Mmmm…Dogfood. Introducing “Haystack.”

(Please note: Haystack links in this post have been updated since the original posting, in order to point to currently correct sites.)

If you look over to the right, you see the Social Customer Manifesto. It’s all about putting the customer in charge. REALLY putting the customer in charge. So, we’ve built something that lets customers take a significant step, and allows them to explicitly define and state the types of relationships they want with their service providers. Most significantly, this gives a customer the power to navigate profiles of individuals in an organization and choose with whom they want to work, as well the ability to be matched with individuals within the selling organization based on similarity of their backgrounds and interests.

We’re calling it “Haystack.”

What’s been broken with so-called “Customer Relationship Management” systems so far is that, well, they don’t really focus that much on the customer, do they? Under the rubric of “CRM,” there have been three primary classes of systems: sales force automation, customer service and call center automation, and marketing automation. All of these look at the world from the seller’s point of view. And all of them focus on how the vendor can crank more customers through a particular process in a given unit of time. They don’t necessarily help to truly build relationships between individuals. In fact, they are more likely to commodify it.

There has been a considerable amount of research done in this area, and there in an increasing body of data that suggests that building this kind of “enterprise social network” has measurable benefit for both customers and vendors alike. Perhaps the cornerstone of recent work in this area was done by Lichtenthal and Tellefsen, and is called “Toward a Theory of Buyer-Seller Similarity.”

“These findings suggest that internal similarity [perceptions, attitudes, and values] can increase a business buyer’s willingness to trust a salesperson and follow the salesperson’s guidance, and therefore, increase the industrial salesperson’s effectiveness. In contrast, the literature also indicates that, under most circumstances, observable similarity [physical attributes and behavior] will exert a negligible influence on a business buyer’s perceptions or a salesperson’s effectiveness. Thus, the key finding is that it is more important for buyers and sellers to ‘think alike’ than ‘look alike’.”

(n.b. The Lichtenthal and Tellefsen paper has an outstanding reference list that significantly confirms their findings.)

In a nutshell, here’s how Haystack works:


Howitworks_1
(click to enlarge)


In addition to trying this out ourselves, we’re starting to have some great conversations with folks like Collective Intelligence and Seedwiki about how this idea can grow.

Similarly to how Robert Scoble and Shel Israel are developing their book, Naked Conversations, out in the open, we are following a similar path with Haystack. We want customer feedback. We NEED customer feedback. (And we don’t want people to think we suck.)

Why we’re doing this? I think Peppers said it best here:

“Companies are faced with commoditized products. They’re faced with well-informed consumers who are bidding them against the competitors and are less loyal. The only real defense is creating a relationship with customers.”

To date, there just haven’t been tools like this aimed at the enterprise, that take this idea of creating real relationships between individuals and providing a means for customers to explicitly state their case, and determine with whom they want to do business at a real, interpersonal, non-synthetic level. So, we built one.

Naturally, a blog just for feedback about Haystack has been set up, and it is located here: Haystack Feedback Loop

[update] The Cerado Haystack Forum can be found here.

In particular, we’d love thoughts on:

  • Business Feedback
  • Technical Feedback
  • And, of course, (eeek!) bugs

This is going to be fun. Acorns. Oaks.

5 Replies to “Mmmm…Dogfood. Introducing “Haystack.””

  1. Sounds like a great idea, but I take issue with the Peppers quote, “Companies are faced with commoditized products”. Faced with? I think we as businesses and we as customers, should say, “No way!”. I don’t want commoditized products! I want design. I want differentiation. You can layer all the CRM on top of it you want, but if it’s not meeting both my practical needs, and my need for self expression, forget it!”

    Peppers and Rogers are good at selling themselves.

  2. Great concept, guys. And it’s a great testimony that you practice what you preach with the “give us input” as you’re developing it approach.

    The question that I have is what if you have one or two employees that are pretty middle-of-the-road when it comes to their personalities? Could something happen like two or three employees are the ones that all the customers want to work with and the other 15 employees don’t have anything to do?

    Also, when we are considering adding an employee here, we have them take a personality test (the DISC test). And from they we have a pretty good idea of what their personality traits are and with what manager they would work best with. Maybe you should model your questions after something like that instead of movie choices, etc.

  3. Alan, i hear ya.

    Spike, regarding the “three superstars and 15 milquetoasts” situation…that definitely is a possibility. There are a couple of possible solutions we’ve been thinking about in that situation:

    1) The “preferred” contact’s profile can show that there is a backlog of time before they’ll become available. If their bandwidth is already consumed, new folks can certainly choose them, but with the knowledge that there may be some delay.

    2) Alternatively, the “preferred” contact can make the initial connection, but also state that their schedule is extremely tight at the current time, and that they wholeheartedly recommend and endorse (other person), who has a bit more availability.

    With respect to the DISC profiling, again, absolutely. We anticipate that each organization using Haystack will have some unique set of criteria they wish to capture in the profiles (in this case DISC, information). That type of customization / extensibility is a have-to-have.

    Thanks for the good words, and the great feedback.

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