When I was in San Francisco on Friday I stopped by the Citizen Space Co-Working office. Great space and people.
My last co-working stop was Independents Hall in Philadelphia, PA.
Commentary by blog and social media consultant Josh Hallett on the use of blogs for public relations, media, marketing, communication & branding and from time-to-time the unsolicited opinion.
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When I was in San Francisco on Friday I stopped by the Citizen Space Co-Working office. Great space and people.
My last co-working stop was Independents Hall in Philadelphia, PA.
Following-up on my first post about the tunnel at Detroit Airport, here are a series of photos from the same spot showcasing the changing light. The last shot is purposely over-exposed:
I was in Indianapolis on Mon/Tue last week for the Regional Airline Association conference. While there I was allowed in to the new Indianapolis Airport which is still under construction. It was bizarre to be in such a large space with almost nobody in it. Some of the photos are here. The main hall features a huge open space with a massive skylight.
Speaking of big, here's a shot of the new Lucas Oil Stadium which will house the Colts starting this fall. This is also a very big building. More photos...
Leave it to Ted Wright at Fizz to always throw an interesting party at a WOMMA event. Last night Ted brought the Veev to Setai on South Beach.
The last Ted event I went to was for Absinthe at WOMMA New Orleans.
After a great day one, and a very 'Miami' reception last night, day two kicked off with a keynote from Bob Pearson, VP of Communities and Conversations, Dell.

The Dell Hell/Turnaround story is often cited at events and this one has been no exception. Bob likes to think that Dell has just finished Chapter 1. Of course in that chapter there were some things that Dell did wrong, but they've made some significant strides to fix things.
A few key points: First, obviously, we're in the most significant period of change online.
Second, the number of conversation and data online is growing exponentially.
Third, customers want to speak with us in their language. English only reaches 1/3 of the world on a good day
Fourth, new countries have formed that are not being treated with the full respect they deserve. If you look at data, if MySpace was a country, it would be the 11th largest in the world.
Fifth, watch out for the content pushers. They want to create stuff and them dump it. People are looking for conversations and relevance.
Leaders will enter and become relevant in conversations every day in every language all around the world about their company and product.
Six, your new home page is Google. The content and experience is being driven by the customer. What are they defining about you?
Seventh, if you build it they may not come. The traffic that matters is not about you. The search action is not brands, it's broader topics.
Eighth, less than 1% of a person's time online is spent buying product. The majority of the people visiting your site are looking for something else, what are you providing them?
What were Dell's key learnings?
1. The most important thing we do is help customers with their technology problems. Dell has created blog response/support teams that go out and help customers with their problems. Only later did they launch their own blog.
2. Blogging is global, blogging multi-lingual, blogging is a community of passion, blogging is not one blog.
3. Would you rather do a focus group with 10 people or listen to 100,000 people debate ideas for a few months ad ask them questions through the process? This lead to Idea Storm. Idea Storm has generated 12,000 ideas, 120 of which are in action externally.
4. Customers are partners. Dell recently launched ReGeneration, a blog about their customers. Customers are driving it.
5. Communities are more powerful than individuals, communities want to help each other improve. Whatever we can do to empower our customers and communities, benefits everyone.
6. The online experience at work should be simulate to the experience at home. At Dell they gave all their employees complete access to the web, how many large companies do that?
7. Join your customers communities and become part of the solution. Think direct to customer Q&A. They participate in forums like Yahoo Answers.
8. You can see in real time whether or not you're relevant to the conversation. Twitter is great for this.
You begin to ask, if you are doing all of this, why do you need to use something like a press release?
9. If you are dealing with an issue, be truthful, transparent and diligent in updating your customers.
10. Your customers are people, not lines of business. Yes we know that, but what do your customers do? What does your customer do, when they're not your customer....i.e. their personal lives. How can you engage
11. Measurement requires thinking outside the box. Things like awareness and activities are easy to measure, but what really matters are conversations and communities.
Immediately after the opening keynote, Jeffrey Graham from the New York Times presented a case study on how the NYTimes is researching how word of mouth impacts advertising.

Jeffrey disagreed with Joesph, he thinks that WOM and traditional marketing can co-exist, that is that traditional advertising is not going away.
Jeffrey has a new title for his presentation: WOM: Marketing's Butt Crack. Good laugh.
Next up was a quick game to get things started.
First question: What are the more commonly used marketing objectives? A: Branding/Awareness B: Direct Response C: Trial Response
Second question: What variables are used most commonly in planning marketing? A: Demographics B: Contextual Relevance C: Cost
Third question: What are the most common measures of marketing effectiveness? A: Direct B: Response Branding
Fourth question: What is the most influential contact point? A: Word of Mouth
There is a big disconnect, marketers know that WOM is important, but the investment, planning and measurement still skews toward traditional media.
What are the myths around WOM?
- You can't influence it.
- You can't buy it in scale.
- You can't integrate it.
- You can't measure it.
All this results in WOM getting a very small portion of the marketing budget, hence the butt crack:

All marketing should be word of mouth, but mass communications can still influence/start. Advertising can drive brand advocacy.
Start thinking about putting word of mouth at the center of media planning.
Media planning for dummies:
- Determine the objectives and targets
- Select media channels
- Develop a short list
- Measure results
Old Way: Demographics, Psychographics, Buying Behavior. New Way: Looking at the level of conversations about brands. Why are people talking? Why not?
Old Way: Channels. New Way: Conversations by technology category.
Old Way: The Short List. New Way: Think about quality and influence of content, what is starting conversation?
The NYTimes tracks what brands their readers are talking about....wouldn't a brand want to be in front of an audience that is talking about them?
Old Way: Measurement, Clicks, Impressions. New Way: WOM.
The Holy Grail has always been directly linking marketing to sales. It's called a Holy Grail for a reason, it's difficult to find. Marketers come up with proxies to link sales to marketing.
WOM also forces us to redefine our markets, since it can easily go global via the technology channels available.
Since WOM is a key motivator, shouldn't we link WOM with marketing? That is, what level of conversation is generated by advertising? Should WOM be the ROI measure for advertising?
WOMM-U kicked off in Miami, FL yesterday with an opening keynote by Joseph Jaffe, author of Join the Conversation.
One of Joe's basic premises is that everything can be a conversation starter. If a book or a business card can be a conversation started, why can't a brand? However, conversation and community are much bigger than a series of tactical strategies.
What's more important impressions or relationships? What brands realize now is that a single bad relationship can have a dramatic impact, i.e. Dell Hell.
The Cluetrain said that markets are conversation, Joe thinks that marketing can be a conversation. If we as an industry don't participate, we'll be left behind.
Joe jokingly said, "God gave us two ears and one mouth, use it"
Step 1, listen. It's unacceptable that often a marketing department doesn't know what's going on. Of course part of listening is hearing and understanding.
Step 2 is response, once you listen and hear you need be responsive. People expect a response.
Step 3 is join, but more importantly, be invited to join. Brands aren't as cool and sexy as they think they are. When brands built islands on Second Life the realized that nobody wanted to come. Brands have to earn their place in the party.
Step 4, catalyze. Brands have the budget, staff and resources to help things along. Find the influencers and help them.
Joe showed some graphs of Twitter conversations related to the Oovoo brand conversation compared
Word of mouth is not bought, it is not sponsored, it is earned. At this point you can get to...
Step 5, start a conversation. You can't do this, unless you've done the first four steps.
So what shouldn't you do?
Don't fake it. Don't manipulate the conversation. Don't control the conversation. Don't dominate the conversation...we (brands) like to talk don't we?
Lastly, avoiding the conversation. Brands are very good at this. Some just don't care.
Are you in the campaign or the commitment business? Are you building relationships that will build and profit over time, or just a quick impression?
Brands need to protect and nurture the new non-traditional programs since they're helping build relationships. How much are you spending on experimentation? Marketing should be storm-chasers, delving into new territories.
Joe believes that corporations will have conversation departments by 2012. Customer service will be a major brand differentiator.
Brands will be redefined based upon on they relate and interact with their communities/customers.
I'm over there......I'm back in live-blogging mode. This time from WOMM-U in Miami, FL. You can follow all the action here and of course photos.
I've been on the road again this week, big surprise there huh? In four days I've been from/to/through: Orlando, Charlotte, Indianapolis, Detroit, Manchester, Atlanta and Miami. Yesterday I had a quick layover in Detroit. One of my favorite airport spots is the tunnel between the A and B concourses. I could stare at the lights for hours. I took a number of photos with the different colors which I'll post later (here they are), but for now I'll leave you with this one.
Speaking of airports, the other night I was part of a select group that toured the new Indianapolis Airport. It was somewhat bizarre to stand inside a huge empty building like that. I'll be posting those
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