BIZTECHBUZZ in the world of social, cognitive, IoT and startups

Category: adoption (Page 23 of 25)

I am a Serial Social Addict. Harness your social network!

OK.  I admit it.  I tweet multiple times a day, I have 2 blogs, and I love social.  My passion is reaching customers and having them connect with my company in new and smart ways.  As such, I experiment, learn from my peers, and measure these new tools for marketing.   As an executive at IBM, I have found that these Social 2.0 techniques drive down costs and increase revenue.

IBM’s 2012 CEO Survey revealed that 57% of CEO’s identified social business as a top priority and more than 73% are making significant investments to draw insights into data.  And more than 1,700 chief marketing officers reveal 82% plan to increase their use of social media over the next three to five years.

This shift of consumer to business networking, known as “Social Business” has become the next big challenge for organizations which are quickly learning that social networks are no longer the new water cooler but rather their new production line, a place where employees, partners and clients connect to share vast amounts of knowledge. The big winners will go those who harness the ability to capture and analyze the knowledge their social network creates and share it throughout the business to accelerate innovation, out-market competitors and remove boundaries internally and externally.

Consider the Social Graph.  A Social graph is a graph that depicts personal relations of internet users   Understanding the connections of your clients helps you see the networks, where clients are isolated and where connections can drive revenue.

social graph

For example, chief marketing officers (CMO) are looking to gain insights from both internal and external data from sources like Facebook, Twitter and public forums to react more swiftly to customer trends and build their brands.  HR Leaders are looking to build communities to improve recruiting and talent management services.

By interacting with the video game, students can make real-life business situation decisions. They can see the results of their decisions right away, and if they make a mistake, it’s much more private than “failing” in front of a classroom of their colleagues. Because a love of gaming is shared around the world, professors have told us the game can help to bridge cultural barriers   While it’s too soon to measure the full implications, there’s a new business environment emerging.

We cannot ignore the changing group dynamics and social implications. In fact, we should tap into the most innovative ideas to redefine the fundamental nature of educating the market.  Just as games present us with situations that invite players to make choices, consider the advantage of using graphics and decision-making steps of games in business. Using Social Media, we could allow decision makers to immerse themselves in the real-world simulations, judging cause and effect before making decisions.

The arrival of Social Business has created an emerging battleground for IT vendors. For example, financial analyst firm CLSA recently cited enterprise social software as one of the top tech trends in 2013 and Forrester Research reports that the market opportunity for social software will exceed $6 billion by 2016.

Happy Mother’s Day to my “non social media” mom! Can you share your MOM stories?

Today I want to celebrate my mom.

I know you may argue but my mom is the best in the world.

  • She loved me regardless of what I accomplished just because.
  • She gave me encouragement in just the right doses.
  • She supported my efforts but showed me how to improve my weaknesses
  • She listened to me.  really listened to me!
  • She is my mom AND my friend.   But Mom first.
  • She taught me all the “selfs” — self confidence, self reliance, self esteem
  • She showed me fun!

Now, she won’t read this as she is not a social media mom but I love her just the same  (  smile!).

I’d love to hear about your mom.  Tell me why she was GREAT!

mom and i

Mobile first. Social Always. Mind the data.

I am here today in Luzern, Switzerland at the Big IBM event with over 1200 companies talking about Mobile and Social!

luzern

We have a special Digital Media Room to assist clients getting started with Social.   Social has a STRONG ROI component which I find is very appealing to our Swiss clients.   And the transformation itself is getting noticed in how it is changing the way we work. Did you know that 83% of gen y has joined a social network and $200B in mobile money transfers by 2015?

IBM believes in this transformation so strongly that Social Business has been a key enabler of IBM’s legendary business transformation and global integration.   IBM is the most prolific user of enterprise social technologies.

Today, more than 400,000 IBM employees use IBM social technologies, including Connections, IBM’s social business platform. As a result, more than 130,000 communities have been developed, 842,000 files shared globally have generated more than 22.1 million downloads. Every day, IBM generates 50 million instant message chats.   IBMs recent $1.3B acquisition of Kenexa  brings relevant data and expertise into the hands of business leaders within every functional department (marketing, HR, sales, product development).

After the keynote, I’ll post our key points for this powerful transformation!

Social Selling — Why is it important?

Social media is used everywhere and is crucial to think through as a sales avenue:

  1. 1 of 5 minutes is spent online
  2. 3 in 5 IT decision makers learn about new products
  3. 57% of decision made before Sales contact
Social selling drives (per Aberdeen Group, Collaborate, Listen, Contribute: How Best-in-Class Sales Teams Leverage Social Selling, Nov 2012)
  1. 30% more team attainment of sales quota
  2. 21% more reps achieve quota
  3. 15% increase in customer renewal rate

Who is a Social Seller?   The social seller doesn’t just use social tools — they have a different approach.   They are:

  1. A Trust-builder
  2. An Idea challenger
  3. A Customer Advocate
  4. A Conversation Partner
  5. THE Go-to Person
sales quote

Social is Personal. My story. It is powerful.

The power of social is everywhere.

But no where as relevant than in personal life.

My dad was placed in the hospital for emergency brain surgery.   I got the news while in Vegas, and booked the first flight out.  I had to wait for the plane for over 6 hours — hoping to get home in time.

I was going crazy in the wait — and really needed to talk to someone.

So I did something I usually don’t do — I posted something very personal on Facebook about my dad.  Much to my surprise, within minutes I had response from friends all over the world.   The outpouring was overwhelming — over 500 comments plus dozens of calls.

  • I had calls from friends that I had not heard from since High School.
  • Prayers poured in
  • Comments of encouragement came in texts, comments, tweets
  • And I didn’t feel alone

No one gave up either — days and weeks went by ….. and the love flowed in through twitter, facebook and beyond.

I talk about the power of social in business — and the power there is very strong and real.  But this personal impact — priceless.

Social Tip of the Week! Turn off Retweets!

Do you follow somebody on twitter who publishes great content but also tends to retweet anything (like anyone who thanks them), thus making it really hard for you to spot the interesting pieces in the mass of tweets? Than try this useful function: To turn off a person’s retweets, go on their profile, click on the little person icon next to the following button and select “Turn off retweets”. One exception: This only works for retweets sent by using the retweet button, not for those with RT at the beginning of the tweet.

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