New marketing is all about conversations…not the ‚Äúconversation‚Äù where you the marketer shout out your message to as many people as possible, but the conversation where your customers are talking to their contacts about your company.
The first conversation is the conversation that’s happening some place else.
Right now, if you have any market saturation at all, people are talking about your company. They may be saying good things…or bad. The question is do you know where the conversations are happening and, when appropriate, are you taking part in them?
The IT guy for a client of mine (a well known author) recently sent me a report showing all the references he’d been able to track that referenced my client over a two week period. This included twitters, blog posts and news reports. In 14 days there had been over 100 “conversations” that referenced my client or his work. Now, the question is what, if anything, should they be doing with that information.
My recommendation is whenever possible you should engage in the conversation. If someone writes a blog posts and mentions your product, why not leave them a comment, thanking them for the mention and give them a coupon for a discount on the their next order (or perhaps a free download). If someone is complaining about your company (check out the search results on twitter for AT&T), why not take the opportunity to pro-actively engage them and provide excellent customer service before they even ask (the whole world is watching). Rather than dealing with negative comments once someone gets frustrated enough to reach out to you, why not take part in the conversation where its already happening.
The second conversation is the conversation that probably isn’t happening yet, but should be. Its the conversation that you host.
Who better to connect your customers than you, their point of contact. If your customers naturally gather around your product in the real world why not help facilitate that happening in the virtual world? Threadless gets this…so does Amazon.
I make purchasing decisions every day and very seldom, if ever, are they influenced by traditional media. When I’m wondering if I should buy a book that’s been recommended to me, do I go to the New York Times book reviews? Nope, I’ve never read one. What I do is look on Amazon at the book reviews to see what their customers have to say.
You may be thinking, yeah, but Jon you‚Äôre on the bleeding edge of early adopters…true, but think about what influences your buying decisions. Chances are the number one thing is word of mouth. The same is true for your customers. Why not create a place for them to connect with each other and prospective customers? If you’re in the simple accounting software business, why not create the online destination for people to gather and ask each other their accounting questions? Don’t try to control the conversation but do take part in it. What you’ll earn is permission to talk to them about what you have to offer.
Are you taking part in the two conversations?
well said Jon!
Hi Jon,
I’ve reviewed quite numbers of companies’ website/products and received mixed responds from these companies.
some companies do respond by commenting back on the post or company’s blog.
But others prefer to respond by writing personal email to me. so there are lots of conversations behind the blog posts.
For the latter group. I don’t really why they don’t simple leave a comment instead. I wish my readers could read my conversations with these companies. but then, I guess not every company feels comfortable leaving a comment publicly.
They should read this post 🙂