Posts Tagged: social at scale


8
Aug 12

When You’re Not Inspired by Your Own Content…

One of the biggest challenges of being Social@Scale is finding the balance between “social” and “scale.”

Given the recent history of enterprise marketing, the default habit is more “scale” than “social” and operational guidelines such as “content calendars” and “KPIs” take over as people lose sight on the value and objective of the activity.

When it comes to Content Marketing, the objective of “create one thought leadership piece per month” tends to morph into “create one piece of content per month” as the metric (it’s easier to track that) and less on the “make sure it really is ‘thought leadership.’”

London 2012 Olympics, August 7th- Flags by the Basketball arena

If you worry you are falling into that abyss, I cannot recommend highly enough Jason Falls’ introspective piece “If Your Content Doesn’t Excite You, It’s Time To Rethink.”

And he’s 100% right.

Being Social (particularly @Scale) is about inspiring, connecting, and stimulating passion aligned to the interests of your audience.

If you’re not fired up about it, why the heck should they care about it?

Not only is Jason spot on in this regard, but he goes even farther, demonstrating in public where he thinks he’s fallen short and how he thinks he can improve. It’s everything that Social should be. Authentic, honest, and personal.

What does all of this do?

It builds TRUST.

We applaud this commitment to being Social and are confident that this approach and the trust that comes with it are going to be highly profitable for Jason…and all enterprises that commit to the same path.

Jeremy Epstein is the VP/Marketing at Sprinklr . You can follow him on twitter @jer979


2
Aug 12

Maureen “Mo” Chapin, Communications Manager at 3M, on How An Enterprise Does Social@Scale

Sprinklr caught up with Maureen “Mo” Chapin, Communications Manager at 3M, who shared her thoughts on what it takes for large enterprises and brands to do Social@Scale.

You can connect with Maureen @kinniriverLinkedIn, and visit her company’s website at 3M.

View Sprinklr’s YouTube Channel for more videos on Social@Scale.


6
Jun 12

How the Enterprise Adapts: Think Social@Scale

A few days ago, I had a less than desirable experience with my electricity provider, Washington Gas and Energy Services.

They assumed I wanted a full year contract with a $150 payment penalty for early termination.

I didn’t.

Old Business Practices, Social Business Practices

This type of business practice may have been suited to a world where consumers were not empowered. It’s not a great fit in a world of Social network-empowered customers.

In a non-networked world, damage to a brand’s reputation is limited to a handful of people. It’s too expensive for a given individual to spread the word.

clip_image002In a networked and socially empowered world, anyone can share their brand experiences at zero marginal cost. Consequently, the potential damage in terms of PR and Marketing costs is much higher.

None of this is news.

The challenge in a Social world for large brands is that what they don’t know about their customer’s experience -at any given touchpoint- can and will hurt.

Social Extends Across Silos

In the case of WGES, what Marketing doesn’t know about my experience with Customer Service has a direct impact on Word of Mouth, brand reputation, and referenceability. It also reduces the impact of the ROI of their direct mail efforts, as in the case of the brochure I received which I promptly put in the recycling bin.

You’ve seen hundreds of these examples. Cross-silo lack of coordination is nothing new.

What is new is the impact on the business from the collaboration inefficiencies.

When a customer has an experience and shares it in Social, the impact may be nothing…or it may be huge, as BPI found out in the meat processing industry.

Adapting to Social: What the Enterprise Needs

The Altimeter Group recognizes this massive challenge to global brands and that’s why they’ve made ”The Adaptive Organization” one of their research themes this year and rightly so.

Organizations continue to operate in industrial-era silos that are more appropriate for the factory floor than a digital world.

A chaotic marketplace — with rapidly shifting social, cultural, and technological disruptions — is forcing organizations to respond, whether ready or not…

Organizations that adapt their organizational and leadership structures will be able to not just manage, but also anticipate and leverage these disruptions to stay relevant.

And the converse of that is true as well. Organizations that do NOT adapt will not be able to manage or anticipate the disruptions.

Altimeter asks the right question:

What’s required inside an organization to make these changes — including new ways to work in decentralized, bottom-up structures, and the supporting roles, policies, structures, processes, and tools?

We work with some of the world’s most global, social brands and what they are telling us is that there are two paths in this adaptation. One that definitely won’t work. One that should.

What Enterprises Need and Don’t Need to do Social@Scale

In the “What We Don’t Need” Group…

1. Better individual technology (so-called Consumerization of IT)
While employees in their personal lives are getting better and better technology and have higher expectations for their capabilities in Social, the solution can only be done enterprise-wide.

2. Maverick business units
It’s true that any LOB can bypass IT entirely by contracting with a SaaS solution of their own, but that’s not going to result in a Universal Profile of the Social Customer, something that would have helped WGES.

And in the “What We Need” Group….

What global brands tell us they need is a way to think and be Social across the enterprise….to be Social at Scale. We like to call it “Social@Scale”.

This requires:

  1. A Unified View of the Customer to see that an account number belongs to a caller who is the blogger on Twitter…all supported by a true multi-channel platform.
  2. An Operational Framework that crosses functions to provide clarity around responsibilities to the customer and roles within the organization….sitting on top of a multi-function platform that supports the plan.
  3. A Governance Framework with automated and manual workflow to ensure that the right messages (e.g. “customer is unhappy with automatic renewal”) get to the right people in the right departments (e.g customer service escalation, marketing, social center of excellence) at the right time with the right level of access and permissions.
For a full list of requirements for the enterprise, download the free PDF “The 6 Must Haves for Every Enterprise Social RFP.”



Now for the Good News

It IS possible and profitable to do Social at Scale and we are seeing some top brands make significant headway.

Take for example, GM.

By aligning their functional teams on a single platform, preparing an operational plan (they call it a “swim lane” document), mapping their business structure to the governance framework, GM was able to reduce Social Customer Service response time from 12 hours to 90 minutes. (Read the full article here about GM).

As Rebecca Harris of GM said, “we weren’t using any of the same systems.”

Now, her teams can track metrics make assignments, archive conversations, and make sure two people aren’t handling the same case at once.

Adaptation is the Pre-requisite

The Adaptive Organization is a pre-requisite to thriving in the new Social Economy. It doesn’t guarantee survival.

We’re seeing companies like Cisco, Virgin America, and Samsung not only re-orient their businesses around Social and across silos, but they are putting the systems and processes in place today to engage at scale enterprise-wide.

The answer to Altimeter’s question?

The Adaptive Organization must think, act, and be Social@Scale.

 

Jeremy Epstein is the VP of Marketing at Sprinklr.
Disclosure: GM, Cisco, Virgin America, and Samsung are Sprinklr clients.

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11
May 12

Jon Zilber, Online Communications Director at HP and Palm, On Social@Scale

Sprinklr caught up with Jon Zilber, Online Communications Director at HP and Palm, who shared his thoughts on what it takes for large enterprises and brands to do Social@Scale.

You can connect with Jon Zilber on LinkedIn, and visit his company’s website at HP.

View Sprinklr’s YouTube Channel for more videos on Social@Scale.


7
May 12

Anita Shaw, Vice President of eMarketing at Union Bank, on Social@Scale

Sprinklr caught up with Anita Shaw, Vice President of eMarketing at Union Bank, who shared her thoughts on what it takes for large enterprises and brands to do social@scale.

You can connect with Anita Shaw @sf_anitashaw, LinkedIn, and visit her company’s website at UnionBank.

View Sprinklr’s YouTube Channel for More videos on social@scale.


5
May 12

Len Devanna, VP of Social Business Strategy at Ant’s Eye View, on Social at Scale

Sprinklr caught up with Len Devanna, VP of social business strategy at Ant, who shared his thoughts on what it takes for large enterprises and brands to do social@scale.

You can connect with Len Devanna @lendevannaLinkedIn, and visit his company’s website at AntsEyeView.

View Sprinklr’s YouTube Channel for More videos on social@scale.


4
May 12

Lori Kasserman, Corporate Communications at Southern Company on Social at Scale

Sprinklr caught up with Lori Kasserman, Corporate Communications at Southern Company, who shares her thoughts on what it takes for large enterprises and brands to do social@scale.

You can connect with Lori Kasserman @lorikasserman, LinkedIn, and visit her company’s website at SouthernCompany.

View Sprinklr’s YouTube Channel for More videos on social@scale.


3
May 12

Norys Trevino, Senior Manager of Social Media at Logitech, on Social at Scale

Sprinklr caught up with Norys Trevino, Senior Manager of Social at Logitech, who shares her thoughts on what it takes for large enterprises and brands to do social@scale.

You can connect with Norys Trevino @norys, LinkedIn, and visit her company’s website at Logitech.

View Sprinklr’s YouTube Channel for More videos on social@scale.


2
May 12

Umang Shah, Director of Social Strategy at Walmart on Social at Scale

Sprinklr caught up with Umang Shah, Director of Social Strategy at Walmart, who shares his thoughts on what it takes for large enterprises and brands to do social@scale.

You can connect with Umang Shah @umang_shah, LinkedIn, and visit his company’s website at Walmart.

View Sprinklr’s YouTube Channel for More videos on social@scale.


1
May 12

Michael Dones, Corporate Marketing Manager at FedEx, on Social@Scale

Sprinklr caught up with Michael Dones, corporate marketing manager, who shares his thoughts on what it takes for large enterprises and brands to do social@scale.

You can connect with Michael Dones @michaeldones, LinkedIn, and visit his company’s website at FedEx.

View Sprinklr’s YouTube Channel for More videos on social@scale.


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