31/12/2009

No, I Don't Want to Be Friends With My Butter: Brand Relationships for the Social Media Era

BY NATHANIEL PEREZWed Dec 23, 2009 at 4:00 PM


friends with butter
While brands still try hard to "crack the Social Media code," most seem to understand consumers no longer find the prospect of being friends with a brand more engaging than the single click it took to fan the brand page on Facebook. After all, what's so novel about the thought of a friendship with my butter? Precisely, nothing.
The impact of social media at the heart of new media is shaking up how brands think of experience design and what consumers expect from brand experiences.
Let's talk digital sociology. I'll quote three impactful points of view from Michael Wesch, Assistant Professor of Cultural Anthropology at Kansas State University. In his series called "The machine is (Changing) Us: YouTube and the politics of Authenticity," he describes the following (which I've roughly transcribed):
  • "Media defines us while we define media."
  • "We've shifted from media to mediated relationships."
  • "Connections were the constraint, we now have connections without constraint."
How can these statements help us understand how to be better at building brand through social media and digital experiences in general? Here's a set of guiding principles to help you get beyond tactical earned media generation and enable you to create richer and more successful "social movements" around brands.
  • You can shape the outcome, but can't prescribe it. Leave predictable outcomes behind. Successful social experiences all have one thing in common: They relinquish control. Bring your consumers closer to action and let them take over. When insights are scarce, leverage the good old reward method to get them to play, then watch them play. If your brand has risk and readiness constraints, consumer control is not a pipe dream. Make it a priority.
  • From Communication to Connectivity. Your brand should no longer think of itself as an authority (even if it is one), but rather a facilitator or enabler. Its role is no longer to broadcast, but to connect. Understanding brand connectivity requires more than just digital listening and influence identification. Moving beyond single degree measures is crucial.  Examining passions and motives within dynamic behavioral contexts is essential. Digital discovery (or anthropology) can help uncover motive “in action”. Social media is an unbound source of insights, allowing limitless exploration of digital personas and their behavior. Your brand can engage and build connectivity through behavioral contexts it can associate with.
  • Create mediated experiences. Focus on understanding the potential impact of various media interactions against consumer motives and apply that understanding to your experience strategy. Leverage YouTube as more than an outlet for brand video and search traffic. Instead, study how video sharing can promote the quality of the engagement and motives you seek to trigger. As you plan your experience, don't limit yourself… Define the media while giving it the opportunity to define you. Create experiences that are engaging but unconfined. Experiences that impose less constraint (or more connection) lead to a greater ability to mine insights from engagement. Branded widgets and social network applications can surely help amplify brand messaging but are really little more than evolved direct media. UGC campaigns with very prescriptive requests cannot allow you to measure much more than response rates.
  • Listen to your experiences. Leverage digital listening to clearly understand how the media has shaped you. Extend your discovery efforts against your conversation to understand patterns of behavior, motives of engagement, audiences and other measures of how your brand is or can be more connective. Measure impact beyond response and conversion by putting your data to work across all sources to truly understand consumer behavior against key business metrics, both offline and online.
  • Keep Shaping & Being Shaped. Whether looking to sustain successful initiatives or creating new ones, brands need to understand how to play in a fully dynamic context. Focus too much on the media itself and your efforts won't scale. Instead, focus on measuring and extending your “connectivity” step by step, creating a well balanced insights & experience machine.
While butter brands of the world now have their work cut out for them, I'm hoping they'll leverage Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, or their own media as mere interaction vehicles while devoting their attention to understanding the essence of consumer engagement within the media. Only then can they design experiences that shape conversation, to then understand how those conversations have shaped their brand.
marketing shift
Nathaniel PerezNathaniel is head of Community Intelligence at Sapient Interactive. Part of a world class group of digital strategists, he works on groundbreaking social marketing approaches, platforms and offerings. Community Intelligence is all about creating marketing experiences that are focused on influence, harnessing its power across channels to trigger measurable digital engagement, action and communication. He's also a co-chair of the ARF Social Media Council. Follow him on Twitter:@mahumbaba.






Online communities for research, what is your preferred name for them?

By Ray Poynter Director at Virtual Surveys and Owner, The Future Place





You can vote and share your thoughts here: http://polls.linkedin.com/poll-results/64076/vxhww


Some comments related to Ray Poynter's Poll:

"Community Panels is a good name, although it's also the "product" names used by Synovate and Vision Critical. But don't think it's trademarked, it's a pretty generic term."

By Ole Petter Nyhaug, Responsible for business development in marketing research innovation @ Synovate

------------------------------------------------------------------------


"I think there are a couple of aspects to this. Firstly, a name that does the Ronseal thing - tells you what it does in the name. Which for me is always the danger of any acronym. The other aspect is to acknowledge current limitations - a lot of UK communities operate under category 6 rules thus preventing the term research being applied and using the terms 'research' too often leads people to apply first principles to them. The most important thing in my view though, is picking language that isn't industry centric...we need terms that we can share with our clients and which helps those less familiar with what they do get an idea. I think the terminology is important - it's more than just semantics. Confusion over terminology means we start to get in to blurring lines between Communities, panels etc. I also like the suggestion that we want something 'cool' though. Not sure my favoured Insight Communities meets that criteria. I definitely think we should embrace the fact that this is innovative and interesting and, dare I say it, exciting!!"

By Paul Child, Associate Director at Virtual Surveys

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Having used both ORCs and MROCs interchangeably for the last few years, I'm leaning more and more toward MROCs. "Online Research Communities" is just slightly vague, given that "research" could be applied in a few contexts. I think "Insight Communities" has a nice ring to it, but the term "insight" is too broad. Forrester led the charge with MROCs, so I'm willing to go with that :)

By Matthew Foley, Market Research Online Community Specialist at PluggedIN Co.





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"I think we need to find a "cooler " name, ORC sounds better than MROC... still needs to be cooler..."

By Laurent Flores, Founder crmmetrix

Hyundai sees great value in Private Online Communities


Hyundai North America president John Krafcik speaks with an invitation-only gathering of some of the brand's most loyal customers. He won't be meeting them in person, however, but via the brand's new Web community, Hyundai Think Tank.

Set up late last year, the site gets together 1,000 people who either own Hyundai cars or have expressed interest in them at auto shows and other events. This stems from the imperative for brands to bring customers into their marketing and development processes.

Hyundai is taking a different approach from well-known case studies from Dell and Starbucks, which both launched public communities. Namely, Hyundai’s approach is invitation only.

"It's important to have people passionate about the brand provide the input," said Eileen Mahdi, manager of consumer insights for Hyundai. "It's that much richer input.” Open communities like My Starbucks Idea and Dell's IdeaStorm often devolve into customers asking for free things or airing complaints. Unlike other carmakers, Hyundai's sales were up 14 percent year-over-year last month. 


30/12/2009

Coolhunting & Web 2.0

Presentación de Víctor Gil, experto en Marketing y Nuevas Tecnologías y autor del libro "Coolhunting: El arte y la ciencia de descubrir tendencias" para la jornada "Coolhunting y Web 2.0: aprende a identificar tendencias" (dic. 2009) organizada por AECEM - Asociación Española de Comercio Electrónico y Marketing Relacional

Coolhunters se entrenan online



por Jimena Laclau

Un ciclo televisivo colaborativo abordará sus técnicas en el marco de CreaTV, un nuevo sistema de transmisión de ciclos emitidos por Televisión Online, dentro de la plataforma e-learning de la Escuela Superior de Creativos Publicitarios.

El proyecto está dirigido a investigadores, planners, coolhunters, directores de cuentas, creativos, estudiantes y profesionales interesados en conocer los hábitos, usos, apropiaciones y tendencias de consumo de cada sociedad. Al frente está la trendspotter y analista de tendencias Kiwi Sainz, reconocida por investigar futuros cercanos a partir de técnicas de corte etnográfico: gente real, en situaciones reales. La idea es que los participantes –provenientes de distintos países- se conviertan en “cazadores urbanos” y vayan construyendo un video documental sobre las costumbres, conductas e idiosincrasia de cada país.

El centro del coolhunting

La Sede Extramuros de la Escuela aborda el tema del Coolhunting desde 2005, a través de alianzas con empresas y consultoras y en formato de Workshop, abiertos al público o en formato in company. Fabiana Renault, directora Extramuros y consultora creativa, señala que “con esta última modalidad, trabajó con empresas como Kraft, Coca Cola, Nestlé, Infinit, Musimundo y agencias de publicidad de Latinoamérica como Prana de Paraguay, Ghersy de Venezuela y Y&R Santo Domingo. La Escuela hizo workshops en universidades y para la Asociación de Agencias de Publicidad en Costa Rica, entre otros. Y además ha prestado ella misma los servicios de Coolhunting por ejemplo a la agencia Prana, con sus marcas Pulp (gaseosas) y Palermo (cigarrillos)"
 
Infobrand dialogó con los responsables del proyecto. Fabiana Renault nos da detalles. “El Coolhunting es una herramienta valiosa, porque aporta miradas emergentes de nuevos métodos de investigación. Permite investigar en campos culturales y sociales que son inspiración para el desarrollo de plataformas exitosas de comunicación. Las marcas alineadas a esta nueva tendencia, hablan de lo que le pasa a la gente y no de los atributos funcionales del producto. A la vez que aporta inspiración, el Coolhunting resulta un termómetro que mide la temperatura urbana y lo que genera la marca. Así, detecta oportunidades de insight, accionables para las marcas.”

Tv Online

CreaTV es un nuevo formato educativo de la sede a distancia de la Escuela Superior de Creativos Publicitarios. Consiste en la transmisión de ciclos o temporadas emitidas por Televisión Online, dentro de la plataforma e-learning. Así, el plan no es llegar a una señal televisiva como la que prima en el imaginario de la gente, sino utilizar la plataforma de e-learning como fuente de transmisión privada. “El funcionamiento es similar al Pay Per View, hay un user y un pass para poder acceder a los videos pre-grabados”, explica Kato Asato, director e-learning. Asato cuenta que “la sede de e-learning desarrolló un sistema de clases en vivo a todo el mundo, a través de aulas virtuales. Y detectamos que los alumnos podían complementar la cursada con un nuevo formato, que no les quitaba tiempo a sus cursos en tiempo real. Así es como nació CreaTV. Cada temporada girará sobre una temática determinada, su duración puede variar entre uno y tres meses de cursada. La primera será Coolhunting “Cazador Urbano”.

Formato Wiki

Asato destacó la importancia de este formato como parte neurálgica del proyecto. “Personalmente, me entusiasma crear una nueva manera de obtener el conocimiento. No sólo a través de una televisión online, sino justamente fomentando un wiki-Proyecto de coolhunting, donde los alumnos vayan construyendo el curso.”

A su vez destaca que es una experiencia única. “Por e-learning, es la primera vez que la sede lanza un curso dedicado al tema; aunque hace tiempo el Coolhunting viene siendo parte del programa del curso Planning-Cultura de Marcas. El wiki-proyecto nace de la lógica de que, mas allá que contábamos con una referente como Kiwi, nos iba a ser difícil (casi imposible) conocer de costumbres, conductas e idiosincrasia de cada país. Y nadie mejor que quien lo experimenta a diario, para describir y analizar sus hábitos.”

28/12/2009

Ethnography app debuts on iTunes store



Suscribe to EverydayLives LinkedIn Group to discuss, make suggestions and share experiences of the EverydayLives Ethnographic App (and get a promo code to test it) 

The firm describes the app as “a sophisticated research tool designed by ethnographic researchers for ethnographic researchers, agency planners, marketers and research respondents.”

Some six months in development the product allows users to record audio and video clips, take photos and make notes while observing subjects. Material can be categorised by project themes and each item is geo-tagged to store the location in which it was recorded before being sent to the researcher’s email account to be reviewed later.

Imagine…….. going on an ethnographic fieldwork assignment with a selection of your brightest colleagues, specialist consultants, a client or two and even an assistant to help you manage and digest your notes and findings..

The EverydayLives process has been honed over the last 14 years into a methodology which is popular with clients and respondents alike. It is inclusive, collaborative and allows rich insights, subject to the quality of the collaboration and thinking taking place.

A guiding principle of our process is the naturalistic capture or recording of everyday life events, happenings and conversations. We do not conduct interviews and in many cases, we don’t even tell respondents what we are interested in learning about when we follow them about their everyday lives.


Our challenge was to create an iPhone app which could shorten the timescale and therefore cost of the above process while retain as much of its richness and collaborative underpinning. And in achieving this, enable qualitative researchers who are unwilling or unable to use cameras and editing software to conduct their own ethnographic explorations too.

Sources: Research-Live & EthnoSnacker blog

27/12/2009

Predictions for the Groundswell in 2010 -- Twitter gets serious or gets bought




Emily Riley and our whole Groundswell team have just published our predictions for 2010. We serve interactive marketers, so these are marketing focused predictions. They are:

  • Companies' use of social councils will attain budgets and power.
  • Listening Platform insights will go mainstream.
  • Marketers will focus less son fuzzy social media metrics and more on real marketing metrics.
  • Twitter will become profitable or get acquired.
  • Facebook will get more hands-on to protect users' -- and its own -- interests.
  • Incompatible mobile devices and siloed social applications will shatter the social experience.
If there is one overarching theme, it's that social technology is now a mainstream part of what marketers do. Items like using Listening Platforms (e.g. Nielsen BuzzMetrics, Radian6) and a focus on metrics that matter to marketers are signs of this shift.

I'd also like to draw attention to the Twitter prediction. Twitter has been fiddling around, growing like mad without a business model, for years now. But in in 2010, growth is not sufficient. One of two things will happen. Either Twitter will have a business generating $100 million at an annualized rate by the end of 2010, or it's going to get bought by the likes of Google, Facebook, or Microsoft. I don't believe it can continue as a huge force that has no visible means of support. Do you?

New Book on Online and Social Media Research

Ray Poynter is writing a book for Wiley on market research, the focus being Online and Social Media Research and would welcome views, ideas, criticisms, and suggestions.

Please note that due to boring and legal considerations, the copyright will end up with the publisher, not with Ray, and not with anybody who makes suggestions. If you are not happy with this, please do not join the group and do not make contributions.

Excerpts from the book will be posted as discussions and you are welcome to dip in and out of them as you see fit. Some of the sections are probably going to be quite dry, others more exciting. But as they say, one man's meat is another man's poison.

Here some words Ray shared at his blog:


"Over the last few weeks a number of people have been kind enough to help in lots of different ways. Some by contributing via this blog, some directly sending me thoughts and case studies, some Tweeting advice or just encouragement.

One key group have been kind enough to join a LinkedIn group and have reviewed pages and in some cases whole chapters of the book. There are so many people helping that all I will be able to do is to thank them, and when I next see them buy them a drink, but their help has been invaluable. Because the publisher for the book is Wiley, all the copyrights and such for the book and the contributions end up being owned by them, but there will be space in the book to list and thank the many helpers.

If you would like to join the group, sign-up in LinkedIn and you will be greatly welcomed." 


By Ray Poynter via The Future Place Blog

Digital Revolution? Kindle Ebooks Outsell Real Books on Christmas



Last month, Amazon’s Kindle broke sales records as it was once again a hot item to give this holiday season. When countless people turned on their new Christmas Kindles for the first time yesterday, what do you think was the first thing that they did? That’s right: they bought ebooks to fill up their Kindle hard drives. A lot of them.

In fact, those new Kindle owners broke a record. According to Amazon, yesterday marked the first time that more ebooks were sold than real books.



Did digital books finally defeat pen and paper this Christmas, though? Let’s think about this logically:

  • While not releasing any numbers, Amazon announced that more Kindle books were sold than real books through Amazon on Christmas day.
  • It would make sense that there would be elevated Kindle purchases on Christmas; people getting new Kindles as gifts would certainly want to make them useful by adding their favorite books.
  • It also makes sense that real book sales would be down. The Christmas shopping season would have passed and most people were concentrating on their families, not shopping, that day.

If we follow the logic trail, then Amazon’s announcement that the “Kindle is the most gifted item ever” makes perfect sense. Its announcement is also mostly PR smoke and mirrors. More people may have Kindles now than ever, but ebook sales still pale in comparison to the countless paper books that were sold this Christmas season.

We do have to give credit where it is due, though; it is another milestone for the constantly-growing e-commerce giant. Amazon sold over 9.5 million items (a staggering 110 items per second) at its peak on December 14th, yet another record. It’s also safe to say that the Kindle, even with new competitors entering its territory, will continue to dominate and grow as more and more people embrace digital prints from their favorite authors.

26/12/2009

Social Media Study by Universal McCann - Wave 4

Universal McCann’s WAVE research into the phenomenal growth of social media is the most robust data set in the world.

Affectionately called "Power to the People", this annual social media tracker has mapped key changes in consumer uptake and usage of social media platforms for the past four years.

Answers to 26 Esomar Questions to help research buyers of online samples

These questions will help market researchers consider issues which influence whether an online sampling approach is fit for purpose in relation to a particular set of objectives; for example whether an online sample will be sufficiently representative and unbiased. They will help the researcher ensure that they receive what they expect from Netquest as an online sample provider in Spain, Portugal, and Latin American countries.

Research News Article on MROCs


The latest edition of Research News features an in-depth article on the rise of MROCs in the Australian research industry. Latitude Insights has been highlighted as a leading boutique agency who specialises in online qualitative research, and there’s a number of quotes from Dianne Gardiner, Latitude Insight’s CEO, included. You can read the article online by clicking here. Our client, Zoe Aitken from Cadbury, was also interviewed for the article, in which she talks about the benefits of immediacy and the depth of insights generated from this methodology.

There’s an interesting discussion about community size and response rates with Vision Critical talking about communities of 6000, and Communispace having 300-500. But then later on in the article, Kris Hartvigsen talks about participation rates of 40-50%. This is where we differ – with smaller, more engaged communities. If we had a 50% participation in a discussion we’d start to look into why members were not as responsive as expected. We don’t want to have conversations with only half the people in the ‘room’.

The good news for all of the agencies who are leading in this area, that there is a strong expectation that online communities will take off in 2010, and will be driven by clients looking for new ways to talk to their customers. And we’re ready to get the conversations going.
 

 

DESCUBRIENDO A LOS COMPRADORES ONLINE - LATAM

Material de apoyo utilizado por el experto internacional Jasna Seguic, Gerente de Negocios y Servicios de Certifica - comScore Latam en el panel "DESCUBRIENDO A LOS COMPRADORES ONLINE ¿Quiénes son y donde están en Latinoamérica? ¿Qué está haciendo el retail para encontrarlos y presentarles su oferta?" que que se llevo a durante el III Congreso Latinoamericano de Comercio Electronico - Ecommerce LATAM 2009 (www.ecommercelatam.org) realizado el 2 de diciembre del 2009 en Hotel W de la ciudad de Santiago, Chile.

+10 Netnography Articles (some of them 100% free)




The Field Site as a Network: A Strategy for Locating Ethnographic Research
Field Methods, Vol. 21, No. 2. (1 May 2009), pp. 181-199.
by Jenna Burrell


The Virtual Ethnographer: Fieldwork in Distributed Electronic Environments
Field Methods, Vol. 12, No. 1. (1 February 2000), pp. 3-17.
by Karen Ruhleder

Beyond groups: seven pillars of peopled ethnography in organizations and communities
Qualitative Research, Vol. 8, No. 5. (1 November 2008), pp. 547-567.
by Japonica Brown-Saracino, Jessica Thurk, Gary A. Fine

Exploring cross-cultural ambivalence: a netnography of intercultural wedding message boards
Journal of Business Research, Vol. 58, No. 1. (January 2005), pp. 89-95.
by M. Nelson

Using Lexical Semantic Analysis to Derive Online Brand Positions: An Application to Retail Marketing Research
Journal of Retailing (11 April 2009)
by Praveen Aggarwal, Rajiv Vaidyanathan, Alladi Venkatesh

How e-communities extend the concept of exchange in marketing: An application of the motivation, opportunity, ability (MOA) theory
Marketing Theory, Vol. 5, No. 1. (1 March 2005), pp. 33-49.
by Thomas W. Gruen, Talai Osmonbekov, Andrew J. Czaplewski

Learning and Knowledge-building in Open-source Communities: A Social-experiential Approach
Management Learning, Vol. 37, No. 2. (1 June 2006), pp. 187-214.
by Andrea Hemetsberger, Christian Reinhardt

Digital Ethnography: An Examination of the Use of New Technologies for Social Research
Sociology, Vol. 42, No. 5. (1 October 2008), pp. 837-855.
by Dhiraj Murthy

Ethnographic Approaches to the Internet and Computer-Mediated Communication
Journal of Contemporary Ethnography, Vol. 38, No. 1. (1 February 2009), pp. 52-84.
by Angela C. Garcia, Alecea I. Standlee, Jennifer Bechkoff, Yan Cui

Connecting in Megaclasses: The Netnographic Advantage
Journal of Marketing Education, Vol. 29, No. 1. (1 April 2007), pp. 69-84.
by Norman J. O'Reilly, Ryan Rahinel, Mary K. Foster, Mark Patterson

The Wisdom of Consumer Crowds: Collective Innovation in the Age of Networked Marketing
Journal of Macromarketing, Vol. 28, No. 4. (1 December 2008), pp. 339-354.
by Robert V. Kozinets, Andrea Hemetsberger, Hope J. Schau

Netnography: An iPod Example


The term netnography has gained currency within the field of consumer research to refer to ethnographic research conducted on the Internet. It is a qualitative, interpretive research methodology that adapts the traditional, in-person ethnographic research techniques of anthropology to the study of the online cultures and communities formed through computer-mediated communications (“CMC”).

At least four aspects of online, computer-mediated, or virtual, interaction and community formation are distinct from their in-person, real life (“RL”), or face-to-face (“F2F”) counterparts. First is the textual, nonphysical, and social-cue-impoverished context of the online environment. Second is an unprecedented new level of access to the heretofore unobservable behaviors of particular interacting peoples. Third, while traditional interactions are ephemeral as they occur, online social interactions are often automatically saved and archived, creating permanent records. Finally, the social nature of the new medium is unclear as to whether it is a private or public space, or some unique hybrid. Ethnography adapts common participant-observation ethnographic procedures—such as making cultural entrée, data collection, analyzing data, and conducting ethical research—to these computer-mediated contingencies and provides sets of specific guidelines (see Kozinets 2002 for a detailed development of the process; see also Kozinets 2006).


Netnography: Ipod Example
View more presentations from Wikonsumer (Created By Angeline Close)


24/12/2009

How about MRFOC? (a much reduced focus on ‘communities’)


Do you sometimes feel – as I do – as if you are working in a different industry to everyone else? From what I read on the topic of ‘Custom Panels and Communities’, which is currently quite a lot, there seems to be a fixation with the term ‘community’. Much of the discussion consists of which acronym to use (MROC, etc.) to best describe what we mean by panels or communities or whatever, while in the research business, at least from my vantage point, the large majority of research clients are really saying something very different.

For the most part in my experience, the following are their primary expressed concerns and desires: In the current climate, they want to spend less or obtain more for the same research budget. They want a faster turnaround of results. They want to be able to easily find and gather feedback from their specific consumer or customer without paying a premium because their targets are low incidence. They want to engage and learn from their consumers and customers in a more continuous, deeper and respectful manner. Secondary desires include: Having their own research asset that is unique and customised PR’ing this effort as it sends the right message to the public at large and contributes to the client being perceived as listening to their consumers and customers Somewhere in most client organisations today there are discussions taking place regarding how to get closer to consumers and customers, and the use of communities might be one vehicle for doing so.

These discussions are occurring in the marketing, sales and CRM functions. There is also the desire to do as much as, or more than their competitors are doing in this area. The business of the market research department is different, though obviously related to these functions and initiatives. I find it difficult to see how market research agencies are appropriately positioned to advise on how to set up and manage online communities when the primary purpose for this type of initiative is typically (and rightly so) focused on marketing and promoting the client’s brand. While there is potentially some learning that can occur by observing the interaction of those who join a so-called community, some very important research considerations need to be kept in mind.


These include: Communities tend to have a very small number of participants (I have never seen a case study that indicates more than 100 or so are members and often times an even smaller number are the active ones) These participants are typically very skewed in their experience, being more ‘vocal’ and with a passion toward the client’s brand (typically good but sometimes bad) The interaction and output is by definition primarily unstructured, making the interpretation, relevance and application to real business issues difficult at best. This is not to say that there is not some value in creating and observing communities; however, it is important to recognise that these communities are not nearly as useful from a research perspective as a custom panel.

So what is a custom panel and how do I define and distinguish it from a community? Custom panels are built and maintained to provide a client with a research asset that can fulfill much of their current sample needs, depending on their research agendas, as well as enabling them to conduct more and other types of research that would otherwise not be possible or economical. Custom panels are recruited from a client’s consumer or customer databases, CRM systems, websites, etc. The profiling can be completely customised to the client’s needs reflecting the way in which they view their brands and business and segment their consumers or customers.

The look and feel can be branded or blinded, depending on the types of research desired, and a lot of focus and attention can be placed on engagement: the number of survey opportunities provided; the look and length of those surveys; the incentives offered; and finally the content published to those who participate, to illustrate to them how their feedback is used and importantly how their opinion compares with their peers. The most common obstacles identified by clients who have considered a custom panel are cost and ensuring that the activity level is consistent enough to sustain the panel.

To address these concerns head on, there is the option of opening their panel to other researchers (in non-competing categories) on a panel exchange platform, thereby maintaining a minimal level of activity whilst providing the client with compensation to help offset the set-up and maintenance costs associated with their panel. The reality of clients today is quite different than what some in the industry have described. I have even seen it suggested in a comment made on one blog that a community is quicker and cheaper than a custom panel.

I find this very difficult to understand and believe when clearly a community involves a considerable budget and a large commitment and buy-in from the client organisation not only on the part of market research but also on the part of marketing, product development and senior management. I would argue that neither a community or custom panel is a quick solution; however, it typically takes 4-6 weeks to set up a custom panel and this provides a more robust and lasting solution than a community.

A custom panel is more cost effective because of its broader uses, and it requires less involvement and investment on the part of the client. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying there is no use for communities, indeed I would recommend one to a client should this fit their needs, but I would suggest building a community within / as part of or as an extension of a custom panel. Bottom line – the large majority of clients, across all sectors I see, do not yet have their own custom panel, so this should keep me busy for quite some time to come!


Charles is co-founder and Managing Director of EasyInsites. Charles has an extensive, diverse and highly accomplished background in market research, having started his career 22 years ago in marketing sciences and analytics in the U.S. in key roles at BBDO, McKinsey, AC Nielsen, IRI, and Ipsos. In 2000, Charles moved into the online research space with key roles in both the U.S. and U.K. at Knowledge Networks, MarketTools, Greenfield/Ciao, comScore, and Research Now. Charles has substantial expertise in online research, online panels, research methods, advanced analytics, and syndicated data with extensive experience in the FMCG and Retail sectors. Charles is a regular presenter at industry conferences around the world including ESOMAR, MRS, AIMRI, ARF, CASRO, AMA, MRA and IIR. Charles has a Masters in Quantitative Methods from New York University and a Bachelors in Political Science from The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

New Market Researchers Networking Platform by Tom H. C. Anderson


Dear Next Gen Market Research LinkedIn Group Member 

Our group has a new site on Ning with added social media functionality (http://www.nextgenmr.com). Unlike our board here on LinkedIn there are no established site rules yet. We're considering this a beta test for now and rules will be added as necessary. 

Feel free to give it a try, create your own profile, a widget etc. 

Curious to hear what you think. Will be adding some new info etc. tot he site int he coming weeks. 

-
Tom H. C. Anderson (NGMR Mod)


Online brand reputation or social media listening software - a review of 26 tools


One of the defining features of 2009 for me personally is the power of Twitter to share ideas and tools with others. This post is a great example of this. I hope you find it useful. Please share your comments on which of these tools you have found effective or let us know about others that aren’t on the list.

The other defining feature for me in 2009, in the digital marketing world, is the growth in interest by marketers in how to listen to the conversations that customers have about their brands, particularly in social networks, forums and blogs.

Although I have been cataloguing online reputation management tools for 3 or 4 years now, I was conscious of the tremendous growth in the category in 2009 which meant that the list was no longer up-to-date.

Step forward Michael Brewer of Clerestorey who has compiled a more comprehensive directory of the leading tools to support his work in advising clients on monitoring their brands in social media.

1. Competitive landscape for reputation management tools


Reputation management tools have been categorised in different ways, for example
  • Listening platforms (used by Forrester in their review of 10 tools earlier in 2009)
  • Reputation or online management tools (ORM)
  • Brand defence tools
  • Social Media Monitoring or buzz tracking software
  • Consumer Generated Media (CGM) tracking
Within these areas, Michael has defined 7 different product categories for brand reputation management and monitoring software which you can see in the 7 colour coded sections of the table.



Category 1 - Wide scope analytical and reporting tools for all aspects of monitoring customer opinions and campaign effectiveness


Category 2 - Blog based influence assessment tools, designed to gain access to influential customers/commentators


Category 3 - PR and media management tools for reputation management and assessing opinion forming influence


Category 4 - Social media tracking and intervention including free tools


Category 5 - Fraud protection, security and threat detection


Category 6 - News media tracking


Category 7 - Social media within sales management - for identifying B2B prospects

I have highlighted the most widely used tools in each category with an asterisk.
2. Key distinguishing features of competitors in 2009
  • Scope and range of searching - number of sites, etc, real time or delayed
  • Sophistication of analysis tools, especially for language analysis; statistical or semantic
  • Flexibility of data presentation, quality of text/charts, dashboard fixed or user configured
  • Communication tools for issuing alerts, collaborative working, via email, text, IM
  • Integration with other applications, primarily web data tracking and CRM systems
  • Option or requirement for ‘human intervention’ by user and/or supplier
  • Charging model and implications for total cost of use
3. Upcoming competitive features in 2010 and beyond
  • Capability for image tracking, video, logo, photos etc
  • Integration with workflow, ERP systems, etc
  • Range of report formats, styles, configured as ‘products’
  • Chart and analysis integration - mapping, 3D, tag clouds, visualisation techniques, etc
  • Actionability -direct intervention in dialogue, development of advertising, web campaigns, etc
4. Notes on compilation
  • Twitter-only search and tracking tools have been excluded (eg Twendz, Twitratr)
  • Some suppliers include agency/consulting services as standard - eg Nielsen Buzz Metrics; Cymfony; Reputrace
  • Typical billing models include annual/monthly subscription, number of profiles tracked, volume of data collected, number of users

Continue reading here


5 Social Media Implications for Brands in 2010 (AdWeek)





Love it or hate it, social media (and its persistent title) will maintain its grip on consumers – and brand marketing discussions – until it evolves into a different form and role in our digital lives.  On that note, Sienna Farris, Director of Social Media at Strawberry Frog, spoke with AdWeek about 5 key social media implications that brands will need to respond to in 2010.  Recognizing that predictions don’t hold a candle against the fast pace at which technology changes and renders them dated, these are more of a call to action and awareness, and less of a definite prediction.


The 5 key implications:
1. Social media marketing will finally transition from “nice to have” to “must have”
2. Location-based social networking is here to stay
3. Experimental social media budgets are key
4. The division between the virtual world and the physical world will continue to blur
5. Crowd sourcing will turn social media into a direct sales channel

iQ 2.0 - Wikonsumer & Netizen Culture

Exploring innovations in consumer & social media research

iQ 2.0 es un espacio para difundir y compartir soluciones relacionadas a la cultura 'Wikonsumer & Netizen', facilitando la creación de Capital Social 2.0 a investigadores y empresas relacionadas con la innovación desde el conocimiento del consumidor.

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