Friday, April 17, 2009

NewComm Forum Conference

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I am speaking at the 5th annual NewComm Forum April 27th - 29th in San Francisco, CA about Enterprise Community Best Practices and am also offering a SNCR Fellow Strategy session - a 2 hour individualized planning session for your enterprise community. You'll have the opportunity to sit down with an SNCR Fellow (me or my esteemed Fellow peers) to design your social media strategy. Together we will build a social media plan to address key questions such as "How will you build social media into your communications program? How will you sell it to your organization and its leaders? And how will you measure its effectiveness?"

View the full program agenda here:

Register now & save $100 with code SNCRFRIEND! Don't miss out - please join us!


For more information &
to register:
visit www.newcommforum.com
or
Email us at info@sncr.org
Call (877) 304-SNCR (7627)

Hope to see you there and if you plan on attending be sure to connect with me onsite or send me a tweet so we can find each other @vdimauro

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Friday, April 3, 2009

Social Media Requires Business Process Integration

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Strapping new tools onto old processes is a common problem when enterprise start using social media. Enterprise Social Media often requires a process integration effort to harvest online community and collaboration as it can change the way business is being done.

Take for example a client-focused online community – a private area for say 10,000 of your key clients and prospects. You create a community and launch content, user generated content opportunities, forums, polls, etc... the usual suspects. You spend a 6 months focused on this beautiful thing, it launches, clients and prospects love it, and everyone is thrilled. This is a good thing.

Now, the typical enterprise is not stupid. They rose to be a sizable organization for a good reason! But, somehow, because new media is, well, new... companies often don't know what to do with the assets created by the social media. Sure, they are celebrated, and touted as valuable, maybe even a few good case studies get built: about how social media was able to help support a conference business by bringing in additional enterprise attendees, or maybe it saved a critical client relationship, but so often the integration-point between social media initiatives and business process are not really crafted to support each other. But they should be as that was likely the reason the social media project was begun in the first place, right?

So, take a look at where the business process gaps are within sales, marketing, even product development etc. and also examine your social media efforts with a critical eye. Link the two processes, and create repeated and repeatable measures so they can support each other. Make good use of the data and outcomes of social media through-out your organization. It's just a matter of time before "new media" loses its "new" luster and you will be ahead of the curve if you build in business process alignment.

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