All That, and a Bag of Chips

This is a “full disclosure” post of sorts. Today’s NY Times ran a piece about bloggers being influenced by Sponsors. I have no sponsors, but I felt it important to be more clear about an experience I had recently. (I’ve also added a disclosure page here and at http://howardgreenstein.com/blog/bio/disclosure – I used the template at DisclosurePolicy.Org to do so – quite useful.)

Recently, I visited the Pepsi campuses in Valhalla and Purchase, NY. As I blogged about Pepsi Innovation Day, I was a guest of Bonin Bough, invited by Stephanie Agresta. I know Bonin via work I had done for his former employer, Weber Shandwick, in the past. Stephanie has consulted with me under the Harbrooke Group banner, and I’ve worked for her firm as well (she’s now working at PR Firm Porter Novelli, and I’ve been asked to do work for her there of a confidential nature). I respect both of them as marketing professionals who understand the value of relationships in business.

During the day the group received access to Pepsi executives, received lunch, access to more chips and soda than any human should be allowed, and a chance to, among other things, make our ‘own soda.’  Upon leaving, we were given gift bags that had chips in them from other countries, soda, a small flash drive from Gatorade, and some schwag with the Pepsi logo (a hat and scarf). Maybe $25 worth of stuff. The chips were fun – I did taste tests with my kids to see if they could identify flavors of chips from places like England, Argentina and Japan.
Bottom line, I wanted to disclose this experience from Pepsi. They’ve put up YouTube Videos of the event, and I appear in them, so it is fair to mention this on the blog.

I do believe this visit was useful because it showed me a company the size of Pepsi is interested in hearing from Social Media practitioners face to face. I don’t think they were buying us – quite the opposite – it was a costly day for me in terms of time away from clients. But it was positive in that I got a chance to meet some other blogger/influencer types and get to know them better. I also got a chance to meet Pepsi staff and hear some of their marketing challenges – a great learning experience for me.

I won’t let this experience significantly influence my work. I’m not here shouting that you should buy Pepsi instead of Coke. I strive to maintain my independence as a blogger. I don’t take anything of significant monetary value from anyone for my writing or my various blogs (including my Inc.com blog). If you happen to think I’m fronting for someone, feel free to let me know.

Social Media Crisis Communications Case Study – United Airlines Breaks Guitars

“Markets are Conversations.” 10 years after the Cluetrain manifesto, it is more true than ever. Take the following conversation. A person has an “experience” with a brand. This experience moves the person so much that they decide to create a YouTube video – not just a talking head one either. A fully produced song, telling the story of that experience. And within 12 days, that video has generated over 2.3 million views, exposing that brand and its story to the public. The story even made the LA Times, and AdAge.
Ok, now imagine the story is bad, and everyone who sees it thinks your company and its representatives (called out by name in the song) are idiots. Ok, stop imagining, and welcome to United Airlines’ waking nightmare – a Crisis Communications Case Study and a case for Social Media consultants to share with brand managers for years to come.
Dave Carroll, a musician, sees his $3500 guitar being THROWN by airline baggage handlers on a stopover in Chicago. He tries to alert airline personnel, but they don’t listen. He confirms the damage when he arrives at his destination but doesn’t file a formal complaint till his trip back one week later. (Because, hey, maybe he’s busy trying to make a living and you’ve just damaged the instrument he uses to make said living.) Continue reading

Interview with JP Rangaswami at Supernova Hub

Over at the Supernova Hub, I got to interview BT Design’s JP Rangaswami, a true innovator and a leader in bringing Web 2.0 into the Enterprise.

At the 140 Characters Conference in New York last week, I spoke with JP about how Business and Strategy are changing due to ubiquitous networks and new ways to access data. He noted that “Things that were previously synchronous, like voice communications, can now be asynchronous, and things that were previously asynchronous [like knowing people status, location or current work] can be synchronous.” There’s much more in the video.

Supernova Interview: JP Rangaswami « Supernova Hub

Wrap-up of Social Media Camp

Yesterday was Social Media Camp in New York at the Roger Smith Hotel.

Howard Greenstein and Chris Heuer at Social Media Camp - image by Jay Bryant

Howard Greenstein and Chris Heuer at Social Media Camp - image by Jay Bryant

Along with Chris Heuer, I presented or co-presented 5 presentations in the main track. Many of them were recorded via Livestream and are available for you to view. Check out http://www.livestream.com/socialmediaclub and click “On Demand” to see the sessions. Soon, all the sessions will be up and organized on the Social Media Camp Site.

Thanks to Jolie O’Dell of ReadWriteWeb for taping this piece from my discussion on Personal Branding. In this segment, I discuss the evolution of worrying about having embarrassing pictures on Facebook.

The slides I used in that presentation and some other relevant ones are on the Social Media Camp Site under “Creating a Digital Identity.” I also presented on “Using Social Media for your Job Search.”

UPDATE: Great Video from Courtney Crosslin – thank you!

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At Pepsi Innovation Day

I’m at Pepsi‘s innovation day – thanks to my friend Stephanie Agresta and Bonin Bough of Pepsi. This is their opportunity to host a bunch of bloggers and journalists, and show what they’re doing that’s new. This is an open kimono day – except for in R&D labs we can take pictures, video and blog everything.
Learning about their company now -at their flavor lab in Valhalla, NY.

Food facts so far – they’re working to ELEVATE the Core – Lays – remove transfats (2002) lower sat fats, lower sodium, simple
ingredients. Baked, different oils, reduce sodium – different flavors arond the world.
This piece is going to be snippets and thoughts, updated all day.
UPDATE
-Just got done with the R&D lab – lots of fun making my own soda, learning about flavors, and getting an overview. My soda was Lemonade, Raspberry and Passion Fruit – very good flavor but I over-sugared it.

Lunch: Lots of ocmments on Twitter, also:

Carbon footprint labeling in the UK  – Walkers

Performance With Purpose

looking for positive momentum – they feel they’re on a roll because they
are part of the conversation.
Interesting

College Humor – made new Pepsi Retro commercials for pepsi throwback
UPDATE 330pm

Panel now with John  Andrews (formerly of Walmart 11 Moms program), Christine CEA (Unilever head of PR) and Adam Cristinsen from IBM.

Discussion of Earned and Paid media.

How is social media changing that?

ADAM: Former PR person – you used to decide message, control, decide who presents it. Now there’s an opportunity to connect with corporate culture – and

Christine: Cultural shift – the tipping point in consumer-generated evolution. They let go of brand control – in 1st season of apprentice – let contestants create a Dove commercial – generated more interest than some of the ones they had done. Now letting consumers create content, or MTV etc. Part of a conversation – letting consumers interact with the brand.

There are challenges – you have the legal folks watching and interacting – how do you create guidelines to allow connection (twitter) and still handle law.

Q: How do you work with Paid media group
Christine: they don’t have a Bonin to oversee Social media. Therefore it’s been a collaborative effort – by necessity. Lots of different needs in Social Media – many related to marketers thinking they ‘need’ a campaign but not 100% sure why or objectives.

They make them sit with media and PR and help figure out goals, and decide who should be the lead (PR or Media) so they can leverage to existing efforts, and also avoid ‘mess’ and/or ‘mess ups’ and know whats going on if things go awry. How you’re judged in your response is important.

John: Paid and Earned working together – Beyond paid and earned – participation media. As they created longer term relationship with 11 moms, they learned they could include them in that planning process as well. They did a program with “Twilight” and used the 11 mom group as a sounding board.They were part of process, had ownership of process, and helped it be most successful pre-sale DVD launch.

The social sphere isn’t always interested in talking about what you’re interested in. When they tried to engage and it was just another media tactic.

Large scale social platforms – Facebook, Twitter, how have those platforms worked for you?

Adam: Agnostic about where employees communicate – there are 275K IBMers on LinkedIn. We want to let employees engage everywhere. From a tactics standpoint-  alumni network is also valuable.

Twitter – wonderful ad-hoc communication network. Even corporate news travels faster on that kind of a network.

UDPATE 340pm

Christine: Great tools for listening. Also suggest they work directly with Facebook. Casestudy – one activity to reach MySpace consumer, one to reach FB, true to the brand (for a different beverage).

John: At Walmart – not about the tech – about the relationships. Eventually FB won’t be cool but it is about creating relationships. Example: Blog Her network – become an integrator in her network – youre createing relationships with those people in her network. It is much more meaningful that you have the relationship with the core influencers.

Q: (missed it)

Adam: Social Media – don’t overplay – it is just the way things are done now – so the model isn’t to have a social media person – it is to integrate it into the marketing team.

Christine: Social Media handle is a shorthand – but a greater area of WOMMA – 80% is offline – the handle has yet to be created for the ‘conversation space’ – social media, soc net, word of mouth – Soc Media is reudced to something – but as a Marketer you need to think beyond it.

From PR perspective – the measurement challenge – if we could capture the value of PR fully  we’d be millionares for the way to do so. Now we are trying to measure value of conversation, net promoter score,  – those used to more standard measurements – there aren’t as many standard ones now. THere may not be “a model or ‘the’ model.” there may be an engagement model, brand equity, pure sales, and it is harder to compare entities.

Adam: The think that kicked off Social Media – massive employee brainstorm – this was a ‘crowd sourcing exercise’ – helped create current corporate strategy. This isn’t a standard effort that would be measured in a standard way.

John: Every metric under the sun shows up. As he left – standard is being worked on – He saw a great presentation from Tyson – taken a nielsen overlay with specific retailer’s shopper area from Spectra – layered on Sales- what’s result of year long twittering? It was quite compelling.

Q: Integration of Paid and Earned to accomplish goals – what does and doesn’t work from process standpoint to see how they can work together?

Adam: Paid, traidiontal have been 2 sides of house – Communications and marketing just merged last year at IBM. There were always tensions. Communications have now taken over marketing – now thinking about how to do things differently – combination to come up with things that work differently. He gets budget from things that used to be advertising. Culture has been melded.

John: several groups coming into process- esp. customer service group as well as tech folks- and set up as an internal agency to be a consulting group inside the agency.

Christine: Lots of experiements (missed some of this).

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Facebook Pages vs Groups – on Mashable

My Latest article appears on Mashable – and it is on the subject of Facebook Pages vs. Facebook Groups.
Mashable – The Social Media Guide

“Should I create a group or launch a Page?” It’s the eternal question that gets asked as often as, “What is Twitter?” at introductory social media training classes. Ever since Facebook launched their Pages product as part of their larger advertising strategy (along with the ill-fated Beacon) in November 2007, there has been confusion over which to use.

You can read the rest at Facebook Pages vs Facebook Groups: What’s the Difference?

Help Us Find the Wisdom of Twitter: #TwitWiz

Image representing Twitter as depicted in Crun...
Image via CrunchBase

At the upcoming 140 Characters Conference being thrown by Jeff Pulver, Dean Landsman and I will give a talk called “The Wisdom of Twitter.” We both have some good ideas about “How Twitter Can be Helpful in Increasing Our Wisdom” or “What Twitter Has Taught Us.” We also know a bit about “What are the Wisest Ways to Use Twitter,” but we’d love learn more about these subjects from the experts – you.

We intend to curate this talk, and take much of the wisdom from you, the crowd. So, please help us learn about the best ways to use twitter to gain wisdom and knowledge, and please help us by sharing the things you’ve learned by using Twitter – 140 characters  at a time.

Please send them to @HowardGr or @Deanland and tag them with #TwitWiz so we can find them more easily. We’ll credit everyone who shares something of value.

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Twitter can Get You Business – My latest post on Inc.com

“Yes, people get business via Twitter. At a recent event in New York (organized via Twitter by PR guru @PeterHimler), I met Lisa Cruz (@LisaRedShoesPR), Co-Founder of Red Shoes PR , a 5 person startup agency in Northeastern Wisconsin. It was created about a year ago as an integrated shop helping clients with both traditional PR and Social Media services. Lisa told me that while many folks are still questioning the way to obtain business on Twitter, her shop had just signed a client who found and actively sought them out because of their activity on Twitter.”

Read more of: Twitter Can Get You Business

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