Gartner advises adoption of social platform

19 10 2008

Gartner, a leading information technology analyst firm, recently revealed their list of Top 10 Strategic Technologies for 2009. Social Software and Social Networking made the cut. Many companies realize they need to get into the social software or social networking arena by establishing a presence on top social networks like Facebook, MySpace, and LinkedIn; by creating social features on their own web sites; or, most commonly in my experience, by doing both. Gartner advises:

Organizations should consider adding a social dimension to a conventional Web site or application and should adopt a social platform sooner, rather than later, because the greatest risk lies in failure to engage and thereby, being left mute in a dialogue where your voice must be heard.

Companies need to be engaged with their customers and prospects. It is no longer good enough to have a good product and use search terms to get business. Using SEO alone is the 21st-century equivalent of hanging a shingle over your door. Instead, how about enabling real human relationships between your customers and with your partners? Especially during an economic downturn, people will look to do business with people, not with nameless, faceless organizations. Soon, I hope to be able to profile some of the ways we at Sociodyne are helping people build these long-term, meaningful dialogs with their communities.





Social media as part of your strategy

17 10 2008

In the social networking boom of the last few years, the social networking sites have been really excited for people to build applications, widgets, gadgets, and thingamajigs. Why? Because all those sparkly things bring more visitors to the social networking site, contributing significantly to the growth of those properties.

But what about your business? What about your pet project? What about your charity? How do you tap into that same power of community?

The big social networking sites will continue to be important. They are the new destinations sites on the web, and millions of people turn to them first for information about their friends and acquaintances.Empowering people to use the power of their communities to achieve their own goals can be a tricky business when it involves projecting your identity into these large social web sites. There are distractions everywhere. The key is to find the right way to project your company, project, charity, etc. into that environment. The answer will be different for many people, but few people that I have been talking to are just worried about lots of people using their social application.

Most people will want to project enough of what they are doing to attract interest. Once the interest is there, it is a good thing to let it carry across into your web site by letting people use their social identities to access some limited feature set of your site. Basically, make it easy for them to “kick the tires”. Then, if they like what they see, they are much more likely to start a long-term relationship with you (mainly through registration and other similar “calls to action”). Tying into these large social networking sites effectively is the challenge of the day.





Patterns of Social Media

11 10 2008

One of the most exciting parts of our conversations with people about their social media projects are the interesting patterns that emerge. Have you thought about the following parts of your project?

  • Who are all the people who will interact around your product or service?
  • What does your community talk about with each other? With others?
  • How does your community gather? If you left something on the street, what would they stop to look at?

If you can answer these questions, you’re well on your way to improving the changes of success of your social media project. Let us know if we can help you answer them, or if you would like us to help you implement, launch, or host your social media campaign.








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