Updates from September, 2009 Toggle Comment Threads | Keyboard Shortcuts

  • initiating 5:36 pm on September 18, 2009 Permalink | Reply
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    Social Media is here to stay – Yes or No????? 

    I have been speaking to large numbers of CEO’s and other senior leadership and one thing stands out – a lack of a clear understanding of what social media represents. To some it’s simply the new tech tool on the internet, to others, it’s something their kids use, while others are completely befuddled by it. Unfortunately, with all the hype, the core of social media generally gets overlooked mainly because it is so subtle. Social Media at its core is just that – “social” plus “media”. It is a conversation across a variety of new media that have altered the way we communicate. Put another way, social media is a conversation on steroids. As business leaders, do we have daily business conversations and do these conversations lead to relationships and can these relationships lead to economic benefit? The answer is yes, yes, yes and until the day we stop having business conversations, social media will be around, although it will always be in a constantly changing form. Perhaps the best way to review this is through these questions .

    Is there a right way and wrong way to “converse”? There are no “right ways” but there are a lot of wrong ways. For instance, if you and I were conversing and I stopped talking, what would you do? Probably walk away, right? Same thing in social media. If you begin to engage your customers, prospects, etc, and then all of sudden stop communicating with them, the odds are they will simply walk away. This is very bad considering these are the very people that are most interested in your business and now they’ve moved away from you. What to do? Here’s a simple strategy – set a social media participation schedule that you can keep up (i.e. 15 minutes per day or what you can handle) and stick to it! This way you will be able to sustain your conversations with those that matter most to your business.

    We are not generating sales yet we are participating, what’s wrong?

    Lets answer this question with a question – In your non social media tactics, are you focused on a hard sell and not relationship building? Basically, do you just talk to people to see if they want to buy something from you without having a relationship with you first? Probably not, right? Yet that is what some business leaders are inadvertently doing with social media. They are simply trying to “sell” without establishing a relationship first. In terms of the buying cycle, they are expecting social media to be a magic pill that attracts late stage buyers without relationships, and expect them to immediately make purchases. However, no relationship is no purchase potential. This is no different than what we face in real life. Businesses spend vast amounts of money to build relationships through branding, customer relations, etc and then over time, those relationships convert to sales. Interestingly, the spot that social media is very powerful is in connecting with early and mid stage buyers and building exponential amounts of relationships.

    I can’t participate because my customers aren’t on social media.

    Well, that can be true, but typically businesses have more than one type of customer. Perhaps the end customer is not on social media, but perhaps a referral sources or connector is. Alter your thinking slightly, wouldn’t it make sense to build social media relationships with those “customers” vs then ultimate end user? I am worried about customer reaction and it spreading negatively on the web, so I don’t participate. Well, the bad news is that it is not up to you whether you want to participate or not. In a recent study conducted by Edleman, they stated that roughly 6 out of 10 people between 25-64 were willing to share their experiences on the web and roughly 8 out of 10 people in those same age brackets, trusted their peer’s recommendations. We can talk about this for 3 hours (and we usually do during our presentations) but let’s surn it back to you and hear your perspectives.

    The key takeaway here is that social media at its core is about a “conversation” and we have hundreds of those in our businesses daily. The challenge is to determine how to leverage social media tools to plug into online conversations and relationship build.

     
    • Tony Brown 7:15 am on September 24, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I don’t know If I said it already but …Great site…keep up the good work. :) I read a lot of blogs on a daily basis and for the most part, people lack substance but, I just wanted to make a quick comment to say I’m glad I found your blog. Thanks, :)

      A definite great read..Tony Brown

    • JimmyBean 9:21 pm on October 1, 2009 Permalink | Reply

      I don’t know If I said it already but …Cool site, love the info. I do a lot of research online on a daily basis and for the most part, people lack substance but, I just wanted to make a quick comment to say I’m glad I found your blog. Thanks, :)

      A definite great read..Jim Bean

  • initiating 1:06 pm on September 17, 2009 Permalink | Reply  

    Teeing of in Public – oofff PEEING in Public is it a right in DILLI 

    Teeing off in public – ooppss ‘Peeing’ off in public is more relevant when it comes to Dilli. You may be walking in crowded markets or public places you would always find that ‘MAN’ finding a corner or a wall to ease himself without worrying who is around or the most basic civic cleanliness is at stake. I am sure we men would have done this somewhere sometime without really caring about our surroundings.

    Who is to be blamed for this? As citizens have we forgotten the basic need for sanitation and cleanliness in our surroundings?

    I think more than blaming the individuals I would blame the local authorities for not having basic sanitation amenities in the vicinity. Delhi being the capital of India I think has the minimal number of public toilets making basic sanitation the most difficult to adhere.

    So the result is some random corner on every road or street becomes a convenient place for men to ease themselves. Are we looking towards a better capital that has better malls and no basic civic amenities for local people who make the most of the population?

    Is it not one of the very key issues of civic amenities that, we as responsible citizens and the powerful youth of today should stand up for?

    How many of us realize the need of such basic sanitation to avoid the often read statements on walls of various streets “ yaha …………….karna mana hai” !!!! or ‘Dekho Gadha …………..kar raha hai’

    Suggestions:

    Our civic department needs to probably take up the following suggestions

    • Build more public toilets for men and women at convenient locations
    • Cleanliness to be prime in existing public toilets for all to visit
    • Heavy fine or disciplinary action against people using roads or walls as toilets
    • Places like Petrol Pumps, convenient stores, parks etc to have toilets

    I think its time for citizens to JAAGO to their rights and help make our surroundings a cleaner and greener space to live in.

    Do post your suggestions on how we can improve SAADHI DILLI

     
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