Posts Tagged ‘Benjamin Dyer’

Oil Riggers or Astronauts? Do Brands really need specialist agencies to blow up the Social Media asteroid?

The advent of the Social Web has seen an explosion in new, new media agencies, clamouring to tell brands how to make the most of these shiny new marketing opportunities: just what should they be Tweeting? How best to work that Facebook fan page?

But it’s hardly rocket science, or is it? And where does this leave the traditional media agencies? Are they desperately playing catch-up or or are they quickly cottoning on? For #MKTG140, George Spencer asks whether brands actually need to employ whizzy new, stand alone boutiques to manage their presence across the rash of sometimes bewildering new web platforms.

Newly-inducted managers at NASA are reportedly made to watch the 1998 film Armageddon, noting as many scientific inaccuracies in the movie as they can spot. At least 168 technically impossible details have been identified during these screenings.

It doesn’t, however, to take a NASA manager to spot the howler on which the entire plot hinges. The NASA brains in Armageddon decide not to bother training their best astronauts to use drills (with which to dig a hole on the deadly asteroid, bury a nuclear warhead and blow the rocky aggressor to bits before it collides with our fair planet.) Probably way too easy for your average astronaut?

Instead, they decide that a more efficient use of the limited time before the expected apocalyptic impact is to assemble a team comprised of the world’s best drillers; train them up as astronauts, and then send them up, to do the already tricky job of landing on the cosmic body hurtling towards Earth at breakneck speed.

Unsurprisingly, nobody is especially confident of the plan; the sole purpose of Billy-Bob Thornton’s character, NASA chief Dan Truman, appears to be to emphasise just how goddamn risky the entire endeavour is. The film is peppered with shots of furrowed brows, “goddamnsonuvabitches” and similar forebodings.

NASA’s barmy Armageddon plan came to my mind more than once during the recent Media140 brands event in London when many of the presenters returned, again and again, to discussing the schism between traditional marketing agencies and the swelling crop of specialist ‘social media’ agencies.

One specific and heated topic was whether the “Social Web” per se was something which was being pushed onto clients by the agencies; and whether companies should be outsourcing their Twitter feeds, for example, to specialists. Many of the companies represented at the event, such as “We Are Social” referred to themselves pointedly as a ‘conversation agency’. Others, such as Ogilvy made no bones about being a more traditional (and by implication, broader) firm. The question I yearned to ask every time this came up was whether anyone believed that, just maybe, we’re in the process of training the oil riggers to be astronauts with these divergent approaches on offer?

During the Survivor’s Club panel, James Hart, Director of E-Commerce at ASOS was asked whether ASOS would persist with Twitter if its user-base dwindled, like so many social networking sites before it. His reaction was telling. He looked utterly perplexed. He explained: “No. We’re about being where our customers are. There wouldn’t be any point if we aren’t reaching people, it’s just a new way [of reaching people].”

I believe that this is the key to the entire revolution. We may be witnessing internal reshuffles, both at traditional agencies and at the brands themselves to better accommodate the altered landscape of the Social Web. However, the core disciplines have not changed. If you want to provide customer service on Twitter, you need to have CS teams who know how to deliver a consistent brand message and who appreciate the gravity of their task. Nothing about Twitter is different for Customer Service, except, perhaps, for the semi-public nature of the conversation?

All of which begs the question: do brands need specialised agencies to work with on their Social Web presence, when most larger agencies are already equipped to provide solutions across a broader spectrum?

As Tom Bedecarré wryly noted in his introductory keynote, of Twitter’s 40 million users, 35 million of them are social media gurus. However, I am not suggesting that We Are Social or other specialised social web agency does things any old Twitter-user could do; they tie the strands of different platforms together and have experience running campaigns across them – but these are platforms designed for humans to use. It’s not the same as producing a TV advertisement; it doesn’t require that kind of specialised knowledge and expertise.

Robin Grant, head of We Are Social, was quizzed over his concerns regarding client attitudes towards the social web; and specifically whether he felt it might be a transient phenomenon. “That’s one of our fears, both internally at We Are Social and as a member of the community. There are clients who are just interested in social media because they are chasing the new toy, and that will create a backlash.”
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The Doctor will Tweet you now: Could Social Media do anything to improve Britain’s NHS?

Can Social Media really do anything to improve the myriad problems of so-called Broken Britain? – For the second installment of this regular series, Media140 tech whizz and resident Mr Fix-It, Benjamin Dyer, a one time Accident & Emergency regular, turns his attention to our love/hate relationship with the National Health Service.

The National Health Service sums up exactly what I love about being British. For years, we moan and complain about the NHS, but as soon as someone breaks ranks, we are all totally appalled, we start a twitter campaign and we demand that they resign.

So my choice of the NHS this week is a touchy one, but surely Social Media can make the experience a better one?

Trawling through the masses of on-line information about the health service, I came across several common problems, but there are also some obvious solutions.

The biggest complaint by far concerns waiting times, both at GP surgeries and at Accident and Emergency. Nothing annoys me more than being late, I always ensure that I am on time or have adequate tolerance for factors outside of my control; I am almost obsessive about it. However, turning up to my local GP for an appointment on time and then having to wait an hour in a germ filled waiting room (never touch the magazines) is possibly the worst experience a human can endure.

Accident and Emergency is exactly the same. As a kid, I was frequently being stitched up. I think my record was three times in one particular month. However, the time it takes between crawling in and finally being seen by a Doctor can be unconscionable.

I am not complaining: both are excellent free services. I just want to make it better.
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Geo-tag that Train Driver! Could Social Media somehow make one man’s commute run rather more smoothly?

Calling all commuters! If you knew – via the miracles of modern technology – that 300 foreign exchange students would be jostling their way into your train carriage at the next station down the line, might you perhaps be tempted to top up your latte and wait a few minutes longer for the next, student-free, service to arrive on your platform?

Here, in the first post of a regular new series – examining how Social Media might fix some of the myriad problems of “Broken Britain” – Media140 tech whizz and frequent long distance commuter, Benjamin Dyer, exercises his ire on the perennial problems of Public Transport and comes up with some rather novel solutions:

I think it’s a good idea to start with a confession. I know in this politically, correct, green washed world this is going to make me unpopular but I LOATH public transport. Without being too over the top, I would rather spend a day discussing fiscal policy with Alistair Darling than spend any time whatsoever on any form of train, bus or ferry. Putting it bluntly, my life is far too short to be breathing in others’ noxious gases while being stared at by the local weirdo.

However, I live on the Isle of Wight, while my office is a stone’s throw away from London – so sadly, while I may dream of discussing quantitative easing with big Al, I have no choice but to use public transport.

Yet public transport sucks; in this age of aggregated data and social networks, surely we should be able to make it better – but how?

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***** Rating? Well Done You! But do Product Reviews really pay?

One undisputed advantage of Social Media is the invigorated voice it has given to the lowly consumer who, only a few years ago, had a mere handful of stones in their slingshot, to help them face down the hulking Goliaths of big business. Now, customer product reviews, both negative and positive, coupled with the myriad new real-time channels via which customers can now communicate with each other, have forced big business to sit up and listen.

Those who don’t adapt to this new climate of transparency and accountability risk doing incalculable damage to their brands – as we saw earlier this year with the saga of the Twitter hashtag spamming intern at @HabitatUK. For Media140, our resident e-commerce guru, Benjamin Dyer, takes a look at how companies are approaching both the opportunity, and the danger afforded by the potent combination of on-line reviews, blog mentions and Twitter endorsements.

When you work in e-commerce as I do, you spend an inordinate amount of time thinking about the process people go through before they buy goods or services. Now, with the advent of social networking, listening to customers has become an absolutely essential part of any business.

Only five years ago, consumers had fairly limited channels for feeding back to a business; virtually all the power lay with the business. Social networking and user generated content has turned this on its head; now your customers can freely interact with other customers. Scary isn’t it!

If you’re in business, you simply have to realize that you can no longer control these conversations. But, if you can’t stop them, why not join them? If you’re selling on-line, then providing the capability for your customers to feedback on the product or service they receive from you is not just a nice gimmick – it shows that you care.

So how do product reviews impact the decision-making process for consumers?
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Just Victims in Search of a common Enemy? A personal Take on the “Online Community” Debate:

Is “Community” the most over-used, misunderstood and still hotly disputed term inevitably bandied around whenever folk are gathered to talk of Social Media? In this admittedly unscientific, but very engaged investigation, Dominique Jackson offers a highly personal perspective:

It was when I overheard the extraordinary statement which opens this post title that I was finally moved to sully my otherwise fairly tightly focussed photo-journalism blog, with a dip of the toe into the lively debate on the existence – or otherwise – of online communities.

The statement was made by a well-known newspaper journalist, dining at an adjacent table in an Italian joint, much frequented by senior media types. At the time, she was musing on the mental health of the readers who evidently took time and trouble to leave online responses to her weekly column.

That incident and my resulting post were in February 2009 – which already seems an aeon ago – particularly given the spectacular rise in the MSM profile of Twitter over the period in question.

I still have no pat answers to the vexed question of online communities. The potential of the real time web and the Social Media communities in question are still in their relative infancy; we may not yet have the perspective to judge their merits or otherwise.

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