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This past Thursday and Friday I attended Lithium’s annual customer conference on Community Management and Social CRM: LiNC 2010. I have some experience in these areas not only because I’ve worked on products to support Community Management and Social CRM (a.k.a. CRM 2.0) but also because as a User Experience professional, my job calls calls for customer empathy and a deep understanding of their needs. When I worked at a small start-up, Zaq Interactive Solutions in Toronto and Montreal about 10 years ago we were pushing online communities and community management. This was well before marketers and other areas of the organization were ready for it and that’s why the business failed. More recently I worked at Yahoo! and I was involved in the research, design and development of their first social shopping product around deals where the desire for customers to connect was extremely clear.

As mentioned, the main topic of the conference was Communities and Social CRM. Of course now, thanks to twitter, conferences like this one easily generate their own time-based community. I tweeted constantly throughout the conference (under the wrong impression that I could win an iPad; contrary to what you might read below, sometimes user incentives DO work :) ). The sense of community and the feeling that I belonged and was being heard was validated by responses, retweets and new followers. Even our complaints about the cold rooms made and impact and after a few tweets the temperature was promptly turned up.

Below is a summarization of what I heard and learned during the conference.

Your customers are everywhere. Are you?

Great idea and aside from sounding creepy it’s what you’re going to need to do. According to Patrick Riley, the Director of User Experience at Lithium:

  • “Gen Y triggered the movement towards the Social Customer”
  • “Now there’s more communication via social networks than email.
  • “3/4” people on the web are tied to social networks. They’re also very conversant with the various technologies available to them.
  • “Users are 4x more likely to contribute on mobile devices vs. desktop because they’re the most engaged. And Facebook mobile users are 6x more likely to contribute.

And consider this: “From first call resolution to first contact resolution, there’s a lot of stuff that’s gone on before that call.” – Paul Greenberg

Users want to be heard, recognized, and loved

The community feeds people’s needs to be understood, recognized, and valued. Letting the customer get control of their experience with the company is the core of everything. Customers want appreciation, not swag. Bragging rights are meaningful and receiving props from other community members is the kind of recognition they’re looking for.

While introducing the concept of Customer 2.0 at an Inside Sales conference last week, my colleague shared a truth in marketing video that sums up the above point about user recognition perfectly. Customer: “I’ve changed, we don’t hang out in the same places anymore. You don’t listen…”

There’s a shift towards transparency to gain customer trust

In Social CRM the company is “the man”. A lack of transparency making it difficult for customers to get the information they want affects loyalty. You should be brutally honest with your customers and speak in your own voice.

According to BestBuy the corportate culture and employee adoption is key. There social media engagemnts align with core philopsophies to empower employees and drive the customer experience. And Scoutlabs, recently acquired by Lithium, thinks every person in the organization should be in tune with the customer. They focused on making their system really easy to use because the voice of the customer doesn’t just below to marketing.

All superusers are not equal.

Superusers are your most valuable customers. They represent the “1” in the “90-9-1” principle. They are more likely to contribute to community sites and do positive brand marketing (via blogging) and defend your company on your behalf. At the conference, one of our prospects (and current product uses) asked to speak with me about my company’s user community. InsideView doesn’t have a formal community yet; that’s why I was at the conference checking out Lithium. I asked Matt (the prospect) why he would join our community and he said it’s because he’s so passionate about our product, SalesView and that he’d like to help out others with their experience with the product. These people do exist, you just have to find them. They come in 4 flavors:

  • connectors
  • critics
  • creators
  • collectors

Connectors help you sell. Critics give rich, actionable feedback. Why focus on these superusers who represent about 1% of your customer base? Because 1% of customers / trendsetters drive 15% of sales” (unknown source).

But don’t just focus on them. The real opportunity to grow your business is between the 9 and the 1 in “90-9-1” principle.

Don’t make participating in the community like work

Community contribution shouldn’t be like work. Or it won’t work. Adding labels and tags to make community content searchable is not something users want to do. The company can do that. Use your community to validate content. They’ll tell you if it’s wrong. And keep in mind that it’s much easier to start knowledge in conversation vs. on a blank page.

The Net Promoter Score is only the beginning

How do you measure the success of your products and services. We’ve been using the Net Promoter score for years. But we’ve been stopping short. Paul Greenberg asks what’s next? If step one is asking a customer how likely they would be to recommend the product(s) or service(s) to a friend, step two is “did you recommend…?” (that’s right; observed behavior is the only trusted measure), step 3 is “did they become a customer?”, and step four: “were they profitable?”.

Different types of customers require different types of communities

There are 3 types of communities:

  • 911 – break / fix
  • 411 – learn and improve
  • 511 – explore and discover
  • The users of these communities display different underlying behavioral patterns and it’s important understand what they are.

    Overall it was a great conference where much was learned. You can see all of my conference tweets using this search. I’ll leave you with one of my favorites:


    Beth Goldman
    Manager of User Experience


I work at sales intelligence leader, InsideView and we’re in the same building as Zynga at 444 De Haro Street in San Francisco. I used to be addicted to FarmVille, playing it daily on Facebook. I couldn’t handle the pressure and responsibility of my e-farm and stopped playing a few months ago. I call it a vacation and imagine some day I’ll be back on that farm, tending away. Despite my lack of use, it looks like Zynga is growing like crazy. I see their staff around the building every day looking pretty happy to be at work and often wonder what goes on behind the doors of their many offices. So I decided to do some research in our own product, SalesView.

Within minutes I found these articles from ITProPortal, The Money Times, PCWorld, cnet news and more outlining the possibility of Zynga bailing out of Facebook and starting their own social gaming network using SalesView (see image below). From there I found even more commentary on the subject, including Michael Arrington’s post on TechCrunch.

Zynga in SalesView

I quickly became concerned about the idea of adding yet another website to my list of social networks. Would social network aggregators like FriendFeed, Netvibes, TweetDeck be so popular if people really wanted to have more destinations to go to on the internet? Social content needs to be “where I’m at” and if it’s not I need a damn good reason to go there.

But as a social news aggregator, this is great for InsideView. The more decentralized information there is about people and companies the more important it is that there are tools out there to show the right information in the right place at the right time. And we can do that.

Beth Goldman
Manager of User Experience
beth.goldman@insideview.com

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If you use SalesView you’ll soon notice some pretty big changes to the way it looks and feels. What might not be as evident is how much these updates will help you do your job better. Our new design has been optimized so you can:

  1. Focus on what’s important with our new streamlined UI
  2. Get the job done quicker with fewer clicks
  3. Get more information where you need it
  4. Discover SalesView’s powerful features with ease
  5. Get the help you need at the right time

Focus on what’s important with our new streamlined UI

Information that rarely changes for companies has been streamlined to take up less space, leaving more room for up-to-date agent news results.

New Company Details Page

Current Company Details Page

A 400-pixel height option for most CRM Mash-ups means less scrolling to get the information you need.

Get the job done quicker with fewer clicks

The persistent “Recently Viewed” pane allows you to easily get back to companies and now people too.

"Recently Viewed" Sidebar

Our mash-up is optimized for productivity so there’s less reason to leave your CRM Application. You can see below that company details now expand inline rather than opening in another window.

Information agent news articles load on-demand for increased performance. Unnecessary connections information was removed from the Watchlist to also help performance and make the list easier to scan.

Comparatively the current Watchlist loads all of the underlying data at once and shows less information when collapsed than the new version.

Current Watchlist

Get more information where you need it

We’ll show you twitter activity for contacts when it’s available while viewing these people in our Product and CRM Application Mash-up

In-product integration

Twitter Integration - Contact Details - Product

Mash-up integration

More company financial and industry information is available on-demand.

Discover SalesView’s powerful features with ease.

New users will immediately realize the benefits of SalesView by receiving alerts for pre-determined companies. Our CRM Application Mash-up now includes access to useful features you might not know we have such as finding prospects.

The simplified and in-context alert settings make it easier to understand and modify your options.

New Design

Alert Settings

Current Design

The new home page acts as a launch pad for key functionality.

Home - Launch Pad

Get the help you need at the right time

The In-context informational pop-ups help you understand how to use features.

In-product training and contextual training links on the sidebar make it easy to learn SalesView’s features.

Training Links Sidebar

These features will become available in the next couple of versions of SalesView. The designs are subject to change before the features are released.

Learn more about:  InsideView |  SalesView

Beth Goldman
Manager of User Experience
beth.goldman@insideview.com

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