Posts Tagged ‘YouTube’

QR code with adidas logo

Successful communication campaigns start with specific communication objectives based upon strategic intent that stems from the company’s overall communication strategy. A social media campaign enables you to structure messages and responses that optimise impact and reach in engaging with new and prospective customers through the sales cycle and from awareness to conversion. Below are eight significant steps involved in the process of planning successful social media campaigns.

Strategic intent

The desired position of the company in relation to the current position with stakeholders is what informs strategic intent. It is formulating what needs to be changed or consolidated in order to attain the desired positioning with stakeholders.

Defining measurable goals

Social media campaigns should start with SMART objectives that are Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic and Timely. Campaign goals inform content strategy. It also enables you to establish how successfully the campaign is going or has been.

Identifying target audience

It is necessary to target specific campaigns to particular stakeholders because organisations may not be able to communicate with all stakeholder groups simultaneously as they do not always all respond to the same stimuli. There are also sub groups or segments within each group. It is important to identify the segment of individuals from a stakeholder group that is the focus of a particular social media campaign.

Establishing a theme

A theme based campaign emphasises a specific topic or message that is central to a particular aspect of the company such as brands, products or corporate strategy. It also showcases specific company strengths or capabilities. It considers the target audience’s demographic, interests and culture. It will be affected by the social environment and channels available.

Campaign Types

Campaign objectives determine the campaign type. Campaign types include:

Informational campaign
A campaign type that is geared at keeping customers and stakeholders informed and up to date with new products, services and company news.

Promotional campaign
This type of campaign aims at promoting sales by making customers aware of special offers, sweepstakes, discounts and so on.

Transactional campaign
This type encourages customers to make a purchase using coupons, QR codes or other promotional offerings.

Engagement campaign
This is a campaign aimed at generating specific reaction or participation from customers.

Event campaign
An event campaign is related to a particular event and communicates information that create interest and encourage participation in the event.

Choosing a message style

Message styles could be any of the following:

Rational
Factual and informational.

Emotional
When it appeals to or evokes specific emotions such as joy or excitement.

Generic
When raising awareness of issues that are industry-wide.

Symbolic association
Association with a respected or admired public figure such as a sports figure.

Pre-emptive message style is similar to Generic but communicates a superior position within the industry.

The target audience and campaign objectives are factors that determine appropriate message style or mix of message styles which can be enhanced through the use of creative and appealing stimuli.

Channels

In social media, communities control the dialogue and where it takes place, whether Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, company blog or other channel. An effective social media campaign will include all channels where the interactions are most likely to occur and where they may lead. A multichannel approach is therefore useful in ensuring a successful social media campaign.

Online efforts may also be combined with offline methods such as in the use of Quick Response QR codes which a user scans with their QR barcode reader or camera phone. QR codes can be used to enhance your campaign by providing the customer with special deals or offerings available online from the company.

City Harvest QR code

City Harvest charity uses QR codes to increase donations

The budget

The budget available will affect communication objectives and the processes involved in planning and executing the campaign.

It is also essential to analyse the impact of the campaign and to evaluate it for results, whether the campaign goals were achieved or not and to what extent.

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We all know the power that mass-media can wield in shaping public opinion and how it is sometimes used negatively to manipulate and distort facts. This is also true of social media. In this video, veteran investigative journalist Sharyl Attkisson shows how fake grassroots movements funded by political, corporate, or other special interests manipulate and distort media messages.

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Coca-Cola softdrinks
There are 6 billion sim cards in use worldwide and mobile devices represent 10% of total internet traffic and this is still growing. Coca-Cola is set to capitalise on this growth and use mobile rich media to create experiences and interactions between consumers and the Coca-Cola brand. This should help the company towards achieving its 2020 vision plan.

The Coca-Cola mobile ad that lets you buy the world a coke from your mobile phone is a great example of this kind of mobile rich media.

You even get to add a personalised message as you send the coke to an unsuspecting person across the world. There are specially created vending machines globally for you to choose from and you see a customised video of your coke as it travels across continents. The recipient of the free coke gets to record a personalised message that is sent back to you.

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Organisations are now becoming more customer-centric as they seek to utilise cost-effective social media technology to achieve greater competitiveness. As competition increases, these organisations will need to differentiate themselves further by not only being customer oriented but also by becoming socially responsible.

Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) is about managing the triple bottom line of the company in a socially responsible way. The triple bottom line refers to people, planet and profit. It involves treating people ethically, whether they are customers, employees, suppliers or other stakeholders. It is concerned with the proper and ethical use of resources in ensuring that the environment is not jeopardised and it seeks to create shareholder value and profit by enhancing market share through gaining the respect of customers.

How social media impacts Corporate Social Responsibility

As a result of the increase in transparency and scrutiny, social media has had a huge impact on organisations who try to differentiate themselves as being ethical. We now have transparency not only in how companies do business, but also in how they act while doing business.

It is no longer just about products, services or pricing, but about corporate behaviour which includes how a company treats employees, suppliers, customers and how they relate with their communities.

Social media is an important tool for an organisation to use to manage its brand.  When you have the opportunity to communicate to a huge audience instantly and across channels, it means that there are lots of people scrutinising the company all the time. Social media is also a powerful tool for consumers to voice out against inappropriate corporate actions. An example of this is “Boycott BP”, a Facebook group formed to express opinion against the Gulf oil spill.

Managing your brand perception on social media channels also means a great opportunity to publicise all the relevant ways you are giving back into communities. This can influence your customer base and market share.

Colgate’s smile for change video on YouTube 

Colgate Australia used Social Media to drive their Corporate Social Responsibility when they included on their Facebook page a Welcome app, with a message indicating that $1 would be donated to a needy kid for every smiling kid’s photo that was uploaded.

Colgate Mother’s Day smile with Mary Mary


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YouTube receives 3 billion views per day and 48 hours of video is uploaded every minute.

Forrester Research identified that a page with a video is 50 times more likely to appear on Google’s first page of search results than a text page on the same topic. A video is the quickest way to attain first page ranking on Google.

Online communities such as YouTube are popular because video content is rich media that communicates visually and is most engaging. It is effective at enhancing communication, supporting and driving business.

For some of the best examples of social media video, visit http://www.simplyzesty.com/video/10-of-the-best-social-media-campaign-video-case-studies/

What you can use video for

To demonstrate products

To promote the company

Customer testimonials

Instructional videos

Video interviews

Training

Press releases (Social Media Release SMR)

 

 

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QR code with adidas logo

Successful communication campaigns start with specific communication objectives based upon strategic intent that stems from the company’s overall communication strategy. A social media campaign enables you to structure messages and responses that optimise impact and reach in engaging with new and prospective customers through the sales cycle and from awareness to conversion. Below are eight significant steps involved in the process of planning successful social media campaigns.

Strategic intent

The desired position of the company in relation to the current position with stakeholders is what informs strategic intent. It is formulating what needs to be changed or consolidated in order to attain the desired positioning with stakeholders.

Defining measurable goals

Social media campaigns should start with SMART objectives that are Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic and Timely. Campaign goals inform content strategy. It also enables you to establish how successfully the campaign is going or has been.

Identifying target audience

It is necessary to target specific campaigns to particular stakeholders because organisations may not be able to communicate with all stakeholder groups simultaneously as they do not always all respond to the same stimuli. There are also sub groups or segments within each group. It is important to identify the segment of individuals from a stakeholder group that is the focus of a particular social media campaign.

Establishing a theme

A theme based campaign emphasises a specific topic or message that is central to a particular aspect of the company such as brands, products or corporate strategy. It also showcases specific company strengths or capabilities. It considers the target audience’s demographic, interests and culture. It will be affected by the social environment and channels available.

Campaign Types

Campaign objectives determine the campaign type. Campaign types include:

Informational campaign
A campaign type that is geared at keeping customers and stakeholders informed and up to date with new products, services and company news.

Promotional campaign
This type of campaign aims at promoting sales by making customers aware of special offers, sweepstakes, discounts and so on.

Transactional campaign
This type encourages customers to make a purchase using coupons, QR codes or other promotional offerings.

Engagement campaign
This is a campaign aimed at generating specific reaction or participation from customers.

Event campaign
An event campaign is related to a particular event and communicates information that create interest and encourage participation in the event.

Choosing a message style

Message styles could be any of the following:

Rational
Factual and informational.

Emotional
When it appeals to or evokes specific emotions such as joy or excitement.

Generic
When raising awareness of issues that are industry-wide.

Symbolic association
Association with a respected or admired public figure such as a sports figure.

Pre-emptive message style is similar to Generic but communicates a superior position within the industry.

The target audience and campaign objectives are factors that determine appropriate message style or mix of message styles which can be enhanced through the use of creative and appealing stimuli.

Channels

In social media, communities control the dialogue and where it takes place, whether Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, company blog or other channel. An effective social media campaign will include all channels where the interactions are most likely to occur and where they may lead. A multichannel approach is therefore useful in ensuring a successful social media campaign.

Online efforts may also be combined with offline methods such as in the use of Quick Response QR codes which a user scans with their QR barcode reader or camera phone. QR codes can be used to enhance your campaign by providing the customer with special deals or offerings available online from the company.

City Harvest QR code

City Harvest charity uses QR codes to increase donations

The budget

The budget available will affect communication objectives and the processes involved in planning and executing the campaign.

It is also essential to analyse the impact of the campaign and to evaluate it for results, whether the campaign goals were achieved or not and to what extent.

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An effective social CRM system involves careful planning and implementation. It is a company-wide approach that requires social CRM goals to be identified and clearly communicated to all. Social media requires new capabilities and you would need to identity the channel or mix of channels that would deliver the best results.

Collaborative teamwork

Collaborative teamwork across functions is important for customer-centric social CRM

The following are three aspects for consideration in implementing social CRM:

Policies and systems

You will need to formulate policies that enable you to respond to customers most effectively to improve customer experiences. All social CRM communication must be guided by policy. Policy will need to adapt as the media evolves and therefore needs to be flexible. The policy should set out guidelines on daily routines for content generation and distribution. It should include guidelines about who is authorised to post content online on behalf of the organisation. Also, company rules against posting offensive or confidential information should be made clear. Company social CRM policies and systems should include provision for risk management and issues arising. This requires a structured assessment of the opportunities and threats.

Key Performance Indicators should be included to continuously measure success.

Social channels and social CRM Technology

With social media, it is the customer who controls the dialogue and where it occurs. It is important to keep up with the customer as they switch from one social channel to another.  In order to be everywhere that conversation about your company may occur, you will need a multichannel approach involving a combination of social channels such as Facebook, Linkedin, Twitter, YouTube, Delicious, Digg, StumbleUpon, Reddit and message boards.

Social CRM software
Social CRM activities are better structured, systematic and automated. Automation saves valuable time and frees your time so you can engage in other creative activities that cannot be automated. The choice of social CRM software will be greatly influenced by the company’s social CRM goals and any existing software system already in use to ensure compatibility.

Good social CRM software should offer the following:

Campaign management features: to organise and manage tasks with the ability to handle varying types of content such as photo, videos and user-generated content.

Advanced scheduling features: that include bulk upload of content, single and repeated posts scheduling and automated multichannel content distribution.

Monitoring and evaluation features: It is necessary to monitor conversation within those identified channels that are significant to your company and product. The advantage of social CRM is the ability to listen and monitor to be able to react. You need technology that enables you to evaluate the effectiveness of the social channel and your social CRM strategy. An effective solution will help you track when and where your impact is greatest.

Training

Collaborative teamwork across functions is important for customer-centric social CRM. Objections to implementation of social CRM can be overcome and a company-wide involvement can be achieved via training.

Your company’s social CRM policies should be clearly communicated to everyone in the company. Procedural training and software specific training should be provided so that all staff engage appropriately and creatively in responding to customer and community feedback.

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This blog enables me to share and explore social media as a Customer Relationship Management tool in building and sustaining corporate credibility.

Corporate credibility as an aspect of corporate reputation refers to the perception that stakeholders have of the company’s honesty, expertise and trustworthiness. It reveals whether the company can be relied upon to do what it says it will do and whether it backs up its corporate communication with actions in line with its promises.

Corporate credibility is important as it affects stakeholder attitude towards the company and towards the company’s marketing, branding and communication strategies. High credibility leads customers to form positive attitudes and positive purchase intentions towards the company. As a result high credibility enhances customer loyalty, market share, brand equity and profit.

For a company to achieve its financial goals, it will need to develop trust and credibility through customer centric strategies. Such customer centric strategies necessitate being able to gather information as much as possible about customer perceptions and their attitudes towards the company and its products, and also being able to listen to customers. This can best be done through a collaborative dialogue strategy of communication, a two-way symmetrical model. Engaging positively with customers and listening to them enhances customer loyalty and the data gained as a result can help to further improve services.

An effective Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system can achieve this and can help identify areas for improvement in order to raise performance.

Traditional CRM vs Social CRM
Traditional CRM involves managing the relationship with the customer for the benefit of the company. It is a marketing tool with a focus to selling to customers and it is therefore the company that initiates and controls the communication while the customer is mostly passive.

Social CRM on the other hand creates an avenue to engage and collaborate with the customer on social media sites such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. The customer does not play a passive role but the emphasis is on community and relationship building to improve customer experience with the company’s products and services. It is a less formal form of conversation and communication could be customer to customer or business to customer.

Social CRM can create an avenue to listen to the concerns, needs and preferences of the customer in a customer centric strategy that enhances corporate credibility and therefore brand equity and revenue. The FedEX story on GannetLocal blog illustrates this. 

One of those companies that have harnessed the power of social media to enhance credibility through Social CRM and have experienced financial growth as a result is Dell.

Linksys, Chordiant and Enterasys Networks are other examples of successful Social CRM to enhance corporate credibility.

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