Tag Archives: Social media

Grace Under Pressure – Why No Hardship is No Good

The economy is struggling, and small businesses have been hit the hardest. However, amid all the downsizing and leveling of growth there are lessons to be learned, ones which are forgotten in better economic times.

Money Means Frills – As a business owner, its easy to be seduced by things you think you need, especially when those in the same industry think they need them as well. I’m talking about spending money on premium designs and logos, fat stacks of high-gloss business cards, cutting edge ad space, and automated phone systems. As good as these made me feel, I honestly don’t think any of them really helped me make money. Sure they may have moved some more product, but too often they were tacked on expenses that didn’t do that much good. These upgrades are nice, but in times like these such investments should do two things: get customers to choose you over others, and keep them once they’ve done that. If it doesn’t do that, its probably a waste.

Debt and Focus – Reduced cash streams gets you focused on what matters. Less money means your unique sales pitch has to be absolutely top notch, since you can’t hide behind gimmicky layouts and flashy websites (see above). You have to rely on value alone. Your customers need to remember and talk about your products. In the end, low-budget marketing campaigns based on serious commitment to an excellent service is fun, authentic, and memorable, not to mention affordable.

Character. Innovation. Success. “Wax on. Wax off.” Like the Karate Kid, getting back to the fundamentals of business discipline will only generate revenue, and perhaps uncover possibilities you hadn’t seen before. Remember the scene from Gone With the Wind where Scarlet O’Hara makes a dress out of curtains so she can get $300. Desperate times lead to desperate measures, but ‘desperate measures’ often means efficient, bottom-line success.

“Bootstrapping”

For many of us, the idea of roughing it means reducing cell phone minutes. Here are a few guidelines for what effective reduced-cost strategizing should mean.

  1. Know who your customer, their needs, and why they would choose you. Answers to these three questions will help streamline your marketing decisions. If they’re hard to answer, think about other companies you go to as a customer. If you like Starbucks, describe yourself, what you look for in coffee, and why you go to Starbucks. Do the same thing for your favorite PC, insurance company, department store. Think about how your needs are being met, and do the same with your own business. And never be afraid to ask your customers!
  2. Tracking Expenses – Everything. And written down. Enacting a strategy where every coffee and ink cartridge gets recorded reduces these nearly invisible bleeds, and may even expose places where a significant amount of money could be saved. A little self-accounting could go a long, long way.
  3. Referral System – Referrals happen. They’re also great for business. Why not structure a simple referral rewards program that incentivizes loyal customers to spread word about your business and gives them a selling sheet to work from. Not only will your customers hear exactly what sets your company apart, your ideal customer, your campaigns, and how you treat new customers (reinforcing their loyalty to the business) but also generate new income by effectively drawing in new customers. All this for typing up a simple sheet!
  4. Embrace the Internet – Social media tools like blogs, LinkedIn, and Twitter can be thought of as “digital billboards.” Gone are the days of these as gimmicky, new-fangled arenas. They’ve been proven to increase communication with your customer base. Not only that, but your company appears up to date on the latest technological trends, and all this for free. Nowadays when people ask if you have a website, you don’t want to be the person who says no.

Companies who economize know the importance of close relationships. They know that loyalty and honesty are what matter most, and that will thrive in any economy.

How to Use Research to Discover Your Value to Customers

In a recent article over at Marketing Experiments, Daniel Burstein makes the distinction between discovering the value that you give to your customers and dictating that value.  In this particular article, he goes into how to use social media to get at that value.  But I’d like to explore other methods as well.

Use Nimble to focus social media conversations.  A few weeks ago, I was introduced to Nimble; a new social CRM (Customer Relationship Management ) tool developed Jon Ferrara, the creator of Goldmine.  He realized that relationships were starting as social media conversations but were really falling through the cracks as people struggled to manage them via traditional tools.  The concept is simple.  Nimble integrates your email with your social media accounts and then allows you to link those virtual connections with tasks and projects.  In the future, the idea is to run your whole sales and marketing communications from one screen.  Definitely something worth exploring.

I mentioned Nimble because it’s a tool that brings conversations together in a way that will allow you to see patterns and actually have conversations about the value that you bring.  This isn’t an activity that you would outsource to a market research firm, it’s an activity for your sales, marketing or executive groups.  But it’s information that will save you market research money and allow you to focus your research on better quantifying and defining this value.

Drive customers to crowd sourcing.  A couple of years ago, crowd sourcing was a trendy topic.  Everyone was talking about it and trying it.  But now, it doesn’t seem to be as much a part of the research conversation.  Just because some other shiny new object might have taken it’s place in the conversation, doesn’t make it less valuable as a tool.  Tools like IdeaScale are still an excellent resource for companies who don’t have BIG “chatworthy” brands on social media.

Your customers and potential customers aren’t going to magically find your crowd sourcing space, you will have to send them there and remind them that it’s there.  You will have to make it part of your conversation and have that web site listed prominently everywhere.  Crowd sourcing will only help you define value if you use it.

Customer research panels.  This is probably the shiny new trend of the market research world.  And when you pair this up with mobile market research, you’ve got yourself one of the most popular topics in research today.  This is another way to collect and listen to what your customers value without necessarily using social media tools.

Survey Analytics’ SurveySwipe application takes your customer research panel mobile and this gives companies advantages besides the obvious one of reaching customers where they are.  It gives you the advantage of better quality responses because their the technology of the mobile phone allows for location-based functions that can trigger surveys as close to the customer response as possible.

At a time when doing market research was a proposition far beyond the small business budget, it was understandable why so many of us were simply deciding on the value that we offered and telling our customer about it.

Believe it or not, THAT is the more expensive option today.  Use the new tools that are available to really engage and talk to your customers about the ways in which they experience your product, then promote that value to other customers who match their profile.

This is not only a sound strategy, but one that will pay off in profitability and customer satisfaction.

The 5 Myths of Selling to Small Business

Instead of telling you HOW to do research, today, I’m going to give you the results from some research.

Ivy Worldwide conducted a survey of small- and medium-sized business owners/operators this year through a network of independent bloggers to determine what factors influence their purchasing decisions.

The survey has identified five misconceptions that most marketers have when selling their product or services to SMBs.  The goal is to help marketers make their messages more effective so they can tap the viable market that is SMB.

Myth 1: Communication on the C-Level is effective.

Though positioning, sales relationships and ROI is important, most SMBs still give more importance on reviews from trusted sources, quality promises and enhanced features.

Based on the survey, businesses said a detailed review from a trusted source that illustrated the pros and cons of the product/service is they highest factor they consider before getting on board.

Marketers should, therefore, make use of the correct channels that SMBs find to be a reliable source of information.  Reliable sources can be third party organizations, news source or key opinion leaders in the industry.

Myth 2: It’s always good to go green.

The truth is environmentally friendly messages is not really that important for SMBs.  In fact, they ranked being green second to the last among factors that will affect their purchase of a product/service.

Unless your product has specific and discrete environmental benefits, don’t jump on this trend green trend.  Since being green is not top-of-mind for SMB purchasers, there is really no point to put too much effort in the trend.

Myth 3: Tried and tested marketing efforts should be employed.

The survey showed that advertising and other traditional media sources ranked far below web forums and independent bloggers as key sources of product and service information.

The trick here is to ensure that you’re engaging your audiences via the communications channels that they actually use.   New marketing can be coursed through niche blogs or social networking sites.  Not only are they popular these generation, but they are also more cost-effective the traditional advertising.

Myth 4: All sales should be treated the same.

For smaller purchase amounts, less effort is required from the seller as they are generally made on a need basis and are rather immediate.  Large purchases, on the other hand, require more research (i.e. comparing prices, test -driving the product, reading reviews and asking for recommendations)

Also, for small purchases, SMBs prefer that products that they can be picked up from a nearby location to allow person-to-person support on the product.

The key is that marketers know how your customers are buying and which channels they prefer.

Myth 5: Transactions are done after payments are received.

For SMB purchasers, service and support terms are more important than payment terms. In fact, service and support are key to the final decision and should be marketed as assertively as product benefits themselves.

SMBs would like to be assured that they can rely on someone in case there is product/service defect.  Be a smart marketer and don’t miss the opportunity to tout service and support terms to your customers.

The Real Deal

It’s always easy to get complacent and put undue confidence in trends, buzzwords and mass-marketing techniques.  Marketers should fight complacency and instead strive for a true understanding of what compels SMB owner/operators to purchase their product.

Are Market Research Tools an Alternative for Social Media Haters?

Social Media has been around for well over five years, yet many CEOs just don’t see the point.  Most of them leave the social media activities to the marketing folks in their organization.

In a post on DIYMarketers, we explore the idea the some of today’s newest, coolest market research methods can actually be a great alternative for CEOs who hate all the hassle of social media, but want all the results.

Here is a summary of the alternatives:

  • If you hate the idea of losing control of your message, then create your own customer community.  You can create a customer or user panel with whom you are in regular conversation.  Ask the panel questions, via survey, they will give you answers.
  • Still question the ROI of social media?  Create a crowdsourcing space on your site where your customers can tell you their ideas for improvements and new products and you can respond.  Create a real-live brain trust and conversation that gets your customer involved in creating a product they will love and talk about.
  • Sick of people’s stupid updates?  Run surveys and polls on the SurveySwipe mobile platform.  You can blast out a question to our existing community or upload a list of your own.  You’ll get feedback in less than 2 hours!
I was one of the first people in line to criticize CEOs who weren’t taking advantage of the power of social media.  But as I got to really listening to their complaints — I really GOT IT.
The alternatives I’ve described here use the social media platforms, technologies and elements of fun and then target them toward ROI rich, time saving and customer engaging results.

4 Smart Ways to Expand Your Small Business

Today’s guest post is from Carol Roth, author of Entrepreneur Equation.  This post is adapted from the book.


A new ADP survey says companies with fewer than 50 employees increased payrolls by 117,000 last month — the biggest hiring surge since 2006. AndPaychex Inc., which manages payroll accounting for companies with fewer than 100 workers, said checks per client rose 2.8 percent from a year ago in the first quarter of 2011, the biggest gain in two years.

For many small businesses — particularly sole proprietors and mom-and-pop operations — expanding brings with it challenges as well as opportunities. The key to growing your small business is to do it the smartway. Here are some tips that may help.

Learn to delegate.

You were smart enough to start your own business. Now use those smarts to figure out a way to simplify, standardize, automate, and delegate tasks in a way that can’t be screwed up by the average employee (think McDonald’s). Create a list, and every time you have a task you would delegate to an employee, add it to the list. Not only does it get you in the habit of delegating, but over time you have created a job description so that you know who you’re looking for when you’re ready to hire.

Hire thoughtfully.

Beware of “hiring gotchas.” For example, spend time putting together a hiring strategy and good questions in advance. Educate yourself on what you can’t by law ask in an interview, and research what other companies pay for such a position, as well as benefits you’re willing to offer (beforethe applicant asks). You might want to steer clear of hiring friends and family. If you’re clueless about how to find a good pool of candidates, consider using one of the new, low-cost virtual services, such as Elance.

Expand by outsourcing.

Let’s say you’re ready to offer new services to your existing customers, but in order to motivate these customers and woo new ones, you have to do social marketing. The problem is, you have no clue how to do it. That’s okay! Smart business owners don’t try to do everything themselves — they outsource professionals to help them focus on what they do best. There are great new online enterprises like Deskelf that will match your needs with virtual helpers — from accountants to social media marketers. And they don’t have to be expensive — Fiverr, for example, links you to professionals who do tasks for as little as $5!

Partner up.

Imagine you’re a professional photographer/videographer who’s got more gigs than you can handle. Find another business owner in your profession and partner up so you can take on more jobs without having to hire new employees. Another way to grow your business is to expand your menu of services. For example, you have a lawnmowing/landscaping business and you find someone who maintains pools. By partnering up, you can offer your clients a twofer — weekly pool service and property maintenance. Finding complementary businesses that don’t compete for customers creates a win-win for both small businesses.

Carol Roth has been helping businesses grow for over 15 years, ranging from solopreneurs to multinational corporations. She has helped them raise more than $1 billion in capital, complete hundreds of millions of dollars in M&A transactions, secure high-profile licensing and partnership deals, create brand loyalty programs, and more. A popular media personality on Fox News, MSNBC, and WGN-TV Chicago, among others, she has an award-winning blog at www.CarolRoth.com. Her new book is The Entrepreneur Equation: Evaluating the Realities, Risks, and Rewards of Having Your Own Business (BenBella Books, March 2011) — #4 on the New York TimesBestsellers List and #1 on the USA Today Money Bestsellers List.

The Power of Asking “What if” and “So What”

How many times have you run across an innovative product and service and thought “Why didn’t I think of that?!”  Or maybe you’re like me and have these “hairbrained” ideas, decide that they are silly and ignore them only to see them advertised or written about as the next great innovation!

The really neat thing about this interconnected internet and social media culture is that we all have the ability to actually reach out to those people and simply ask them how they got the idea and what they did after that.

One of my new-year’s resolutions was to do exactly that; reach out to people I thought had an amazing idea, product or service and start a conversation with them about what they were thinking and how they made that idea come to life.

And you know what?  The answers I got were not earth-shattering.  They were actually very simple and driven by two questions most typically asked by your average three-year-old: “What if….” And then “So what?”

Here are just a few snippets of interesting conversations that illustrate this point:

Prasad Thammineni, CEO OfficeDrop.  When Prasad graduated from the Wharton School he found himself in possession of thousands of paper documents that contained the sum of his hard work during graduate school.  Inside these paper folders and files was some potentially useful stuff – but it was taking up tons of space.  He asked himself the question “What if ….I scanned all this stuff and made it electronic?”  Not a novel idea exactly, but this got him thinking about the fact that other grad students wanted to do the same thing.  Then he asked “What if there were other people that had documents they wanted to keep, but not in boxes?”  And OfficeDrop, the online document storage site was born.

David Garland is a young entrepreneur who had already sold his successful hockey-themed web site and was on to another entrepreneurial venture.  He and his partner sat in a coffee shop and chatted about Donnie Deutsch’s show “The Big Idea.”  They loved the show but it made them ask the question “So what?”  That simple question started a brainstorm of “What if we did a TV show that focused on young entrepreneurs and provided education as well as entertainment?”  In less than two months David had sponsors and a show.

I’m going to stop at these two very-very brief examples.  But I can tell you that I have at least five more and am averaging at least one per month.   That means that in an economy that everyone says is down, there are people who are choosing NOT to participate.  These people  have consciously set aside their adult mind-set and are asking the “child-like” questions that lead to opportunity.
Asking “What if…” brings out the idea.  But asking “So what?” makes it marketable.  These two simple questions are the root of real, authentic and buzzable differentiation.

I can already hear you saying “If it were only that easy!”  Have you considered recruiting some kids as an advisory group?  I’m completely serious about that.  I’ve heard of large companies recruiting kids as problem solvers and brainstormers because of their un-fettered ability for unconstrained thought.  What have you got to lose?

Kids of all ages (especially elementary school age) love being included in what we are doing.  What makes it boring for them is the cumbersome corporate speak that we use to hide the fact that we are basically unclear about what our value is to customers.
In addition to the personal benefits that you’ll gain by engaging kids in your business, think about what you’ll be teaching them?  You’ll be showing them that their unbridled creativity has value.  You’ll be showing them that just by thinking in a certain way, they can create opportunities for themselves and for others.
And in an economy that has so many people seeing themselves as victims, what kind of a gift would you be giving by creating a new economy of entrepreneurs?

Opportunities to Push the Envelope of Market Research

In a couple of weeks, Vivek Bhaskaran will be speaking at the IIR Technology Driven Market Research event in Chicago.   The Technology Driven Market Research Conference is all about the breakthrough technologies that will be used in market research.   If you’re interested in learning more about this conference, take a look at their site and register.

In the meantime, get a preview of what you’re likely to hear from Vivek and other thought leaders in the market research technology realm.  In this interview with Leaonard Murphy from the Green Book Marketing Research Blog, Vivek blows the roof off the conventional market research and then gently leads us back to really pushing the envelope as we look for new ways to really listen to what our customers and our markets are trying to tell us,

Using Analysis and Listening as Psychic Tools

OK, sorry, I pushed that headline a little to get your attention.  Let me explain.

A few months ago, I read this book SHiFT Selling by Craig Elias and it literally blew my mind.  Craig was talking about using simple analysis of sales you’d already won to literally predict and place yourself right in front of your ideal customer just when they are ready, willing and able to buy.  So it actually LOOKS like you’re being psychic — when you’re actually being smart.

The Craig Elias used these same techniques to connect with me (after I was doing research on HIM) and we came up with this eye-popping webinar that you can participate in NEXT Tuesday April 12.  REGISTER RIGHT HERE.

How to Use Social Media to WOW Your Customers

Now we have a slightly understated headline to communicate a really interesting and important trend — that’s related to TRIGGER EVENTS (the webinar I was talking about in the previous section).

The latest issue of Trendwatching is out and you’ll never believe what they are talking about “Random Acts of Kindness“.   You know — random acts of kindness — like paying the toll for the person behind you, just doing something nice for someone you don’t know — BECAUSE it’s the nice thing to do.

Well – it’s a HOT HOT HOT trend in business right now.  There are tons of examples – I’ll just give you a few right here :

  • In October 2010, flower delivery service Interflora launched a social media campaign in the UK designed to brighten up the lives of Twitter users by sending them flowers. Interflora monitored Twitter looking for users that needed cheering up. Once found, the users were contacted and sent a bouquet of flowers as a surprise.
  • In November 2010, Dutch airline KLM ran an experimental campaign called How Happiness Spreads, where it employed a “Surprise Team” to give passengers tailored, unexpected gifts at the airport.
    Combining with location-based game Foursquare, as soon as someone checked-in at a KLM Foursquare location within its network of airports the Surprise Team went online to find more background information about the person, decided upon a suitable gift and gave it them before they flew.
    For instance, one traveler tweeted he would miss a PSV Eindhoven football game while he was in New York. The Surprise Team, accordingly, gave him a Lonely Planet guidebook of NYC with all the football bars highlighted in blue.

If you haven’t already noticed – this super trend is being DRIVEN by using social media technology to LISTEN to its audience and then take action because it’s NICE.

Have the big corporations gone Buddhist – creating waywardly great karmic impressions?  It may seem like it, but you can bet your bottom dollar that they are being savvy marketers.

Generate More New Business By Being at the Right Place at the Right Time

Timing is a powerful business model or differentiating strategy.  Domino’s built their brand using a “Timing” positioning strategy “30 minutes or less” but that’s so 20th Century!

2011 brings with it a new twist on using timing as a differentiation strategy with the advent of nearly perfect information about products, price, communication and distribution.  There’s never been a time in history where we knew so much detail about people; their needs, wants, comings and goings.  In fact, small businesses have been more focused on the social media tools and smart phone technologies that make all this possible than on the profitable possibilities of using these low-cost, high-impact vehicles to get and keep more ideal, profitable customers.

WHEN is the Buying Decision Made?

When you stop and think about it, buying decisions aren’t made when we thing they are.  For example.  If you were buying a new car, it’s unlikely that you made your buying decision the first time you stepped onto a car lot.  Chances are, you started thinking about buying a new car after something significant happened; an expensive repair bill, an accident, when your car hit 100,000 miles, etc.

The point I’m trying to make is that we tend to assume that our prospects started thinking about something the instant WE found out about them as a prospect.  And the truth is that they started thinking about something AFTER something interrupted their comfortable routine.

That interrupting event is called a “trigger.”  And you can learn more about it in Craig Elias’ new book SHiFT.  He has mapped out how people buy using the following model:

  • The Status Quo: It’s a physical law of motion that applies to people too.  People will not change their existing behavior unless their world is interrupted by a third force.  Prospects will only change or make an effort to buy when the pain of NOT taking action is greater than the pain of doing something differently.Try This: Look at your existing customers and find out what triggered their choosing YOU instead of some other option.  The answers might surprise you.  Don’t just take their first answer, dig deep to find out what event happened that caused them to take action.   Once you know this, you can find ways to fish in THAT pond.  If your best customers come to you after they’ve had a baby, then you need to explore OBGYN’s as lead sources or your local maternity ward.
  • Window of Dissatisfaction: At this stage of the game, your prospect KNOWS that what they’ve been doing is no longer going to work.  Taking our “new baby” example further, if you sell baby furniture, your prospect will be more likely to make a purchase as their due date draws near.  There is a certain time between the trigger event that shocks them out of their comfortable coma and when a purchase has to be made.Try This: Target the “ponds” where your ideal customer is most likely to go when they experience this trigger event.  Then be sure to understand what’s important to them when they are trying to make a purchase, and be their guide.  You are already ahead of the competition if you are already associated with the trigger event, by default, you will be among their choices because you are simply THERE.  You increase level of value by how well you answer their questions and help them choose.
  • Searching for Alternatives: This is where MOST every other business (who doesn’t understand timing) is selling.  But your prospect has already narrowed their choices down AND suddenly their value expectation has risen mainly because they’ve already looked at some of the alternative solutions that were there during their window of dissatisfaction.  Every other alternatives that complicates the process starts to literally upset them because they have a need and an intention to purchase as well as a need to see every alternative.  Vendors or businesses who make this process difficult will lose the sale.Try This: Offer exceptional value that is significantly different and sets you apart from the early birds.  Look at your “points of purchase” for example, do you take credit cards, do you have easy terms, do your customers want to buy on line, can you offer special rates if they decide today?  There are many options, consider all of them.

Selling to the Executive Decision Maker

This is also a big timing issue.  Most industrial sales people are selling to purchasing people or middle managers or engineers.  If that’s the case, you are already late to the party.  Recent research has shown that the CEO of a company starts thinking about problems that they are having in their business and searching for educational information online years or months before potential vendors are even considered.

The biggest marketing mistake industrial or technical organizations make is making their web sites searchable for the products and services they provide and NOT the problems they solve.  For example, if the CEO is looking for ways to “reduce lead time” he or she will only find 518,000 results searching Google.  But if the CEO searches on “ERP Systems” (computer systems that could ultimately reduce lead time) he will find over 4.2 million entries.

Use Social Media Tools to Help

Today’s social media and smart phone technology makes a timing marketing strategy not only doable but cost effective.  Imagine actually knowing WHAT you’re looking for as you search LinkedIn or Facebook or Twitter.  Start by simply identifying the event triggers that shock your prospect into dissatisfaction and then go searching for other people with the same problem.  You’re likely to find better, happier and more loyal customers in the process.

LEARN MORE!

In the latest Marketing Sherpa CMO survey on Marketing Automation 76% of CMOs reported that generating high quality leads was the most pertinent to their organization.

Sirius Decisions found that an integrated approach to sales and marketing results in a 24% increase in growth but what is the simplest most effective way to align sales and marketing.

APRIL 12 WEBINAR WILL SHOW YOU:

  • Which digital assets attract the most profitable prospects
  • Where to place content so it drives the best prospects to your web site
  • When are the three best times to pass a web-based lead to your sales team
  • How to get sales to give you the data you need so they get the leads they want
  • How to create a simple seven step system that aligns your sales and marketing efforts
  • Which sales and marketing research results in the greatest payoff for you and your sales team

Craig Elias, author of 2011′s must-read book for salespeople, marketers and business owners  – SHiFT Selling AND Ivana Taylor, publisher of DIYMarketers will explain the Trends, Triggers and Tools that you will use to be at the right place at the right time.

FIRST - Register for the webinar TODAY

THEN – Click over to the SHiFT Selling web site and download FREE preview chapters to get you started so that you can get the most out of this webinar.

SPECIAL TOOLS AND RESOURCES – We’re also working on a sweet “Won Sales Analysis” template that you will have access to when you register for the webinar!

What Do YOU Think? Will Social Media Replace Traditional Research Tools?

Vivek Bhaskaran passed this link around the other day from an Ad Age article titled “Will Social Media Replace Surveys as a Research Tool?”   As a marketing practitioner — meaning that I use BOTH social media and surveys — I was taken aback.

Here is an except from the article (but I encourage you to click over and read it yourself as well):

Joan Lewis, global consumer and market knowledge officer of Procter & Gamble Co., with its $350 million in annual market-research outlays, made the statements during and after a panel discussion on “How Market Research Must Change” at the Advertising Research Foundation’s Re:Think 2011 conference in New York.

The industry should get away from “believing a method, particularly survey research, will be the solution to anything,” she said. “We need to be methodology agnostic.”

Social-media listening isn’t only replacing some survey research but also making it harder to do by changing consumer behavior and expectations, Ms. Lewis said in an interview after the panel.

The more people see two-way engagement and being able to interact with people all over the world, I think the less they want to be involved in structured research,” she said. “If I have something to say to that company now, there are lots of ways to say it.”

I’m not sure if it’s just me (so pipe in here), but it would NEVER dawn on me to replace every survey with social media.  Social media has certainly changed the landscape of how we gather information.  The two-way interaction and communication with customers is often a free focus group.

But not every business is P&G.  Many products and services don’t have the brand presence or the audience on social media channels to garner enough valid feedback.

In fact, I predict that surveys will change and that the only thing I can hope for from social media is that it does away with stupid survey questions that don’t deliver good decision-making information.  But again — this is making the assumption that my respondent is talking about Bromobutyl rubber compounds on Twitter.  (Just searched Twitter – not a Tweet on bromobutyl or Facebook) But if you search it on LinkedIn, you’ll find some potential respondents to a survey perhaps.

Am I Sounding Defensive?

Another point in the article is to stay method agnostic — and I think this is a great recommendation.  As research professionals, it’s out job to get to information that helps us make good business decisions.  I don’t particularly care which method we’re using — as long as it can help me run my business.

Will Video Make Focus Groups Obsolete?

What if you could actually watch consumers interacting with your brand in their natural habitat?  That is what a new application, Qualvu is offering brand managers and marketers.  In the video explanation on their home page, they show how their platform allows you to target consumers all over the world and get video from them as they interact with your brand.

What do you think?  How would you use this new tool?