Using social media to improve company productivity#

Business Week article on how IBM is using Social Networking tools to improve employee internal communication and knowledge sharing.

Many companies are banning employees use of social networking software such as Facebook. When you look at what companies such as IBM and others are doing you can see the longer term strategic advantage they will have.

5/25/2008 10:12:28 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

PM - citizen outreach programme#

Gordon Brown is sure to get more 'brick-bats' that plaudits for using YouTube to ask for video questions. Shame. To my mindthis is a great initiative. I feel it works on multiple levels. I have never met him personally but relatives of mine (not labour supporters and members of the public) have said he is a very nice person to meet and talk to. YouTube maybe less adversorial and suit his communication style better. Equally it gives him a direct contact with his 'customers'. What a great way to get feedback on some of the issues the electorate feels unsettled about. Opinion polls and research by others can never replace hard-wired feedback. Policians do hold regular clinics for constituents but being in the Westminister Village does cut you off from reality. YouTube sould help reconnect.

So what lessons can business learn?

  • Too many senior executives live in the 'boardroom bubble' where they become detached from the daily issues facing their customers. they see and hear 'massaged' and presented data from their management team. In some cases the boards attitude means that the 'messangers' present the data in the most favourable way possible. YouTube feedback could help the management team engage better with customers. What are the hot issues? What are management doing to address them?
  • It is a great 'dip-stick' research tool. Instead of the annual satisfaction surveys that are virtually out of date before being presented why not use YouTube as a form on ongoing 'sentiment' checking?
  • Why not extend the principal to employees? Look at research. How many times does it say management is 'out of touch' with employees? Employees do not understand senior managements strategy or their personal role in it? That they are de-motivated as they feel disengaged?Could a YouTube type initiative but behind the 'firewall' help? 
5/19/2008 4:02:46 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Social media explained...#

If you are still coming to terms with Web 2.0 and Social Media check out these great online slide resources...

What is social media? and The evolution of communication

Social media metrics

What should companies be doing? Taking at least 10% of their customer services, PR and marketing budgets and putting them 'on (the) line' to engage in the ongoing conversation. Ensuring all employees are fully up to speed on using social media (infact many are already doing so) to improve internal and external communications.

 

 

 

4/7/2008 10:18:08 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Corporate strategy on social media#

Interesting survey done by Clearswift about HR's handling of employees use of web 2.0 and social media technologies.

Although based upon US data it shows that almost 1/4 of HR professionals do not understand web 2.0 and social media and leave that to IT. It seems that almost 2/3rds of companies ban employees using social media sites.

The issue for companies is this:

  • If employees are not allowed to use social media tools who is monitoring the internet for a companies brand reputation or being allowed to join in the active conversations?

There is a wider issue at play here. All the recent research shows that employee engagement in the UK is poor. Employees feel that managers fail to communicate with them. They do not know or understand the companies vision and mission. 

The result? Upto a 1/3rd of employees would not recommend or promote the company and a large percentage would actually say negative things! 

Companies that are banning social media use by employees during work time do so with the best of intentions but just what are they risking?

 

 

12/8/2007 10:30:04 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Mobile education - for kids (and parents too)#

 

 

Sesame Street are starting to produce weekly 5 minute podcasts. They will be created from previous programming or specially produced. They are doing this as a result of feedback from parents who wanted mobile educational media content for their children to use at any time when out and about from the home. The first 26 episodes will focus on letters of the alphabet to help build children's literacy skills.

 

Business organisations would do well to look at the site as it is an excellent example of the use of personal video players and ‘smart’ phones as a very cost effective way of educating and informing a mobile sales force and other remote home workers.

 

 

9/20/2007 6:50:11 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [1]  |  Trackback

 

Employee engagement and motivation#

CHA has just published a report called, ‘Talking in the dark’, looking at what factors limit management communications.

 

An earlier study by them showed engaged employees were more productive, self motivated and motivated others. To become engaged employees have to understand an organisations mission and strategic goals, the plan, their role in this, what they have to do to achieve that and their reward for success.

 

Is that so hard? No but with the statistics below is it any wonder so many companies are less productive that then should be?

 

Middle managers:

 

  • 36% don’t understand the purpose and plan of the organisation
  • 60% don’t understand their own and their teams role in achieving the plan
  • 70% say the company does not celebrate success

 

Some other notable statistics:

 

  • 21% look forward to going to work (does this really mean 79% are de-motivated!)
  • 25% say they have time to do a proper job (does this really mean 75% are falling below TQM standards?)
  • 33% say their efforts are acknowledged (67% do not?)
  • 48% of managers do NOT think it is their job to communicate
  • 35% of managers do NOT share explanations of the plan to their teams
  • 52% of managers do NOT understand the role of communication to help solve issues

 

Note: The above scores are for private and public sector combined. When

         analysed separately the public sector satisfaction scores are less than then

         private sector.

 

What seems to be the issue?

 

Middle managers consistently rate their relationships and communication with their own teams as being higher (but this is self rating – wonder what their teams would say?) than that from their own senior management. The feeling by middle management is that they are isolated. Why hold staff meetings if all you get are awkward questions you cannot answer?

 

How do managers say they want help from senior managers?

 

·         51% - tell me clearly the organisations plan so I can understand and pass on

 

·         50% - give me the time to do it

 

·         41% - give me a feedback mechanism to senior managers for employee

               comments

 

·         25% - coach me to be a more confident communicator

 

·         24% - give me a messaging/Q&A communications toolkit so I can handle

               employee feedback.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My personal observation.

 

This latest research leaves me with a terrible feeling of déjà vu.

 

Survey after survey over the last 20+ years shows the same key issue. Was it ever thus? Senior management and employees disengaged from each other and middle management seemingly caught in the middle.

 

What a fantastic opportunity!

 

If UK PLC is performing as well as it is with what the surveys suggest is in effect half of its work force de-motivated and disengaged just what would be the upside performance if another 10% or 20% of the team were brought on board?

 

What we need is a clear message, delivered highly effectively with a clear feedback process loop. Let’s call it 360 Engagement Communication!

 

In our work with senior managers on communication strategies and programmes we always complete a formal brief. What is the message and who are the target audience are two of the questions we ask? It is usually quite hard to get senior management to articulate this in a single agreed document. If we asked each board member to write down the company mission and what each departments key goal is in helping to achieve that I bet we would get multiple variations.

 

Maybe we should not be surprised. The board members have been appointed because they are smart, decisive and have their own minds. The only problem is that the rest of the workforce is not mind readers. They need it spelt out so they can see the big picture, the overall objectives and then understand how they can personally become engaged.

 

The new mantra for Corporate UK should be engagement – employees and customers. The tool - cascade communication

5/11/2007 2:13:53 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Attracting and retaining talent - keeping employees happy#

I noticed a recent article in ZDNet about Google and their appointment of a Chief Culture Office. Attracting and retaining high performing employees is critical for every organisations success. Google is no exception.

What interested me most was the comment made on employee happiness. Google have been surveying staff for over 5 years now.

To quote Stacy Sullivan, Chief Culture Officer and HR Director at Google:

“We're trying to figure out how committed people are to the company, what's causing that commitment level to be high or low, what makes a difference to them and their management and direct managers. The results ended up being centred a lot on career development and growth. So career development is more of a focus than giving more stock options or increasing salaries.

This reflects the findings in other published research. See this post.

So besides career development and personal growth (and a good salary and perks) what really helps employees to remain fully engaged and motivated?

·         Open upward and downward communication within the organisation

·         Understanding clearly how their role helps the company achieve its vision

·         Trust in management – what they say and do

5/4/2007 9:42:02 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Customer engagement with CRM deployment#

A recent report from McKinsey, the management consultants, looked at customer service and how frontline engagements can make or break customer relations.

 

The report highlights the findings from Forrester Research in 2005 that only 10% of companies surveyed agreed strongly that the CRM project had met business expectations.

 

Yet academic research and business analysis has shown consistently that enhancing the breadth and depth of customer relationships converts into an improved P&L. It is much more cost effective to up-sell and cross-sell than it is to acquire new customers. The cost of acquisition in many industries means it takes time, sometimes years, to achieve pay-back, With churn in early years many companies are spending money on winning customers who they lose before they regain any of the costs.

 

What McKinsey discusses is the importance of creating a ‘spark’ to turn a sceptical or negative customer into a committed loyal one. When a customer is unhappy with the service or product there is a ‘moment of truth’. If handled well the negativity can be reversed and an evangelist created. It is critical employees feel able put the customer ahead of the businesses or their own agenda. Other research has shown that most people do not complain but those that do often have extensive contacts. They will use this social network of contacts to relate their experience – good or bad.  

 

Research on the European banking industry showed the following depending on if the customer considered they had either a positive or negative experience of the bank addressing their issues:

 

 

Action taken by customer

% acting if positive  

% acting if negative

Did nothing

13

28

Bought more product

58

-

Bought new product

29

-

Bought less product

-

14

Changed bank

-

15

Stopped buying product

-

20

Bought product elsewhere

-

23

 

Whilst over a quarter of people ‘do nothing’ when upset they will probably tell people in their social network about their issues. But others will reduce spend and tell people!

 

McKinsey have estimated the ‘wallet gap’ in spending is 20% from positive to negative.

 

Whilst CRM deployments improve business efficiency especially routine processing tasks they often have little positive effect on the emotional engagement with customers.

 

Customer emotional engagement is a human-to-human action. The engagement happens at multiple levels: thoughts and feelings, values and beliefs and personal and emotional needs.

 

At one level this is company cultural issue. The core philosophy of the company has to be aligned to re-enforce the attitudes and behaviour of staff when interfacing to customers.

 

How can this by achieved?

 

McKinsey’s identify 4 areas to ensure employees are able to ensuring positive ‘moments of truth’ for a customer:

 

·         Employee self empowerment to put customers needs above all else

·         Positive outlook

·         Empathetic awareness of themselves and customers

·         Selfless approach

 

They also identify what they call ‘environmental levers’. These are the support and personal development infrastructure that management provides to employees

 

  • Create clear meaning and clarity of purpose for employee role
  • Opportunities to improve capabilities
  • Reward infrastructure
  • Visible and active leadership (‘walk the talk’)

 

Comment:

 

Looking at previous research on employee engagement we see there is a big delta between the ideal as expressed above and the reality with many companies. A large percentage of employees do not feel engaged or communicated with, do not trust their managers and so will not recommend their company to others.

 

If employees are not positive about things how can they even start to help a negative customer become positive at a ‘moment of truth’? It just will not happen. A CRM investment must be matched by a customer centric culture, attitude and behaviours or the ROI will just not happen.

 

 

 

 

Disclosure:

 

Like many people I was caught up with CRM in the 1990’s. At the time I was working for a Fortune 500 Technology company and trying to implement a business improvement project which entailed evaluating marketing, PR and sales tools and processes across multiple business divisions and markets in Europe. Corporate had decided to consolidate media buying, branding and agencies worldwide. I was tasked with ‘selling the idea’ and then rolling it out across Europe working with 4 autonomous business divisions and their subsidiary offices across Europe. The whole programme was to be self-funded from savings made in ‘unnecessarily duplicated’ local agency fees and locally generated campaigns. With almost 100 local agencies, 4 divisional marketing directors and VPs it was like trying to herd cats. From Corporate HQ it looked so simple. Just appoint a single ad agency, select a single CRM vendor and get ROI from reducing 100’s of agencies to a handful.

 

I attacked the assignment with relish and was helped by reporting to the European President and being on the main board as Director of Communications. Fair to say that unravelling the whole inter-connected mass and choosing the select few agencies and a single CRM platform was hard. After 2 years it seemed we were well on the way to achieving our ROI goals before strategic business divestments changed the objectives. One big issue was we had largely failed to consult our customer and channel partners. This led to some real disappointments and expensive re-development. In hindsight we would have probably failed to achieve the targeted ROI and enhance the customer experience.

 

I then spent 5 years working for organisations either directly or via software vendors/System Integrators on CRM deployment projects. My experience is that most that were failing to achieve the ROI expected were due to a failure to properly map external customer expectations and needs onto the system design. They were secondary (if considered at all) to the business process and IT needs.

   

 

 

4/28/2007 8:57:50 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [1]  |  Trackback

 

Employee happiness and motivation#

The City and Guilds annual Happiness Index survey for the UK has just been published.

 

Results:

 

  • 32% of all employees unhappy
  • North overall happier than South (Scotland 24% v London 5%)
  • North East happiest region in England
  • Florists and hairdresses happiest. Office workers less so. HR people least happy
  • Delta between what managers think about employee motivation and what employees themselves say

 

Area

Manager

Employee

Money solves employee unhappiness

26%

17%

Skills are being under-used

14%

27%

Training is at right level

69%

57%

 

  • Top 6 contributions to happiness (in ranked order)
    • Being appreciated
    • Financial rewards
    • Feel doing worthwhile
    • Flexible working conditions
    • Scope for progression
    • Support for training and development

 

4/27/2007 12:15:08 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Happiness and Trust - lastest research#

Cambridge University has just published extracts from the latest European Social Survey into well-being which started in 2002. Every 2 years 20,000 people across European are interviewed. The objective is to see how happy people are and their longer term satisfaction and what factors influence this.

 

The result? The UK is 9th out of the 15 EU members in 2004. The Danes are the happiest. The UK is less happy now than at the last survey. The Cambridge researchers speculate that the reduction in the UK's happiness could be due to declining trust in Government and other institutions. These are also highlighted in the latest annual Edelman Trust Survey and the CIPD 2006 survey on Employee Engagement.

 

Dr Luisa Corrado, who led the Cambridge research said ‘The countries that scored highest for happiness also reported the highest level of trust in governments, laws and each other’

 

For governments the challenge is to work on policies that promote social inclusion and not exclusion.  

 

For businesses it is to work on the psychological contract and communication policies and programmes that enhance employee trust and engagement as well as enhance relationships with customers.

 

4/18/2007 9:02:13 AM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Crisis management - what companies should do #

Having been involved in a fair few crisis management situations in my time on both the client and agency side I found this from Steve Rubel and a link to a Google blog very interesting. Google have analysed what happens to searches immediately an issue or recall becomes public.

 

I have personal experience of crisis management having created a few and been involved in damage limitation in others. My recommendations to companies are as follows:

 

  1. Have an immediate ‘holding position’ statement already prepared. Valuable time is lost in getting a message together, approved, signed-off and released. In the ‘old days’ pre-internet you had time to sort things out. Today the internet and social media networks give you hours not days and weeks to get sorted.
  2. Have an outline ‘Crisis Guide’ that details what is the ‘holding statement’, who is authorised and trained to make it, who is back-up reserve if that person is unavailable and what the next step is. Make sure the guide covers all sorts of situations. The better prepared you are the smoother everything will fall into place.
  3. Have all the communication links in place – your PR agency for external communication, internal employee communication plans and a ‘special project team’ that will work together for the period of the crisis. Usually valuable time is lost finding out who will be authorised to speak and then decide what to say. Have this pre-agreed especially up to and including board level. You need a board level ‘stakeholder’. The unexpected will happen. Someone at the highest level needs authority to react and give guidance.
  4. Take charge of the news agenda. Don’t wait. Some of the best managed situations have been where the company takes the initiative. Don’t think in today’s era of Citizen Journalists that you can keep things under wraps by ‘drip feeding’ journalists. It will get out. Do you want to be reacting and responding or prepared and managing?

 

From my experience this is what usually happens with a company. Cock-up not conspiracy theory prevails.

 

  • News trickles out in the market that there is a problem. The noise grows. The company may not have all the facts and senior management may not even get to hear about it as it takes time to filter up the organisation.
  • When asked for comment the company plays for time by saying ‘no comment’ which fuels stories and rumours that they have something to hide. They may but more usual they are just trying to buy time.
  • The usual truth? In back ground mode the company is frantically trying to understand the issue, get all the answers ready and prepare people to release the official statement. Because so much is at stake this involves many people. This takes to organise and is with any committee approach, it takes time to get consensus. That ‘dead time’ is when most damage is done. By the time the prepared statement is due to be released things have usually moved on. The company is now chasing the story and is continually on the back foot.
  • In meantime the silence is filled with more stories and rumours that the company has known about it for some time and tried to hide it. Now the story is not just the issue itself but company ethics and behaviour.
  • The company may now face not only class action suits from affected parties but possible shareholder class action suits alleging corporate and management negligence.

 

The company itself is now the story as much as the original issue. Brand and company reputation is negatively impacted. The share price falls. In retrospect it can have all been foreseen. Early warnings were ignored or the management processes and procedures were not in place or formally followed.  

 

To see how some companies have managed this issue of crisis management see articles by Mallenbaker and WPP.

 

4/14/2007 4:00:33 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00) #    Add to del.icio.us Add to digg Comments [0]  |  Trackback

 

Traditional versus new media #

At the National Union of Journalists annual conference a vote was passed to hold a national strike on November 5th to protest about the cuts and changes being faces in the media. (See Press Gazette for more information -

http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/article/130407/jeremy_dear_nuj_journalism)

 

There was also a motion both condemning the loss of UK based journalists jobs through outsourcing but also supporting improved rights for those overseas outsourced journalists. A real dilemma for delegates and the Unions. (see Press Gazette for details -

http://www.pressgazette.co.uk/article/130407/nuj_reuters_mirror_outsourcing)

 

As to be expected the downturn in fortunes for print media as readership and advertising declines is having an impact through ‘downsizing’.