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Industry Buzz via Twitter Thinking Beyond LinkedIn
The social media world is about the appropriate application, including face-to-dace meetings
By: Bruce Johnston
Jul. 16, 2009 05:15 PM
While LinkedIn offers an attractive gateway to the world of social media, many financial professionals we have been speaking with downplay the importance of other social media tools like Twitter. That sentiment was forcefully expressed recently in John Ridley's Visible Man column, which decries Twitter as a stomach-churning indulgence for navel gazers. Is John right? Are Twitter and its fellow social media apps best suited for distracting easily bored, attention deficit fad followers? That thought was on the minds of many at the Russell Reynolds Distribution Roundtable focused on Social Media tools as a way to expand distribution for asset & wealth management firms in New York recently. The other side of the story was well-represented as well: That every game-changing communications improvement arrived first as a fad. Those over 20 may remember the early cellular phones in their lunch box-size vinyl bags; when it wasn't unusual to wonder: "Isn't that guy just showing off? Does he really need to have a phone with him all the time?" Every communications improvement finally wasn't really about the app after all, it was about the content, about what the message was trying to achieve.
Some enterprising CEOs are taking to the promise of social media in a big way. Take a look at this message from Vanguard CEO Bill McNabb on the firm's financial stability. Posted on their web site in April, to date 96 visitors have commented. Simultaneous to the posting of the message on the Vanguard website, they very well could have sent a tweet, allowing recipients to forward, or "retweet", the message to friends thus enhancing the number of receipients. Sprint and many other companies and their managers could take a page from this experience that my good friend Scott McKain, speaker and author of the just published best selling business book, "Collapse of Distinction", had recently with Sprint. He twittered a complaint to Sprint about excessive advertising covering up a loss of customers and received this series of 140 character tweets from Stephanie Vinge of Sprint PR:
Scott was impressed at her persistent follow-through and responded this way:
Stephanie responded:
And, he's considering it. The takeaway is this: When someone voices a concern about your organization, you strengthen your hand by responding just like Stephanie did: Immediately, openly, and sincerely. And she made an attempt to reconnect with a former customer. Who knows? You might get that dissatisfied client back. Would it be worthwhile for you and your firm in terms of AUM and revenue if you could respond immediately, personally and sincerely to your customers? Would it be worthwhile for you and your firm to stay connected with current customers reconnect with former customers and stay in front of potential customers? The promise of social media and Web 2.0 is to answer those questions in the affirmative. SOA World Latest Stories
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