Challenges we face as leaders | Thoughts on Blogs Week of October 23, 2009

Participation on the social web following the Social Media Academy’s NCP Model.

What do you see as the biggest challenges for business leaders in the next 12 months.

LinkedIn Questions -Dan Paulson C level executive adviser.  CEO of InVision.

In response:

Corporate websites are doomed.  Buyers are not going to these sites for information. They are using online readers, social sites, product sites and forums to learn the “real story” and share reviews on products and services.
Leaders need to find ways for buyers to personally connect with you  while integrating them into your business. This allows you to establish lasting connections.

Leaders need to recognize that buyers (both consumers and B2B) have fundamentally changed their buying process. Therefore they must change the sales process.  Trust is the biggest issue.  Those suppliers who  are open and share information,  are active in marketplace, and engaged in community of professionals will standout and can be trusted sooner.

Having customer evangelists who are freely recommending your product and service based on their customer experience being outstanding is the most important thing to move you up the recommendation chain. Your goal should be to provide the best customer experience and engagement.

Your online presence should integrate with social sites in various forms.  Build your platforms across your organizations to integrate with the social web.

Does your company have a Social Media Policy for employees?

Social Media Marketing Group – LinkedIn Questions & Answers

Can employees blog about your company? Tweet about it? Can they RT something about the company that someone has already said?

In response:

I also agree with Ryan that social media policies and guidelines are helpful to both employees and senior management.  It provides the structure for employees to follow so they know when they are out of line.  It reassures senior management that they have escalation paths in place should conversations go haywire and it documents for legal reasons grounds for inappropriate actions.

I recently heard Lee Aase of Mayo Clinic speak and they have a policy statement on their blog.

I have started to see policy statements by social media professionals such as chrisbrogan.com that include disclaimers, linking policies, connection policies, and disclaimers.

Privacy Begins at Home.

Lee Aase on the use of Skype and various social media tools.

In response:

Lee, thanks for making yourself oh so human.When we see people from big organizations talking about using social media, its easy to assume that they know everything.

Its easy to be intimidated by the conversations that’s ongoing or in trying to start one yourself.

I appreciated the very real presentation you gave on your own humble beginnings recently in Madison WI for the AAF. It helps even to those of us firmly entrenched in the world of social media, It also helps us be creative with how we implement social media.

You provided great incentive to use Flip video for interviews and capturing content in new ways. So I did a video blog post while I was traveling to a soccer game in the car. I will try and be brave and post it today on my blog. Note to everyone, its easier to do this with some type of velcro on the dashboard so you don’t have to hold the camera.

Thanks again for the great presentation and for your blog and SMUG university.

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Thoughts on blogs|Week of October 4, 2009

Thoughts on Blogs – some selected participation in the social web following the Social Media Academy’s NCP Model

The Social Path-In regards to a wonderful list of ten ways that social media has improved lives in 2008:

I hope you are working on 2009 best of as well. This is the kind of list I should show people who look at me oddly when I say I work with social media.
I also have been trying to collect a list of social media tools that can make our lives easier. Some I have collected are

Carepages.com – helping those with illness stay connected to those who care;

Conference 2.0 – allows conference attendees to connect with others before, after and ever after communities

www.xeesm.com which is in the early beta as a social relationship management tool.
Can you think of any others for my list?

The Productivity Institute-In regards to goal setting for social media time investment:

Bruce, I can’t agree with you more about setting realistic goals.
Doing some kind of assessment first, that analyzes where and who your customers and potential customers are, helps to define issues and spaces.  With goals and spaces defined, you can select the social media tools that best accommodate your available resources (people, time and budget).
Anything that can help see and track where your contacts are and how often you contact them for an organized effort would be very helpful.  Just this week LinkedIn introduced a new feature for organizing contacts (part of the paid upgrade), so they are introducing features that allow for more management of contacts not just linking.  This all helps.

Kyle Lacy -In regards to a post on tips for using Twitter in business setting:

I found your list to be a great compilation of tips for Twitter with a lot of new ones for me to digest.I am ready for the next round of social media tools that will bring more functionality for social relationship management.  For instance, I was running out of room on cards for social media links, plus for the 35 -55 age group, the font is getting too small.. Rather than just place on my website page, which I did as well, I wanted something that might provide more functionality.  I have used the www.xeesm tool and it has helped.  I plan to attend Social Media Tools Week to learn about others. Right now I can track easily all my comments across the blogs I read and post to.  Pretty good when I want to review where I have been for the week.

Social Wayne -In regards to a post on two services that allow you to put social media links in one place:

It was interesting to learn about the two sites/services you mentioned Dandyid and Card.ly.  Do they also track and find my comments across the blogs and sites one comments and posts on?  Some new functionality for social media tools will be front and center during Social Media Tools Week 11/16-21. Ideally, the best tools would let me track who I contact and how often in any social media space would be the most helpful.  Even better if it tied into a CRM system so that I could see better the inbound marketing efforts versus the traditional marketing and where the largest impact is.

www.xeesm.com seems to be going in the right direction.  They are introducing some new functionality during SM Tools week.  I have found this tool quite useful during the preliminary beta and hope they will offer more functionality that will fit my ideal tool better.

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How to participate in the social web

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Social Media Academy’s NCP Model

I follow the Social Media Academy’s NCP model which stands for Network Contribution Participation.b4nature_landscapes015

Network provides the reach for your message and connection to people in your social ecosystem.

Its about growing your network by connecting with people in various places.

Contribution is the active engagement and content contribution over such networks. Conversation is the currency in social media.

It can be blogs, articles, pictures, videos or podcasts.

Participation is the positive or negative reflection of the contribution and the actual conversation.

So you have to speak up in new areas, comment on others blogs, and add to the color of the conversation with your very own twist in the fabric.

Networking

You start the process with Networking.  I do great at networking and growing my network. At first it was slow on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter.  Now, they each have a mind of their own with an almost organic growth that has taken over.

Since I do a lot of public speaking on social media, this has provided added stimulus to the growth, maybe greater than most users would find.  I have not done much with TopLinked or some of the speed networking opportunities yet on LinkedIn, rather I wanted to work hard at this myself and truly know the work involved.

Now I can expand further my network in several new areas such as YouTube, Flickr, Picasa, and Slideshare.  These will provide a different type of space and I am looking forward to who I connect with there as well. Some will be professional, but I suspect it will allow me to enter new relationships that aren’t the same as those that connect with me and the written word.

Contribution

The contribution part of the NCP Model is likely the most difficult for many.  This means writing, folks.  Creating original thoughts and getting them posted in the social space. I wrote community opinion pieces first for my local paper. Then I started with book reviews in a metro business publication, which then transferred to an online forum for greater reach.

I was asked to provide quest posts on several social media blogs.  This was the hardest step because I was offering knowledge to my peers.  I am not sure anyone is listening to those posts yet, but I find that I do have a unique perspective that provides another facet of conversation in the business community.

Then came my own blog (Network Mindshare).  This is hard work – no doubt about it.  Being creative in coming up with ideas is not the problem, it’s deciding what to write about the idea!

Last but not least, I also took on the challenge of a social media column in an online newspaper.  More deadlines, a different writing style and another shift in the audience. Good for the network.

Participation

Participation in the social web is the final piece of the NCP Model.  You just can’t shout out your opinions in a one way megaphone.

You need to actively search out and read others who have shared their opinions on topics that are of interest.  Don’t just read these, you must comment.  Your thoughts can support, express a contrary point of view, offer explanation, share examples, express frustration, ask further questions, offer solutions or just compliment the post.

The key is engagement and you can’t do that without putting those thoughts in writing.

Thoughts on Blogs

I am trying a technique to make sure that I continue effectively on the participation side of the NCP Model.  Each week I have set a goal to comment on at least three different blogs.  In order to find the blogs, I have Google Alerts set on keywords that I researched using the Google Keyword Tool.  I share comments on these blogs and keep track of them using the Social Relationship Management tool www.xeesm.com/wendysoucie, which lets me search for all references I have made (after using that link) and I will pick out several and post them.  I will include them in a new blog category called “Thoughts on Blogs.”

Perhaps you have a blog that I should read and on which I should offer my opinion?  Comment here with the link and I will check it out.

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