Do You Look For Wrongs Or Rights? Social Media Works for B2B.

Over the course of my career I have worked in many different office environments. Advertising agencies have unique cultures, but inside of the general category they vary greatly. But you’ve probably noticed these characteristics in your office or in yourself. Some people always look for what is wrong with an idea, a proposal, campaign, project, etc. Their first inclination is that there must be something wrong and you get the sense they enjoy finding flaws (no matter how minor) and enjoy shooting entire ideas down for it. Have you ever had a boss, a co-worker, or worked for an entire company with that mentality? How many innovative ideas or programs ever saw the light of day? The fear of failure rules those cultures. Expressing your concern, puts you on the record as spotting a flaw in case it does see the light of day and fails – you’ve covered your but. All the while these same people read about successes in the trade press and wonder why they can never get there.

On the other hand, I have worked for and with people who embrace risk over safety, because they know that is where greater reward is to be found. In fact, they know if people find a lot of reasons not to do something, that is a sign that it could be great. Social Media in general falls into this category, because it represents such a dramatic shift in thinking. Marketers must give up control. No one is really concerned about running another newspaper ad, but letting your consumers talk for you, or your employees is a risk. But the truth is they are doing it anyway. Don’t get me wrong, any plan should be vetted and optimized to follow best practices and increase the chance for success. But that kind of thinking comes from finding the “rights” of the idea first, before the “wrongs.”

Sometimes embracing the risk of social media to gain reward requires more than approval, but a change in policy. I once worked for a client that wanted social media ideas. We listened and presented innovative ways to share valuable information (they already had, but very little were using) via social media networks that would utilize their managers and help them generate sales leads through Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter. They loved the idea, the only problem was that they had a corporate policy to block social media access on managers computers. End of idea – back to cold calls. The eMarketer chart above shows the percent of marketers who have overcome outdated policies and are using social media to generate leads and sales.

A recent article in Forbes speaks to this issue. It is written by bank CEO Frank Sorrentino and he calls other bank CEO’s to join him in social media – many in the financial industry are not there. He acknowledges the risks, but points out that you can learn ways to manage them. On the other hand, Sorrentino warns that there are risks in not joining social media. If you are looking for reasons not to do social media (wrongs), you will find plenty. But I encourage you to change your focus and look for the reasons to do social media (rights) – that is the only way you will reap its rewards.

Hallucinations Aren’t Contagious, But Social Media Is Real For Many Business Functions

Marketers need take wisdom of the crowd seriously. I remember before the days of social media reading forwarded complaint letters from customers with wild visions of the true intentions of our ads. It was truly amazing what they dreamed up and saw. Our animated talking coffee bean was a little fresh talking, but one viewer said it looked like something very different and offensive and recommended we should be fired. We based it on a picture of a real coffee bean – I didn’t know what else to say.

Back then it was easy to laugh off such hallucinations. But today single comments and reviews are much more powerful. And social media conversations tend to be more about product experience that comes from operation’s delivery. That doesn’t mean marketing is off the hook. We make the service promise that sets up expectations. If we say the coffee is fresh on TV, but it’s not in just one store, complaints come in the form of tweets, Facebook updates, ratings, reviews, comments and even videos. Or some consumer may discover the coffee beans come from growers who don’t promote humane working conditions – more cause for public complaint.

A Forbes article made this point recently saying that the new power of consumers to influence brands has moved past being just a new marketing and branding tool. What if store employees start tweeting about the quality of the coffee and customers start commenting new flavor ideas? Now you have HR, PR, operations, product development and marketing involved. Like it or not the crowd is in your business. Transparency is the new norm and it’s contagious.