I recently read Likeable Social Media: How To Delight Your Customers, Create an Irresistible Brand, & Be Generally Amazing On All Social Networks That Matter by Dave Kerpen. This book offers valuable insight to running social media for a business without talking down to you like you are baby boomer who doesn't know how to use a cell phone. (No offense to baby boomers. They just generally get a bad wrap for not knowing how to use technology, which makes for some pretty funny memes.)
Kerpen
is an entrepreneur and public speaker who co-founded Likeable Media, a social
media and word-of-mouth marketing agency for large businesses and Likeable
Local for small business, so he is more than qualified to give advice and
best-practices on the subject matter.
This
book covers a wide range of social media topics, so I won’t go into them all in
this review. I highly recommend checking out the book for yourself, but I will
be discussing some highlights, takeaways, and points of disagreement.
Kerpen
starts off with what all marketers should start off with – defining their
target audience, which is NOT merely demographics. A description of your target
audience includes demographics like age, gender, race and income, but you
should also examine your customers’ likes, dislikes, attitudes, values, fears
and beliefs. How do you learn all these things about your target audience? Kerpen
recommends you listen, and never stop listening to them. You need to be on the
social media platforms that your target audience is on, and you need to be
providing relevant and valuable content that interests them. Kerpen references
multiple times the idea of taking off your marketing hat and putting on your consumer
hat. Think about how YOU would like to be treated as a customer. Do you want
spammy emails and pop-up ads all the time that distract you from the content
you’re trying to view? Probably not.
Kerpen
makes a relationship metaphor throughout Likeable. He suggests that being
engaged to your fiancĂ© is kind of like being engaged to your consumers – promising
to be truly concerned about what they say, think, feel and need. Kerpen says, “Just
as we fall in love with people who can listen to us and we can trust, we fall
in love with companies that can do the same.” To inspire brand loyalty and capture
customer lifetime value, companies need to create a dialogue with their
consumers. Companies should respond to good as well as bad comments. It may be
tempting to quickly take down negative criticism or a customer’s bad experience,
but Kerpen advocates for the do not delete rule. This rules states that unless
a comment is obscene, profane, or bigoted, or it contains someone’s personal
and private information, it should never be deleted from a social network site.
Your non-response is also a response which is why it’s important to respond quickly
to criticism and take it to direct messages if needed. Likeable is
filled with great examples of all these points, but a prominent example in this
scenario is a customer who was upset with his bill from Verizon. The company apologized,
sent him a private message, and just four days later, the customer went back to
social media singing the praises of the customer support team and the company.
This example demonstrates that your unhappy customers can become your biggest
supporters, so as tempting as it may be, do not delete their bad comments!
Some other golden nuggets from Likeable
include being authentic, honest and transparent, asking questions to engage
your audience, making use of consumer generated content, and providing value. Each
chapter has action items so you can begin putting these best practices into
place at your company.
Kerpen
practices what he preaches. I tweeted
about his book, and he responded by liking my message, retweeting it, and
having a small conversation with me. That is really all it takes to make a
customer feel appreciated!
My
biggest critique is that Kerpen paints social media as the holy grail of
customer engagement. It seemed as if every problem can be solved by social
media, which may not be the case. There are certainly situations where throwing
social media into the problem makes it worse. Although we live in a digital age,
traditional marketing tools like focus groups, press conferences and good old
fashion market research can sometimes be the better avenue rather than going
through the sensationalized ads and fake news on social media.
I really enjoyed reading this blog post! You put some really great examples in here about how to treat your customers. I love the quote that says "Just as we fall in love with people who listen to us and we can trust, we fall in love with companies that can do the same." This is a great quote and in my opinion means it isn't hard to keep your customers loyal and happy. In order to keep them happy, just treat them as you would treat a loved one. I also agree it is very important to respond to your customers whether the comment is positive or negative. This also shows that you care and are here to help. The only topic I disagree with is your critique against Dave Kerpen. I believe the "old fashioned way" with press conferences and meetings is slowly starting to fade out. This is why I believe that companies need to adapt to the way media and marketing is changing. Overall, I really enjoyed reading this blog and it had great content. @ConnellyNathan
ReplyDeleteYou did a great job at including the audience in your post! It is very important for companies to reply to bad and good comments, and your example with Verizon proved it. By companies responding to bad comments, this can turn around a customer's image of how they see the company. A customer realizes this company made a mistake and they are doing everything they can to fix it and help the situation. You provided great examples of what a company should do to be successful: being authentic, honest and transparent, asking questions to engage your audience, making use of consumer generated content, and providing value. I agree with your statement of the "old fashioned way" with focus groups and press conferences. This can allow us to reach a different audience and get different information we may not get from the internet. @haley_masscomm
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