1. 2011 conference season focuses on consumer behavior

    Tuesday, 5 Jul 2011 No Comments Posted by:

    Well, the spring social media conference season is finally behind us. I had the privilege of speaking at several conferences this spring, including the Social Media 301 Conference at Microsoft, Mount Royal University’s Social Media Shift, and Jeff Pulver’s 140 Characters Conference New York. Typically, these conferences feature practitioners sharing case studies, panels taking a deeper dive into some niche topic, or motivational social pundits pimping their latest book. This spring, a new topic seemed to be repeated at every event I went to: a focus on consumer behavior.

    The talk that caught my attention the most was from long-time social media veteran Stowe Boyd. Contrary to popular opinion that increased socializing leads to distractedness and inefficiency, Stowe suggested social conversation actually leads to better mental performance.

    Stowe mentioned a study by Dr. Reynol Junco of Lock Haven University, in which his class was split into two groups. One used Twitter as a class journal, the other group wrote everything down on paper. The study found that students using Twitter improved their GPAs across ALL their classes by an average half a grade. Dr. Junco’s conjecture was that constant feedback via Twitter led to higher retention. And that Twitter offered a low-stress way to ask questions of other students and the instructor.

    Does social interaction — “social touch” — increase performance — or revenue?

    Stowe also mentioned that the best basketball teams were ones that had the most physical contact. When people touch, levels of a bonding hormone called oxytocin go up in the brain. This causes the heart to relax, stress to reduce, and performance to increase. Stowe posited that  constant, friendly “touch” – even if done over social channels – can produce this oxytocin and rather than resulting in defocus and stress, can actually lead to increased performance.

    One growing body of evidence suggests that interacting with a brand in the presence of friends may increase revenue as well. In 2010, Chadwick Martin Bailey produced a study that showed that 51% of Facebook users, and 67% of Twitter users were more likely to purchase from brands when engaged via social channels. And according to a February 2011 study by Leadformix, 1 out of 2 leads coming into B2B websites are coming from LinkedIn. One has to wonder, why is that? Does having the constant “social touch” of friends and family (or colleagues) help relax the wariness we often have toward marketing?

    Consider this statistic: in May 2011, Starbucks reported that while Starbucks.com had 1.8 million unique visitors, its fan page had 19 million – a number over ten times greater. Coca-cola reported that its dot-com site received 270,000 uniques…but its Facebook fan page received over 22 million = EIGHTY ONE TIMES HIGHER [via the Wall Street Journal]. Consider the emotional warmth you might feel while looking at asomething on CocaCola.com versus what you would feel within Facebook, with new friend requests coming in, photo uploads from family, or chat notifications from a loved one. While this is primarily an issue with B2C brands, where would you prefer to engage with a brand?

    I feel therefore I am

    Which leads me to a statistic I use in my talks. Nobel Laureate Daniel Kahneman did a study of cognitive behavior and found that, despite our notions of being reasonable, rational creatures, the vast majority of our decisions, perhaps up to 95%, are made based on emotional drivers and very little from rational decision-making. Kahneman suggested that our perception is that we 1) think something, then we act, and then we feel something about that decision. At least, that’s what we believe. But the reality is that possibly 95% of our decisions are done by 1) feeling something, then acting, and then thinking/post-rationalizing that decision to bring our rational brain into alignment.

    Why is that? Because emotional decisions can be parallel processed. We can feel happy and sad at a daughter’s graduation. I can be excited and nervous while speaking to a group. Parallel processing is often chosen because it can be processed more quickly, whereas rational decision-making is serial, linear, and slower. If x is true, then y. If y is false, then z. While emotional thinking is the result of millennia of primate survival, rational decision-making literally takes more time and more caloric energy.

    And in our time-starved world, where we encounter endless bits of information demanding our attention, which kind of decision-making do you think we’ll default to?

    Because of this, it makes sense that emotional decision-making is more likely to take place in an environment saturated with the oxytocins produced via social interaction as well as the time-demanding firehose of social interaction produced by Facebook.

    My final thought: why leave the comfort of our friends to engage with a brand on some lonely dot-com site? Some organizations, particularly those who are consumer-focused, may want to reconsider their investments to shift engagement and content to social sites rather than their dot-com. The engagement provided on those social sites by friends, and the brand, may lead to a more revenue-friendly environment for marketers. As long as we don’t destroy those oxytocins with self-interest, deception or distrust.

  2. Influencer Programs: How to Engage Smart People Outside Your Organization

    Friday, 23 Apr 2010 7 Comments Posted by:

    One of the most powerful concepts from the popular book, Wikinomics is the notion that there are more smart people outside your organization than inside it, no matter how enormous the organization is.

    Sean O’Driscoll, Ant’s Eye View CEO and Ant Advocate knows this firsthand from his work as General Manager of the Microsoft Most Valuable Professional program. Listen to his thoughts below.

    As Sean mentions, key to encouraging passionate advocates, people who are answering hundreds of questions about your organization, or sharing information about your company with others, is first to figure out what makes those individuals tick. Do these advocates want access to product and service development teams? Do they want to be recognized and rewarded? Or are they simply satisfied with free stuff?

    At Microsoft, MVPs weren’t necessarily all that interested in speaking with the C-level executive suite but rather in helping others better use products they’ve come to be passionate about, and passionate about improving. As such, what Sean and his team did was to give MVPs direct access to the people within product development teams. When these advocates began to see their suggestions and feedback directly embodied in product and service innovations, they increased their engagement levels.

    Under Sean’s leadership, the program grew to more than 4000 MVPs in 90+ countries and resulted in 500 product reviews and over one million answers. To ask Sean more questions about how to engage users in an Influencer Program, you can find him at LiNC2010 on May 11 and 12. Or feel free to ask a question below.

    Special thanks to Paul Gilliham of Lithium for the interview.

  3. Mommy Madness: Influencer programs can be small AND effective

    Monday, 28 Sep 2009 4 Comments Posted by:

    Screen shot 2009-09-23 at 5.14.31 PM.png

    This past spring, the North Texas Chevy Dealers worked with Velocity Marketing and CBS Radio to put together a very cool blogger outreach program. In short, the program targeted 5 moms. As you’ll see from the interview below with project lead Amy Krause, the SVP at Velocity Marketing, the impact of even this small number was huge. Who says influencer programs need to have huge numbers to be effective??

    On with the interview!

    How would you explain the Mommy Madness program?
    We realized the power of word of mouth over any other kind of communication. Now, more than ever, we see that with blogs and social media – word of mouth is happening to a greater amount of people at the same time and…faster! As a marketer, I feel it’s important to “join in” the fun rather than try to direct the conversation. And you need to be confident of your product. In this case, the Chevy Traverse was the perfect product to put in front of moms in a very casual way. Our goal was to get 5 local moms who like to blog into the all-new Chevy Traverse, love it (like we knew they would) and tell their friends about it. We had a contest for moms to nominate themselves to be a part of the “Chevy Traverse Mom Squad”. In addition to letting them check it out, we put them on “missions” with their vehicle – to the grocery store, to a baseball game, on a “girls day outing” and let them write about their adventures in their Chevy Traverse. Each “mission” was fun for the mom and their family and showed off attributes of the Chevy Traverse. During the “Mommy Madness” program, people could register to win an all-expense paid trip to a spa for them and their friends by voting for a mom. The winning mom also got a trip. It was a fun program!

    There was an interesting combination of players involved (agencies, CBS, Chevy dealers, etc). Can you talk about whose idea this was?
    This was a program that I thought of after having so many friends, who are moms, start to blog. I thought that it would be great to be able to bring together some moms who blog, and let Chevy give them more to write about – be a part of the family adventure. The vehicle is just perfect for moms. I then brought CBS Radio/Dallas into the fold and we brainstormed together – they added all the details, execution and creative to the program so it was a great partnership. I then presented it to the local Chevy Dealers who were thrilled to do this local media promotion.

    Many other car companies are doing blogger outreach and loaning cars for a few days. Why go so far as to loan your cars for 8 weeks?
    We felt like in order for the blogs to gain traction, we needed to do the program for 8 weeks. We would have fewer moms involved, but really be able to give them a sense of the vehicles they are driving.

    Convincing five dealers to donate (or at least donate the “new” moniker) on five pricey vehicles must have been quite a feat! Can you share some of the surprises and frustrations to making a great program idea actually get sold in?
    There weren’t any frustration or surprises. The dealers were all very excited about the program and thrilled to be doing something different.

    How did you select the five moms?
    We read all the entries and chose the moms based on what they wrote on their entry and checked out their blogs – we had several people take a look at all the entries.

    Talk to me about your challenges with the legal department; loaning 5 cars for two months must have made the lawyers more than a little nervous!
    The dealers loaned the cars and had the moms fill out the proper paperwork that the dealers would have anyone fill out. In some markets we rented the vehicles. It wasn’t an issue.

    You did something most brands are scared to do: you put your volunteers to work. The Moms were tasked with specific activities as part of their participation. How did that turn out?
    It was interesting. We learned a lot about that AFTER the program ended and we asked many of the mom’s for feedback. Evidently, we didn’t ask them to work enough! The tasks that they were asked to do were very much a part of their regular routine and we helped with that task. For example, going to the grocery store…a family outing…a girls trip to Massage Envy. The moms were thrilled and we were able to showcase the attributes of the Chevy Traverse in each mission.

    Now that the program has ended, what surprised you the most? What would you do differently?
    I was surprised at how very creative all the moms were with their videos and their blog. They were all fantastic. I couldn’t have had better brand ambassadors than these moms! What also surprised me was how much they wanted to sell the Chevy Traverse. Some moms organized test drives with their local Chevy Dealer, one mom brought some sales people to her house and had her neighbors over who all got a walk-around of the vehicle. They were far more creative than me.

    As far as what I would do differently, I think we will make the program a little shorter. Some of the missions may change and we’ll add a mission in that supports the community and possibly support a local non-profit.

    Many marketers don’t think that a number like 5 would be worth their time. How did these five scale to deliver program results?
    It’s important to note that this was a local program, sponsored by the local Chevy dealers – not a regional or national program. Since it was a new program, we wanted to start small and take our learnings from there and go bigger. We didn’t know what kind of results to expect just using select radio stations and moms blogging!   

    I know it’s tough to share results, but… Can you share some results about how successful the program was?
    We did the program in three markets – Dallas/Ft. Worth, Houston and Kansas City. Between the dates of 4/17 – 8/10, we could attribute the sale of 46 Chevy Traverses’, 44 people bought another Chevy vehicle and 17 people bought a GM product. A total of 107 people bought a new vehicle. And we’ll keep measuring the program. In addition, we had over 873 test drives of the all new Chevy Traverse… thanks to the moms!

  4. WOMMA Publishes Influencer Handbook…

    Monday, 6 Oct 2008 7 Comments Posted by:

    Influencers are more than a passing interest to me…generally speaking I don’t take projects that aren’t about reaching out and connecting with influencers as part of a community strategy.  Some time back, WOMMA approached myself, Brad Fay of Keller Fay and Steve Hershberger of Comblu about being co-chairs of the Influencer Committee within WOMMA.  We met and gathered a broader group of experts – primarily practitioners – with the idea of documenting some practices and recommendations regarding influencer marketing and influencer engagement.  While we didn’t agree on everything (what fun would that be), I’m pleased with the outcome of the work, the Influencer Handbook.  Have a look and let us know what you think.  It includes the following sections:

    • Definition of an influencer and influencer marketing
    • Types of influencers
    • Methods to engage and thank influencers
    • Guidelines for influencer self-regulation
    • Bibliography of influencer communication research and practices

    Working effectively with influencers was the section most near and dear to me.  I’m sure we missed some important points and examples that can further contribute to increasing practitioner success with influencers.  If you’re new to this topic, or not, I simply hope you’ll consider a few key principles:

    • An Influencer program is different than a loyalty program and requires more comprehensive planning and long term commitment to succeed
    • Influencers rarely do what they do to help your brand, they do it to help other users – your benefits are by-products of your commitment and engagement
    • Consider the idea of "fair exchange of value" or an influencer "balance sheet" – ensuring the benefits to your influencers are in balance with the benefits that accrue to you as a brand – if not, the likelihood of failure is quite high.
    • Knowledge, specialized access and relationships are of substantially higher value to all parties than swag/give-aways. 

    And if you really want to know about influencers…connect.  Throw away the data, analytics, tools and economy of scale for a few months and go sit down face to face with as many as you can.  There’s "tactile knowledge" required to really understand a brand’s influencers.  When I was a practitioner, it was this seemingly over-investment in face to face that really changed my perspective.

    Sean

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  5. Influencer in Chicago – Tribune picks up the local story

    Monday, 14 Jan 2008 1 Comment Posted by:

    This is a nice article about local technical community contributor (and Microsoft MVP) Darren Liu in Chicago – hobby blends with career blends with “flat earth” help and support of users in native China.

    Thought I’d share.

    Sean

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  6. Satisfaction, Loyalty and Affinity…

    Monday, 31 Dec 2007 4 Comments Posted by:

    I had the good fortune to eat Sushi, have some 1:1 discussion and participate in a short video for Jeremiah this past month while he was in Seattle attending the Web Community Forum.  The video gave me a chance to talk a bit more about finding, thanking and engaging influential’s as part of developing a more effective advocacy and user listening strategy.  Ultimately, I like to think of engagement in the following lifecycle:

    image

    • Satisfaction is really just "brushing your teeth" – basic hygiene.  You have users who believe what you provide meets their needs.  Nothing more or less.  The barrier to be replaced here is pretty low.  And realistically, few mature companies have large scale customer dissatisfaction issues – they more likely have large scale customer apathy issues.
    • Loyalty is obviously a higher achievement.  At this point, you’ve earned users who show up in your Net Promoter scores and exhibit behaviors of likelihood to recommend. 

    In my experience, this is where a lot of the measurement ends.  However, this is short of the destination that brands we envy elicit from their customers.  Does loyalty really capture the essence of the Harley Davidson or Four Seasons customers?  It doesn’t capture how I feel about Cookshack! The word "customer" is probably not even the right word in these cases!

    • Affinity is an even stronger measure of alignment with a brand, product or service.  What does it look like?  The behavior I look for is "likelihood to defend."  If someone "attacks" your product, service or brand, does someone show up to defend it?  We all know the credibility that the brand itself has in defending its products or services – pretty limited.  I’m not advocating the brand doesn’t participate here, I’m merely making the point that other users are generally more credible advocates. 

    Note:  Overly supportive/pushy/argumentative "fanboys" can be counterproductive in this, so take care with the extremes.

    A few questions for brand/product managers are:

    • What are the drivers that move users across this continuum?
    • What is the cost model for the drivers?
    • What is a healthy distribution in my relative industry and competitive market?  If I was Marriott, would the same distribution goal make sense as the Four Seasons?  Probably not. 
    • What is the my current vs desired state distribution?

    Thanks again Jeremiah for taking the time for the video and here’s a link to watch.

    Sean

  7. User Generated Help and How-to Content Model

    Friday, 28 Dec 2007 4 Comments Posted by:

    Occasionally it feels like those of us focused on the social media phenomena live a little bit in a vacuum.  While the circle seems to be growing, there are times where it feels like we are all preaching to the choir – to the already converted.  We read each others blogs, follow each other on Twitter, friend each other in Facebook, attend many of the same conferences, etc.  Most of this is great!  Heck, it is a bit of the theme of how I named this blog – "group therapy."  There’s a lot of value in those of us with common interests and challenges getting together and sharing experiences, ideas and new learning.  I do wonder how we all measure whether we are broadening the circle of those embracing social media.  It struck me at a recent conference (that was great by the way) that everyone in the room was essentially bought in on the topic in a significant way.  This is good in that it gathered really amazing people and inspired focused conversations, and we need that.  It was bad in that it didn’t feel like the circle really grew that day.  Out of that conference, I committed that in 2008, I will focus more of my conference time on industry events where social media is a track, vs THE TRACK – for example, I just committed to speak at SSPA in May. 

    What gets missed sometimes in our swarming with each other is capturing the simple examples that help illustrate how the business and user engagement model changes in a web 2.0 world.  Content is one of my favorite illustrations of this.  Many companies spend extraordinary amounts of money on content for their users – for this post, let’s focus on help and support content.  Here are a few examples:

    Once the investment is made in an authoring model (in house or vendor), more money is spent to localize the content – all of which, at best, serves the fat part of the long tail of help and support content needed to really assist the breadth and depth of users.  There’s nothing unique about this model, this has been in place for many years and as we know, changing the model is not simple.  This is obvious ground for community models (Q&A support forums and wikis).  Most are doing this, though in very few cases are these different models integrated – look at the sites and it’s clear these are silo’d efforts.  If your users can draw your org chart just by navigating your web pages – you have an integration problem…ok, opportunity:)  Does a single search crawl both in-house and user generated content?  What about user generated content beyond the bounds of yourcompany.com.  For example, look at this 6 minute video on Youtube of How to Create a Gantt Chart with Excel.  Note the # of views, stars, favorites and the two most recent comments!

    image

    How should Microsoft (Disclosure – I work at Microsoft right now) treat this content on Youtube?  What are the processes to discover content like this?  How do you decide what to include or not?  How much risk do you take with dead links to external content that can vanish?  What should be done about the video creator – this is an influencer – probably should thank him at a minimum – but much more should be done (another day, other posts on influencer program development). 

    A more radical view of this would be the following question:  When do you stop authoring content in house? (and re-deploy that investment to drive a user generated content model?)

    Before I go further, let’s be realistic. You probably can’t just stop authoring content.  There will be some content you may always need to author.  Security content for example – where many users will expect vendor created (and legally indemnified content).  You may also find that this enables a shift in which content you write – more pre-release and deployment/training content and less help and how-to content.  Likewise, there is a business scorecard problem.  Businesses measure results on a monthly/quarterly/annual basis – particularly when we are talking about investments like content.  So, how can you achieve a breakthrough in results from a new, user driven model, when your scorecard is assuming continuous quarter over quarter improvement.  This conflict quickly converts companies from being risk takers to risk averse. 

    What would happen if you stopped writing content and converted your entire KB/FAQ process to a wiki?  In the near term?  There’s a high probability the quality of your content would initially go down (at least that is the right expectation to set).  User generated content is not the holy grail, it won’t solve world peace.  This is where the scorecard conflict is key – you need executive patience in longer term goals than quarterly results.  Look at Wikipedia…a few years ago there was plenty of debate about its accuracy – now it is generally accepted (and research has supported) to be as accurate, or more than, commercially published encyclopedias.  In fact, a simple example is to look at how current it is.  When will that old school publishing model be updated with yesterdays assassination of Benazir Bhutto.  Wikipedia took less than 24 hrs and it’s not just in English, but here in French, Spanish, Dutch…and many more. 

    The real answer is more about percentage of content authored in-house vs via community – move from 80-90% internal to 80-90% user generated.  While the quality might initially go down, there is little question that ultimately a user generated content model will be more complete (topic and language) and at least  as good (likely far better) than anything that can be done in house.  Depending on your business, you need to forecast how long this transition might take – will it exceed the old model in 6 months, 1 year, 3 years?  What’s the bet?  What’s the tolerance for the duration?  How do you risk mitigate the potential quality dip?  You know you will have resisters who on day 1 will email around links to some user submitted piece that is terrible – are you prepared – is the corporate culture ready to withstand these bumps?

    By now you should also be thinking about the revised scorecard.  Why are you doing all this?  To save cost on content?  Deflect calls from your call center?  Reach more users?  Increase satisfaction (users find what they want)?  All valid goals, but with only these elements, it’s likely a richer scorecard than what most organizations have today around help and how-to content.

    Practical social media for busines
    s.  I like it, wonder what you think?

    Sean

  8. Bad example of engaging with Influencers…

    Tuesday, 4 Dec 2007 No Comments Posted by:

    Ok, on the heals of my recent discussions on the topic of good models vs bad models with influencers, a friend shared with me a story brewing regarding Target’s efforts on their "Rounder’s" program – an attempted "stealth influencer" program. 

    Have a read of "Bloggers seeing red over Target’s little secret"

    Here’s my favorite nugget from the story:

    The hubbub began in early October after Siman received a Rounders newsletter as Target was launching a new Facebook page. Like many companies now setting up sites on Facebook and MySpace, Target hoped to get people talking about new products, get feedback and continue to find ways to promote its hip image.

    "Your Mission: Try not to let on in the Facebook group that you are a Rounder," the newsletter read.

    "We love your enthusiasm for the Rounders, and I know it can be hard not to want to sing it from the mountaintops [and in the shower, and on the bus]. However, we want to get other members of the Facebook group excited about Target, too! And we don’t want the Rounders program to steal the show from the real star here: Target and Target’s rockin’ Facebook group. So keep it like a secret!"

    The vendor running the Rounder’s program quickly took the fall for Target and to everyone’s credit the response and apology seems swift.  Good job there, I’ll assume sincere.  One piece of advice:  shouldn’t have deleted the posts!

    Need we all be reminded of the logic behind stealth anything in social media.  I think the best thing to keep secret is the one thing you most want people to know – that way you can be assured of the word getting out!

    Sean

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  9. “Who’s on First – The role of Early Adopters…”

    Saturday, 1 Dec 2007 1 Comment Posted by:

    I talk to a lot of people and invariably I’m talking about a lot the same things all the time – Web 2.0, Social Media, Influencers…  To be honest, all to often I lose track of many of these conversations – not the people – I’m good at tracking that…but it’s a lot of conversations.

    Last week I picked up my mail at work and on my desk was the Nov. edition of Marketing News with a little note of thanks on the cover.  It didn’t really register, I just put in my to-read pile.  Today, I picked it up and tore off the outer wrapper and saw the headline story was "Who’s on First? Early Adopters spend more, share more and can make or break your product.  Rather than fear them, marketers today are building relationships with them."  (by Daniel Honigman)

    Ok, that sounds right up my alley – I know instantly I’m either going to like this article or hate it for over simplifying the influencer model.  So, I sit down to read…

    Page 1:  The set up – citizen marketers driving brand awareness and purchase influence through their conversations.  Relative authority of influencers increasing over historical rates.  Ok – I’m good, I certainly think this is true.  I find myself thinking about recent time I’ve shared with Ed Keller and Duncan Watts on either side of this position – debating the role of the influential.  I believe strongly in the influence model, but I fear its failure through over simplification (I blogged this recently).

    Page 2:  Industry quotes and data/research supporting the concepts.  Low and behold, data and quotes from WOMMA co-presenter Ed Keller.  Cool, he’s one of THE guys on the topic.  A good warning from Charles Golvin at Forrester: "You have to be a bit more clever and thoughtful and engaging in developing your approach to this audience; the in-your-face, can’t-avoid-it advertising won’t fly."

    Page 3: Wrapping it up with a b-2-b example…wait a minute, I know that guy.  The story turns to how Microsoft (disclosure – that’s where I work) engages with influentials (MVPs – disclosure – that’s the program I have global responsibility for) around the world to gather feedback on future products.  Suddenly I remember the conversation with the journalist as I’m reading my quotes.  Kind of a funny moment to be reading something and find yourself in it having forgotten the discussion:) 

    Anyway, I like the article (good thing!) and was happy to see one of my signature statements included: "An important part of the ethos [of our program] is that MVP’s don’t do what they do in their communities to help Microsoft–they do it to help other users."

    Thanks Daniel for sending me the mag or this is one I probably would have missed.

    Sean

  10. Influencer Marketing: An Oxymoron?

    Sunday, 18 Nov 2007 8 Comments Posted by:

    I recently found myself in a roomful of Brand marketers, Agencies and Boutique consultancies discussing the growing authority of influencers.  As social media has amped and marketing eyes a mixshift of investments to new media and Word of Mouth, the importance and debate around the role of Influencers has exploded. 

    Just last week, Ad Age reported on research by PQ media that Word of Mouth Marketing crossed $1B in 2006…up from $76M 5 years earlier, in route to $3.7B by 2011. 

    …in 2006, according to an independent research report on the field that will be unveiled during a session at the annual Word Of Mouth Marketing Association conference in Las Vegas today. The analysis, believed to be first in-depth look at word of mouth, reports that spending on the emerging discipline has increased from $76 million in 2001 to $981 million in 2006 and is expected to grow to approximately $3.7 billion by 2011.

    These influencer conversations generally fall into a couple of buckets:

    • Data and examples designed to convince you that Influencers matter
    • How to find and "activate" them in the brand conversation
    • How to measure

    I find myself invited to participate in a lot of these discussions as I have pretty strong views on the topic after 5 years of building one of the largest Influencer programs (www.microsoft.com/mvp).  Probably more important than the strong views, is the practical lessons learned from operationalizing a global program designed to find, thank and engage influencers both online and offline.  Like most things, the best way to learn about something is to go and personally engage in it.  I estimate that I’ve talked to over 3000 influencers of our brands from over 50 countries during the past few years. 

    So, back to the conversation at the conference…As we sat in the room having the discussion, several people used the term "Influencer Marketing."  Each time I heard it, I cringed.  Something about this phrase seemed wrong.  In the moment, I couldn’t articulate why this phrase dug so deep, but by my afternoon presentation I had to discuss this topic.  I like to keep the following core assumption in mind:  Influencers don’t do what they do in order to help you (the brand)…they do what they do to help other users.  Forgetting this core point is probably the fastest path to a failed influencer initiative.  The term "Influencer Marketing" to me feels like it is attempting to get a direct response from an influencer.  Find the right people, tell them about "A" and they will go tell everyone about "A."  In my experience, it just doesn’t work this way.  There are a few "influencers" with whom this works – but they rarely influence much or sustain over the long term – they may just be loud.  Perhaps my issue with this is that most marketing feels very one way.  If you really want to get influencers talking, it’s about a two way, trust based conversation. 

    Wrong model (marketing dream):  I tell you about "A," you tell everyone you know about "A"

    Right model:  I tell you about "A," you tell me about "A1, B and C."  I listen, I make some changes or I don’t make changes but I tell you why.  This creates outbound conversation – but it’s a by-product of a relationship, not a channel for push communications.

    In truth there probably isn’t anything wrong with the term itself.  There are influencers and brands will invariably market to them – and that’s not evil.  What might be "evil" is thinking there is a shortcut here – forgetting that this really only works when social media is creating a conversation between a brand and the users…and remember, "listening is not just waiting for your turn to talk!"

    And finally, the right model makes another strong point – that the conversation isn’t just between your influencers and the marketing department – it’s the influencers and your company – cross functions.

    Sean