Convergence in B2B and B2C Mobile Marketing?

(A recent column I wrote for Mobile Marketer.)

Picture 8 On the surface, there are stark differences between
business-to-business marketing and business-to-consumer marketing:
audience size, volume of sales and magnitude of purchases. But as
mobile becomes ubiquitous for connecting with customers, are we
starting to see a convergence between the two? Some industry insiders have contested that a desire to manage unified communications via mobile avenues could become more common in years to come.

I would contend
that the answer is, yes – if we have the courage to think creatively
and move beyond the already-tired clichés of mobile marketing such as
text campaigns and mobile couponing.

In fact, with a bit of creative thought, the opportunity for
connecting with new customers in both audiences is quite remarkable if
we concentrate on the experiences that can be provided with today’s
mobile devices.

So what are the ways that we can get creative?

Let’s look at the root of that word, “creative” for a second. It stems from create.

Every
one of our prospective customers – both B2B and B2C – has not just a
tiny screen onto which we can foist our message, but now has the
ability to create things as well – photos, videos, conversations and
relationships.

Let’s look at the taken-for-granted camera phone capabilities.

Again,
why not think about how we can bring prospects into the process by
enabling and encouraging them to be a creative part of the sale,
instead of a passive recipient?

In the B2C case, we can, for
example, encourage contests and participation where customers take
their photos with the most interesting/scenic/extraordinary usage of
our products and submit them to a community site.

Similarly, we
can encourage B2B customers to send their sales reps photos of their
unique environment/circumstance/prickly problem so that the reps can
better understand the situation and propose an insightful solution.

In the B2C case, we could encourage video testimonials to be pulled into a powerful montage.

In
the B2B case, we can gather videos of customer best-practice tips to
illustrate how our products perform in the real-world and how they are
being used to solve real problems in an efficient manner.

But,
more important than the technical tools, why not enable prospects to
easily connect with the people and information they need to make a
decision to buy?

It is all about the connections and the relationships.

In
the B2C case, a great example of this would be making it easy for
customers to locate and, after the initial sale, create reviews of
their experiences with a product from other customers.

Similarly,
in the B2B realm, this entails providing tools to connect the prospect
with other similar past customer references, testimonials, case studies
or a knowledgeable sales associate.

The upshot is that for both
B2B and B2C we have a real opportunity with mobile: the opportunity to
differentiate based on how we encourage, empower and enable active,
social customers instead of passive targets.

The organizations that crack the code on this are going to be the winners in using this medium.

Moreover, with the emergence of firms like AdAction in the advertising market, businesses can further take advantage of the ‘advertise in mobile‘ technique. This can help entrepreneurs to increase their chances of creating a huge customer base (that comprises both B2B and B2C customers) easily. So, let us use mobile to bring both B2B and B2C customers into the process,
instead of simply throwing marketing messages at them.

Let’s
challenge ourselves to start conversations, and enable prospective
customers to engage with us and with each other, regardless of what
bucket – B2B or B2C – in which they have historically been
classified. Let us try to understand our customers better because that is crucial for the growth of any organization.

Jeanette Gibson from Cisco on Governance

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How Cisco looks at social media from a governance perspective, as presented by Jeanette Gibson (Director of New Media, Cisco Corporate Communications).  The slide reads: Be Respectful, Be Mindful, You Are Reponsible, Abide By The Rules, Add Value, Be Honest, Be Yourself

Smartphones Changing the Network

Iphone New post up at SupernovaHub: "Smartphones Changing the Network."  The key bit, from analyst NPD, via Geek.com:

"The smartphone category grew its share of the overall mobile phone market
six percent annually, having jumped from 17 percent in the first
quarter of 2008 to nearly one quarter (23 percent) of the entire mobile
phone market. According to Rubin, this serves as clear indication of
the rising popularity of the smartphone category that, by many
analysts’ estimates, is already reshuffling the entire market."

Read it.

The Social Media Maturity Model – One Perspective

The folks over at DestinationCRM asked for some initial thoughts on the Social Media Maturity Model.  First, definitely check out Josh Weinberger’s post from June 1 to get the lay of the land. It’s a good guide to the graphic and to the experiment they're conducting.

Next, kudos to Lisa Boccadutre on fitting a whole raft of
information into a very small space. The information density on this
piece is astounding, in that in two pages there are points about time
frames of market uptake of social media, capability changes over a
five-year horizon, strategic evolution, treatment of customers and
evolving social capabilities.

I do have one primary concern: This graphic seems to imply that the
customer will still be on the outside looking in, even five years from
now. Not sure I entirely agree with that.

My key question: What does this look like if the customer moves to
the center of the picture, instead of merely being a target of an
organization’s actions?

So, here we go…

Link to video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e1p-CoclHwE

Corporate Blogging Roundtable

The folks from the German-American Business Association were kind enough to invite Mark Finnern (SAP), Jennifer McClure (Society for New Communications Research), Vassil Mladjov (Blogtronix), Mark Simmons (SixApart), Mario Sundar (LinkedIn) and myself to participate in a televised roundtable discussion entitled “Successful Corporate Blogging.”

Here’s the setup:

Blogs are
changing the way companies are listening and reaching out to their
customers. This televised panel of media experts is aimed to give
insight in how to use blogging as a successful marketing communications
strategy.  Sample discussion topics include: What are the elements of
a successful blog? How can legal pitfalls be avoided? How can ROI be
measured? How can we confront our fear of blogging? What will the
future of blogging look like?”

The panel was followed by a Q&A
session.

Here’s a link to the video.

Bonus factoid: What I learned…it’s a bit disconcerting when a person whom you don’t know hands you a lavalier mic and calmly instructs you to partially disrobe (in front of a roomful of people) in order to run the microphone cord up the inside of your shirt so it doesn’t show up on camera.

Is “Community” a Lie?

Picture 10 Micah (say "Me(ha!)") does some solid thinking about "The Lie of Community."  The thought-provoker:

"The lie of community is that by having users or by creating content,
a community just exists. That by being on the Internet somehow we are
all part of some global community. There is no global community."

…and the money 'grafs:

"Create the ability for community members to communicate as they want to.
Brand managers and most companies want to control the conversation. If
your users are truly part of the community, they will do nothing to
hurt and/or destroy the community in which they live.

Trust them to make your product better. Trust them to make your community better."

Which brands that you know have the courage to actually trust their community members?  And which ones are afraid?

photo: wvs

The New Maelstrom of Social Media

Picture 6 Some thoughts on social media overload over at DestinationCRM.  The lede:

“Is it time to declare email bankruptcy, delete those 1,000 unread messages, issue a public mea culpa, and start over? With an ever-increasing chorus of “overload,” this social media stuff must be irretrievably broken, right?”

Link to article.
PDF of article.

Study: Unselfish Individuals Benefit in Social Networks

Altruism
Nifty excerpt in the Technology Review on altruism in social networks.  The excerpt:

"How altruistic behaviour emerges has puzzled evolutionary biologists
for decades. From the point of view of survival of the fittest, the
unselfish concern for the welfare of others seems inexplicable. Surely
any organism should always act selfishly if it were truly intent on
saving its own bacon.

One explanation is that altruistic acts,
although seemingly unselfish, actually benefit those who perform them
but in indirect ways. The idea is that unselfish acts are repeated. So
those who have been helped go on to help other individuals, ensuring
that this behaviour spreads through a group, a phenomenon known as
upstream reciprocity.

Eventually, the individual that
triggered the altruistic behaviour will be on the receiving end of
least one unselfish act, ensuring that, at the very least, he or she
doesn't lose out. In this way, unselfish individuals actually benefit
from their altruism."

Read the Technology Review summary here.

Here's the full paper (26pp.).

Neato.

Texture

Very interesting "open-source business card" project being tested over at Kickstarter from VRM colleague (and NPR innovator) Keith Hopper.  Check it out.  Keith says:

"I
discovered that if you power off your iPhone with the camera app
running, you'll get an impromptu close-up shot when you next turn on
your phone. This is usually a shot of a table surface, the ground, your
shoes – many of which provide interesting textural backgrounds.

This
phenomenon inspired me to shoot texture shots taken as iPhone
close-ups. In order to learn more about effectively framing and
lighting a digital shot, I post all photos without edits, cropping, or
level and color changes.

If you want one of the first packs of Creative Commons-licensed MOO MiniCards, the
money will go to pay for the cards and the shipping for your order. All
the photo and edit work to complete the project I'll do for free. Any
additional money raised will go towards hiring a graphic designer to
design a 100th card (99 photos + 1 professionally designed card). The
100th "credits card" will give photo, design, and support credits to
every participant that pledges at least $1 to the project.
"

Trying a new form of innovation/business exploration? Check.  Art?  Check.  Cool stuff?  Check.

I'm in.