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Mark Zuckerberg makes the big time

Monday, May 31st, 2010

The latest from the great mind of Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist Mike Luckovich . JD Lasica works with major companies and nonprofits on social media strategies. See his business profile , contact JD or leave a comment. Tweet It! Buzz This Post Delicious Digg This Post Facebook Reddit Stumble This Post Related posts: Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg on where they’re going next Video interview with Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg Journalist becomes object of derision at Mark Zuckerberg SXSW keynote

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Mark Zuckerberg makes the big time

Biz360: Tracking business intelligence

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Social media smarts for business from JD Lasica on Vimeo . Monitoring, analytics and more for companies of all sizes “I f you’re a brand, you simply cannot afford to sit on the sidelines any longer. This is the reality: People are going to talk about you regardless of whether you’re in the room. So you might as well get with the program, start by listening, and start understanding what people are saying about you, your industry, your products and your competitors.” That spot-on summary in a nutshell comes courtesy of Maria Ogneva, director of social media for Biz360 , the social media monitoring provider acquired by Attensity last month . I’m fans of both Maria — you’re following her at @themaria on Twitter, yes? — who’s a stalwart on the Bay Area tech scene, but also of Biz360, for a simple reason: Small and mid-size businesses need an affordable solution to help them keep abreast of conversations on the social Web. At last word, Biz360 offers a nice package that begins at $399/month, letting you track 10 topics by one user. The service monitors every meaningful nook and cranny “where conversations are happening,” Maria says. That includes blogs, microblogs like Twitter and identi.ca , forums and discussion boards, the public portion of Facebook, online news sites, and video and photo sites. Watch, embed or download the video on Vimeo “You need to listen to customer input and tailor your brand strategy based on what you hear.” — Maria Ogneva “Social media challenges the silo mentality we’ve been used to in the corporate world,” Maria says, because social media cuts across everything: market research, marketing, customer support, HR, PR. Maria and I are convinced that social media will have an increasingly significant impact on businesses’ development of products and services. “You want to understand what your customers want and need — there are market research implications there,” she says. “You need to listen to customer input and tailor your brand strategy based on what you hear.” Who uses Biz360? Brand managers, agencies, marketers, market researchers and customer service reps, among others, she says. For HP, likely its biggest client, Biz360 helps track brand and product messages in several languages. A typical customer will be able to see coverage, or mentions, of their company, key products or services; “velocity” (mentions over the course of time); sentiment and engagement metrics: how many people are retweeting you, how many are engaging with your brand? Biz360 is on my short list of monitoring services I recommend to Socialmedia.biz clients. ‘Nuff said, watch the video. Maria also had this assessment of South by Southwest, where we conducted the interview plopped on the Austin Convention Center hallway: “Being in the social media space, all of your colleagues and friends take off once a year and go to SxSW .” Very true. Thanks to the SxSW team for the press pass that let me conduct a series of interviews there. Related Interview with the CEO of Radian6 (Socialmedia.biz) Attensity Acquires Biz360 (arnoldit.com) Biz360 Celebrates Ten Years of Service (eon.businesswire.com) JD Lasica works with major companies and nonprofits on social media strategies. See his business profile , contact JD or leave a comment. Tweet It! Buzz This Post Delicious Digg This Post Facebook Reddit Stumble This Post This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported . Related posts: Privacy software Radian6 and the Yellow Brick Road for brands Social media in the business arena

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Biz360: Tracking business intelligence

Review of ‘Open Leadership’: Winning by letting go

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

Charlene Li at SxSW in March ( photo by Jen Consalvo ) Charlene Li’s latest is a worthy addition to your business books shelf T he first thing to understand about Charlene Li’s smart new book “Open Leadership” is that this is not a call to arms for top management to deploy a loosey-goosey, feel-good strategy of giving up complete control of your management structure. Nor is it yet another business book about effective corporate leadership techniques. Instead, Open Leadership: How Social Technology Can Transform the Way You Lead is about how to reinvent companies (as they must be) for the age of social media. It’s filled with smart, practical strategic advice — not only for company CEOs but for middle managers, social marketers and change-makers at all levels of an organization — about how to set out a vision, how to overcome internal barriers and how to navigate a brand through these turbulent waters. Like “Groundswell” before it, “Open Leadership” (336 pages) brims with anecdotes and real-word examples of how companies are making the transition to the conversational era. (The publication date is May 24; Charlene gave me an advance copy of the book at SxSW.) Charlene lays out her premise early on: That businesses require its executives to adopt an “open leadership” style of management in place of the command-and-control paradigm in place at most large companies. “Face it — you’re not in control and probably never really were,” she writes. “You need to let go of the need to be in control.” As she explains, you aren’t really giving up control — “you are shifting it to someone else that you have confidence in.” In other words, openness (and letting go) is just the first step in Open Leadership. But it needs to be matched by an equal commitment to provide a structured, integrated framework in which an openness strategy can succeed. The book begins with the telling example of United Airlines’ boneheaded reaction to a customers’ complaint about its baggage handlers damaging his guitar. (I recently interviewed musician Dave Carroll about it and will post it here soon.) The resulting negative publicity spawned by Dave’s United Breaks Guitars series on YouTube surely cost the airline millions and a damaged reputation that has not yet been repaired. While those of us who run social media agencies will no doubt be familiar with much of the terrain Charlene covers throughout — Dell’s IdeaStorm, Best Buy, Starbucks, Comcast, Motrin Moms — every reader should come away with at least a handful of stories that provide tangible evidence of the transformative effects of social media and open leadership across departments — customer support, product development, marketing, PR, HR — and across sectors. A telling chart on ROI Those of us in the field know that ROI (return on investment) is a frequent subject of internal conversations about deploying social media inside the enterprise, and Charlene provides plenty of cold, hard numbers about the financial payoff. Take, for example, the interesting graphic on “Understanding the benefits of support” at a large company: Benefits/savings • Call deflection (assumes 10% of 100,000 calls/year at $10/call): $100,000 • Identify support problems in advance (avoids 10,000 new calls): $100,000 • Greater employee productivity (fewer emails, fewer meetings, find info/experts faster): $600,000 • Cost avoidance because employees find solutions: $200,000 • Better employee morale and commitment (reduced turnover, recruitment cost avoidance): $200,000 Total benefits: $1,220,000 Costs • Discussion forum software: $50,000 • Collaboration software: $50,000 • Two full time people: $200,000 Total costs: $300,000 Net benefit: $920,000 Charlene gets down in the weeds in the section mapping out “New metrics for new relationships,” including measurements on calculating “the New Customer Lifetime Value,” which goes well beyond looking at just the ROI of a campaign. She cautions against “dashboard delirium” syndrome, where companies measure KPIs (key performance indicators) just because they can. The book is filled with such smart, no-nonsense actionable insights. So if your company is still not very clueful about the social media revolution’s effects on business, buy a copy for your boss. You can find “Open Leadership” at this list of online bookstores , or by buttonholing Charlene at one of her frequent public appearances. Final word: I don’t see the directory of social media policies and guidelines on the Open Leadership site , promised on page 100; but then, we already have a great directory of them at Socialmedia.biz , and the Altimeter Group wiki has a list as well. JD Lasica works with major companies and nonprofits on social media strategies. See his business profile , contact JD or leave a comment. Tweet It! Buzz This Post Delicious Digg This Post Facebook Reddit Stumble This Post This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported . Related posts: Mind Wide Open Review of ‘Art of the Start’ Review of ‘Groundswell,’ ‘Reality Check’

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Review of ‘Open Leadership’: Winning by letting go

Blue Shield CA making strides in social media

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

  New programs are believed to be a first for health insurance industry A s those of us who’ve worked with health care companies know, the health care field has been slow to get off the dime and embrace the gamut of changes that social media offers, from interactions with customers to providing a real-time feedback loop to develop new products or services. But that’s starting to change. Today I had a long conversation with Jason Yang, brand manager in the Corporate Brand Marketing department of Blue Shield of California , who filled me in on a host of social media initiatives that the not-for-profit health plan has recently launched, chief among them: • A customer ratings and reviews program, launched Jan. 13 ( announcement here ), that enables Blue Shield CA members to provide feedback on their Blue Shield health plans. Blue Shield CA is using a platform built by Bazaarvoice , an Austin, Texas-based company that helps businesses analyze online customer conversations in a style similar to Yelp and Amazon. It’s believed to be the first health plan in the nation to invite online feedback from members to improve the health care experience. Members can simply log into their account to rate their Blue Shield health plan and read other members’ reviews. Members can rate different plans using a five-star scale to measure overall satisfaction, customer service, value, doctor access, prescription drug coverage and whether or not the plan is easy to use and understand. Members can also provide comments and advice, though no information that identifies an individual is permitted, Yang says, and members aren’t permitted to rate physicians or providers. The pilot has generated positive feedback from members, so Blue Shield CA is expanding the program to all its 3 million members. • A question and answer interactive forum , launched April 29 ( announcement here ), that allows members to ask questions and receive answers from other members or from participating physicians. Members can discuss topics such as allergies, dental care, diet/food/nutrition, women’s health, first aid and more. You have to be a member to post in the Ask & Answer forum, but it’s visible to the public and it’s optimized for search engine indexing, Yang says. According to a study last year by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, 61 percent of American adults go online for health information, so it makes sense for Blue Shield of California to provide vetted information. Yang describes it as a four-tiered process, with an automated filter at the front end to screen for obscenities or spam, two moderators and a corporate brand manager who monitor the conversations. (I can appreciate the challenges, since I set up an Ask the Expert medical feature as editorial director of BabyCenter.com back in the late ‘90s.) “We’re the first health plan in the country to do this, as far as we know,” Yang says of the programs. The goal, he adds, is to provide transparency and enhance Blue Shield CA’s services. “We mine it [customer feedback] for data, to see what issues people are concerned about, track scores for the various plans and relay the information to the appropriate teams so they can get first-hand updates on what the plans need to address.” “We encountered a lot of hurdles internally, ranging from what’s acceptable from a privacy and legal perspective to making sure everything met the requirements of the nationwide Medicare governing body and the state agencies that oversee health care,” he says. In the end, both programs are modest but important steps in bringing Blue Shield of California’s 3 million customers into the conversation. Blue Shield CA has a Facebook page set up by a member of the community and will soon launch a presence on Twitter, Yang says. They use Radian6 for measuring an array of metrics. I should point out that Blue Shield organizations operate independently of each other from state, so while some information-sharing happens, the plans generally work on their own without a lot of joint ventures. (It’s a bit of an odd set-up, frankly: Blue Shield and Blue Cross are competitors, even though they are both governed by the BlueCross BlueShield Association .) Related Social Media Hour podcast : Adri­ana Lukas & I discuss health care and social media Blue Shield of California Launches Bazaarvoice Ask & Answer™ (eon.businesswire.com) JD Lasica works with major companies and nonprofits on social media strategies. See his business profile , contact JD or leave a comment. Tweet It! Buzz This Post Delicious Digg This Post Facebook Reddit Stumble This Post This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported . Related posts: Living in a black and blue country Buy blue Journalists need a federal shield law

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Blue Shield CA making strides in social media

Tips on how women can attain ‘true power’ on stage

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Power and Presence for Women from JD Lasica on Vimeo .   Speakers get guidance on how to enhance their public appearances I ’ve been astonished by how many of my friends and colleagues have thrust themselves into the public eye by writing books, appearing on panels or going full tilt into public speaking. I’ve even detected a small uptick (finally!) in the number of women appearing on stage at tech conferences. I’ve spoken at my fair share of public events , and what public speakers often have in common is an uncertainty of how to engage the audience with command and assurance. That’s especially true of many women, who’ve been taught by the culture to prize “false power archetypes” rather than being true to their own voices, says Bronwyn Saglimbeni , a public presence coach in Silicon Valley. “We’ll hold our hands in front of our bodies, or behind our backs, or in front of our mouths — and the problem is those are not powerful positions.” — Bronwyn Saglimbeni “As women, we need to come up with our new power archtetypes,” she said at a recent Girls in Tech retreat in Santa Cruz, Calif. “Unfortunately we’ve been fed a steady diet of false power archtetypes — aggression, intimation, or leaning too heavily on our sexuality, or hiding behind our sexuality.” Saglimbeni offers coaching on speaking, presenting and how to attain “true power.” “It happens when personality aligns with purpose to serve the greater good,” she says. “Where does the purpose of our work life and personal life intersect? During public speaking, what are the elements of our personality that need to be brought forward? Every time we have an opportunity to get up and speak, we have to really cherish that time and nail it.” Watch, download or embed the video on Vimeo Watch the video on YouTube Common mistakes in public appearances Body language and posture often an issue for speakers. “Often we’ll hold our hands in front of our bodies, or we hold them behind our backs, or in front of our mouths — and the problem is those are not powerful positions,” she says. “The other thing I see is that people tend to get very serious when they take the stage. … We need to let go a little bit and have fun!” Women often find themselves perplexed on how to behave in a largely male corporate setting. Says Saglimbeni: “If it’s a very serious board room filled with male executives, you can meet them there. But you can also establish credibility and start injecting a little bit more of yourself. Room reading skills are very important. It helps you tailor your message, know when you’re losing people, and know when you’re got ‘em.” Her firm Bronwyn Communications works with corporate clients to improve their public speaking and media relations skills. But any Blogworld Expo speaker can pick up a few tips by watching the video at top. Cross-posted to the Blogworld Expo blog . JD Lasica works with major companies and nonprofits on social media strategies. See his business profile , contact JD or leave a comment. Tweet It! Buzz This Post Delicious Digg This Post Facebook Reddit Stumble This Post This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported . Related posts: NBC Teams with One True Media Daily affirmations for women in technology Women’s eNews seeks your support

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Tips on how women can attain ‘true power’ on stage