conversation marketing

Required Reading: Conversation Agent

Picture_13

Conversation Agent - Connecting ideas and people – how talk can change our lives, by Valeria Maltoni

If you haven't been reading the excellent writing and thinking of Valeria Maltoni, now is a good time to start. Valeria is a client-side marketer who "gets it" and her blog, Conversation Agent, is full of sage advice for anyone in the field of marketing interested in smart ways to think about and approach the social media space.

Her posts are well thought out, expertly researched, and highly thought-provoking. The best part of it all - she truly does all of this to help others connect and inspire more interesting conversations - both in the digital realm and in person. Go there now, or just subscribe to her RSS here so you can keep track of her writing regularly.

The Curse of Great Expectations


Iphone3g
Great expectations are always a dangerous thing. The unveiling of iPhone 2.0 on Monday reminded us of this age-old lesson.

We've all been waiting, some of us for nearly a year now, for the second generation of this device that changed the way we think about mobile communications and web browsing.

Expectations were already high, based on what happened last time. Rumors kept circulating, gaining more and more momentum to the point that they became what several people believed would be announced. Then when it was finally made public, many were underwhelmed. iPhone 2.0 wasn't as fully loaded as they were hoping and speculating.

This seems to be a growing problem for brands. In addition to Apple, we can also look at what happened when Cadbury released their follow-up spot to Gorilla.

We build up grandiose visions of what will come based on a previous experience that surpassed our expectations or completely surprised us. Then the big moment comes and we don't get what we were hoping for. We're let down in some way. We wanted to be blown away again.

But is that fair? Cadbury didn't promise us anything implicitly. They simply made a commitment to creating videos that brought people joy. They didn't say that each time they made a video it would be better than the last one. They just said it would make us smile.

And in this case, Apple didn't make any promises or even give away too many clues as to what was coming with the new iPhone. They just said some new software was coming in June/July and then did what they always do - keep very, very quiet.

Maybe therein lies the problem.

In the "Age of Conversation," keeping quiet and being secretive can be just as dangerous as, if not maybe worse than, saying too much. Especially when you have a bunch of passionate, forward-thinking, creative fans who are highly active online - sharing their visions and hopes for a new product or service - building unrealistic expectations among a larger portion of the general public.

If you are fortunate enough to be a brand that has a community of amorous fans, such as Apple, maybe now your job isn't to create anticipation and excitement for your products or services as much as it is to properly manage expectations.

Had Apple (or better yet, Steve Jobs himself) come out several weeks ago and done something to properly set expectations, we wouldn't be disappointed we didn't get video chat or a bigger hard drive. In fact, if they had done a good enough job, we would have expected less than what we got and we'd be more excited about what was announced yesterday.

Just as we don't always know what we want or know what is possible, we don't always know what is not yet possible. If one of your brand's core principles is to surprise and delight people, then in an age when anyone can generate an idea and spread it quickly and broadly to the point that it becomes accepted as truth, keeping expectations in check should be a top priority.

I'm not advocating that brands should try to control the message. Not at all. I'm simply saying that when these things happen, they better join the conversation rather than sit back and watch. It might seem like a great thing - getting all this "free" publicity talking up your brand and imagining you can do more/better than you really are going to - but it's not. It's irresponsible.

Not managing expectations is gong to become, if it hasn't already, a bigger problem for brands with passionate fans. Not speaking-up when you can see that people are setting themselves up to be disappointed is just as bad as over-promising things yourself.

Brands have more access now than ever before to understanding peoples' expectations. I suggest they start paying attention and getting involved when it's called for.

In an age of collaboration, open source and idea sharing, you don't want to let people down too often or they'll just go find someone to help them make their expectations become a reality on their own.

A Must Read: What's Next In Media

Neil Perkin has posted an excellent presentation on where media is today and where he sees it heading. Take a few minutes to click through the slides, ponder it a bit, and then pass it along to others you know who are trying to sort it all out.

And by all means, share your thoughts with him in the comments to his post...

Age of Conversation 2.0 Teasers

Aoc2_2 Last week, Ryan Barrett put out a request for the authors of the upcoming Age of Conversation 2 book to share a brief snippet of their chapters.

Greg Verdino has some critical thoughts on why this should have waited and I tend to agree him. Perhaps it is just the nature of many who blog to want to share what they write almost as immediately as it is finished.

Anyway... After reading what others have given her, I'm really looking forward to the book's eventual arrival so I can read the rest of their chapters.

Given that, and in the spirit of playing along, here's mine - based on a quote from George Bernard Shaw:

"The reasonable brand adapts itself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to it. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable brand."

The unreasonable brand is something I intend to start posting more and more things about without giving away my chapter as it's something I've been thinking a lot about lately and where I'm going to go with it won't encroach upon the specific sub-topic I chose to write on.

To see all of the bits Ryan has collected so far, jump over here.

A Social Media Conspiracy Theory via The Kaiser Edition

The Kaiser Edition has posted some very insightful and interesting thoughts on the whole "social media" epidemic that is sweeping through the marketing world. On top of it being those things, it's also pretty entertaining.

It lines up with something I've been thinking about lately too. There are a lot of people out there who claim to be social media strategists and experts simply because they're doing some of these things themselves.

Just because you're doing something doesn't mean you're qualified to advise people on it. I know a lot of people who technically can drive a car but I'd never want them to try to teach someone else how to do it.

Anyway, give the presentation a browse. It's thought-provoking at a minimum.

You can also find it on SlideShare if you prefer to view it there.

Age of Conversation 2.0 Announced

Drew and Gavin have announced the theme and authors for Age Of Conversation 2.0. The winning theme was "Why Don't People Get It?"

I'm excited to be a part of this and I look forward to what lies ahead as it all comes together. Here is the complete list of contributors/authors with links to their blogs/sites. I'm sure many of these names will be familiar to you...

Adam Crowe, Adrian Ho, Aki Spicer, Alex Henault, Amy Jussel, Andrew Odom, Andy Nulman, Andy Sernovitz, Andy Whitlock, Angela Maiers, Ann Handley, Anna Farmery, Armando Alves, Arun Rajagopal, Asi Sharabi, Becky Carroll, Becky McCray, Bernie Scheffler, Bill Gammell, Bob Carlton, Bob LeDrew, Brad Shorr, Bradley Spitzer, Brandon Murphy, Branislav Peric, Brent Dixon, Brett Macfarlane, Brian Reich, C.C. Chapman, Cam Beck, Casper Willer, Cathleen Rittereiser, Cathryn Hrudicka, Cedric Giorgi, Charles Sipe, Chris Kieff, Chris Cree, Chris Wilson, Christina Kerley (CK), C.B. Whittemore, Clay Parker Jones, Chris Brown, Colin McKay, Connie Bensen, Connie Reece, Cord Silverstein, Corentin Monot, Craig Wilson, Daniel Honigman, Dan Goldstein, Dan Schawbel, Dana VanDen Heuvel, Dan Sitter, Daria Radota Rasmussen, Darren Herman, Darryl Patterson, Dave Davison, Dave Origano, David Armano, David Bausola, David Berkowitz, David Brazeal, David Koopmans, David Meerman Scott, David Petherick, David Reich, David Weinfeld, David Zinger, Deanna Gernert, Deborah Brown, Dennis Price, Derrick Kwa, Dino Demopoulos, Doug Haslam, Doug Meacham, Doug Mitchell, Douglas Hanna, Douglas Karr, Drew McLellan, Duane Brown, Dustin Jacobsen, Dylan Viner, Ed Brenegar, Ed Cotton, Efrain Mendicuti, Ellen Weber, Emily Reed, Eric Peterson, Eric Nehrlich, Ernie Mosteller, Faris Yakob, Fernanda Romano, Francis Anderson, G. Kofi Annan, Gareth Kay, Gary Cohen, Gaurav Mishra, Gavin Heaton, Geert Desager, George Jenkins, G.L. Hoffman, Gianandrea Facchini, Gordon Whitehead, Graham Hill, Greg Verdino, Gretel Going & Kathryn Fleming, Hillel Cooperman, Hugh Weber, J. Erik Potter, J.C. Hutchins, James Gordon-Macintosh, Jamey Shiels, Jasmin Tragas, Jason Oke, Jay Ehret, Jeanne Dininni, Jeff De Cagna, Jeff Gwynne, Jeff Noble, Jeff Wallace, Jennifer Warwick, Jenny Meade, Jeremy Fuksa, Jeremy Heilpern, Jeremy Middleton, Jeroen Verkroost, Jessica Hagy, Joanna Young, Joe Pulizzi, Joe Talbott, John Herrington, John Jantsch, John Moore, John Rosen, John Todor, Jon Burg, Jon Swanson, Jonathan Trenn, Jordan Behan, Julie Fleischer, Justin Flowers, Justin Foster, Karl Turley, Kate Trgovac, Katie Chatfield, Katie Konrath, Kenny Lauer, Keri Willenborg, Kevin Jessop, Kris Hoet, Krishna De, Kristin Gorski, Laura Fitton, Laurence Helene Borei, Lewis Green, Lois Kelly, Lori Magno, Louise Barnes-Johnston, Louise Mangan, Louise Manning, Luc Debaisieux, Marcus Brown, Mario Vellandi, Mark Blair, Mark Earls, Mark Goren, Mark Hancock, Mark Lewis, Mark McGuinness, Mark McSpadden, Matt Dickman, Matt J. McDonald, Matt Moore, Michael Hawkins, Michael Karnjanaprakorn, Michelle Lamar, Mike Arauz, Mike McAllen, Mike Sansone, Mitch Joel, Monica Wright, Nathan Gilliatt, Nathan Snell, Neil Perkin, Nettie Hartsock, Nick Rice, Oleksandr Skorokhod, Ozgur Alaz, Paul Chaney, Paul Hebert, Paul Isakson, Paul Marobella, Paul McEnany, Paul Tedesco, Paul Williams, Pet Campbell, Pete Deutschman, Peter Corbett, Phil Gerbyshak, Phil Lewis, Phil Soden, Piet Wulleman, Rachel Steiner, Sreeraj Menon, Reginald Adkins, Richard Huntington, Rishi Desai, Beeker Northam, Rob Mortimer, Robert Hruzek, Roberta Rosenberg, Robyn McMaster, Roger von Oech, Rohit Bhargava, Ron Shevlin, Ryan Barrett, Ryan Karpeles, Ryan Rasmussen, Sam Huleatt, Sandy Renshaw, Scott Goodson, Scott Monty, Scott Townsend, Scott White, Sean Howard, Sean Scott, Seni Thomas, Seth Gaffney, Shama Hyder, Sheila Scarborough, Sheryl Steadman, Simon Payn, Sonia Simone, Spike Jones, Stanley Johnson, Stephen Collins, Stephen Cribbett, Stephen Landau, Stephen Smith, Steve Bannister, Steve Hardy, Steve Portigal, Steve Roesler, Steven Verbruggen, Steve Woodruff, Sue Edworthy, Susan Bird, Susan Gunelius, Susan Heywood, Tammy Lenski, Terrell Meek, Thomas Clifford, Thomas Knoll, Tiffany Kenyon, Tim Brunelle, Tim Buesing, Tim Connor, Tim Jackson, Tim Longhurst, Tim Mannveille, Tim Tyler, Timothy Johnson, Tinu Abayomi-Paul, Toby Bloomberg, Todd Andrlik, Troy Rutter, Troy Worman, Uwe Hook, Valeria Maltoni, Vandana Ahuja, Vanessa DiMauro, Veronique Rabuteau, Wayne Buckhanan, William Azaroff, Yves Van Landeghem

Fallon Brainfood: The Social 10

Didn't get around to sharing this one last week, but meant to do it. Sorry about that.

Fallon planner, Aki Spicer, shared his thoughts on 10 Trends Marketers Should Know About Social Networking at the agency's Brainfood lunch both with the agency and beyond by broadcasting live across several social media platforms so that anyone could watch if they were so inclined. Sounds like it went pretty well. Wish I could have caught it live.

Aki starts off with a good quote from William Gibson: "The future is here. It's just not evenly distributed yet."

Much of this is inline with some of what I've shared here throughout various posts and comments elsewhere. If you're following the social media conversations around the blogs, then I would say this is a really good round-up/recap of many of those ideas with some great case studies, quotes and implications to support exactly what he said this is, "a kind of social media 101."

Anyway, give it a go if you're looking for a good perspective on this topic. If you've got comments or thoughts, be sure to leave them for Aki over on the SlideShare or on the Fallon Planning blog post.

The Age of Conversation Bum Rush

Aoc_banner_2 Now, normally I'm not a fan of these "Bum Rush the Charts" things, but this is a good book written by lots of smart people AND the proceeds go to charity, so how could I not help them spread the word?

You can help too. Here's how (paraphrased from an email from Drew):

Write a post telling your others about the Bum Rush.

You can get all the details here. Be sure that you use the specific link to the book listed below (or on the post). It’s linked to an Amazon associate account so even more money gets raised for Variety.

Digg Chris’ post on Friday, starting at noon CST.

Go to www.freshpeel.com on Friday and Digg Chris’ post about the Rush.  They are really trying to get the word out beyond their circle of influence. Stumble it....Facebook about it....Twitter. But drive people to Chris’ post from anywhere and everywhere.

Beginning Saturday morning — buy the book, but only buy one at a time!

Go here and buy the book.

Some Thoughts on Utility

Facebookapps
[ image inspired by Joshua Porter ]

Asi has a really good analysis of Facebook Apps over on No Man's Blog. Give it a good read - especially if you're considering creating any of these for your brand(s) and/or client(s).

In his write-up, he links to my post earlier in the week where I shared the ADWEEK article on brands moving toward doing things that, well, do things for people along with a few of my thoughts around this. I'm not calling this out to brag. I'm calling it out because the way I read it, he's rightfully taking a jab at me for just talking about doing these things. 

Fair enough. I gave no proof as to what we're doing in this area. I wish I could, but I can't. For one, some of it's not done yet. Additionally, and unfortunately, for those that are done I'm not allowed to talk about them per contractual agreements we have with the clients we're working with on them. I attempted to share one before and almost as soon as the post went live, I was pinged with a request to take it down. Lesson learned. As soon as that changes, I'll be sure to let you know. But anyway...

I'm glad he called me out because I wasn't entirely happy with where that post ended up. It turned into something I wasn't intending it to. I didn't mean for it to sound like you should never create another micro-site or extend an off-line campaign into the digital realm. There are definitely cases where you should.

I left it as it was though because it felt like a good place to start the conversation on moving from just creating more noise online to creating utility. So, it was a good push for me to pick back up sooner than later.

First, I agree that it's absolutely "easier said than done." If it weren't, we'd see a lot more brands who have cracked this nut. This is also why everyone keeps referring to the same case study which Asi is tired of hearing about. I have to agree that I'm tired of hearing about it as well. The hard thing is, because it is in a class all on its own and it's the gold standard, it ends up being the champion for utility in the digital age. The good news is that I think we will see more and more of them soon, but right now there aren't many. (For a few examples, again, see the ADWEEK article.)

Now that we have that out of the way, let's talk about the first stage of creating utility...

Take anything digital you might be creating or are thinking about creating and plug it into the blue character's chat bubble above - Web site, micro site, application, MySpace profile, Facebook fan page, widget, digital thing-a-ma-bob, etc. Then look at your answer to the red character's question. If the answer is no, maybe it's time to press pause and see how you can turn that answer into a "yes."

Dictionary.com defines useful as:

1. being of use or service; serving some purpose; advantageous, helpful, or of good effect: a useful member of society.

2. of practical use, as for doing work; producing material results; supplying common needs: the useful arts; useful work.

I take this to mean that useful can be accomplished in a variety of forms. From the user perspective, useful can be as simple as giving someone information they were looking for quickly and easily. Useful can be teaching someone something new. Useful can be helping people communicate with each other easier or better. Useful can be saving people time. Useful can be extending the value or capabilities of your real-world product. And, under the right circumstances, useful can be entertaining someone.

From the client/brand side of things, useful can also mean several things. Useful can mean opening up a new channel for conversation with fans/users of your product or service (please use it for conversation and not just to spam people). Useful can mean creating a new stream of revenue. Useful can mean engaging people in something that encourages them to purchase more of your product or service in order to extend that experience. Useful can mean reinforcing a first time purchase. Useful can be simply giving them yet another positive experience with your brand so that they're more likely to want to buy your brand again in the future.

It's easy to get caught up in the excitement of new technologies and new places where people are gathering and then rush to do something in that area so you can say you've done it. Before creating whatever it is you're thinking about doing, just ask yourself how both parties involved will find it useful. You need to figure this out in the beginning. After it's created is too late.

Let's all try to remember, it's not only not enough to be first, it's also not enough to only be useful to one of the parties involved. Especially if the only beneficiary is the brand. It needs to be useful to both parties involved.

More to come on the subject of utility for sure. This post has already gone too long as it is.

ALSO: I would love to hear any thoughts any of you have around this or any other post I put up. I realize that the way I often tend to write things may seem like I'm not asking for participation, but please share anything you wish in the comments. Share if you agree or disagree. Share if you have a great example that counters or supports it. I'm just sharing what is in my head here and by no means am arrogant enough to think I'm right all of the time. So please, comment away as much as you please. We'll all be smarter because of it...

FREE MCAD + MIMA Speaking Event

Picture_20

Catfoa_badge_170_3 Tomorrow (Monday, March 3), MCAD and MIMA are hosting the second speaker in their series Conversations About the Future of Advertising. The speaker will be Valeria Maltoni, author of Conversation Agent, AdAge Power150 blogger and Director of Marketing Communications at Sungard Availability Services.

The description sent my way reads:

"We've got a great conversation planned about blogging, social networks, community and the growing power of the consumer in the future of advertising. Valeria will speak both as a blogger and as a marketing client -- how does she prepare and enable her company for the mutations facing us all?"

This event is free - no registration required.

All the details can be found here or here.

The quick info is as follows:

MCAD+MIMA speaker series:
Conversations About The Future of Advertising
Conversation #2 with - Valeria Maltoni, Conversation Agent

6:00 p.m. - 7:45 p.m.
Monday, March 3, 2008
The Fine Line Music Cafe
318 First Ave North
Minneapolis, MN 55401

What Is This?

My Twitterings...

Search This Blog

Contact Me

Planners and Such