TFM&A 2011 — A black swan event? (March 6, 2011)

We [ www.auros.co.uk ] were exhibiting at stand D6 TFM&A, Earls Court, London. It was the first outing for our new stand — the counter-intuitive design worked well. And it gave us quiet space to introduce a new idea to marketers eager to learn and explore. This was the first show in our history (that I know of) that we signed a deal at the show — significant and definitely not a black swan event.

500tfma

Tipping point

For me this show marked a tipping point for social media. Oh sure, it's been around for a while (some might say decades) but the tipping point is about how it features in marketer's minds and hence budgets, it is a transition from *ad-hoc dabble* to *consciously adopt and strategically implement*. Marketers have been presented with a rather negative scare tactic to date: "you need to listen to what people are saying about your brands!" I reckon some have reacted anywhere from negatively-followed-by-obstinacy through to *OK, I'm doing the listening, now what?*

Listening is important

In most control systems, feedback is important. The thermostat on the wall tells *the heating system* it's time to make some warmth. The feedback information in that example is a simple binary on/off, it's easy monitor and make decisions based on simple information. Sentiment analysis is tricky however. There's lots of chatter to listen to online — that's OK, the tech can handle that. There's the problems inherent in language and the way it's used by humans and analysed by machines: "that's wicked" get's a negative sentiment score. Even so, to not listen is to miss some useful feedback.

Listening

From listening to dialogue

You own your website, you control its content, you execute email campaigns and you track who looks at what. You know your stats and KPI's. Then social media arrived along with the millenials — the audience that doesn't email or tweet come to that. In addition, social media introduces its own tipping point: people control is greater than brand control. You may not be marketing to millenials yet — you will be soon. What do you do? Take your content to where the people are and figure out how to move from broadcast-and-hope to listening-with-intent. This is the social media world of many-to-many communication. Marketers with a mental model that can be summarised as communication-entitlement or *I talk, you listen* will have to re-learn their craft.

It's no longer enough to recognise your buyers in the market place. You need to recognise the mavens, the influencers, the individuals that endorse your brand/s but may not be a customer. In Facebook terms this could be the positive comments and Likes in the *earned* space. Dialogue with coolhunters or mavens is therefore important but traditional targeting methods won't get your message to them — in a traditional marketing sense influencers are invisible.

Unexpected consequences

Don't confuse social media monitoring tools like Alterian's SM2 with social media management. The two are complimentary but the latter goes beyond monitoring-only to solve problems associated with managing and maintaining many channels: scaling, security and control, and reporting. The unexpected consequences come in the form of insight. Web analytics could tell you how many visitors came to your site but not who they are, who they influence or who influences them.

Conclusion

Wikipedia defines a Black Swan Event this way [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_swan_theory ]:

  1. The event is a surprise (to the observer).
  2. The event has a major impact.
  3. After its first recording, the event is rationalized by hindsight, as if it could have been expected (e.g., the relevant data were available but not accounted for).

So what was the black swan event of TFMA? That the vast majority of the people wanted to talk about social media and didn't particularly want to talk about WCMS. Oh sure, it's important but it's a bit like air: we all need it but no one talks about it!

To see and be seen (February 20, 2011)

My first "proper" bicycle was a Dawes Red Feather. It came complete with lights and a dynamo! The lamp was very effective at illuminating the road ahead  — all the time I was moving. A dynamo powered light goes out the moment you come to a halt. Fast forward 40 years and things are a little different. On any dark evening you'll notice cyclists, lit-up like proverbial mobile christmas trees with their flashing LED lights and high-power lamps. These ensure that not only can they see where they're going but that they're also seen and therefore safety is maximised. In other words, lights on a bicycle have two purposes: to see the way ahead and to be seen.

The Social Media parallel

When discussing Social Media activities with clients and prospects, they're understandable first concern is to gather some social media analytics. This information tells them what people say about their brands and associated services. Using the bicycle analogy this information is the "lights to see".

Be seen too!

It's one thing to see but that's only half of the social media story. Active participation is the other half — it the same as *being seen*. And it's really quite important. If you blog and wonder why you don't get comments it could well be because you don't comment on other blogs. Perhaps you don't yet blog at all? If you tweet and all your tweets are about you, your brand and your activities then your social media plan ain't that social! If you can never bring yourself to engage with your competitors or even, heaven forbid, congratulate them on their achievements, you haven't got it yet.

Single-dimensional social media doesn't work — you have to see and be seen. You have to participate as well as measure. Social media is a conversation and it involves expressing opinions, ideas and celebrating success even when it's not yours. Social media participation requires a healthy dose of altruism. If you think it's there simply to exploit — you haven't understood how to play nicely. It's as if you stopped peddling, your dynamo has stopped and ALL your lights have gone out. It's a social thing….

Local Authorities on Facebook (December 13, 2010)

Since my last post on this subject I thought it worth revisiting the data. Why today? Today (13 December 2010) was the day English Councils discovered just how much they had to save as the waves of cuts begin to hit. Local government is required to deliver services, some funded by central government, others through community initiatives. And it's the latter a.k.a, Big Society or pay-for-it-yourself that means these organisations need to engage with citizens to:

— sell ideas
— explain choices, cuts and options
— ask for input and help
— gain commitment

Today was the day some lost their jobs while others had budgets cut to such an extent it will make tomorrow's challenge a whole new ball game. An interesting side effect of hard times is that strategic intelligence is driven up as hardships increase. This is the age of austerity, the age of doing more with less. And it's the age where councils seem to be engaging with their citizens using with social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter. Will it enable them to do more with less? Only time will tell…meantime, some have joined the race to be liked.

In this post I've refreshed the date and concentrated on PERCENTAGE INCREASE IN FACEBOOK LIKES since my last post. Coventry County Council is still the notable leader in terms of Facebook success with more that 16,000 Likes!

Local Authority
Pos. FB Likes (orig.) FB Likes (current) Incr. %
Darlington BC
1 427 2,977 597%
Belfast CC
2 611 2,565 320%
Tameside Metropolitan BC
3 114 316 177%
City of Edinburgh
4 171 438 156%
Brighton and Hove CC
5 220 560 155%
Stratford-on-Avon 6 94 240 155%
Manchester CC
7 172 425 147%
Sunderland CC
8 577 1392 141%
Carmarthenshire 9 171 391 129%
London Borough of Brent
10 118 264 124%
Wrexham County BC
11 156 344 121%
Torbay Council
12 387 814 110%
Bracknell Forest Council
13 294 602 105%
Cambridgeshire BC
14 92 186 102%
London Borough of Lewisham
15 139 271 95%
Stockport Metropolitan BC
16 138 269 95%
Stevenage BC
17 141 262 86%
London Borough of Barnet 18 351 647 84%
Wakefield City Metropolitan DC
19 109 192 76%
London Borough of Southwark
20 432 738 71%
Rotherham Metropolitan BC
21 104 175 68%
Maidstone BC
22 158 258 63%
Allerdale BC
23 140 218 56%
Coventry CC
24 10,896 16,589 52%
Hart DC
25 89 129 45%