September 13th & 14th, 2011
Hilton Netherland Plaza, Cincinnati, Ohio

Pete Blackshaw

Loyalty is Not Enough in the Age of Consumer Control!

Loyalty-Advocacy-UserContribution This isn't a new chart, but I presented it yet again today in a speech before C-Suite executives sponsored by the South Florida Interactive Marketing Association (SFIMA) and BGT Partners and it triggered the most and best reactions.  And so I'm sharing it again. Soak in in! 

Job Opportunity: Analyst, Digital Strategic Services

In my day job I head a digital strategy group at Nielsen (Digital Strategic Services) and below is a a job description for a new position I'm looking to fill, ideally in the Cincinnati region.  Send any resumes to Joshua.Hammond@nielsen.com. 


Analyst- Nielsen Digital Strategic Services (DSS): DSS is a team of consultants charged with advising Fortune 500 clients on how to best interpret and act upon social media (CGM, earned media) and customer feedback to improve marketing and drive consumer and brand advocacy.  We are seeking a highly energetic analyst to support efforts across a broad spectrum of initiatives including marketing, industry thought leadership, product innovation, content strategy and client consulting. Analyst will work with team of seasoned client consultants, led by EVP and industry leader, Pete Blackshaw.

Analyst: Digital Strategic Services: The analyst will assist in the core consulting delivery of Digital Strategic Services and will actively support the needs of senior consultants and executives.  This individual must be able to analyze, interpret, and present a broad spectrum of BuzzMetrics, Nielsen and non-Nielsen data across multiple projects at a time.  Strong analytical skills and understanding of consumer-generated and social media a must. 

Responsibilities Include: ·        

  • Analyze and interpret data from proprietary tools to provide actionable insights to clients
  • Present quantitative and qualitative analysis in written reports
  • Develop, design, interpret and present primary research with managers ·         
  • Develop and design client and conference presentations with managers ·         
  • Support thought leadership and client presentation delivery ·         
  • Assist managers with pre-sales research   
  • Assist with product testing for new initiatives 

Skills Required: ·        

  • BA/BS Required ·         
  • Understanding of CRM, CGM, social media, and emerging Web 2.0 platforms
  • Demonstrated experience with interpreting data, performing qualitative and quantitative analysis ·         
  • Understanding of marketing mix and effective marketing principles ·         
  • Excellent communication and writing skills ·         
  • PowerPoint, Excel and web-based tool mastery a must 

Location: The position will be located in Cincinnati, OH

Timing:   As soon as suitable candidate is identified


 

The Twenty Most Important Social Media Buzzwords for 2010

My, how the digital times are a-changin'. We're downsizing to small screens, friending the world, thinking in 140 characters and downloading -- dare I say -- "billions and billions" of apps designed to make everything we do simpler, faster and more convenient (well, we think). And so, only days into 2010, I decided to kick off the year with an Ad Age column dedicated to the most appropriate buzzwords to describe our curious stampede to the social media and mobile future.  Here's are a few excepts and favorites from the piece. Read the full-article here. Anything missing?  Send feedback here or via my Twitter account (twitter.com/pblackshaw)

  • SPURNED MEDIA: Just like it sounds, earned media that goes horribly negative, invades otherwise pristine search results or bleeds into traditional media. Bad customer service is a top driver of "spurned media."
  • MOBILENECKING: The alarming tendency to have our necks titled down or shifted sideways -- ever glued to our mobile device. This anywhere, anyplace epidemic is increasingly common in cars, airplanes and crosswalks. Closely related to term "Eyevoidance," where no one looks at anyone anymore.
  • JACK RIPPER: The device warriors who hog outlets anywhere they can find them -- in the airport, via the USB port of a colleague's computer, even a restaurant reservation desk. They get a charge from a charge.
  • WIKI WART: A bad piece of news or an embarrassing brand episode (e.g., an activist protest or a social-media campaign that backfired) that just won't go away in a brand's Wikipedia description. PR pros often give false hope to brands of removing the warts, but relentless Wikipedia editors put them right back.
  • OEDIPOST COMPLEX: The curious neurosis that compels folks to sleep with their Blackberry or iPhone. The afflicted can't stop checking -- even in late hours -- for responses to tweets or blog and Facebook posts.
  • BRAND TEASE: A consumer who "friends" or "fans" a brand, only to never return for a second date. Brands feed the cycle by forgetting to court the consumer with engaging, interesting or sustaining content or value.
  • APPTOSTERONE: The mojo that fuels intense "mine's bigger/better" conversation about mobile apps. "Dude, you got Bump, but I've got FourSquare." Marketing techies are loaded with Apptosterone.
  • TWITSTOP: A bathroom detour from a meeting or conversation in order to check e-mail, Twitter or the latest and greatest via an app. (Swear on the Bible, I don't do this ... but I'm told lots of others do.)
  • DIGITAL DETOX: What we all need -- at least in doses. As we've learned, total digital immersion has side effects. Let's all pursue a roadmap for balance in 2010. (This is likely the topic of my next book, so send feedback.)
Again, here's the full article.  Love to hear your thoughts. 

Two Minutes on Social Media With MC Hammer

While attending Snowcial (a relatively new conference that fuses social media and snow sports), I had a chance to interview the superb kickoff speaker, none other than MC Hammer. A social media maven since 2004 (long before most of us), he talked about the role of authenticity, relationship building, and the promise and potential of the social media space. In my view, it's not a coincidence that he has nearly 1.8 million followers on Twitter. This was clear even in his post-speech interaction with all the attendees: accessible, friendly, the opposite of pretentious, and highly attentive to the issues, themes, and topics raised by others at this event.  This two-minute interview is an excellent social media primer. 

Three Words Marketers Must Sing in 2010: Serve, Shrink & Simplify

In one of my last Ad Age columns for the year, I focus my attention on three critical words marketers need to embrace, repeat, and perhaps even "retweet" in 2010:  Serve, Shrink, and Simplify.  It's worth a full read, but here are a few excerpts:

Serve:  You've heard this from me before, but I'll say it again. Service is the new marketing. Serving trumps selling. If consumers are in control, we can't just sell or wrap ads around them. We need to serve their needs, solve their problems and dial up talk-worthy "brand experiences." And we must do so 24/7, as Twitter-influenced consumers increasingly expect the "service desk" to be on all the time, from the 800-number and brand "chat" line to the Facebook fan page. Serve and you'll touch the nerve.  The other good news is that more brands are getting this -- almost intuitively. That's why we're seeing a fire hydrant of service innovation taking place across brand blogs, Twitter and even iPhone apps.  Consider the implicit assumption in mega-brand Tide's new iPhone app -- the "Tide Stain Brain" -- which acts as a de facto washing consultant.

Shrink: Our screens are shrinking -- big time. With billions of "app" downloads -- certain to explode further in 2010 -- much of our attention is now fixed (often frenetically) on screens half the size of a playing card. That has big implications. We need to adapt to a smaller interface. We need to rethink design. We need to cut the clutter. We need to obsess on the power of "icons" with the compulsiveness of a Steve Jobs or an airline safety card designer. We need to translate "everything-but-the-kitchen-sink" brand websites into two-inch screens. Oh, and this "shrinking" principle also applies to how we tighten and simplify copy. Twitter's 140-character limitation may seem like a climbing Everest to the "diarrhea of the mouth" crowd, but get used to it. Brevity is the soul of wit, my friends. We need to do more with less. Indeed, small is the new big.

Simplify:  Of course, we'll never win on either the "serve" or "shrink" principles unless we really simplify things for consumers. Admit it, we love complexity. We hide essential information in illegible fine-print. We're rather give consumers a 200-page "how to" manual than a simple video demo. If you want your iPhone app to sing, you darn well better build it on "add water and stir" simplicity principles. If you want your small-screen ad unit to engage, or your sponsored content to drive participation, you better think hard about stripping out the gobblygook. Just think about the upside. Consider all the micro-charges on our bank or Amex statements because Apple computers made it ridiculously simple to pay for content. Then project that to e-commerce sales, or perhaps even the riddle of how to save online content from Jack-the-"Free"-Ripper." Let there be no doubt -- simplicity sells.

Again, three words:  Serve, Shrink and Simplify.  (Full article here.) 

200 Tweet Summary of WOMMA Annual Conference

Outstanding recap of the most important tweets from the 2009 WOMMA Summit, held last week in Las Vegas.  The tweets follow the conference in chronological order.  I especially encourgage folks to pay attention to FTC keynote tweets.  The panel I moderated with Comcast, Best Buy, Levis, and Bunn is at the very end.  Kudos to @brandautopsy's John Moore (also WOMMA's evangelist) for this outstanding recap.  

Word-of-Mouth Marketing Association Summit Notebook

The WOMMA ethics code.  Here at the WOMMA annual conference.  Outstanding event -- easily one of the best. (Disclosure: I'm a co-founder.) The industry has really grown up, and it remains committed as ever to helping brands navigate through all the relevant issues around word-of-mouth marketing, including ethics.  Here's a snapshot from a couple current and former WOMMA board members about the state of the industry and key trends. The Twitter tweets around the conference reflect record-breaking conversation, and I encourage folks to tune in.  The WOMMA.org website will also post transcripts and video feeds from the various presentations and keynotes, especially this morning's FTC keynote. I also urge brands exploring word-of-mouth and/or social media for the first time to spend quality time reviewing (even debating) the WOMMA ethics code. As for me, I'll be hosting a general session conversation with Comcast, Best Buy, Toyota, and Levis on the relationship between customer service and word-of-mouth.  Stay tuned for a recap on that front. 

Revisiting Paid versus Earned Media: Now Enter "Blended" Media

PaidEarned

Yesterday, during a spirited panel discussion I moderated at Cincinnati's Digital Hub Conference featuring P&G's Dave Knox, Empower's Kevin Dugan, and former P&G digital leader Suzanne Tosolini, we talked a fair amount about how to balance "Paid" versus "Earned" media, a question I've been thinking about constantly at Nielsen and beyond. It's a mission critical question -- one with massive implications for both marketing and operational investment -- and it was no coincidence that I used this as a foundational slide to prod and catalyze the conversation on the topic of using social media and digital to build great brands.  

Earned2

We're finally at a true crossroads in marketing.  There is so much evidence across the web that "earned media" -- consumer-generated media, social media, conversation, variants of PR -- is creating meaningful lift and value for brands that we now need to think more critically about resource and spending allocations.  Empirical evidence makes clear, for example, that customer service is a major driver of "earned media," but fixing or improving customer service takes real investment. Where does it come from?  Do we slice it off the "paid media" side of the equation.  And who makes that decision?  The CMO as currently defined, or some new hybid role that combines marketing, PR, and service?  Alas, the big questions.

Earned1

Then again, it's not that simple, which is one reason the latest iteration of my paid/earned grid (which draws its initial inspiration from Dachis's David Armano's very early industry prodding on this framework) includes a third wheel called "blended media."  Here is an attempt to acknowledge that paid media often serves as a critical stimulus or even vitamin for "earned media."  Moreover, in a world of crowdsourcing and co-creation, "earned media" is increasingly becoming a core input into the paid equation.  Yes, we must always accomodate that fuzzy middle.  

Needless to say, our discussion on the matter was lively and spirited, and I hope it continues to drive and advance the conversation during the second day of this event which features keynotes from Peter Kim and Bob Gilbreath and presentations from many others, from Jason Falls and Jack Graydon.  BTW, if you want to follow this excellent conference, the Twitter hashtag is #dhi09 or just click this link.  

Thanks again to Dave, Kevin, and Suzanne for a most excellent panel.  And congratulations to all the event organizers, especially Jack Streitmarter or ScreamingBob Media and the Cincinnati Ad Club.  Outstanding!!!

- Pete (twitter.com/pblackshaw)

Advertising Week Diarist: Priming the Conversation

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Within a half-hour of Mad Men winning a coveted Emmy (yet again) for best television drama, New York's "Advertising Week," a five day celebration of the advertising industry, officially kicked off.  In surveying the program content, one can quickly detect the significant changes and groundshifts in this industry, from digital transformation to social media strategy to the proliferation (and necessity) of service-grounded iPhone Apps.   Even the website for the event reflects a new world order in communication -- what with "sharing" utilities, digital media kits, mobile "utility" downloads, and the like.  It's a far cry from what my father, Bill Blackshaw -- one of the the orginal Mad Men -- experienced.  

Still, the ad community remains challenged (if not overwhelmed) by the new rules and dynamics of consumer control.  Of course social media is an "opportunity," but it's also a cross-current that threatens to dilute messaging and desired impact, or even put distrust on viral steroids.  Indeed, consumers have greater leverage to "advertise" their attitudes toward brands, and a significant percentage of them remain highly guarded and skeptical.  Marketers need to focus -- nay, obsess -- with how to renew, re-invigorate, or perhaps even redefine the trust covenant between consumer and brand. 

Importantly, we need to keep asking: are we just selling or are we serving the needs of consumers? Are we branding or bonding?  Are we embarking upon what Bob Gilbreath, CMO of BridgeWorldwide and a fellow P&G alum, refers to in his forthcoming book as "Meaningful Marketing?"  (He defines meaningful marketing as the 'marketing itself add[ing] value to peoples’ lives.' ) Or are we all, as Bob Garfield implies (not so subtly) in his provocative, arguably must-read book, The Chaos Scenario, just toast.  I'm actually convinced there's a world of potential for marketing and advertising, but we need to reset many of our core assumptions and operating principles. I'm equally convinced that this unprecedented bubbling of consumer conversation (from online communities to Twitter) is a well-spring of free and thoughtful advice to marketers about which roads and direction to take to secure the long term loyalty and advocacy of consumers.  But we first need to check or respective agenda at the door, and tune in to what the conversation is telling us. Listen first, then engage!  

Toward that end, I thought I'd "prime the pump" a wee bit.  A little over a year ago, around the time I published my book "Satisfied Customers Tell Three Friends, Angry Customers Tell 3000", I started writing a column for Advertising Age magazine (mostly online) on a range of topics related to future trends in advertising, the relationship between service and marketing, and the broader impact of social media.  I just skimmed my content archive and pulled ten columns that might serve as a useful "primer" going into Advertising Week. These are themes and topics that are especially meaningful to me, but I suspect they might resonate with others. As always, I welcome feedback.

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Earned Media May Be Efficient But It's Far from Free: Getting the full divident of "earned media" requires much more that setting up Twitter and Facebook accounts.  Meaningful product and operational investment (e.g. customer service) pay the biggest dividends.

'Social Media Dad' Sees an iPhone-Powered New World Order:  It took a birthday party for my twins to help me appreciate the power and impact of the "all in one" service device.

Is Customer Service a Media Channel: Ask Zappos:  Zappos built a model Amazon ultimately acquired on an almost fanatical belief in the power of word-of-mouth, employee advocacy, and "no questions asked" service (all all kinds). 

It's Time for a Slow Marketing Movement:  Is social media pushing us into the "exuberance" zone? Maybe we need to slow down and revisit some of the fundamentals before we lunge forward.

Marketers Love a Conversation Unless the Consumer Starts It:  Why are brand feedback interfaces (e.g. Contact Us) so ugly, uninviting, and at complete odds with all marketing exhuberance over the "conversational" aspects of social media. 

In Time of Crisis, Sexy and Flashy Don't Count:  When Swine Flu broke, government agencies, especially the CDC, got it right.  Speed, functionality, and answers converged quickly.  We can learn from this.  

Is the Future of Marketing About Marketing to Marketers?  We need to sift marketer from consumer conversation, and many of the biggest brand brohaha's of the year have been triggered by tens of thousands of "marketers" who use social media.  New influencer channel?

When Calculating Twitter's ROI, Don't Ignore Its Change on Organizations:  Remember, social media is as much about business process innovation (especially driving internal cultural change) as marketing outreach.

Underwriting Your Super Bowl Spot:  You just can't think about TV the same anymore.  Much of the value in TV advertising comes through the "multiplier effect" across digital expression venues, and the digital trail.  How do we think holistically about TV?

The "Contribution Revolution" is More Important Than You Think:  Social media isn't just about messaging and advocacy; it's also about the tangible economic impact (potentially cost savings) of "user-contribution systems," whereby the most loyal customers become a de facto work-force.

Spanish Language Content Surprisingly Lacking on the Web: Marketers talk up a storm about the importance of Hispanic/Latino marketing (lots of it on the agenda for Ad Week) but it's hardly reflected on websites or social media strategies. 

- Pete (Twitter)

The Curious Juxtaposition of Advertising & Media Content

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