Technology recipes

Mobile Living: Past, Present, and Future

A superb infographic on mobile living… click to view the full infographic, click again to zoom if need be:

Created by MobiTV

Facebook Places Overview/Walkthrough

I’m checking out Facebook Places, and thought a quick screenshot walkthrough would be nice for those curious about it!

Here’s the new Facebook iPhone app, with the Places icon smack in the middle. Places is only available via mobile apps, and the mobile web site http://m.facebook.com/

Clicking on it brings up a list of friends that have checked in recently, as well as the Check In button…

Click the Check In button, and it lists nearby places to choose from, or you can type in a location to search or to add a new one…

Once you click on a place or add a new one, it brings up the screen showing the place, with options to add a comment, and tag other friends (if their privacy settings allow this)…

After you’ve tagged a friend, it adds the friend(s) as “with …”

Once you click Check In, it pushes it to your list of friends and where they are…

and also adds it to your Facebook news feed for others (depending on your privacy settings) to see, like, and comment on.

iPhone 4 Deets

In-house vs Outsourcing a Social Media Presence

Social media is becoming quite the revolution, as many of you already know, and many more are learning about on a daily basis.  Businesses need to address how they are going to manage their social media presence, and in speaking with numerous businesses that I engage in social media discussions with, I’ll offer my quick thoughts.

There are 2 core ways to begin, in-house or outsourcing, both of which can be broken down into two types themselves. Some businesses consider keeping it in-house, whether that be hiring for a new social media position, or bringing in someone with social media experience to train existing staff. Others consider outsourcing it to a local company that specializes in social media management, while some consider offshore outsourcing, taking their social media efforts out of the country primarily to save on costs.

The decision on which option to go with often depends on engagement within the social media realm. Engagement is good… it’s what social media is all about. Being able to handle the level of engagement is a primary concern, and can drive the decisions on how best to manage a company’s social media.

Hiring someone part-time or full-time to handle the social media is usually beneficial when the needs of the business warrant enough engagement to sustain the position, usually depends on the size of the company, but is done to handle the volume of the engagement they expect to realize. Part-time usually leads to full-time, but either way having a company employee that is responsible for social media creates a focused, concise, professional presence that reaps the rewards of this type of investment. Examples include @JetBlue, as well as companies like @Zappos that allow all employees to engage in social media.

Similar to this, holding in-house training is an option, where someone in the marketing/communications department is trained to become the point person for managing the social media presence. Sometimes the biggest issue with in-house training is that people can take on the additional responsibilities of social media, but that enthusiasm and the engagement fade over time, usually within 30-60 days, and their social media presence declines, which erodes their intent, reputation, and can impact the bottom line. Giving existing people even more to do is challenging if they are already tasked with other responsibilities, especially when social media can consume a large chunk of time in ramping up during an initial launch, finding/building relationships, and getting the word out. In most cases, training eventually leads to creating a full-time position or outsourcing anyway.

Outsourcing social media to large agencies is something that is done quite often, and quite well. Large companies have no problems affording these agencies, and the agencies focus on social media very well most of the time.  Smaller businesses or local non-franchise shops, restaurants, bars, etc often can’t afford hiring an agency, and look to smaller service companies that offer social media experience that can assist them in getting up to speed, as well as manage their presence for them, so they can focus on their core business, while realizing the explosive benefits that social media can deliver, all at a cost they can afford.

Some companies are considering outsourcing social media to foreign countries, but the biggest issue is that doing this is not anything like outsourcing technical/customer support, programming, SEO work, or other realms that have been done for years. Those realms have huge pitfalls that must be overcome to be done right, and some companies have experienced bad results when not done right. Social media is all about engaging… and outsourcing the engagement is especially difficult over and above those other realms, because the engagement must be authentic, the expectation, by the very nature of social media, is that customers are reaching someone that understands the company, relates to the customer in a very real sense, has the reach and depth to evoke real relationships to be formed, and in the end has the very essence of the company that customers are craving to interact with that causes them to become the loyal fans of the company. When done poorly, can not only tarnish the reputation of the company, but can explode in compounded negativity spread in real-time via the very social media networks that a company is trying to benefit from. To outsource the social media to a completely different culture can lead to unfulfilled expectations,negative experiences, laughable dialogs, and in the end a backlash against a company, it’s brand, it’s reputation, and it’s bottom line.

Outsourcing is a delicate option, and outsourcing to a agency or small specialists are best options as they establish the close connections between themselves and the company that are needed to manage the social media presence and engage in an authentic way.  Outsourcing to foreign countries is done very carefully for support, programming/coding, or other specialized yet generale technical skillsets, and social media is not in any way related to those types of outsourcing experiences – it’s more like trying to outsource your sales and marketing to someone that you hope represents the company and it’s brand properly… something that is rarely if ever done, let alone done right, and the downside can be much more expensive than any cost-savings could be projected.

If social media is managed well, the end result is that there is a presence that will represent the company online, engage with their past, present, and potentially future customers, and maintain that engagement to build relationships that then ideally turn those relationships into loyal fans that not only remain customers, but tell friends, family, coworkers, and their own larger social media networks about the company and why it’s great. This is one of the central differentiators with social media compared to other methods of communicating with the same audience, in that if done right it leads to not only an improved customer experience, but elevates the company in a very positive way, and can enable the compounding of positive word-of-mouth.

I’d love to hear your thoughts on this, and if you have any questions or concerns, I’d be happy to discuss them with you.

Some other posts on this topic to reference:

http://johnfmoore.wordpress.com/2009/07/16/want-your-social-media-campaigns-to-fail-offshore-the-effort/

http://www.gauravonomics.com/blog/social-media-outsourcing-the-onshore-vs-offshore-decision/

http://www.itbusinessedge.com/cm/blogs/all/does-outsourcing-social-media-make-sense/?cs=11744

http://www.gauravonomics.com/blog/next-big-thing-social-media-outsourcing-smo/

http://marketing.about.com/od/internetmarketing/a/socialmediaourtsource.htm

http://soshable.com/social-media-hire-outsource/

http://www.gauravonomics.com/blog/why-should-brands-embrace-social-media/

Presenting at #CTC HOB LA

I’m presenting today at the Cool Twitter Conference in LA today on integrating social media and Twitter specifically into your web site, with focus on WordPress as a CMS.