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Posted on June 23, 2009

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Social Media Monitoring Tools Podcast - A Discussion with Brian Chappell


BY JASON CORMIER
Size: 9.9 MB
Length: 10:45

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Show Notes:

Room 214 Co-Founder, Jason Cormier, discusses social media monitoring tools with Brian Chappell, Senior Social Search Strategist at Ignite Social Media.

In this podcast, we discuss:

1. The most valuable aspects of social media monitoring tools: Keeping tabs on conversations and customers for the purpose of crisis communications and reputation management.

2. Sentiment analysis in social media monitoring tools: Is automatic sentiment analysis developed enough?

3. What are clients looking for in these tools? Engaging in new markets through listening to customers, opportunities to include intelligence in product development cycles.

4. "Social media isn't a salt shaker": You have to work it into the base of your marketing.

5. What's next with social media monitoring: Greater levels of CRM integration, and more consistent pricing models.

Notes: I appreciated Brian's participation in the discussion, even as some have cited our agencies as competitors. It was affirming that Ignite is working through many of the same issues we are with respect to the tools. Hopefully, there is a nugget or two of insight here for others considering how they should evaluate the options. As one of our partners once put it to me, "it's always preferable to combine our powers for good instead of evil."

TAGS: SOCIAL MEDIA MONITORINGSOCIAL MEDIA TOOLSCAPTURE THE CONVERSATIONRADIAN6ROOM 214 PODCASTBRIAN CHAPPELLIGNITE SOCIAL MEDIASENTIMENT ANALYSISREPUTATION MANAGEMENTBRAND MANAGEMENTJASON CORMIER

Posted at 9:30 am | 2 Comments | Share this podcast

Posted on May 20, 2009

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The 4 Keys to Social Media


BY JASON CORMIER

This has been somewhat of an anecdotal piece to many of our conversations about social media lately - so I'm sharing it. Given the countless layers of social media, it should be understood these keys are in the context of research, planning and measurement (not tactics).

nerdapproved.comOf course, many of our prospects and clients want to shoot straight for the tactics. Part of our responsibility is backing them out to the bigger picture of what the objectives are. Strategy follows, and only then are the tactics (and technology) addressed.

As practitioners we casually speak about listening, learning and engaging. The first two keys are specific to listening.

Here is Room 214's take on it:

1.    KEY Words: Those again? Yes. Keywords are not just for SEO and search marketing. In fact, most of today's leading online business intelligence and social media monitoring tools are providing value initially based on keyword search queries. Even basic keyword analysis can go a long way.

2.    KEY Topics: Beyond keywords, are key topics or emerging themes. Knowing what your share of voice is in terms of percentage of conversations about your brand (vs. your competitors or partners) has its place - but understanding common themes or topics in those conversations adds a whole new level of insight with respect to priority of messaging, response, etc.

3.    KEY Performance Indicators: If you have an idea in terms of what success looks like against your objectives, then key performance indicators should be established to provide a means of measurement.

I realize we could get into an entirely separate discussion around score cards, Net Promoter and ROI here - but the point is to establish some form of measurement related to response. Might sound like common sense, but it's an often forgotten element.

4.    KEY Influencers: This is where the gold is with respect to a great deal of action that can follow from the initial data (listening) collected. Social media is little more than word of mouth marketing on the Internet. Unlike traditional word of mouth, however, identifying influential people and web properties essentially enables the priority of who gets the word first.

When you consider these keys, which one do you think is most relevant to you? What parallels do you see with what might be considered traditional marketing and public relations?

Note: Thanks to nerdapproved.com for the image.

TAGS: SOCIAL MEDIA MARKETINGWORD OF MOUTHSOCIAL MEDIA MONITORINGKEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORSKEY INFLUENCERSSOCIAL MEDIA PROGRAMSROOM 214

Posted at 7:02 pm | 1 Comment | Share this blog post

Posted on April 8, 2009

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Why Social Media is Succeeding at Qwest


BY JASON CORMIER

Qwest announced its "Talk to Qwest" program today - a comprehensive social media effort effectively helping Qwest customers resolve a range of issues online - including billing, tech support, product/pricing inquiries, etc.

Talk To Qwest web page

Starting on Twitter, @TalkToQwest, Qwest has put together a super-group of people clearly demonstrating their care for customers through daily outreach and response (in 140 characters or less). That is actually the short answer to why they are succeeding in social media: their people.

As the social media agency hired to assist them, it's a privilege to share a little personal insight on Qwest with respect to both challenges and opportunities. But first, I have a confession.

Frankly, I was a little concerned about the project before we even started working together. It's one thing to focus on a project within a department of a large company - but when multiple departments are motivated to participate, and impassioned individuals are talking about literally changing how the company does business… well, I'll let you fill in the blanks from your own experience. Exciting? Yes. Quickly and effectively executed? Often not.

My internal questions were simple. How quickly is Qwest really going to be able to move on this? Would even necessary things like "messaging" and legal stand in our way of doing it right? Could they be relevant? Could they be cool? Could they be timely? Would the people we worked with have enough buy-in from the rest of the organization to really show the world that Qwest "gets it?"

Today, you (and Qwest's customers) are in the position to answer some of the more important questions I had early on. Socialmedia.qwest.com is a good start for seeing how the company is introducing and addressing the relevance factor.

And cool?! How about those Viddler videos of the people behind Qwest's Twitter presence? I can't tell you how glad I am about the avoidance of over-production that could have so easily been present here. And you just gotta see what this Qwest guy does at the bowling alley after hours (see video below). Classic!


In answer to my own questions - it's refreshing to say that early on, what we discovered within Qwest were groups of extremely committed people excited to work across multiple departments to make this happen. 

Continue Reading...

TAGS: TALK TO QWESTQWEST SOCIAL MEDIASOCIAL MEDIA MONITORINGSOCIAL MEDIA PLANNINGCAPTURE THE CONVERSATIONTWITTERCUSTOMER SERVICEROOM 214

Posted at 2:01 pm | 7 Comments | Share this blog post

Posted on October 22, 2008

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Social Media Monitoring Podcast with Collective Intellect


BY JASON CORMIER
Size: 11 MB
Length: 11:57

Listen to our Podcast:

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Show Notes:

Room 214 Co-founder, Jason Cormier, interviews Co-founder and CTO of Collective Intellect, Tim Wolters.

In this podcast, we discuss:

1. The value of Collective Intellect for social media monitoring

2. The specific values of online conversational monitoring in terms of base-lining share of voice among competitive brands, identification of themes, identification of influencers and what the sentiment is around a brand.

3. The maturity and differentiation of Collective Intellect's ability to track online sentiment, and approach online monitoring from a "topic net" approach as opposed to a simple keyword approach.

4. Tim's reaction to Google's potential patent-pending technology for identifying key influencers in Facebook, MySpace and others.

5. Tim's advice for getting started in social media (start monitoring with free tools).

Note: This subject matter has become extremely relevant to Room 214's social media agency services over the last two years. On that note, let us know if you are interested in hearing more about strategy, planning and/or tactical outreach efforts used in conjunction with these kinds of tools and data.

TAGS: SOCIAL MEDIA MONITORINGTIM WOLTERSCOLLECTIVE INTELLECTGOOGLE INFLUENCER RANKINGCONVERSATIONAL MONITORINGSHARE OF VOICESENTIMENT TRACKINGCAPTURE THE CONVERSATION PODCAST

Posted at 9:02 am | 1 Comment | Share this podcast