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Posts Tagged ‘Best Practices’

When Customers are a Village

Monday, September 14th, 2009 by John Mallen

Christopher St., Greenwich Village by Beulah BettersworthI have just read a blog essay called “Finding Your Village of Customers” by Sonia Simone, senior editor at Copyblogger .  This is must reading for the micro-businesses among us.

Such firms, like my own, may have a global band of customers who not only know those who serve them, but delight in the relationship. She is spot on. In this space you really do listen to your customers, really understand them and respond to their needs — before you’re asked!  The village is your market, the regulars who love your offerings as well as the status of being a “regular,” like the Beacon Hill bar in TV’s “Cheers.”

Simone’s post is short, so I won’t go on except to summarize the key needs (besides listening, understanding and taking action). Every village needs:

“A leader. (That’s you.)

“A purpose. (That’s your market position or winning difference.) . . .

“And a place to come together.

“You might create a membership site for your best-loved customers. Or organize special conferences, user groups, and gatherings. You might build something as simple as a private online forum where your village can share their experiences — good and bad.

“But give your village a place to get together. To know you better, and know one another better. A place where everybody knows their name.”

And that’s one powerful way to use communications to amplify success. The “place” is likely one you develop on the Social Web.

How to Understand Social Media

Monday, March 30th, 2009 by John Mallen

It seems — at least to those of my friends who remember typewriters — the questions of the day revolve around social media.  What’s it all about? How do we use it?  Why use it at all? 

greg-lloydEnter Greg Lloyd whose blog Explaining Twitter - One of Three Places for People was republished this afternoon in Social Media Today.

This is an excellent primer providing answers the questions above, and it has good links to other sources for anyone who wishes to dig deeper.

Of interest is Greg’s organization of the social media world into three buckets, those for the neighborhood, workplace and public commons.

“What fascinates me about social software is how we’re learning to create places with perceived affordances - features and user models - that seem natural for different purposes and intentions,” Lloyd writes. “I use Facebook, Traction TeamPage and Twitter as three separate places: the neighborhood, workplace, and the public commons.”  Traction Team Page is collaboration software his firm makes.

I like the organizational principle. It’s something I can wrap my thoughts around.  Will this taxonomy be of help in marketing? Maybe later.

Deflecting a PR Crisis

Thursday, January 8th, 2009 by admin

I thank Sara Marchetti of Ogilvy PR for drawing attention to the excellent response to a online PR threat by Gary Vaynerchuk’s on his v-log.   Not only is his strategy sound, but he presents a terrific example of the best that comes from social networking and hints an a new role for those of us in PR and communications firms.

In the 24/7 information cycle of the Web, one cannot wait for their PR firm to draft a response and post it a day later. Things move too quickly. An emerging role for firms like the one I work with is and will increasingly be to support clients’ do-it-yourself communications and PR.