Monday, March 28, 2011

Aflac Gets the Last Quack – A Social Media Success Story


We’ve all heard the story: a celebrity tweeted something ugly about the tsunami and earthquake disaster in Japan and was fired. But this wasn’t just any celebrity – it was the very recognizable voice of an incredibly well-known brand, Aflac. The duck is an embodiment of the brand – from the company’s marketing flyers provided to prospective customers to plush ducks given to new customers and successful agents to TV ads to print ads to social media sites to the corporate website.

But when the firing happened, Aflac didn’t blink. The company took a stand and moved forward in a positive manner. It combined the power and reach of social media with the importance of marketing. It launched a campaign to find a new voice for the famous duck. The campaign featured Aflac’s Facebook page and the company’s main website – and the entire ad community took notice.

While the next voice for Aflac’s duck may be someone famous or not-yet-famous, we can thank Aflac for using social media to generate positive buzz around a fun campaign and for continuing the conversation about a product we don’t spend a lot of time talking about: insurance. As a result, there is no doubt who has the last quack in this story.

Monday, March 21, 2011

The Importance of Training, Customer Connections & Leadership


Please welcome Eric Jacobson to my blog. Eric has more than a quarter-century of experience in successfully leading employees and teams through periods of revenue growth, new product development, and re-engineering. He is an experienced mentor and coach and holds an MBA Degree from Keller Graduate School. Eric’s passion is helping individuals to become effective leaders at work, within organizations, and wherever they are called upon to lead and inspire. Eric and I recently discussed a number of important business topics, and I would like to share Eric’s insights. For more about Eric, visit his blog and follow him on Twitter.

HOW DO YOU CREATE AN EFFECTIVE CORPORATE CULTURE?

ERIC JACOBSON: Fortunately, for most of my career, I have worked in effective corporate cultures. But if I put together the best of each, here is what made those environments effective:

  • Leaders led by example on a consistent basis and were willing to roll up their sleeves, particularly during tight deadlines or challenging times.
  • Employees clearly understood how what they did made a difference and how their contributions made the organization either more profitable or more effective.
  • The workforce included a blend of long-term employees with a rich company, product/service, and customer history, employees who had been at the company for five-to-seven years, and then new hires with a fresh perspective and keen sense of new technologies and techniques. That blend worked best when the mix included virtually all A-players.
  • Top managers had a clear, realistic, and strategic vision for how the company would grow and compete in the marketplace.
  • Employees were challenged and rewarded through growth opportunities, education and training, and pay increases.
  • Leaders provided opportunities for the company and employees to give back to the community. Sometimes it was through company-organized volunteer projects, and other times, it was by encouraging (and rewarding) employees to volunteer on their own time.
  • A group of employees served on an activities committee with as little top management influence or interference as possible to plan monthly team-building, networking, educational, and charitable activities. This grassroots approach helped ensure that the culture was shaped and influenced by employees and not just by top management. In this way, employees owned the culture as much as the management teams did.

HOW IMPORTANT IS TRAINING FOR A BUSINESS?

ERIC JACOBSON: Training is vital, and sadly, most companies do not provide enough training for their employees. My experience tells me that typical employees know only a fraction of what they can do in Excel or PowerPoint for example. Also, too often, employees lack enough training on their company’s new products or services, or about their customer base and competitors. My recommendations are to find power users of Excel and PowerPoint and have them lead a training “Lunch & Learn” session where co-workers bring sack lunches and spend an hour learning new ways to use these software tools. You can also use the “Lunch & Learn” format as a forum for your salespeople to share with employees what they are hearing from your customers or about your competitors. Another idea is to devote a half-day when employees team with co-workers from various departments to learn more about your customers, products, and services. “Lunch & Learns” and forums for power users and sharing information don’t involve out-of-pocket expenses. They do require devoting time for training. But, the time spent will be well worth it and felt throughout the entire organization.

WHAT ARE THE BEST WAYS TO CONNECT WITH YOUR CUSTOMERS?

ERIC JACOBSON: Whenever possible, connect with your customers face-to-face: visit with them at their locations, engage with them at networking events and tradeshows. Be sure your salespeople are asking your customers why they bought from your company and what other products and/or services they would like to see your company provide. Ask your former or lost customers why they left you. Use surveys (mailed or via online tools, such as, SurveyMonkey) to ask your customers quantitative and qualitative questions. Engage your customers in a dialogue via social media, particularly via your company’s Facebook page or YouTube channel. Make it easy for your customers to tell your story in their words via social media.


WHAT ARE THE FIVE MOST IMPORTANT TRAITS OF A GOOD LEADER AND WHY?

ERIC JACOBSON: Wow, selecting only five is tough – especially since I asked a similar question in a LinkedIn group discussion and group members offered nearly 100 different adjectives to describe an effective leader. But for me, the five most important traits are:

  • Good communicator: That means effectively communicating timely and consistent messages during good and bad times, and knowing how and when to be a good listener. Communicating is critical. Employees must hear from their leaders, and, hearing from their leaders in person vs. email and written memos is much more effective.
  • Being a servant leader: Put your employees and your company first. A top manager who makes self-serving decisions will lack followers and bring the company down.
  • Adaptable: Today, more than ever, a leader needs to be able to adapt. That means being able to adapt to competitive and industry situations. It also means being willing to change your decisions if new information or circumstances warrant the change.
  • Decisive: Leaders who are not decisive and who cannot make a decision will spin their organization into a frozen state where employees are unmotivated, discouraged, and frustrated.
  • Motivating: Smart, decisive, engaging, tough yet fair, personable, and encouraging leaders are motivating. These leaders motivate employees to deliver their best for their leaders and their companies.

WHAT ARE CRITICAL ITEMS TO CONSIDER AND COMPLETE BEFORE STARTING A NEW BUSINESS?

ERIC JACOBSON: Before you start a new business, you must ask yourself:

  • Is there a true need for my product or service?
  • What is the competitive environment and how will my product or service be unique or different or better?
  • Will my location (or accessibility online) be convenient and easy to get to for my customers?
  • Do I have adequate funding to support my business, particularly during the ramp-up period that could last a year or more?
  • Do I have the stamina to start a new business and work hard even if it means months of extended work hour days, loss of weekends, lack of vacations, and limited personal time?
  • Will my family and social life withstand my commitment to my new business?
  • Will the name of my business be easy to spell, suitable for print on online, and memorable?
  • Am I a risk taker?
  • Am I humble enough to ask for help, especially if I am not an expert in marketing or accounting?
  • Do I hire well? Do I have the skills, ability, and resources to hire people who will share my same vision, work ethic, and commitment to the business?
  • Do I have an exit plan? Do I know how to handle exiting from the business should it fail or, ideally, should it become so successful that I will be able to sell it?
  • Do I have a business plan? Even if one is not necessary for a bank, funders or lenders, it will force you to address many important issues. Writing the plan, which could take two to six weeks of working on it nearly every day, will force you to think of all aspects of your business and will require you to address tough questions you will likely not ask without the discipline of writing a plan. Perhaps most critical in your plan will be the sections on: competition, marketing, and financial projects.

WHAT COMPANIES DO YOU ADMIRE FOR THEIR OVERALL LEADERSHIP AND CUSTOMER SERVICE?

ERIC JACOBSON: I admire the following four companies: Southwest Airlines, Marriott, Whole Foods, and Amazon. Each has leaders that are both employee and customer focused. Each makes it easy to do business with them and creates a relationship with you so that you want to do business with them over and over. Each has employees that seem to enjoy their jobs and are proud to be part of their respective company. We can learn much from these companies.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Will the Next Generation of IT Pros Need to Be Marketing Technologists?

Have you noticed that technology and marketing have begun to overlap? Tech gadgets that were formerly reserved just for geeks are now business tools for the masses. Years ago, early adapters were mainly tech guys. But today, most men and women are tech-savvy, which causes ripple effects in the workplace. Users have iPhones or Blackberries – and even scarier for IT – they know how to use them. Here are some areas to prove that the lines of technology and marketing are beginning to blur.

DATABASES & CRM

Databases are the unquestionable intersection of data and technology. The gold for many companies rests within their database of customer data, prospect data, and customer interactions. Who is responsible for researching database options, database creation (translation, coding), selection of database purchase if a customer relationship management system (such as, SalesForce) is an option, upgrades for the database, and data entry? There are countless skill sets necessary to accomplish all of these actions ranging from budgeting, coding, customer analysis, etc. The answer is that both technology and marketing departments must be involved.

SOCIAL MEDIA, WEBSITES & EMAIL MARKETING

Who is responsible for website design? While techs would argue that they own the coding responsibility for web design and maintenance, it is the responsibility of the marketing department to create promotional campaigns and track their effectiveness. For consistency, the marketing team needs to own all branding and outreach campaigns, and the website is only one tool in the marketing tool box. However, most marketers are not web coders nor do they wish to be – so the two teams must work together. Another tool within the marketing tool box is email marketing. Most techs believe that anything that involves the Internet and emails should be funneled through the IT department. And then, of course, there’s social media. Depending on a business’s product or service, the social media sites of Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, LinkedIn, and Flickr can be used to generate publicity. But, they can also cause harm. There is constant debate within many companies as to which department owns the sites and the responsibility to update their content.

NETWORK SECURITY & PRIVACY

Most companies have virus protection and other methods to protect their networks from harm, but do IT departments communicate with users? How many IT departments send email reminders about changing passwords regularly? What about communications to remind users to create different passwords for different purposes, e.g., a network password, an email password, etc.? What about explaining the need for a consistent company “voice” when participating on social media sites, e.g., Facebook company page, Twitter company page, and LinkedIn company page? Who is best suited to teach employees about network security and privacy concerns in a language that they will understand, and more importantly, follow? While not the ideal answer for information security professionals, the answer would have to be the marketing professionals because they are the most qualified to communicate and promote – those are their skills.

How have you seen the lines of marketing and technology overlap in your business?

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Serve to Lead – What a Visionary Concept!


When a person studies great leaders, he or she gains insight as to how those great leaders confronted their situational challenges and management crises. Leadership expert James M. Strock studied Theodore Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan and wrote books featuring executive lessons from both, and as a result, developed a unique perspective for 21st century leadership. His latest book, Serve to Lead, is a must-read.

There may be “born leaders,” but there surely are far too few to depend on them. Leadership must be learned and can be learned. ~Peter Drucker

With the premise that “anyone can be a leader,” readers are asked four questions:

  • Who are you serving?
  • How can you best serve?
  • Are you making your unique contributions?
  • Are you getting better everyday?

According to Strock, due to advances in technology, what was previously a transaction-based world has evolved into a relationship-based world. As a result, people are becoming more important – not less important, as the media would like us to think. Employees ranging from entry-level customer service agents to top leadership teams are critical in resolving problems, building rapport with customers and prospects, and maintaining brand integrity. For companies to be successful and endure for the long-term, employees need the tools to provide solutions. For example, if a shopper at a retail store is upset about a price difference when paying, the employee at the check-out counter must have the authority to resolve the situation. Without a doubt, this is leadership – refer back to the questions listed above.

Another theme throughout the book is that there is no universal leadership style. A busboy in a restaurant, a bagger at the supermarket, a technician who changes the oil in your car, as well as the VP of Sales at a company can all be leaders. They may inspire those around them, demonstrate accountability and own errors, improve the corporate culture, advocate for the corporate brand, or provide excellent customer service. But, the bottom line is that they can all be leaders.

Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do, and they will surprise you with their ingenuity. ~General George S. Patton


More details: http://www.jamesstrock.com

Follow James M. Strock on Twitter: http://twitter.com/JamesStrock

Follow James M. Strock’s Blog: http://servetolead.typepad.com

Watch the Serve to Lead Video on YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gE3OIWGPSw

Follow James M. Strock on YouTube:

http://www.youtube.com/user/jmstrock

Promote Serve to Lead: http://www.zazzle.com/servetolead+gifts