Archive for March 14th, 2009

14
Mar

Suxorz ‘09: The Ten Worst Social Media Campaigns

Saturday, 14 March 2009 at 5:00PM
Presenters:

This session is mostly for fun and some of the following is PG-13 (or R). Read on with that in mind. The meat of it was a conversation of advertising and branding in social media.

Round #1:  Everybody’s doing it

Round #2:  Revenge of the Blogosphere I
Round #3:  Revenge of the Blogosphere II

Is it true that if people are talking about your product that this is an automatic win? This is what many persons in advertising like to say. No. Unmoderated, racist comments associated with your site/product, for example, are not what a company wants. going edgy within social media to create an image can backfire.

When social media advertising is done well it does not barge into your space - especially a friend-space.

14
Mar

HOWTO: 149 Surprising Ways to Turbocharge Your Blog with Credibility

Saturday, 14 March 2009 at 3:30PM
Presenters:  Merlin Mann and John Gruber

Of course, the title of this session is farcical, but it is what they talked about tangentially.

Their assumptions: all of you make things and all of you want to become better and you want respect and credibility of others.

Walt Disney: “We don’t make movies to make money. we make money to make more movies.”

Topic (or Obsession) times Voice:  both are needed.

Whatever your topic, try to figure out how to be better at it than 80% of the rest of the world. Pick your obsession and focus on it to make it have a voice. Think about that person you wish to write for.

Don’t try to be another,  unique personality that has been successful. Know what your audience wants, copy the right things from the playbook of others. [Gruber ref to 37signals]

Read @comcast on search.twitter.com for a laugh.

The long-term gains are bring awesome at what you do.

You need a high tolerance for the ambiguity and uncertainty of the results of creating your content. Human attention is valuable and limited.

Tell people what happened, what it means and your opinion.

Give stuff away…. [quote from Mann here]

Don’t do something that initially seems profitable but may screw up whether people like you or not. Don’t make money and crush the bunny.

Don’t become too obsessed with the thing you want to make money on.

Once again, Mann pushes Stephen King’s book, On Writing. I must read that sometime.

14
Mar

Opening Remarks (Tony Hsieh - Zappos.com)

Saturday, 14 March 2009 at 2:00PM
Tony Hsieh - Zappos.com

He looks way young.

He started out with his own homegrown pizza business in university. Then founded LinkExchange and sold it to Microsoft ($265 million). He learned al lot of leassons about company culture with LinkExchange. When sold it had about 100 employees and he dreaded going into work. This forged much of the mission of Zappos. Now they have 1400 employees in Las Vegas. They look to Virgin as an example of diversifying and maintaining service.

About 75% of their customers are repeat customers. They use what would be marketing money and sink it into customer service. They recently surpassed $1 billion in sales.

What is customer service? Contact info is explicitly listed at the top of every page. They rely heavily upon the phone as a way to communicate their brand with the customer. Of course, their free shipping and return policy.

They only advertise what they physically have in their warehouse. They used to advertise what the manufacturers said they had the their warehouses, but this delayed shipping and was not always accurate.This shaves 25% off sales in the short run.

They always upgrade shipping so the customer gets a Wow! effect. This is very expensive for them, but they view it as part of their word-of-mouth marketing.

They will direct customers to competitor sites if the competitor offers a better deal. Strangely, that solidifies brand loyalty. This also happens over the phone so it is personal and the customer remembers this experiences.

They tell their reps that they can spend as much time as they want on the phone with customers.

Great customer service is a byproduct of great company culture. They have a two-level interview process:  one for the job fit and one by HR for company culture fit. New employees need to pass both and either can be a basis for firing. Really?

They have training that involves doing a wide variety of jobs within the comany. They offer people $2000 to leave during training. This gets them people who really want to stay. The people who did not take the offer are people that have to commit and engage with the company.

They have a CultureBook in which all the employees write down why they work at Zappos. they make this available to all new employees.

Twitter is used extensively. They offer Twitter training to new employees and they use it for internal networking and it bonds co-workers. http://twitter.zappos.com/

The brand is created by the company culture and they are converging. Branding may lag a bit, but transparency directly links the culture to the branding.

Example: Woman accidentally left $150 in a returned wallet. She received a letter from the warehouse worker who found it returning it. This is a result of good company culture. Rather than spending gobs of money for surveillance of employees, put the money into the hiring process and let things take care of themselves.

They wish to won the 3 C’s:  Clothing, Customer service and Culture

“People may not remember exactly what you did, but they will remember how you made them feel.”

Zappos Core values

  1. Deliver WOW Through Service
  2. Embrace and Drive Change
  3. Create Fun in a little Weirdness
  4. Be Adventurous, Creative and Open-minded
  5. Pursue Growth and Learning
  6. Build Open and Honest Relationships with Communication
  7. Build a Positive Team and Family Spirit
  8. Do More with Less
  9. Be Passionate and Determined
  10. Be Humble

Steps for building a brand that matters:

  1. Decide if you are trying to build a long-term and sustainable brand
  2. Figure out your values and culture
    Do this early on when you are small. What are your core values and alignment and then live the brand. (I know this sound hokey) They try to have every employee know these core values. Example:  When reporters visit, any person can be the company’s spokesperson.
  3. Commit to Transparency
    twitter.zappos.com; newsletter: askanything; zapposinsights.com
  4. Vision
    “Whatever you are thing, think bigger.” Idea:  If you follow the vision instead of the money then the money will follow.
  5. Build Relationships
    This is not networking. Be interested
  6. Build Your Team
    “If you want to go quickly, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.” - Al Gore
  7. Think Long Term
    Repeat customers. This is not an overnight success story.

Happiness: People are generally very bad at predicting what will bring them sustained, long-term happiness. What if you spent a portion of your time learning the scince of happiness.

  • Perceived control
  • Perceived progress
  • Connectedness
  • Vision/meaning - being a part of something greater than yourself

Three stages of happiness:

  • Pleasure - temporal stimulus
  • Engagement - get lost in what you enjoy
  • Meaning - higher purpose

Slides: http://www.slideshare.net/zappos/zappos-sxsw-31409

Misc. references made:

14
Mar

Change v2 (Lawrence Lessig)

Saturday, 14 March 2009 at 11:30AM
Presenter:  Lawrence Lessig - Stanford Law School

This talk is about Trust. It is very difficult to take notes on Lawrence Lessig’s talks. That is and remains to be why I have not pursued my law degree at Stanford. He is brilliant to just listen to and watch. Here is his talk taken from another presentation recording. If/when the SXSW version becomes available, I will replace it.

Following is my feeble attempt to take notes and then I gave up. The video has it all.

Lonely Planet and Wikipedia do not accept money. Why? It is not that money = false, but that money = mistrust.

Example:  Huge trust gap between doctors and parents who refuse to vaccinate their children. Money breeds doubts and mistrust.

context > doubts > deadly meme

“classic tobacco science” - corrupted science conspiracy theory that is rooted in mistrust

Money poisons trust because it appears to introduce an improper dependence or reason that trumps reason.

Bad government decisions are based upon this dependency.

This talk is difficult to take notes on. I am just going to listen and make the slides available.

Problem is not big gov or deregulation, but the cost of the loss of trust.

The solution he advocates to break the cycle of money’s influence:  citizen funding of congress ONLY. strike4change.org

Al Gore TEDTalk on the “democracy crisis”

This problem of mistrust created by the government’s dependency upon improper money should be addressed like an alcohol intervention - the alcoholism is the problem that creates other problems.

References made during his talk:

14
Mar

How Not To FAIL At Web Services

Saturday - 14 March 2009 at 10:00AM
Presenter:  Gregg Pollack - Rails Envy

This was an interesting talk about creating RESTful apps and the grammar of web apps. It was very interesting and gave me some things to research. I am not a developer in Rails or Python all the time. I do PHP - barely.

What does RESTful mean:

  • Common resources (nouns)
  • All resources need to be addressable
  • Standard methods of interaction
  • Protocol which is
  • Client/server
  • Stateless
  • Cached
  • Layered

URI are the nouns.

SQL:  select, create, update, delete

REST:  get post, put., delete

The web does not support the put and delete

[rails example]

open social

xrds: defines the names of resources for open social

Slides and links:  http://railsenvy.com/sxsw/

book:  RESTful web services by Leonard Richardson and Sam Ruby