Online communities your thing? The Online Communities Index report is hot off the presses for Library subscribers! http://t.co/EAAgG7bi about 13 hours ago from web ReplyRetweetFavorite
  • RT @SageNAmerica: Great quote from Larry Ritter RT @LCoates1: "If you don't like change, you'll really dislike being irrelevant." @ACTby ... about 13 hours ago from web ReplyRetweetFavorite
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