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B2B

Aaron Worsham / Apr 14, 2008

Customer Communications 2.0 – Instant Messaging

Previously, we chatted about forms of communications and how they’re changing in the b2b world. Today we will glance casually at what Instant Messaging has to offer your company. IM isn’t the new kid on the communication block anymore; its actually starting to show its age. Most IMs are old enough and mature enough to consider for more serious jobs than passing on jokes to friends and co-workers. While MySpace and Facebook are hanging around at the mall in the food court, AIM, Yahoo Messenger, MSN and Jabber have all moved on to full time jobs in the retail and services industries. They have become responsible, productive members of society. Now the question is, how do we put them to best use. The key to understanding how IM can help you connect with your customers are ‘immediacy’ and ‘presence’. Lets do a little catagorizing, shall we?

Talking to someone face to face has immediacy and presence. You know they are there and that they are hearing you as you talk. The big downside is max distance being measured in feet. Also, face to face conversations are best done serially. You can have more than one conversation at a time, but the results are lousy and sometimes dangerous (me agreeing to Opera tickets with wife while talking to buddy about Hockey Playoff seats)

Phone conversations, too, have immediacy and presence. The distance problem is solved, but concurrency is still an issue. A good salesman might be able to hold two sales calls a once but I wouldn’t recommend it to the rest of us.

Along came email, which was a glorified post office with the new fangled ability of immediate delivery. Suddenly everyone was hooked. Communication through an immediate delivery that didn’t rely on presence was just the ticket for huge gains in efficiency. Digital records of the communication thread was the killer feature that cinched it. This became the defacto standard for business communication. Still, when something needs presence we fall back to the phone.

Now compare Instant Messaging. IM has the distance, presence and immediacy of a phone call. It has the efficiency and cocurrency of email by holding multiple conversations. It also has digital recordings of the communication thread. Its something of the perfect business communication tool, if only it didn’t suffer from an image problem.

In a few years your customers will start to host IM solutions for their company, as they do email today. Here is how you can put this information to use now to build stronger lines of communication. First, you need to get a corporate IM service. Each have their strenghts and reputations in the market. For a solution hosted at your location, I would recommend looking at Jabber. Now, extend this service to your customers as an alternative to email. For some customers, this will have instant geek chic appeal. Here is where knowing the weaknesses of the different forms of communication makes a huge difference. Hook up support staff with IM accounts. Start with the inside sales support people. Give the account info out to your customers. Now the customer has a direct, immediate, recorded, concurrent, pressence based method to get information about your products or services. They can ask that question while they are working with the product and writting up that email to accounting about paying you a bag of money for it. If that isn’t the bee’s knee’s in customer focused technology, then I don’t know what is.

Sarah Worsham / Apr 10, 2008

B2B Social Bookmarking – Ma.gnolia

Similar to Del.icio.us, Ma.gnolia allows you to save and share bookmarks with friends and colleagues. However, Ma.gnolia takes the social aspect to a new level and has a very easy-to-use intuitive design.

Ma.gnolia is truly a social place to trade bookmarks. You can find, join and start groups with similar interests, which share people, tags, and links. Tagging is an integral part to any social bookmarking site and ma.gnolia integrates tags throughout their website, presented in tag clouds so you can easily see what the group feels is important. Almost every page has a featured linker to provide you with both a new person to link up to and new content to look at. Ma.gnolia makes it very easy to find new people and to see what the community finds interesting.

Ma.gnolia’s design is both beautiful and easy-to-use, making it fun to browse around looking for interesting sites or people. Your profile homepage shows recent bookmarks from you, your contacts, and your groups all in one place. Exploration is encouraged with lists of recent bookmarks, hot links and hot groups. Links can easily be imported from del.icio.us and login is a breeze – using your choice of openid, yahoo, facebook, clickpass, wordpress, livejournal, aol or typepad.

Adding bookmarks is easy with several ‘bookmarklets’ which are links you can add to your browser. One of these, Roots, also lets you see what the Ma.gnolia community thinks about the page before you add it – tying you to the community even when you are browsing around the web. Sharing your bookmarks on your website or blog is also easy, with a wide variety of officially supported Add-ons and a large community creating their own in the wiki.

Adding a social bookmarking service to your website or blog is a great way to easily add content and connect with your readers. Ma.gnolia also offers a way to increase traffic to your website due to the large community and social functionality. If you’re looking for a robust social bookmarking service for your blog or website, take a close look at Ma.gnolia.

 UPDATE: You can take a look at my ma.gnolia profile to get a feel for how it works.

Technorati Tags: ma.gnolia, social bookmarking, B2B social bookmarking, B2B, internet consulting, B2B internet consulting

Aaron Worsham / Apr 9, 2008

Customer Communications 2.0

Lets face it, Business to Business sales is a tight knit world. Your company is usually in a small, well defined industry with a finite number of potential customers. Your customer base, too, has a small number of vendors that they’ve worked with for years and intimately trust (usually). Communication in this small network is very clearly defined.

  1. You, the sales person, have a sales proposal.
  2. You call me, your customers, for chat/meeting/lunch/golf?
  3. We discuss/haggle.
  4. I sign.
  5. You hand off to implementation.
  6. Repeat 3 months later.

The customer can also start the dance with a sales opportunity, but regardless the steps are still the same. Most of this interaction is done over the phone and through email. Both customers and vendors are comfortable with these forms of communication. Used together, email and phone can blend to the perfect ratio of interruption and discretion. We have customer communication pretty much figured out, that is as long as nothing changes.

Its Wednesday, so that must mean things have changed, again. It may sound hyperbolic, but change happens. As a tech analyst in the B2B market, I will say that we seem to have a slower rate of adoption than the consumer markets. Traditional business modes seem to hold on much longer, presumably due to the insular nature of how our industries operate. Eventually, however, the forces that mold the consumer world find their way into the B2B community. I have seen a slow but inevitable adoption of new communication technology in B2B companies in the last few years. Instant Messaging, Blogs, Social Networks, Microblogging. If your customers are using these tools in their business, then you should really pay attention. There may be a new mode of communication forming right before our eyes. The first one there may win the hearts and minds of your B2B industry.

In future posts I will be discussing some of the new ways you can connect with your customers. We will look at when and how to use Instant Messaging appropriately. Next we will take a look at how LinkedIn can help you connect, reconnect, and stay connected to your customer’s colleagues. Lastly, we can dive into web conferencing which is an older idea getting a new lease on life.

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About Sazbean


Sarah Worsham (Sazbean) is a Webgrrl = Solution Architect + Product Management (Computer Engineer * Geek * Digital Strategist)^MBA. All views are her own.

Business + Technical Product Management

My sweet spot is at the intersection between technology and business. I love to manage and develop products, market them, and deep dive into technical issues when needed. Leveraging strategic and creative thinking to problem solving is when I thrive. I have developed and marketed products for a variety of industries and companies, including manufacturing, eCommerce, retail, software, publishing, media, law, accounting, medical, construction, & marketing.

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