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5) Video marketing on
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Northwestern Technologie Social Media PresentationDanielle Jessee
A presentation about the benefits of social media marketing. Details and statistics about how social media can increase sales, customer loyalty and brand awareness.
My Final Project report for Leeds Metropolitan University, UK. Our research was based on Quota Sampling of 300 Students across Leeds City for Understanding whether or not it would be viable for promoting University Courses through Social Media Websites (Web 2.0)
This document summarizes the key findings of a 2011 social media marketing industry report. The report is based on a survey of over 3,300 marketers. Some of the main findings include:
1) Marketers are most interested in learning how to measure the impact of social media marketing and integrate their various social media activities.
2) Most marketers spend 6 or more hours per week on social media marketing, with over a third spending 11+ hours.
3) Generating business exposure is the top benefit of social media marketing according to 88% of respondents.
4) Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, and blogs are the most commonly used social media tools.
5) Video marketing on
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The document provides an overview of the Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe) for applying Lean and Agile practices at an enterprise scale. It discusses how SAFe addresses the need for new approaches to software development that can scale for large organizations. SAFe is based on Lean principles and emphasizes continuous delivery through Agile teams and release trains, alignment across teams and programs, and transparency. Implementing SAFe through practices like these can help organizations accelerate delivery, increase productivity, and improve software quality.
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The document discusses branded content and provides examples. It defines branded content as the fusion of entertainment and brand information delivered in a non-traditional way. It also notes that branded content represents the shift from interruptive advertising to brand engagement. An example is provided of Gatorade's "Everything to Prove" branded content series that followed NFL rookies' journeys, integrating Gatorade organically and positioning it as a sports nutrition leader.
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The document provides a brief history of branded content from event/TV show sponsorship (BC 1.0), to product placement (BC 2.0), to content creation (BC 3.0). It then discusses what the next phase (BC 4.0) could entail, describing how a brand becomes "alive" through the energy and engagement of its community/fans. It uses Coke Studio in India and Pakistan as an example of a brand that has become "BrandALIVE" through various online and offline community-building initiatives.
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Social media has become a major factor in determining reputation as everyone uses platforms to take positions on issues and drive agendas through organized campaigns. However, the essential elements of building a good reputation such as transparency, engagement, and evolution will continue to be important. In the future, advertising, public relations, and social media campaigns will integrate more fully rather than operate separately.
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This document discusses the future of content and how it is consumed. It notes that content experiences are shifting from solitary consumption to being more people-centric. It also discusses how the role of gatekeepers is changing and influence is becoming more collaborative within communities. The document suggests content will move from a model focused on protecting sharing to one that is more content-centric and experiences-driven.
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1) Data is now ubiquitous, accessible in real-time from many sources.
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3) Consumers make decisions through complex influences from both online and offline sources.
Traditional research methods are struggling to keep up with these changes. New approaches are needed to gather insights from diverse online and real-world communities.
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Newsroom of the Future - R. Sukumar, Mint at the IndiaSocial Summit 2012India Social
The document discusses the future of newsrooms and how Mint Newspaper is adapting. It saw a 35% increase in page views to its Livemint.com website on March 30th, with 24% of traffic from Facebook and Twitter and 25% of users landing directly on a specific column page. The newspaper is focusing on delivering content across multiple devices, social media engagement, advertising to amplify stories, and becoming more web-first through improvements to technology, software, processes and behaviors.
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The document discusses the need for brands of the future to evolve around a new mental model given the social revolutions caused by digital technologies and social media. It notes that brands are still rooted in assumptions of the past and resist fundamental change. The future will see brands shift from being centrally controlled to community owned, managing communities instead of just being managed, and existing seamlessly in both physical and virtual spaces. Brands will need to create more meaningful experiences with fewer resources.
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Social media has become a major factor in determining reputation as everyone uses platforms to take positions on issues and drive agendas through organized campaigns. However, the essential elements of building a good reputation such as transparency, engagement, and evolution will continue to be important. In the future, advertising, public relations, and social media campaigns will integrate more fully rather than operate separately.
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This document discusses the future of content and how it is consumed. It notes that content experiences are shifting from solitary consumption to being more people-centric. It also discusses how the role of gatekeepers is changing and influence is becoming more collaborative within communities. The document suggests content will move from a model focused on protecting sharing to one that is more content-centric and experiences-driven.
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This document outlines six rules for harnessing chaos in content marketing. The rules are: 1) Content is king but attention will be empress, as virality and attention quotient are critical. 2) Content needs to be repurposed like adjustable items. 3) Content must appeal to feelings over just information. 4) Content discovery is an emerging industry as search and social media change how people find information. 5) Branding is now about reputation, not just recall of ads. 6) Sponsoring content and contests can raise brands by engaging with culture instead of just demographics. The overall message is that old advertising models are challenged and content must be repurposed and appeal to emotions to gain attention in this new environment.
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Trends in insights and data include:
1) Data is now ubiquitous, accessible in real-time from many sources.
2) Social media allows new ways for people to negotiate culture and share opinions.
3) Consumers make decisions through complex influences from both online and offline sources.
Traditional research methods are struggling to keep up with these changes. New approaches are needed to gather insights from diverse online and real-world communities.
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This document discusses social CRM, which involves using social media and user generated content to understand customers better and enhance customer engagement, experience, and relationships. It describes how social media is digital, proactive, networked, visible, real-time, and ubiquitous. It explains that social software adoption at enterprises starts with using social tools to solve problems but can expand to social learning and innovation. The document outlines how social media supports all aspects of the customer relationship process from acquisition to retention to enhancement. It presents social CRM as understanding customers through social listening, engaging customers on social networks, collaborating with customers, and measuring customer feedback and business outcomes.
India Social Media Report Edition 2 by Blogworks in assoc with NM Incite (A N...India Social
India Social Media Report, Edition 2, is compiled from responses of 444 brands/ organisations and Agencies, who participated in a detailed online survey conducted in November 2010, to understand the nature and level of social media usage by businesses and brands in India. The report presents actionable insights on social media trends and spends for brands and organisations. Copies can be ordered by writing to report@blogworks.in.
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Social media and marketing in India: a report from the India Social Summit 2010
1. Social media and marketing in India: a report from the India
Social Summit 2010
Preeti Chaturvedi
Warc Exclusive
January 2011
2.
Title: Social media and marketing in India: a report from the India Social Summit 2010
Author(s): Preeti Chaturvedi
Source: Warc Exclusive
Issue: January 2011
Social media and marketing in India: a report from the India
Social Summit 2010
Preeti Chaturvedi
Over 40% of brands and organisations in India are spending more than 10% of their marketing and communication budget on
digital media. Within that, 31% of marketers are spending 10% of digital spend on social media; 11% are heavy spenders with
more than 30% of digital budgets going to social media. And 90% of brands and organisations in India have already engaged
in social media initiatives.
These were some of the findings of the India Social Media Report Edition 2, released by Blogworks and NMIncite (a
Nielsen/McKinsey company) at the India Social Summit 2010, held in December in New Delhi. The report was compiled from
the responses of 444 brands, organisations and agencies who participated in a detailed online survey.
Speaking about his experiences with the social media research report, Karthik Nagarajan, Director- Online Division at The
Nielsen Company India, said: "The findings of the research confirm the fact that social media is no more a concept in India but
something that brands are investing real time and money into, as we speak. There is an overwhelming acceptance of the fact
that there are huge gains from this medium if used correctly, and that is shown in the structured approach that brands are
adopting - in deployment as well as measurement."
Over the course of the Summit, panelists discussed the impact of changing media vehicles on society, branding in the new
digital age, assessment of return on investment, mobile social networking and the increasing deployment of social networking
platforms for B2B marketing. They claimed that social media had largely been accepted as an important channel for brand
reputation management and sales.
Yet marketers' obsession with measuring returns on social media investment was quite evident, and a persistent theme
throughout the summit. The other debate was whether social media had become part of the mainstream. Other controversial
themes also emerged during the various panel discussions.
One of the most "tweetable quotes" of the summit was by management consultant Gautam Ghosh who, while commenting on
the social media policies of various organisations in India, commented, "You cannot be social on the outside and anti-social on
the inside." He was referring to the stringent blogging and online communication guidelines which organisations in India had
laid down for their employees even as they continued to market their own products and services through online communities.
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Another noticeable trend which was conspicuous throughout the conference was the sweeping presence and popularity that
Facebook has come to enjoy in India.
Branding is not selling
One of the key focus areas of the conference was active branding through social media outreach programmes. Facebook's
India head, Kirthika Reddy, argued the case for putting people at the centre of all social media campaigns. Case studies from
brands which have used a "social" marketing approach were then presented to the audience.
Abdul Khan, AVP-Tata Teleservices, India's leading telecoms operator, showcased the approach to branding its DOCOMO
service. An integrated approach was used to popularise the brand which went beyond 'fans' and 'likes'.
The campaign bagged six of BBC/Campaign India's Digital Media Awards in 2009. The organisation created a 3G Forum
which had immense participation from members, building a large repository of 3G knowledge. Tatadocomo.com touched 2.6
million unique visitors in November 2010 and recorded 9 million page views in same period. My3GLife, the brand used in the
campaign, soon became one of the most popular tags on Twitter in India.
The fact that such online campaigns are driving offline media in India came through as the panellists observed that most of
these offline programmes could not be imagined if a corresponding online programme was not there to support the activity.
Reddy mentioned another interesting case from the Delhi Traffic Police Authority, which had used Facebook to deal with
vehicles in violation of traffic rules (for example, cars parked in 'no parking' areas). Facebook members posted pictures of
vehicles in violations and voiced other concerns - an initiative which has led to a substantial increase in disciplinary action and
has resulted in an image makeover for the Delhi Police. It now has more than 42,000 fans on Facebook.
The trend towards social media was further corroborated by the Blogworks/NM Incite report. It showed that 77% had come to
manage their social media engagements in-house, thereby recognising the significance of this department in the larger
organisational framework. This was an increase from 2009, when only 55% of the organizations had in-sourced social media
activities.
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Q. What's the nature of your brand/organisation's social media engagement programme?
However, when the discussion turned towards whether social media programs were influencing product innovations for
brands, Santosh Desai, MD and CEO of Future Brands, strongly disputed the idea. He felt that the nature of social media was
conversational, which made any research-based innovations originating in social media campaigns difficult. "In social media,
the nature of feedback is conversational. Therefore, brands find it difficult because they are used to more formatted
responses, and social media feedback cannot be categorised as the hard nuggets of data that marketers are used to" Desai
said.
Social media in B2B marketing
The panel turned towards an examination of how social media is being deployed by organisations in a B2B context. What
followed was a series of interesting sessions on how companies are leveraging platforms like LinkedIn and Slideshare to
influence their stakeholders. Three predominant themes that emerged from the session were: how social networking sites
could be used for people positioning, change management and crisis management.
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Picture shows: The B2B Panel at India Social 2010
From left to right: Gautam Ghosh, Management Consultant and Blogger at Gautamblogs.com; Prem Kumar Aparanji,
Evangelist - Social CRM, Customer Solutions Practice, Cognizant; Amit Ranjan, Co-founder, SlideShare; Hari V Krishnan,
Country Head, LinkedIn India; Sanjay Sahay, Global Head, Digital Marketing, Infosys; Gaurav Mishra (Moderator), Director -
Social Media-Asia, MSL Group
In his keynote address, Hari Krishnan, Country Head at LinkedIn India, explained how, in a B2B context, it is relevant data as
opposed to large quantities of data which facilitates decision-making. Many speakers talked about the challenges involved in
making social media strategies and insights operational. Sanjay Sahay, Global Head of Digital Marketing at Infosys (India's
leading IT and IT-enabled services firm) observed, "It was in the year 2005 that people first talked about blogging as a means
of idea-sharing. But it took us two years before we could take our blogs out in the market. It takes time to operationalise an
insight. Today, we have more than 600 bloggers from the organisation who are blogging actively and sharing their thoughts."
Krishnan revealed that in the past year the LinkedIn B2B network in India had grown over 100%. When LinkedIn India was
incorporated in November 2009, it had 3.4 million members. It now has more than 8 million. The growth is a clear indication
that B2B networking is gaining momentum in India, and this finding was also evident in the research conducted by Blogworks
and NMIncite.
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Q. What's the nature of your brand/organisation's social media engagement programme?
The panellists then reflected on how the very nature of social media programmes made them particularly suitable to business-
to-business marketing, because what matters in this context is the quality of leads and real meaningful conversations.
Organisations are already using networks like LinkedIn, Slideshare and Yahoo Answers for thought leadership by positioning
their experts among their target audience.
Monetisation: It's always been about money
The conference then turned towards answering the critical question for marketers: is online behavior influencing offline
purchase decisions? Yes, said Dmitry Shevelenko, Online Sales Launch Team, Facebook India, an opinion which Anurag
Batra, CEO at publisher Exchange4Media, seconded when he added, "The time for monetising communities is now."
Speakers criticised marketers' obsession with numbers which they felt was undermining the true benefits of social media -
namely, long-term branding and customer relationship management. They criticised organisations that were obsessively
focused on increasing the number of 'fans' and 'likes' on Facebook without weaving such followings into any meaningful
programme.
The panel stressed on how it is imperative to focus on conversations as opposed to focusing on numbers. According to
Manish Vij, Chief Business Officer at web development company Smile Interactive, felt that the term 'social media' itself was an
oxymoron because people associate the word 'media' with a number of transactions. The panellists then discussed how the
most successful products are those which people are ready to associate with publicly. They observed that the key to a
successful marketing strategy is to create products that empower consumers.
Nevertheless, it was obvious from the research data that most social media activities in India were sales-focused. Marketing
(78%), reputation management (71%) and lead generation (48%) are the top three purposes for which brands and
organisations are using social media in India.
Microsoft's Regional Director, Jaspreet Bindra talked about entertainment and devices division, Microsoft India, said that social
commerce is all about putting a social context to a brand's online and offline marketing. He talked about their Xbox campaign in
India from the previous year which was done totally on digital. "Now we are doing 100 per cent activities only on social media,"
added Bindra.
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Bindra also talked about how the boom in social media in India was not confined to an increased participation in online
communities. India was becoming home to a lot of promising community based startups like Flipkart and Slideshare.
The discussion also focused on the growing ecommerce market in India and how it could be aided by social media campaigns.
Panellists reflected on how the size of the ecommerce industry in India was in the region of US$250 million. The common
sentiment was that since in India, cash was the main mode of payment, the Western models of cashless online transactions
would probably not be successful in the Indian market. The overall opinion was that in the Indian market, an integration of
online and offline approach would work best. This is a feature that Indian startups like Flipkart have implemented by giving
their buyers options like cash payment on delivery.
Mobile Social Networking
On the mobile social networking panel, Rajiv Kumar, CEO of Indian mobile platform RockeTalk, shared his insights into user
behaviour in India. He revealed that most of the users of his mobile social network were initially from the smaller towns and
had uploaded over 100,000 videos onto the site already.
That mobile and online social networks cannot be viewed in isolation from each other was obvious in the inputs that came from
Harish Gandhi, Executive Director India, Canaan Partners. He talked about the 20% desktop users at the top of the pyramid
and how they are pivotal for creating the content which is then used by the huge number of mobile subscribers in India.
Key trends
Rajesh Lalwani, founder of Blogworks, summarized his learnings from his research and consultancy in social media in 2010 in
the following words, "Social media is clearly getting a lot of mindspace from business. Having seen the impact in their pilots,
marketers are clearly working towards critical mass with increased spends."
He shared a number of key trends in India's social space in 2010. These were:
l A market in transition, moving towards strategic interventions
l A sharp focus on the customer - 92% of brands are using social media to engage customers, compared with 79% in the
previous research
l Only 23% of social media engagement is being outsourced - this could be a sign of early usage; interestingly,
programmes developed by agencies and third-party consultants show greater breadth
l The arrival of the sales department in social media programmes
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