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Posts Tagged ‘social media’

101 statistics about why social media will drive the future of CRM

Wednesday, 24 August 2011 17:08 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

Inbound marketing experts HubSpot put together a compelling list of statistics that show why the future customer will require new techniques and technologies, especially social media.

100 Awesome Marketing Stats, Charts and Graphs

View more presentations from HubSpot Internet Marketing

One of the reasons Competitive Futures is launching its multi-client research project on this is subject is that forecasts show that many executives are unclear about how to go about social media for CRM, and even intend to keep marketing through one-way, context-free media, despite the incredible growth in online social activity.

It is our forecast that this tension between social-savvy customers and social-hesitant businesses will mean that the first companies to evolve their practices will achieve competitive advantages in the years to come.

Check out our white paper, and download our prospectus to see how your company can sponsor this unique foresight project.

 

White paper: Social media and customer relationship management

Thursday, 18 August 2011 16:01 Written by Eric Garland 1 Comment

Competitive Futures is launching a new multi-client research project over the next six months on the future of social media and customer relationship management. This white paper details the insights that lead us to take on this important topic on behalf of our clients.

For a full project prospectus, call us at 877.431.6565 or contact us.

Competitive Futures White Paper: Social media and customer relationship management

2011: The year business truly goes social?

Friday, 10 December 2010 09:54 Written by Eric Garland 1 Comment

Altimeter’s Jeremiah Owyang recently presented this following forecast on how social media will be integrated into the heart of business starting next year. Up to 2010, some companies were just experimenting with social media, some bolted it on to their existing brand communications structure, while still fewer used it as an organizing principle to allow all members of the company to relate to the outside world of customers and stakeholders in new ways.

In 2011, Owyang says we can expect businesses to focus on measurements of ROI, integration with product roadmaps, more organized modeling, and increasingly mature policies for social media.

Keynote: Social Business Forecast: 2011 The Year of Integration
View more presentations from Jeremiah Owyang.

Facebook will be worse than an abandoned shopping mall

Tuesday, 25 May 2010 10:09 Written by Eric Garland 4 Comments

Facebook will be worse than an abandoned shopping mall, and Twitter is doomed – or so sayeth my favorite comic, Patton Oswalt. (While it may seem to strange to cite standup comics for business insight, I submit that there’s nothing more comical than most of mainstream business television right now.) As such, I thought that his announcement that he is joining Twitter contained some cutting analysis on the future of social networks and the stability of their business models in an era of ultra-easy product substitution:

So, I’m joining Twitter this Saturday.

And, eventually, whatever replaces it.

I was on Friendster. It collapsed. I jumped on MySpace, and now it’s pretty much an abandoned shopping mall. I still get about 30 Friend Requests and 15 messages in my Inbox every day, but they’re all mailing list bullshit for bands I’ll never listen to, or porno-bots promoting some young Eurasian hottie. Even the comments are clearly all bot-generated. An abandoned mall still had trash, heating and cleaning services drop by, I guess.

I’ll still update my calendar and galleries here, but that’ll be about it.

Don’t feel bad, MySpace. Facebook is also, clearly, on the way out. Constant spam ads, weird privacy wormholes — yuck. Any social networking site, like a great punk band or TV show, has entropy and collapse built into its biography.

Remember how fun Friendster was for those three or four months?

His scenarios, however, are my favorite:

And Twitter will collapse, too. What will replace it? Here are my 3 predictions:

BlipBlap: Basically Twitter, but only 17 characters allowed, and no vowels. Xclnt!

Wh1ff: The first-ever “scent site” — you update your status from an “odor board” of 170 different scents. “(Snnnnnnfff) Patton had chili for lunch and he’s somewhere humid.”

DanzaQuip: Every single status update on this site is first sent to Tony Danza’s personal e-mail. He then decides which ones to post, and is the only one who can respond or comment. (*This site will replace the U.S. Post Office in 2027)

Really, is it any stranger than a prediction that 400 million people would voluntarily post embarrassing photos online in an ultra-complex social web of their coworkers and former elementary school classmates?

The telephone: a disruptive technology

Thursday, 18 March 2010 10:43 Written by Eric Garland 2 Comments

I loved this graphic, picked up on Twitter. (Click to enlarge) Not sure who Bozarth is, but it’s a clever comparison of social media to the original electric social medium, the telephone.

A few observations, picked up from our years of discussing innovative technologies and new social trends with leaders:

  • When people say “It can’t be done,” they usually mean, “We can’t control what will be done with it.” Control, or more accurately the perception of control, is considered FAR more important than creating the forward motion of innovation. Control is almost always the most important value in a large bureaucracy,  more important than revenue generation and even profit.
  • Most new communication technologies are tested out informally before they become official way of doing “work,” and thus are usually classified as “fooling around, wasting time.” Consider that back in 1996, in the days before Competitive Futures, while using the Internet to research competitors for my then-CEO, I was taken aside by a junior manager who accused me of “playing video games at work.” The video game in question, incidentally, was the EDGAR database of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
  • Most every generation underestimates the tech savvy of the generation succeeding it, while simultaneously overestimating the complexity of the next generation of technology. Back in 2000, we did a landmark study of the future of information technology for the construction industry in which we predicted the increased use of cell phones, laptops, GPS, and electronic building plans. Many of the older executives rejected the notion that “construction guys” would be using “the Internet and computers” by 2010. Two assumptions here were faulty: that computer skills were the dominion of the educated, and that “computer” meant “giant, clunky desktop” instead of a smart phone or Toughbook. Today, even the poor kids have Playstation and cell phones, and intrinsically understand electronic menus and text messaging. The generation is more tech savvy, and the tech is simpler.
  • The argument of late technology adopters is usually predicated on the idea that they have a CHOICE as to whether the new technology impacts their business. If history is any guide, you can either adopt major technology shifts or wait to see what your competitors will do with the technology. If this is still a question in your mind, why don’t you ask the music industry what it’s like to deny the inevitable.

As such, Competitive Futures is bullish on the long-term impact of social media. It seems inevitable for a host of technological and sociological reasons.  Pause for a moment to consider its impact on your customers and your internal management.

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This is the official trend blog of Competitive Futures, a management consultancy that provides trend research and analysis for business and government around the world. Here, we update you on interesting trends we see as part of our work for our clients.


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