Marketing your company through social media

Lamb CMC's essential tips to consider when thinking about building a social media presence for your company.  Probably the fastest growing area of our business, both in interest and actual work has been communication services involving social media. We have written a number of times here about how Linkedin and Twitter need to be considered as a key element of your external brand positioning, so we won’t preach here, but rather assume that if you are reading this then you have made that leap of faith to give it some serious consideration.

 

So what should be in your mind when thinking about how it should be delivered within your organisation?

Well the very first thing is to realise is that this is a strategy that will by its nature spread across the whole your organisation. It cannot nor ever will be delivered as a single thread that will not influence all else. It is a public broadcasting medium, therefore you need to appreciate that what is said here could extend many times beyond your direct following or networks. People sharing or retweeting could potentially give it a huge outreach that will overlap all your other communication channels. So think organisation-wide and develop a concerted strategy before pressing send.

 

Know your goals

Most think that it is the size of your community that is the key aim. Of course that is important, but knowing what you want to achieve with that community is of much greater importance; is it to drive brand awareness, traffic back to your website or is it perhaps sales? Your social communications strategies must accord to these goals and always have them in mind.

 

What is your ROI?

Whether managed internally or externally there will be a cost and with that you need to have the measurements to know that the campaign is meeting your goals. Whether short, medium or ultimate aims, be clear about how it will be measured.

 

Should I worry about Follower numbers?

In a word, no! It is more about having influencers – people that are trusted and have engaged followers themselves. Look out for bloggers, acknowledged experts, interesting “celebrities” in your sector and active tweeters; all of whom can help spread and evangelise your messages.

 

Look out for other communities to be active within

There are some obvious channels to use, Twitter & LinkedIn being two here, plus Facebook, as with its new Timeline platform it finally makes some sense for businesses to profile on it. But there are equally many other communities that have been created to be shared amongst like-minded people. Look them out and get involved as you never know who might be on them.

 

Klout score analysis

Understand the data

There are a plethora of tools on the internet that can help you delve into the effectiveness of your social media presence. Everyone has their favourites; here at Lamb we use HootSuite  as the dashboard for monitoring the various accounts we have. Aside of the usual timelines, mentions, messages, etc it has a great search tool for looking at Twitter trends as well as being able to tell you when and how many times a tweet posted has been retweeted, thereby showing the outreach of it. We use Klout and its inbuilt scoring matrix to gauge how effective our accounts are. Its algorithms assess amongst other things, your activity, the quality of your followers and the outreach of your tweets to build a number score. Very simply the higher the number the greater your perceived Twitter clout or Klout is considered. It also shows how it goes up and down, which can be a great indicator of any specific messaging done. SocialBro is great for lifting the bonnet of your Twitter account and seeing who’s following you, who they really are, how active they are and how influential they are for you.

 

Make everything social

Ultimately one of the prime motivations of all this is to raise awareness. A big part of which is to drive traffic to your site and likewise raise its profile in the Google search rankings. This is now almost entirely driven by how active and contemporary your site is, therefore it pays huge attention to the social media content within it. Don’t miss that trick then and make sure your site captures and displays that content where Google will find it.

Don't fear the cookie monsters

There’s been a lot of panic around recently due to a change in the UK online cookie privacy law that became compulsory in May 2012. This has got a lot of people worried and confused as to whether their website is complying or not within this new law. So what is all this cookie stuff about?  

What's the beef?

In a nutshell, a new law now requires all websites to ask visitors for permission to store and access cookies on their computers.

There was an EU ePrivacy directive passed back in 2009 which in itself isn't a law but from which each EU country is required to make their own enforceable laws. The UK brought its new cookie law into action in 2011 but gave a years grace period which ended in May 2012, which is probably why you've recently noticed more messages on various websites asking you to accept cookies on to your machine. Prior to this websites were allowed to automatically place cookies on your computer as long as your browser preferences were set to accept them.

 

Cookie Cookie Cookie

What the hell is a cookie anyway?

A cookie is a small file that allows information to be sent back and forth between a website and a user’s browser so that websites work smoother and the user gets a better, uninterupted web experience. This can contain information that helps with things like remembering login passwords so that you are automatically logged in next time you visit a site. Other uses of cookies are storing a user's preferences, google analytics details, access/authentication, identification of a session, remembering shopping cart contents, etc.

Your cookies can also pass on information from one site that you visit to another, for example, if you are logged into a social network like facebook and you visit a news website your browser will realise you are logged into facebook and allow you to share a news story to your facebook friends directly from the news site without asking you to log in again.

This same method can be used for targeted advertising which allows websites to see what sort of sites you have been visiting previously and tailor the adverts displayed to you according to what you are interested in.

 

What's this new law trying to achieve?

The principle purpose of this law is to protect privacy even when the information collected via a cookie is not necessarily personally identifiable. The issue around consent is about transparency and helping the user know what information is being collected and by whom.

 

ico Cookie Law Guidance

What does the law say?

Regulations already existed dating back to 2003 which stated that you had an obligation to tell users how your site uses any cookies and give them information on how they can opt out if they objected. This was usually contained within a privacy policy page typically placed in the footer of a website.

However as of 26 May 2011* new regulations state that:

1) All websites must provide clear and comprehensive information about the purposes of the storage of or access of information via any cookies they are using; and

2) Website owners must obtain consent to store a cookie on a user or subscribers device when they visit a website.

Essentially the law is very similar to the 2003 regulation with the main difference being that whereas previously you just had to provide an option to opt out, the new law now requires every visitor to a website to actively ‘consent’ i.e. opt in or opt out of cookies being set for their web session.

It is this active step of flagging up a message or a pop-up box that has got the web industry annoyed as it is disruptive to the user's experience on most websites they will visit. Considering that 92% of websites use cookies to varying degrees you can see why developers might feel this is annoying but the fact is that this is the law now and unless they are going to stop using cookies then they will need to comply or ignore the law.

* The regulations were enacted in May 2011, however a year’s grace was granted for implementation meaning the deadline for compliance was 26 May 2012.

 

What could this mean for you?

Generally we would say that there is no great cause for panic for many B2B websites like those of our clients as they tend to not rely on cookies too much past the analytics use. It is something that should be implemented into your site alongside any other updates you are performing. Most sites can be amended quite simply to display a message asking for permission to store cookies with a simple accept or refuse button for customers to click on.

If your site is selling anything or storing details of users then you should definitely be looking to comply as a matter of urgency as the ico (Information Commissioner's Office) has the power of fining up to £500,000 (though there is suggestion that this would only be for when serious fraud has been committed causing substantial damage or loss to the user).

 

So, simple isn't it

We've tried to give you the edited version and keep it fairly simple and in layman's terms here. Obviously there is a lot of information surrounding anything like this and ico are the official body responsible for handling this new regulation. They have prepared a PDF containing the full details regarding the cookie law and this can be downloaded here.

There is also a FAQs video presented by Dave Evans from ico explaining what companies should be doing in order to comply with the new regulations which you can view here.

 

As a final note, if any of our Lamb client's out there are reading this and want to discuss any potential changes that may need to be implemented on their website then please contact Carl on 020 7247 2233.

Twitter in action

As regular readers of our blog will know, we are social media enthusiasts and have made it a key part of our work to try and show why every brand should at least contemplate its use. I think it would be fair to say that most people see the benefits of LinkedIn as a 21st century addition to the old fashioned networking, but not so many see the benefits of something as eclectic as Twitter, with its fast moving, up to second micro-blogging. It really is a medium where the art is to be in constant touch with it and to actively participate, rather than sit on the sidelines as a watcher. Part of our social media service delivery is to manage the Twitter accounts for some of our clients that use them and we were recently involved in an event that we believe shows the real worth of Twitter.

One of our clients, Howe & Co is probably the best regarded human rights law firm in the UK, if not internationally. They have represented in many high profile cases, not least of which the settlement rights of the Ghurkas, publicly led by Joanna Lumley. With their status, their Twitter account (which only started a month or so back), whilst small in number, counts some highly influential people, one of which is the MP Peter Carroll, himself vocal on all manner of human rights issues.

At around 9.30pm one evening a week or so ago, Mr Carroll posted the following tweet:

"@relresuk @realmissfiona I would think that the lawyers @HoweAndCo could help with this. They fought for the Gurkhas & they are brilliant"

Because we use some of the many social media monitoring tools, we were immediately alerted and responded to the tweet in the name of Howe & Co, inviting some direct follow up. We also forwarded the tweet on to Howe & Co, who similarly responded immediately.

Cutting what could be a long story of the next few hours, the plea for help was on behalf of Jane Worroll, the daughter that had exposed the abuse of her mother Maria at the Ash Court Care Home. As part of an employment tribunal by an ex-employee she was being summonsed to provide her videos in defence of the ex-employee. For obvious reasons, she found this whole idea horribly distressing, especially as the summons had been delivered earlier that evening for her to present them the next morning.

With social networks and Twitter especially sharing the news, it had come to the attention of The Relatives & Residents Association, who support, inform and campaign on behalf of older people in care & who had worked closely upon this case, TV Presenter Fiona Philips, who was involved in the original Panorama programme as well as the subsequent news coverage and as already said, MP Peter Carroll. Adding Howe & Co into the equation it meant that some solid advice was given as well as some much needed moral support. With this in place, Jane Worroll received the help she needed and with the support given, Howe & Co made a firm connection with the charity.

Pleasingly this episode was recognised by Fiona Philips and she reported it and the support given by Howe & Co in her regular newspaper column in the Daily Mirror.

I will leave you to ponder the respective merits here, but for a simple act, well executed and some intelligent thinking by Howe & Co about social media, their whole worth of their business has been lifted into a hugely positive place of its own.

 

If you'd like to follow either us or Howe and Co. on Twitter then our links are below:

Lamb CMC

Howe and Co.

Twitter - Can you afford to not be part of the conversation

We've all heard about the benefits of getting your business represented on Twitter and connecting to your network of customers but have you considered what the consequences of ignoring this social network might be? Potentially there could be a P.R. storm brewing around your company reputation while you are oblivious to it. We had a bit of bother here this week, when one of our clients, became the victim of some spurious tweeting as they had been erroneously identified as a company that has been making unsolicited calls about pursuing mis-sold PPI policies. I think we all know about these calls, texts & emails that are unwanted and intrusive. The details of this episode are of no more importance so we will spare names, etc. But it raised a very serious issue about reputation management if you have a Twitter/social media presence, as our client does or if you do not, which we feel is worthy of a few mentions here.

Shockingly, given that the company had been mis-identified, they became the victim of some brief but quite spiteful tweeting, which had it gone unnoticed, could have caused a nasty bump in their reputation. By its nature Twitter is at its best when breaking news and the story spreads fast and wide. As it was both we and they got on top of it and wrote a suitably worded email to the person that posted it, pointing out the error and demanding an apology. Which for the record was willingly given, the tweet deleted and an apology posted.

However it raises point number one. Twitter is a written medium in the public domain and as such is bound by all the same libel laws and protections as anything else similar, like a Facebook post, a comment on Linkedin or an email (where there is now strong legal precedent). It is therefore incumbent upon anybody posting anything that they remember this fact and think twice before submitting anything controversial.

On the flip side I think our client handled their own situation perfectly and responded straight away, made direct contact, politely pointed out the error and demanded the withdrawal which is point 2. In an environment like Twitter, necessary responses really must be thought through but as far as possible, immediate, time can quickly become an enemy.

What has really got me thinking though, is point 3. What had happened had our client not had a Twitter account and were blissfully unaware that a reputation fire was burning around them. The simple truth of social networks is that in reality there is no opt in or opt out, the only difference is if you are not active then you have zero control over the conversation, but if you are then you have the opportunity to be proactive and shape what is being said.

The statistics of what is posted on Twitter are staggering; 250 million tweets per day, over 100 million active Twitter users and if like me you are part of that community then you will see first hand how breaking news spreads instantaneously across it. Perhaps the most famous example being the posting of the amateur film when the plane came down in the Hudson River, or the death of Amy Winehouse beating the BBC to spread the sad news.

This subject is particularly relevant at the moment due to the news this week regarding the jailing of a student who made racially offensive comments about footballer Fabrice Muamba on Twitter. This is another example of how comments made online can be treated every bit as seriously and are governed by the same laws of libel as comments made in the press or elsewhere.

So I am pleased that our client has escaped the clutches of a bad press day this week but I am now just a wee bit more worried, nay paranoid about whatever else may have been missed. My advice, join the conversation and of course, make sure you use an expert to help you. As you know the Lamb door is always open for a cup of tea and a chat...

Linked in to LinkedIn?

Mark Huxley speaks about his continuing love affair with LinkedIn, the importance of staying connected with industry peers and how he has rekindled various old professional relationships that might otherwise have been lost. He discusses why LinkedIn is such a crucial social media tool for professionals worldwide and what you might be missing out on if you choose to ignore it.  ______

I have been a member of LinkedIn for quite some time now and to me it has become an integral part of my working life. I love the connections I have made, more so I have relished the countless numbers of my own working past that I have reconnected with. I follow many of the debates that the Groups throw up with a passion and it has become an automatic go-to place for much of the research I do. I cannot then fathom those that I speak to who refuse to use it or have a closed mind to all the benefits it can bring.

I think it is the truth to say that LinkedIn is the single form of professional social media that we recommend to every single client we work with. To me it is the world’s largest online directory of professional people, the companies they work for, the Groups that interest us all, the endless volumes of research and communication tools as another tool. None of us would not use the phone or email, so why would someone elect not to use LinkedIn?

Some statistics…

  • 150 million users Worldwide
  • 8 million users in the UK
  • 2 new members sign up every second
  • Circa 4.2 billion searches made on it in 2011
  • More than 2 million companies now have profiles on LinkedIn

So why do we advocate it so widely? Firstly and most importantly, unlike all other social media channels it exists for one reason alone; it is purely for professional people undertaking their professional lives. In that task, it cannot be doubted that they have utterly succeeded.

If you make the leap of faith and start using it, after some polishing of your LinkedIn skills (which many a trained professional can help you with) you will soon be:

  • Keeping in touch with an entire network of people, crossing many professional boundaries. With their own activity everything will be current, saving you lots of hard work in keeping track of what they are up to. Don’t forget friends beget friends, so you will be able to constantly build your own network, sharing friends old and new
  • You can invite your rolodex of business cards to come join your network
  • Share and collaborate upon what you are working upon and for that matter anything of wider interest to you and them
  • By joining the myriad of Groups that it has, you can drill into specific sectors and topics, seeing the current thinking and rumours on the street.
  • Actively join in discussions, either asking questions or sharing sagely opinions
  • Keep in touch with companies that are of specific interest to you, who’s joining, who’s left, what are they doing right now
  • Research more about the people you are going to meet for the first time. What is their role at the company, how long have they been there, where did they come from, what have they done in their past
  • Take out one of the paid for packages and you can see who’s been looking at your profile, really helpful if you’ve been targeting a specific person or company

Frankly the list is endless and every day LinkedIn creates new services that are aimed at making all our professional lives just that little bit easier and more interesting. If I finish with one word of caution, then it is that LinkedIn is only a tool, like your phone or email. The real art of networking is still the face-to-face time that makes the whole working relationship work. They are still founded upon friendship that harbours trust and builds the opportunities to prove worth in work, act or deed, which leads to the long-term relationship. This must never ever be forgotten!

Mark Huxley speaks to Post Magazine about Social Networking

As social media begins to shake off the stigma of being little more than a means to wile away time, Amy Ellis investigates whether, as some predict, 2010 will be the year this new medium becomes a quantifiable marketing tool. Referring to social networking and business in the same sentence can generate an air of distaste, with some seeing the former as merely a timewasting tool and many businesses blocking employee access to such sites during working hours.

Research into social media in financial services undertaken by Datamonitor in December 2009 revealed Facebook as the number one social networking site in 100 out of 127 countries. And figures from last July indicated that, while Facebook still dominates as a means of sharing content, Twitter is already about half as popular.

In the light of such numbers, it is not surprising that social networking is slowly losing its 'dirty word' status in the business arena. Companies are beginning to explore how social networking can strengthen their reputation, broaden their reach and, perhaps most importantly, grow their sales.

So, are UK brokers beginning to embrace sites such as Facebook, Twitter and Linked In on a commercial basis? Are they looking beyond a heightening of individuals' personal profiles and networking capabilities?

According to Bob Darling, franchise director at Coversure, you would have to be almost a Luddite to completely ignore social networking sites. "If insurance is meant to be a personality and relationship business, then the fact these sites are social means they are an important medium. In my opinion, they haven't really proved themselves as yet, but it doesn't mean they won't, of course," he suggests.

Mark Huxley, director of Lamb Creative Marketing & Consultancy, agrees — citing social networking as being about recognising the fact that insurance is still centred on the personal nature of the relationships you build and how brands have to generate trust, friendship and loyalty. "A broker dealing with an end customer in the very congested space of UK general insurance has got to have something out there to convince the customer why they should stay with them," he insists.

Future uncertainty

Being aware of new communication tools and exploring ways they can help in business should be the starting point for everyone, says Peter Elliot, head of marketing at Bluefin, which has reserved a number of sites in its corporate name but is not currently using them. "You can't ignore these major trends in communication, but at the same time no one can be sure of how they will develop. For instance, I ask myself: whatever happened to Friends Reunited? Like Rubik's Cubes and Sony Walkmans, once upon a time Friends Reunited was all the rage and it was almost impossible to imagine a world without it. That uncertainty surrounding the future of social media needs to be considered."

There may be something even more inherent that is holding brokers back from diving into social networking. As Paul Macbeth, managing director of Macbeth Chartered Insurance Brokers, points out, part of the problem in the insurance world is that it exists in a microcosm that is slow to adopt such developments until forced to.

This certainly seems to resonate with Kwik Fit Financial Services. Lisa McAndrew, e-commerce and marketing manager, says the company does not want to go in feet first and invest, preferring to monitor developments initially. Meanwhile, Matthew Clark, science and technology director at La Playa, points out that he is not aware of any brokers that have used social networks to produce tangible benefits. "They may be out there, but I would have thought it is not always easy to measure," he says.

This has not prevented La Playa from embracing social media and, despite some trepidation, Kwik Fit is also relatively advanced in this arena.

Katie Gouskos, marketing executive at La Playa, says: "Marketing generally is changing. The landscape is shifting and, as a small broker, we can't afford to spend millions on advertising; we are never going to compete in that arena. So social media is a brilliant opportunity for us to demonstrate our expertise, get among the bigger players and take it as a good opportunity, which I think it is."

La Playa is now planning to launch a blog, which it hopes will tie in with the Facebook and Twitter pages it already possesses. "We use Linked In to maintain relationships with other professionals, so hopefully once we have integrated all these forms of online marketing we will really begin to understand the power of social media," Ms Gouskos says.

Mr Clark adds: "We are not expecting social media, or our participation in it, to be some kind of magic bullet that will solve all sorts of problems and market us to our target audience almost cost-free. That would be quite naive.

"It will run alongside the other events we are doing, which include face-to-face networking, as well as the more traditional areas. We still do a bit of direct mailing but, for example, have moved away from mailing a hard-copy newsletter to contacts and instead send that electronically now.

"So, as things change, the traditional activities fragment and people move into more intelligent forms of communication, we will probably expect social media to gradually work more profitably for us, as opposed to the more traditional channels that increasingly won't work."

Finding time to tweet

Ms McAndrew explains that Kwik Fit has had a Twitter account set up for a year and has gained quite a large following considering its less-than-aggressive approach. One of the positives flowing from these sites, from a business perspective, is that they are free to use.

However she points to one cost Kwik Fit has predicted: "The big cost is from a resource perspective; it takes a lot of time setting these up and monitoring them. If you really want to do it properly, then you need to invest in resources and that's where we can see it becoming quite costly.

"So we need to weigh that up against the traditional media where we can see a return in our investment almost straight away. The question for us is whether we want to take resources away from the traditional; at the moment it is about trying to strike the right balance," she considers.

Julian Edwards, director at MCE Insurance, agrees that these sites require time and energy, as well as dedicated resources within existing operations that can manage and understand them. "The first route we have taken with Facebook is all about direct response marketing. Most companies that want to have a reach on Facebook will set themselves up as a fan page and this works incredibly well if you are a lifestyle brand.

"We use it because we are very niche and have a flag-bearer in the form of Big Ed - he has generated a following from the fan page we launched in the last quarter of 2009. But before we push on and try and get some serious numbers involved in terms of a fan base, we are taking time to learn about the medium, because you are trying to interact commercially with people's leisure time," he explains.

"Would we use Big Ed's fan base to pick up the phone and encourage people to take out their bike insurance with him? No. Fundamentally, this would be changing the relationship that you have with people in that media."

Mr Edwards considers that it is not about sales, but rather reaching your target audience in the right way. "When time is precious, you have got to give people something that they actually want to know about. It has got to be relevant; it has got to be two-way communication; and it has got to be frequent," he says.

As far as driving direct sales from socially interacting with people, Mr Edwards says only time will tell. "We haven't put that into our forecast, but it is new. Someone has got to master it somewhere down the line and, in five years' time, the model will have been well documented. That is the beauty of it.

"This is a subject I'm very interested in and do a lot of reading on. And I certainly haven't come across any case studies about how people have significantly increased their revenue from it directly. But I am not saying that is impossible. Unless companies that have invested heavily can see some results, however, they will lose interest and find other distributions," he insists.

Mr Huxley adds: "I don't actually think asking whether social networking is a fad or whether it is here to stay is the right question. These things are here; these are tools that can help businesses to communicate. So the question is: when are you going to embrace those tools to build your networks and communicate?

"If you had asked me a year ago whether people were engaging with this, I would have said absolutely not. Now Linked In is constantly being mentioned: everyone is getting onto it, some are realising what it can do for them as a business, but many others are not quite sure what they are on there for. People are engaging with it, at least in so far as realising there is a community sitting out there that they want to be in touch with.

"My entire career has been about the personal nature of networking, getting to know people and all the things that benefit my business life. That is what Linked In is for me at the moment," he says.

Ms McAndrew explains that most of the followers Kwik Fit currently has on Twitter are journalists, but following other competitors is where the broker is finding benefit. She has thought of a possible drawback with this use of social networking, however. "It will be interesting when we look at this from the customer perspective; that is where we have been holding back. Once we open this up to a lot of customers following us, we will undoubtedly get more people commenting. That could be from a good perspective, giving us positive feedback, but there is also the potential for negative responses if, for example, a customer has an outstanding complaint.

"Obviously, we could also view that as a good opportunity — as a company, we always want to show we are there to actively resolve complaints. But, again, this would require resources and could take up a lot of time because you simply can't predict how many responses you are going to receive."

Another potential downside — one identified by Mr Clark — is the risk of allowing staff to use these networking sites in a way that might be in contrast to the company's brand and image. "Some comments that are 'tweeted' can be unwittingly defamatory and that is a risk we have to acknowledge and blend into our existing electronic communications policies. We have considered this and I believe we are ahead of the game there; people are aware of what they ought to be doing and saying online."

A slow burner

Returning to the issue of generating sales from social networking, Mr Macbeth — whose firm is on Twitter and Linked In, but not Facebook — simply states: "You can't think that by sending out a few tweets, you will get a policy; it doesn't work like that. It is a slow-burning process that you have got to work at and stick with."

But it is not all doom and gloom. What social media can do is reach out to a huge audience, which the average broker would not be able to do otherwise, unless it is a huge firm or one prepared to spend a lot of money. According to Mr Macbeth: "That is where the potential lies — in the number of people you can connect with and the number of people you can start to build some form of relationship with online.

"We use social media to enhance our brand and raise our profile and reputation. In my view, the key to it lies in becoming a trusted source of information and advice. If you are just going to go on and try and sell things, it isn't going to work. Insurance isn't sexy enough to do that. It should be about building yourself up as a credible source of information.

"In the current climate, particularly, brokers should be doing everything they can to try and raise their profile," he adds.

Mr Edwards concludes that, in terms of target advertising, social networking has so far failed to prove itself. "So much hype has been spoken about it over the years; companies have invested time and resources in trying to understand it and the result has been minimal as commercial entities," he asserts. "But I really believe that 2010 will be the year that social media either makes it or breaks it in terms of media spend and marketing distribution."

First published in Post Magazine 06 Apr 2010