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Convince The Curmudgeon

Presentation on April 28, 2009 in San Francisco at the Inbound Marketing Summit. It's so obvious what you need to do -- the audience is there, you've got the technology lined up, and a vision of the utopia that your social strategy is going to create. The only problem: the curmudgeon in the corner office. S/he just doesn't get it! This session will examine the typical objections to a social media strategy, layout a process to follow to address those objections, and provide best practices to turn that curmudgeon into your greatest advocate.

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Convince The Curmudgeon

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  1. Convincing The Curmudgeon Charlene Li Altimeter Group April 28, 2009

  2. Meet your curmudgeon “It’s a fad and waste of time.” “There’s no ROI.” “It’s way too risky.” 2

  3. Your curmudgeon can’t tell these apart 3 Source: Wordle.net

  4. “It’s a fad and waste of time.”  Make it real for them. • Identify an area of passion. • Connect with old friends. • Showcase conversations with real customers, that teaches them something they didn’t know. 4

  5. Pair different social media mindsets Fearful Skeptic Cautious Tester Realist Optimist Transparent Evangelist Find the “moments of truth” and “moments of crisis” for each mindset 5

  6. Examples of Realist Optimists Lionel Menchaca Dell Paula Drum H&R Block Ed Terpening Wells Fargo 6

  7. “There’s no ROI.”  Tie it to strategy and goals What will you do? What won’t you do? With limited time and resources 7

  8. Focus on relationships, not technologies What kind of relationship do you want? Transactional Occasional Impersonal Short-term Passionate Constant Intimate Loyal 8

  9. Tie technologies to the goals Dialog Learn Help Innovate 9

  10. Measure the right things Your goals determine your metrics Use the same metrics as your corporate goals 10

  11. Example “micro” metrics Goal Metric Value Learn # of customer feedback Impact of faster, better insights Dialog # of comments # of referrals # of sales Brand loyalty Faster, more closes Help Innovate # of issues addressed # of implemented ideas Employee satisfaction Faster development 11

  12. Higher order metrics to consider Net Promoter Score How likely are you to recommend this to someone you know? Lifetime Value Lifetime revenue Cost of acquisition Cost of retention Customer referral value (CRV) 12

  13. “It’s way too risky.” Embrace and prepare for failure Identify the top 5-10 worst case scenarios. Develop mitigation and contingency plans. Prepare everyone for the inevitable failures. 13

  14. Wal-mart failed many, many times 14

  15. Buyer blog hit the right note 15

  16. Photo: Kantor, http://www.flickr.com/photos/kantor 16

  17. Thank You Charlene Li Altimeter Group charlene@altimetergroup.com blog.altimetergroup.com Twitter: @charleneli Slides available at slideshare.net/charleneli 17 Copyright © 2009 Altimeter Group

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