Community Management & The Personal Touch

Today my buddy Charlie Trotter told me a story about his experience after signing up for Utterz, a mobile-blogging tool:

I Uttered an Utterz about hoping it would work well with my blog and twitter. I just got an email from the community manager welcoming me and assuring me that it would integrate just fine. He actually listened to my audio thing because I didn’t title it.

He went on to say:

I love it so so much when a site rep contacts me specifically about something. The CEO of Media Temple left me a voice mail thanking me for sending Media Temple a nice email. Dalas Verdugo, Vimeo’s community manager is quickly available through IM and quickly solves my problems when they happen. Now this email from Utterz.

Having that personal connection, having someone take the time to make it when they own a site with so many users is a big deal to me. It makes me a zealot for them.

Boom. How do you turn consumers into zealots? Act like you’re a human and they’re a human and we’re all a bunch of humans.

Yahoo’s oneConnect cures what fragments you

One of the more frustrating things about social media services is how disjointed they are. You have to juggle different groups of friends, scattered bits of functionality, and scores of logins (although the login situation is improving) for each service. For example, half of my Twitter friends just jumped ship to another service. So what should I do? Sometimes it all makes me crazy.

So I was happy to read on TechCrunch about oneConnect, Yahoo’s new catch-all mobile tool for keeping up with your friends’ joneses across services:

OneConnect will pull together contacts from your mobile phone, Yahoo address book, and social networks, including:

Bebo, Dopplr, Facebook, Flickr, Friendster, Hi5, Last.fm, LinkedIn, Myspace, Twitter

You will be able to see whether your contacts are online, recent messages, status updates, uploaded photos, and other activity streams for each one. Of course, you will also be able to send them messages via e-mail, IM, and SMS.

From OpenID to Facebook’s Platform to OpenSocial, hopefully this is another slice of a larger trend toward making all this jazz much simpler.

Sideways marketing

Media consumption and interaction are no longer linear. What in the world does that mean? I’ll tell you -With the accessibility of on-demand media, it means that from the content-producer perspective, time is no longer a huge factor in consumption. To use our Trabian’s own Matt Dean as an example, it means that he doesn’t watch The Office on TV at 7:30 on Thursdays. He downloads it through iTunes and watches it whenever he pleases.Meanwhile, consumers themselves are creating distribution channels through blogs, podcasts, bittorrent networks, text messages, YouTube, water-cooler conversations, the effects of links on search engine results, and a slew of other things I haven’t thought of. The majority of this consumer generated content is on-demand too.Because of this, communications do not move along a specified path, they bounce around willy-nilly. Marketers, this is especially important to you because you can no longer think in terms of top-down distribution for your marketing. When you speak, it’s important to understand (and capitalize on) the channels that message will fly through.

We’ll call this “sideways marketing,” and it involves viewing and reaching consumers by recognizing their distribution channels, and making yourself accessible and deliverable through those.

A few examples

Campbell-Ewald’s Chief Contact Officer (cool title) Ed Dilworth (less cool name) gave a session at ad:tech entitled “Navigating the Current of Participatory Communication” that broke down how his firm was flipping clients on their sides.

For their clients, it means everything from setting up corporate blogs to asking consumers to create an ‘07 Super Bowl spot to setting up farmer’s markets throughout the U.S.

Separately, Jay-Z and Coca-Cola distributed a live performance video, embedded with promotions for Coke, through illegal file-sharing networks. Jay-Z’s stereotypically-named lawyer, Mike Guido, said this about the strategy:

“The concept here is making the peer-to-peer networks work for us. While peer-to-peer users are stealing the intellectual property, they are also the active music audience…this technology allows us to market back to them.”

On your own site

Because many search results point directly to internal site pages, the homepage is less significant. People are gaining sideways entry into your site, and your design should reflect this. Embrace this by:

  • Tracking the search results that are pointing people to your site using tools like Mint.
  • Tracking which internal pages are receiving the most traffic.
  • Making sure your internal pages have calls to action and links that cross pollinate the rest of the site.
  • Design a clear information architecture that is easily navigable even in the deepest reaches of your site.

Listen

Step one in all of this is to listen to and understand your consumer. How else can you understand how they’re communicating, where they’re creating content, and how they’re accessing and redistributing yours? Once you understand this, it’s simply a matter of working with them.

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I design things.

Here's some stuff I've made. I hope you love it. If you're interested in working together, drop me a line and we'll chat.