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LinkedIn Signal LinkedIn Signal should be available for most of you today. If you haven't already seen it, it allows you to create live, dynamic searches for topics of interest to you - just...

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Community and Social Media Promotion Manager - Gibraltar A really exciting opportunity has come onto Carve's radar for a Community and Social Media Promotion Manager, based in Gibraltar. The role offers an unique opportunity...

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Career Networking on Facebook Following today's  Mashable article about Facebook Careers app BranchOut, it's high time we devoted some time to looking at its implications for individuals and employers...

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WordPress Adds new Likes and Reblog This buttons. Trying to make their user-friendly blogging platform a little bit more social, WordPress just added a "Like" button (just like the new famous Facebook one) as well as the...

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LiveLABS @ TruLondon On Thursday and Friday this week I’ll be leading two tracks at TruLondon (http://thetruconferences.com/) that we hope will turn into something pretty special. We’ve...

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Google+ brand pages: protecting your name

Posted on : 11-11-2011 | By : Malik | In : Carve Consulting Blog

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Here we are! Four months in and after having gathered 40M users, Google has finally launched official brand pages on Google, the +pages.

Many had elevated expectations regarding those pages, especially regarding customisation: they hoped they would be able to totally brand their page, unlike on Facebook.

Unfortunately, they will be disappointed, because on this aspect, Google emulates Facebook’s way of doing things; the brand page is very similar to a user’s profile, with profile picture, bio, photos and videos.  At the moment, there is no application or equivalent of a landing tab, but it will probably arrive soon.

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Google have announced some particular feature to promote its +Pages.

  • You’ll be able to use Google hangout to hold direct video customers with customers
  • You’ll be able to separate your followers into different circles; useful if you want to share a post only with a particular group of customers (most loyal customers, people from a particular country etc.): the possibilities are stronger than on Facebook or Twitter

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For the moment, it is impossible to get analytics for your page. But when we consider the gap between Facebook analytics and Google analytics, Google definitely has analytical skills that Facebook doesn’t, and it should provide to users many more precise insights than are currently available on Facebook.

Many brands have already created their pages: Pepsi, Toyota, Angry Birds, FC Barcelona, Orange, and L’Oreal. Will Google+ become a competitor to Facebook and Twitter? We can’t say now; it is too soon to judge it. But with 40 million users, Google+ has definitely reached a size which can already be interesting for brands.

These +pages might elevate in importance in the coming months, and Carve Consulting recommends protecting your name by creating a Page, even if you don’t currently plan to use it.

  • +1 widget to embed on your website
  • It will be possible to look directly for a +page on Google search, by typing the name of the brand followed by “+”. We tested this feature named “Direct connect”, but it isn’t currently live.

Carve consulting can create your +page, please feel free to contact us in this regard at contact@carveconsulting.com

Social Media Revolution in Organisations : Blitzkrieg vs. Guerilla

Posted on : 28-09-2011 | By : christophe | In : Carve Consulting Blog

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You might have heard of Jeremiah Owyang’s model, “The Five Ways Companies Organize for Social Business”. His framework presents and details 5 organisational models illustrating how companies structure their social media activity across the organisation. Summing it up broadly, here’s how it goes:

organic3

The Organic model is where companies usually start from: multiple, uncoordinated and decentralized initiatives. In terms of content & resource synergies, brand control, not to mention reputational risk and reporting…this model is far from optimal.

centralised3

In the Centralized model, one department manages the overall company’s social media activity, distributing content across various business area-specific channels. While ensuring greater control over the message and maximisation of resources’ use, this model seriously limits business-area autonomy and might be less reactive than the following ones due to its “process-heavy” nature.

coordinated2

In the Coordinated model, the central team provides resources to various nodes to empower them to become fully autonomous (yet consistent across the organisation) when managing their social media activity.

dandelion3

The Dandelion is probably the most advanced structure. In this model, the central node only serves for central reporting and resources, with each hub acting as a fully autonomous Coordinated-type structure. This particularly fits multinational organisations that have very diverse “companies within companies”.

honeycomb2

In the Honeycomb, every individual plays a role in customer facing interactions. It requires an advanced and open social media culture, and only fits B2C organisations. As Jeremiah Owyang concludes, “very few companies will actually achieve this”.

Overall, this is a powerful framework which can help organisations figure out where they are and what they’re aiming to achieve. Significantly, Owyang doesn’t present any model as being the ideal one, acknowledging that different organisations have different needs/objectives in social networks.

However, this framework is static and doesn’t really draw a roadmap explaining how to go from, for example, Organic to the Dandelion / Hub & Spoke. Implementing a successful social media strategy - on top of the necessary skills, policy, training and so on - requires a massive cultural change. Putting it simply, taking a multinational organisation’s disorganised social media presence with myriads of poorly-managed and barely controlled/monitored channels, and turning it into an efficient, flexible, global Dandelion model delivering clear ROI is not going to be achieved in a day, a week, or a month.

The real question when trying to socialise your organisation - and realise the benefits therein - is therefore not “What’s the right model for us?” but “How do we implement company-wide change”. From an organisational point of view, turning your company social represents a behaviour-disrupting innovation. In a nutshell, every approach taken to tackle the latter question stands somewhere between the “Blitzkieg approach” and the “Guerrilla approach”.

The Blitzkrieg approach is the one most commonly used by organisations when implementing innovation; it’s an “all in one go – get used to it” approach that consists of imposing the change to the whole organisation following a tight schedule. Most social media consultants will tell you things like “Resources Mapping, Social Media Policy, Training, Engagement Map and you’re good to go”. Well, this doesn’t work, mainly for one simple reason: most people hate change. As a result, this type of approach virtually always fails to generate “internal buy-in” and the shiny Social Media Revolution ends in an inconsistent, marketing-driven “let’s use twitter to broadcast corporate messages just like the old days” mockery of what was supposed to be “engagement”.

On the other end of the spectrum, we have the Guerrilla approach. This consists in taking only a small number of well-trained and highly motivated individuals to make the company social, department by department, one campaign at a time and recruiting new devotees along the way.

Applying Everett Roger’s “Diffusion of Innovations” model to this particular case, the Guerrilla approach acknowledges the fact that within every organisation the acceptance for change is not homogenous. Some people love change, some are shy or indifferent, some will fight it until they’re dead or fired. Basic human nature, we’ve all seen it. In other terms, only a fraction of people can be considered as “Innovators” and they are the only ones to have the influence to generate buy-in from the “early majority”, quickly followed by a big chunk of the “late majority”. Then come the “laggards”, or “social media haters”, left alone in the smoking ashes of the old “broadcast and sell” paradigm.

Let’s go back now to the Jeremiah Owyang model and try to see what it would look like if we were to turn a “Organic” company into a “Coordinated Model” following the Guerrilla approach.

Step 1 would be to identify and extract one particularly innovative node from the Organic structure.

step-11

In Step 2, after some targeted training/workshops, one could decide to launch a pilot program coordinated by the one team extracted in Step 1. At this point, it’s just not realistic to put together a central cross-functional social media savvy team, so let’s make the central team and the node complementary to each other: Central Marketing and one product-focussed initiative, or Central HR and a business-area specific HR team for example. This way we expect to create the first segment of the Coordinated Model and generate interest and buy-in among neighbouring business areas (the orange dots below). This is the “innovators to early majority” stage.

step-21

Step 3 to end: One by one, add hubs around the central point replicating on a larger scale the process implemented in Step 2 while complementing the central node with new functions and skills (i.e. Comms + CRM + Legal + HR + Marketing…). Progressively, the central node will develop processes and tools to speed up the integration of peripheral nodes: Social Media Policy, Engagement Guidelines, Training, Tutorials, Toolkits, Resources…

In the end, this incremental (hence long term) approach should enable the organisation to reach the desired structure (or to change its mind along the way) whilst ensuring at each step that the resources are properly trained, that the engagement is consistent, and that - most importantly - social activity is strategically meaningful and ultimately generates value for the business.

Have we lost the art of conversation?

Posted on : 28-04-2011 | By : kate | In : Carve Consulting Blog

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The rise of social media usage has undoubtedly changed the way we communicate, but does it mean that the art of conversation is dead?

Paul Harrison gave his views on this to BBC Radio this week. He believes that rather than social media tools hampering our ability to talk, we are now able to participate in a more global conversation. Yes there is a certain amount of inanity on social sites (Paul too was questioning the value of his beer-related tweets during a bbq this weekend) but that aside, there is a tremendous amount of value to be found in our wider online conversational abilities.

Paul also discussed how we unconsciously give away private information on social sites. As we mentioned in a previous blog, we should be mindful of our privacy settings and ensure that we think about the impact (preferably in advance) of what we post online.

You can listen to Paul’s interview with BBC Radio in full here, from 49:11 into the broadcast:

Community and Social Media Promotion Manager - Gibraltar

Posted on : 03-12-2010 | By : kate | In : Carve Consulting Blog

A really exciting opportunity has come onto Carve’s radar for a Community and Social Media Promotion Manager, based in Gibraltar.

The role offers an unique opportunity to enhance corporate reputation, manage external media relations and be responsible for commercialising sponsored poker players by creating role models (“poker playing legends”).  For someone with creativity, drive and a passion for social media, this would be a fantastic role.

If this sounds like you (or someone you know), more details can be found here: bit.ly/dTuFE2


Apple lauches Ping : Facebook meets Twitter for Music

Posted on : 02-09-2010 | By : christophe | In : Carve Consulting Blog

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Integrated with Facebook (follow your friends), similar to Twitter (follow Artists), based on the now popular asymetric friendship model (you don”t have to be a follower to get followed and vice-versa) and backed-up by personnalized recommendations (charts/artists/people to follow), Ping is available for desktop iTunes  and will soon be for IPod and IPhone as well.

It seems to be a bit slow for the moment, to lack datas for recommendations as well as artists profiles, but the integration of a sophisticated social network with a digital music service that already has 160 millions customers is definitely something to keep an eye on. Especially if you are MySpace…

But do people really have room for another Social Network ? Let’s wait and see….

A URL shortener for your brand.

Posted on : 13-08-2010 | By : christophe | In : Carve Consulting Blog

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The customised URL shortener we created for National Tourist Office VisitBritain is really beginning to take off. Why should you do the same for your brand ?

xcreateawsm1xcarvetwitter

It looks cool, right ? But there is of course more than a geeky guilty pleasure behind this idea. Here’s how Coke describes its URL shortener, http://cokeurl.com/: “As social media continues to evolve we have increasingly smaller spaces to get our messages across. Coke URL is just one way we’re making happiness easier to share.”

The most obvious advantage is the ability to access useful analytics about each tweet’s performance. Then, from a marketing perspective, a branded URL shortener  makes your links memorable and reusable. Branded URL shorteners act as verified transparent and trustable links for users and readers. Last but not least, your brand name gets promoted with every use!

So, Share the Love ! Branded!

http://LoveUK.us/2D

Chris

TweetDeck on Android…

Posted on : 12-08-2010 | By : george@carveconsulting.com | In : Carve Consulting Blog, The Social Company, Twitter

News today that the popular TweetDeck will soon be released on Android. For further info read:

http://mashable.com/2010/08/12/tweetdeck-for-android/

La Poste delivers real-time customer service via Twitter

Posted on : 28-07-2010 | By : christophe | In : Carve Consulting Blog, Twitter

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Let’s say you just sent a DVD to one of your friends and would like to be informed about how this is going.
In addition to a classic phonecall or customer service website visit, you can now follow your mail journey on Twitter with La Poste.
The process is as innovative as it is simple. You simply send your reference number mentionning @suivi_avec_lisa and you will then be sent a Direct Message every time your mail’s status is updated.

Brilliant, right?

la-poste

Can you separate online, offline, professional and private social networks

Posted on : 08-07-2010 | By : Sarah Thomas | In : Carve Consulting Blog, Corporate Social Networks, Digital Engagement, online reputation management

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This is an enlightening presentation for anyone who is involved in social networking by Paul Adams, a UX researcher from Google.

Probably most relevant for someone who’s daily actions can be fairly consistently tracked on Facebook, Foursquare and Twitter and particularly those who want to keep their personal and professional lives separate online.

And while we are on the topic of social profiles, another great post you might like to check out is about knowing and maintaining your own social footprint effectively from Michelle Prak here.

Social media graphics

Posted on : 07-07-2010 | By : george@carveconsulting.com | In : Carve Consulting Blog, The Social Company

A great and simple way to view some intriguing social media information: http://ht.ly/275gM