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Danny Brown

Danny Brown

podcaster - author - creator

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Latest posts from Danny Brown

Enjoy the latest posts from Danny Brown, and feel free to add your own thoughts in the comments after the post.

3 Things CEOs Should Never Lose Sight of in Social Media

binocular view

binocular view

This is a guest post from Lisa Petrilli.

I just spent two full days in a phenomenal leadership simulation program entitled, ?Magnetic Leadership? that was conceived, created and offered by Profitability Business Simulations.

I had the privilege of playing the role of the customer throughout the simulation, and then coaching the teams and their leaders after each simulation round was completed.

During each round, one person on each team was appointed ?CEO? and was responsible for determining the overall direction and strategy for their team of eight people.

They had one hour to prepare the team for the 10-minute, high-stress simulation in which they were given a business challenge along with a fickle customer (me) and tasked with meeting the challenge while satisfying the customer.

Three Overarching CEO Success Principles

There were three overarching principles that were critical to the CEOs? success that surfaced during the simulation.

As I was reflecting on how I would talk with my leadership-focused clients about how the experience confirmed the importance of these principles, I realized that it was imperative to talk with my social media clients about the experience as well.

Why?

Because these principles are such that they must be communicated and absorbed throughout the entire organization, so that the company can exude them and live them on a daily basis. As a critical part of marketing, sales, business development and customer relationship building, employees on the front lines of social media must also exude and live these principles through their work.

Vision

As someone committed to ?visionary leadership? I was thrilled to see how the high-ranking leaders I was working with understood the importance of vision to their success, and how they got better over the 2-day experience at clarifying and communicating their vision:

“In an organization, those individuals on the front line of social media must clearly understand the vision for the organization in order to exude that vision when talking, and sharing content with, customers.”

Patagonia

For example, though Patagonia does not have a formal vision statement, it shares its vision when it writes about its ?Reason for Being:?

?Patagonia grew out of a small company that made tools for climbers. Alpinism remains at the heart of a worldwide business that still makes clothes for climbing ? as well as for skiing, snowboarding, surfing, fly fishing, paddling and trail running. These are all silent sports. None requires a motor; none delivers the cheers of a crowd. In each sport, reward comes in the form of hard-won grace and moments of connection between us and nature?

For us at Patagonia, a love of wild and beautiful places demands participation in the fight to save them, and to help reverse the steep decline in the overall environmental health of our planet.?

Patagonia?s vision is to enable its customers to experience that hard-won grace and moments of connection with nature, and to express its love of wild and beautiful places by saving them.

Now see how Patagonia?s social media efforts further their vision to enable customers to experience that hard-won grace and those moments of connection with nature?especially the wild and beautiful places.

From Patagonia’s Facebook Page:

Picture Story: Conditions
Another in our occasional series of posts for the more visually oriented. This one goes out to all those lucky enough to charge off the couch and into the unknown without looking back or thinking twice . . . or doing much thinking at all, for that matter.

And from Twitter:

Twitter Pagatonia

Twitter    Patagonia  Also check out a new video ...It?s clear to me that Patagonia employees immersed in social media understand the company?s vision and how critical it is to share it, and inspire through it, via what they communicate.

Values

It was striking how in such short leadership simulations one?s personal and leadership values became so immediately obvious.

For example, whether or not a leader valued the input of others was demonstrated by how well they listened, because there?s a difference between asking for someone?s opinion ?to appease that person? and asking because you truly want to know. Of course, this is just one of so many ways to demonstrate values.

It?s critical that CEOs not lose sight of the fact that the values that are rewarded in the organization are those that will ultimately be imbued in conversations with, and content shared with, customers socially.

Contrast the fact that I worked with a client who would not allow me to tweet birthday wishes from the organization?s Twitter account to some of our most loyal and active members, with the following, recent tweets from Patagonia:

Twitter    Patagonia  Paul Marsh 1945-2011  Pion ...

Twitter    Patagonia  Bean?s Battle

Which organization would you naturally gravitate toward; the one that allows itself to be human and places value on sharing the human experience or the one that believes doing so just isn?t professional?

Value Proposition

Your company?s value proposition is what sets you apart from your competition; what makes you unique and provides that niche in which you cannot be rivaled.? For Apple and Disney it?s about customer experience while for Walmart it?s low cost and for Nordstrom it?s service.

If Disney social media employees tweeted about low-cost tickets to Disney World or asked Facebook fans to share stories about how to explore the park on a budget, it simply wouldn?t fit with the brand?s value proposition.

Rather, you see tweets about unique customer experiences that cannot be had anywhere but Disney World:

Twitter    Walt Disney World  Party like a princess

Twitter    Walt Disney World  Meet Pirates

And yet, without guidance and clear communication from the CEO, employees immersed in social media might make the mistake of expressing the company in ways that are in direct contrast to its value proposition.

It is the CEO?s responsibility to ensure that all employees understand the vision, values and value proposition (amongst other things!) that the company is committed to, to be their head steward, and to never lose sight of how critical it is to align these principles with their company?s social media efforts.

  • If you?re in the C-suite of your company, ask yourself if you?ve communicated your vision, values and value proposition well enough so that employees in social media roles may do their jobs to the best of their ability and are empowered for success. If not, you run the risk that what they share socially may not be aligned strategically!
  • If you?re in a social media role and you realize you?re not clear on these principles and priorities, make sure you ask and get clear direction!

Your thoughts?

Lisa PetrilliAbout the author:?Lisa Petrilli?is Chief Executive Officer of C-Level Strategies, Inc. and is passionate about visionary leadership. She helps C-suite executives and emerging leaders create strong visions for their companies and for themselves, and then bring these visions to fruition with clear and aligned strategies focused on leadership, marketing, and social media. You can find her on Twitter @LisaPetrilli and running #LeadershipChat every Tuesday night at 8pm ET, and she welcomes your emails at?Lisa@CLevelStrategies.com.

image: Joelk75

A Short Request for Help

james foley
james foley
James Foley, one of the four journalists

Hi guys. This post will be short, because your time is needed elsewhere. It’s a short request for help.

You may have seen me tweet or share the same message on Facebook, and thank you for your help there. I just wanted to expand a little bit.

My friend Deb Morello is trying to raise 5,000 signatures for a petition to lobby the Libyan government to release four freelance journalists currently being held against their will in Libya – James Foley, Clare Gillis, Manu Brabo and Anton Hammerl. The petition will also be sent to the U.S. State Department, as well as the Foreign Ministries of Spain and South Africa.

From reports so far, no-one is being allowed to see the journalists and concerns are obviously growing.

This isn’t an anti-war post; nor is it a post that states one side is right and the other is wrong. This is simply a post asking for your help to raise the 5,000 signatures needed by tomorrow, to try and make a difference in helping four people who have no military say in the current conflict.

Currently, the petition stands at just over 3,200 signatures – meaning we need approximately 1,800 more by tomorrow afternoon (Monday April 18). If we can all sign, and encourage just one other person to sign with us, it’ll only take 900 of us to make that difference. In the connected world we live in, surely that’s doable in the next 24 hours or so?

I try not to make this blog one where I ask you to be involved in personal stuff, as that’s not why you come here. But I’d really appreciate your help in this. You can add your details to the petition below. If the widget doesn’t load, you can sign directly on this link.

Please, if you can, sign, share and share again. Let’s see if we can show a small army can make a big difference.

Thanks guys.

Sunday Brunch – Improving Your Google Traffic

Sunday brunch
Julius Meinl
Julius Meinl coffee house in Southport, Chicago, is Gini's favourite Sunday Brunch place.

Welcome to a new episode of Sunday Brunch, where we talk about your questions on social media, marketing, business tips, entrepreneurship and more.

Today?s question is from Gini Dietrich, CEO of communications firm Arment Dietrich and owner of the popular Spin Sucks blog. Gini asks:

?Danny, when I saw you speak at PodCamp in Toronto, you said Google is your number one driver of traffic. Our number one driver is Twitter, then Facebook, then Networked Blogs, then Hootsuite, and THEN Google. We’d love to switch that around so Google is number one and the others follow suit. We use the SEO all-in-one-pack and SEO Scribe. We’re well ranked on Google and through the search engines, but we must be doing something wrong. Any insight??

Thanks for the question, Gini, and I hope the video helps.

If you have a question, you can send it in via the form below. There?s also a file upload option, if you want to send in a picture of your favourite Sunday Brunch place.

Cheers, and see you same time, same place next week for some more Sunday Brunch chats.

Resources:
As mentioned in the video, below is the Google AdWords Keyword Suggestion Tool that you might find useful:

  • Google Keyword Suggestion Tool.

This post contains a video. If you can’t see it displayed properly in your feed, you can view it directly here.

[gravityform id=6 name=SundayBrunch Question Form]

Immitation or Inspiration?

imitation and flattery

Changing face of social media

There’s a lot of buzz online at the minute about a video doing the rounds from U.K. online content specialists Purplefeather.

In the video (seen below), a blind beggar is struggling to get people to put money in his tin. They see him, but most walk by. Then a girl walks by, sees the man, looks at his sign and has a brainwave (I won’t spoil it in case you haven’t seen the video yet).

It’s this action, and the message behind it, that’s resulted in all the buzz about the video. Not surprising – it’s a powerful message.

But it’s not the original message.

Three years ago, Alonso Alvarez Barreda of Wama Films made a longer video. It was about a blind beggar who was struggling to get people to put money into his tin. A kindly passer-by sees this and… well, you get the picture.

Purplefeather’s video is great, and they mention on their YouTube channel that their video is a homage to Alonso’s video, and it’s always nice to see credit where credit’s due.

But part of me can’t help but wonder if a direct remake was needed over the original, or if a similar point could have been made with a different video. Or are we really out of original ideas, now? I’m also curious if Purplefeather paid the original director, since (to me) it’s more than just a homage (of course, that’s just my cynical business head coming through).

The videos are below (the new version is the first one). What’s your take – imitation or inspiration?

This post contains a video. If you can’t see it displayed properly in your feed, you can view it directly here.

Update: Thanks to Dukeo for the heads-up that the “original” video seems to be a copy itself. And the dearth of originality goes on…

The ROI of Employees

roi of employees

roi of employees

Over at his blog yesterday, Chris Brogan wrote about his admiration for Gary Vaynerchuk. The post sparked quite the discussion in the comments, a lot of it about ROI (return on investment).

This stemmed from a quip Gary had made to an event attendee who was asking a few times about the ROI of social media, to which Gary replied, “What’s the ROI of your mother?”

A throwaway quip, but one I thought was indicative of why so many people are confused (or afraid) when it comes to using social media for business. I said as much in the comments, and Chris Theisen raised an interesting point with his question: “Do companies actually measure whether each employee has a positive ROI on the company?”.

If they don’t, then they should.

What’s the point in running a business and employing the folks you need if you’re not measuring their impact? Questions you should be asking (and measuring) include:

  • Does John the sales guy bring in enough sales to cover his costs? Great, he may be bringing in $100,000 worth of sales, but if they’re to 100 different customers and I need to hire more customer service advisors to handle their queries, John’s value immediately diminishes.
  • Does Karen the customer service advisor upset my customers? She may be awesome in the office, but if she’s caused 10 customers to leave in the space of twelve months, and they each spend $5,000 per year, her salary of $30,000 per year is now actually $80,000 per year.
  • Does Peter the marketing guy piss off fellow team members and lower their morale because he thinks he’s “all that”? If so, does that stop them doing their job properly and cost me sales, or quality service for my customers? Does it make my employees want to leave, costing me more money to train new hires (not to mention losing the team spirit that had been fostered before Peter’s arrival)?

These are just three examples of where you could start looking, and measuring the impact each employee has on your business. There are many more, and some that are unique to individual businesses and industries – but they’re good starter points, and a pointer for a full organizational development analysis. This can then tell you how to make sure your employees feel as valued by you as they are valuable to you.

If you’re not already measuring the ROI of your employees, then are you really measuring the success of your business?

image: TruthOut.org

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