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The Facebook Era: Tapping Online Social Networks to Build Better Products, Reach New Audiences, and Sell More Stuff [NOOK Book]
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“People in all demographics and regions of the world are more connected than ever before to the products, issues, places, and individuals in their lives. This book recognizes that we’ve come to a place where people can represent their real identity—both personal and professional—and use the social filters on the Web to connect with the world around them.”
—Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Operating Officer, Facebook
“...A must-read for CEOs and other executives who want to understand Facebook and more importantly take the right actions to stay relevant and stay competitive.”
—David Mather, President, Hoovers, Inc.
The ‘90s were about the World Wide Web of information and the power of linking web pages. Today it’s about the World Wide Web of people and the power of the social graph. Online social networks are fundamentally changing the way we live, work, and interact. They offer businesses immense opportunities to transform customer relationships for profit: opportunities that touch virtually every business function, from sales and marketing to recruiting, collaboration to executive decision-making, product development to innovation. In The Facebook Era, Clara Shih systematically outlines the business promise of social networking and shows how to transform that promise into reality.
Shih is singularly qualified to write this book: One of the world’s top business social networking thought leaders and practitioners, she created the first business application on Facebook and leads salesforce.com’s partnershipwith Facebook. Through case studies, examples, and a practical how-to guide, Shih helps individuals, companies, and organizations understand and take advantage of social networks to transform customer relationships for sales and marketing. Shih systematically identifies your best opportunities to use social networks to source new business opportunities, target marketing messages, find the best employees, and engage customers as true partners throughout the innovation cycle. Finally, she presents a detailed action plan for positioning your company to win in today’s radically new era: The Facebook Era.
Join the conversation—www.thefacebookera.com.
Fan the book—www.facebook.com/thefacebookera.
Right this minute, more than 1.5 million people are on Facebook. They’re interacting with friends—and talking about your brands. They’re learning about your business—and providing valuable information you can use to market and sell. In the Facebook Era, you’re closer to your customers than ever before. Read this book, and then go get them!
Clara Shih offers best practices for overcoming obstacles to success, ranging from privacy and security issues to brand misrepresentation, and previews social networking trends that are just beginning to emerge—helping you get ahead of the curve and ahead of the competition, too.
Includes a practical 60-day action plan for positioning your company to win in the Facebook Era
For companies of all sizes, in all industries—and business functions ranging from marketing to operations
By Clara Shih, creator of Faceconnector, the first business application on Facebook
Learn how to…
Understand how social networking transforms our personal and professional relationships
Why social networking will have business impact comparable to the Internet
Use online social networks to hypertarget your customers
Hone in on precise audience segments and then tailor custom campaigns with powerful personal and social relevance
Define and implement your optimal social networking brand strategy
Ask the right questions, set the right goals and priorities, and execute on it
Implement effective governance and compliance
Understand and mitigate the risks of social networking/Web 2.0 initiatives
Web 2.0, the next generation of the Internet that is characterized by social networking sites, has revolutionized the ways individuals communicate. It has also transformed the way business is conducted, especially by companies that have used social networks' information about people and affiliations to form customer profiles and profitable customer relationships. Shih, a Web 2.0 business applications pioneer, shows readers how to use the power of social networks in business functions, such as sales, marketing, recruitment, and identification of opportunities. Companies' future abilities to compete may be dependent upon the implementation of strategies in this book, which recommends it to all business professionals.
“I am a firm believer in the people.”
—Abraham Lincoln
It was the spring of 2007. Smoking indoors hadn’t yet been outlawed, though this place might not have cared either way. These two older men, clearly regulars, sat in the back corner, bare, lanky arms hanging out of their wifebeaters, cigarette dangling out one side of their mouth and a toothpick out the other. They were gesturing animatedly, laughing, eating, smoking, chattering away in loud Cantonese about this and that.
I tuned them out to focus on my steaming bowl of wonton soup. Just then, out of the corner of my ear, I heard them just barely: “...blah blah blah Facebook.” I instantly sat up to listen. I had not been mistaken—these two men slurping down their congee at an anonymous diner tucked away in a corner of Hong Kong where foreigners never go, and probably don’t know about, were talking about Facebook. Their children who were in college abroad got them into it, and now they were hooked. I was floored. It was the moment I realized that if Facebook was not already mainstream, that it would become so very, very soon.
I flew back to San Francisco the following week and attended the first f8, Facebook’s developer conference. There, they unveiled a new platform that would allow third-party developers and software vendors to build applications that Facebook users could add to their Facebook pages, such as their profile. The keynote presentation and product demonstrations were novel and interesting—new Facebook applications such as iLike for sharing music and concerts with friends, Slide for sharing photos andvideos, and so on and so forth.
Still, I felt like something was missing. Games and SuperPoking are fun, but where were the business applications? I was working (and still work) at an enterprise computing company, salesforce.com, which made its name developing customer relationship management (CRM) applications. But wasn’t relationship management at the core of what Facebook was offering, albeit in a more fun and casual and modern way?
That night, I went home and sketched out an idea for bringing Facebook to business. As a product marketer, I had been spending a lot of time on sales calls and saw that the most successful reps established immediate rapport with their prospects and had the strongest personal relationships with their customers. Meanwhile in my personal life, I saw Facebook help establish faster and better rapport with people I had just met, and help me maintain closer relationships with my friends. So I decided to bring Facebook to CRM.
With my friend Todd Perry’s help, I developed Faceconnector (originally called Faceforce), which pulls Facebook profile and friend information into Salesforce CRM. Instead of anonymous cold calling, sales reps and other business professionals could get to know the person behind the name and title, and even ask for warm introductions from mutual friends.
Fortunately, Todd and I weren’t alone. Enterprise start-up companies like WorkLight, InsideView, and Appirio evolved their products to include Facebook and other traditionally “consumer” social media. New companies emerged, like Mzinga, Socialcast, and Small World Labs, to build enterprise social technology from the ground up. My employer, salesforce.com, brought voting, tagging, profiles, feeds, and other Web 2.0 capabilities into its IT platform and CRM applications. Oracle announced a strategy around “social CRM.”
Our idea—bringing the power of community, trusted online identity, and user data on social networking sites to business—was a simple one, but has had powerful consequences. But it represented a paradigm shift: Facebook isn’t just for kids anymore.Why You’re Reading This Book
This book is meant to help you understand online social networking and what it means for your company. Perhaps these situations sound familiar:
There are three main premises that motivate this manuscript. First, organizations are inherently social because organizations are only as good as their people and people are inherently social. Whether it’s relationships between a sales rep and prospect, recruiter and candidate, vendor and procurement personnel, or other partners, business success has always come down to personal relationships. Second, recommendations and referrals from those you know and trust are powerful influencers of purchase decisions. Last but not least, research shows that weak ties, rather than your most intimate circle of friends and family, tend to carry the greatest amount of social capital in business contexts. It is precisely in weak ties where Facebook and other online social networks can often make all the difference.Welcome to the Facebook Era
We are witnessing a historic movement around the online social graph—that is, the map of every person on the Internet and how they are connected. It is the World Wide Web of people, a reflection and extension of the offline social graph—the friends, family members, colleagues, mentors, classmates, neighbors, and acquaintances who are important to us, who help shape us, and for whom we live. The online social graph empowers us to be better, more effective, more efficient, and more fulfilled doing what is inherent to our nature—communicating who we are, and transacting and interacting with others. Data from social networks, such as where people are from, what they are interested in, and who their friends are, with the right privacy controls in place can then be implicitly or explicitly mined to make business interactions more tailored, personal, and precise.
With the lightning pace of technology, we are living in a very different world than a few years ago. Today’s college students don’t use e-mail except with “grown-ups” like professors and potential employers—they send Facebook messages and write on each other’s Facebook walls. But it’s not just college students. Although Facebook may have begun after office hours, its power extends far beyond our personal identities into our professional ones.150 Million and Counting
This very moment, over 150 million people around the world are logged in to Facebook, updating their status, interacting with friends, interacting with brands, providing valuable information for you to be able to understand them better, and learning about you in return. As a business person, you need to be where your customers are, and increasingly, customers are spending time on Facebook.
We can learn a great deal from Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, which used Facebook, MySpace, and other social networking sites to rally millions of supporters and help raise nearly $1 billion in grassroots campaign contributions. According to the Pew Research Center, ten percent of Americans (and one-third of Americans under the age of 30) used Facebook or another social networking site to get information about the presidential election. How many people will use Facebook to learn about or become engaged with your company and products?It’s All About the People
Perhaps the online social graph was inevitable. Technology shouldn’t be—was never meant to be—an end in and of itself. It is only interesting and meaningful and valuable where and when it serves people. Technology-centric technology was the result of an immaturity of our systems and thinking. The online social graph provides us with a new way, a way to bring what most defines and differentiates each one of us—our history, our relationships, our memories—into all aspects of our lives, including the way we experience technology.
What the future holds is anyone’s guess, but what we do know is that business will never again be the same—whatever your industry, wherever you work, whether you are in sales, marketing, product development, recruiting, or another corporate function. We were in a very similar place of anticipation back in the early days of the Internet, and the PC and mainframe computing before it. Then, as now, some companies jumped blindly on the bandwagon, investing a tremendous amount of time, energy, and capital to implement technologies they did not understand, with no clear strategy and, ultimately, little to show for it. Others dismissed the Internet as a passing fad and were gradually outcompeted by online businesses or companies that used the Web to achieve more efficient and effective sales, marketing, recruiting, product development, and operations. But the smart ones took notice and began preparing for what an Internet era might look like. They thought through the implications for their business, and they adapted and thrived. This book is here to help you be smart about online social networking so that this time around you, too, can adapt and thrive.
If it’s true that we are separated at most by only six degrees, then you are not very far from any one of your customers or prospective customers. Read this book, and then go out and get them!
Welcome to the Facebook Era.How to Use This Book
This manuscript is structured into three parts. Part I (Chapters 1 through 3) provides the bigger-picture framework from which we can develop a richer understanding and appreciation of the online social networking revolution—what is happening, why it’s happening, and what we can learn and apply from past technology revolutions. Part II (Chapters 4 through 7) takes a tour across four major functions in a company—sales, marketing, product development, and recruiting—and explores how each is being affected by online social networking technologies. Part III (Chapters 8 through 12) of the book is a practical how-to guide around implementing the ideas and possibilities presented in Part II. In all, there are twelve chapters in this book:Part I: A Brief History of Social Media
© Copyright Pearson Education. All rights reserved.
Foreword ix
Acknowledgments xii
About the Author xiv
Introduction 1
Why You're Reading This Book 2
Welcome to the Facebook Era 3
How to Use This Book 5
Part 1 A Brief History of Social Media
1 The Fourth Revolution 11
Mainframe Computing 12
The PC 14
The World Wide Web 15
The Online Social Graph 17
Empowering the End User 22
2 The Evolution of Digital Media 25
Storage and Creation 26
Media Distribution 26
The Future: Social Filtering 29
Why Facebook Is Different 34
Social Network Ecosystems 36
What the Social Graph Means for Digital Media 42
3 Social Capital from Networking Online 43
Establishing a New Category of Relationships 44
Online Interactions Supplement Offline Networking 50
Flattening Effect 52
Creating New Value from Network Effects 52
Blurring the Lines 57
Part II Transforming the Way We Do Business
4 Social Sales 61
Transforming the Sales Cycle 62
The Need for Multiple Network Structures 79
CRM-The First Social Network? 80
5 Social Network Marketing 81
Hypertargeting 82
Loyalty and Engagement 89
Social Distribution 96
Challenges and Limitations 103
6 Social Innovation 107
Concept Generation 108
Prototyping 115
Commercial Implementation 117
Continual Iteration 120
7 Social Recruiting 123
The Best Social Networks for Recruiting 124
Sourcing Candidates 126
Candidate References 134
Employer and Recruiter Reputation 135
Keeping in Touch 137
Advice for Candidates 141
Employee Poaching 141
Part III Your Step-By-Step Guide to Using Facebook for Business
8 Engage Your Customers 145
Start with Strategy and Objectives 146
Find Your Unsanctioned Communities 148
Define andEstablish Your Presence 155
9 Get Your Message Across 163
Hypersegment Your Audience 164
Choose Your Media Strategy 167
10 Build and Manage Your Relationships 181
Setting Up Your Facebook Account 181
Interacting on Facebook 187
Asking for and Providing Introductions 193
11 Corporate Governance and Strategy 195
Choosing the Right Network Model 196
Identify Key Risk Areas 198
Partner with Legal, IT, and PR 200
12 The Future of Social Business 203
The Innovator's Dilemma 204
The ROI of Social 205
Social Trends 205
What the Future Means for Doing Business 206
Final Remarks 211
A Snapshot of Top Social Networking Sites, March 2009 213
Index 223
“I am a firm believer in the people.”
—Abraham Lincoln
It was the spring of 2007. Smoking indoors hadn’t yet been outlawed, though this place might not have cared either way. These two older men, clearly regulars, sat in the back corner, bare, lanky arms hanging out of their wifebeaters, cigarette dangling out one side of their mouth and a toothpick out the other. They were gesturing animatedly, laughing, eating, smoking, chattering away in loud Cantonese about this and that.
I tuned them out to focus on my steaming bowl of wonton soup. Just then, out of the corner of my ear, I heard them just barely: “...blah blah blah Facebook.” I instantly sat up to listen. I had not been mistaken—these two men slurping down their congee at an anonymous diner tucked away in a corner of Hong Kong where foreigners never go, and probably don’t know about, were talking about Facebook. Their children who were in college abroad got them into it, and now they were hooked. I was floored. It was the moment I realized that if Facebook was not already mainstream, that it would become so very, very soon.
I flew back to San Francisco the following week and attended the first f8, Facebook’s developer conference. There, they unveiled a new platform that would allow third-party developers and software vendors to build applications that Facebook users could add to their Facebook pages, such as their profile. The keynote presentation and product demonstrations were novel and interesting—new Facebook applications such as iLike for sharing music and concerts with friends, Slide for sharing photos and videos, and so on and so forth.
Still, I felt like something was missing. Games and SuperPoking are fun, but where were the business applications? I was working (and still work) at an enterprise computing company, salesforce.com, which made its name developing customer relationship management (CRM) applications. But wasn’t relationship management at the core of what Facebook was offering, albeit in a more fun and casual and modern way?
That night, I went home and sketched out an idea for bringing Facebook to business. As a product marketer, I had been spending a lot of time on sales calls and saw that the most successful reps established immediate rapport with their prospects and had the strongest personal relationships with their customers. Meanwhile in my personal life, I saw Facebook help establish faster and better rapport with people I had just met, and help me maintain closer relationships with my friends. So I decided to bring Facebook to CRM.
With my friend Todd Perry’s help, I developed Faceconnector (originally called Faceforce), which pulls Facebook profile and friend information into Salesforce CRM. Instead of anonymous cold calling, sales reps and other business professionals could get to know the person behind the name and title, and even ask for warm introductions from mutual friends.
Fortunately, Todd and I weren’t alone. Enterprise start-up companies like WorkLight, InsideView, and Appirio evolved their products to include Facebook and other traditionally “consumer” social media. New companies emerged, like Mzinga, Socialcast, and Small World Labs, to build enterprise social technology from the ground up. My employer, salesforce.com, brought voting, tagging, profiles, feeds, and other Web 2.0 capabilities into its IT platform and CRM applications. Oracle announced a strategy around “social CRM.”
Our idea—bringing the power of community, trusted online identity, and user data on social networking sites to business—was a simple one, but has had powerful consequences. But it represented a paradigm shift: Facebook isn’t just for kids anymore.
This book is meant to help you understand online social networking and what it means for your company. Perhaps these situations sound familiar:
There are three main premises that motivate this manuscript. First, organizations are inherently social because organizations are only as good as their people and people are inherently social. Whether it’s relationships between a sales rep and prospect, recruiter and candidate, vendor and procurement personnel, or other partners, business success has always come down to personal relationships. Second, recommendations and referrals from those you know and trust are powerful influencers of purchase decisions. Last but not least, research shows that weak ties, rather than your most intimate circle of friends and family, tend to carry the greatest amount of social capital in business contexts. It is precisely in weak ties where Facebook and other online social networks can often make all the difference.
We are witnessing a historic movement around the online social graph—that is, the map of every person on the Internet and how they are connected. It is the World Wide Web of people, a reflection and extension of the offline social graph—the friends, family members, colleagues, mentors, classmates, neighbors, and acquaintances who are important to us, who help shape us, and for whom we live. The online social graph empowers us to be better, more effective, more efficient, and more fulfilled doing what is inherent to our nature—communicating who we are, and transacting and interacting with others. Data from social networks, such as where people are from, what they are interested in, and who their friends are, with the right privacy controls in place can then be implicitly or explicitly mined to make business interactions more tailored, personal, and precise.
With the lightning pace of technology, we are living in a very different world than a few years ago. Today’s college students don’t use e-mail except with “grown-ups” like professors and potential employers—they send Facebook messages and write on each other’s Facebook walls. But it’s not just college students. Although Facebook may have begun after office hours, its power extends far beyond our personal identities into our professional ones.
This very moment, over 150 million people around the world are logged in to Facebook, updating their status, interacting with friends, interacting with brands, providing valuable information for you to be able to understand them better, and learning about you in return. As a business person, you need to be where your customers are, and increasingly, customers are spending time on Facebook.
We can learn a great deal from Barack Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, which used Facebook, MySpace, and other social networking sites to rally millions of supporters and help raise nearly $1 billion in grassroots campaign contributions. According to the Pew Research Center, ten percent of Americans (and one-third of Americans under the age of 30) used Facebook or another social networking site to get information about the presidential election. How many people will use Facebook to learn about or become engaged with your company and products?
Perhaps the online social graph was inevitable. Technology shouldn’t be—was never meant to be—an end in and of itself. It is only interesting and meaningful and valuable where and when it serves people. Technology-centric technology was the result of an immaturity of our systems and thinking. The online social graph provides us with a new way, a way to bring what most defines and differentiates each one of us—our history, our relationships, our memories—into all aspects of our lives, including the way we experience technology.
What the future holds is anyone’s guess, but what we do know is that business will never again be the same—whatever your industry, wherever you work, whether you are in sales, marketing, product development, recruiting, or another corporate function. We were in a very similar place of anticipation back in the early days of the Internet, and the PC and mainframe computing before it. Then, as now, some companies jumped blindly on the bandwagon, investing a tremendous amount of time, energy, and capital to implement technologies they did not understand, with no clear strategy and, ultimately, little to show for it. Others dismissed the Internet as a passing fad and were gradually outcompeted by online businesses or companies that used the Web to achieve more efficient and effective sales, marketing, recruiting, product development, and operations. But the smart ones took notice and began preparing for what an Internet era might look like. They thought through the implications for their business, and they adapted and thrived. This book is here to help you be smart about online social networking so that this time around you, too, can adapt and thrive.
If it’s true that we are separated at most by only six degrees, then you are not very far from any one of your customers or prospective customers. Read this book, and then go out and get them!
Welcome to the Facebook Era.
This manuscript is structured into three parts. Part I (Chapters 1 through 3) provides the bigger-picture framework from which we can develop a richer understanding and appreciation of the online social networking revolution—what is happening, why it’s happening, and what we can learn and apply from past technology revolutions. Part II (Chapters 4 through 7) takes a tour across four major functions in a company—sales, marketing, product development, and recruiting—and explores how each is being affected by online social networking technologies. Part III (Chapters 8 through 12) of the book is a practical how-to guide around implementing the ideas and possibilities presented in Part II. In all, there are twelve chapters in this book:
© Copyright Pearson Education. All rights reserved.
In-the-know companies now actively leverage online social networks - MySpace, Facebook, Friendster and their numerous compatriots - to increase sales, improve public relations, gain market research data, reach customers, offer technical support, find new employees and more. Despite the stereotype that some sites are "just for kids," many online social communities exist strictly for business people and professionals, including Forbes, CEO Network (controlled access for select senior executives) and LinkedIn (a professional referral and networking portal). Online social networking draws countless mainstream consumers. If you want to reach them, getAbstract recommends this book by Clara Shih, who developed the first business application for Facebook. She details online social networking and even explains how you might make some money with it.
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If you own a business you need to be on Facebook. You will learn to sell more stuff, get your name out, and build your business. Great content, easy read and info that you can put to use today. I was stuggling but found my presence with facebook which has helped grow my business at www.ThePowerOfTen.ws
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Overview
“People in all demographics and regions of the world are more connected than ever before to the products, issues, places, and individuals in their lives. This book recognizes that we’ve come to a place where people can represent their real identity—both personal and professional—and use the social filters on the Web to connect with the world around them.”
—Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Operating Officer, Facebook
“...A must-read for CEOs and other executives who want to understand Facebook and more importantly take the right actions to stay relevant and stay competitive.”
—David Mather, President, Hoovers, Inc.
The ‘90s were about the World Wide Web of information and the power of ...