Showing posts with label social marketing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social marketing. Show all posts

Monday, September 27, 2010

The use of social media as a tool for marketing

A few months ago we warned corporations to be very careful in using social media as their new playground for marketing. They don't control this medium! They don't control the narrative anymore! It was easy for them to make you believe almost anything they wanted in a society provided only with one-to-many communications, controlled by them. Many-to-many communications are changing the game. The message doesn't  move directly from them to the consumer. It propagates from person to person, and at every step anyone can play with it. In order to get your message around it must be a powerful meme, it must resonate with people to make them push it further, share it with their peers. If the public perception of a company is bad, the message released by that company WILL get distorted and WILL play against. It's harder now to fool everyone...  If you do things wrong, sooner or later the shit will hit the fan. The certain way to prevent a branding and marketing disaster is to be honest.

Social media will make organizations responsible by making it harder for them to lie and to hide their dirty stuff.

A lesson in AT&T's Facebook approach
More companies are embracing social media these days for marketing purposes. But at the same time, there's always the risk of PR disaster. Kenny Malone reports on one approach companies can take when Facebook turns unfriendly. Read more...

By AllOfUs

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Social media, a deadly place for corporations

The starting point of this reflection is the fact that corporations are going full speed and head first into the new social media hype. They are using these new tools to engage the masses in the process of design, evaluation, and marketing. The goal is to understand the dangers corporations are facing in engaging the masses through social media. I am getting my "data" from different social media outlets (forums, mailing lists...) where executives exchange ideas on how to best use the new technology to gain market share and to increase profits.


The "2020 Social Workshop on Social Media for Non-Pofits" article bellow explains why the adoption of the new media will gradually kill the corporation. In this article I explore another class of adverse effects.



Two important observations
  • companies don't control this new media (the social media)
  • the message is spreading through multipliers or evangelists which are not part of the organization

The social media space can become a bloody battleground for corporations
No one controls social media. Anyone can spread his own ideas at very small costs. Anyone can pollute your message, anyone can directly attack you. Moreover, social media is not regulated like the classical media. You cannot sue Facebook because a group of people wrote negative comments about your company, and freedom of speech is applied differently on social media than on classical media. It is very possible to see social media becoming a battleground for corporations (individualistic and highly competitive entities, not very keen on sharing, openness, and collaboration), leading to a carnage. Because they can, because it is possible, and because it costs almost nothing, some corporations might choose to attack their competitors using social media. They can decide to take a hidden approach by inciting other entities to carry out the actions, for example to pollute their competitor's marketing campaign, to incite other groups to boycott their competitor's products by providing them with negative information about it, etc. Or they can take a more direct approach, putting themselves in front of their actions. Dirty fights are seen in classical media, I think social media is the perfect breeding ground for this sort of actions.

This is actually good news for those of us who don't believe in hierarchies (hierarchically structured private endeavors). Open and collaborative systems are now competing with classical hierarchies, in this new environment shaped by the new technology. The new technology rewards collaborative networks to the detriment of individualistic and overly competitive hierarchical organizations, because it naturally enhances sharing and cooperation. On top of that, it seams that this new environment might encourage hierarchies, that is corporations, to express their individualistic and overly competitive nature by killing each other on the open "piazza".

The same social media can be used by the public against a corporation
How can a corporation with a bad reputation survive against a swarm of activists behind its tail? As corporations learn how to use social media to increase their profits, activists also learn how to use the same technology to attack corporations. The question is, given the nature of this new technology, who can extract more potential from it? Who will benefit the most?

After thousands of years of social evolution good ethics still rules the world. Even though, in most cases, bad people are running our societies, good ethics is what keeps societies together, and these corrupt leaders go through a lot of trouble to convince their subjects that they stand on the right side. The Internet technology transforms the entire planet into a small village, in the sense that anyone has access to who you are and to your past. This is especially true for public entities like a corporation. It is hard to hide if you are a really bad guy. Until recently, in a large city, one could screw someone here and hide in anonymity two blocks away. That is because one could get away with it, because people didn't have easy access to who the identity of the individual. Thus, if the gains are larger than the risk involved the individual can repeat his immoral actions, and even get imitated by others. In a small village setting, everyone knows everyone else. If someone screws someone else once his ability to screw anyone else again drops dramatically. One's ability to extract advantages from his community diminishes after a bad move, because people will marginalize this individual. So everyone gets it: if you screw someone you'll be shunned, it's not worth it...

That's why crime is low in small communities, not because people are different there, but because good behavior is reinforced by the way people are constrained to interact with each other. In the small village context, reputation becomes a very important asset and it is measured against accepted ethical norms. The same regulating mechanism operates in a highly interconnected world, i.e. in a world with Internet. If a company knowingly sells an unsafe product sooner or later this will come out, and a few dedicated individuals can literally bring this company down. A few passionate individuals have the means to destroy its reputation using the same social media it is using to market its products. See the Boomerang, a new way to fight work related injustice, how one person can take on a corporation.

In my opinion, by transforming the world into a small village the Internet forces economical entities to act ethically, or at least according to what the majority perceives as good ethics.  


By AllOfUs

Monday, April 26, 2010

2020 Social Workshop on Social Media for Non-Pofits

Check the SlideShare Presentation bellow by Gaurav Mishra. I find it very useful to understand the new technology and its impact on how we do business. But I also to take away another lesson: large corporations like DELL fully embraced social media and are actually benefiting from it. But here's my question: is the new social technology the Trojan horse of corporations? Is this the ultimate act of blind greed and desperation for profits that will initiate the demise of these hierarchies?

I believe that once social media penetrates into a corporation it brings with it a whole new culture, a deadly poison. This is the culture of sharing and collaboration, of freedom and autonomy, along with the realization that real value resides within the masses.

Business people are just realizing that in a context where you can gather and organize input from millions of individuals and engage them all in different types of activities it becomes more profitable to open the organization a little, to blur its boundaries. The argument is that if you have the means to engage a large number of individuals there might be a way to extract value from them, but first you need to invite them to your party, so you need to open your door.

Until recently, the prevalent model was that the corporation decides what people want, makes the product and pushes it to the market by manufacturing a desire for it. (Most products are sold based on desire, not on need.) Executives are now realizing that when the consumer is part of the design and the marketing process something magical happens and profits surge. The new technology makes this possible, offering very effective communication and collaboration tools. But to make it work, they need to create a hype around the product, which is now sold as a social cause, a story, an event, and to create a community around it. So the model is shifting, the consumer is part of the design and the marketing campaign, he's part of the process now. There is an open dialog between the corporation and the public, there is some sort of collaboration (implying reciprocity), or at list this is what the corporation wants YOU to believe. They want to make you feel as if you are contributing to something meaningful, because they need your input. They manufacture a community around a product because they want to trap your gregarious instincts with it, in order to get your cooperation to buy the product, to talk about it, and to contribute with new product-ideas. It works to a certain extent... The long-term problem is to maintain voluntary individual cooperation in a situation where the individual has other choices. At some point down the line people are going to wake up and smell the manipulation, especially if they have other points of comparison, other models bases on true reciprocity.

You cannot engage the people in your cause for a long time without making them perceive that they get something back. You cannot make a community without making a community. If you make a party but you keep all the goodies for yourself in a hidden room, sooner or later people will find that out and, because they have the choice, they will simply leave you and go to the another party. All this is based on individual choice and cooperation. People give (time, ideas, etc.) as long as they perceive that they get something back. Not necessarily material benefits, we are dealing with a multi-value system. If your community doesn't feel like one you cannot gain the fool cooperation of your crowd. But this is not the end of the story!

These executives smelled the money and, almost by reflex, they made the move, not realizing that embracing the new social technology, even to the extent they did, is incompatible with their very nature. You cannot be closed hierarchy and an open decentralized community at the same time! By adopting the social media DELL corporation makes the statement that there IS value in the multitude. People know what they need and they have good ideas in terms of design. The interconnected multitude is also good at evaluating the product according to a multi-dimensional set of criteria, taking into consideration functionality, ergonomics, ecology, safety, etc. The corporation engaging the multitude is forced to acknowledge this, it is forced to look into this matter by the success of others. This shift to the social business model is the first act of their demise, initiating a slow and precarious metamorphoses towards purely collaborative systems. Most corporations will not survive this transformation. At this moment, behind the veil of openness there is a lucid and manipulative mind, but after some time working with the social model executives will realize that there is much more value to be extracted from the multitude. They will eventually come to the conclusion that the best way to maintain a high level of individual involvement and cooperation within an open and diffuse organization is to give people a real sense of belonging to a real community. Is to invite creative and hard working individuals from everywhere to join the venture and to extract benefits from their involvement in proportion to their contributions. In other words, whose hierarchies who can survive the metamorphoses will become value networks.

But wait a second, economical entities only act in the direction of increased economical power. Who says that opening even more leads to greater economical power? (Notice that I don't use the word profit, we want to allow other types of economies to emerge.) You find the answer to this question here. See also open value networks.

We are just at the beginning of the business 2.0 phenomena. This technology that we call social is very young still. Corporations have already implemented new methods to improve their products and to boost their sales. Slowly but surely we will see emerging in parallel decentralized organizations of design and production, which will fully embrace the culture of sharing and collaboration, based on new economical principles. These new organizations will be able to enlist vast social forces because they will be able to convey the message to the participating multitude that their output belongs to them! These alternatives, although slow to emerge, will gradually take over the economy. Corporations will go through a metamorphoses to become open and decentralized, most of them will not survive this radical transformation.

Gaurav Mishra, I see you as a powerful and mystical shaman followed by a group of executives, greedy, power hungry, and selfish, all anxiously waiting for their magical potion. Instead you are giving them their poison and rejoice at their insane smile of happiness, not seeing their tragic faith soon to arrive.