Posts Tagged ‘Twitter’

Dell nears $7 million in Twitter sales with no strategy

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

Isn’t the Value of Social Media What Business Is All About?

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Share Print CommentsToday’s corporate leaders are struggling to figure out how to use social media to further their business strategy. At Dell, we believe this is backwards thinking. Social media isn’t a means to further a corporation’s strategy, it’s a means to help determine it.

The “Mom and Pop” businesses in our neighborhoods have always followed sound and pragmatic business practices, rooted in developing, maintaining and strengthening relationships with customers. The customers and the businesses valued those relationships because “Mom and Pop” offered convenience. They listened to their customers and used their suggestions to improve the business. They provided great service and found ways to thank their clientele. Social media is really nothing more than the simple application of these business practices in a digital form.

So if you are wondering about how to leverage Twitter, Facebook, blogs, forums, and the company Web site to achieve your organization’s goals, perhaps you are starting from the wrong point. As with the corner store, if your business uses social media to engage in conversations on a human level, you strengthen your business and allow your strategy — both corporate and social media — to evolve based on customer feedback.

At Dell, we have a longer perspective on the social media conundrum than most. We’ve been an active leader in the space since 2006, with a depth and breadth to our social media presence that has earned top billing among brands using social media to engage stakeholders.

What we’ve learned is that social media has transformed the large corporation of the millennium into the Mom and Pop shop of the old days. The emergence of social media simply makes it more possible to connect directly with customers every day. Dell’s community goes well beyond our own forums — it now extends to direct contact with more than three million followers worldwide. Even during a historically difficult time for businesses of all stripes, Dell has generated nearly $7 million in global product sales on Twitter.

“Mom and Pop” knew that their business was only as successful as their relationships with customers could make it. That’s the value of the direct connection to your customer, and that’s how every company can achieve success using social media — by facilitating the conversation. No strategy necessary.
Learn more at http://www.huffingtonpost.com/manish-mehta/isnt-the-value-of-social_b_383320.html

Twitter power over Pepsi

Thursday, June 11th, 2009
Twitter massive growth and marketing value

Twitter massive growth and marketing value

June 11th, 2009 | by Stan Schroeder

From the Urban Dictionary: “Jumping the shark – a term to describe a moment when something that was once great has reached a point where it will now decline in quality and popularity. Origin of this phrase comes from a Happy Days episode where the Fonz jumped a shark on waterskis. Thus was labeled the lowest point of the show.”

Indeed, when a huge international corporation like PepsiCo recognizes you in such a way that it prints its Twitter address on a Pepsi Raw can (only in the UK, but still), you can no longer be cool or rad; you’re now part of the mainstream. Of course, those of us who are following Twitter(Twitter reviews) closely know this already, but if anyone ever needs a defining moment in which Twitter went from being that little microblogging service to an online powerhouse, this is it.

 

The question that everyone’s been asking at every such milestone – for example, when Oprah joined the service – is whether it means Twitter is making it big, or is it the start of its downfall? Actually, it’s a little bit of both.

pepsi_rawCan ubiquity hurt Twitter? In some ways, yes. Not everyone wants to be a part of something that everyone else is part of. In today’s longish and meandering rant, Trent Reznor touches on the subject, saying he’s all but quitting Twitter – among other reasons – because its popularity has dragged to it some people he’d rather not be in contact with.

However, when you have a service whose goal is to become a basic utility, like water or electricity, this is exactly what you want: everyone, from regular users to major corporations, thinking of your service as one of their basic identifiers, similar to a phone number, email, or a web address. When other corporations, big or small, as well as politicians, musicians, actors and other public figures all start thinking of their Twitter account as an essential part of their online identity, Twitter has reached one of its most important goals. Jumping the shark might turn out to be the best thing that ever happened to them.

[image courtesy of Brand Republic]
http://mashable.com/2009/06/11/twitter-address-pepsi-can/