From the monthly archives:

March 2009

The following text is taken from my recent article for B2B Marketing Magazine in the UK:

Twitter is the perfect example of social media – an online tool powering conversation. B2B marketers have the potential to use it more effectively than B2C, not only due to the length of sales cycle but more importantly the long relationship cycle.

As a business marketer, you need to find out if your customers are talking about your brand, products, services and indeed competitors on Twitter. If they are, then you need to engage with them and be there before the sale. If not, then register your brand’s ID on Twitter and get involved before your competitors do.

With any communications tool, you should have a strategy in place to effectively handle the relationships with customers. Here are guidelines on how to best communicate your brand on Twitter.

1. Register your brand
Don’t get brand jacked – register your company name on Twitter! You can then link this account to your company blog so you are integrating your communications and syndicating content.

If your organisation does not have a blog, consider using Twitter – it can be cross-platform integrated, easier to maintain and your customers can see what you are up to.

Your sales and marketing team should also look to register their personal Twitter accounts. Dell employees use their personal name and company Twitter ID (e.g. JohnatDell) to reinforce transparency.

2. Find your customers
Using the Twitter search tool you can find users who mention your brand, product, service, industry or competitor, and then follow them.

They hopefully will check out your website or read your ‘tweets’ and follow you back. Even if they do not follow you back immediately, you can earn their following by answering any related questions adding value with an ‘@reply’.

Do not fall into the trap of using ‘auto-follow’ tools or following everyone who follows you, keep focussed on your strategy and your audience.

3. Set your brand apart from the noise
Thinking of what you should ‘tweet’ about? Twitter gives you 140 characters to answer the question ‘what are you doing now?’ so make it relevant and remember that anything you tweet will be indexed by Google.

Give some thought to your tone of voice. I would recommend that your tweets are conversational.

As with any social tool it is your contribution to the community that will set you apart from the noise and encourage followers to engage with your brand. Offering social currency such as links to industry white papers, reports, case studies, hints and tips may earn your brand social endorsement in the form of a ‘retweet’, a powerful feature of Twitter of online word-of-mouth marketing in action.

Twitter is a business ecosystem bringing together people, conversations, offerings and entire industries into one busy marketplace where the savvy can extract value and form long-term relationships.

B2B marketers should look toward Twitter as a cost-effective way of getting closer to customers. The question you should be asking yourself today is ’should I be looking to extract value from social media tools such as Twitter now, or play catch up, spending more time and effort later on?

{ 0 comments }

Back in 2008 I was invited by Dan Goldstein, Assistant Professor of Marketing at London Business School to be a guest lecturer for the MBA Internet Marketing course 2008/9 focusing on social media; more specifically the qualitative and quantitative findings of my social network marketing report.

What really made me appreciate this opportunity is the latest Financial Times rankings whereby LBS is ranked as the number one business school in the world! Admission is extremely selective and the Internet Marketing group is self selected by Dan personally.

Furthermore the Internet Marketing syllabus comprises of what can only be described as an ‘elite’ guest lecturer line-up that I was honoured to be a part of:

  • Scott Gallacher (Sky)
  • Simon Birkenhead (Google)
  • Benjamin Faes (YouTube)
  • James Cridland (BBC)
  • Blake Chandlee (Facebook)
  • Rob Horler (Isobar)
  • Mark Slade (mobile)
I actually delivered my guest lecture on the 16th February and have only just found the time to blog about the experience now but I am pleased to say it went very well.  I have received great feedback from both Dan and the students themselves after the lecture.
What I really enjoyed most was the interactive nature of the presentation.  Questions were asked after every slide, some of which were very challenging as you would expect from some of the brightest business minds.  The questions really challenged my own thinking and at the same time gave the students an opportunity to truly engage with my lecture.  After 1.5 hours of social media discussion and debate my brain was charged.
Following on from this I have been invited by Dr Lisa Harris to deliver a guest lecture at the University of Southampton as part of their online marketing degree.  Another great University and opportunity to discuss social media with students.
In September 2009 Social Media Marketing has been included within the 100 Best Twitter Feeds for Savvy Business Students and the Top 50 Business Education Bloggers.

{ 0 comments }