Springer Texts in Business and Economics
Efraim Turban
Judy Strauss
Linda Lai
Social Commerce
Marketing, Technology and Management
Springer Texts in Business and Economics
More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/10099
Efraim Turban • Judy Strauss • Linda Lai
Social Commerce
Marketing, Technology and Management
Efraim Turban
Pacific Institute for ISM
University of Hawaii
Honolulu, HI, USA
Judy Strauss
Managerial Sciences Department
University of Nevada
Reno, NV, USA
Linda Lai
School of Business
Macao Polytechnic Institute
Rua Luis Gonzaga Gomes, Macao
ISSN 2192-4333
ISSN 2192-4341 (electronic)
Springer Texts in Business and Economics
ISBN 978-3-319-17027-5
ISBN 978-3-319-17028-2 (eBook)
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2
Library of Congress Control Number: 2015939078
Springer Cham Heidelberg New York Dordrecht London
© Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is
concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction
on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation,
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The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication does not
imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant protective laws and
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The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book are believed to
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or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors or omissions that may have been made.
Printed on acid-free paper
Springer International Publishing AG Switzerland is part of Springer Science+Business Media (www.springer.com)
To Daphne and Sharon with love
Efraim Turban
To my lovely daughters, Cyndi and Malia
Judy Strauss
To my parents for their love, support, and encouragement
Linda Lai
Preface
Social commerce, also known as social business, is an emerging field driven by the explosive
growth of the social Web and social media. The field includes social network services such as
Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn; user-generated content networks such as YouTube and
Pinterest; products and services review sites (e.g., Trip Advisor); and social shopping sites
(e.g., Groupon, Polyvore). Social commerce (SC) can be viewed as a subset of electronic commerce where the electronic transactions and associated product conversations are conducted on
social networks and other social media platforms.
To date, major activities of social commerce are facilitated by marketing communication,
online sales transactions, and customer service areas. There are also significant activities in the
areas of collaboration, recruiting, and problem solving within organizations (known as
Enterprise 2.0). Social commerce networks also benefit organizations by moving them closer
to their markets for collaboration and research purposes that often result in product innovation
and greater customer value.
SC is expected to maintain its rapid growth, disrupting several current business models in
the process. An understanding of the strategies and tactics in this field is critical for the future
of any organization. This book is a snapshot of SC in 2015/2016, and it includes many resources
and references so the reader can learn about the state of the art and monitor current strategies
and tactics.
THE PURPOSE OF THIS BOOK
This book was written as a multidisciplinary textbook by leading authors of e-commerce and
e-marketing textbooks, with contributions by several industry experts. It is the first comprehensive textbook and resource collection ever written on this topic and it can be used in one or
more of the following ways:
(a) Textbook for an elective course at the undergraduate or graduate levels (including MBA
and executive MBA programs).
(b) Supplementary text in marketing, management, or information systems disciplines.
(c) Material for training courses in industry.
(d) Support resources for researchers and practitioners in the fields of marketing, management, and information management.
Multidisciplinary Approach
Social commerce is a multidisciplinary field combining marketing, IT, management, sociology, behavioral sciences, and more.
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FEATURES OF THIS BOOK
Several features are unique to this book. It includes both management and theoretical
approaches to improve business strategies and tactics.
Managerial Orientation
Social commerce can be approached from two major viewpoints: technological and managerial. This text uses the second approach. Most of the content is about SC applications and
implementation. However, we do recognize the importance of the technology and present technological topics as needed. In addition, we provide many technology resources.
Real-World Orientation
Extensive, vivid examples from large corporations, small businesses, governments, and nonprofit agencies from all over the world make concepts come alive. These examples show the
readers the capabilities of SC, its cost and justification, and the innovative ways these entities
are using SC in their operations.
Solid Theoretical Background
Chapter 3 is dedicated to the theoretical foundations necessary for understanding SC, ranging
from consumer behavior to social influence. Furthermore, we provide website resources, many
exercises, and extensive references to supplement the theoretical presentations.
Most Current Leading-Edge Topics
The book presents the most current topics related to SC, as evidenced by many recent sources.
Topics such as crowdsourcing, social CRM, reputation management, social games, mobile
social, the Hype Cycle, social analytics, and sentiment analysis are presented from the
theoretical point of view as well as from the application perspective.
Global Perspective
The importance of global competition, partnerships, and trade is increasing rapidly. Social
commerce can facilitate global collaboration, the management of multinational companies,
and electronic trading around the globe. International examples are provided throughout the
book, including some from developing countries.
Links to Resources
Several hundred links to research reports, companys’ products, books, guides, free e-books,
etc. are provided.
Note #1. We do not mark a www. in front of the URLs. If the page is not loaded try to add
www.
Note #2. The dynamic nature of the field makes some of the links obsolete.
Note #3. In many cases, we provide only the name of a company or its URL, but not both.
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User-Friendliness
While covering all major SC topics, this book is clear, simple, and well organized. It provides all
the basic definitions of terms as well as logical conceptual support. Furthermore, the book is easy
to understand and is full of interesting real-world examples that maintain the readers’ interest.
ORGANIZATION OF THE BOOK
The book is divided into 11 chapters grouped into four part (see Fig. 1.6). In addition, there are
two primers, one on e-commerce and one on e-marketing, which provide the foundations
needed as prerequisites to a course on social commerce. An appendix to the book lists dozens
of SC-oriented websites.
COURSE SYLLABUS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES
Per the request of many instructors, we provide the following suggested course description,
learning outcomes, and student learning strategies.
Course Description
Social commerce is an introductory course in an emerging, quickly developing field, which
utilizes social media, including Web 2.0 tools and social network sites, to conduct e-commerce,
e-marketing, and other e-business activities. The course covers the areas of buyer behavior,
social media marketing, social enterprise (Enterprise 2.0), social government, social CRM,
crowdsourcing, social entertainment and gaming, social strategy, market research and analytics, and several other critical topics. The course is managerially oriented, and includes many
social media applications and assignments. The prerequisites are: basic knowledge of introduction to MIS, marketing, and e-commerce.
Learning Outcomes
Upon completion of this course, the student will be able to:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Understand the essentials of social commerce and its strategic value.
Define social media and describe its composition and tools.
Explain the major supporting theories behind social commerce.
Describe the components of social commerce.
Explain how social media is used in marketing communication (including advertising,
reputation management, and company-owned social media content).
Discuss how social media can engage customers in social commerce activities.
Describe the major models of social shopping.
Explain social CRM and the use of social media to support it.
Describe the content of social enterprise (Enterprise 2.0) and its benefits and business models.
Explain crowdsourcing and collective intelligence and relate them to social commerce
activities (e.g., idea generation).
Be familiar with many applications of social commerce such as social entertainment,
social government, and social learning.
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12. Describe social strategy and performance and analytics, including competitive strategy
and innovation applications.
13. Assess the implementation and deployment issues involved in social commerce.
Student Learning Strategies
• Learn the important terminology for this emerging field, as presented in the book’s extensive glossary.
• Follow links within each chapter to learn many of the topics more thoroughly.
• Read case histories within each chapter and answer challenging questions about the company’s social media strategies.
• Study the end-of-chapter review questions that can help self-assessment of knowledge learned.
• Engage in social commerce topics with end-of-chapter activities: discussion, debates, and
Internet exercises.
• Watch videos and answer relevant questions about them.
• Delve more deeply into chapter topics with end-of-chapter team assignments and activities.
• Solve interesting, current case problems and video cases introduced in each chapter.
PEDAGOGICAL FEATURES
The text offers a number of learning aids for the students:
• Book’s Learning Outcomes. The book’s learning outcomes are included in the proposed
course syllabus.
• Chapter Outlines. A listing of the main headings (“Content”) at the beginning of each
chapter provides a quick overview of the major topics covered.
• Chapter’s Learning Objectives. Learning objectives at the beginning of each chapter help
readers focus their efforts and alert them to the important concepts to be discussed. The summaries at the end of each chapter are organized to correspond with the learning objectives.
• Opening Cases. Each chapter opens with a real-world example that illustrates the major
topics to be covered in the chapter. Following each case, a short section titled “Lessons
Learned from the Case” links the important issues in the opening case to the subject matter
of the chapter. Questions for the opening cases are provided in the “Team Assignment”
section at the end of each chapter.
• Application Cases and Examples. In-chapter cases and numerous examples highlight
real-world SC solutions used by organizations. Questions follow each application case to
help direct students’ attention to the implications of the case material.
• Exhibits. Numerous attractive exhibits (both illustrations and tables) extend and supplement the text discussion.
• Chapter Summary. The chapter summary is linked one-to-one with the learning objectives
introduced at the beginning of each chapter.
• Review Questions. Each chapter ends with a series of review questions. These are intended
to help students summarize the concepts introduced and understand the essentials of each
section before proceeding to another topic.
• End-of-Chapter Exercises. Different types of questions measure students’ comprehension
and their ability to apply knowledge. “Topics for Class Discussion and Debates” are
intended to develop critical thinking skills. “Internet Exercises” are challenging assignments that require students to use the Internet and apply what they have learned. More than
100 hands-on exercises direct students to interesting websites to conduct research,
investigate applications, download demos, watch videos, or learn about state-of-the-art
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technology. The “Team Assignments and Projects” exercises are challenging group projects
designed to foster group collaboration.
• Glossary and Key Terms. Each key term is defined in the text when it first appears. In
addition, an alphabetical list of key terms appears at the end of each chapter and a glossary
with the definitions of all terms are available at the end of the book.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
The following support materials are also available.
• PowerPoint Lecture Notes. These notes, developed by Judy Lang and Efraim Turban, are
oriented toward text-learning objectives on a chapter-by-chapter basis.
• Instructor’s Manual. The Instructor’s Manual includes answers to all review and discussion questions, exercises, and case questions written by Jon Outland (Online Colleges and
Universities).
• Test Bank. A comprehensive test bank was developed by Jon Outland.
• Online Tutorials. We provide five technology-related online tutorials. The following tutorials are not related to any specific chapter. They cover the essential of SC technologies and
provide a guide to relevant resources.
T1—e-CRM
T2—EC Technology: EDI, Extranet, RFID, and Cloud Computing
T3—Business intelligence and Analytics, Data, Text, and Web Mining
T4—Competition in Cyberspace
T5—E-Collaboration
• Two authors’ websites
1. Judy Strauss’s site (judystrauss.com/socialcommerce) includes valuable additional
content to supplement the book material.
2. Efraim Turban’s site (social-commerce-textbook.com) includes tutorials and online files.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Many individuals helped us create this text. Faculty feedback was solicited via reviews and
through individual interviews. We are grateful to this faculty for their contributions.
The following individuals made useful contributions that assisted us in the process of creating this book.
• Deborrah C. Turban (University of Santo Tomas, Philippines) contributed material to several chapters via her Internet search efforts. She also supported the writing of most chapters,
checked the references, and helped with many other tasks.
• Judy Lang (Lang Associates) formatted the manuscript and provided valuable suggestions
for its improvement.
• Cyndi Jakus (Truckee Meadows Community College) assisted with referencing issues.
• Ivan C. Seballos II (De La Salle Lipa, Philippines) and Stanley Myles C. Seballos (COCPHINMA Education Network) drew the figures and helped with research and development
for the book.
• We also recognize the various organizations and corporations that provided us with useful
content. These include Fabio Cipriani (Brazil), who gave us permission to use his slides
with their supporting text. We also recognize the practitioners who helped us to gain valuable insights in the social commerce field: Brian Solis (briansolis.com), Matthew Tommasi
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(the Social Media Guide; socialmediaguide.com.au), and Brian Smith (the global social
director of Useful Social Media; usefulsocialmedia.com).
• We thank these contributors for their dedication and superb performance shown throughout
the writing of the manuscript.
Finally, we appreciate the assistance provided by the Springer team under the leadership of
Neil Levine, Matthew Amboy, and Christine Crigler.
Honolulu, HI
Reno, NV
Gonzaga Gomes, Macao
Efraim Turban
Judy Strauss
Linda Lai
Contents
Part I
1
2
The Foundations
Introduction to Social Commerce ...........................................................................
Opening Case: Starbucks Goes Social .......................................................................
1.1 Social Computing and the Social Web ..............................................................
Social Computing..............................................................................................
The Social Web .................................................................................................
Some Interesting Statistics About the Social Web and Social Media ...............
1.2 Fundamentals of Web 2.0 and Social Media.....................................................
What Is Web 2.0? ..............................................................................................
What Is Social Media? ......................................................................................
1.3 Social Commerce: Definitions and Evolution...................................................
Definitions and Characteristics .........................................................................
The Evolution of Social Commerce..................................................................
1.4 The Content of the Social Commerce Field......................................................
The Landscape and Major Components of the Field ........................................
Social Media Marketing....................................................................................
Enterprise 2.0 ....................................................................................................
1.5 The Benefits and Limitations of Social Commerce ..........................................
Benefits to Customers .......................................................................................
Benefits to Retailers ..........................................................................................
Benefits to Other Types of Enterprises .............................................................
The Social Business: An IBM Approach ..........................................................
New or Improved Business Models ..................................................................
Concerns and Limitations of Conducting Social Commerce............................
1.6 The Process of Conducting Social Commerce and Suggested
Research Topics ................................................................................................
The Process of Conducting Social Commerce..................................................
Illustrative Research Issues ...............................................................................
1.7 The Content and Organization of the Book ......................................................
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
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Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce.............................................................
Opening Case: Pinterest—An Innovative Social Commerce Platform......................
2.1 Social Media: The Basics..................................................................................
Social Media: Many Definitions .......................................................................
The Landscape of Social Media ........................................................................
2.2 Web 2.0 and Its Major Characteristics ..............................................................
Representative Characteristics of Web 2.0........................................................
User-Generated Content....................................................................................
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2.3 The Major Social Media Tools: From Blogs and Microblogs
to Wikis and Support Technologies ..................................................................
Blog (Web Log) ................................................................................................
Microblogging and Twitter ...............................................................................
Wikis .................................................................................................................
Other Useful Tools and Apps ............................................................................
2.4 Social Networks and Social Networking Sites and Services ............................
Social Network Services (Sites)........................................................................
The Major Capabilities and Services Provided by Social Network Sites .........
Business-Oriented Social Networks .................................................................
Enterprise Social Networks...............................................................................
2.5 Mobile Social Commerce .................................................................................
Mobile Social Networking ................................................................................
2.6 Crowdsourcing and Crowdfunding: An Introduction .......................................
Crowdsourcing ..................................................................................................
Crowdfunding ...................................................................................................
2.7 Virtual Worlds as a Social Commerce Platform ...............................................
Major Features ..................................................................................................
Avatars ..............................................................................................................
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
3
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce ...................................
Opening Case: Netflix Increases Sales Using Movie Recommendations
by Customers .............................................................................................................
3.1 Learning About Online Consumer Behavior ....................................................
A Model of Consumer Behavior .......................................................................
The Major Influential Factors ...........................................................................
3.2 The Consumer Purchasing-Decision Process ...................................................
Generic Purchasing Decision-Making Phases:
A Managerial Decision-Making Approach .......................................................
The Consumer Brand Decision-Making Process Models .................................
The AIDA Model ..............................................................................................
Consumer Behavior in Social Media and Commerce .......................................
3.3 Personalization and Behavioral Marketing .......................................................
Personalization in Social Commerce ................................................................
Behavioral Targeting and Collaborative Filtering.............................................
3.4 Word of Mouth in Social Commerce ................................................................
What Is Word of Mouth (WOM)?.....................................................................
Using Word of Mouth in Social Commerce......................................................
The Power of WOM..........................................................................................
The Major Types of WOM................................................................................
Viral Marketing and Social Networking ...........................................................
3.5 Consumer Engagement in Social Commerce ...................................................
Engagement in Social Commerce .....................................................................
Case 3.1 How Whole Foods Engages Its Customers ........................................
Facebook Presence ............................................................................................
Engagement on Twitter and by Blogging .........................................................
Why Engagement ..............................................................................................
3.6 Social Psychology Theories, Social Network Analysis,
and the Social Graph .........................................................................................
Social Psychology and Social Commerce.........................................................
Social Network Theory and Analysis................................................................
The Social Graph ..............................................................................................
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3.7 Social Influence, Social Capital, and Social Support........................................
Social Influence.................................................................................................
Social Capital in Social Commerce ..................................................................
Social Support in Online Communities ............................................................
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
Part II
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Social Media Marketing
4
Marketing Communications in Social Media ........................................................
Opening Case: Johnson & Johnson Uses New Media Marketing..............................
4.1 Getting Started with Social Media Promotions ................................................
Listening to Customers .....................................................................................
Developing Market Communication.................................................................
Social Media Target Markets ............................................................................
Social Media Communication Objectives ........................................................
Identify Social Media Hangouts .......................................................................
4.2 Promotional Tools: Definitions and Use ...........................................................
4.3 Social Media for Social Commerce Communication .......................................
Social Media Platforms .....................................................................................
Owned, Paid, and Earned Social Media............................................................
4.4 Owned Social Media .........................................................................................
Controlling Social Media ..................................................................................
Types of Owned Social Media ..........................................................................
Focus on Pinterest .............................................................................................
Focus on Twitter and Other Microblogging ......................................................
Other Types of Owned Social Media ................................................................
Making Press Relations Social Media Friendly ................................................
4.5 Paid Social Media: Advertising ........................................................................
Advertising Formats..........................................................................................
Video Advertising .............................................................................................
More Social Media Advertising Examples .......................................................
Advertising Pricing Models ..............................................................................
4.6 Coordinating Social, Internet, and Traditional Media Promotion Plans ...........
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
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Customer Engagement and Metrics .......................................................................
Opening Case: Häagen-Dazs Viral Video Creates a Buzz .........................................
5.1 Earned Media ....................................................................................................
5.2 Social Media Engagement Levels .....................................................................
5.3 Engaging Consumers to Produce Earned Media ..............................................
Who Should a Company Engage? ....................................................................
5.4 Engagement Techniques ...................................................................................
Viral Marketing .................................................................................................
Ratings, Reviews, Recommendations and Referrals ........................................
Collaborative Content Creation by Consumers ................................................
How Do Companies Entice Engagement? ........................................................
5.5 Reputation Management in Social Media .........................................................
Which Reputations Matter? ..............................................................................
Build, Maintain, Monitor, Repair, and Learn....................................................
Reputations Management Systems ...................................................................
5.6 Search Engine Optimization .............................................................................
5.7 Monitor, Measure, and Refine: SM Metrics .....................................................
Awareness/Exposure Metrics ............................................................................
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Brand Health Metrics ........................................................................................
Engagement Metrics .........................................................................................
Action Metrics ..................................................................................................
Innovation Metrics ............................................................................................
Measurement Tools ...........................................................................................
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
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Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models ................................................
Opening Case: Groupon—Will the Company Prosper? ............................................
6.1 Definitions, Drivers, Concepts, and Benefits of Social Shopping ....................
Definitions .........................................................................................................
Concepts and Content of Social Shopping........................................................
The Benefits of Social Shopping.......................................................................
6.2 Components and Models of Social Shopping ...................................................
What Components to Expect in a Social Shopping Site ...................................
The Major Social Shopping Models .................................................................
Traditional E-Commerce Sites with Social Media Additions ...........................
6.3 Group Buying and Deal Purchasing .................................................................
Group Buying in China .....................................................................................
Group Buying and Flash Sales on Facebook ....................................................
Deal Purchases (Flash Sales, Daily Deals) .......................................................
6.4 Shopping Together: Communities and Clubs ...................................................
Online Social Shopping Communities ..............................................................
Case 6.1 Polyvore: A Trendsetter in Social Shopping ......................................
Kaboodle: A Unique Social Shopping Community ..........................................
Private Online Shopping Clubs and Retail by Invitation ..................................
Shopping Together Sites ...................................................................................
6.5 Social Shopping Aids: From Recommendations, Reviews,
and Ratings to Marketplaces .............................................................................
Recommendations in Social Commerce ...........................................................
Other Shopping Aids and Services ...................................................................
Social Marketplaces and Direct Sales to Customers.........................................
6.6 Innovative Shopping Models and Sites and Virtual Goods ..............................
Examples of Innovative Social Shopping Ideas and Sites ................................
Shopping Without Leaving Facebook and Other Social Networks ..................
Shopping for Virtual Goods in a Virtual Economy ...........................................
Real-Time Online Shopping .............................................................................
Auctions in Social Shopping.............................................................................
B2B Social Networking ....................................................................................
Virtual Visual Shopping ....................................................................................
Social Shopping in the Near Future ..................................................................
Activities on Twitter..........................................................................................
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
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Social Customer Service and CRM ........................................................................
Opening Case: How Sony Uses Social Media for Improving CRM..........................
7.1 Definitions and Concepts of CRM, E-CRM, and Social CRM.........................
How Social Networks Empower Customers.....................................................
Defining CRM and E-CRM ..............................................................................
What Is Social CRM? .......................................................................................
7.2 A CRM Model for Customer Interactions ........................................................
The Patricia Seybold Group Model for Customer Interactions ........................
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Customer-Facing Applications..........................................................................
Case 7.1 iRobot Uses Social Media for Multichannel CRM ............................
7.3 The Evolution of Social CRM ..........................................................................
Cipriani’s Multidimensional Presentation.........................................................
Understanding the Social CRM Evolution .......................................................
7.4 How to Serve the Social Customer ...................................................................
The Social Customer .........................................................................................
Implementation of Social Customer Service and CRM....................................
How Social CRM Works: Problems and Solutions ..........................................
Some Social CRM Tools ...................................................................................
Automated Response to E-Mail (Autoresponder).............................................
Automated Live Chat ........................................................................................
Using Microblogging ........................................................................................
Product Review Sites ........................................................................................
7.5 Social CRM in the Enterprise ...........................................................................
Social CRM in the Enterprise and B2B Environments.....................................
Salespeople Benefit from Social Media ............................................................
7.6 Special Applications and Issues in Social CRM ...............................................
Social Networking Helps Customer Service in Small Companies ...................
Customer-Touching Applications .....................................................................
Customer-Centric Applications .........................................................................
7.7 Strategy and Implementation Issues of Social CRM ........................................
Social CRM Strategy ........................................................................................
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
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Part III Social Enterprise, Other Applications
8
The Social Enterprise: From Recruiting to Problem Solving
and Collaboration ....................................................................................................
Opening Case: How a Private Enterprise Network Transformed
CEMEX into a Social Business .................................................................................
8.1 Social Business and Social Enterprise ..............................................................
Definitions: Social Business and Social Enterprise ..........................................
Business Networks ............................................................................................
The Benefits and Limitations of Enterprise Social Networking .......................
How Web 2.0 Tools Are Used by Enterprises ...................................................
8.2 Business-Oriented Public Social Networking...................................................
Case 8.1 Linkedin: The Premier Public Business-Oriented
Social Network..................................................................................................
Networks for Entrepreneurs ..............................................................................
8.3 Enterprise Social Networks...............................................................................
Taxonomy of Social Enterprise Applications ...................................................
Characteristics of Enterprise Social Networks .................................................
How Enterprise Social Networking Helps Employees and Organizations .......
Support Services for Enterprise Social Networks .............................................
How Companies Interface with Social Networking .........................................
8.4 Online Job Markets and Training in Social Networks ......................................
Social Recruiting...............................................................................................
Virtual Job Fairs and Recruiting Events ...........................................................
8.5 Managerial Problem Solving, Innovation, and Knowledge Management ........
Idea Generation and Problem Solving ..............................................................
Knowledge Management and Social Networks ................................................
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Online Advice and Consulting ..........................................................................
8.6 Crowdsourcing: Collective Intelligence for Problem Solving
and Content Creation ........................................................................................
Crowdsourcing as a Distributed Problem Solving Enabler ..............................
The Process of Crowdsourcing .........................................................................
Successfully Deployed Crowdsourcing Systems:
Some Representative Examples ........................................................................
Tools for Crowdsourcing ..................................................................................
8.7 Social Collaboration (Collaboration 2.0) ..........................................................
Supporting Social Collaboration .......................................................................
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
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Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government
to Entertainment and Gaming ................................................................................
Opening Case: Justin Bieber—The Ultimate Story of Social Media Fame ...............
9.1 Social Media and Commerce in E-Government ...............................................
Definition and Scope of E-Government ............................................................
E-Government 2.0 (Social Government) ..........................................................
Case 9.1 Social Networking Initiatives by the New Zealand Government ......
The Benefits of Government 2.0 .......................................................................
Applications and Resources ..............................................................................
9.2 B2B Social Networking ....................................................................................
E-Communities in B2B .....................................................................................
The Major Opportunities and Benefits of Social Commerce in B2B ...............
Specific Social Networking Activities in B2B ..................................................
Using the Major Social Networks in B2B ........................................................
B2B Success Stories .........................................................................................
B2B Virtual Trade Shows and Trade Fairs in Virtual Worlds ...........................
Strategy for B2B Social Networking ................................................................
The Future of B2B Social Networking .............................................................
9.3 Social Commerce: Applications in Virtual Worlds ...........................................
The Features and Spaces of Virtual Worlds ......................................................
The Landscape of Virtual World Commercial Applications .............................
The Major Drivers of Social Commerce in Virtual Worlds ..............................
The Major Categories of Virtual World Applications .......................................
Concerns and Limitations of Commercial Activities in Virtual Worlds ...........
9.4 Social Entertainment and Social TV .................................................................
Entertainment and Social Networks..................................................................
Multimedia Presentation and Sharing Sites ......................................................
Internet TV and Internet Social TV...................................................................
Social Television (TV) ......................................................................................
Internet Radio and Social Radio .......................................................................
9.5 Social Games, Gaming, and Gamification ........................................................
Games on Social Networks ...............................................................................
The Business Aspects of Social Games ............................................................
Educational Social Games ................................................................................
Gamification......................................................................................................
9.6 Socially Oriented Online Person-to-Person Activities......................................
P2P Lending ......................................................................................................
Social Money Lending ......................................................................................
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
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Contents
xix
Part IV
10
11
Strategy and Implementation
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce ............................
Opening Case: Social Media-Based Market Research Helps
Del Monte Improve Dog Food...................................................................................
10.1 The Strategy-Performance Cycle ....................................................................
Types of Social Media Projects.......................................................................
10.2 Organizational Strategy and Strategic Planning for Social Commerce ..........
Porter’s 5 Competitive Forces Model and Related Strategies ........................
The Key Elements of a Strategic Planning Process ........................................
Strategy Implementation in Social Commerce ...............................................
A Strategy for Successful SC Implementation................................................
10.3 Justification and ROI in Social Commerce .....................................................
An Overview of Justification ..........................................................................
The SC Justification Process ...........................................................................
Difficulties in Conducting Cost–Benefit Analysis and Justification ...............
Incorrectly Defining What Is Measured ..........................................................
Intangible Cost-Benefit Analysis ....................................................................
The Use of Gartner’s Hype Cycle ...................................................................
Risk Analysis ..................................................................................................
Conclusion ......................................................................................................
10.4 Market Research in Social Commerce ............................................................
Why Conduct Market Research? ....................................................................
E-Marketing Research in Brief .......................................................................
Using Social Networking for Qualitative Market Research ...........................
The Process of Conducting Qualitative Market Research
for Social Commerce ......................................................................................
Learning from Customers: Conversational Marketing ...................................
Conducting Market Research Using the Major Social Network Sites ............
10.5 Metrics and Monitoring Performance .............................................................
Performance Monitoring and Analysis Cycle .................................................
Using Metrics in Performance Assessment.....................................................
Using Metrics in Social Commerce ................................................................
Balanced Scorecards (BSC) ............................................................................
Metrics and Measurements for Social Influence .............................................
Monitoring the Social Media Field .................................................................
10.6 Social Media Analytics and Sentiment Analysis ............................................
Definitions, Importance, and Applications......................................................
Social Media Analytics ...................................................................................
Tools for Mining Social Media Activities .......................................................
Sentiment Analysis and Web 2.0.....................................................................
Dashboards in Social Commerce ....................................................................
10.7 Improving Performance via Innovation and Competitive Analysis ................
Competitive Intelligence for Improving Performance ....................................
Innovation in Social Commerce......................................................................
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
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256
256
257
257
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258
260
Implementing Social Commerce Systems ..............................................................
Opening Case: Domino’s Employees Post Vulgar Videos on YouTube ....................
11.1 Social Commerce Implementation Issues .......................................................
What Is Implementation? ................................................................................
The Implementation Process and Its Major Issues .........................................
11.2 Security and Fraud Protection in Social Commerce .......................................
Social Engineering and Fraud .........................................................................
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xx
Contents
Social Phishing................................................................................................
Social Media Makes Social Engineering Easy ...............................................
Defending Social Commerce Systems ............................................................
Protection Against Spam .................................................................................
Fraud in Social Commerce..............................................................................
11.3 Issues of Legality, Privacy, Cyberbullying, and Ethics...................................
Legal Issues.....................................................................................................
Case 11.1 Internet Blackout against Anti-Piracy Laws...................................
Privacy Issues in Social Commerce ................................................................
Cyberbullying .................................................................................................
Ethics in Social Commerce .............................................................................
11.4 Technological Issues .......................................................................................
Social Commerce Systems Integration ...........................................................
Social Commerce Tools ..................................................................................
Acquisition of Social Commerce Systems......................................................
11.5 Employee-Related Implementation Issues ......................................................
Non-work-Related Use of Social Media .........................................................
Employee Reluctance or Resistance to Participate .........................................
Quality of Content and Biases of User-Generated Content ............................
Data Leakage and Loss of Data ......................................................................
Social Media Management at Work ................................................................
11.6 Organizational Issues and the Impacts of Social Commerce ..........................
Improving Marketing and Sales Revenue .......................................................
Transforming Organizations and Work ...........................................................
11.7 Other Implementation Issues ..........................................................................
Implementation Issues in SMEs......................................................................
Some Strategy Issues for SMEs ......................................................................
Risk Factors and Analysis ...............................................................................
11.8 Successes, Failures, and Lessons Learned ......................................................
A Strategy for Social Commerce Implementation Success ............................
Some Policies and Guidelines.........................................................................
Learning from Failures ...................................................................................
Adoption Strategies.........................................................................................
Revenue Generation Strategies in Social Commerce .....................................
11.9 The Future of Social Commerce .....................................................................
Creation of Jobs ..............................................................................................
IBM’s Watson, Smart Computing and Social Commerce...............................
Conclusion ......................................................................................................
Summary ....................................................................................................................
References ..................................................................................................................
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Appendix: Recommended Resources for Social Commerce ........................................ 291
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics ....................................................................................... 293
Primer B: E-Marketing Basics ....................................................................................... 305
Glossary ............................................................................................................................ 313
Index .................................................................................................................................. 319
About the Authors
Linda Lai has been an Associate Professor at the Macao Polytechnic Institute of China since
September 2006. Prior to her current position, she undertook remits as academic and administrator at the City University of Hong Kong for 15 years. She had also worked as a business
professional in Hong Kong and England for more than 6 years. Dr. Lai holds two research
degrees from Lancaster University, UK—one in the area of IT applications and the other
focusing on wider management issues. Her research interests include decision science, knowledge management, and electronic commerce. Dr. Lai has published more than 40 high impact
articles and a book on Chinese e-business entrepreneurship within recent years.
Judy Strauss is Associate Professor of Marketing, emerita at the University of Nevada, Reno.
She is an international speaker, seminar leader, entrepreneur, and previous Marketing Director
of two companies. She is an award-winning author of 4 books (in 14 editions) and numerous
scholarly articles on internet marketing topics, co-authoring Radically Transparent: Monitoring
and Managing Reputations Online and E-Marketing—the first textbook on internet marketing
(translated into Japanese and Chinese). At UNR, she taught marketing communication, international marketing, internet marketing, and strategy topics—including co-advising the national
winners in the AAF National Student Advertising Competition. She still teaches an online
Principles of Marketing course and in Germany: Brand Management. She has won two teaching awards and a lifetime achievement in marketing award from the American Marketing
Association. Strauss earned a doctorate in marketing at Southern Illinois University, and
finance MBA and marketing BBA at University of North Texas.
Efraim Turban, M.B.A., Ph.D. (University of California, Berkeley) is a visiting scholar at the
Pacific Institute of Information System Management, University of Hawaii. Prior to this, he
was on the staff of several universities, including City University of Hong Kong; Lehigh
University; Florida International University; California State University, Long beach; Eastern
Illinois University; and the University of Southern California. Dr. Turban is the author of more
than 110 refereed papers published in leading journals, such as Management Science, MIS
Quarterly, International Journal of Electronic Commerce, Journal of MIS, and Communication
of the ACM. He is also the author of 22 books, including Electronic Commerce: A Managerial
Perspective, Business Intelligence, Decision Support Systems, and Information Technology
for Management. He is also a consultant to major corporations and universities worldwide.
Dr. Turban’s current interest is social commerce. He is the coeditor of 2011/2012 special issue
on the topic in the International Journal of Electronic Commerce, and the author of several
related papers in referred journals.
xxi
Part I
The Foundations
Introduction to Social Commerce
Contents
Learning Objectives
Opening Case: Starbucks Goes Social ......................................
3
1.1
Social Computing and the Social Web .............................
5
1.2
Fundamentals of Web 2.0 and Social Media ...................
7
1.3
Social Commerce: Definitions and Evolution .................
8
1.4
The Content of the Social Commerce Field.....................
10
1.5
The Benefits and Limitations of Social Commerce.........
13
1.6
The Process of Conducting Social Commerce
and Suggested Research Topics ........................................
16
The Content and Organization of the Book ....................
18
References ....................................................................................
21
1.7
1
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Define social computing and the Social Web.
2. Describe the Social Web revolution.
3. Describe the essentials of Web 2.0 and social media.
4. Define social commerce and describe its roots and
evolution.
5. Describe the content of the social commerce field.
6. Define social media marketing.
7. Describe Enterprise 2.0.
8. Summarize the benefits and limitations of social commerce.
9. Understand the process of conducting social commerce.
10. Find research opportunities in social commerce and
learn about related resources.
OPENING CASE: STARBUCKS GOES SOCIAL
Starbucks Corp. (“Starbucks”) is the world’s largest coffee
house chain. As of October 2014, the company has over
21,000 stores in 66 countries (per starbucks.com). In addition to its coffee houses, Starbucks sells coffee and related
products from its online store (store.starbucks.com/). In
2012, Starbucks began turning itself into a digital and social
company (Van Grove 2012 and case study at storify.com/
MerMaeMarNat/starbucks-social-media-case-study).
The Problem
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this
chapter (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_1) contains supplementary
material, which is available to authorized users.
Starting in 2007, the company’s operating income declined
sharply (from over $1 billion in 2007 to $504 million in 2008
and $560 million in 2009). This decline was caused by not
only the economic slowdown, but also by the increased competition (e.g., from Green Mountain Coffee Roasters), which
intensified even during the recession.
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_1, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
3
4
The Solution: Going Social
Starbucks is a tech-savvy company. As such, the company has
one of the best social media programs (see Moth 2013). Social
media are Internet-based systems that support social interactions and user involvement (see Sect. 1.2). The company’s
focus is geared toward developing relationships based on the
needs, wants, and likes of existing and future customers.
Starbucks’ major social media activities include My
Starbucks Idea (a community of about 300,000 members that
cast over 1,000,000 votes by 2014), a Facebook page, and a
presence on all other major social networks (see Moth 2013).
Exploiting Collective Intelligence:
My Starbucks Idea
My Starbucks Idea (mystarbucksidea.force.com) is a
platform in which consumers and employees can make
suggestions, vote on the suggestions, ask questions, collaborate on projects, and vent their frustrations (see York
2010). The consumer-generated ideas (70,000 in its first
year; 150,000 by 2014) range from thoughts on rewards
cards and elimination/recycling of paper cups to ways to
better serve customers. The site acts as a place for open
dialogue and collaborative environment and a place for
sharing ideas and information.
The company also interacts with the community via its
‘Ideas in Action’ blog. The blog provides statistics on the
ideas generated, by category (e.g., product ideas, service
ideas), as well as their status (under review, reviewed, in the
works, and launched). The company may provide monetary
incentives for certain ideas. For example, in June 2010,
Starbucks offered $20,000 for the best ideas concerning the
reuse of its cups.
1
Introduction to Social Commerce
merce engagement. For example, users can pay for coffee
with their smartphones.
Starbucks posts diversified information (e.g., news, discussion) on its Facebook “wall,” whether it is content, questions,
or updates. The company also advertises on Facebook (e.g.,
contests, events, new products) and posts job openings.
Starbucks’ Presence on LinkedIn and Google+
Starbucks has profiles on LinkedIn and Google+ sites with
millions of followers. It provides business data about the
company, shows employee profiles, and advertises available
jobs. Note that Starbucks is regularly assessing the costbenefit of advertising on social networks.
Starbucks’ Activities on Twitter
In December 2014, Starbucks had over seven million followers (Follow@starbucks) on Twitter (twitter.com/starbucks),
organized in lists (e.g., @starbucks/friends). Each ‘list’ has
its own followers and tweets. Whenever the company has a
new update or campaign (e.g., discounted drinks) it posts a
tweet. By July 2013, Starbucks was the number one retailer
to follow on Twitter.
Starbucks’ Activities on YouTube, Flickr, Pinterest,
and Instagram
Starbucks runs ad campaigns and has its own channel on
YouTube (youtube.com/user/starbucks) and a “group” for
fans on Flickr (flickr.com/groups/starbuckscoffeecompany), with fans sharing over 12,000 photos and videos. For
details on these and other networks, see Moth (2013).
Starbucks’ Activities on Facebook
Early Adoption of Foursquare—A Failure
Starbucks maintains a strong social media presence on
Facebook (facebook.com/Starbucks), with over 38 million
“Likes” (as of December 2014). Their Facebook page
encourages consumers to drop by for conversation and share
ideas, feedback, and constructive criticism.
The millions of people who ‘like’ Starbucks on Facebook
verify that the company has one of the most popular fan
pages (see current statistics at fanpagelist.com). Starbucks
is offering one of the best online marketing communication
experiences on Facebook to date, along with mobile com-
Not all Starbucks social media projects have been a success.
For example, the company decided to be an early adopter of
geolocation by working with Foursquare. The initiative simply did not work, and the project ended in mid-2010. As an
early adopter, Starbucks did not fully understand how to use
the site effectively for its social media needs (see Teicher
2010 for an analysis). With the general lack of interest in
geolocation, it looks like Starbucks may stop using this
technology.
1.1
Social Computing and the Social Web
5
Social Media Marketing
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE CASE
According to Gibb (2013), Starbucks excels at social media
marketing because:
• It has “super influencers”
• It encourages sharing
• It customizes the experience
• Its causes are timely and consistent
• It uses social cross-promotion to reach new audiences
• Its mission is “to inspire and nurture the human spirit one
person, one cup, and one neighborhood at a time.”
Starbucks Digital Network
When customers are at Starbucks, they have more than Wi-Fi,
they get access to the Starbucks Digital Network from all
major mobile devices, including tablets and smartphones (see
starbucks.com/coffeehouse/wireless-internet/starbucksdigital-network). The Network, in partnership with Yahoo!,
features free premium online content, such as news, entertainment, business, health, and even local neighborhood
information channels. In 2014, Starbucks switched to Google
Wi-Fi, instead of AT&T, to give their customers faster Wi-Fi
and network speeds.
The Results
Starbucks turned sales around by effectively integrating the
digital and the physical worlds. In 2010, its operating income
almost tripled ($1.437 billion versus $560 million in 2009)
and so did its stock price. In addition, earnings doubled from
2010 to 2013. In 2013, the operating income reached $2.68
billion. Sales are lifting due to digital and social media promotions (see York 2010).
The company’s social media initiatives are widely recognized. In 2012, Starbucks was listed by Fortune Magazine as
one of the top ten social media stars (per archive.fortune.
com/galleries/2012/fortune/1205/gallery.500-socialmedia.fortune/5.html), and in 2008, it was awarded the
2008 Groundswell Award by Forrester Research. Starbucks
attributes its success to ten philosophical precepts that drive
its social media efforts (see Belicove 2010).
Sources: Based on Loeb (2013), Belicove (2010), Van
Grove (2012), Moth (2013), Allison (2013), Schoultz (2013),
Teicher (2010), mystarbucksidea.force.com, blogs.starbucks.com/blogs/Customer, and starbucks.com (accessed
June 2015).
The opening case illustrates how a large company uses
both an enterprise and a public social network. In addition, the company uses social media platforms and
Web 2.0 tools to connect and build relationships with
its customers for advertising and customer service. At
the same time, a central activity is to involve customers
in improving the company’s operations by soliciting
and discussing ideas. It is a large “electronic suggestion box,” but it is visible to everyone using the company’s in-house enterprise social network. The major
objective is to increase the flow of visitors to the physical stores as well as to the online sites. Using special
promotions and rewards, Starbucks has attracted a
record number of visitors, considerably improving its
revenue and profits.
In this chapter, we cover the essentials of social
commerce and describe the content of this book.
1.1
SOCIAL COMPUTING AND THE SOCIAL
WEB
The first generation of e-commerce (EC) involved mainly
e-trading, e-services, and corporate-sponsored collaboration.
We are now in the middle of the seconds generation of EC,
which includes what we call social commerce. It is based on
the emergence of social computing and on a set of tools, marketplaces, infrastructure, and support theories, all of which
are socially-oriented (see Meeker and Wu 2013).
In this chapter, you will discover the importance of social
commerce to customers, retailers, and other organizations.
Social Computing
Social computing is a type of computing that includes an interaction of computers and social behavior. It is performed with a
set of social media tools that includes blogs, wikis, social network services (see Chap. 2), and social marketplaces. For
details, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_computing.
In social computing, individuals produce information, which
is available to all, usually for free. For an interesting study about
social computing, see Ericson (2011). Many universities and
corporations (e.g., IBM, Microsoft, Intel, HP and Carnegie
Mellon University) have centers for social computing.
6
The Social Web
According to Appelquist et al. (2010), the term Social Web “is
a set of social relationships that link together people over the
[World Wide] Web.” For details, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Social_web. The Social Web is quickly changing work, entertainment, learning, and human interactions. According to
weblogs.about.com/od/bloggingglossary/g/SocialWebDef.
htm, the Social Web, is “the seconds generation of the World
Wide Web which focuses heavily on user-generated content,
communities, networking and social interaction.”
Welcome to the Social Web Revolution
Social computing interrelates with social consumers. Many
experts have found that the Social Web is transforming people’s individual and group behaviors as well as the power
structure in corporations and marketplaces. This change is
very rapid and significant, so we can classify it as a revolution.
For an overview of this revolution, read Fraser and Dutta
(2008) and watch the video titled “Social Media Revolution”
(4:22 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?v=sIFYPQjYhv8.
For a description of this change, see Amerland (2011). The
major social network that is currently changing the world
and business is Facebook.
F-Commerce
A major force in the Social Web revolution is Facebook,
which, in late 2014, had over 1.35 billion monthly active users
worldwide. Facebook is considered the “king” of social networks and the implementer of many commercial innovations
what is known as F-commerce (see Shih 2011; Kirkpatrick
2010, and facebook.com/commerce). For additional details,
see webopedia.com/TERM/F/f-commerce.html.
Some Interesting Statistics About the Social
Web and Social Media
There are many sources of statistics about social commerce
and media. A good place to start is with the “100 Fascinating
Social Media Statistics and Figures From 2012” posted by
Honigman on Huffington Post, and corresponding infographic, for 2013 (with recapping statistics from 2012) at
(digitalbuzzblog.com/infographic-social-media-statistics-for-2013). For social media and video statistics for
2014, watch the video at youtube.com/watch?=QfVVfB_
UHeA. See also Pant (2013). Note: These statistics are
dynamic, changing with time.
1
Introduction to Social Commerce
The following examples were compiled from bazaarvoice.
com/research-and-insight/social-commerce-statistics and
pewinternet.org/2013/12/30/social-media-update-2013.
• It was predicted that Internet use will quadruple in
size from 2011 to 2015 (Goldman 2011), with much
of the expected growth attributed to social networking activities.
• Since March 2010, there have been more Internet
visits to Facebook than to Google.
• As of December 2014, Facebook hosts pages for
over 30 million businesses, and has more than 1.5
million advertisers (per techcrunch.com/2014/07/23/
facebook-usage-time).
• The first ‘Funny or Die’ comedy user-generated
video, “The Landlord,” had 70 million viewers in its
first 6 months.
• In March 2011, a teenager from New South Wales
had to cancel her 16th birthday party after she
posted an invitation on her Facebook page, intending to invite people in her class only. The invitation went viral and close to 200,000 people
replied that they were attending, prompting her to
cancel the party. (See news.com.au/national/
chatswood-girl-cancels-facebook-party-after20000-said-they-would-attend/story-e6frfkwi1226021517747).
• The Internet start-up Groupon, a leader in daily
deals social shopping, had annual revenues of $500
million in its seconds year of operations. This
prompted Google to offer $5.4 billion to acquire the
site in October 2010. Groupon rejected the offer
and went public with an IPO in 2012 (see opening
case to Chap. 6).
• Among the Y generation, 96 % have joined a social
network.
• Of the 77 % of American adults who surf the
Internet, more than 67 % are members of social networks. The time spent social networking by Internet
surfers is growing rapidly. According to comScore
Media Metrix, in 2013, the world spent more than
120 billion minutes using social networks and blogs
each month, which totaled 24 % of all the time
spent online. These numbers are growing over time.
• In July 2014, over 645 million active users worldwide
were on Twitter (more than 255 MAUs), sending
about 500 million tweets every day (statisticbrain.
com/twitter-statistics;
about.twitter.com/
company). Note that these numbers may differ
1.2
Fundamentals of Web 2.0 and Social Media
7
What Is Web 2.0?
•
•
•
•
depending on the source consulted (see, e.g., Craig
Smith’s “By the Numbers” post [last updated
December 21, 2014] at expandedramblings.com/
index.php/march-2013-by-the-numbers-a-fewamazing-twitter-stats/#.U9FtuvldWSo; not all of
Twitter’s registered users use the service with any
consistency; see venturebeat.com/2013/09/16/
how-twitter-plans-to-make-its-750m-users-likeits-250m-real-users).
Before making a purchase, about 90 % of customers
conduct research online after they get recommendations from family or friends (July 2014).
30 % of big companies offer customer service on
Twitter (per Dougherty 2013).
Over 72 % of adult Internet users in the U.S. use
Facebook at least once a month (per marketingpilgrim.com/2014/03/google-plus-cant-beatfacebook-but-can-it-win-seconds-place.html ).
Again, this data can fluctuate depending on the source.
Microsoft paid $250 million for a 1.6 % ownership
of Facebook in 2011. Many people thought that the
price paid was too high. However, based on its stock
price in July 2014, the valuation of Facebook was
estimated to be $180 billion, making Microsoft’s
investment worth $2.6 billion, an ROI of over
1,000 % in 3 years—not bad!
For Facebook’s Q3 2014 earnings (posted October 28,
2014), see techcrunch.com/2014/10/28/facebook-q3-2014;
for the Quarterly Earnings Slides and accompanying webcast (posted October 28, 2014), see media-server.
com/m/p/22wd72e4.
For additional statistics and discussion of the social media
revolution, see factbrowser.com/tags/social_commerce,
pewinternet.org/data-trend/social-media/social-mediause-all-users, Bullas (2013), Meeker and Wu (2013), and
Young (2013).
By the time you read this book, Facebook may have 1.5
billion members, which is over 40 % of all Internet users
worldwide and over 20 % of the world population.
1.2
FUNDAMENTALS OF WEB 2.0
AND SOCIAL MEDIA
The Social Web is based on the concept of Web 2.0. These
two terms are often used interchangeably, although some
experts define them differently.
O’Reilly Media introduced the term Web 2.0 in 2004.
O’Reilly viewed this term as describing a seconds generation of Internet-based tools and services. Some properties
cited by O’Reilly were: user-generated content, online collaboration and information, and sharing data interactively.
For comprehensive coverage, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Web_2.0 and McDonald (2010). In 2006, O’Reilly updated
his definition of Web 2.0.
Note that the term is defined in several ways.
O’Reilly (2006) expanded and clarified his ‘What is Web
2.0’ article (O’Reilly 2005), dividing Web 2.0 into the following four levels (“a hierarchy of ‘Web 2.0-ness’”):
1. Level 3 applications, the most ‘Web 2.0’ oriented,
exist only on the Internet, deriving their effectiveness from (interpersonal) connections and
from the network effects that Web 2.0 makes possible, are growing in effectiveness as people
make more use of them. O’Reilly cited eBay,
Craigslist, Wikipedia,
Delicious,
Skype,
Dodgeball, and Google AdSense as examples of
level 3 applications.
2. Level 2 applications can operate offline but gain
advantages from going online. O’Reilly cited
Flickr, as an example, which benefits from its
shared photo database and from its communitygenerated tag database.
3. Level 1 applications operate offline but gain features online. O’Reilly cited examples such as
spreadsheets, and iTunes (because of its music
store).
4. Level 0 applications work as well offline as they do
online. O’Reilly gave the examples of Google
Maps, Yahoo! Local, and MapQuest.
Karakas (2009) categorizes Web 2.0 into five shifts, which
define the new global landscape of business, technology, and
innovation: “a) creativity, b) connectivity, c) collaboration,
d) convergence, and e) community….”
The major characteristics and tools of Web 2.0 are presented in Chap. 2 and the applications are described in most
of the other chapters. Web 2.0 is considered a platform for
running social media. For a summary of Web 2.0 definitions,
explanations, and applications, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Web_2.0.
8
What Is Social Media?
Many people equate the terms Web 2.0 and social media and
use them interchangeably; however, a deeper understanding
of the differences helps improve academic and practical
research and corporate implementation strategies. While
social media uses Web 2.0 and social computing tools and
technologies, the social media concept includes the philosophy of connected people, the interactions among them, the
social support provided, the digital content, and other properties that contribute to successful applications. In essence, it
is a product of the social economy (see Chui et al. 2012).
Social media can be defined as online text, image, audio,
and video content created by people using Web 2.0 platforms
and tools for social interactions and conversations, mainly to
share opinions, experiences, insights, and perceptions. They
also generate content. The key is that users, in addition to organizations, generate, control, use, and manage content, often at
little or no cost. Social media “is the collective of online communications channels dedicated to community-based input,
interaction, content-sharing and collaboration. Websites and
applications dedicated to forums, microblogging, social networking, social bookmarking, social curation, and wikis are
among the different types of social media” (per whatis.techtarget.com/definition/social-media, which also offers examples).
Kaplan and Haenlein (2010) define social media as “a
group of Internet-based applications that build on the ideological and technological foundations of Web 2.0, and that allow
the creation and exchange of user-generated content.” For definitions, examples, and infographics, see boundless.com/marketing/social-media-marketing/
introduction-to-social-media-digital-marketing/what-issocial-media. In Chap. 2, we discuss several other definitions
of social media. For a 2013 infographic by Altimeter, see slideshare.net/Altimeter/infographic-29122697. For comprehensive videos, see “The Social Media Revolution 2014”
(2:31 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?v=DYedZth9ArM
and “#Socialnomics 2014 by Erik Qualman” (3:19 minutes) at
youtube.com/watch?v=zxpa4dNVd3c. New versions of both
videos are created annually.
Social media/Web 2.0 are key drivers of social commerce.
For the effect of social media on commerce, see the infographic
by Pant (2013), the discussion by Solis (2011), and the Slideshare
presentation by Solis and Li (2013). There is also a summary of
Solis’s report available at briansolis.com/2013/10/altimetergroups-state-of-social-business-2013-report. A video titled
“Social Media Video 2013,” which describes the state of the
field, is available at youtube.com/watch?v=QUCfFcchw1w.
For comprehensive social media statistics for the call center, see
Fonolo (2013). For a guide to using social media for small businesses, see Gratton and Gratton (2012).
For the differences between social media and social
networking,
see
conversationalmarketinglabs.com/
blog/2014/04/about-incept/the-difference-between-social-
1
Introduction to Social Commerce
networking-vs-social-media. For the difference between
social networking sites and social media (including infographics), see blog.referralcandy.com/2013/11/18/differencebetween-social-networks-and-social-media. For using
social media vs. social networking as a content marketing
strategy, see searchenginejournal.com/social-media-versussocial-networking-content-marketing-strategy/94867.
1.3
SOCIAL COMMERCE: DEFINITIONS
AND EVOLUTION
As it is a new field that involves several academic and professional disciplines, there is no agreed-upon definition or
description of the content and boundaries of the social commerce area. The following are some working definitions.
Definitions and Characteristics
Social commerce (SC) refers to e-commerce transactions
delivered via social media. (For a primer on e-commerce, see
Online Appendix A.) Some consider social commerce to be a
subset of e-commerce. More specifically, it is a combination
of e-commerce, e-marketing (for a primer on e-marketing,
see Online Appendix B), the supporting technologies, and
social media content. This definition is illustrated in Fig. 1.1.
The figure shows that social commerce is created from the
integration of e-commerce and e-marketing using Web 2.0/
social media applications. The integration is supported by
theories such as social capital, social psychology, consumer
behavior, and online collaboration, resulting in a set of useful
applications that drive social commerce.
The social commerce field is growing rapidly; from 2011
to 2015, it was projected to rise to $30 billion in revenues,
according to Booz & Co. (reported by Cuccureddu 2011).
For the impact of the technology, see ShopSocially (2013).
The magnitude of the field can be seen in the statistics and
infographic provided by Bennett (2013). For other interesting social commerce statistics, see bazaarvoice.com/
research-and-insight/social-commerce-statistics.
Wang and Zhang (2012) provide a list of 11 definitions,
including that of Stephen and Toubia (2010), who define SC
as “a form of Internet-based ‘social media’ that allow[s] people to participate actively in the marketing and selling of
products and services in online marketplaces and communities.” They distinguish social shopping that connects customers, from social commerce that connects sellers. Dennison
et al. (2009) provide an IBM definition: “…social commerce
is [the concept of] word of mouth, applied to e-commerce.”
(Emphasis added.) Marsden (2011) collected 24 different
definitions of SC that include several of SC’s properties
(such as word of mouth, trusted advice, and buying with the
opinions and assistance of friends).
1.3
Social Commerce: Definitions and Evolution
E-Commerce
E-Marketing
Web 2.0/
Social Media
Social
Commerce
Support
Theories
9
4) Our Working Definition
We define social business as any business that uses social
media extensively in most or all of its operations. Such businesses also promote the social dimension in their operation.
Many companies are transforming themselves to become
social businesses. According to this definition, social commerce can be viewed as a subset of social business. Namely,
a company that conducts extensive social commerce can be
labelled a social business. This definition is close to that of
Enterprise 2.0, which is presented later in this chapter and in
Chap. 8.
For other working definitions of social business, see socialenterprisecanada.ca/learn/nav/whatisasocialenterprise.html.
The Evolution of Social Commerce
Fig. 1.1 The foundation of social commerce
For additional discussion, see bazaarvoice.com/researchand-insight/social-commerce-statistics and Baekdal (2011).
Note that social business is about a large collection of tools
that need to be assembled in the right way and tied to underlying business processes and strategies (Greengard 2014).
Social Commerce and Social Business
The term social commerce is frequently confused with the
term social business. The problem is that there are several
definitions and explanations of social business. Here are
four:
1) Social Commerce Is the Same as Social Business
The two terms are often used interchangeably.
2) The Business That Addresses a Social Problem
The term social business was first defined by Nobel Peace
Prize Laureate Prof. Muhammad Yunus. He described the
framework of social business as being based on seven principles (see muhammadyunus.org/index.php/social-business).
According to Yunus, “social business is a non-loss, non-dividend company dedicated entirely to achieve a certain goal”
(per
forbes.com/2010/06/15/forbes-india-muhammadyunus-social-business-opinions-ideas-10-yunus.html) and
should be self-sustainable (attempting to avert losses).
3) IBM’s Definition
Any business that embraces networks of people to create
business value (see description in Sect. 1.5; for a comprehensive discussion, see the IBM White Paper titled ‘The Social
Business’ at ibm.com/smarterplanet/global/files/us__en_
us__socialbusiness__epw14008usen.pdf).
In Fig. 1.1, we illustrated the essential idea of social commerce. Let us look at this idea in more detail.
Social commerce emerged from the integration of several
fields, which are shown in Fig. 1.2. For example, Marsden
and Chaney (2013) show how social media contributes to
sales, making it a social commerce application. Spenser et al.
(2013) describe how social commerce increases sales and
brand reach.
The development of Web 2.0 technologies comes with
social computing. With these technologies came commercial
applications, which included activities in social networks
and the use of social software such as blogs and wikis. A
major driver of SC is the globalization of business. This
prompted the need for collaboration of employees, business
partners, and customers. Web 2.0 applications created an
efficient and effective platform for such collaboration.
The development and rapid growth of mobile computing and smartphones has also facilitated social commerce. Mobile commerce is the basis for SC models such
as location-based applications, virtual communities, virtual worlds, and consumer/company networking. Social
commerce also relies on communication and collaboration theories.
A major emphasis of SC is its marketing orientation.
Traditional marketing activities were applied to Internet
marketing in the mid-1990s, when companies began building websites and using e-mail only to advertise their products for sale offline. As the Web developed, marketers applied
the Internet to facilitate e-commerce transactions. Until that
point, marketers controlled brand messages and continued
their advertising and other communication monologues to
customers and potential buyers (prospects). With the emergence of social media, marketing communication changed to
a dialog with Internet users, and many marketing strategies
evolved or completely transformed to support social
commerce.
10
Fig. 1.2 The major roots
of social commerce
1
Marketing
Sociology,
Social
Behavior
Internet,
Web
Introduction to Social Commerce
E−Commerce
M−Commerce
Social
Marketing
Internet
Communities
Web
2.0
L−Commerce
Social
Networks
Social
Media
Marketing
Social
Commerce
Virtual
Worlds
Multiple
Player
Games
Table 1.1 The major differences between E-commerce and social commerce
Property
Major objective
Major activity
Content
Problem solving
Collaboration
Product information
Marketplaces
Targeting
CRM
E-commerce
Transactions
Publishing
Company generated
Company experts, consultants
Traditional, unified communications
Product descriptions on websites
E-tailers (e.g., Amazon.com) and direct
from manufacturers’ stores (e.g., Dell)
Mass marketing, segmentation
Seller/manufacturer support
Online marketing strategy
Integration
Data management
Selling online
System integration
Reports and analytics
Note: The original term social marketing referred to the
application of marketing strategies and tactics to social
causes, such as the American Heart Association. This concept
was not related to marketing activities in social media. Today,
however, many practitioners and academicians use the term
social marketing to describe social media marketing.
Marketing, technology, consumer, and management evolutions paved the way for SC, just as they prompted
e-commerce development. The major differences between
social commerce and e-commerce are illustrated in Table 1.1.
Huang and Benyoucef (2013) describe the evolution to SC
by looking at design features.
For a chronicle presentation and infographic of historical milestones in the development of social commerce, see socialtimes.
com/social-commerce-infographic-2_b84120. For a study of
the development of social business, see Solis and Li (2013).
1.4
Social commerce
Social interactions
Engagement
User generated
Crowdsourcing
Web 2.0 tools
Peer product reviews
Social networks (f-commerce), collaborative
markets
Behavioral targeting, micro segmentation
Social support by peers and by vendors
and employees
Multi-channel, direct at social network sites
Mashups and system integration
Analytics
THE CONTENT OF THE SOCIAL
COMMERCE FIELD
The content of the SC field is very diversified.
The Landscape and Major Components
of the Field
The landscape of social commerce is multidisciplinary (see
Marsden (2009)) “Simple Definition of Social Commerce
With Word Cloud and Definitive Definition List. [Updated
January 2011]; and Liang and Turban (2011/2012). Most of
the activities center around e-marketing conducted using
social media, particularly marketing communication, adver-
1.4
The Content of the Social Commerce Field
11
tising techniques, sales promotions, and public relations usually expressed as social media marketing activities. However,
several other areas are emerging in the field, especially activities within organizations that are referred to as social enterprise or Enterprise 2.0. Liang and Turban (2011/2012)
illustrate the social commerce landscape in Fig. 1.3.
Discussions of the other activities of the figure are provided
throughout the book. Note that, the term non-Internet refers
to other electronic systems, such as intranets and private
networks.
For additional descriptions of some SC elements, see
“The 2010 Social Business Landscape” by Hinchcliffe at
enterpriseirregulars.com/23628/the-2010-socialbusiness-landscape. For a detailed discussion, see the slide
presentation by Marsden (2011) titled “Social Commerce
Opportunities for Brands” at digitalintelligencetoday.com/
new-presentation-social-commerce-opportunities-forbrands. For use of social commerce and statistics, see
“Social Commerce Statistics” at bazaarvoice.com/researchand-insight/social-commerce-statistics. Finally, view the
slide show by Appelo (2010) and see Altimeter Group’s infographic of the state of social business at slideshare.net/
Altimeter/infographic-29122697.
The two major elements of social commerce, social media
marketing and Enterprise 2.0, are described next.
Social Media Marketing
Social media marketing (SMM) is the use of social networking and social media as marketing communication and
other marketing tools (per McAfee 2009). Social media mar-
Social
Commerce Acvies
Social Media
Markeng
Enterprise Social
Commerce
Social ads and
promoons
Collaboraon 2.0,
Communicaon
Viral Markeng,
Recommendaons,
Referrals, Affiliate
markeng
Social shopping,
Group buy,
Deals,
Locaon-based
Problem solving
Video markeng
Markeng
research, Rangs,
Reviews
Social CRM,
Customer service
Recruing, HRM,
Training
Interacons with
business partners
Technology, Support,
Integraon of Social
Soware Tools
(blogs, wikis)
Management &
organizaon
Social media
opmizaon
Strategy and
cost-benefit,
Crical success
factors
Integraon with
other systems
Adopon and
deployment
Mobile support
Legal,
Risk
management
Social B2B
Trading of virtual
properes
Person to person
recommendaon
and trading
Forums,
Discussion
groups, Social
Interacons
Social content
contribuons
F-commerce
Corwdsourcing
Fig. 1.3 The major dimensions of social commerce
Experts’ advice
E-supply chain
management
Developers
Globalizaon,
SME’s
Security
Other Applicaons
Idea Generaon
Quesons /
Answers
Non-Internet
e-government
e-learning
Social videogaming
M-commerce
L-commerce
e-service
12
1
keting facilitates social commerce, increases brand exposure,
repairs brand reputation damages in social media, and fosters
long-term customer relationships, among other things.
Today, integrated marketing communications is the application of the traditional marketing tools in innovative ways,
integrating them with social media, such as in viral marketing. (See Chaps. 4 and 5 of this book for more details.) For
additional information and a free toolkit titled “Social Media
Marketing 101,” see act-on.com/resources/social-mediamarketing-toolkit.
The emergence of Web 2.0 allows marketers to connect
directly with increasingly smaller target markets, including a
single individual. For example, savvy marketers now build
brands and respond to questions and complaints on social networks instead of (or in addition to) sending press releases to
traditional journalists. They can also build social interactions
with customers and conduct market research. (For five ways
for managing feedback and complaints on social media, see
surveymonkey.com/blog/en/blog/2014/03/11/feedbackcomplaints-social-media/.) The various topics of social
media marketing communication are described in Chaps. 4–7,
by Singh and Diamond (2012), and through various e-books at
salesforcemarketingcloud.com/resources/ebooks. For an
infographic, see Wood (2014). For a description of visual
social marketing, see Neher (2014). For marketing tips, see
McCarthy (2013) and Walker (2014). Finally, for the future of
social media marketing, watch “The Future of Social Media
Marketing w/ Gary Vaynerchuk” (28:55 minutes) at youtube.
com/watch?v=0Qy9aLqhxcc.
Examples of Social Commerce Applications
in Marketing
Marketing-related applications in public social network sites
include the following examples:
• In March 2010, Dell claimed that it made $6.5 million by selling computers on Twitter since 2007
(see Nutley 2010).
• In 2013, Disney allowed people to purchase tickets
on Facebook (without leaving the social network).
• Mountain Dew attracts video game lovers and
sports enthusiasts via “Dewmocracy” contests. The
company also entices the most dedicated community members to contribute ideas. The company
uses Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube to encourage
consumers with common interests to participate in
the contests.
Introduction to Social Commerce
• Levi’s enabled consumers on Facebook to place
orders based on what their friends might like. There
was also a video “Social Shopping Comes to Levi’s”
to educate consumers on how to use Facebook to
shop for Levi’s with the preference of their friends
at youtube.com/watch?v=Ed5vJeaEuzA. This
service was discontinued.
• Wendy’s used Facebook and Twitter to post videos they
created that are so funny, customers must talk about
them. (See forbes.com/sites/caroltice/2013/10/28/
wendys-social-media-success-secretmassivestupidity).
Social commerce also occurs in companies’ internal (private) social networks, which are known as enterprise social
networks. In such a case, we refer to the networks as ‘social
enterprise’ or ‘Enterprise 2.0.’
Enterprise 2.0
The seconds major type of social commerce is Enterprise 2.0
(see Fig. 1.3, p. 11), which is used by an increasing number
of companies to conduct several social media and social
commerce activities inside the enterprise (e.g., idea generation, problem solving, joint design, and recruiting).
There are several definitions of Enterprise 2.0. The
term “Enterprise 2.0” was first coined by McAfee (2006).
The initial definition connected the term to Web 2.0 and
collaboration. McAfee revised his definition several
times. His refined definition (“Enterprise 2.0, Version
2.0”), as posted on his blog, is “…the use of emergent
social software platforms within companies, or between
companies and their partners or customers” (per
andrewmcafee.org/2006/05/enterprise_20_
version_20); see also McAfee (2009). McAfee further
revised his definition to include the “why” of Electronic
Commerce 2.0 to “…the use of emergent social software
platforms by organizations in pursuit of their goals”
[emphasis added] (per andrewmcafee.org/2009/08/
defining-moment/; see also McAfee 2009). A similar definition says that Enterprise 2.0 is a social software platform that helps employees, customers and partners to
share, collaborate, innovate, and communicate.
Note: For more definitions and concepts of Enterprise 2.0
technology, see the slide presentation titled “What is Enterprise
2.0?” at slideshare.net/norwiz/what-is-enterprise-20. For
other definitions, see erp.asia/enterprise2.asp and whatis.
techtarget.com/definition/Enterprise-20. Several Enterprise
1.5
The Benefits and Limitations of Social Commerce
13
For comprehensive coverage of Web 2.0 in the Enterprise, see
msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb735306.
aspx#jour12web20ent_topic1.
Examples of Social Enterprise Applications
Some examples of social enterprise applications include the
following:
Fig. 1.4 The foundation of Enterprise 2.0
2.0 conferences are held every year, some providing additional definitions that may even change with time (e.g., see
e2conf.com). For example, e2conf.com provided a white
paper (see Enterprise 2.0 Conference 2009) in which it compared Enterprise 2.0 to Enterprise 1.0, listing the following as
some of the characteristics of Enterprise 2.0: ease of information flow, agility, flexibility, user-driven technology, bottom
up communication, global teams, fuzzy boundaries, transparency, folksonomies (rather than taxonomies), open standards,
and on-demand (rather than scheduled) activities. In addition,
important characteristics are flat organizations (rather than
hierarchical) and short time-to-market cycles.
The benefits of Enterprise 2.0 (social enterprise) are similar to those of social commerce (see Sect. 1.5).
For an extensive slide presentation titled “What Is
Enterprise 2.0?,” see slideshare.net/norwiz/what-isenterprise-20. Enterprise 2.0 can be viewed as being the
intersection of social media, e-marketing, social networks,
and e-collaboration (see Fig. 1.4).
For more on Enterprise 2.0, see Chap. 8 and Chui et al.
(2013).
Simply put, Enterprise 2.0 means using Web 2.0 tools in
the workplace. For a comprehensive discussion of the state
of Enterprise 2.0, with a history and infographics, see
Hinchcliffe (2007).
• Dell, Starbucks (see opening case), IBM, and many
other companies solicit ideas from large groups of
employees, customers, and business partners on
how to improve their business operations (e.g.,
Dell’s IdeaStorm site).
• More than 50 % of medium and large corporations
use LinkedIn and Facebook to announce available
positions and to find potential employees.
• Best Buy provides state-of-the-art customer service
via Twitter. They also have an idea generation
forum on their website called “Best Buy Unboxed.”
For a comprehensive study on the benefits and inhibitors
of social commerce in the enterprise, see Forrester Consulting
(2010).
1.5
THE BENEFITS AND LIMITATIONS
OF SOCIAL COMMERCE
According to many practitioners and researchers, social
commerce is making significant impacts on organizations
and industries (e.g., ShopSocially 2013). For example, a
major impact has been seen in the fashion industry (e.g., see
Little 2013).
Several surveys have confirmed that social commerce
results in significant monetary and strategic benefits to businesses (e.g., Leggatt 2010). See also success stories at IBM
(2011b) and 67 case studies that prove social media ROI at
barnraisersllc.com/2010/10/33-case-studies-prove-socialmedia-roi. See also Butlion (2013).
SC benefits are organized here in three categories: benefits to customers, benefits to retailers, and benefits to other
types of enterprises.
14
1
Introduction to Social Commerce
Benefits to Customers
The success of social commerce depends mostly on its benefits to customers. The major benefits appear in the following
list:
• It is easy to get recommendations from friends and
other customers (e.g., via Twitter, in social media
discussion groups, and on product review sites).
Recommendations result in more confidence and
trust, helping customers decide about purchasing
products and services.
• Customers are exposed to special deals (e.g., via
Groupon and messages from friends on Facebook)
for large savings.
• Purchases can be matched with specific needs,
wants, tastes, and wishes of customers (e.g., see the
Netflix case in Chap. 3); this increases satisfaction
and reduces product selection decision time.
• It is easy for customers to use the social commerce
technology.
• Social commerce fits the mobile device lifestyle
well.
• Increased trust of customers in vendors (via closer
relationships).
• Social commerce allows customers to help other
customers (social support).
• Customers can get better customer service from
vendors (see Chap. 7).
• Customers can make new friends (e.g., for travel)
and socialize online.
• Customers can get rich social context and relevancy
during their purchase decision-making process.
• Customers can connect with individuals and businesses who otherwise are inaccessible to them.
Benefits to Retailers
Retailers are also major benefactors of social commerce. For
example, Leggatt (2010) reported that over 40 % of businesses globally find new customers via social networks (in
2015, the figure is higher). In addition, over 27 % of companies invest in social networking in order to acquire and retain
customers.
Retailers may benefit from social commerce in the following ways:
• Consumers can provide feedback on market communication strategy and on product (service) design.
• Vendors get free word-of-mouth marketing (see
Chaps. 3 and 4).
• Increased website traffic (recall the Starbucks opening case), which increases revenue and sales.
• Increased sales when social influence methods (see
Chap. 3) are used.
Example
Popular firearms manufacturer Beretta Inc. increased its revenue in 2013 by 15 % by introducing social commerce into
its e-commerce store, using ShopSocially’s SC platform. For
details, see digitaljournal.com/pr/1655392.
For a comprehensive presentation of social commerce
benefits and impacts on retailing, see Dennison et al. (2009).
Benefits to Other Types of Enterprises
In addition to increased sales and revenue, enterprises can
benefit from social commerce in several ways (see Chap. 8):
• Conduct faster and less costly recruitment with
larger reach to a large number of candidates.
• Reduce costs via innovative methods such as using
the collective intelligence of employees and business partners (see crowdsourcing, Chap. 8).
• Foster better external relationships; for example,
with partners and channel distribution members.
• Increase collaboration and improve communication
within the enterprise and with business partners (e.g.,
by using blogs, microblogs, wikis; see McAfee 2009).
• Foster better internal relationships (e.g., by increasing employee productivity and satisfaction).
• Give free advice to small enterprises from other
enterprises and by experts (e.g., via LinkedIn
groups).
• Understand that it is usually not expensive to install
and operate SC systems.
• Locate experts quickly, both internally and externally, whenever needed (e.g., see guru.com).
• Conduct market research quickly and inexpensively
and get feedback from customers, employees, and
business partners (see Chap. 10).
1.5
The Benefits and Limitations of Social Commerce
• Increase market share and margins (see survey
results in Bughin and Chui 2010).
• Build brands through conversations and social
media promotions.
• Create small customer segments for reaching very small
markets with brand offerings at a low cost and price.
• Manage company and brand reputations online.
• Build brand communities for positive word-ofmouth online.
• Enhance customer service and support.
• Increase traffic and sales at the company website
and at the physical stores.
• Facilitate market research by monitoring conversations online.
• Increase company and brand rankings on search
engine results pages.
The potential benefits in the previous list may result in:
increasing productivity and value (Chui et al. 2012), providing a strategic advantage (Bauer 2011), and encouraging
companies to at least experiment with social commerce.
Successful applications are introduced in Chaps. 4–8, and a
comprehensive list is available on Bazaarvoice. Note that the
use of social media and commerce is turning out to be a
global phenomenon (e.g. see Ran 2012).
The Social Business: An IBM Approach
The previously noted benefits to enterprises make it desirable for enterprises to transform themselves to what IBM
calls a social business. A social business is “a business [that]
embraces networks of people to create business value” (IBM
2011a). Many consider this term equivalent to social commerce and use the two interchangeably. However, IBM is
more concerned with the structure and operations of enterprises. IBM and many other companies (notably Intel) are
becoming social businesses. (For how IBM evolved into a
social business, see Traudt and Vancil 2011.) IBM (2011b)
sees the following three goals for social businesses:
1. Enable an effective workforce. Functional departments can increase overall employee productivity
and job satisfaction through improved knowledge
capture, expertise location, and collaboration.
Travel, training, and teleconferencing expenses can
be reduced. In addition, better and faster recruitment can be done inexpensively.
15
2. Accelerate innovation. Product research and
development teams can invoke and accelerate idea
generation, information, discovery, and strategy
sharing by employees. Companies can gather
feedback and ideas from key customers and business partners.
3. Deepen customer relationships. With easy and fast
access to content and expertise, customer service
representatives can work faster and more efficiently
and provide higher-quality service. Marketing and
sales teams can have more time to spend with customers and concentrate on customer-focused initiatives, thus, strengthening relationships with
customers.
In addition, IBM strategically integrates social media into
various business processes (e.g., procurement) and is developing an organizational culture to support the integration
process for delivering rapid and impressive outcomes. For
details, see IBM (2011a) and IBM Social Business (ibm.
com/social-business/us/en/solutions.html).
Examples of Social Business Implementation
IBM has developed several social business tools (e.g.,
SmartCloud Engage) which are used in many organizations.
For an example of how Wakefern Foods uses IBM’s social
business tools in their workforce, watch the 2013 video
(2:44 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?v=bt3_hGaUjX8.
New or Improved Business Models
A business model describes the method (or plan) implemented by a company to meet the customer’s needs, and by
which a company generates revenue and creates value. Note
that, the January–February 2011 issue of Harvard Business
Review is dedicated to business model innovations (five
articles), including several topics related to social commerce. For a presentation of the models’ structure and a list
of e-commerce models, see Online Primer A. For a comprehensive business model presentation titled “What is a
Business Model?” see slideshare.net/Alex.Osterwalder/
what-is-a-business-model.
Social commerce provides innovative e-commerce business models. Some are new, while others are improvements
of regular EC models (e.g., group buying). A large number of
16
SC models are in the area of social shopping, as described in
Chap. 6. Several other new models are in the area of enterprise commerce (Chap. 8). Here are some brief examples:
• Shopping business models include items such as widgets
and “buy now” buttons on social media sites.
• Online software agents that connect buyers and sellers,
such as when TripAdvisor refers travelers to providers of
travel services.
• Content sponsorship—selling advertising on a site that
supports content development (e.g., YouTube).
• Crowdsourcing models that allow companies to better
design their products or logos by involving their
customers.
• Sales promotions conducted in social networks that drive
traffic to the company’s site, such as contests, discounts,
and offering free music and software to download.
• Recruiting in social networks, as exemplified by LinkedIn
and Facebook job markets (Chap. 8).
• Collaboration models that are facilitated by blogs, wikis,
and crowdsourcing (see examples in Chap. 8).
Many start-ups have invented these and other business
models. For example, some companies offer person-toperson (P2P) services that send broadcast-quality videos
over the Internet (see Chap. 9). Webkinz (webkinz.com) created a huge business around a virtual pet world for kids, and
IZEA Inc. (izea.com), the pioneer of Social Sponsorship,
created a marketplace for connecting social media creators
of content (e.g., bloggers) with the world’s biggest brands.
Several of these start-up companies are so prosperous that
they went public on stock markets. Well-known companies
are Pandora, LinkedIn, Twitter, Yelp, Trip Advisor and
Zillow.
The potential for profitable social business models is very
large. For example, wikia.com is using a crowdsourcing
community in an attempt to develop a superior search mechanism. If it can create a successful one, Google may be in
trouble. For the opportunities for businesses created by social
commerce, see Moontoast (2011). For new business models
in the fashion industry, see Knopf (2012), and businessoffashion.com. For a discussion on the strategic power of
social media, see Bauer (2011).
Concerns and Limitations of Conducting
Social Commerce
Although social commerce presents many opportunities for
organizations, its implementation may involve some potential risks, and possibly complex issues such as the integration
of new and existing information systems. Representative risk
factors are: difficulties in justification of SC initiatives to
upper management, security and privacy concerns, possibili-
1
Introduction to Social Commerce
ties of fraud, legal concerns, quality of UGC, and time wasting by employees during work hours. Companies also risk
loss of control over their brand images and reputations in
social media conversations and product review sites, which
can affect product sales. According to the Enterprise 2.0
Conference (2009), the major barriers to adoption of
Enterprise 2.0 are resistance to change, difficulty in measuring ROI, and difficulties of integration with existing IT systems and security. For details, see Chap. 11. A 2011 survey,
“Social Business Shifting Out of First Gear,” reported by
Burnham (2013), ranks the top concerns in deployment of
social business as: (1) security and liability exposures, (2)
doubts about ability to govern effectively, (3) poor systems
integration, (4) doubts about ROI/value, and (5) poor organizational technology adoption. We expand on some of these
issues in Chap. 11.
1.6
THE PROCESS OF CONDUCTING
SOCIAL COMMERCE AND SUGGESTED
RESEARCH TOPICS
This section of Chap. 1 deals with the process of conducting
social commerce that drives the content and the structure of
this book.
The Process of Conducting Social Commerce
Social commerce can be conducted in different ways,
depending on the application and circumstances. However,
some general activities exist in most cases. These activities
are illustrated in Fig. 1.5.
Starting on the left side are the three components illustrated earlier in Fig. 1.1 (pg. 9).
Next, companies and individual customers become
engaged in various social media activities and platforms (see
description in Chaps. 2 and 3).
Enterprises monitor communication and other activities
and engagements (sometimes referred to as listening). This
action is done by using monitoring devices. For example,
Google Alerts or other applications for scanning tweets and
blogs are used to search for a specific company’s name on
the Web. Monitoring can be done by direct communication
with consumers, by listening to online conversations, and so
forth (see more in Chap. 10).
The collected information, including those portions that
are visible in the direct communication to consumers, are
examined via social analysis methods (Chap. 10), and are
used as input for managerial decision making regarding marketing communication (such as advertising, pricing, competitive strategy, product design, or problem identification).
1.6
The Process of Conducting Social Commerce and Suggested Research Topics
17
Fig. 1.5 The process
of conducting social commerce
Marketing Strategies
Social Media Marketing
E-Commerce
E-Marketing
Social Media
Supporting
Theories
Engagement
Collaboration
Information
Gathering
Consumers,
Friends,
Organizations,
Partners,
Government
Social
Analysis
Enterprise 2.0
Crowdsourcing
Entertainment
Gaming
B2B
Others
Foundation
Activities
Players
Application
Strategy and
Implementation
Some of these are intended to influence consumer purchasing decisions (see social influence, Chap. 3). Influencing
consumers’ decision making can be done via reviews, recommendations, and discussions. This influence can be
explained via social and behavioral theories and marketing
communication models. The non-marketing activities
include mostly social enterprise activities (such as collaboration, problem solving, or recruitment) and activities in other
areas such as government, business-to-business, virtual
worlds, person-to-person, and entertainment.
Example:
IBM provides several products and platforms to enable
social media applications and implementation. Such systems
collect and analyze data and process them to enable predictions, recommendations, and strategy. For details, watch the
2013 IBM Smarter Commerce video, “Advanced Social
Analytics Platform” (3:44 minutes), at youtube.com/
watch?v=AxzqyMx0Mm8.
Note that enterprise activities and applications in other
areas may include some marketing/advertising actions. All of
these issues need to be embedded in strategy, justification, and
planning. Finally, a slew of issues may surface during the
implementation of social commerce. These range from adoption strategy and software selection to corporate policies.
Successful implementation depends on the appropriate selection of social network services and sites. In May 2014, the
leading B2C social platforms were Facebook, Twitter,
Pinterest, LinkedIn, Google+, YouTube, and others, while
B2B favored social platforms were LinkedIn, Facebook,
Twitter, followed by blogging, Google+, YouTube, and others.
(From blog.percolate.com/2014/05/b2b-vs-b2c-marketingsocial-media-blurred-lines, referencing Stelzner 2014.)
Illustrative Research Issues
As a new discipline, social commerce is gradually attracting
the attention of researchers worldwide. The number of papers
delivered in scientific conferences and published in professional journals is increasingly rapidly. In addition, a large
number of books about conducting social commerce are
appearing in specific social networks, mostly Facebook,
Twitter, LinkedIn, and Pinterest.
A comprehensive framework of social commerce was
proposed by Wang and Zhang (2012). According to this
framework, SC research was categorized into people, management, technology, and information. A historical recount
of the field, from 2005 to 2011, was conducted according to
these four categories. Within each category, Wang and Zhang
(2012) identified application areas (e.g., social shopping,
business models and so forth). The researchers also provided
several possible directions for future research.
Aral et al. (2013) developed a framework for research in
the area of social media and business transformation, referencing the fact that social media is fundamentally changing
the way we communicate, collaborate, consume, and create.
Liang and Turban (2011/2012) developed a research
framework for social commerce. They presented an organiza-
18
1
tion framework with a representative list of topics. The framework includes four major areas: social media marketing,
enterprise management, technology support and management, and organization. Each area is divided into subtopics
suitable for research (e.g., viral marketing in SC). The framework also includes relevant theories (e.g., social support),
outcome measures of success, social media tools, and platforms and adaptation of traditional MIS research themes (e.g.,
user behavior).
In the remaining chapters of this book, we provide representative examples of relevant research issues.
Finally, in Online Appendix C to this book, we provide a
comprehensive list of resources that can be used by both
researchers and practitioners.
1.7
THE CONTENT AND ORGANIZATION
OF THE BOOK
We end this chapter by providing a visual summary of the
book’s composition.
The book is composed of four major parts that contain 11
chapters. In addition, there are three online appendices.
Figure 1.6 displays the book’s chapters (their titles are
abbreviated) and the way they are organized in parts.
Introduction to
Social Commerce
Part I
The Foundations
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC issues as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. Social computing and Social Web. This emerging
computing approach is situated at the intersection of
technology and social behavior. Social computing is
done with Web 2.0 tools; when done on the Internet, it is
referred to as the Social Web. Its major objectives are
improved collaboration and social interactions. It is
based on user-generated content, controlled by users,
and intended for users. It is also based on social support
of people to each other and lately it is being used commercially (e.g., for advertising).
2. The Social Web revolution. The emergence of the
Social Web is considered a revolution due to the speed
and magnitude of the changes introduced by the technology. One measure is the size of many social networks.
The impacts on work, services, entertainment,
collaboration, communication, social interactions, and
so forth, are significant in many areas, as are the changes
in the way that many companies treat their employees
and customers. Marketing, for example, is centered
around the social customer, and consumers are treated
Supporting
Theories
Social Media
Ch. 1
Introduction to Social Commerce
Ch. 2
Part II
Part III
Social Media
Marketing
Promotions in Social Media
Ch. 4
Customer Engagement
And Metrics
Ch. 5
Social Enterprise, Other
Applications
Enterprise 2.0,
Crowdsourcing
Ch. 8
Social Entertainment,
Social Government, Social B2B
Ch. 9
Social Shopping
Ch. 6
Social CRM
Ch. 7
Part IV
Strategy and
Implementation
Strategy, ROl,
Metrics
Ch. 10
Fig. 1.6 The content and organization of the book
Implementation
Ch. 11
Ch. 3
Review Questions
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
with social CRM. Social games are attracting many millions of participants and trust and loyalty is increasing
rapidly in marketplaces. Finally, many companies are
transformed into social businesses.
The Web 2.0 revolution and social media. Web 2.0
refers to a new way of using the Web. It is a trend that
makes use of the Web by people and for people. For
example, user-created content, the use of social software, and the rise of social networking are major characteristics of Web 2.0. Social media implements Web 2.0
tools for social interactions, conversations, engagement,
and sharing ideas in many different ways.
Social commerce evolution. Social commerce (SC) can
be viewed as a subset of EC where activities are done in
social networks and/or by using social media tools. SC
operates at the intersection of social media, EC,
e-marketing, and supporting theories from several disciplines, including social psychology, marketing, sociology, and information technology. SC is able to add value
to the performance of organizations, while at the same
time increase the satisfaction and the added value to
employees and customers. The main activities and content of social commerce are in the areas of social media
marketing, social enterprise, and social games and
entertainment.
The content of the social commerce field. Social commerce refers to conducting e-commerce in social networks and using social media tools, such as blogs. It is a
comprehensive field comprised mostly of social media
marketing (advertising, market research, and customer
service) and social enterprise (problem solving, recruiting, and collaboration). It also includes social entertainment, social games, and crowdsourcing. Social
commerce is driven by the existence of giant social networks, Web 2.0 infrastructure tools, and the emergence
of social customers.
Social media marketing. This is an umbrella name for
the major marketing activities conducted via social networking. Most notable are marketing communication
and advertising, social shopping, market research, and
social CRM. It is an integrated, multifaceted marketing
and advertising practice.
Enterprise 2.0. Using social media technologies and
Web 2.0 tools within an organization is called Enterprise
2.0, or social enterprise. It is based upon social media
activities, such as publishing, sharing, collaborating, and
creating knowledge. The major practical applications
are: social media assist in recruitment, idea generation
via crowdsourcing, and collaboration via blogs, wikis,
and other Web 2.0 tools.
Benefits and limitations of social commerce. A large
number of benefits are available for customers, retailers,
19
and other businesses. Customers can get better prices and
customer service, and also receive social support (e.g.,
product recommendations) from friends. Users can meet
new people and establish new contacts. Retailers can
reach more customers, get feedback quickly, improve
relationships with customers, go global, and use free
word-of-mouth marketing communication. There are
also benefits to businesses. Businesses can conduct fast
and inexpensive market research, recruit employees from
all over the globe, innovate, collaborate, and locate
experts when needed. Companies can receive help from
other companies, sometimes at little or no cost. The
major limitations are the possible invasion of privacy of
the participants, the difficulty justifying the investment
in SC, the possibility of poor quality of UGC, and the
difficulty of integration of SC , EC, and IT.
9. The process of conducting social commerce. The process depends upon the application of concern. In
marketing-related applications, vendors monitor information flow to and within social networks and attempt to
structure market communication strategy accordingly
(e.g., ad campaigns, coupon distribution, special sales).
In the social enterprise, companies use the wisdom of
the crowd to solve problems via crowdsourcing and to
reach potential job seekers via social networking. In
addition, internal and external collaboration is a byproduct of the SC process.
10. Research topics in social commerce. Given that this
field is new, there are many evolving research opportunities, yet not much has been done. Some suggestions are
provided in subsequent chapters.
KEY TERMS
Business model
Enterprise 2.0
Social business
Social commerce (SC)
Social computing
Social media
Social media marketing (SMM)
Social Web
Web 2.0
REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Define social computing and the Social Web.
2. List the major properties of the Social Web.
15
12
15
8
5
8
11
6
7
20
3. Explain why many consider the Social Web/media as a
revolution.
4. Define Web 2.0 and describe its major properties.
5. Define social media, social networks, and social
networking.
6. Define social commerce.
7. List some major origins of social commerce.
8. List the major building blocks of social commerce.
9. List five benefits of social commerce to consumers and
five to retailers.
10. Define social media marketing.
11. Describe Enterprise 2.0.
12. What is a social business (per IBM)?
13. List some limitations of social commerce.
1
Introduction to Social Commerce
2. Enter mashable.com and review the latest news regarding social networks and network strategy. Write a report.
3. Enter bazaarvoice.com. Summarize its major services.
Examine Bazaarvoice Connections (bazaarvoice.com/
solutions/connections) in particular.
4. Enter LinkedIn and join a group related to social marketing. View the activities conducted there. Prepare a report.
5. Enter socialmediatoday.com. Examine the content on
the site, especially content related to social commerce.
Write a report.
6. Enter bestbuy.com and find their social commerce activities. Write a report.
7. Enter Amazon.com and find out how shopping is done
with smartphones using the Amazon mobile app. Write a
report.
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
1. Discuss the differences between social media and Web 2.0.
2. Relate social media to collaboration.
3. Describe five properties of Web 2.0 and discuss how they
differ from those of Web 1.0.
4. Discuss the major benefits of social commerce to
consumers.
5. Review any two Socialcast customer case studies related
to social commerce at socialcast.com/customers#casestudies and discuss the following:
(a) What benefits have the companies that embraced
Socialcast realized?
(b) What are the major lessons learned from these cases?
6. Debate: Are the benefits of social networking large enough
to compensate for its negatives? Start with the article titled
“The Great Debate: Social Networking” at thesnapper.
com/2011/09/22/the-great-debate-social-networking.
7. Watch the video (4:07 minutes) about Bumbu Desan
Restaurant Group at enterpriseinnovation.net/article/
video-bumbu- desa-restaurant-group-taps-socialoptimize-communications-1159410969 and answer the
following questions:
(a) What motivated the restaurant chain to become a
social business?
(b) What were the benefits to the customers?
(c) What kinds of management reports are available?
(d) What are the benefits to the company? How has its
competitive advantage increased?
INTERNET EXERCISES
1. Enter a social network (e.g., Google+ or Facebook).
Create a homepage. Make at least five new friends.
1. Assignment for the Opening Case
Read the opening case, find some new material about
Starbucks and social commerce, and answer the following questions:
(a) Why is Starbucks putting such an emphasis on social
media?
(b) List the specific social networking activities done by
the company.
(c) What are the differences and similarities between
Starbucks’ own social network and its pages on
Facebook, LinkedIn, and other social networks?
(d) Why did Starbucks fail with Foursquare? (Consult
Teicher 2010)
(e) How are ideas generated at My Starbucks Idea? By
whom?
(f) What did you learn about social media strategy?
2. Watch the video titled “Expert Views on the Social
Purchase Journey” (5:45 minutes) at youtube.com/
watch?v=yx4Rh8snQDE, and answer the following
questions:
(a) How does multichannel marketing fit social
purchasing?
(b) What mobile applications are described in the video?
(c) What did you learn about customer experiences,
customer purchasing decisions, and customer
engagement?
(d) What else did you learn from this video?
3. Social commerce is rapidly changing the fashion industry
(e.g., see Knopf 2012, Little 2013, and bussinessoff
ashion.com). Prepare a list of all fashion 2.0 business
models, leading companies, benefits, success stories, and
concerns. Write a report.
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2
Tools and Platforms for Social
Commerce
Contents
Learning Objectives
Opening Case: Pinterest—An Innovative Social
Commerce Platform ...................................................................... 23
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Describe the major basics of social media.
2. Describe Web 2.0 and its major characteristics.
3. List the major social media tools and their uses in SC.
4. Describe social networks.
5. Describe mobile social commerce.
6. Understand the essentials of crowdsourcing.
7. Describe virtual worlds.
2.1
Social Media: The Basics .................................................... 26
2.2
Web 2.0 and Its Major Characteristics.............................. 29
2.3
The Major Social Media Tools: From Blogs
and Microblogs to Wikis and Support Technologies ........ 30
2.4
Social Networks and Social Networking Sites
and Services .......................................................................... 33
2.5
Mobile Social Commerce .................................................... 36
2.6
Crowdsourcing and Crowdfunding: An Introduction ..... 37
2.7
Virtual Worlds as a Social Commerce Platform ............... 39
References ...................................................................................... 43
OPENING CASE: PINTEREST—AN
INNOVATIVE SOCIAL COMMERCE
PLATFORM
Pinterest is an innovative fast-growing social bookmarking
website where users ‘pin’ related images and content on a
virtual pinboard. The company started in 2010, creating a
new opportunity for social commerce. (See a guide by
Leland 2013, statistics in Smith (2014a), and pinterest.com/
pinnablebiz/pinterest-statistics.)
For a free e-book about using Pinterest for business, see
Georgieva (undated). For infographics, search Google
Images for ‘Pinterest.’ For Pinterest “facts, stats, and rules,”
including case studies, see pinterest.com/wglvsocialmedia/
pinterest-facts-%2B-stats-%2B-rules.
The Opportunity
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this chapter
(doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_2) contains supplementary material,
which is available to authorized users.
Pinterest’s roots relate to social bookmarking images, which
have been used globally for several years. The company’s
founders saw the business potential and the success of similar companies in Brazil and China. Furthermore, Pinterest
succeeded in attracting initial venture capital to expand the
business.
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_2, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
23
24
The Solution
Pinterest is a provider of virtual pinboards that allow users to
organize and share images found on the Web (referred to as
pins). The pinned images are organized by topic (theme or category). For example, one can collect pictures of sailboats and
pin them on one pinboard, with appropriate text explanation.
You can collect decorations for your home on another pinboard, and you can collect Chinese recipes on a third pinboard.
Millions of people create pinboards and anyone can search and
view them (see Engauge 2012). People use Pinterest for many
different reasons. It is an app for saving and organizing images
and sharing those images with others. Users can add friends to
their account and can ‘follow’ them. The company’s goal is to
connect people according to common interests and do it while
making profit. For a large number of infographics, search
Google Images for ‘Pinterest Infographics.’
Having many visitors and a rapid growth rate are necessary, but not sufficient, for social commerce success. Viable
business and revenue models are also needed.
The Business and Revenue Models
Pinterest’s revenue model is based on charging for advertising. (The company is privately held and it does not have to
report its revenue to the public.) It looks as though the company’s current priority is, according to CEO Ben Silbermann,
“to turn the site into a viable business” (see MacNeil 2014).
To learn more about how the company aims to become a
viable business, and to read an interview with the CEO, see
MacNeil (2014). Nevertheless, many people try to speculate
about (or suggest) revenue opportunities for the company
(e.g., see Leland 2013), some of which are provided next. In
May 2014, Pinterest began selling advertising (“promoted
pins”) to selected marketers. These ads will show up in
Pinterest’s search and category feeds (see techcrunch.
com/2014/05/12/pinterest-launches-paid-ads-withselect-brands-in-form-of-promoted-pins). In June 2014,
according to Pinterest’s product manager, Pinterest began
adding “do it yourself” advertising to Promoted Pins, which
are available on a cost-per-click basis, allowing businesses
of all sizes to “promote their Pins to reach more people and
get visits back to their website” (see Stone 2014). Pinterest
is also adding updated analytics (see business.pinterest.
com/en/blog/new-tools-businesses). In August 2014,
Pinterest expanded the Promoted Pins platform to more
businesses (see techcrunch.com/2014/08/13/pinterestexpands-self-serve-promoted-pins-to-more-businesses).
For more about Promoted Pins and how they work, see ads.
pinterest.com.
2
Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce
Yang’s Suggestions
Quora Inc. (quora.com) posted a question on its website:
“How does Pinterest generate revenue?” One of the most
comprehensive answers received was provided by Yang
(2012) who presented 13 potential monetization opportunities in four categories: charging advertisers (e.g., see
Dembosky 2013); charging e-commerce partners; charging
users; and charging B2B partners. Most of these opportunities have existed in EC for years (e.g., charging for premium services, creating an online retail shop, using an
affiliate program, and building a comprehensive advertising scheme).
Selling Data for Market Research and Analysis
Brave (2012) suggested selling customer data available on
Pinterest to retailers who can use analytics, including data
mining (or mining “affinity data”), to conduct market
research using this data. Customer data may reveal important
statistical associations and relationships between consumer
behavior, content (e.g., product recommendations, personalization, ads), and services and products provided. These
associations can be used for one-to-one relationships and
segmentation, as well as for marketing promotions and
advertisements. Retailers can use affinity modeling and analysis to ascertain relationships so retailers can better understand consumer purchasing behavior. This enables optimal
marketing communication strategies. Brave also noted that
by pinning and repinning on Pinterest, consumers show their
affinity for certain themes or for specific products.
Other Suggestions for Doing Business
on Pinterest
Many consultants offer suggestions about doing business on
Pinterest:
• Hemley (2012) provides 26 different suggestions in an
A-Z guide (e.g., A = Add a Pinterest “Follow” and/or “Pin
it” Button; B = Brands and Pinterest; C = Crowdsourcing,
and so forth).
• HubSpot offers a free e-book titled “How to Use
Pinterest for Business” (see offers.hubspot.com/how-touse-pinterest-for-business). It includes suggestions
such as how to create Pinterest business accounts and how
to drive traffic and leads to companies’ website using
Pinterest.
• Mitroff (2012) suggests the approach that Zappos
Corporation uses. This approach, which is called
PinPointing, involves product recommendations based on
what customers pin. Pinterest may collaborate with
Opening Case: Pinterest—An Innovative Social Commerce Platform
25
retailers such as Zappos to jointly create product
recommendations.
• Green (2013) suggests that businesses pin and repin. She
also offers the following: making boards for anything
(e.g., boards for inbound marketing, social media);
pinning images (e.g., photos with text, infographics); and
finding people to follow and getting followers.
For more suggestions, see realbusiness.com/2013/12/
a-pinterest-guide-for-your-business. PinAlerts (pinalerts.
com; not affiliated with Pinterest) provides a comprehensive
Pinterest business library with many boards and thousands of
pins to help businesses market on Pinterest (see pinterest.
com/pinnablebiz). For comprehensive coverage, see
MacNeil (2014).
In October 2014, the valuation of Pinterest was about $5
billion (up from $3.8 billion in late 2013). Should the company
be able to generate significant revenue, it probably will go the
IPO route, in which case the valuation may be much higher.
(The company plans to have an IPO in 2015). Let us look now
at some managerial issues facing the company.
Using Pinterest for Advertising, Marketing,
and Other Business Activities
Most of the suggestions cited above, as well as suggestions
by others, concentrate on advertising and marketing opportunities. For comprehensive coverage, see Macarthy (2013),
MacNeil (2014), Cario (2013), Hayden (2012), and Miles
and Lacey (2013). For how retailers use Pinterest, see Jopson
and Kuchler (2013) and Greer (2013).
For a free e-book on how to use Pinterest for business, see
Leaning (2013).
Results and Managerial Issues
According to ShareThis (as reported by Business Insider), as
of Q3 2013, Pinterest was the fastest growing content-sharing
platform (see businessinsider.com/pinterest-is-fastestgrowing-content-sharing-platform-2013-11).
As
of
September 2014, Instagram is now the fastest growing content sharing platform (per socialmediatoday.com/content/
instagram-fastest-growing-social-network-4-brandsriding-wave). Also according to eBizMBA.com (August
2014 data), Pinterest is the fourth most popular social networking site, behind Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn (ebizmba.com/articles/social-networking-websites).
As of July 2013, the total number of users worldwide is
70 million (smallbusiness.yahoo.com/advisor/30-reasonsmarket-business-pinterest-2014-infographic-184545665.
html). In December 2014, the number topped 70 million. For
comprehensive 2014 statistics, see Smith (2014a).
Similar reports on this amazing growth rate and popularity are provided by comScore and other reporting companies. This growth attracted over $200 million in venture
capital in 2012 and 2013 and it has generated many suggestions on money-making possibilities with Pinterest (e.g., see
Leaning 2013; Loren and Swiderski 2012).
Legal Concerns
Many people collect images from the Internet to build their
pinboards (and possibly a brand) without asking permission
from the content creators, giving them an attribute, or compensating them. Some of the collected material is formally
copyrighted; other material may be considered copyrighted.
A similar problem exists with material used on Facebook or
by bloggers. According to Pinterest’s ‘Terms of Service,’
members are “solely responsible for” the content they post
on Pinterest. Furthermore, users must have explicit permission from the owners of the content to post them. According
to Shontell (2012), one lawyer deleted all her Pinterest
boards out of fear of copyright violations. Note that Pinterest
places all blame and potential legal fees on its users (who
also may pay the legal fees incurred by Pinterest). Pinterest
has taken several steps to alleviate the legal concerns of users
(e.g., see Hempel 2012). The company is continuously adding measures to minimize the legal problems (see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinterest). For example, in May 2012, the
company added automatic attribution of credit to content
creators. For a discussion, see Hornor (2012). Finally, legal
concerns may include dealing with the spammers who are
busy on the site.
Pinterest’s Competition
The popularity of Pinterest has resulted in many attempts to
clone the company. Since the core concept is basically image
sharing, it may not be patentable. Competitors are emerging in
niche markets. For example, TripAdvisor concentrates on travel;
Gentlemint.com focuses on “manly things” (e.g. cars, world
news, fitness); and Dribbble.com is for designers to share their
creations. An emerging competitor to Pinterest is fancy.com,
which partnered with Google+ in February 2013. Boxnutt.com
is very similar to Pinterest, but concentrates on funny images
and clips. Indirect competitors include several Chinese companies that operate in a culturally different environment, (see
McKenzie 2012). Companies such as Facebook and Google
may initiate a competitive service. According to Hempel (2012),
Pinterest is more business oriented than Facebook or Twitter,
and visitors tend to buy more there, although Facebook and
Twitter drive more visitors to their sites.
26
2
Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce
Conclusion
Social Media: Many Definitions
It seems that Pinterest has some potential benefits for small
businesses (e.g., designers). Many companies already use
Pinterest to derive benefits (e.g., see Etsy.com and Volpe
2012). However, these applications do not provide any revenue to Pinterest at the moment. The success of Pinterest will
be determined by its revenue model and the company's
profitability.
Sources: Based on Brave (2012), Carr (2012), Jopson and
Kuchler (2013), MacNeil (2014), MacMillan (2014),
Hempel (2012), Loren and Swiderski (2012), Yang (2012),
and Volpe (2012).
The term social media was defined in Chap. 1 as: online
media content using Web 2.0 tools and platforms conducting
social interactions and conversations. These can be sharing
opinions, creating content, providing recommendations, and
so forth.
Social media is a powerful force of socialization,
enabling interactions, communication, and collaboration
on a massive scale. For a comprehensive description, see
Kaplan and Haenlein (2010), who define social media as
“a group of Internet-based applications that build on the
ideological and technological foundations of Web 2.0,
and that allow the creation and exchange of user-generated content.”
Here are some additional definitions of social media
adopted from Kawasaki and Fitzpatrick (2014), Safko
(2012), and Luttrell (2014):
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE CASE
Pinterest is a unique platform for conducting social
media and e-commerce activities. The participants
form a social network which connects people who
find interesting images on the Web and organize
them by topic. Pinterest is also a platform on which
several activities of SC can be supported. For example, companies can build pinboards that promote
their brands. Pinterest can be used as a platform for
facilitating innovations via idea-generation and sharing. Pinterest is a derivative of Web 2.0 and social
media, and as such, it is a new mechanism for supporting social commerce. Other mechanisms covered
in this chapter are social networks, crowdsourcing,
and virtual worlds. Note: In addition to the tools and
platforms described in this chapter, social commerce
requires the generic tools of e-marketing and
e-commerce.
2.1
SOCIAL MEDIA: THE BASICS
In this book we use the word media to mean digital text,
sounds, pictures, and videos that are shared via the Internet
or other computing systems. Social media, like all media,
delivers content to audiences for marketing, entertainment,
learning, collaboration, for other purposes. Let us first define
social media.
• Any website that utilizes Web 2.0 concepts. This
includes microblogs, blogs, wikis, social videos,
and so on.
• Software tools that enable people to generate content (text, video, audio, etc.) and engage in personto-person sharing, publishing, conversations, and
dissemination of content in a social environment.
• Media that is frequently designed by users and is
disseminated through social networking.
Note: Tommasi (2011) provides 50 different definitions
of social media. This is typical in a developing interdisciplinary field. (Available for viewing as part of a Datasift
SlideShare presentation (posted April 3, 2012), titled
“Follow the Content”: see slideshare.net/datasift/followthe-content.)
A common thread running through all the definitions of
social media is that they are a blend of technology, content,
and social interactions for the co-creation of value. For
details about social media, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Social_media, Kaplan and Haenlein (2010), and Kawasaki
and Fitzpatrick (2014). For a critical history of social media
see Van Dijck (2013). For a brief history of social media
(1969–2014), references, news and more, see uncp.edu/
home/acurtis/NewMedia/SocialMedia/SocialMedia
2.1
Social Media: The Basics
History.html). For free e-books, see hongkiat.com/blog/
free-ebooks-social-media.
The complexity and richness of the social media field
can be seen in the social media map available at social
mediatoday.com, in Kaplan and Haenlein (2010), and in
Safko (2012). A comprehensive slide show (115 slides) on
social media implementation is available at slideshare.net/
fated82/social-media-implementation-slides. For a report
on the state of social media, see Eitel (2015).
It is useful to organize the diversified content of social
media into a framework or model that enables the organization of the content as illustrated next.
The Landscape of Social Media
Social media can be viewed as containing three major types
of entities: (1) application tools for media components for
applications (e.g., text, images, audio, and videos); (2) delivery platforms, mainly social network sites and services; and
(3) social media activities such as conversations, sharing,
and recommendations. These three parts are illustrated in
Fig. 2.1 (the corners of the large triangle), and they are interconnected by a networked community of people, organizations, society, and technology. For comprehensive coverage,
see Divol et al. (2012). For social media statistics, see Pring
(2013) and Wallace (2013). For 2014 major social network
statistics, see mediabistro.com/alltwitter/social-mediastatistics-2014_b57746. For 2014 social media statistics
Figure 2.1 The components of social media
27
with an interactive infographic, see c4lpt.co.uk/
blog/2014/06/07/social-media-2014-statistics-interactiveinfographic. For a video on the social media revolution
(2013), see youtube.com/watch?v=QUCfFcchw1w.
The Major Parts of Social Media
The details of the three parts of social media are:
1. Media components and applications. These include text,
audio, images, and video. Social media uses a wide variety of content presentations, known as rich media.
2. Social network sites and services. These are websites that
are platforms for social media. They enable people to meet
in communities of shared interests, hobbies, or causes;
these are referred to as social network sites. Starting with
well-known names such as Facebook and LinkedIn, there
are thousands of social network sites around the globe
(e.g., see Van Belleghem et al. 2011). According to
Webopedia, a social networking site is “any website that
enables users to create public profiles within that website
and form relationships with other users of the same website who access their profile” and are “community-based”
(see webopedia.com/TERM/S/social_networking_site.
html). Several different types of these services are
described in Sects. 2.4 and 2.5. These sites enable the third
part of our model (Fig. 2.1), social media activities.
3. Social media activities. Many activities can be performed
using social media. The major ones are:
28
2
Functional Building Blogs
In what they describe as the “jungle of social media,”
Kietzmann et al. (2011) identify seven social media functionalities that they consider the building blocks of the field.
The building blocks are:
• Sharing: Sharing content among users (e.g., in discussion forums, chats, or video and photo exchanges;
e.g., on Snapchat). It is the extent to which users
exchange, distribute, and receive content.
• Presence: Finding where your friends are at a given
time. It is the extent to which users can know if others are accessible.
• Conversations: There are many ways to have conversions using social media tools, ranging from
Twitter to Facebook to Whatsapp. It is the extent to
which users communicate with other users in a
social media setting.
• Relationships: Users can relate to each other in
many ways. For example, you can join a group in
LinkedIn or follow somebody on Twitter. It is the
extent to which users can be related to other users.
• Reputation: Users like to know the social standing
of others. For example, endorsements at LinkedIn.
It is the extent to which users can identify the standing of others, including themselves, on a social
media setting.
• Identity: Disclosing who you are is an integral
part of many social networks. Having a profile is
essential to build relationship. It is the extent to
which users reveal their identities in a social media
setting.
• Groups: Given the large size of social networks,
many social media platforms offer smaller communities. It is the extent to which users can form communities and sub-communities. On LinkedIn you
can join professional groups, and on Facebook and
Twitter you have friends and followers.
A large number of social media guides for some of the
above activities, for social network sites, and for the major
social media tools are provided (some for free) on the Social
Media Examiner website. For the impact of social media on
commerce, see the infographic, at staging.socialmediatoday.
com/ritu-pant/1586661/social-currency-effect-socialmedia-commerce, Wildfire, Inc. (2012), and Kaplan and
Haenlein (2010). For a framework for research, see Aral
et al. (2013). Schaefer (2014a) explains the business trend of
social media.
Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce
Social Media Marketing (SMM)
A major area of application of social media is social media
marketing (SMM), which is the process of conducting marketing activities, such as marketing communication, engagement, and advertising. The major objective of SMM is to
attract the attention of potential buyers through social media
tools and platforms (Media 2014). In SMM, marketers create
content for this purpose by themselves, or by using user generated content. In addition, by using social media tools and platforms, marketers try to have the created content shared over
the Internet. For 500 social media marketing tip, see Macarthy
(2013). Also, see the tips and strategy suggested by Walker
(2014). For a list of successful campaigns, see en.wikipedia.
org/wiki/social-media-marketing. Many of SMM activities
are done in the major social networks (see Macarthy 2013).
Details of SMM are presented in Chaps. 4 and 5.
Web 2.0 Tools and Applications
The social media tool kit includes a large number of tools,
and these can be defined and categorized in several different
ways. Popular tools are blogs, wikis, and RSS feeds. The
tools’ capabilities are ever changing.
In Table 2.1, we provide a fairly comprehensive list of
social media tools. We describe some of these tools in
Sect. 2.3.
Software Applications (Apps)
Software applications (abbreviated as “apps”) are closely
related to, and frequently confused with, social media tools.
A software application (app), also known as Web application, is a piece of software (usually small) that is run on the
Internet, or on an intranet on your workplace computer, or on
your wireless device, such as a smartphone or tablet. Apps
are designed for end-users.
Numerous apps are available for social media. For example, Facebook offers Facebook Local Currency Payments—a
payment application that offers a method of paying for digital and virtual goods in games and apps used across Facebook.
Unfortunately, the distinction between software tools and
apps is not always clear. This may not be an important issue
for users, but it is important for developers.
A list of the top 1,000 Web 2.0 tools and applications in
60 categories is available at sites.google.com/a/vmbulldogs.
com/van-meter-secondary-library-voice/web-2-0-tools.
A similar list of Web 2.0 tools and applications is provided at
go2web20.net. A comprehensive resource with links to
Web 2.0 tools is provided at xmarks.com/site/www.
web20searchengine.com/web20/web-2.0-list.htm.
2.2
Web 2.0 and Its Major Characteristics
Table 2.1 Social media software tools and services
Tools for online communication
• Blogs, vlogs (video blogs), microblogs (e.g., Twitter)
• Wikis
• Instant messaging and VoIP (Voice over Internet Protocol)
• Internet forums
• Text chat
• Collaborative real-time editors
Platforms and applications for support
• Social networks general services
• Commercial and professional social networks
• Social search engines
• Enterprise social networks
• Social guides
• Multimedia sharing sites (e.g., YouTube) and photos (e.g., Flickr)
• Article sharing
• Social bookmarking
• Social citations
• Social libraries
• Social cataloging
• Virtual worlds and massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs)
• Crowdsourcing and idea generation
• Social games in networks (e.g., Zynga, Electronic Arts)
• Content management tools
Emerging technologies
• Peer-to-peer social networks for selling and bartering
• Virtual presence
• Mobile tools for Web 2.0
• Productivity and support tools
Tools for individual users
• Personalization tools
• Customization
• Search in blogs, in all types of media
• Clipping tools
• RSS
• File-sharing tools
Web 2.0 development tools
• Mashups
• Web services
The three parts shown in Fig. 2.1 are interconnected by
people (individuals, groups), organizations, and communities,
and are enabled by Web 2.0 tools and applications and their
characteristics (i.e., the technology and processes). Social media
is recognized today as an effective tool with proven ROI. For
166 case studies and a free e-book, see Petersen (2011).
2.2
WEB 2.0 AND ITS MAJOR
CHARACTERISTICS
In Chap. 1, we introduced the essentials of Web 2.0. Web 2.0 is
a major element of social media because it provides the tools
people use when engaging in social media activities. The terms
29
Web 2.0 and social media are frequently used interchangeably
to describe the same things. However, many treat Web 2.0 as
tool-oriented technology only, and social media as a broader
concept of innovative applications, tools, content, and strategy
(e.g., see Edwards 2013). For a comprehensive handbook of
research on Web 2.0 (47 chapters), see Murugesan (2010).
Representative Characteristics of Web 2.0
The major characteristics of Web 2.0 are presented in
Table 2.2.
Of these characteristics, here we will discuss only the
topic of user-generated content. Other characteristics are
described in various chapters of this book (e.g., new business
models were described in Chap. 1).
User-Generated Content
User-generated content (UGC), also known as consumergenerated media (CGM), refers to media content that is produced by end-users and is publicly available. It is also used
Table 2.2 Major characteristics of Web 2.0
The following are representative characteristics of Web 2.0:
User-created content (self-publishing)
• The ability to tap into the collective intelligence of users. The
more users who contribute, the more popular and valuable a Web
2.0 site becomes
• Unique communication and collaborative environment
• Making data available in new and innovative ways
• Web 2.0 data that can be remixed or “mashed up,” often through
Web services interfaces, much like the way a dance-club DJ
mixes music
• The presence of lightweight programming techniques and tools
that lets nearly anyone act as a developer (e.g., wikis, blogs, RSS,
and podcasting)
• The virtual elimination of software-upgrade cycles that makes
everything a perpetual beta, or work in progress, and allows rapid
prototyping using the Web as a platform
• Unique sharing of content of all types
• Networks as platforms, delivering and allowing users to use
applications entirely through a browser
• Open source architecture, which makes connectivity to
computing resources simple
• Users own the data on the site and exercise control over that data
• An architecture of participation and digital democracy that
encourages users to add value to the application as they use it
• Creation of new business models
• A major emphasis on social networks
• A rich, interactive, user-friendly interface based on Ajax or similar
frameworks. Ajax (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML) is a Web
development technique for creating interactive Web applications
• More productive organization communication due to improved
search, links, user authority, and so on
• Global spread of innovation. As soon as a successful idea is
deployed as a website in one country, similar sites appear worldwide
30
2
to describe a wide range of applications, content creation,
and other activities. Examples include reviews, recommendations, problem solving, marketing communication (such
as user-generated ads), news, word of mouth, and entertainment. Some social media sites are entirely populated by
UGC, such as YouTube (videos), Flickr (photos), Meetup
(network of local groups), LinkedIn, Google+, Twitter,
Instagram, and other social networks. Note that, according to
research reported by Knoblauch (2014), millennials trust
UGC 50 % more than they trust other content.
For details about UGC, including its limitations and legal
concerns, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User-generated_content. Regarding commercial applications, UGC is used in
writing Wikia and Wikipedia entries and similar collective
intelligence projects. It is also used to engage an organization’s markets by preparing (or contributing to the preparation of) ads, encouraging comments to blog entries, and
soliciting product improvement recommendations (such as
My Starbucks Idea). Sites entirely populated by UGC, such
as YouTube, attract a multitude of visitors and thus provide
revenue through an advertising business model.
With an increase in user-generated content on the Web,
the user (or consumer) is largely in control of brand conversations. As a result, traditional marketing strategies (such
as banner ads) may not work as well in social media
environments.
Following the traditional word of mouth, consumers
want to be associated with, and receive, product recommendations from friends and family. They want to visit and
participate in online “environments” where trust, interest,
and knowledge is shared by communities. Web 2.0 technologies allow consumers to listen and contribute to UGC
on a large scale. However, some major issues related to
UGC include its quality, fairness, how current the content
is, and the potential invasion of privacy of those cited in
specific UGC. This is inevitable in an environment where
everyone is a publisher with little editing control; however,
several commercial systems are in place to moderate online
discussions and other UGC (see reputation management
systems in Chap. 5).
As stated earlier, social media activities are enabled by a
set of tools that are referred to as Web 2.0 or social software.
These are described next.
2.3
THE MAJOR SOCIAL MEDIA TOOLS:
FROM BLOGS AND MICROBLOGS
TO WIKIS AND SUPPORT
TECHNOLOGIES
Social software encompasses a range of software tools that
allow users to interact and share data and other media. The
major social software tools were listed in Table 2.1. For comprehensive coverage, see social7.org. For comprehensive
Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce
coverage of social media tools, tactics, platforms, and strategies, see Safko (2012).
Many of the applications performed with social media
tools share the common characteristics described earlier, as
well as having the ability to easily upload data/media. Major
advocates of using social media tools believe that they are
the backbone needed for creating online innovative communities and applications.
Note that these tools are also popular in social networks.
For example, photo sharing and blogging are integral parts of
many social networks. However, several of the tools are also
written in traditional information systems such as blogs in
corporate portals.
In this section, we will cover only representative tools that
are used more extensively in social commerce: blogs and
microblogs (e.g., Twitter), wikis, and social search.
Blog (Web Log)
The Internet offers the opportunity for individuals to publish
on the Web using a technology known as Web logging, or
blogging. A blog is a personal website, or part of a website,
open to the public, where the owners express their thoughts
and opinions, and provide information and expertise. Blogs
are “a publicly accessible personal journal” and “new content is published by the author on a regular basis” (per etc.
usf.edu/techease/mac/internet/what-is-blogging-andhow-can-i-use-it-as-a-classroom-activity). Blogs can
become a two-way communication that may facilitate collaboration. Blogs can be used on the Internet or internally
within the enterprise on intranets. The totality of blogs is
known as the blogosphere. For comprehensive coverage of
blogs, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blog. Blogging is probably the most popular Web 2.0 tool among the largest U.S.
corporations. For the top ten business blogs for entrepreneurs
(in 2013), see onlinebusiness.volusion.com/articles/bestbusiness-blogs. For the top 50 business blogs (Blog Rank),
see blogmetrics.org/Business.
Many blogs provide commentaries on a particular subject; others function mostly as personal online diaries. A
typical blog includes text, videos, images, and links to relevant sources. A video blog (vlog) is a blog with video
content. Because it is getting easy to embed videos in
blogs many blogs are changing to vlogs. According to WP
Virtuoso, in November 2013, there were over 152 million
blogs on the Internet, with a new blog created somewhere
in the world every half seconds (172,800 per day; per
wpvirtuoso.com/how-many-blogs-are-on-the-internet,
which also provides an infographic with interesting facts
about blogs). Note that almost 10,000 fake or spam blogs
are each created daily (out of 150,000–200,000 total).
Most blogs are written in English. Note that, while most
blogs are written by one individual, there are some blogs
2.3
The Major Social Media Tools: From Blogs and Microblogs to Wikis and Support Technologies
that are written by two or more people (sometimes by
many employees of a company).
Building Effective Blogs
It is becoming much easier to build blogs. Programs from
Google (blogger.com) and other vendors (e.g., typepad.
com) are very user-friendly, allowing blog authors to write
directly on theirs or on any other website (e.g., when they
write for a vendor). Blog space is free; the goal is to make it
easy for users to create their own blogs. Bloggers (the people
who create and maintain blogs) invite others to their blogs.
Blogs can easily be edited and forwarded. Blogging platforms, such as wordpress.org or movabletype.org, have
more complex features and also allow users to host their
blogs at a third-party site, such as godaddy.com or directly
on WordPress. Bloggers also use special terminology, such
as 'blog storm,' where thousands of bloggers in the blogosphere write about the same topic, event, or activity in order
to push the story to mainstream news. See whatis.techtarget.com/reference/Blog-terms-Glossary for a glossary of
blog terms. For building effective blogging business for
profit see Murdoch (2014).
To review the legal and social consequences of blogs,
including the dangers of defamation or liability, political
dangers, issues in relation to employment, and court cases,
see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blog. For the potential impact of
blogs on the reputation of brands or organizations, see Chap.
5. For EFF’s Legal Guide for Bloggers, see eff.org/issues/
bloggers/legal.
Commercial Uses of Blogs
The blog concept has transferred quickly and extensively
to the corporate world. For coverage, see Rich (2014)
and Schaefer and Smith (2013). Typical applications
include:
• Building brands.
• Demonstrating company or individual expertise to
attract clients.
• Attracting many readers for the purpose of selling
advertising on the blog.
• Providing customer support for problem resolution,
interactions, and encouragement of customer
engagement.
• Using search engines to increase traffic to the owner’s other sites.
• Setting up blogs for partner and customer feedback.
31
Example: How Stonyfield Farm Uses Blogs
Stonyfield Farm (stonyfield.com) makes the number-one
selling brand of organic yogurt and is the third largest overall
yogurt company in the U.S. The company’s core values are
promoting healthy food (organic) and protecting the environment. The company guarantees the use of only natural ingredients in its products and it donates 10% of its profits each
year to environmental non-profit groups (see their videos at
youtube.com/user/stonyfieldorganic/videos).
The company uses word-of-mouth marketing approaches
that are compatible with its grassroots “people-friendly”
image. As of 2007, Stonyfield has turned to blogs to further
personalize its relationship with its customers and connect
with even more people. The blogs provide the company with
what the management calls a “handshake” with customers.
Stonyfield publishes six different categories of blogs on its
website, including “on the farm,” “at home,” and “in the
cup.” Each category includes sub-categories.
Stonyfield hires bloggers to post new content to each of the
blogs on a regular basis. When readers subscribe to the blogs,
they receive automatic updates, and they can also respond to
the postings. The blogs have created a positive response for
the Stonyfield brand by providing readers with topics that
inspire them and pique their interests. The blog readers are
encouraged to try Stonyfield products. Management believes
that blogs are an excellent method of communication with the
customers, as well as for public relations.
Microblogging and Twitter
Microblogging is a form of blogging that allows users to
write short messages, post an image, or embed a video, and
then publish them on a forum. These messages can be delivered as text messages from mobile devices, as instant messaging, through e-mail, or just posted on the Web. The
messages are delivered in real-time or close to it (e.g., commentary during a sporting event).
The content of a microblog differs from that of a regular
blog due to the limited amount of characters per message
(e.g., Twitter has a limit of 140 characters on any device).
The most popular service is Twitter, although in 2014,
there were hundreds of competitors (e.g., tumblr.com and
see Frasco 2013). A very large and popular microblog service in China is Sina Weibo (us.weibo.com/gb). Note that
many of the microblogging sites include social media and
social networking functionalities.
Twitter and Tweeting
Twitter is a microblogging service with some social network
features, that enables its users to send messages and read other
32
2
users’ messages and updates, otherwise known as tweets, which
are short text-based posts. Tweets can be read directly online or
delivered to users (followers) who sign up to read them. Twitter
can be viewed as a social media platform for broadcasting information and opinions. According to Twitter’s homepage, “Twitter
is a service … to communicate and stay connected through the
exchange of quick frequent answers to one simple question:
‘What are you doing?’” However, the service additionally
includes social networking capabilities, such as user profiles,
lists of friends, and dozens of applications, so Twitter can also
be considered a social network. For capabilities and details, see
Collier (2014), Fitton et al. (2014), and tweeternet.com. Twitter
and its business applications are described in detail on business.
twitter.com/basics and by Schaefer (2014b). The shares of the
company are publically traded and their price advanced rapidly
(in 2014). Also see twitter.com/101Guide. The latter is also a
guide to using Twitter for business.
As of August 2014, Twitter claims to have more than 271
million monthly active users (per about.twitter.com/company). For 250 amazing statistics see Smith (2014b). Twitter
is used by customers and it is also becoming a useful enterprise tool. Socialtext (socialtext.com) is a social software
company that offers functionality including a Twitter-like service for the enterprise (see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Socialtext).
Twitter is an important social commerce tool because it:
• Enables the contribution of information by people
whose opinions are important to a company and its
management. This includes idea generation and
improved innovation.
• Helps rapid dissemination of information and news
and consequently is facilitating word-of-mouth
information, so it is can be used as a marketing
communication tool.
• Allows people to interact with others, which helps
them find business partners and sales leads.
• Helps employees find colleagues, understand what
their colleagues are doing and share advice and get
help.
• Helps with customer care and problem resolution.
For Twitter statistics, see statisticbrain.com/twitterstatistics, and Smith (2014b).
For the benefits of using Twitter for business, see Dessau
(2013), and Bennett (2014).
Wikis
A wiki, also called a wikiblog, is a tool that enables users to
jointly create digital documents. According to Wikipedia,
Wikis are powered by wiki software. They also are deployed
Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce
via corporate intranets and in knowledge management systems (e.g., create and update knowledge).
A wiki can be viewed as a continually revised, multiauthored blog. Whereas a blog usually is created by an
individual (or maybe a small group) and frequently has an
attached discussion board or a continuous list of comments,
a wiki essentially is a blog that enables anyone to participate
as a co-editor. Any user may add, delete, edit, or change content. (In contrast, content blogs cannot be changed by anyone
but the original poster.) A wiki is like a loose-leaf notebook
with a pencil and eraser left in a public place. Users can read
it, scrawl notes, tear out a page, add an image, and so on.
Wikis can be implemented in many ways. One way is through
contributions by many, as in the case of Wikipedia (see
Waters 2010). A similar concept is employed by sites such as
investopedia.com. For a comprehensive list of wikis, see
wikiindex.org. For characteristics, e-commerce applications, resources, and more, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiki.
For collaborative wiki types, see pbworks.com and WikiHub
(getwikihub.com).
Business Applications of Wikis
Wikis are becoming an important enterprise collaboration
tool. Even universities use them for project collaboration,
such as working on accreditation materials for business
schools. An interesting example is Wind River (windriver.
com), a software company that uses wikis extensively to support teamwork (see details at twiki.org/cgi-bin/view/Main/
TWikiSuccessStoryOfWindRiver).
Other Useful Tools and Apps
Hundreds interesting tools can be classified as social media
tools. Here are few representative examples:
• Snapchat—A mobile photo messaging app used
for taking photos, videos and drawings, and sending
them to recipients on a desired list.
• WhatsApp—A free cross-platform messaging
exchange app for smartphones that allows users to
send SMS messages at no charge (a Facebook
company).
• Ortsbo—Enabler of real-time conversational translation mainly in social media settings.
• DROTR (Formerly Droid Translator)—Translates
voice, videos calls, and chats into 29 different languages. The program has been upgraded and is now
a completely separate VoIP service for mobile
devices. See Petroff (2014) and droid-translator.
tiwinnovations.com.
2.4
Social Networks and Social Networking Sites and Services
• Tagged—A maker of social discovery products. It
enables people to meet and socialize with other
people through advanced browsing and matching
features, shared interests, etc.
• Viber, Line, etc. Several new companies are
centered on mobile devices. For example, providing
mobile apps for free texting, free phone calling,
photo messages, and location sharing with others.
Line Inc. also provides stickers and the latest news
and coupons. As social networks, these companies
allow creation of reviews, etc. See Macarthy (2013).
Several companies provide free voice and video
calls for mobile devices and desktops (e.g. Viber for
Desktop).
• Hashtags—Enables users to click on a hashtag on
Facebook and see all public content related to a specific keyword. Also enables users to join any public
conversation related to a posted hashtag (see
Vandermeersch 2013).
• Google+ Hangouts—Google’s Messaging and
chatting tool for the mobile environment (see Tech2
News Staff 2014 and plus.google.com/hangouts).
• We Chat—A popular mobile text, images, video
and voice messaging communication service; now
with real-time location service (owned by Tencent
Holdings of China). It is similar to WhatsApp (see
Tech2 News Staff 2014).
Social Search
Searching information available in social networks can be
improved with tools such as “Graph Search” from Facebook.
The tool is integrated with Facebook’s Social Graph (see
Chap. 3). Social Graph can process information available in
natural language, including queries. Social search discovers
social connections and much more. For details, see facebook.com/about/graphsearch. Graph Search ads provide
income to Facebook. Google also incorporates social features to its standard search engine.
Specialized Search Engines for Social Networks
Several search engines are designed specifically for searching social networks and networking. Representative examples are: pipl.com, wink.com, peekyou.com, yoname.com,
and zabasearch.com. For ways to make it easier for people
to find others online, see Cockburn (2014).
For a comprehensive beginner’s guide to social media, see
moz.com/beginners-guide-to-social-media.
Using Multiple Tools to Improve Performance
Many companies combine Web 2.0 tools to improve
performance.
33
Now that you have an idea about social media tools, we
can move on to the seconds of our framework (see Fig. 2.1,
p. XX), describing social networks.
2.4
SOCIAL NETWORKS AND SOCIAL
NETWORKING SITES AND SERVICES
There are several definitions of the basic concepts related to
social networks.
First, there is a community of people with common interests that exist online and are referred to as a virtual community. (For example, Trimdownclub.com is a community of
people that are interested in reducing their weight.) A community is using a website to communicate and share ideas,
etc. Such a website is referred to as a social network site (or
service).
A social network, in general, is a structure that
describes social relationships and flows of information
and activities among the participants in a community. The
structure is made of nodes that describe the participants
(people, computers, other objects). These nodes are connected by lines that describe the relationships and activities in the community. The nodes in a network are
connected by one or more interdependencies, such as
ideas, values, visions, ideologies, financial interest,
friendship, or similar interests. The structures can range
from simple to very complex.
In its simplest form, a social network can be described by
an image of all relevant connections among the nodes. The
network can also be used to determine the social capital (see
Chap. 3) of individual participants. These concepts are often
displayed in a social network diagram, where nodes are the
objectcs and participants, and the lines are the ties.
Social Network Services (Sites)
Social network services (SNSs) (also known as social network sites), such as LinkedIn or Facebook, provide and host a
free Web space for people to build their public profile. They
also provide communication and support tools (e.g., blogs,
forums, polling, e-mail, and chatting capabilities), and apps
that enable different activities. Social networks are peopleoriented. Today, corporations have a great interest in the business aspect of social networks, for professional reasons as well
as for networking and for promoting products and services. An
example is linkedin.com, the largest business-oriented social
network that connects professionals and businesses by industry, functions, geography, and areas of interest (see Chap. 8).
The following are some examples of representative social
network services.
• Facebook.com. The largest and the most visited social
network service.
34
• YouTube.com and metacafe.com. Users can upload and
watch video clips at these sites.
• LinkedIn.com. The largest network for professional
people and for recruiting.
• Pinterest.com. The most popular pinboard-based network.
• QQ.com. China’s Tencent QQ, with over 800 million
active IM users. The site has some social network capabilities (e.g., online social games, music), and it is the
largest online chat community in the world. An English
version is imqq.com. QQ International, which is distributed through an English-speaking portal, provides nonMandarin speakers the ability to connect with other QQ
users. It also provides a non-Mandarin interface to access
Qzone, China’s largest social media network.
• Plus.google.com. A social network designed to be the
social extension of Google that may rival Facebook and/
or LinkedIn. (See Meyer 2013 for an infographic; for a
2014 infographic on how to improve engagement on
Google+, see thehubcomms.com/infographic-how-toimprove-engagement-on-google/article/354606.)
• Flickr.com. A photo-sharing service; share and connect
with the community.
• Hi5.com. A popular global social network for meeting
new people through games, shared interests, and more.
Acquired by Tagged in 2011.
• Habbo.com. A global entertaining virtual world-based site.
• MySpace.com. Social network focusing on music.
For a list of the major sites, including the number of users,
see
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_social_networking_
websites and ebizmba.com/articles/social-networkingwebsites. For a 2014 social media infographic with statistics
and other information, see blog.digitalinsights.in/socialmedia-users-2014-stats-numbers/05205287.html.
2
Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce
The Social Networking Landscape
The social networking landscape can be categorized as
follows:
• Leisure-oriented sites. Socially focused public
sites are open to all users. However, companies also
use these for promoting their products. For example, Facebook, hi5, and Google+. MySpace is
known as a place where musicians sell their music.
• Professional networking sites. Sites focusing on
business networking. Examples: LinkedIn, Xing,
and Biznik.
• Media sharing sites. Sites that enable focusing on
the display and sharing of user-generated multimedia content, such as video and photos. Examples:
YouTube, Flickr, and Instagram.
• Virtual world sites. 3D virtual worlds built and
owned by their residents (the users). Examples:
Second Life, Webkinz, and Hobbo.
• Communication sites that possess social networking capabilities. Many socially oriented websites facilitate communication. For example:
○
Microblogging/presence applications, such as
Twitter, Plurk, and Sina Weibo
○
Unified communication products such as
Microsoft’s SharePoint, Salesforce’s Chatter,
Microsoft’s Yammer, and IBM Connections
(formerly Lotus Connections) empower and
enable communication, conversations, collaboration, and other social networking activities.
○
Enterprise-owned sites. These are private sites
owned by companies. Examples include:
Starbucks, Disney, or Dell.
Social Networking
It is useful to distinguish between social networks and social
networking. Social networking refers to the execution of any
social media activity listed in Sect. 2.1, including having a
presence in social networks. It is the act of exchanging information, private or public, through various forms of network
technology, such as the Internet, cellphones, and other devices
and services, using social media tools, apps, or networks.
Social networking includes all social media activities,
regardless if they are done in social networks or in any other
website (e.g., corporate portal).
Social networking is viewed as being all about people and
relationships, basically describing the activities conducted in
social network sites.
For a comprehensive list of social network websites, see
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_social_networking_websites.
Note that, in each of the social network sites, you may
find social software tools and socially oriented applications
(apps). Also note that, thanks to mashups, it is possible to
have content from several sites combined. For instance, a
Facebook page might include photos from Flickr, videos
from YouTube, and news from Twitter. Social media and networking are becoming new communication venues that
impact the manner in which people interact. Finally, note
that the capabilities and business models of social network
sites are changing constantly (e.g., regarding Facebook,
see Hutchinson 2013). For a comprehensive guide to social
2.4
Social Networks and Social Networking Sites and Services
networks, including social networking basics, and different
categories of social networks, see webtrends.about.com/
od/socialnetworking/u/list-of-social-networks-guide.htm.
A Global Phenomenon
Although Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn attract the majority of media attention in the United States, in general, many
other social network sites are proliferating and growing in
popularity worldwide (e.g. see emarketer.com/Article/
Which-Social-Networks-Growing-Fastest-Worldwide/
1009884).
For popularity around the world, see royal.pingdom.
com/2013/01/16/internet-2012-in-numbers (2012 data);
Alexa’s top 500 (alexa.com/topsites/global); and statista.
com/statistics/272014/global-social-networks-ranked-bynumber-of-users. (However, it is important to note that rankings differ depending on the source and manner of calculation
and fluctuate between dates.) For example, renren.com, Qzone
(qzone.qq.com), and weibo.com are premier social networking services in China. Mixi.jp has attained widespread adoption in Japan, tuenti.com in Spain, studiVZ (studivz.net) in
Germany, and Vkontakte (vk.com) in Russia. In Poland one
can find Nasza-Klasa (nk.pl). Hi5.com has been adopted globally. Additionally, previously popular communication services
have begun implementing social networking features. For
example, the Chinese QQ (an instant messaging service), cited
earlier, instantly became one of the largest social networking
services in the world once it added profiles and made friends
visible to one another. Note that international entrepreneurs,
inspired by the success of the largest social network sites in the
USA and their capabilities, have created their own local knockoffs. Information about social networks is changing rapidly;
therefore, to get the most up-to-date data, go to alexa.com,
expandedramblings.com, or comscore.com.
For a comprehensive slideshow about the spread of social
media globally, see Van Belleghem et al. (2011).
35
• Users can construct a Web page where they are able
to present their profiles to the public.
• Users can create a circle of friends who are linked
together.
• The site provides discussion forums (by subgroup,
by topic).
• Photo, video, and document viewing and sharing
(streaming videos, user-supplied videos) are
supported.
• Wikis can be used to jointly create documents.
• Blogs can be used for discussion, dissemination of
information, and much more.
• Some social network sites offer community e-mail
and instant messaging (IM) capabilities.
• Experts (including paid and non-paid) can be made
available to answer members’ queries.
• Consumers can rate and comment on products and
services.
• Online voting may be available to poll members’
opinions.
• Some sites provide an e-newsletter.
• Some sites support conference (group) chatting,
possibly combined with (document and image)
sharing.
• Users can chat both by text (Instant Messaging) and
voice.
• Message and bulletin board services are available
for posting information.
• Some social network sites provide storage for content such as photos, videos, and music.
• Users can bookmark their self-created content.
• Users can find what is going on in others' networks,
or in topics of interest.
• Users can shop, relying on advice received from
friends and other shoppers.
To learn about Facebook and its capabilities, see the free
tutorial at gcflearnfree.org/facebook101.
The Major Capabilities and Services Provided
by Social Network Sites
Business-Oriented Social Networks
Social network sites provide many capabilities and services
such as:
Although not all networks have all these capabilities,
some have even more. These capabilities can make social
networks useful for consumers (see Zeisser 2010).
Business-oriented social networks, also known as professional social networks, are networks whose primary objective is to facilitate business activities and connections. The
prime example here is linkedin.com, which provides business
36
2
contacts and interactions and enables job searching and
recruiting (see Chap. 8).
Businesses increasingly use business social networks for
building professional networking, and introducing themselves online. Social networks also make it easier to keep
connected globally.
Example of a Business-Oriented Social Network: XING
Originated in Germany, XING (xing.com) is a business network for business professionals—job seekers, recruiters,
salespeople and managers from many countries, mostly in
Europe (mostly German-speaking countries; see details at
corporate.xing.com/no_cache/english/company/xing-ag).
The site offers secure services in 16 languages serving 200
countries. Users can visit the site to:
• Establish new business contacts and find sales leads.
• Expand and manage their contact with networks of
professionals.
• Promote themselves to employers in a professional business context.
• Find experts that can give advice on any topic (for fee or
for free).
• Organize professional conferences and related events.
• Control the level of privacy and ensure that their personal
data are protected. (XING handles members’ data in
accordance with strict German data protection regulations.) This is especially important in the European Union,
where data privacy issues are more important and legislated than in the United States and most other countries.
See security.xing.com for more about their trust and
security policies.
For more on XING, see xing.com/help. Services also are
available for mobile devices.
Enterprise Social Networks
Business-oriented social networks can be public, such as
LinkedIn. They are usually owned and operated by independent companies. Another type of business-oriented social
network is private, owned by corporations and operated
inside them. These are known as enterprise social networks,
such as My Starbucks Idea. They can be available to customers, or solely to the company’s employees (see Chap. 8).
2.5
MOBILE SOCIAL COMMERCE
Mobile computing is growing faster than any other type of
EC computing. According to Cisco Systems’ 2014 Visual
Networking Index (as reported by Sartain 2014), global
mobile data traffic increased by 81% (from 820 petabytes per
Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce
month in 2012) to 1.5 exabytes per month in 2013. (To access
Cisco’s White Paper, see cisco.com/c/en/us/solutions/collateral/service-provider/visual-networking-index-vni/white_
paper_c11-520862.pdf.) This growth clearly facilitates
global mobile commerce. According to a survey conducted
by eDigital Research and Portaltech Reply (as reported by
The Retail Bulletin 2012) 64% of smartphone consumers use
mobile devices to shop online, a fourfold increase since
2010). For research regarding the explosion of mobile social
media, see Redsicker (2013). In subsequent chapters, we will
discuss many mobile applications. Here we present the basic
definitions, technologies, and a few examples.
Mobile Social Networking
Mobile commerce is spreading very rapidly in social media
and social commerce applications (Redsicker 2013).
Mobile social networking refers to social networking where
members chat and connect with one another using any mobile
device. Most major social networking websites now offer
mobile services. By Q1 2014, Facebook had over 1 billion
mobile monthly active users out of a total 1.28 billion monthly
active users (see techcrunch.com/2014/04/23/facebookpasses-1b-mobile-monthly-active-users-in-q1-as-mobileads-reach-59-of-all-ad-sales. Some social networking sites
offer mobile-only services (e.g., path.com and in-galaxy.com).
Mobile social networking is especially popular in Japan,
South Korea, and China, generally due to better data pricing
(flat rates are widespread in Japan).The network can be only
mobile or the site can offer both mobile and non mobile
access. In Japan and South Korea, where 4G networks offer
more bandwidth, the leaders in social networking are mixi.jp
and game-centric Mobage by DeNa (mbga.jp) in Japan, and
cyworld.com in South Korea. For an infographic of 2013
mobile growth statistics, see digitalbuzzblog.com/
infographic-2013-mobile-growth-statistics.
Experts predict that mobile social networks will experience explosive growth, as evidenced since 2012. For how
social platforms are powering mobile commerce, see Gupta
(2011). For opportunities of mobile social networks see Wu
and Wang (2014).
Video Sharing
Mobile video sharing, which sometimes is combined with photo
sharing, is a relatively new technological and social trend.
Mobile video-sharing portals are becoming popular (e.g., see
vimeo.com). Many social networking sites offer video sharing
features (e.g., see mfubo.com).
Examples of Social Mobile Commerce Applications
There are several types of social mobile applications.
Illustrative examples are provided next.
2.6
Crowdsourcing and Crowdfunding: An Introduction
Example 1
IBM is a leader in social commerce adoption of mobile
devices. Following are some examples of IBM’s initiatives
according to Taft (2011):
37
2.6
CROWDSOURCING
AND CROWDFUNDING:
AN INTRODUCTION
Crowdsourcing and crowdfunding are relatively new platforms for conducting social commerce.
• IBM Mobile Connect. This is a mobile version of
IBM Connections (formerly Lotus Connections;
social media and social networks building software). Customers can get immediate access to
blogs, wikis, and other tools. They can also share
photos, videos, and files on major mobile devices
(e.g., Android, Blackberry, Apple).
• IBM Connections allows people to create business
value. For example, employees can use the Ideation
Blog to generate and vote on ideas at work (see
ibm.com/connections/blogs/SametimeBlog/?
lang=en).
• The new capabilities in IBM Connections 4.5, such as
the Moderation application, or Ideation Blogs, enable
workers to embrace networks of engaged people.
Example 2
A poll conducted by TravelClick in October 2011 revealed
that half of the participating hoteliers around the globe are
investing in mobile technologies to support social commerce
(see bizreport.com/2011/10/travelclick-hotels-to-investmore-in-mobile-social-marketing.html).
With the current technology, we also see a trend toward the
sophisticated mobile interactions of Internet social networks
with images, voice, and videos. This is expected to be a powerful managerial and marketing feature in the near future.
Experts predict that mobile access to social networks will
experience explosive growth. For the connection between mobile
computing and social media marketing, see Sanovy (2013).
Mobile Community Activities
In many mobile social networks, users can utilize their
mobile devices to create their profiles, make friends, create and participate in chat rooms, hold private conversations, and share photos, videos, and blogs. Some
companies provide wireless features that allow their customers to build their own mobile community (e.g., using
sonopia.com).
Crowdsourcing
Crowdsourcing is a platform for using collective intelligence
for conducting social decision support and other social commerce activities (see crowdsourcing.org). Crowdsourcing is
usually managed over the Internet. Here we present the
essentials of the technology. In Chap. 8 we present the applications that are based on this technology.
Definitions and Major Concepts
The term crowd refers to any group of people, (usually large
one) such as a group of consumers, employees of a corporation, or members of a social network, who usually possess
expertise, when used for crowdsourcing.
Crowdsourcing utilizes the wisdom of crowds to collectively execute tasks such as solving problems, innovating, or
completing large projects by dividing the work among many
people. The term was coined by Jeff Howe in a June 2006
Wired article (Howe 2008). In the crowdsourcing process, the
initiator recruits a crowd (e.g., customers) to create content,
accomplish a cumbersome task (e.g., additions to Wikipedia),
or conducting research and development. This is based on the
idea that many heads are better than one. The collective intelligence of large groups is assumed to be able to solve complex
problems at low cost (see Sherman 2011; Brabham 2013).
The basic elements of crowdsourcing are illustrated in
Fig. 2.2. Three elements are involved: the task(s) to be carried
out, the crowd, which is used to work on the task, and the tools
and processes used by the crowd to execute the task. These elements are connected by features related to the task(s) and the
crowd (such as the composition or size of the crowd), the technologies used (such as idea generation and voting), and implementation issues such as incentives paid to the participants.
The Process of Crowdsourcing
Crowdsourcing can be viewed as a collective problemsolving or a work-sharing process and usually is conducted
on the Web. In a typical example of crowdsourcing, problems
38
are broadcasted either to a known crowd (e.g., employees or
business partners) or to an unknown group of participants
(e.g., expert problem solvers or consumers). The communication usually starts as an open call for solutions (see first step
in Fig. 2.3). The members of the crowd are organized as
online communities, and members submit individual solutions. The crowd may also discuss the solutions and may vote
for a final short list. (The short list can be prioritized [e.g.,
ranked].) The final selection can be made by the crowd or by
management (Fig. 2.3). The winning individuals in the crowd
are compensated, either monetarily or with special recognition or acknowledgement of a job well done. In other cases,
the only rewards may be the intellectual satisfaction.
Example
In 2008, Starbucks introduced My Starbucks Idea (mystarbucksidea.force.com), a social media site designed to solicit
ideas and feedback from Starbucks’ customers (see opening
case in Chap. 1). The site was built around three key themes:
1) ideas are user generated, 2) users can vote to short list the
submitted ideas, discussing them before and/or after the
Fig. 2.2 The basic elements of crowdsourcing
Fig. 2.3 A typical
crowdsourcing process
2
Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce
vote, 3) company employees act as “idea partners,”’ providing answers to questions and leading discussions.
The process is visible to the entire community. The members can see the status of each proposal.
Note that crowdsourcing focuses on innovation, creativity, and the problem-solving capabilities of a crowd organization. An overview of crowdsourcing is provided in videos
about crowdsourcing at youtube.com/watch?v=F0UtNg3ots, at crowdsourcing.org, and by Sherman (2011).
Crowdsortium (crowdsortium.org) sees crowdsourcing as a
network of specialists. These specialists have developed best
practices for the industry.
Benefits of Crowdsourcing
The major perceived benefits of crowdsourcing include the
following:
• Problems can be analyzed or solved at comparatively little cost. (Payment can be determined by the
results; however, sometimes there is no monetary
payment, just praise or accolades).
• Solutions can be reached quickly since many people work on the needed research. In addition, product designs may be expedited.
• The contributing crowd may reside within the organization, so talents may be discovered.
• By listening to the crowd, organizations gain first
hand insight into their customers’ (or employees’)
desires. There is built-in market research when the
crowd is composed of customers.
• Crowdsourcing can tap into the global world of
ideas. The crowd may include business partners,
customers, academicians, etc.
• Customers tend to be more loyal if they participate
in a company’s problem solving process.
2.7
Virtual Worlds as a Social Commerce Platform
39
Uses of Crowdsourcing in Social Commerce
job, or fly a spaceship. For a comprehensive overview, see
Malaby (2009). For research issues see Wasko et al. 2011. To
learn more about Seconds Life, see wiki.secondlife.com/
wiki/Video_Tutorials, and the video titled “Philip Rosedale:
Seconds Life, Where Anything Is Possible” (28:31 minutes)
at youtube.com/watch?v=lHXXsEtE3b4.
There are several social commerce applications used in
crowdsourcing—notable are idea generation, such as used
by Starbucks and the creation of Wikipedia. Sherman (2011)
presents many other successful applications; the major ones
are described in Chap. 8.
Major Features
Crowdfunding
Crowdfunding is an Internet platform for collecting small
amounts of money from many individuals (a crowd). The
money is collected for several possible purposes. Most common ones are:
• Equity funding. This is one way for funding start-ups.
The contributors get shares of the company. For an overview see Lennon (2014). The recipient of the funds can
get an idea off the ground very quickly (see examples in
Chap. 8). Equity funding is done by intermediaries such
as Kickstarter.
• Rewards crowdfunding. According to en.wikipedia.
org/wiki/crowdfunding: “entrepreneurs pre-sell a product or service to launch a business concept without incurring debt or sacrificing equity/shares.”
• Contribution to a cause. People raise money as a philanthropy activity for individuals in need and for civic
projects.
For further discussion, examples of application see Chap.
8 and the Wikipedia entry.
2.7
VIRTUAL WORLDS AS
A SOCIAL COMMERCE
PLATFORM
A virtual world is a site for online communities situated in
a computer-generated setting, where users socialize and
work with one another through the use of avatars. Objects,
jobs, homes, and businesses are created in a 3D environment,
and are owned by the residents. It is an interactive environment, which is fun and satisfying. Virtual worlds (also
referred to as digital worlds or metaverse), usually structured
as interactive 3D virtual environments, and are created for
users to inhabit and interact. Users feel as if they are actually
within the environment because they have the ability to control certain features of the virtual world. Virtual worlds,
according to Wikipedia, initially appeared in massively multiplayer online games; however, they are not limited to
games. Players can create a character that travels between
buildings, towns, and even planets and stars, as well as conduct activities there. In a virtual world, you can be anyone
you want. You can build a dream house, decorate it, have a
There are several different types and purposes of virtual
worlds; however all share the following features (compiled
from The Virtual Policy Network’s ‘A Virtual Worlds Primer’
(virtualpolicy.net/resources/virtual-worlds-primer), and
the authors’ experiences:
• The worlds can be used by many users who access
them via an online interface.
• The interface is mostly 3D, which is more engaging
than 2D.
• All interactions are in real time from anywhere.
• Most of the content is user-generated. It is facilitated by tools provided on the sites.
• The virtual world is always in motion, regardless of
the presence of its residents.
• Socialization is encouraged. Tools are provided for
engagement and for creating groups and sociallyoriented activities.
• Communication among users can include text,
graphical icons, visual gestures, video clips, sound,
and so forth.
• Use of avatars is a common way to represent the
residents of the virtual worlds.
Avatars
Residents of virtual worlds can represent themselves by 2D
or 3D images known as avatars. Avatars are interactive, animated, computerized characters that are graphical images
designed to look like people and are programmed to exhibit
human behavior. Avatars have unique names and can move
around. Advanced avatars can “speak” and display behaviors
such as emotions, gestures, and facial expressions. They can
be fully automated to act like robots. Avatars are designed to
gain the trust of users. Many companies use avatars as tour
guides or to staff virtual reception desks. For a demonstration of avatars in action, see meez.com.
The purpose of avatars is to make the human–computer
interface more realistic. Thus, they are sometimes referred
40
to as interactive conversational characters. They are being
used extensively to support users’ Internet chat with
companies (e.g., Live Chat), representing the company’s
employees or “help desk.” A popular use is the live chat with
avatars. You ask questions and the avatar, using natural language processing, attempts to understand your questions.
The avatar then matches an answer from a database to each
question. For an example, see “Ted” at TD Ameritrade
(tdameritrade.com). Instant-messaging programs such as
google.com/hangouts use avatars (e.g., see hangoutapps.
com). Avatars can improve customer satisfaction and retention by offering personalized, one-to-one service. They also
can help companies get to know their customers in order to
better design promotions. For more on avatars, you must see
the 2009 movie Avatar.
Example 1: Jetstar Airline
According to Business Wire (2013), Nuance Communications,
Inc. announced that Jetstar “has launched a new virtual assistant called ‘Ask Jess,’ which is based on Nuance Nina Web,
an intelligent virtual assistant that delivers a human-like,
conversational customer service experience. Customers simply type their request to Jess, and Jess provides the answers.
The new Ask Jess virtual assistant draws on Nuance Nina, an
intelligent virtual assistant that leverages innovative technology for natural language understanding and delivers a conversational interface to Web visitors which stimulates human
conversation. By understanding what customers want, Ask
Jess makes getting information on booking, baggage, and
seating easier than navigating pages on a website. Jetstar’s
‘Ask Jess’ virtual assistant is also fully integrated with the
company’s existing live chat service.” (To ask Jess a question, see jetstar.com/au/en/customer-service.)
Example 2: Market Research
Starwood Hotels constructed a prototype of its Aloft brand
hotels before they were built in 2008. People using Seconds
Life were asked to view the prototype and give the company
their opinions on the model. Using the feedback, the company completed the design and built the hotels.
Example 3
Avatars guide and advise passengers in airports. As of 2012,
you can see human-sized avatars acting as greeters in many
airports in Europe (e.g., Paris) and the U.S. (New York), that
are there to help passengers by giving them information
about ground transportation, etc. (see abcnews.go.com/
Travel/york-airports-introduce-avatars-assist-passengers/
story?id=16957584). For a demonstration of the avatars
in the New York airports, watch WNYC’s video titled
“Airport Avatar Demonstration” (47 sec.) at youtube.com/
2
Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce
watch?v=tI3YBf36twk. Advanced avatars can conduct
vocal conversations with passengers (sometimes in several
languages). Similar avatars act as guides in some companies,
universities, and tourist attractions. New York airports are
developing interactive avatars that allow customers to ask
questions about the airport (see digitaltrends.com/cooltech/new-york-airports-are-installing-virtual-avatarsto-help-visitors).
Virtual Shopping
You can go shopping with friends while each shopper is
located at his or her individual home. You enter a virtual
store in the virtual mall and find jeans on sale. Your avatar
tries on the jeans (the avatar’s body’s size is the same as
yours) and displays it to your friends. They provide an
assessment. Then, if you like it, you may buy the pants online
or visit the physical store later. Virtual shopping is gaining
popularity (see Chap. 6).
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC issues as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. Define the landscape of social media. Social media is
composed of three parts. First, there are Web 2.0 tools, such
as blogs or mashups. In addition, there are applications that
act in a similar fashion to the tools, enabling different activities. Seconds, there are social network sites and services,
notably Facebook and LinkedIn. They are equipped with
the tools and apps. In this seconds category, we also find
social networks that enable users to conduct many activities, including media sharing (such as YouTube), or support
communication (such as Twitter). The third category is the
activities people conduct with the help of social media
and its tools, such as sharing, interacting, recommending
products, and connecting with people.
The previously noted parts are interconnected via networks of people, organizations, technology, and society.
2. Web 2.0 characteristics. Web 2.0, the seconds generation
of the Web, is based on social computing. It is all about
people and their interactions and relationships. A major
characteristic is the generation of content by users and for
users. These users are engaged in many activities that
increase trust and loyalty. Web 2.0 also enables the wisdom of crowds and several other business models.
Notable activities are reviews and recommendations, as
well as the ability to post questions and get answers from
friends and other people. The many characteristics enable
the creation of online communities where people with
similar or shared interests can congregate and act. Web
Review Questions
3.
4.
5.
6.
2.0 operates in an open source technological environment, and it is flexible and inexpensive, or completely
free.
The major social media tools. Blogs and wikis are
probably the most mature tools of social media. Other
well-known tools are microblogging, file sharing, idea
generation (ideation), social search engines, recommendation engines, and voting (polling) tools. Web 2.0 tools
can be combined (e.g., via mashups), and are embedded
in many social networks. They are also used extensively
inside enterprises (e.g., blogs in a company’s portal).
Social networks. Social networks are websites for large
Internet communities. The networks enable sharing of
content including text, videos, voice, and photos. Social
networks promote online socialization and interaction.
Many thousands of networks are popping up around the
world, some of which are global. These social networks
compete for advertising money. Millions of corporations
advertise, entertain, and even sell on social networks.
Business-oriented communities concentrate on business issues, either in only one country or worldwide (e.g.,
conducting recruiting, finding business partners). Social
marketplaces meld social networks and some aspects of
business. Notable business-oriented social networks are
LinkedIn and XING. Some companies use their own private social networks, whereas others conduct business in
public social networks, such as Facebook. Enterprise
social networks are those owned and operated inside one
company. Their members usually are present and former
employees. Business networks are used mainly for collaboration, recruiting, personal networking, knowledge
creation preservation and sharing, training, and socialization. Many large companies have such networks (e.g.,
IBM, Wells Fargo, Starbucks, Coca-Cola, and Disney).
Mobile social commerce. Many users of social networks
are also users of wireless technologies. Therefore, conducting business as mobile commerce is exploding in social networks and in mobile applications in the enterprise. In
addition, there is an explosive growth in social entertainment
and gaming, part of which is commercial. All major social
networks enable wireless activities. In fact, some social business models (notably location-based services) are delivered
mostly wirelessly. Social and business connections can be
made in real time or close to it (e.g., via Twitter).
Crowdsourcing. Crowdsourcing is a process of outsourcing work, including problem solving to large communities (a crowd). The community members can be chosen
based on the nature of the tasks to be performed. The
technology is used for idea-generation, performing large
tasks, social collaboration, and facilitating engagement.
It is considered a social commerce activity because
certain applications, such as team problem solving, and
crowdfunding involve social interactions. Crowdfunding
41
involves raising small amounts of money from a group of
individuals for purposes such as funding a start-up company or contributing to a cause. Crowdfunding is usually
done on the Internet.
7. Virtual worlds. Virtual worlds provide entertainment
and education through trading virtual properties, discussion groups, learning, training, and much more.
Everything in a virtual world is simulated, animated, and
supported by avatars. Starting with playing 3D games,
people can create imaginary worlds where they can do
almost anything they like. They can build virtual houses,
cities, schools, or factories, and then do almost anything
they can imagine there. Thousands of companies have
established presences in virtual worlds, especially in
Seconds Life, which also offers dissemination of information and advertising.
KEY TERMS
Avatars
Blog
Business-oriented social networks
Crowdfunding
Crowdsourcing
Microblogging
Mobile social networking
Social media marketing (SMM)
Social networks
Social network sites
Social network services (SNSs)
Social networking
Social software
Software application (app)
Tweet
Twitter
User-generated content (UGC)
Virtual world
Video blog (vlog)
Wiki (wikilog)
39
35
39
37
31
36
28
35
35
33
34
30
28
31
31
29
39
30
32
REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. What is social media?
2. What are the three major components of social media?
3. Snapchat is a very popular photo sharing application.
Compare its capabilities to those of Instagram. Comment
on why it is so popular (start by reading Leahey 2013).
4. Describe user-generated content. What is its importance?
5. List five major Web 2.0 tools.
6. View IBM’s video “IBM Customer Testimonial:
Wakefern Foods Uses Social Business Tools to Activate
42
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
2
Their Workforce” at youtube.com/watch?v=tI3YBf36
twk. Identify the social business tools used by the
company.
Define social networks as compared to social network
services (sites).
Describe the major capabilities of social network sites.
What is an enterprise social network? List some of its
major capabilities.
What are the critical features that distinguish a blog
from a user-produced regular Web page?
Define crowdsourcing (see Howe 2008).
List the elements of crowdsourcing and describe the
process.
What are the benefits of crowdsourcing?
What is social mobile networking?
Describe the major types of crowdfunding.
Define virtual worlds and list their characteristics.
Describe avatars. What are they used for?
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
1. Discuss the differences between a wiki and a blog. Are
there any similarities?
2. Discuss how wikis, blogs, forums, social networks,
crowdsourcing, and virtual worlds can be used to facilitate collaboration.
3. Discuss some reasons why Twitter is so popular.
4. What are the major differences between physical and
virtual communities?
5. How do business-oriented networks differ from regular
social networks such as Facebook?
6. What are the major characteristics of Web 2.0? What are
some of the advantages of using Web 2.0 applications?
7. Debate: Blogs and wikis are going to eliminate e-mail.
Yes or no?
8. Compare Twitter, Tumblr, and Plurk.
9. What type of social network is Quora (quora.com)? Is
Keek (keek.com) considered a video-based social network? Compare it to YouTube.
10. It is said that social media and mobile computing facilitate each other. Discuss.
11. What are the social elements of crowdsourcing?
12. Is Google+ a social rival to Facebook? (Start by reading
readwrite.com/2013/07/18/watch-out-facebook-whygoogle-and-pinterest-are-gaining-as-social-rivals).
Debate the issue.
13. Discuss the differences and similarities between crowdfunding and person-to-person money lending (Chap. 8).
14. Read “Social Media 101” at socialquick.com/content/1why_social_media_marketing and discuss the major
areas of activities. Prepare a report.
Tools and Platforms for Social Commerce
INTERNET EXERCISES
1. Enter google.com and find the services offered to bloggers by software vendors (e.g., look for Blogger.com).
Write a report.
2. Enter anshechung.com and see Saenz (2011) and prepare a report on Anshe Chung’s empire.
3. Enter Web 2.0 Journal at web2.sys-con.com and find
recent material on wikis, blogs, and Twitter. Write a report.
(a) Find out what any three companies are doing on the
site.
(b) Choose two universities and find out what they are
doing on Seconds Life.
(c) Write a report.
4. Register at secondlife.com and enter the site.
5. Enter socialmediatoday.com. Find five articles or blog
posts related to one topic of this chapter. Write a summary.
6. Enter communityroundtable.com. Make a list of activities conducted there that are related to the content of
this chapter. Describe what you see there.
7. Enter paperbackswap.com. What kind of a community
is it? Who can use it? Why?
8. Enter sunzu.com. What kind of social network is
it? Why?
9. Enter scholarpedia.org, softpedia.com, webopedia.
com, and investopedia.com. Relate their attributes to
social media.
10. Enter metacafe.com. What is offered at the site? What
type of social media is used? Why?
11. Enter facebook.com and identify the different Web 2.0
tools available on the site.
12. Go to kylelacy.com/25-case-studies-using-twitter-toincrease-business-and-sales. Select five cases out of
the 25 provided, and find additional information on
each. Write a summary.
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
1. Assignments Related to the Opening Case
(a) Why is Pinterest considered a social network?
(b) What are the company’s business and revenue models?
(c) How can manufacturers advertise on Pinterest?
(d) Compare and contrast Pinterest and We Heart It. Pay
attention to the business models.
(e) Pinterest has a large amount of money. How does it
use this money on its website to increase its competitive advantage?
2. Watch the video “Online Communities: The Tribalization
of Business (Part 1)” (6:15 minutes); (Parts 2 and 3 are
optional), at youtube.com/watch?v=qQJvKyytMXU
and answer the following questions:
References
3.
4.
5.
6.
(a) Why is the term tribalization used?
(b) What are virtual communities?
(c) How can traditional businesses benefit from online
communities?
(d) What is the value of communities for the customers?
(e) Compare social vs. marketing frameworks.
(f) How are virtual communities aligned with
businesses?
(g) Discuss the issues of measurements, metrics, and
CSFs in social networks.
The teams concentrate on new tools and apps that can
support social commerce. Start with whatsapp.com,
snapchat.com, hshtags.com, wechat.com/en, and plus.
google.com/hangouts. Describe the support they can
provide. Give presentations to the class.
Conduct a comparative analysis of three to five major
microblogging sites (e.g., twitter.com, tumblr.com)
revenue models, growth rates, and competitive features.
Each group can concentrate on one topic, or on one
company.
Enter socialmedia.org, ecommercetimes.com, socialmediatoday.com, and similar sites and find ten case studies regarding business applications of social commerce
technologies. Distribute the ten cases to team members
and search for more information on each case. Write a
report.
What is social bookmarking? How it can be used? How
can it facilitate social networking?
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Supporting Theories and Concepts
for Social Commerce
3
Contents
Learning Objectives
Opening Case: Netflix Increases Sales Using Movie
Recommendations by Customers ................................................ 47
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Describe the factors that influence online consumer
behavior.
2. Understand the decision-making process of online consumer shopping.
3. Explain how consumer behavior can be analyzed for creating personalized services.
4. Describe online word of mouth and its benefits.
5. Define online engagement and describe its influence on
social trust, loyalty, and satisfaction.
6. Describe social psychology theories relevant to social
commerce, social network analysis, and the social graph.
7. Describe social influence, social capital, and social
support.
3.1
Learning About Online Consumer Behavior .................... 49
3.2
The Consumer Purchasing-Decision Process .................... 52
3.3
Personalization and Behavioral Marketing....................... 55
3.4
Word-of-Mouth in Social Commerce ................................. 57
3.5
Consumer Engagement in Social Commerce .................... 60
3.6
Social Psychology Theories, Social Network
Analysis, and the Social Graph .......................................... 63
3.7
Social Influence, Social Capital, and Social Support........ 66
References ...................................................................................... 70
OPENING CASE: NETFLIX INCREASES
SALES USING MOVIE RECOMMENDATIONS
BY CUSTOMERS
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this chapter
(doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_3) contains supplementary material,
which is available to authorized users.
Netflix (netflix.com) is the world’s largest online movie and
TV show (streaming library) rental company, with more than
57 million paid subscribers worldwide (Q4 2014). Netflix’s
customers receive DVDs either by mail from an extensive
selection or by streaming media (of selected titles) over the
Internet to PCs, tablets, smartphones and TVs, allowing consumers to watch them immediately. Netflix also offers original series (e.g. House of Cards, Orange is the New Black),
which are very successful. Among the ever-expanding base
of devices compatible for streaming, Netflix includes game
consoles (e.g., Microsoft’s Xbox 360, Nintendo’s Wii, and
Sony’s PS3 and PS4); Blu-ray disc players; HD TVs; Apple’s
TV, iPhone, and iPad; set top boxes (e.g., Roku); and handheld devices (e.g., Amazon’s Kindle, Barnes & Noble’s
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_3, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
47
48
Nook). In all, more than 200 devices can stream Netflix. The
company’s success is built on providing a large selection of
DVDs, an easy to navigate catalog, recommendations of
what to view based on users’ taste preferences, and fast, free
delivery. Netflix distributes millions of video programs each
day. The growth history of Netflix is described by Gallaugher
(2008) and Smith (2014).
The Problem
Because of the large number of available titles, customers
often have difficulty deciding what they want to watch.
Often, customers choose the most recent and popular titles,
which means that Netflix has to stock many copies of the
same title to send via postal mail. In addition, some less popular titles do not rent well, even though they could match
many customers’ preferences. For Netflix, it is critical to best
match titles with customers’ profiles, yet maintain a reasonable level of DVD inventory.
A seconds major problem facing Netflix is the competitive nature of the movie rental business (e.g., see us-dvdrental-websites.no1reviews.com).
Netflix
competes
against several online rental companies (e.g., Café DVD),
as well as against companies such as Amazon Instant Video
and Hulu and Hulu Plus that offer movies, TV shows, and
videos to download and watch instantly. DVD rentals, at
prices as low as $1/day (e.g. Redbox), are also being offered
from kiosks located at supermarkets and malls. In 2008,
Blockbuster started offering online movie rental subscriptions, but shut down this service in 2013. In 2013,
Blockbuster started a video streaming service called
Blockbuster On Demand (blockbusternow.com), offering
thousands of movies available on devices such as PCs, tablets, and Roku. (Blockbuster closed its physical stores in
2013.) Other online content providers such as Apple iTunes,
the television broadcast companies, and Google Play have
also become direct competitors. HBO is planning a streaming service in 2015, but Netflix believes that both companies will prosper since they have different shows; however,
according to Morgan Stanley, increased competition from
Amazon, Hulu, and HBO GO “could take away Netflix’s
ability to grow its subscriber base in 2014” (see forbes.
com/sites/maggiemcgrath/2014/01/07/amazon-and-hulucould-slow-netflix-growth-in-2014- morgan-stanleysays). Another issue is that there is a clear trend for more
and more viewers to watch videos online (some for free).
Hence, in 2008, Netflix decided to bring a “watch instantly”
service to attract Internet subscribers. Netflix wants to rid
itself of the DVD business since online streaming has no
shipping costs. Redbox started an online streaming service,
but it was not successful.
3
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
The Solution
Netflix reacted successfully to the issue of matching viewers and movies and the competitive pressure with a recommendation service that was called Cinematch (it is now
referred to as “recommendation algorithm”). This service
uses data mining tools to analyze more than three billion
film ratings made by customers, as well as through histories
of customers’ rentals. Using proprietary algorithms, the system recommends to customers what titles to watch. It is a
personalization service similar to the one offered by
Amazon.com that recommends books to customers. The
recommendation is accomplished by comparing an individual’s preferences with people that have similar tastes, by
using the collaborative filtering software (described later in
this chapter).
For the accuracy of their matching algorithms, Netflix
started a contest in October 2006, offering $1 million to
the first person or team to write a computer program that
would beat Cinematch’s prediction accuracy by 10 %. The
company understood that this would take quite some time;
therefore, it offered a $50,000 Progress Prize each year the
contest ran. After more than 2 years of competition, the
grand prize of $1 million went to “BellKor’s Pragmatic
Chaos,” a 7-member team. Netflix’s recommendation system is constantly changing and improving. For example, in
2013, Netflix introduced “Max,” a new personal recommendation system that talks back to the user (for use with
PlayStation, but will roll out to other devices [e.g., iPad] in
the future). For a description of “Max” and how it works,
see blog.netflix.com/2013/06/let-max-be-your-netflixguide-on-ps3.html.
Netflix subscribers can also invite one another to become
“friends” and make movie recommendations directly to each
other, view one another’s rental lists, and share movies rating
using a social network called FriendsSM. All of these personalized functions make the online rental store very customer friendly.
In March 2013, Netflix unveiled a sharing program called
“Netflix Social.” You can connect your Netflix account with
Facebook to connect you with your friends that use Netflix.
Social features include sending recommendations to
Facebook friends, and sharing what you watch with them
automatically. For information, see slashgear.com/netflixintroduces-netflix-social-to-share-favorite-movies-andshows-with-friends-13273705 and help.netflix.com/en/
node/464. For a demonstration, see blog.netflix.com/2013/03/
introducing-netflix-social.html. For comprehensive coverage, see O’Neill et al. (2014). In September 2014, Facebook
and Netflix created a new, private recommendation system
that allows users to recommend videos to friends without
publicly posting on their wall.
3.1
Learning About Online Consumer Behavior
49
The Result
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THIS CASE
Netflix has seen very fast growth in sales and membership.
The benefits of the algorithms-based recommendation system include the following:
• Effective recommendations. Approximately 60 %
of Netflix members select their movies based on
one-to-one movie recommendations.
• Customer satisfaction. Before 2011, more than
90 % of Netflix members said they were fully satisfied with Netflix. Customer satisfaction dropped
significantly in 2011 when Netflix hiked up their
prices for instant streaming service and divided
DVDs by mail in to a separate service. (Satisfaction
picked up as of 2013.)
• Finance. Netflix has experienced a significant
growth in membership and financial performance.
• Ratings. Netflix has more than 3.5 billion movie
ratings from members in their database. (Each
member has rated about 200 movies.)
• Rental habits. Members rent twice as many movies
per month as they did prior to getting the recommendations. As a result, the rental queues (movies
members want to rent) grew rapidly.
• According to the Huffington Post, 75 % of what
people watch on Netflix comes from the site’s recommendations (huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/07/
netflix-movie-suggestions_n_3720218.html).
This case illustrates the use of the social Web to influence customers. In particular, Netflix uses software
intelligent agents in its recommendation system to
gain a substantial advantage over its competitors by
making personalized movie recommendations to influence its members to rent DVDs that they might possibly like, based on previously viewed films. Netflix’s
recommendation algorithms are designed to increase
customer satisfaction and loyalty. The algorithms use
several theories to create recommendations; one is
influencing consumer behavior via other customers’
reviews and recommendations, another one is by
checking what customers with similar profiles are
ordering, and inferring from that data what a specific
customer may like; and yet another is using a large
number of reviewers to build a knowledge base and
use it for an input to the recommendation algorithms.
Several consumer behaviors and other theories are
related to social commerce. In this chapter, we will
deal mainly with those relating to influencing people’s
buying decisions. These include consumer behavior
models (generic), online consumer behavior, consumer
behavior in social commerce, word of mouth, social
psychology, online collaborative filtering, ratings,
reviews and recommendations, social influence, social
capital, and social support.
3.1
Netflix advertises extensively on the Web using several
promotional techniques. Primarily, it places static banner ads
on high-traffic sites, but it also uses permission-based e-mail
marketing, blogs, social networks, classifieds, Really Simple
Syndication (RSS) feeds, and more. The domain netflix.com
attracted over 34 million unique visitors in October 2014,
according to Compete.com (go to siteanalytics.compete.
com/netflix.com/#.VFao0vnF-So for more information).
The recommendation system has become the company’s
core competency. Netflix’s future depends heavily on this
system making accurate recommendations and subscribers
accepting them, which is why Netflix strives to increase the
system’s accuracy. For the science behind these algorithms,
see Vanderbilt (2013).
Sources: Based on O’Neill et al. (2014), Vanderbilt
(2013), Poggi (2013), Smith (2014), and netflix.com
(accessed June 2015).
LEARNING ABOUT ONLINE
CONSUMER BEHAVIOR
Companies are operating in an increasingly competitive
environment: therefore, sellers must try to understand customers’ needs and influence them to buy their products and
services. Customer acquisition and retention are key success
factors, both offline and online. This is particularly important for online businesses, as most interactions with their
customers are online. For a summary of factors affecting
consumer behavior, see aipmm.com/html/newsletter/
archives/000434.php.
For a large collection of pins on online and offline consumer and buyer behavior, see pinterest.com/thewebchef/
consumer-behavior. For a 2014 infographic showing
online consumer shopping habits and behavior, see
business2community.com/infographics/online-consumershopping-habits-behavior-0952526.
50
3
Consumer
Characteristics
Uncontrollable
Variables
Age
Gender
Ethnicity
Education
Lifestyle
Knowledge
Motivation
Satisfaction
Experience
Preference
Habit
Trust
Frequency of
Purchase
Personality
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
Environmental
Factors
Merchant and intermediary
Factors
Brand reputation
Trustworthiness
Policies and procedures
Social variables
Community and culture
Regulations, taxation
The Attitude-Behavior Decision Process
Product/Service
Factors
Awareness
Product/service knowledge
Product/service type
Product/service availability
Product/service customization
Product/service quality
Product/service variety
Differentiation
Tangibility
Price
Brand
Intention
Attitude
Loyalty
(repurchase)
Purchase
Behavior
EC Systems (Technology and website variables)
Website Feature
(Hygiene factors)
Motivational
Factors
Controllable
variables
Payment options
Delivery options and efficiency
Condition of product received
Search engine
Shopping cart
Accuracy
Information
presentation
Completeness
Security
Web page design
Navigation
Usability
Consistency
Accessibility
Mobility
Customer Service
FAQs
E-mail
Call centers
Personalization
One-to-one marketing
Status tracking
Fig. 3.1 EC consumer behavior model
This section is divided into three parts: First, we introduce
the generic topic of consumer behavior. Then, we move to
online behavior, and finally, we present consumer behavior
in the social commerce environment.
A Model of Consumer Behavior
For decades, market researchers have tried to understand
consumer shopping behavior, and develop various models to
summarize their findings.
Consumers can be divided into two groups: individual
consumers and organizational buyers, including governments, private corporations, resellers, and nonprofit organizations. These two types of buyers tend to have different
purchasing behaviors and usually are analyzed differently.
In this chapter, we focus on individual buyers.
An individual consumer behavior model often includes
influential internal and external factors that affect the buyer’s
decision process and the process for making a purchasing
decision.
Figure 3.1 shows a consumer behavioral model, which is
divided into the following two parts:
• Influential factors. Factors influencing purchasing decisions fall into five major dimensions. They are: consumer
characteristics, environmental factors, merchant and
intermediary factors, product/service factors (which
include market stimuli), and EC selling systems. The first
three dimensions are not controllable by the sellers, while
the last two are mostly controlled by the sellers. The
dimensions are shown in Fig. 3.1. The influential factors
affect the buyers’ decision process. (For more about factors that influence the online shopping experience, see
blog.profitero.com/competitor-monitoring-whatfactors-influence-the-online-shopping-experiencecomscore, and Perreau 2013).
• The attitude-behavior decision process. The influential
factors affect the buyers’ decision process. The seconds
part of a consumer behavior model is the decision-making process, which usually starts with an awareness of
the situation and a positive attitude, and ends with the
buyer’s decision to purchase and/or repurchase (see the
3.1
Learning About Online Consumer Behavior
oval part in Fig. 3.1). A favorable attitude would lead to
a stronger buying intention, which in turn would result in
the actual purchase and repurchase behavior. Previous
research has shown that the links between attitude, purchase intention, and actual purchase and repurchase
behavior are quite strong.
The Major Influential Factors
Major influential factors of consumer purchasing behavior
fall into the following categories:
Consumer Characteristics
Consumer (personal) characteristics, which are shown in the
top-left portion of Fig. 3.1, refer to demographic factors, individual preferences, and behavioral characteristics (e.g., social
psychological variables). Several websites provide information on online customer buying habits (e.g., emarketer.com,
clickz.com, and comscore.com). The major demographics
that such sites track are gender, age, marital status, race, educational level, and occupation (some are listed in Fig. 3.1),
which can be correlated with Internet usage and SC data. For
example, both males and females have been found to perceive
market information differently, depending on their levels of
purchase, confidence, and internal knowledge. Several studies show that shopping experience has a significant effect on
consumer attitude and intention to purchase and repurchase
online (e.g., Crespo and del Bosque 2010; Chiu et al. 2014).
Marketers also study psychological variables, such as personality and lifestyle characteristics. These variables are
briefly mentioned in several places throughout this book. To
read about the impact of lifestyle differences on online shopping, see Wang et al. (2006).
Merchant and Intermediary-Related Factors
Online transactions may also be affected by the merchant that
provides the product/service. This group of factors includes
merchant reputation, size of the transaction, trust in the merchant, and so on. For example, people generally feel more
secure when they purchase from Amazon.com (due to its reputation) than from an unknown seller. Other factors such as
marketing strategy and advertising can also play a major role.
Product/Services Factors
Another group of factors is related to the product/service
itself. The consumer’s decision to make a purchase is affected
51
by the nature of the product/service in the transaction. These
factors may include the price, appearance, quality, design,
brand, and other related attributes of the product.
EC and/or Social Commerce Trading Systems
The EC (and SC) platforms for online transactions (e.g.,
security protection, payment mechanism, and so forth)
offered by the merchant and the type of computing environment (e.g., mobile vs. desktop) may also have effects. EC
design factors can be divided into payment and logistics support, website features, and consumer services. Liang and Lai
(2002) classified them into motivational and hygiene factors
and found motivational factors to be more important than
hygiene factors in attracting online customers. Another factor that we include here is the type of EC. For example, consumer behavior in m-commerce may be unique and so is
behavior during social shopping.
Motivational Factors
Motivational factors are functions available on the website to
directly support the purchasing process (e.g., search engine,
shopping carts, multiple payment methods).
Hygiene Factors
Hygiene factors are functions available on the website. Their
objective is to make the website functional and serviceable
(e.g., ease of navigation, show items added to the cart); their
main purpose is to protect consumers from risks or unexpected events in the transaction process (e.g., security
breaching and site technical failure).
Environmental Factors
The environment in which a transaction occurs may affect a
consumer’s purchase decision. As shown in Fig. 3.1, environmental variables can be grouped into the following
categories:
Social Variables
People are influenced by family members, friends, coworkers, and current styles. Therefore, social variables (such as
customer recommendations, word of mouth) play an important role in SC. Of special importance in SC are social networks and discussion groups, where people communicate
via chat rooms, electronic bulletin boards, tweeting, and
newsgroups. A study by Liang et al. (2011/2012) shows that
social support in online communities significantly enhances
the intention to purchase online.
52
3
Cultural/Community Variables
The influence of culture on buying behavior varies between
countries and regions (e.g., rural vs. urban areas). For example, the purchases made by consumers in California’s Silicon
Valley will likely be different from those made by individuals who live in the mountains in Nepal. Bashir (2013) conducted a comprehensive study about online shopping for
electronics in Pakistan.
Other Environment Variables
These include aspects such as available public information,
government regulations, legal constraints, and situational
factors. For example, tax rates (Chap. 11) may affect online
shopping (see Einav et al. 2014).
Note that this model may be somewhat different in the
mobile environment. For information on mobile marketing,
browse mashable.com/category/mobile-marketing.
We now turn to the process that buyers use while making
product-purchasing decisions (the center of Fig. 3.1) and its
relevant models.
3.2
THE CONSUMER
PURCHASING-DECISION PROCESS
In Sect. 3.1 we described the factors influencing the consumer purchasing decision. Here, we describe the process of
purchasing.
Several models were developed in an attempt to understand and explain the consumer’s purchasing process decision. We will describe two major categories of these models.
The first is a model developed from the perspective of managerial decision making. The seconds is a model developed
from the marketing management perspective.
The purchasing decision process is another major element
in analyzing consumer behavior. It is composed of several
phases, as discussed next. A generic model is introduced below.
Generic Purchasing Decision-Making Phases:
A Managerial Decision-Making Approach
From the consumer’s perspective, a generic purchasingdecision model for decisions involving financial, social, or
other factors (e.g., high involvement) consists of a sequential
process of five major phases (Hawkins and Mothersbaugh
2012). In each phase, we can distinguish several activities
and, in some, more than one decision. The five phases are (1)
need identification, (2) information search, (3) evaluation of
alternatives, (4) purchase and delivery, and (5) post-purchase
activities. Although these phases offer a general guide to the
consumer decision-making process, one should not assume
that every consumer’s decision-making process necessarily
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
proceeds in this order. In fact, some consumers may proceed
to a specific decision point and then revert to a previous
phase, or they may skip a phase altogether. The five phases
are discussed next in more detail.
1. Need identification. The first phase in the purchasing process is for a customer to recognize a
need. This occurs when a consumer is faced with a
gap between the current state of what the customer
has and the desired state (e.g., his mobile phone
needs a useful new feature, such as a bigger
screen). A consumer can recognize a need in different ways (e.g., by internal stimuli, hunger or
thirst; or external stimuli, exposure to an advertisement). A marketer’s goal is to get the consumer
to recognize such a gap and then convince the consumer that the product or service the seller offers
will fulfill the need.
2. Information search. Once the need has been recognized, the customer seeks information on how to
fulfill that need. Here, we differentiate between two
decisions: what product to buy (product brokering)
and from whom to buy it (merchant brokering).
These two decisions can be separate or combined.
The consumer’s search for information, catalogs,
advertisements, promotions, and reference groups
could influence decision making. During this phase,
online product searches and comparison engines
can be very helpful. See examples at shopping.
com, pricegrabber.com, and mysimon.com, as
well as discussions in some social networks.
3. Evaluation of alternatives. The information search
usually yields a few feasible options. From these,
the would-be buyer will further evaluate the alternatives and, if possible, negotiate terms. In this
phase, a consumer needs to generate and rank criteria for making the final choice. For online consumers, the criteria may include product prices, payment
terms, and product features.
4. Purchase and delivery. After evaluating the alternatives, the consumer will make the purchasing
decision, arrange for payment and delivery, purchase warranties, and so on.
5. Post-purchase activities. The final phase in the process is a post-purchase phase, which consists of customer service and evaluation of the usefulness of the
product. Customer service and consumer satisfaction
will result in a positive experience and positive word
of mouth and/or positive written reviews (e.g., “This
product is really great!” or “We really received good
3.2
The Consumer Purchasing-Decision Process
53
service when we had problems”). If the customer is
satisfied with the product and services, loyalty will
increase, repeat purchases will occur, and the customer will recommend the product to others.
Alternatively, unsatisfied customers may disseminate negative word of mouth (see the discussion of
reputation management in Chap. 5).
For more about online consumer behavior, see van Bommel
et al. (2014). For more related information, see Amo (2014).
For online consumer behavior future trends see corra.com/
news/consumer-insights-on-what-drives-online-shopping.
Also, for consumer purchasing decision making see slideshare.net/saphniemachado/consumer-behaviour-9852224.
Fig. 3.2 Social commerce brand decision process
The Consumer Brand Decision-Making
Process Models
Marketers often view the purchasing decision model as a
three-phase process, which they use for designing marketing
communication strategies and tactics. These phases are:
1. Awareness and knowledge of the product’s features
and benefits. This is a cognitive stage happening
inside the consumer’s mind.
2. Attitude about the product (positive or negative).
This stage is about the consumer’s feelings, such as
liking, disliking, or preferring the product and postpurchase satisfaction level.
3. Behavior involves the consumer actually doing
something, such as purchasing, repurchasing, writing an online product review, or visiting a website.
If the consumer forms a positive attitude, it may transform a buying intention into an actual purchase. Marketing
research has shown that the linkages among these three
phases are quite strong. Therefore, developing a positive
consumer attitude about the product and website experience
plays a central role in the final purchase decision.
This decision-making model, displayed in a circular fashion in Fig. 3.2, reflects the idea that consumers can begin
activities at any point on the circle and not necessarily proceed in any regular order, as previously mentioned. The following sections describe two variations of this model.
The AIDA Model
The Attention-Interest-Desire-Action (AIDA) model describes
a common set of events that may occur as a reaction to an
advertisement. (Some add “S” for satisfaction, to form
AIDAS.) The model is commonly used by advertisers to create messages that influence a buyer’s awareness, attitude, or
behavior (see mindtools.com/pages/article/AIDA.htm and
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AIDA_(marketing)). This model
argues that consumer processing of an advertisement or other
promotional message includes the following events or stages:
1. A—Attention (awareness). The first step is to get the
customer’s attention (e.g., be quick and direct; use
powerful words or phrases to catch a customer’s
eye). This is done usually by advertising.
2. I—Interest. By demonstrating features, advantages,
and benefits, the customer becomes interested in
the product (e.g., engage the customers by getting
them interested).
3. D—Desire. After evaluation, the consumer generates a desire to acquire the product or service (e.g.,
build the reader’s interest and create a desire in
them—a motivation to act).
4. A—Action. Finally, the consumer will take action
toward purchasing (e.g., act on their desires and buy
the product/service).
5. S—Satisfaction. Customer post-purchase satisfaction will generate higher loyalty and lead to repurchase after using a product/service.
54
3
A recent version of AIDA is the AISAS model proposed
by the Dentsu Group, dentsu.com/crossswitch/dictionary/index.html that is tailored to online behavior. The
model replaces desire with search and adds share to show
the increased word-of-mouth effect on the Internet. It
indicates that consumers go through a process of
Attention-Interest-Search-Action-Share in their online
decision process. The model, which is particularly suitable
to social commerce, is described next.
Social Commerce Brand Decision Process
The Dentsu Group model is particularly suitable for social
commerce, so we have integrated it into the appropriate areas
in Fig. 3.2. The center of this model reflects actions particular to social commerce. Buyers use Google and other search
engines during their information search and product evaluation stages. They share this information with others before,
during, and after their purchase. Marketers make sharing
easy by providing “like” buttons, comment boxes, and several other tactics (discussed throughout this book). Finally,
consumers read and write recommendations on product
review sites, social networks, and other online sites. For a
video from Reevoo regarding these and other consumer SC
shopping habits, titled “Consumer Research on Social
Commerce” (3:06 minutes), see vimeo.com/25357746. For
consumer behavior in social media, see Heinonen (2011).
Players in the Consumer Decision-Making Process
Several different people may play roles in various phases of
the purchasing decision process. In B2B, they usually act as
a team to make the buying decision(s). The following are
five major roles:
1. Initiator. The person who recognizes and suggests
the need to buy a specific product or service.
2. Influencer. A person who tries to convince other
people to make a purchase.
3. Decider. The person who makes the final buying
decision.
4. Buyer. The person who purchases the product or
service and pays for it.
5. User. The customer who uses the product.
The roles apply both to the organizational and to the individual consumer buying process. For example, a recent college graduate (initiator, decider, and buyer) considered
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
buying a car for his mother (user), and his father and friends
(influencers) offered brand suggestions. Finally, he took his
father’s advice and purchased the car.
The sellers need to decide which of the roles is more
important to be influenced and try to do it. Sellers should use
the most beneficial role to influence the buyer based on each
situation.
In social media, we can use a variation of these roles that
include:
1. Followers. These are social media users (the majority) who seek advice from others and are influenced
by the advice.
2. Influencers. These are people who have large networks of followers, or have reputations as being
experts and fair (e.g., bloggers, review writers).
3. Advocates. These are usually loyal customers who
are satisfied with certain products or services and
are willing, when asked, to provide testimonials to
this effect.
Example: Influencers at Sony
Dragon (2014) describes Sony’s Sony Club, an annual program for recruiting successful bloggers to act as influencers.
The selected bloggers need to have a natural affinity for the
brand. The bloggers, who are not paid for their time (but are
reimbursed for all expenses), attend a 3-day conference where
they are provided with Sony products. After the conference,
the bloggers share their experience and review the products.
Note
A study conducted in April 2013 by First Direct (firstdirect.
com) found 12 social media personalities: the dippers, the
ultras, the deniers, the virgins, the lurkers, the peacocks, the
ranters, the changelings, the ghosts, the informers, the
quizzers, and the approval seekers. For definitions of these
and more details, see newsroom.firstdirect.com/press/
release/the_ranters_and_peacocks_-_new and for a
related
infographic,
see
cliveroach.tumblr.com/
post/48414019461/12-personality-types-in-social-mediarevealed. See also “A New Breed of Social Media
Personalities” at pinterest.com/pin/16888567325374584.
When more than one individual is involved in the buying
process, it becomes more difficult to properly target social
commerce marketing communications strategies. Different
marketing efforts may be designed to target people who are
playing different roles. This is especially true when those
responsible for the buying decision in a business are considering purchasing online. Note that major enterprise purchases
3.3
Personalization and Behavioral Marketing
are being made by several users, influencers, buyers, and so
on. In such cases, there is a group decision process.
Corporate Buyers’ Behavior and the Players
in the Buyer Decision Process
Buyers for businesses and governments are also influenced
by most of the factors in Fig. 3.1. The main difference is that
corporate buyers’ characteristics do not play as big a role;
nevertheless, the buyers are often motivated by personal
desires for promotion, pay increases, and career
marketability─for example, getting a great bargain with an
online purchase can help the buyer’s reputation as an efficient employee.
Consumer Behavior in Social Media
and Commerce
Understanding both online and offline consumer behavior
can be helpful, but in social commerce, we are especially
interested in knowing about consumer behavior in social
media systems, and particularly in social networks. One
issue is that many people come to social networks to socialize and not to conduct business. However, this situation is
changing. More users come to social networks for both
“pleasure and business.” For example, rating and recommendations for products (Chap. 6) have become popular. One
issue for sellers is to identify the specific behavior relevant to
their customers’ social commerce activity. According to
Rayson (2013), vendors can enhance their social media strategy if they know the various personalities and roles of their
customers.Formoreinformation,seeconversionxl.com/how-to-usesocial-media-to-drive-sales.
One of the major social networks that increases its commercial activities by learning and manipulating consumer
behavior is Facebook. For example, in 2013 the company
stopped direct sales of real products, concentrating on selling
virtual products. Many researchers and consultants have
investigated this topic, ranging from how social media influences purchasing behavior (Peneycad 2013), to using social
media to market to women (Walter 2013). For other aspects,
see Lee (2012).
55
blogs. The study also surveyed group-buying and locationbased sites.
What Prompts Users to Share on Social Media
Sharing content is a major behavior on social media. One reason is that sharing helps define the user’s personality. Another
reason is “to promote an issue.” For finding your social media
personality, see pinterest.com/pin/16888567325446527 and
Exercise #9 in “Topics for Discussion and Debates” at the end
of this chapter.
3.3
PERSONALIZATION AND BEHAVIORAL
MARKETING
A major characteristic of Internet-based social commerce (as
well as with many offline purchases) is that consumers are
influenced by recommendations made by family, friends,
other customers, and experts. Such recommendations can be
general to all buyers (e.g., service or product ratings/reviews),
or they can be targeted to a specific individual, such as in the
Netflix case.
There are several major ways that recommendations can
be done online. First, customers may initiate a request to
friends or other consumers (e.g., via e-mail, text message,
tweet, or post a query on Yahoo! Answers). Seconds, companies (e.g., as done by Netflix and Amazon.com) may
attempt to make individually tailored recommendations
based on a specific consumer’s social interactions or preferences, or based on that of similar customers. For example,
vendors can integrate Facebook Platform (formerly
Facebook Connect) with a user’s profile to connect to a site,
or they can use ‘social sign-on,’ also known as ‘social login,’
which is a single sign-in using existing information from a
social networking site like Facebook. This means that
brands can access users’ social activity to present them with
the products or services that are tailored to their tastes. Most
large online retailers have already implemented social signon into their sites.
In this section, we will address three key methods relating
to social commerce: personalization, behavioral targeting,
and collaborative filtering. All these methods intend to influence customers to buy.
Personalization in Social Commerce
The Shop.org Study
A joint study conducted in 2011 by Shop.org, comScore.
com, and Social Shopping Labs found some interesting facts
about consumer behavior in social commerce. Partial results
were reported by Grannis (2011). The results include data in
how customers interact with Facebook, Twitter, and registered
Personalization refers to the matching of services, products,
and/or marketing communication content to individuals,
based on their preferences. The matching process is based
on what a company knows about the individual user. This
knowledge usually is expressed in a user profile. The user
profile describes customer preferences, behaviors, and
56
demographics. It can be created by getting information
directly, by observing the user’s online clicking behavior
(i.e., what people are doing online), or by asking customers
to fill in a questionnaire. Another way for vendors to create
profiles is through the use of software tools such as a cookie
(also known as an HTTP cookie, web cookie, or browser
cookie), which is a data file that is placed, without the knowledge of a user, on the user’s hard drive. For details about
‘cookies,’ see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HTTP_cookie and
searchsoftwarequality.techtarget.com/definition/cookie.
In addition, profiles can be built from previous purchase patterns. Finally, vendors can build profiles by conducting marketing research (as in the Netflix case) or by making
inferences from information known to them about similar
customers.
Once a customer profile is constructed, a company can
match the profile with a database of products, services, or
marketing promotions. Manual matching is a time-consuming
and expensive process; therefore, the matching process is
usually done by software (intelligent) agents. One-to-one
matching can be implemented by using one of several different methods. One well-known method is collaborative filtering (discussed later in this section).
Many vendors provide personalization tools that help in
customer acquisition and retention. Examples of such vendors are Sidecar (hello.getsidecar.com) and Magnify360
(magnify360.com). For a comparison of personalization
done in e-commerce and social commerce see Li and
Karahanna (2012).
Web Cookies in Social Commerce
Cookies are small files sent from a website and stored in a
designated area in your computer. They allow companies to
save certain information for future use. According to
Webopedia, “the main purpose of cookies is to identify users
and possibly prepare customized Web pages for them” (per
webopedia.com/TERM/C/cookie.html).
The use of cookies is a well-known method of monitoring
consumers that enables the identification of a customer during future visits to the same computer (see whatarecookies.
com). Are cookies bad or good? The answer is “both.” When
users revisit Amazon.com or other sites, they are greeted by
their first name. Amazon.com knows a user’s identity by
using cookies. Vendors can provide consumers with considerable personalized services if they use cookies that signal a
consumer’s return to a site. Cookies can provide marketers
with a wealth of information, which can then be used to target specific ads to customers. The vendors can then recommend products similar to what the customer previously
purchased. A variation of cookies is known as e-sugging
(“SUG-ing,” from “selling under the guise of research”).
3
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
Thus, marketers get higher rates of “click-throughs,”
and customers can view information that is most relevant
to them. Cookies can also prevent repetitive ads because
vendors can arrange for a consumer to not see the same ad
twice. Finally, advanced data mining companies (e.g.,
such as SPSS and Sift) can analyze information collected
and stored in cookie files so vendors can better meet their
customers’ needs.
However, some people object to cookies because they do
not like the idea that “someone” is watching their activity on
the Internet. Users who do not like cookies can disable them.
On the other hand, some consumers may want to keep the
“friendly” cookies. For example, many sites recognize a person as a subscriber by accessing their cookies so that they do
not need to re-register every time they visit the site.
Cookies can be removed if the user does not like them.
For instructions on deleting cookie files from your Internet
browser (e.g., Internet Explorer, Google Chrome, Firefox),
see whitecanyon.com/delete-cookie.
Using Personalized Techniques to Increase
Social Commerce Activities
It has become common practice for vendors to provide personalized services to customers in order to increase customer satisfaction and loyalty. A prime example is Amazon.
com, which provides many personalized services, the most
common one being product recommendations. Amazon.
com automatically generates such recommendations based
on the buyers’ purchasing and browsing histories, and upon
the purchasing history of other customers with similar purchasing histories.
Personalized services can be facilitated when the companies know more about their customers. Information for personalization is provided by vendors such as TowerData.com
(towerdata.com; formerly Rapleaf), which offers a service
that helps businesses learn more about their customers so
they can personalize content (go to intelligence.towerdata.
com/developers/personalization-api). For a free e-book
about the 40 best ways to personalize your website, see qubitproducts.com/content/40-best-ways-to-personalize.
Laengin (2013) provides a slide presentation on personalization and social commerce. For a vendor that specializes in
e-commerce personalization and social shopping, see
Barilliance (barilliance.com).
Behavioral Targeting and Collaborative
Filtering
A major goal of marketing is to enhance customer value
through delivering the right product or service to the cus-
3.4
Word of Mouth in Social Commerce
tomer. One of the most popular ways of matching ads with
customers is behavioral marketing, which is identifying a
specific customer behavior on the Web and designing a marketing plan for this customer accordingly.
Behavioral Targeting
Behavioral targeting uses consumer browsing behavior
information and other information about consumers, to
design personalized ads that may influence consumers better
than mass advertising does. It also assumes that users with
similar profiles and past shopping behavior may have similar
product preferences. Google tests its “interest-based advertising” to make ads more relevant and useful. Representative
vendors of behavioral targeting tools are PredictAd (predictad.com), Boomerang Digital Marketing Solutions (boomerang.com), Criteo (criteo.com), and Conversant
(conversantmedia.com).
Behavioral targeting refers to the one-to-one targeting
of ads to consumers base on individuals’ Web-browsing
behavior, such as search history. Many vendors believe
that this approach can help them deliver more accurate
online advertisements to consumers, influencing the consumers to buy their products. A well-known example is
Google AdWords (google.com/adwords), which presents
ads to users on the search engine results pages based on the
key words typed into the search engine (called “sponsored
links”). Behavioral targeting can be used on its own or in
conjunction with other forms of targeting, such as using
the customers’ real time location, their demographics, or
the content they are interested in. Google is offering its
“interest-based advertising,” in its Display Network
(google.com/ads/displaynetwork) to make ads more relevant and useful. For social media behavioral targeting,
see Lee and Kotler (2011) and for additional information,
see Hiam (2014). A major method of behavioral targeting
is collaborative filtering.
57
and to recommend products to them. For a free tutorial of
119 slides about collaborative filtering from Carnegie Mellon
University, see Cohen (undated). Many commercial systems
are based on collaborative filtering.
Amazon.com’s “Customers who bought this item also
bought…” is a typical statement generated by collaborative
filtering, which intends to persuade a consumer to purchase
the recommended items.
For a comprehensive discussion and more information
about data collection, targeted advertising, and 105 companies that catch data, and so forth (including an infographic),
see Madrigal (2012).
Legal and Ethical Issues in Collaborative Filtering
A major issue in using collaborative filtering for personalization is the collection of information from users without their
consent or knowledge. Such a practice is illegal in many
countries (e.g., the U.S.) because of the violation of privacy
laws. Permission-based practices solve this problem. In fact,
empirical research indicates that permission-based practices
are able to generate better positive attitude in mobile advertising (Tsang et al. 2004). The negative effect of behavioral
targeting can be seen in the case of Facebook. In June 2014,
Facebook made a major shift in the way it collects consumer
data, by announcing that they would now include members’
Internet behavior to fine-tune its interest-based advertising.
This means that Facebook collects their members’ external
Web surfing behavior and compare it with their members’
internal behavior on Facebook. This will help advertisers
better understand users’ interests and provide members with
more relevant ads (see ghosteryenterprise.com/facebooksnew-behavioral-targeting-program-internetadvertising-hits-high-ghostery-dispatch). Since there are
many members who believe their privacy is being violated,
Facebook is providing them with stronger privacy controls,
and a way to opt-out of the program by visiting a website
built by the Digital Advertising Alliance, which lets
Facebook and other companies know that users do not want
to receive these specially targeted ads.
Collaborative Filtering
When (or even before) new customers come to a business, it
would be useful if a company could predict what products or
services are of interest to them without asking them or viewing their previous records. A method that attempts to do just
that is collaborative filtering. Using proprietary formulas,
collaborative filtering automatically connects the preferences and activities of many customers that have similar
characteristics to predict the preferences of new customers
3.4
WORD OF MOUTH IN SOCIAL
COMMERCE
As you may recall from Chap. 1, IBM’s definition of social
commerce states that it is an application of word of mouth.
Therefore, it follows that a basic understanding of word of
mouth may be a useful precondition for building a social
commerce strategy.
58
What Is Word of Mouth (WOM)?
According to Investopedia, word of mouth refers to oral
communication that passes information from person to person. An important area of marketing is called word-of-mouth
marketing (WOMM), also known as viral marketing, which,
according to Wikipedia, relies on the added credibility of
person-to-person communication (e. g., a personal recommendation). Marketers do not have control over this form of
communication as they do with company-generated marketing tactics; however, they try to stimulate positive WOM and
monitor to see if it works. There are several variations of this
method. For more about word-of-mouth marketing, see
investopedia.com/terms/w/word-of-mouth-marketing.
asp,
entrepreneur.com/encyclopedia/word-of-mouthadvertising, and businessdictionary.com/definition/wordof-mouth-marketing.html. For use of word of mouth in
business, see Sernovitz (2012).
3
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
nielsen-consumers-trust-wom-over- other-messaging.
html#axzz2gntQPihd). Word-of-mouth content depends on
both the extent of customer satisfaction with a product or a service and the degree of the perceived value of the WOM. To
promote and manage word-of-mouth communications, marketers can focus on brand advocates, the people who are the most
brand-loyal and proactively recommend their favorite brands
and products online and offline without being paid to do so
(such as people who own iPads). Influencer marketing is
WOMM used to target key individuals who have authority and
a high number of personal connections (the influencers).
Chapter 5 describes several WOMM techniques in social
media (see forbes.com/sites/kimberlywhitler/2014/07/17/
why-word-of-mouth-marketing-is-the-most-importantsocial-media).
Viral content spreads fast in social commerce due to the
large number of contacts and connections in social networks.
In addition, microblogging, such as posting on Twitter,
accelerates the spread of WOM.
What Makes Content Go Viral?
The Process of Digital WOM
According to Horton (2013), “content goes viral if it spreads
very fast on the Internet.” An infographic from Mashable.
com shows that content will go viral if it is hilarious, provokes emotional responses (positive or negative), is thoughtprovoking and ready for good gossip. For more information,
see mashable.com/2011/12/03/viral-infographic.
Digital WOM is a cyclical process whereby messages are
transmitted electronically, starting with one person who
sends the message to his friends on his network. Some of the
friends then send the message to their friends on different
networks, and from there the messages are spread to more
and more people. The process is described in Fig. 3.3. Digital
WOM is sometimes laughingly called “Word of Mouse.”
Using Word of Mouth in Social Commerce
Word-of-mouth marketing (WOMM) is a subset of electronic WOM, whose major subject is marketing. According
to Entrepreneur, word-of-mouth advertising (marketing
communication) is “an unpaid form of promotion in which
satisfied customers tell other people how much they like a
business, product, or service” (per entrepreneur.com/encyclopedia/word-of-mouth-advertising). WOMM is a powerful promotional tool and should be considered as a part of
almost every business marketing strategy.
WOMM is highly valued by vendors, social media users,
and performance marketers (this is called “earned media” in
Chap. 5). It is transmitted via e-mail, videos (e.g., see mashable.com/2011/01/26/viral-videos-infographic), and discussions in social networks, etc. Marketing strategies use WOMM
to increase credibility and trust. Research has revealed that customers are inclined to believe WOM rather than company-generated promotions. The consumer tends to believe that users
who deliver WOM are not receiving a benefit from the company. According to Nielsen’s 2013 “Global Survey of Trust in
Advertising,” 84 % of consumers worldwide say they trust
word-of-mouth recommendations from their trusted friends and
families (per mediapost.com/publications/article/209286/
The Power of WOM
Several studies show the power of WOM. For example,
Bazaarvoice provides detailed statistics on WOM at bazaarvoice.com/research-and-insight/social-commercestatistics; including the following (you will see varying
findings of these stats in later chapters):
• Close to 90 % of online customers trust recommendations from people they know.
• 70 % of online customers trust recommendations
from other customers that they do not know.
• 67 % of shoppers spend more money online because
of recommendations from friends.
• 53 % of people on Twitter recommend products
and/or vendors on their tweets.
• 80 % of all recommendations in bazaarvoice.com
are positive (four or five stars).
• 44 % of all online purchases of consumer electronics are influenced by WOM.
3.4
Word of Mouth in Social Commerce
59
Fig. 3.3 The process of digital
WOM
For a slideshow on the power of e-WOM, see slideshare.
net/fbarrenecheaf/the-power-of-eword-of-mouthadding-social-media-to-the-marketing-mix. For WOM as
a facilitator of customer driven innovation, see G. Brown
(2014).
For factors influencing the adoption of WOM (such as
gender, age, type of product, etc.) in online shopping in general, see Cheung et al. (2008).
dissemination and information about the product based on a
deep knowledge of the brand’s target market. According to
Marketing Made Simple, a message spread through YouTube
can be much faster than face-to-face communication (see
marketing-made-simple.com/articles/word-of-mouthadvertising.htm).
Viral Marketing and Social Networking
The Major Types of WOM
There are two major types of WOM: (1) Analog: This is person-to-person, face-to-face communication, as well as the
traditional written, printed, and telephone media. (2) Digital:
Information is digitized and possibly stored in a format that
can be sent and re-sent electronically.
The digital format is used in social media marketing. You
tell something to your network, then people in your network
tell people in their networks, and it continues to expand
exponentially. Web 2.0 tools and social networks such as
Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube make the spread of information easy and fast. A practical issue is what channels
should one use to entice information dissemination. This
topic will be discussed in Chap. 5.
Consultants help companies improve WOM. For example, in order to draw attention to their products or help build
a mailing list, a vendor may offer a gift giveaway of a new
game or video that people will like and probably share with
their friends. Companies can also hold contests, giving away
a game or video and advertise on social networking sites.
Vendors can use e-mail, Facebook, or Twitter for the initial
Viral marketing refers to a word-of-mouth method by
which people tell others (frequently their friends) about a
product they like or dislike. Viral marketing and advertising
has many variations and it plays a major role in e-commerce
and social commerce (see Logan 2014).
Viral marketing is especially popular among young adults
and on Facebook and Twitter. Thus, information (good or bad)
can spread quickly to millions with minimal cost to the companies’ advertisers. For example, when YouTube first started, the
site conducted almost no traditional advertising in its first few
months, but millions joined because of WOM. For the “power
of WOM,” see ama.org/publications/MarketingNews/
Pages/The-Power-of-Word-of-Mouth.aspx. For comprehensive coverage, see Wilde (2013).
Viral Blogging
Many retailers are capitalizing on WOM marketing by using
bloggers. See some examples at buildabetterblog.com/
business-blogging-articles-to-get-you-started.html. (This
is known as blogger outreach.) When viral marketing is done
60
by bloggers, it is referred to as viral blogging. Viral blogging
can be very effective with the use of tools such as Twitter
(e.g., see slideshare.net/LizBullock1/how-dell-is-usingsocial-media-to-deepen-customer-relationships-andbuild-trust). For a video describing a viral blogging system,
see Payne (2013).
Note: A collection of videos tagged “viral blogging system”
is available at vimeo.com/tag:viral+blogging+system.
Example
PayPerPost (payperpost.com) runs a marketplace where
advertisers and bloggers, video bloggers, online photographers, and podcasters can connect with each other. Those
who need services describe what they want and how much
they are willing to pay. Providers then bid on the jobs.
PayPerPost checks the reputation of the bloggers and
matches them with the advertisers’ requirements. PayPerPost
also arranges payment to the bloggers. Note that the
PayPerPost bloggers are required to disclose that they are
being paid for their postings. (For details, see payperpost.
com/bloggers/blogger-how-it-works and payperpost.com/
advertisers/how-it-works).
Viral Videos
A viral video is a video that is spread rapidly through the
process of online information sharing. These videos become
popular when they are circulated via e-mail, SMSs, social
networks, microblogging, blogs, discussion forums, and so
forth. This way, people share videos that receive more attention, sometimes drawing millions of viewers in a short time.
Popular sites that are used for sharing viral videos include
YouTube and VEOH. For the top viral video ad campaigns,
see www.visiblemeasures.com/insights/charts/adage.
Viral videos are liked (or disliked) so much that viewers
send them to others, spreading the word about the videos
quickly across the Internet. Marketers are using viral videos
by inserting ads in videos or by using ads as pop-ups prior to
the start of presentations; see adage.com/section/the-viralvideo-chart/674. Note that, if the reactions to a video are
positive, the buzz can be useful, but negative reactions can
hurt the brand (see the discussion on reputation systems in
Chap. 5). Baseline magazine periodically provides a list of
the ten best viral marketing videos. For viral video marketing
case studies (the best virals of 2013), see digitalstrategyconsulting.com/intelligence/2013/12/viral_video_marketing_case_studies_the_best_virals_of_2013.php.
Consumer-Generated Videos
Many companies are utilizing user-generated videos for their
online ads and even for their TV commercials.
3
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
YouTube is the largest advertising platform for video ads.
It has billions of videos and is growing rapidly. YouTube permits selected marketers to upload videos with ads to the site.
Google’s AdSense ad distribution network also offers adsupported video clips. Another way for advertisers to use
viral videos is by creating contests (see onlinevideocontests.
com and onlinevideocontests.com).
Example: Crash the Super Bowl
Doritos runs an annual online contest, inviting fans to create
their own Doritos ads. The winners get a bonus prize of up to
$1 million and their ad airs during that year’s Super Bowl. In
2010, Doritos invited Pepsi Max to be a part of their fourth
contest, receiving over 3,000 entries. In 2013, the contest
was moved to Facebook, attracting over 3,500 submissions
and over 100 million views. In 2013, for the first time,
Doritos took its contest globally, opening it to fans worldwide. This resulted in a sizable advertising effect.
Other Viral Marketing Methods
Viral marketing is done in most social networks through
e-mail, messaging, and forwarding of videos, stories, and
special offers. In addition, there are other innovative ways to
go viral. Carter (2013) provides 15 examples of viral marketing
mostly related to social commerce.
Note: An interesting question was raised by Seraj (2012):
“Does electronic word of mouth in social media help or confuse?” Extensive research was conducted by Seraj, who provided a conceptual model of how electronic WOM affects
the buying decisions of customers and what the role of social
media is in influencing buying decisions.
3.5
CONSUMER ENGAGEMENT
IN SOCIAL COMMERCE
Several interdependent social behavioral theories are related
to engagement. We will describe the essentials of engagement in this section.
Engagement in Social Commerce
Today’s customers are socially-oriented and engaged. One of
the most talked about concepts in social media is customer
engagement (see Sherman and Smith 2013). Unfortunately,
there are many definitions for this umbrella term.
Definitions of Engagement
En.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customer_engagement) defines
customer engagement (CE) as “the engagement of customers
3.5
Consumer Engagement in Social Commerce
with one another, with a company, or a brand. The initiative
for engagement can be either consumer- or company-led and
the medium of engagement can be on or offline.”
According to Wikipedia, online customer engagement
refers to:
1. “A social phenomenon enabled by the wide adoption of
the Internet in the late 1990s and taking off with the technical developments in connection speed (broadband) in
the decade that followed. Online CE is qualitatively different from the engagement of consumers offline.
2. The behavior of customers (who) engage in online communities revolving, directly or indirectly, around product
categories (cycling, sailing) and other consumption topics. It details the process that leads to a customer’s positive engagement with the company or offering, as well as
the behaviors associated with different degrees of customer engagement.
3. Marketing practices that aim to create, stimulate, or influence CE behavior. Although CE-marketing efforts must
be consistent both online and offline, the Internet is the
basis of CE-marketing.
4. Metrics that measure the effectiveness of the marketing
practices which seek to create, stimulate, or influence CE
behavior.”
Rhoads and Whitlark (2008) define engagement as “the
emotional bond or attachment that a customer develops during the repeated and outgoing interactions accumulated as a
satisfied, loyal, and influencing customer.” To show the
diversity of definitions, you may want to watch the video:
“How Do You Define Engagement?—Social Media Camp
2011 Ep#36” (6:26 minutes) at youtube.com/
watch?v=sF0U-OYuKFU. According to staging.socialmediatoday.com/heatherrast/324809/brand-interest-notoutdone-brand-engagement, no one can pinpoint what
engagement really means. However, despite the lack of an
agreed upon definition and the skeptics that call it a fad and
buzzword, the majority of people agree that it is a useful concept. We view engagement as a link between a company and
customers, as illustrated in Fig. 3.4.
For many visual examples of various types of engagement, search Google Images for: ‘engagement in social
Customer
Company
Promotions
Education
Entertainment
Product offers
Service
Customization
Customer
Engagement
Fig. 3.4 Customer engagement
Needs
Characteristics
Resources
Attitudes
Behaviors
61
media.’ For an interesting infographic that shows the
potential complexity of value chains needed for customer
engagement, see customerengagementagencies.com/
business-case/value-chains.
The Benefits of Engagement
The following are the major benefits of customer engagement:
• Optimize online customer interaction and increase
awareness.
• Leverage customer contributions to lead to competitive advantage.
• Leverage employee engagement for competitive
advantage.
• Enable organizations to properly and quickly
respond to the fundamental changes in consumer
behavior on the Internet.
• Overcome the ineffectiveness of the traditional
advertising broadcasting model.
• Overcome the decreasing brand loyalty trend,
increasing brand loyalty and a company’s
reputation.
• Help companies provide an effective communication agenda.
• Help maximize customer value across all online
channels.
• Increase sales.
• Decrease operating cost.
For additional benefits, see Sherman and Smith (2013) and
Barnes and Kelleher (2015). Epstein (2013) describes how 14
companies benefit from engagement. Wikipedia also sees loyalty as a contributor to strengthen customer relationships that
emotionally tie them more closely to companies. Wikipedia also
connects engagement to satisfaction, WOM, awareness, trust,
loyalty, and helping customers engage and assist each other.
For how to boost engagement in LinkedIn, see Ahmad
(2014). For an example, see Case 3.1.
Case 3.1
SC Application
How Whole Foods Engages Its Customers
Whole Foods Market (wholefoodsmarket.com) is operating
in a very competitive industry. To succeed, the company is
constantly looking for innovations. Therefore, it has become a
first mover in its industry, embracing social media to build a
closer relationship with its customers (e.g., see Moth 2013
62
and media.wholefoodsmarket.com/fast-facts). Also see
the slideshow at slideshare.net/JenniferKesik/wholefoodssocial-media-marketing-31878552.
In order to engage its customers, the company is successfully using social networks. Here are some examples:
Facebook Presence
The central feature of Whole Foods Market’s social media
campaign is its presence on Facebook (facebook.com/
wholefoods). It not only has a central Whole Foods Fan Page
where the company runs campaigns and contests, posts recipes and product information, and supports customers’ conversations, but all of the local outlets also maintain an
individual fan page, which is controlled and updated mostly
by the individual store.
Engagement on Facebook
To encourage easy customer engagement, according to
Loayza (2010), Whole Foods:
(a) Assigned and trained “a specific employee at each store
to become the Community Manager (CM)” (per Loayza
(2010)).
(b) Created guidelines so that the CM knows what content
can be posted and what content must be avoided.
(c) Developed moderation rules and guidelines to be used in
case there are any belligerent fans on their Facebook wall.
(d) Recommended FB post-tree items to keep the CM organized and keep the content on the wall alive and fresh.
(A post-tree can be health tips, career opportunities, and
so forth.)
The campaign’s objective, according to Loayza (2010), is
to provide a platform that allows the community to interact
and become engaged with their local Whole Foods store. The
brand’s goal is to “belocal.”
For how Whole Foods marketing uses social media to
its advantage, see digitalsparkmarketing.com/creativemarketing/social-media/whole-foods-marketing.
3
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
feedback and shares from the FB Fan Page than on the actual
blog. The FB Community Manager doesn’t just post the link
and let it happen, the CM actually takes the time to write a
descriptive paragraph describing what the post is about….
Furthermore, Whole Foods has not linked the blog to its Notes
feed of the Facebook fan page. Instead, they only post highly
relevant posts that their FB community would like to read.”
For how Whole Foods creates customer engagement by
providing a unique experience, see linkedin.com/
pulse/20141124223243-43172975-how-to-create-customerengagement-by-providing-a.unique-experience.
As of 2012, Whole Foods uses Pinterest for customer
engagement (Drell 2012).
Involvement with Whole Foods Employees
Finally, according to Loayza (2010), “Whole Foods embraces
transparency, and features real-life employees in its videos to
support the campaigns that it is holding. Again, this is in line
with the ‘Local’ brand and allows FB Fans to see the real
people that make Whole Food[s] happen.”
For more about Whole Foods Market’s use of social
media, see Moth (2013).
Sources: Based on Loayza (2010), Stanchak (2011),
Stelzner (2010), Drell (2012), Moth (2013), and fr.slideshare.
net/socialtech/whole-foods-social-media-case-study.
Questions
1. Enter facebook.com/wholefoods. What kinds of engagement activities are available there?
2. Find information about the Whole Foods Market “Love
Local” Facebook page related to the nearest store to you.
Identify all SC-related activities.
3. Examine twitter.com/wholefoods. Identify their engagement activities.
4. How does the company use their blog to engage with
customers?
5. Find out how the company is using Pinterest.
Mobile Engagement
Engagement on Twitter and by Blogging
In addition to its company website, Whole Foods has a
company blog (wholefoodsmarket.com/blog/whole-story)
and a Twitter account (twitter.com/wholefoods).
Why Engagement?
According to Loayza (2010), “Whole Foods interacts with
consumers and provides them with relevant content. News
features are posted on the FB Fan Page and receive more
A major trend in social engagement is to use mobile devices
and mobile commerce systems. Each interaction channel that
is used by customers provides for different experiences and
opportunities. According to IBM (2014), none of the communication channels is as personally and effectively engaging
as the mobile channels. Mobile channels allow companies to
engage with their customers regardless of location. Therefore,
it can be most beneficial for companies to interact with customers with the right messages in the right place and time, by
using the right business processes, creativity, and technology
(which IBM and other vendors provide). To learn more about
how this is done, see IBM (2014). Also, see Adobe (2013).
3.6
Social Psychology Theories, Social Network Analysis, and the Social Graph
The Measure of Engagement
Since there are many ways for customers to be engaged,
there are different measurements and metrics that companies
can use to gauge engagement. The following are some commonly used measures of engagement:
aspect of engagement—psychology (see Solis 2012 and the
next section).
Note: In addition, to customer engagement, one should
consider employee engagement (see Kelleher 2013).
3.6
• Methods. What types of engagement are used (e.g.,
blog, video, wiki)?
• Frequency. How often does a member visit?
• Duration. How long do members stay on the site
when they visit?
• Recency. When was the last visit?
• Virality. How often do members share content on
the site? In addition, how much is their sharing
amplified throughout social networking?
• Activity level. How active are visitors?
• Community. What kind of community are they in?
• Category. What activity (e.g., communication, collaboration, rating, sharing, etc.) does it fit?
• Ratings. How often do members rate content on
the site?
Papworth (2011) relates the measurement of engagement
to the seven stages in the following list, starting from shallow
engagement (e.g., photo sharing) to deep engagement (e.g.,
collaboration).
63
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY THEORIES,
SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS,
AND THE SOCIAL GRAPH
Given the strong influence of friends, family, and other customers on consumers’ purchasing decisions, it is useful to
explore some of the supporting behavioral and social theories behind this influence.
Social Psychology and Social Commerce
There are many definitions of the term social psychology.
According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary, social psychology is “the study of the manner in which the personality,
attitudes, motivations and behavior of the individual influence and are influenced by social groups.” Our interest here
is the study of influences that are related to social commerce
in general and online shopping in particular. There are many
theories and studies about social commerce psychology
(e.g., see Marsden 2009; Solis 2012; DeLamater and Ward
2013). Here, we present only some of the theories.
Social Commerce Psychology
1. Internal/enterprise (e.g., wiki, sharing photos)
2. Monitoring (e.g., management listening to
employees)
3. Broadcasting (Twitter, bulletin board, news, RSS)
4. Viral (see Sect. 3.4, all types)
5. Campaigns (see Chaps. 4 and 5)
6. Collaboration (internal and external; see Chap. 8)
7. People powered (crowdsourcing, questions and
answers, social support)
For details on the levels of engagement, see Papworth
(2011). Another measure of engagement level is the ratio of
brands engaged to those not engaged. See Chap. 5 for another
engagement categorization system. A special social engagement index for buyers was developed by Zambito (2011).
For tools to monitor and analyze engagements, see Radian6
(a SalesForce company). Finally, there is an interesting
Social shopping relies on social psychology that “harnesses
the human capacity for social learning, learning from the
knowledge and experience of others we know and/or trust.
This social learning faculty is part of our social intelligence,
the ability to understand and learn from each other and profit
from social situations. However, social shopping tools also
work at a more fundamental level, by playing to cognitive
biases in how people are influenced by other people when
shopping” (Marsden 2009).
Note: A cognitive bias, according to Princeton University,
is “a pattern of deviation in judgment that occurs in particular situations.”
For more on social commerce psychology, see aimclearblog.com/2012/03/20/social-commercepsychology-the-whys- hows-of-consumer-behaviorsesny and DeLamater and Ward (2013). For a video on
social psychology and shopping carts, see youtube.com/
watch?v=YWaEGkbQ2XQ.
64
3
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
Cognitive Styles and Morphing in Behavioral
Marketing
Cognitive styles that define how people process information
has become a subject of research in Internet marketing and
advertising. The underlying rationale is that people with different cognitive styles have different preferences in website
design and marketing messages. Specifically, an attempt is
made to connect the Web with users in their preferred cognitive style. This can make one-to-one advertising messages
more effective. MIT designed an empathetic Web that is utilized to figure out how a user processes information and then
responds to each visitor’s cognitive style. For a comprehensive description, see Urban et al. (2009).
The topic of social influence (Sect. 3.7) is closely related
to social psychology.
Fig. 3.5 A simple social network structure (there are only three connections between you and me)
The Universal Heuristics of Shopping
Social Network Theory
Research has found that shoppers do what is popularly
known as “thinslicing” when they are out shopping (see
Marsden 2009). Thinslicing is a style of thinking (psychologists call it heuristic-thinking and marketers call it
decision heuristics). This style of thinking involves ignoring most of the information available, and instead “slicing
off” and using a few salient information cues, often social
in nature, along with a set of simple, but usually smart
mental rules of thumb (heuristics) to make intuitive purchasing decisions. According to Marsden (2009), psychologists have identified six universal heuristics
developed by Robert Cialdini (2008, 2001a, b) that shoppers use to process thinsliced information: social proof
(follow the crowd), authority (follow the authority), scarcity (scarce products must be good), liking (follow those
you like), consistency (be consistent), and reciprocity
(repay favors). For extensive coverage, see Goleman
(2006). Social shopping tools are powerful because they
harness these heuristics to make purchase decisions more
likely. For example, the “Black Friday” online retailer
discounts, good only on the day after Thanksgiving,
evokes the scarcity principle. (However, the deals are now
offered online for weeks prior to the Thanksgiving holiday and afterwards.)
Social Network Theory and Analysis
To apply social commerce properly, it may be helpful to
learn about the foundation of social network sites. Two major
topics are described here: social network theory and social
network analysis.
According to Wikipedia, a social network “is a social structure made up of a set of social actors (such as individuals or
organizations) and a set of the dyadic ties between these
actors. The social network perspective provides a set of
methods for analyzing the structure of whole social entities
as well as a variety of theories explaining the patterns
observed in these structures.” The social actors (nodes) are
connected by lines (the dyadics) that signify relationship
(and contacts) such as friendship, kinship, common interest,
financial exchange, dislikes, beliefs, or related knowledge.
A social network structure can be illustrated by a graphical display of specific connections (also known as ties, edges,
or links) between the nodes of the network as illustrated in
Fig. 3.5. The network can also be used to measure social
capital—the value that an individual gets from a social network (to be described later).
Figure 3.5 is simplified. Using computerized drawings,
one can show hundreds, or even thousands, of nodes and
links in one diagram. A sample of many networks, known as
sociograms, is shown in Google’s search results of images
for sociograms. Note that the connecting lines are not always
presented as arrows. This may mean that the connections are
not known or they are bidirectional. A unidirectional arrow
signifies one-way messaging.
The theory of social networks was developed by sociologists, starting in 1950, by looking at one individual and his
relationship with 100–150 other individuals. On the Web,
social network sites, such as Facebook, have expanded the
concept to include organizations and their environment (e.g.,
customers, society, suppliers, or government). The theory
enables social network sites to allow many users to publish
3.6
Social Psychology Theories, Social Network Analysis, and the Social Graph
their own content for their friends and others to see. Social
networks also help site users to display their professional
profiles. The sites provide tools for sharing features, communication capabilities, and more. The graphical display of
the relationships is the basis for social network analysis.
Social Network Analysis
Social network analysis (SNA) is a method for analyzing
social networks (see Scott and Carrington 2011). It involves
the mapping and measuring of both relationships and information flows among groups, organizations, and other connected entities in social networks. SNA provides a visual
analysis of human relationships that is both quantitative and
qualitative. In the business world, this is sometimes called
organizational network analysis.
The use of SNA depends on the availability of data that
describe the latest in social networking.
One of the methods of SNA is based on finding the center
point in the network. This information gives us insight into
the operation of the network, such as who are the players,
who are the leaders and what subgroups exist. For details,
see orgnet.com/sna.html.
The Benefits of Social Network Analysis
The following are the major benefits of SNA that relate to
social commerce:
• Leverage peer support
• Facilitate innovation and learning
• Identify the individuals, teams, and subgroups who
play the influencers roles in social networks.
• Find information flow problems and identify those
who are not getting information properly as a result
of the problems
• Help in refining social commerce strategies.
For comprehensive coverage of SNA, see Scott and
Carrington (2011).
The Social Graph
A social graph is a diagram that illustrates the interconnections among people, groups, and organizations in a social network (see whatis.techtarget.com/definition/social-graph).
Mark Zuckerberg, co-founder and CEO of Facebook,
used the term initially to refer to the networks and relationships
65
among Facebook users. This definition was expanded later to
refer to a social graph of all Internet users. A social graph can
be described as a “global mapping of everybody and how
they’re related” (per cbsnews.com/news/facebook-onesocial-graph-to-rule-them-all). The term was used to
explain the Facebook Platform (facebook.com/platform),
which was introduced in 2007.
The Facebook social graph describes the relationships
between individuals online. This is in contrast with social
network analysis, which describes connections and relationships in the real world. The two concepts are very similar.
However, the social graph is digital; while social network
analysis is mostly quantitative. In addition, relationships are
defined by the social graph more explicitly.
Facebook helps people and websites with the construction
of the social graph. For details, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Social_graph. The Facebook Graph Search algorithm finds
information from within a user’s network of friends. See
search.fb.com displays a Facebook ad created from an individual’s information and sent to other members using a
social graph.
A social graph is exemplified by a sociogram similar to
that of social networks (as illustrated earlier in Fig. 3.5). The
diagram depicts all personal relationships of an individual
with others. By searching Google Images for ‘social graph
and Facebook,’ one can find hundreds of visual images of
social graphs.
Graph Search
A Graph Search is Facebook’s search engine, which is integrated with the Social Graph. It can process natural language
queries to return information from social networking. It also
helps to find people and things. It is used for advertising on
Facebook (see Constine 2013). For how marketers can leverage Facebook’s Graph Search, see socialmediaexaminer.
com/facebook-graph-search-marketing.
In
2014,
Facebook brought Graph Search for mobile systems. For
details, see recode.net/2014/12/08/facebook-finally-bringsgraph-search-to-mobile.
The Power of the Social Graph
According to Whitney (2010), the “Social Graph is a way to
model social networks and help make the connections
between people in those networks clearer. It [is] an
extremely powerful tool for understanding the connections
between people. The question is, how much information
does [a company’s] brand get from the Social Graph? The
answer is, as much as the social network owners and participants of the social network allow (the brand) to have.”
Several companies help retailers utilize the power of the
66
3
social graph. For an example of the powers and limitations
of the social graph, see psfk.com/2013/01/social-graphsearch-facebook.html. For a study on the relationship
between social graph, consumer behavior and online shopping, see Guo et al. (2011).
3.7
SOCIAL INFLUENCE, SOCIAL CAPITAL,
AND SOCIAL SUPPORT
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
2. Internalization is when people accept a belief or behavior
established by those people or groups who are influential
to them.
3. Conformity is changing how you behave to be more like
others.
4. Compliance refers to a case in which people publicly
appear to conform to the majority, but keep their real feelings and beliefs private.
5. Obedience is a form of social influence that is derived
from an authority figure.
Of the several social theories that are related to social commerce, here we present only three.
Social Media Influence
Social Influence
As described earlier, one objective of SC vendors is to influence consumers. When the influencers are friends, or socially
connected, the influence may be stronger. For details, see
Singh and Diamond (2012). To some extent, “everyone is an
influencer on something” (see Kramer 2013).
There are several definitions of social influence. For
example, according to Changing Minds.org, social influence
“is the change in behavior that one person causes in another,
intentionally or unintentionally, as a result of the way the
changed (persons) perceive themselves in relationship to the
influencer, other people and society in general” (see changingminds.org/explanations/theories/social_influence.
htm). According to qualities-of-a-leader.com/personalmbti-type-analysis, “Social influence occurs when one’s
thoughts, feelings, or actions are affected by others. Social
influence takes many forms and can be seen in conformity,
socialization, peer pressure, obedience, leadership, persuasion, sales, and marketing.” (See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Social_influence.) It is also one of the social psychology
heuristics for consumer decision making, as previously mentioned. Vendors use social influence theories, such as communicating about the large number of people who purchase
a product, to persuade people to purchase online (see Lee
et al. 2006). Note that social influence may be the result of
social engagement (e.g., see Hall 2013). Social influence is
important in e-commerce (Grimes 2013). For mobile social
influence, see Martin (2013).
Types of Social Influence
Several areas of social influence are distinguished (per
Wikipedia, based in part on Herbert Kelman):
1. Identification is when people are influenced by someone
who is liked and respected, such as a famous celebrity.
In social commerce, vendors and other organizations tend to
influence consumers mainly by conformity and voluntarily
compliance. Social psychology, for example (Sect. 3.6),
includes several different methods of social influence. One, the
social exchange theory, explains social exchange as it relates to
benefits and rewards. This theory is used by vendors who provide rewards for social-based actions (such as a discount for
writing a product review). Companies such as Groupon and
Foursquare utilize this theory in their SC strategy.
Persuasion, according to Wikipedia, is also “a form of
social influence. It is the process of guiding oneself or another
toward the adoption of an idea, attitude, or action by rational
and symbolic (though not always logical) means.” For details
and tactics of influences in general, see Harvard Business
Essentials (2005). Note that social media is used also to influence the influencers (see socialbro.com/blog/make-friendsinfluence-the-influencers-using-social-media). For an
infographic showing how social media influences business,
see go-gulf.com/blog/social-media-influence-businesses.
The presence of social networks is changing people’s
shopping habits. For a study, see Bowling (2012).
Tracking and Measuring Social Media Influence
Vendors may be interested in measuring the effect of social
media influence so they can evaluate the success of their
social commerce strategy. For a coverage of tools, see Hall
(2013). For a further discussion, see McCue (2013).
Social Capital in Social Commerce
Social capital refers to the value created by connections
among individuals and within social networks. It highlights
the value of social relations and the role of cooperation. It
Summary
also helps to get economic results. Like any other economic
capital, people can save and spend social capital. The term
social capital is frequently used in different interpretations
depending on the perspective.
There are several definitions of social capital that share
the idea that social networks have or facilitate value (social
capital). The concept is similar to that of human capital and
physical capital. Social contacts, for example, can affect the
productivity of individuals, teams and organizations. For
details, see go.worldbank.org/C0QTRW4QF0. For social
capital research activities, see facebook.com/social.capital.
research.
An example of using social capital theory for explaining
customer information sharing in social communities is provided by Liu et al. (2013).
Effects of Social Networking on Social Capital
Social networking activities can positively affect an organizations’ social capital. In our book, social capital refers to the
network of social connections that exist between people and
their shared values. That is, social networks have value and
social capital refers to the collective value in the network.
For example, using network sites, crowdsourcing, and information sharing may increase innovation, which increases
social capital. The ability for a quick connection (e.g., via
Twitter) facilitates social interactions and collaboration.
Impact on Sales and Marketing
Social capital theory, if properly used, can increase reputation and sales. The concept of brand can be facilitated by
using social capital. Vendors can use social capital to influence consumers (e.g., see McCue 2013).
Social Support in Online Communities
As indicated earlier, social networking facilitates social
interactions and brings social values to its users (e.g., see
Bambina 2007). This facilitates social support.
Social support refers to one’s perception of being cared
for, receiving responses, and being helped by people in their
social group. Social support can also be viewed as a vehicle
for satisfying one’s psychological needs. Users can obtain
social support from an online community. For a discussion,
see Huang et al. (2010) and Hampton et al. (2011). For how
social support facilitates e-commerce, see Liang et al.
(2011/2012).
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Social support can help a person feel better, by providing
direct assistance to solve personal problems when they occur.
Therefore, such good experiences may make people more
satisfied with social interactions. For a guide to social support in social commerce see Strother (2014).
Since interactions on the Internet are virtual in nature,
online social support can help social media users, usually in
intangible ways, such as giving informational and emotional
support (Huang et al. 2010). For a study about the linkage
between social support and intention to conduct social commerce, see Liang et al. (2011/2012).
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC issues as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. Factors influencing online consumer behavior.
Consumer behavior in SC is similar to that of any consumer behavior, but it has some unique features. It can be
described by several decision models that are influenced
by factors including the consumer’s personal characteristics, environmental characteristics, product/service features, merchant and intermediary, and SC systems
(logistics, technology, and customer service). All of these
characteristics may influence the consumer purchasing
decision. A major objective of social commerce is to
influence consumers by using social theories, relationships, and connections.
2. The online consumer decision-making process. A
major objective of marketing research is to understand
the consumers’ online decision-making processes, and
formulate strategies accordingly to influence the consumers’ buying decisions. For each of the five steps in the
traditional process, sellers can develop appropriate strategies. Another model, the Attention-Interest-Desire-Action
(AIDA) model, can help design ads and marketing campaigns. The Attention-Interest-Search-Action-Share
(AISAS) model is tailored to the online behavior in the
decision process. This model is particularly suitable for
social commerce. Social media tools can be used in each
step of the process. For example, friends can help with
need identification, information search, and product evaluation (see Chaps. 4 and 5).
3. How consumer behavior can be analyzed for creating personal services. Consumer behavior can be
observed (e.g., via cookies or monitoring browsing history), or it can be derived from questionnaires. Given
the information about the consumers, vendors can create a consumer profile where they try to infer what the
consumer likes and/or needs. Consumer behavior can
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4.
5.
6.
7.
3
also be predicted by having information about other
consumers with similar profiles or shopping habits.
Given the availability of such information, vendors can
tailor ads or messages targeted to individual consumers
on a one-to-one basis. The analysis and targeting is
done by using proprietary formulas based on theories
such as collaborative filtering.
Word of mouth online. The information in online WOM
travels via electronic communication channels such as
e-mail, blogs, notes on pages of social networks, tweets, or
other social media tools. It also can be transmitted via videos, photos, sounds, or any other communication device.
The benefit for the receivers is that they get information
that may add value to them. WOM may result in conversations and discussions that clarify issues and reduce ambiguity. WOM increases interactions and engagement.
Vendors may get free publicity that can travel very
fast. They also may get information on what needs to be
corrected (see reputation management in Chap. 5).
Furthermore, vendors can devise marketing strategies
based on what they hear through WOM, so that they can
improve marketing plans.
Define online engagement and describe its influence
on trust, loyalty, and satisfaction. Engagement describes
the various social networking activities used by customers, employees, and others on social networks, and in participating in social networking (e.g., writing blogs). This
includes activities that involve sharing videos and stories,
using WOM, reviewing, voting, discussing, recommending, collaborating, posting questions, answering
questions, and more. By engaging in these activities, people increase the bond with participants, including vendors, governments, and service providers. The
relationships and contacts generated by social media
engagement facilitate trust (in others, including vendors),
increased loyalty to brands and products, and elevated
customer satisfaction, thus influencing them to buy more
products and services.
Social psychology, social network theory, and social
graph. Social psychology, as it relates to consumer
behavior online, is a prime supporting theory in social
commerce. The issue is how to influence consumers to
shop for certain brands. A primary approach is via social
networks. This involves collecting consumer data and the
analysis of the structure and operation of social communities and networks. Facebook’s social graph is also a
useful theory in social commerce. Social graph theory
was created initially in order to help people with social
networking. Later, the social graph was also used to facilitate social influence.
Social influence, capital, and support. The theories that
are well-known in social psychology can be used in social
commerce to influence and assist consumers. People can
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
be influenced by other people who they may know or be
connected to. Social capital reflects the value added to
people as a result of social interaction and engagement.
Social capital, like human capital, can be preserved and
used by vendors to influence people. Finally, social networks and engagement can provide support to individuals
and facilitate their shopping decisions.
KEY TERMS
Behavioral targeting
Collaborative filtering
Cookie
Customer engagement (CE)
Online customer engagement
Personalization
Social capital
Social graph
Social influence
Social network
Social network analysis (SNA)
Social psychology
Social support
User profile
Viral blogging
Viral marketing
Viral video
Word of mouth (WOM)
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REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Describe the major components and structure of the
online consumer purchasing behavior model (see
Fig. 3.1).
2. List some major personal characteristics that influence
online consumer purchasing behavior.
3. List the major environmental variables of the purchasing
environment.
4. List and describe five major merchant-related variables.
5. List the five phases of the generic online purchasingdecision model.
6. Provide an example to explain the five phases of the
generic purchasing-decision model.
7. Describe the AIDA and AISAS models and analyze their
differences in illustrating online purchasing behavior.
8. Describe the major players in an online purchasing
decision.
9. Define personalization and list some of its benefits.
10. Define cookies and explain their use in influencing
customers.
11. Define behavioral targeting and describe how it is used.
Team Assignments and Projects
12. Describe collaborative filtering.
13. Describe how social psychology and cognitive style
influence shopping decisions.
14. What is social influence? Why is it so important?
15. Define social network theory.
16. Define WOM and list its advantages.
17. What are the benefits of social network analysis (SNA)?
18. Define the social graph and Facebook’s Graph Search.
19. Define social capital and compare it to human capital.
20. Describe social support as it relates to social commerce.
21. Describe engagement in social media.
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
1. How can you describe the process of the purchase decision when the customer is online and looking for an
iPhone? What can an online store do to attract this customer to purchase an iPhone from them?
2. Why is personalization becoming an important element
in SC?
3. What techniques can be used to learn about online consumer behavior?
4. Distinguish between social network theory and social
network analysis (SNA).
5. Discuss the role of social capital in social commerce.
6. Debate: Some say that people come to social networks
to socialize, and they will not accept ads or conduct trading there. Others say that people do not mind the ads, but
may ignore them.
7. Debate: Netflix.com, Amazon.com, and others use customers’ historical purchases as a part of their recommendation systems. Is this an invasion of privacy?
8. McCafferty (2011) claims that the influence of social
media on purchasing is overrated. View his slide show
and gather additional information. Debate the statement.
9. Enter pinterest.com/pin/16888567325446527. Try to
match the suggested personalities to several students.
Comment on the value and accuracy of the suggested
personalities.
10. Some claim that social influence can be negative.
Discuss the issue and how empowered consumers may
not always be swayed by the decisions of others (e.g.,
see Brooks 2013).
11. C. Brown (2014) claims that customers do not want to
be “one,” but prefer to be one out of the “many.” Debate
this issue.
INTERNET EXERCISES
1. Enter whattorent.com and compare its recommendation
system to that of Netflix. Write a brief report.
69
2. Enter exacttarget.com/products/predictive-intelligence
and identify information about social influence on online
shopping.
3. Enter infosys.com/edge and check their EdgeVerve platforms. Make a list of all social commerce activities that
can be facilitated with the software.
4. Enter clickz.com and bazaarvoice.com and find recent
material on online trust and loyalty.
5. Enter walmart.com. Compare their customer comments
to that of Amazon.com.
6. Enter retailsystemsresearch.com and find recent
research on three of the theories presented in this chapter.
Write a report.
7. Enter resourcenation.com/blog/category/social-media.
Find recent material related to the topics discussed in this
chapter. Write a report.
8. Find Carter’s (2013) examples of viral marketing and
analyze the following examples: Honda, Dove, and Grey
Poupon Society of Good Taste. Write a report on their use
of social media.
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
1. Assignment for the Opening Case
Read the opening case and answer the following
questions:
(a) In your opinion, is recommending videos a major
success factor for Netflix? Why or why not?
(b) Netflix is moving on to streaming movies, instead of
physical shipping of DVDs. However, by doing so,
the company faces more competition. What are some
critical success factors for Netflix in this area?
(c) Netflix uses traditional banner ads for the mass audience. Is this wise? Any suggestions for improvement?
(d) Visit Netflix and identify all major social media
applications.
(e) Examine Netflix’s major competitors. Start with Hulu
Plus (hulu.com/plus). Read heavy.com/tech/2014/07/
Netflix-vs-hulu-plus-whats-the-best-app-to-streamtv-shows-and-movies.
2. Research sources that discuss consumer behavior in
social media and social commerce (e.g., onlineconsumers.wordpress.com, socialmediatoday.com, brandprotect.com/social-media-monitoring.html, and pinterest.
com/thewebchef/consumer-behavior. Prepare a report
divided into most cited categories.
3. Does eWOM in social media help or confuse? Debate.
4. Watch the 6:24 minutes video posted by Payne (2013).
Answer the following questions:
(a) How can a social network facilitate viral blogging?
(b) What are the major benefits of viral blogging?
(c) What are the major limitations?
70
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Walter, E., “Marketing to Women: How To Get It Right.” September 2,
2013.
socialmediatoday.com/content/1708156/marketingwomen-how-get-it-right (accessed December 2014).
3
Supporting Theories and Concepts for Social Commerce
Wang, E. T. G., H.-Y. Yeh, and J. J. Jiang. “The Relative Weights of
Internet Shopping Fundamental Objectives: Effect of Lifestyle
Differences.” Psychology and Marketing, 23, no. 5, 353-367, (2006).
Whitney, M. “The Eve of the Social Commerce Era.” September 3,
2010. blog.moontoast.com/the-eve-of-the-social-commerce-era
(accessed December 2014).
Wilde, S. Viral Marketing Within Social Networking Sites: The Creation
of an Effective Viral Marketing Campaign (Google eBook).
Munchen, Germany: Diplomica Verlag, 2013.
Zambito, T. “The Social Buyer Engagement Index.” iMedia Connection,
October 5, 2011. blogs.imediaconnection.com/blog/2011/10/05/
the-social-buyer-engagement-index (accessed December 2014).
Part II
Social Media Marketing
Marketing Communications
in Social Media
4
Contents
Learning Objectives
Opening Case: Johnson & Johnson Uses New
Media Marketing .......................................................................... 75
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. List and define the six social media promotion steps.
2. Identify the key social media communication objectives.
3. Explain how to select social media tools and platforms to
achieve campaign objectives.
4. Compare and contrast the essentials of owned, paid and
earned media.
5. Give examples of several owned social media channels
and tactics.
6. Explain the advertising formats for social media.
4.1
Getting Started with Social Media Promotions ................ 78
4.2
Promotional Tools: Definitions and Use ............................ 81
4.3
Social Media for Social Commerce Communication........ 82
4.4
Owned Social Media ............................................................ 85
4.5
Paid Social Media: Advertising .......................................... 88
4.6
Coordinating Social, Internet, and Traditional
Media Promotion Plans ....................................................... 94
References ...................................................................................... 97
OPENING CASE: JOHNSON & JOHNSON
USES NEW MEDIA MARKETING
The Problem
Johnson & Johnson is the world’s largest health care, medical devices, and diagnostics company. It has more than
128,000 employees worldwide (2014 data). A major problem
facing the company is that its production and marketing must
comply with strict global government regulations. With high
Internet and mobile usage, it is important for companies to
use online communication tools to reach and support its customers. Moreover, the company has about 30,000 Internet
domains. In the past several years, Johnson & Johnson has
applied Internet media extensively, and as a result, achieved
significant performance improvement.
Using Internet Media Channels
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this
chapter (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_4) contains supplementary
material, which is available to authorized users.
Using social media, Johnson & Johnson has grown in online
strategies over the years. The following include some of its
strategies.
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_4, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
75
76
Web 1.0 Stage
In 1996, for the first time in the company’s history, Johnson
& Johnson launched its first website, jnj.com, and began
advertising in the cyberworld. This Web 1.0 website presented a simple online brochure to promote the company’s
products.
Web 2.0 Stage
Several activities were conducted:
1. Kilmer House (First Blog). In 2006, the company introduced its first Web 2.0 promotional tools after using Web
1.0 for over 10 years. Kilmer House was named after the
company’s first science director, Dr. Frederick Barnett
Kilmer. The goal for the blog was to “offer a way to tell
some of the stories about the early days and history of
Johnson & Johnson, and the people who worked here.”
The blog was a perfect way for the company to enter the
Web 2.0 era.
2. JNJ BTW (The Corporate Blog). In 2007, the company
launched its seconds blog. This blog promised to become
“the voice for the company.” JNJ BTW became a place
where the company joined the online conversation about
subjects that are related to Johnson & Johnson, and it
became a great venue to offer public education about
health care. More recently, the company added a blog for
parents, called “JNJ Parents Blog.” (jnjparents.com). A
blog for parents by parents, it covers a multitude of topics, from family safety and wellness to social responsibility and holiday celebrations.
3. JNJ Health Channel on YouTube. Through the company’s
first three new social media channels, Johnson & Johnson
gained the experience of producing good content without
violating regulatory rules. In May 2008, the company
launched two JNJ health test videos on YouTube: “Ask
Dr. Nancy—Prostate Cancer” and “Obesity and Gastric
Bypass Options.” In mid-2014, Johnson & Johnson had
over a hundred videos with over ten million views and
10,570 subscribers. The content covers a wide spectrum
from health and wellness stories to innovations, company
news, philanthropy, and sustainability.
4. Twitter and Facebook. In March 2009, the company
launched its Twitter channel, monitored and updated by
Marc Monseau, the editor of the former JNJ BTW blog.
J&J now has several Twitter accounts. Their “Johnson &
Johnson Cares” Twitter account currently has 34,900 followers and the company is excellent at posting frequent
tweets, videos, and images. JNJ Cares uses the hashtag:
#howloveworks. Its “J&J News” account posts updates
and information for the media, and has over 69,000 followers. In April 2009, the company created its first
4
Marketing Communications in Social Media
Facebook page (facebook.com/jnj), which, as of
mid-2014, had over 624,000 “likes.” The page contains a
company overview, biographical information and focuses
on “caring for the world, one person at a time.” Twitter
and Facebook also serve as “bridging communicative
tools” to integrate viewers into JNJ BTW for further
details about Johnson & Johnson. The company’s
Facebook page has links to some of its various websites
including the J&J Channel.
5. Other social media channels. Johnson & Johnson also
maintains a Foursquare presence. People can check in
when they visit the worldwide headquarters in Brunswick,
New Jersey. In June 2013, Johnson & Johnson teamed up
with the company (RED) to raise AIDS awareness. J&J
donated $1 to the Global Fund to Fight Aids for every
person who shared on social media (retweeting, pinning,
etc.). J&J made a specially created infographic, which
documents the progress the world has made fighting
AIDS since 2003 (see mashable.com/2013/06/10/
share-red-campaign).
Mobile Advertising Campaigns
In a classic example, Johnson & Johnson also integrated several mobile promotional campaigns from 2007 to 2009.
1. Johnson & Johnson ACUVUE campaign with IM. J&J in
Singapore, Hong Kong SAR, and Taiwan wanted new
vibrant methods of engaging potential target consumers,
and helped them understand the benefits of the product
(ACUVUE Moist Disposable Contact Lenses). In response
to research showing that 85 % of daily contact lens wearers
use instant messaging (IM) to stay in touch with their friends
via chat throughout the work day, and their target audience
would be “highly attracted” to images that are “friendly,
cute, and fun,” the company worked with Microsoft Digital
Advertising Solutions in 2007 to come up with a three-way
strategy using linked components. They created a game
called Saving Momo (hosted within Windows Live
Messenger), a Theme Pack to be added to IM, and Windows
Live Alerts. The theme pack included branded wallpapers,
display pictures, and emoticons that enabled users to express
their feelings while chatting. The “Saving Momo” game
hinged on stopping the cartoon figure Momo from getting
dry eyes by giving him Acuvue, while they ran promotional
banners on Hotmail Live and Messenger. All three strategies highlighted the Johnson & Johnson’s ACUVUE
brand of contact lenses. J&J was pleased with the results
of the campaign (see docstoc.com/docs/9919750/
Industrial-Marketing-Report-Update-johnson-andjohnson-company).
2. Using a multichannel mobile campaign. In 2008, the
company used in-call audio ads (ads played while people
Opening Case: Johnson & Johnson Uses New Media Marketing
are on hold on the phone), SMS, and mobile websites to
create a new way to send out promotional messages to its
target audiences. The company used VoodooVox In-Call
Networks to attract target audiences to fill out a form on
the company’s Wireless Application Protocol (WAP)
page. Once an audience user fills out the form,
MindMatics, a German mobile services provider, alerts
VoodooVox on the behalf of J&J, and it sends a free trial
offer of One-Day ACUVUE Moist Lenses for consumers
to try.
3. Johnson & Johnson’s Zyrtec and iPhone 2.0. Zyrtec is an
over-the-counter allergy medication that generated
$315.9 million of sales in 2008. In 2009, Johnson &
Johnson conducted a mobile advertising campaign with
The Weather Channel (TWC), putting a banner ad on
TWC promoting a free application for iPhone users to
download. TWC reaches more than 38 million users
online each month, and it is the most popular online
weather source in North America. The special feature is
that it when the consumer clicks on the banner ad (giving
an option to click on the “try it free” icon), it expands to
take up most of the screen without closing the Weather
Channel app. Therefore, the mobile advertising created a
win-win situation for both the consumers and the brand,
combining the latest forecast with an increased awareness
of the Zyrtec brand.
Social Networks
Johnson & Johnson is very active in the use of social media.
For example, on the company’s main Facebook page facebook.com/jnj, the company provides a link to its YouTube
channel (J&J Channel), which offers extensive health information. The Facebook page has over 625,000 million
‘Likes’ and the most engaged city is São Paulo, Brazil
(August 2014 data). J&J’s most active Twitter account is its
@JNJNews. Finally, J&J is using social media to save lives
(the “RED” AIDS awareness campaign discussed above;
see Olenski 2013).
The results of an IMS Health Report (January 2014)
revealed that J&J Pharma is #1 for social media engagement.
Of the ten pharmaceutical companies that were active on
Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, Johnson & Johnson came out
on top—by a wide margin (see Munro 2014). In June 2014, the
FDA issued proposed social media guidelines for the pharmaceutical and medical devices industry. The guidelines proposed
by the FDA include restrictions on product advertising on platforms with character limitations, such as Twitter, and require
companies to post the risks and benefits associated with a product (for more details, see medcitynews.com/2014/06/
fda-finally-proposes-social-media-guidelines-pharmamedical-device-makers).
77
Results
The intensive campaigns on various new social media
platforms have resulted in significant financial and managerial performance improvements.
1. Robert Halper, director of video communication for
Johnson & Johnson, explained the ROI (return on investment) of using new media: “There is certainly a subjective ROI in terms of our reputation. Look at some of the
comments on our Nursing videos…Management that I
report to is extremely positive about the channel, particularly the large amount of views (over 700,000) and cost
(essentially $0).” Halper goes on to state, “YouTube provides an excellent metric, including views over time,
trends, most popular videos, even viewer retention rates.
I provide this data to senior management in my department, and sometimes to the operating companies, when
applicable” (See Ploof 2009).
2. Mobile advertising has shown positive results with minimum effort over the years. In 2007, ACUVUE’s 1-month
campaign recorded nearly 300,000 Theme Pack downloads and 200,000 game plays of Saving Momo. The
campaign drove sales, improved the brand engagement
within the target markets and had a positive viral impact
on the brand. In 2008, Johnson & Johnson used the InCall Network as another option to engage consumers,
which made it easier for users to get a free trial of
ACUVUE.
3. The Zyrtec campaign achieved more than three million
downloads in the first 3 months after it was launched, and
The Weather Channel remained the number one download for iPhone users in the Apple Store. Mobile advertising has been seen as “a real medium with real reach”
because of its direct interaction between the brand and
consumers (per Butcher 2009).
Sources: Based on: Butcher (2008, 2009), Microsoft
(2009), Ploof (2009), and Sernovitz (2011).
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE CASE
The opening case illustrates how Johnson & Johnson,
a very large company, uses several social media tools
to increase its customers’ awareness, positive attitude,
and trial of its brands. The company started to communicate with its customers in blogs, later adding all
major social media tools and social networks. The
company runs several well-known campaigns with
financial, administrative, and social-related success.
We explain here, and in the rest of the chapter, how
companies can use the above tools strategically.
78
4.1
4
GETTING STARTED WITH SOCIAL
MEDIA PROMOTIONS
The first step in effective and efficient social media marketing communication is to identify and gain a good understanding of an organization’s target markets and their social
media use and behavior (see Fig. 4.1).
Listening to Customers
This involves listening to customers, both collectively and
individually. Collective listening occurs through quantitative
and qualitative primary market research and social media
monitoring via live dashboards. Johnson & Johnson hit gold
when research revealed the high use of instant messaging
(IM) among contact lens users and then used this information
to design the Saving Momo game (hosted within Live
Messenger). Individual listening occurs through participation
in social media conversations and by monitoring these conversations through various techniques discussed in this book.
How does this listening to customers aid promotion strategy and tactic selection? It helps businesses understand the
characteristics, decision-making processes, behavior of target markets, and effectiveness of marketing stimuli to ultimately increase sales and customer satisfaction, as discussed
in Chap. 3. In particular, marketers want to know three critical things that relate to a consumer’s experience with the
AIDA model (Attention, Interest, Desire, and Action; see
Chap. 3):
1. What proportion of their target markets is aware of the
company’s brands and individual products (attention)?
2. Are the attitudes of the markets positive or negative
toward these brands (desire, interest)?
3. What proportion of the market purchases the products
and how frequently do they make repeat purchases
(action)?
Developing Market Communication
Once marketers understand their consumer and business or
government buyer markets on these dimensions, they can
develop marketing communication goals for their social
media campaigns. For example, if no one is aware of a new
product or the features of a current product, the need to build
market awareness will guide the communication message. If
the blogosphere is active with product criticism, the goal will
be to join the conversation with accurate information and
genuine concern. For companies like Coca-Cola with nearly
100 % awareness of the Coke product worldwide, the communication goals shift to the action realm—how to motivate
purchase among non-users or how to increase purchase
amounts and occasions among users (such as Coke’s campaigns to drink the product for breakfast).
Example
IBM believes it has a larger number of employees involved
in social media than does any other corporation. It has over
394,000 employees on LinkedIn, over 17,000 “likes” on its
official “Greater IBM Connection” Facebook page (global
community of current and former employees), 89,000 members in its LinkedIn Group and over 10,000 followers on
Twitter. The official Twitter page has 110,000 active
followers, while the official FB page has over 531,000
Social Media Promotion Steps
1 Select target market/understand SM behavior
2 Set measurable communication goals
3 Select social media platform/tools
6 Refine
4 Execute and monitor
5 Define/review performance metrics
Fig. 4.1 Social media promotion steps and examples
Marketing Communications in Social Media
Johnson & Johnson Example
1) Contact lens wearers/85% use IM
2) Increase sales and image of
ACUVUE brand
3) Game for IM mobile download
4) Create game & theme pack
5) 300,000 downloads; brand
engagement and positive
reputation
4.1
Getting Started with Social Media Promotions
“likes.” These social media participants present themselves
as topic area experts—positioning IBM as the agenda setter,
listening to local market discussions, gaining market insight,
and finding opportunities to add positive and helpful comments to the social media conversations (Sysomos 2011).
“We educate our sales force to be actively involved with
social media; to make fewer calls per day, and spend the
other time participating in conversations on LinkedIn,
Twitter, etc. We’ve been able to create new leads that way
and validate that time investment. We don’t host the parties—
we need to find them and invite people back to ours,” according to IBM Social Media Marketing Manager, Delphine
Remy-Bautang. This social media involvement aids social
commerce—in a survey of 2,300 employees, IBM found that
its social media participation increased sales by 60 %, customer satisfaction by 42 %, personal reputation by 64 %, and
productivity by 74 %. Furthermore, the company expected to
generate $4.8 billion in revenue in 2012 due to social media
participation (Remy-Boutang 2014).
For the top 25 social media listening aids to increase your
hearing (2014), see biznology.com/2014/04/25-socialmedia-listening-aids-to-increase-your-hearing.
However, customers and prospects are not the only target
markets for social media communication campaigns, as
discussed next.
Social Media Target Markets
In the IBM example, social media participation increased
employee productivity while working with customers.
However, social media communication tactics often target an
organization’s employees for the purpose of recruiting,
information sharing, idea generation, or morale building.
Examples
Sharpe HealthCare posted a video on YouTube that featured
employee interviews at a recruiting fair in San Diego. One
employee said: “Passion, purpose, and possibility and that is
why I’ve been here for 7 years” (see “Sharp Employees Talk
About The Sharp Experience” at youtube.com/
watch?v=25Ik9rAoQEs). In another example, the employees of Connected Ventures created a humorous video: a “Lip
Dub” version of the song “Flagpole Sitta” by Harvey
Danger. It featured all the employees lip-syncing the song in
the company offices. The video made Connected Ventures
look like a really fun place to work. The company posted the
video on Vimeo in 2007 (which went viral) with a last slide:
“We’re hiring: connectedventures.com/jobs.php.” Kevin
Rose of Digg posted the video link on his Tumblr microblog, and many others sent tweets about it, resulting in over
79
200 candidate applications in a very short time (see vimeo.
com/173714).
In another interesting example, Orabrush created a
humorous YouTube video about the benefits of using its
tongue cleaners. After it experienced 39 million views, the
company spent only $28 on Facebook ads directed at
Walmart retail buyers, which resulted in the distribution of
the tongue cleaners to 3,500 Walmart stores (Neff 2011).
Starcom MediaVest Group (SMG) is a Marketing &
Media Services company with approximately 8,000 employees in 67 countries. SMG’s officers went on a global tour
with key partners: Google, Facebook, and MSN, and wanted
to let SMG employees participate by providing meeting
updates and answering questions while on the tour. Using the
Yammer private enterprise social network, SMG benefited
by leveraging collective employee expertise, finding key
emerging topics and empowering and engaging the 1,549
employees who followed the 3 day management dialogue
(for more examples, see Yammer.com case studies at about.
yammer.com/customers).
Social media also connects business partners and distribution channel members for increased social commerce
activity.
One important feature of social media communication is
that, with their messages, companies can effectively and efficiently target markets as small as one person. Called microtargeting, this is not possible to do with traditional media,
except via direct postal mail, but information technology
allows inexpensive automated messages to be sent to very
small markets that share similar interests.
Social Media Communication Objectives
For companies, commerce is the ultimate goal of social
media communication with customers and prospects, as
mentioned previously. Organizations set very specific, measurable objectives before beginning any communication
campaign, thus, helping to determine the budget/staff time.
Companies then monitor the campaign with performance
metrics to see if it is successfully accomplishing the objectives (discussed in Chap. 5). An example commerce objective is to generate a 5 % increase in sales within 12 months.
Companies can also set tactical objectives to support sales
goals, such as increasing conversations, driving traffic to the
website, gaining a large number of “likes” on Facebook, or
changing negative views of the brand. The following specific, general, and tactical objectives leading up to purchase
will help guide communication messages or promotional
offers, and move customers and prospects to the ultimate
social commerce act:
80
4
• Current customers: Build brand loyalty, entice
customer advocacy about the brand in social media,
retain the customer’s business and build the purchase frequency and quantity over time for all the
company brands (more about this in Chap. 7: Social
CRM).
• Prospects: Increase brand awareness, build interest
and desire for the product and move to initial purchase or other actions (such as registering in a social
network or following the company’s Tweets and
Vine Videos).
• Both customers and prospects: Engage customers
through social media content by consuming information, commenting or reviewing products, creating content, such as videos to upload and
collaborating by posting innovative suggestions to
improve the brands.
Examples of Goals and the Social Media
Platform/Tool Tactics to Accomplish Them
Following steps 2 and 3 in Fig. 4.1, we present the
following:
• Product Awareness: Sick Puppies is an Australian
band that posted a YouTube video entitled “Free
Hugs Campaign” and received over 75 million
views in the 8 years since its 2006 upload.
• Interest and Desire: In 2010, Dunkin’ Donuts ran
a Facebook campaign that invited followers to
design a new donut, with the 12 finalists receiving a
prize of $1,200 worth of free donuts for life, and the
winning entry to go on sale at the U.S. stores that
autumn. Dunkin’ Donuts received 90,000 entries,
tripling their Facebook fan base and gathering
53,000 Twitter followers. WaveMetrix measured
the conversation sentiment and discovered a substantial amount of positive conversation: 44 %
regarding the promotion, 38 % discussing the great
taste and nearly 20 % expressing love for the brand.
The negative comments centered on lack of availability, inconvenient store locations and poor product taste (see wave.wavemetrix.com/content/
dunkin-donuts-uses-social-media-drivepositive-brand-engagement-00107).
• Purchase: Ticketmaster created an interactive
social seat map for over 9,000 events. When people
want to buy tickets to an event, they can check in
Marketing Communications in Social Media
from their Facebook account and view a seat map
that shows where their Facebook friends are sitting.
“Once people purchase their tickets, they can share
their seat tag with friends, triggering a post about
the seats on Facebook.” Their friends can then purchase a ticket with a reserved seat nearby. This great
new idea increased traffic to Ticketmaster by 33 %
(see facebook-successstories.com/ticketmaster
for more information).
Objectives in Non-profit and Government
Organizations
Non-profit and government organizations also set goals for
social media communication. Most seek to communicate with
constituents for sharing information (such as “warning signs
of heart disease”), promoting ideas (such as “stop smoking”),
learning about constituents’ needs, and capturing innovations.
Examples
Doctors Without Borders (doctorswithoutborders.org) has
a Facebook page with news, photos and videos of its work
around the world. The page has over 702,000 Facebook
“likes” as of July 2014 (see Shih 2011 for a full chapter on
non-profit and government uses of social media).
In another government example, GovLoop, with over
100,000 members, is a social network for any member of the
government community, as well as students and others interested in working for the government, working on community
service projects, or contracting for profit (see govloop.com).
Specific branches of the government also correspond with
the public via social media (e.g., Facebook, Twitter, blogs).
For example, the TSA blog is “sponsored by the Transportation
Security Administration to facilitate an ongoing dialogue on
innovations in security, technology and the checkpoint
screening process” (see blog.tsa.gov).
As seen in previous examples, companies set communication goals for employees and partners as well, such as sharing information, retaining employees, brainstorming and
fostering creativity. The remainder of this chapter focuses on
social media communication tools/platforms used to connect
with a company’s selected consumer target markets.
Identify Social Media Hangouts
It can take a lot of time to monitor social media, so how does
one know which tools and platforms are most effective for
social commerce promotions? The answer: Go where the
company target markets congregate. Facebook is an obvious
4.2
Promotional Tools: Definitions and Use
solution because of its huge market penetration among
Internet users. However, there are some people who are
either too young or who do not use technology on a regular
basis, and if they are a company’s market, it is time for these
marketers to stop reading this book. Low technology use
occurs in some international markets, because only 2.9 billion people of the world’s 7.1 billion population had Internet
access in 2014, so nearly 60 % of the world is not on
Facebook or other social media sites—primarily in developing countries (see numbers of users by specific country at
internetlivestats.com).
What about Twitter? Nearly 16 % of Twitter users were
active in 2014, according to research firm statista.com. Thus,
a company will definitely use Twitter if its customers and
prospects are in the elite 16 %. For example, the singer,
Beyoncé, recorded a new album and posted videos of herself
and the album cover on Instagram. Within 12 hour there were
1.2 million tweets about the album and more than 430,000
copies were sold on iTunes within 24 hour (Tracy 2013).
Discovering the Best Social Media to Use
There are three ways to discover which social media sites the
target markets frequent. First, following the traditional media
model, check with each social media property to get statistics
on user profiles to see the proportion of overlap with the company’s target market(s). If there is significant presence in that
medium, this is an effective place to participate. For example,
marketers can visit the Facebook advertising section, select
the specific market profile desired, and find the number of
users in that market. Figure 4.2 displays a Facebook ad for a
music event narrowly targeted to 2,520 local residents, with
interests that make them an ideal target market, as listed in
their profiles. When placing the ad, the company was able to
Ad Preview
Edit
Gong Concert Feb. 26 @ UNR
Pathtobliss.com
Experience the soothing
Vibrations as 5 gong
Mystique memebers play
Sixteen finely tuned
Gongs and more at UNR
On 2/26 @ 7:30 pm.
Fig. 4.2 Facebook Ad for a Gong Concert. Source: Owned by one of
the book authors
81
specify exactly which Facebook users would be shown the
ads on their home pages. After selecting the geographic, psychographic, and demographic criteria, Facebook presents
advertisers with the number of users in the target who will see
the ad on their home pages. In this example, the advertiser
selected characteristics based on the following user profiles
presented by Facebook when creating the ad:
• Live in the United States and within 50 miles of Reno,
Nevada
• Eighteen years of age or older
• Have the following interests in their profiles: Buddhism,
Deepak Chopra, meditating, metaphysics, Power Now,
Reiki energy, sound healing, spirituality, tai chi, or yoga
(Facebook presented options and the advertiser simply
selected them).
The seconds way to discover the best social media for
reaching a desired target market is to survey the company’s
customers to see which social media they use and assume
that prospective customers with similar characteristics are
also using that medium. The third way is to participate in
social media that seem appropriate and to see if customers
and prospects engage in this content. Be careful with this
experimental approach, however, because you do not want
to spend too much time with trial and error if it does not
help to achieve the social commerce objectives. In contrast,
sometimes the social media chooses the company because
employees may detect conversation about the brands,
executives, or company itself in a medium previously
unused by the company and will want to participate in that
discussion.
If the company detects many effective social media, then
the decision is based on efficiency: Do the company’s
employees have time to communicate in them all, or if the
company is buying advertising, which ones are the least
expensive to reach the market? Advertising pricing models
will be discussed in more detail later in this chapter.
The final consideration involves platforms preferred by
target customers. For instance, there are many effective and
efficient applications and other tools for mobile phone users
that are not available on computers, and if that is where a
company’s target market spends time, promotions should be
tailored for the mobile phone format.
After the groundwork for successful promotional campaigns is completed, companies will select the social media
tools used for social commerce.
4.2
PROMOTIONAL TOOLS:
DEFINITIONS AND USE
Consumers tend to think that everything with a company
name on it, from a Facebook contest or YouTube video to an
iPhone application, is “advertising.” In contrast, marketers
82
4
have specific definitions of the five key marketing communication tools they use (often called the “promotion mix”).
These definitions help when selecting the appropriate tool(s)
to create the desired effect in the target market. Following
are definitions from the best-selling textbook, Principles of
Marketing (Kotler and Armstrong 2013), along with social
media platform examples that the company controls (versus
user generated content):
• Advertising: “Any paid form of non-personal presentation and promotion of ideas, goods, or services
by an identified sponsor.” Social media examples:
Paid message placed in a YouTube video, Facebook
or LinkedIn ad, Google AdWords, promoted
Tweets, paid product placement in virtual worlds or
online games, and ad sponsored content delivered
to mobile phones.
• Public relations: “Building good relations with the
company’s various publics by obtaining favorable
publicity, building up a good corporate image, and
handling or heading off unfavorable rumors, stories, and events.” Social media examples: Companycreated multimedia content (e.g., online videos,
blogs, wikis, photos, book/product reviews, podcasts and answering questions on sites such as
eHow and Yahoo! Answers), social media press
releases, viral videos and other content, social
media events, participation in virtual worlds, social
bookmarking and tagging, conversation/commenting on other people’s content about brands, social
media apps for mobile phones.
• Sales promotion: “Short-term incentives to encourage the purchase or sale of a product or service.”
Social media examples: Groupon shared discounts,
free sampling of digital products (e.g., music, software, research, or news stories), contests/sweepstakes, games (e.g., advergames, where the product
is featured in the game can be a combination of
advertising and sales promotion).
• Direct marketing: “Direct connections with carefully targeted individual consumers, to both obtain
an immediate response and cultivate lasting customer relationships—the use of direct mail, the
telephone, direct response television, e-mail, the
Internet, and other tools to communicate directly
with specific customers.” Social media examples:
The entire Internet and social media might be considered direct marketing; however, specific social
commerce examples falling only in this category
include text messaging with offers from companies,
Marketing Communications in Social Media
behavioral targeting (displaying ads based on user
behavior online), location based systems, and RSS
feeds of content to individuals who opt in to receive
the data.
• Personal selling: “Personal interactions between a
customer and the firm’s sales force for the purpose
of making sales and building customer relationships.” Social media examples: Chat bots that allow
for conversation on a website (also called virtual
agents/assistants) and sales lead generation tools.
In general, marketers have the least control over the
advertising tool because they are placing messages on
someone else’s social media platform, and the medium will
have technical, legal, content, and ad size requirements. In
addition, companies must develop the advertising content
and also pay for the space, whereas the other tools only
require staff time or technology costs to develop the content. In addition, note that marketers combine many of
these tools for increased social commerce effectiveness,
such as when an advertisement carries a sales promotion
discount offer or link to a public relations content (such as
a video). For example, an ad intended to build awareness of
a new product will more likely compel users to purchase if
the ad also carries a link to the product and a limited time
discount offer.
In the spirit of social media transparency, we also want to
point out that these tools have been used for decades in traditional media (such as television, radio, magazines, newspapers, and outdoor spaces), but social media opportunities are
really pushing marketers to redefine and upgrade these tools.
We now move to social media carrying the marketing
communication messages via these promotion mix tools.
4.3
SOCIAL MEDIA FOR SOCIAL
COMMERCE COMMUNICATION
Media are communication channels used to disseminate
news, information, entertainment and promotional messages. Like all media, social media can take many different
forms, including text, images, audio, or video, as discussed
in Chap. 2. Social media are one type of media, with two differentiating characteristics: (1) they consist of online platforms and tools; and (2) they blend technology and social
interactions for the co-creation of value. That is, people use
social media for social interactions and conversations (refer
to Chap. 2). In this definition, “people” collectively refers to
organizations, their employees, customers, and prospects
and the general population of Internet users.
4.3
Social Media for Social Commerce Communication
Social Media Platforms
Marketers place multimedia content in many types of social
media platforms. These platforms facilitate social actions,
such as interaction and conversation. Following are representative platforms used for social commerce, as was discussed in Chap. 2, and in more detail later in this chapter
and Chap. 5.
• Article sharing (e.g., Delicious bookmarking, Digg
social tagging)
• Blogs and microblogs (e.g., Blogger, Tumblr,
Twitter)
• Mobile Apps (e.g., company-specific apps and
many other dedicated apps like Foursquare that are
available for both mobile and Web platforms)
• Multimedia sharing sites (e.g., Photo sharing:
Flickr, Photobucket, Video sharing: Vimeo,
YouTube, Vine, and audio sharing: e.g., iTunes,
Pandora, Spotify)
• Messaging and chatting: WhatsApp, Viber, Line,
Google+ Hangouts, WeChat
• Peer-to-peer consumer product selling and bartering (e.g., Craigslist, peer-to-peer lending institutions online)
• Public and private communities (e.g., Google
Groups, Wikipedia, and a company’s private
community)
• Search engine rankings (e.g., Google, Bing; Wink,
PeekYou—for social media)
• Social networks (e.g., Facebook, Twitter, dating
sites and many more/Wikipedia lists over 100 social
networks)
• Virtual worlds (e.g., Seconds Life, Webkinz)
• Wikis (e.g., Wikipedia, wikiHow)
• Mashups (e.g., Facebook Places, Google Places)
Owned, Paid, and Earned Social Media
Over 46 % of companies reported that social media drove
business sales in 2013, according to Forbes (Makovsky
2013). Forbes also reported that the following proportions of
businesses use these social media: Facebook (89 %), Twitter
(88 %), LinkedIn (78 %), YouTube (71 %) and corporate
blogging (51 %). How do they select from among this plethora of social media tools to achieve social commerce goals
within their selected target markets? To help companies sort
out the opportunities, Forrester Industry Analyst Sean
Corcoran developed a rubric to classify all media into three
categories (earned, owned, and paid), giving an explanation
83
of the roles, definitions, benefits, and challenges of each type
(traditional, Internet, and social; Corcoran 2009). The
Interactive Advertising Bureau Social Media Committee
revised this rubric to classify only social media into the same
three categories:
1. Owned media carry communication messages
from the organization to Internet users on channels
that are owned and, thus, at least partially controlled by, the company.
2. Paid media are when the brand pays to leverage
social media properties. These are properties owned
by others who are paid by the organization to carry
its promotional messages (e.g., advertising). The
company controls the content; however, the media
have content and technical requirements to which
the advertisers must adhere.
3. Earned media are when customer conversations
become the channel: Messages about a company
that are generated by social media authors (such as
bloggers), traditional journalists on media websites,
and by Internet users who share opinions, experiences, insights, and perceptions on social media
sites and mobile applications. Companies have the
least amount of control over this media channel;
however, they respond to customer conversation
and try to guide it toward their positive brand messages (earned media are discussed in Chap. 5).
Table 4.1 summarizes the roles, benefits, and challenges
of social media. Effective social commerce campaigns will
have both owned and paid media components as their foundation in order to achieve earned media objectives—such as
a YouTube video it creates (owned) and an ad in a related
YouTube video (paid). These, in turn, will help motivate
earned media components, such as when consumers comment on the videos or pass the video link along on their
Facebook pages and other media.
Social Media Content
Content generated by sellers drives owned, paid, and much
of the earned media (see Fig. 4.3 for an overview). Content
marketing, as defined by the Content Marketing Institute,
is “a marketing technique of creating and distributing valuable, relevant, and consistent content to attract and acquire a
clearly defined audience – with the objective of driving
profitable consumer action…. It is an ongoing process that
is best integrated into your overall marketing strategy, and it
focuses on owning media, not renting it” [emphasis in the
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4
Marketing Communications in Social Media
Table 4.1 Roles of earned, owned, and paid social media
Definition
Owned social media
• Channel a brand partially controlled
Examples
•
Role
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Benefits
•
•
•
Challenges
•
•
•
•
•
•
Corporate and micro sites with
social hooks
Facebook fans
Twitter
Branded channels
Communities
E-mail
CRM
Build “social CRM” channels for
longer-term relationships with
consumers
Engagement with consumers at
various stages of purchase funnel
Multiple social channels/touch
points
Each fan/follower can influence
one-to-many via social graph
Increased targeting
Builds customer loyalty
Multiple channels to build/maintain
Ongoing interaction
Content controlled/not distributed
platform
Public CRM
Paid social media
• Brand pays to leverage social media
platforms
• Installs (cost per install—CPI)
• Social actions (cost per action—CPA)
• Social engagement (cost per
engagement—CPE)
• Sponsorships
Earned social media
• When customers become the
channel
• WOM (Word of Mouth)
• Buzz
• Viral
•
Ability to reach consumers in social
platforms and act as catalyst that feeds
owned and earned media
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Targeting
Immediacy
Scale
Peer to peer social distribution
Branded content
Measurable
Brand safe (moderation)
Brand directed
Industry standards in early stages
Pricing models evolving
Rapidly changing environment
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Social media as earned media is
often the result of a well-executed
and well-coordinated owned social
and paid media
Peer to peer/social
Brand can direct message in paid/
owned media
Transparent
Consumer voice
Measurable
Spreads quickly via social graphs
Active brand involvement
Consumers can ignite positive or
negative conversation quickly
Source: Interactive Advertising Bureau. “Social Media Guide.” February 2010. iab.net/media/file/IAB_SocialMedia_Booklet.pdf (accessed
August 2014). Used with permission
Fig. 4.3 Owned, paid, and
earned media are all content
driven. Source: E-marketing,
Strauss and Frost (2014)
4.4
Owned Social Media
original quote] (see contentmarketinginstitute.com/whatis-content-marketing). This is an interesting and huge
trend, in which companies are organizing themselves as
online media publishers. Marketers have long created content offline when they create paper flyers, newsletters, brochures, catalogs, infomercials, and DVDs (“interrupt”
marketing). What is new is that marketers now use digital
content as inbound marketing that attracts customers and
prospects. It is about having content available to inform,
entertain, and engage users when they seek the company—
and most Internet users in both B2B and B2C markets do
searches and come across this material when researching or
shopping. For example, instead of placing a banner ad that
might receive as little as a 0.5 % click though, many companies create video content that entertains, engages, and
entices users to visit the company website to learn more.
Some companies publish small items, such as videos, online
press releases and blog posts. Others create lengthy white
papers, infographics, and e-books. For example, we received
e-mails about white papers on various social commerce topics and clicked through to download the papers as research
for writing this book.
Next, we will discuss various social platforms and tools
used for owned and paid media. Chapter 5 addresses how
owned and paid media result in earned media to motivate
social commerce. Keep in mind that no categorization
scheme is perfect, and many tools can be used for more than
just one goal.
4.4
OWNED SOCIAL MEDIA
In this section, we discuss some of the social media channels
that are partially controlled by the organizations that create
the lion’s share of the multimedia content. The primary goals
are to (1) engage consumers with the positive brand content,
(2) entice them to pass this content along to others (earned
media), and (3) build social CRM (customer relationship
management). All of these goals attempt to increase social
commerce initial and repeat purchases. Companies often
inform consumers of sales promotion offers using some of
these channels (such as discount offers, contests/sweepstakes or free product samples).
Controlling Social Media
Note that companies can monetize their owned media content in three important ways. First, they can sell digital content on their social media properties, such as white papers,
music, software, or online Webinars (and many other products). In addition, the Shopify.com shopping cart service
now offers a Facebook webstore option for selling tangible
85
products. Seconds, they can accept Google’s Ad Sense or
other types of ads and receive payment when users click on
these ads. These ads can appear on a company’s own website
or blog, and also in multimedia content it uploads elsewhere,
such as ads shown in their own YouTube videos (in this case,
the company shares revenue with the site owner, YouTube).
The third way is to become an affiliate of another website,
such as Amazon. Companies receive revenue when users
click on a book or other product featured on their blogs or
other social media property and subsequently purchase it on
Amazon (for example, see pathtobliss.com/books.html).
It is important to include visuals, such as videos and
images, in all owned media (and paid media). This is because
the human brain processes visuals much faster than it does
text, (60,000 times faster) and posts with visuals increase
content engagement by 180 %. Finally, the target market
spends 100 % more time on sites that contain videos (Walter
and Gioglio 2014). This partially explains the rapid growth
of Pinterest, YouTube, and Instagram. Bottom line:
Storytelling through words and images is critical to capturing the user’s attention.
Types of Owned Social Media
Chapter 2 described most of the following types of owned
media and the following expands on some of them:
• Websites dedicated to gathering customer opinions. Some
sites exist for consumers to provide new product ideas.
For example, Starbucks has a site that encourages people
to post and comment on new products, experiences, or
community involvement suggestions. As of August 2014,
the site had received over 198,000 suggestions (see mystarbucksidea.force.com). Dell’s IdeaStorm invites product suggestions and comments and votes from users. Dell
personnel respond with a section called “Implemented
Ideas” (see ideastorm.com). Providing company feedback encourages users to submit ideas.
• Online public and private communities. Companies
create spaces for consumers, prospects and business
customers to discuss topics of interest or seek company
support with technical or product issues (among other
goals). These include social networks such as Facebook,
LinkedIn, Twitter, Pinterest, and numerous special
interest-based networks and online classified sites
(e.g., Craigslist). Organizations create profiles and
pages in these networks and post content to start
conversations.
• Blogs and microblogs. Individuals in sponsoring organizations create blogs to express opinions, discuss product
uses, and share information in sites such as Blogger,
Tumblr, and the WordPress publishing platform. Twitter
started as a microblogging site that turned into a social
86
•
•
•
•
4
network, so it spans both categories. Blogs can be added
to a company’s Facebook page (and other social networks), as well as to the company’s own website.
Sometimes blogs are authored by many employees, such
as Kodak’s “A Thousand Words,” where employees share
personal stories, illustrated with images they took using
Kodak cameras (see 1000words.kodak.com).
Multimedia sharing sites. These include photographic
image sharing (e.g., Flickr, Pinterest, Instagram, and
Photobucket), video sharing (e.g., YouTube, Vine, and
Vimeo), and podcast (audio) sharing (e.g., iTunes and
Sound Cloud). Sellers can bring their products to life and
improve their visitors’ experiences by adding video or
audio content to their product pages on social networks or
their corporate portals. They can further increase their
Google search presence by uploading business photos to
a Flickr stream, and use an app to bring the stream onto
their website.
Virtual worlds. Companies can create a presence in metaverses such as Seconds Life, or create their own virtual
world to support commerce, such as Webkinz. On
Webkinz children enter a key code from a stuffed Webkinz
animal they purchased at a brick and mortar retailer, then
create a life online for their animal, while connecting with
others doing the same (see webkinz.com). In Seconds
Life, companies can create a virtual webstore, multimedia
event or talk/lecture, contest, and can also create blogs.
They can publish a URL containing streaming audio or
video content and publish it, so that other Seconds Life
residents will view their content and subscribe. Companies
can also participate in Seconds Life media, such as providing content for the in-world radio and television stations. Obviously, all of this content must be enticing
enough for in-world residents or it will not be consumed.
Other interesting tactics include offering visitors branded
items, such as clothing containing logos (every avatar
wants that Calvin Klein Beanie hat!). Finally, some companies use their avatars as promotional vehicles, engaging
other avatars in conversation about the brand and offering
sales promotions such as coupons. For example, the
Nesquik Bunny avatar hops around Seconds Life, attending various events (for more information see wiki.secondlife.com/wiki/Advertising_in_Seconds_Life).
Company-hosted virtual events. Organizations host
Webinars and online events that attract participants who
can send questions and chat with each other during the
event.
Mashups. These include many types of website combinations to engage consumers. One notable example is
Google Places for Business, which allows business owners to list their business name and location so that mobile
and computer users can find the business location on a
Google Map. Lil’ Piddlers Pet Grooming & Boutique in
Marketing Communications in Social Media
Oakland Park, Florida realized a 30 % increase in sales
within 5 years of using Google Places (search for “places
for business success stories” at google.com for more).
Focus on Pinterest
Pinterest (see Chap. 2 opening case) is responsible for 23 % of
all social commerce sales (Bobowski 2014). Sellers build
business by creating Pinterest boards of new products, bestselling products, gift ideas and promotional offers. Forever 21
ran a contest that encouraged Pinterest users to build boards
with Forever 21 products and win a chance to get a $1,000 gift
card. In July 2013, Shopify, a leading commerce platform for
over 100,000 stores, recently added Pinterest’s “rich pins,”
making it easier for shoppers to discover things they like and
purchase from those stores directly (see business.pinterest.
com/en/blog/welcome-shopify-stores-pinterest). These pins
include meta data taking Pinterest users directly to posted
products. Shopify reported a 70 % increase in click throughs
from Pinterest to its merchants, based on rich pins. Shopify
noted that Pinterest is a better marketing communication tool
than Twitter or Facebook (see shopify.com/blog).
Focus on Twitter and Other Microblogging
Twitter and other microblogging social network sites allow
sellers to create text, video, or image-based content of interest for followers. Companies can tweet about their business
and product offerings, announce sales promotions, and entice
Twitter followers (as well as their own followers) to visit the
virtual or brick and mortar store. For example, in 2010,
Virgin America gave away free flights to tweeters with a
large number of followers who would entice conversation
and a lot of traffic about the company’s new destination,
Toronto, Canada. The social commerce software suites (e.g.,
from 3dCart) help merchants reach their Twitter followers by
posting “tweets” when the merchants add new products or
create new promotions.
It is extremely important to send interesting and informational posts on a microblog and not use a “hard sell” as the
major topic of the tweet. People on Twitter want to know
“what are you doing?” and “what can you tell me?” and not
“what are you selling?” A smart marketer will conceal the
promotional message in the post or comment. A very smart
marketer will present him or herself as a subject area expert
who happens to work at a particular company in a specific
field. Note that only one of Twitter’s competitors is really
successful. It is an Asian mobile microblogging platform,
“migme” (formerly Mig33; see mig.me).
The following are ways to use Twitter for successful promotional campaigns (see business.twitter.com):
4.4
Owned Social Media
• Industry analysts, journalists, bloggers, and other
influencers from most sectors of the economy are
well-represented on Twitter. Smart companies tweet
interesting content (i.e., not just marketing materials) and engage in dialog to get consumers talking,
tweeting, and blogging about the company.
• Staying in touch with customers on Twitter is not
only more real-time than many other techniques, it
is also far more cost-effective than direct mail,
attending trade shows, phoning, or even maintaining a customer newsletter. It is not that Twitter can
replace other touch points completely, but it can
reduce the required cost and frequency of hightouch interactions.
• It is very likely that customers, prospects, and key
influencers are already having conversations about
an industry, or the company and its competition on
Twitter. If companies are not participating in that
conversion, they are missing valuable intelligence,
business opportunities, and possibly even the
opportunity to prevent potential damage to the
firm’s reputation. For example, American Apparel
uses Twitter to solicit and discuss ideas for ads,
posts flash sales, and do holiday campaigns to give
away free costumes (see blog.twitter.com/2014/
influencer-qa-with-ryan-holiday-americanapparel-sold-50k-in-an-hours-on-twitter).
• Hashtags continue to grow in popularity on Twitter
and in other social networks. They are used to
spread and categorize information. On Twitter,
#hashtags are also used to categorize posts into
“trending topics.”
Other Types of Owned Social Media
There are many other important owned social media properties to support social commerce activities. For example, company employees can establish expertise in their industries by
answering questions on Yahoo! Answers or eHow, or by
reviewing books at Amazon.com and other booksellers on
topics related to their product categories. In the following sections, we will discuss four important avenues: Online gaming,
gifting, branded apps and the social media press release.
Online Games and Advergaming
Games can be played on three types of hardware: Consoles,
PCs, and portable devices. Zynga, Inc. produces online
games and sells virtual products to players who use real currency to buy them. In “FishVille,” for example, the company
87
successfully sells a virtual translucent anglerfish and other
fish for $3 to $4 each. Some players spend thousands of dollars a month on virtual skyscrapers in “CityVille” or imaginary chickens in “FarmVille.” Although the majority of the
players do not purchase any items with real currency, the
amount of monthly users is so large that the number of people who buy these “imaginary” chickens and skyscrapers
generate “big bucks” for the company (Wingfield 2011).
Advertisers sometimes use online fantasy games (e.g.,
available at Yahoo!, ESPN, and more) to send ads to specific
sports fans (e.g., fans of National Football League or Major
League Baseball). Online fantasy sports attract millions of
visitors every month.
Advergaming (in-game advertising) refers to (1) games
featuring a company’s product, or (2) the integration of
advertisements into video games, especially computer-based
ones: both promote a company’s product or a service. Video
games are popular in social networks and give advertisers a
chance to reach millions of game players. For an example,
see Intel’s gaming page “IT Manager Duels” (itmanagerduels.intel.com). Enter the Matrix, the first video game based
on The Matrix series of films, is one such game that includes
hyperlinks for players to click on to learn more about the plot
of the next level. Advergames are unabashedly commercial
by nature, but if they are fun and exciting, players will enjoy
them and tell their friends. Advergames create brand awareness and viral marketing: word-of-mouth.
During the fall back-to-school season in 2008, JC Penney
created an online game for girls on Facebook called DorkDodge. Players had to navigate their way past undesirable
boyfriends to get to their dream date. The retailer also had an
interactive video (a modern-day take on the movie The
Breakfast Club) where users could choose clothes from JC
Penney for the actors.
For details on advergaming, see adverblog.com/category/advergames. Camaret (2013) provides several definitions of social and other types of advergaming, along with
some examples of successful advergames.
Online Gifting
GroupCard’s application (acquired by InComm) allows
retailers to sell group gift cards on their own websites and
social networking pages. What is unique about this app is
that the customer who creates the card can circulate it to
many others, who then can add additional personalized messages and contribute a dollar amount via PayPal. GroupCard
also offers collaborative gifting so that a group of people can
combine funds for a gift certificate at the merchant’s own
Web properties (see groupcard.com).
JibJab (jibjab.com) allows users to create videos and
eCards using images of friends or family. Consumers upload
88
a headshot from their computers and drag it into the hilarious
and charming videos, then send the link to the person in the
headshot or post it on a social network. These can quickly go
viral, and more people visit the site to pay $1.99 to download
the video or $18 a year to make more eCards and videos in a
premier account.
Branded Apps
Many companies create branded online applications and
widgets that support social interactions and user contributions. “Widgets are mini Web applications that are used to
distribute or share content throughout the social Web, downloaded to a mobile device or desktop, or accessed on a website or blog,” according to the “Social Media Buyer’s Guide”
(Interactive Advertising Bureau 2010). The content in widgets can be branded information, games, or other types of
interactive content.
For example, Nike+ iPod Sports Kit is a sensor application that measures the distance and pace of a user’s walk or
run in the physical world. It uses a unit embedded in the
shoes that communicates with any iPod. Nike+ has many
such apps. Facebook features hundreds of thousands of
third-party software applications on its site. One popular
application allows companies to run contests on Facebook
and collect user e-mails and other information.
Making Press Relations Social Media Friendly
The traditional press release is a typed document that
includes the “what, when, where, who, and why” of something newsworthy the company sends to journalists for possible inclusion in print or online media (e.g., a new product
announcement). Many companies include these text heavy
press releases as links on their websites, or worse, as PDF
files for download. This is changing. Now bloggers and other
social media journalists want to gain quick bits of information and expert quotes on topics they are writing about.
Because they want to include images, video, and text information for articles, news releases are beginning to become
social media friendly. Figure 4.4 is an updated social media
press release template created by Shift Communications
(2012), to be used on company websites. Following is the
key to the numbered features on this outstanding press
release template (Social Media Press Release 2.0):
1. Sharing tools (previously “simple sharing buttons”)
allow users to share specific content from the release.
2. Shift recommends that headlines contain fewer than 55
characters for mobile-friendliness and easy retweeting
and resharing in social networks.
4
Marketing Communications in Social Media
3. It is important to include a link to a YouTube video
because this platform is mobile-friendly, has the largest
video audience online that loves to share, and nearly
every social network recognizes YouTube URLs.
4. It is good to have an audio service like SoundCloud
because this platform is mobile-compatible and
shareable.
5. Photo galleries are key, with Flickr being an excellent
choice due to its high sharing ability and defense of intellectual property.
6. Social commenting allows for integrating social discussions into Facebook and other systems.
7. Use selected contact information based on particular
social media, which the company uses actively.
8. While not displayed here, the entire press release is
embedded inside a marketing automation system. This
allows the company to see who has shared the release.
The large PR firm, Edelman, uses social media press
releases, along with traditional releases. This new form of
press release includes the important facts and is largely interactive, providing links to company-created multimedia and
white papers. It is especially social media friendly because it
allows for easy pass along with social media buttons. This
press release is the brainchild of Shift Communication’s
Todd Defren, who also created a social media newsroom
template for company websites, similar to what is being used
by Google and other companies.
4.5
PAID SOCIAL MEDIA: ADVERTISING
As previously mentioned, social media sites sell space to
advertisers who wish to reach the site’s audience. Paid media
can engage target markets, moving them to owned media and
resulting in social media conversation (earned media). Great
content will not stay trapped in owned media but will spread
(such as videos or white papers). Paid media often also carries sales promotions, such as discounts. This cycle of
owned, paid, and earned media can also result in increased
e-commerce sales.
In this section, we discuss the purchasing of advertising
space on these sites. The findings of a 2012 Nielsen study
conducted by Digiday concluded that marketers will use
more social media advertisements in 2013. According to the
survey, 75 % of advertisers and 81 % of ad agencies invest in
paid social media advertising. Furthermore, 64 % of those
advertisers said they plan to spend more on social advertising in the future (Nielsen 2013). Marketers use social media
advertising to achieve the following objectives:
• Create positive brand images
• Build brand awareness
• Generate video views
4.5
Paid Social Media: Advertising
89
Fig. 4.4 Social Media Press Release 2.0. Source: Reprinted with permission from Shift Communications (shiftcomm.com/2012/12/
social-media-press-release-2-0)
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Generate leads/build database
Gain feedback about products
Support product introductions
Drive traffic to an online destination
Increase size of community (friends, followers, fans)
Engage existing customers in conversation
Sell products (the ultimate goal)
Thus, paid social media are for building awareness, creating positive brand attitudes; collecting valuable information
about customers; and motivating actions such as joining a
community, clicking through to a site, and purchase. To drive
sales, users require a compelling reason to click. For example, the fast-food chain Chick-fil-A ran a successful Facebook
free-sample sales promotion engagement ad campaign; clicking on the ad revealed a form to receive a mail-in coupon.
Advertising is the major current revenue source for social
commerce media companies. Advertisers are willing to pay a
great deal for placing ads and running promotions in social
networks because of the large number of visitors in the
networks and the amount of time they spend there. Consider
these statistics:
• Online advertising in 2013 hit $42.8 billion, which is
25 % of all advertising expenditures (both on- and offline;
Interactive Advertising Bureau 2014a).
• Some of the ad formats in 2013 that support social commerce include: Search marketing (43 %), display/banner
advertising (19 %) and mobile ads 17 % of the $42.8
billion total, (Interactive Advertising Bureau 2014a).
• Facebook has over one million advertisers who spent
$2.59 billion on Facebook advertising in 2013. Mobile ad
revenue was 53 % of that total (Edwards 2014).
Like other SC activities, advertising is placed both in public as well as in private company-owned social networks.
Before discussing a few examples of advertising in social
media, it is important to understand how advertising is created and purchased: The formats and pricing models.
90
Advertising Formats
Anything goes with paid media online: text—from a sentence to pages of story—graphics, sound, video, hyperlinks,
or an animated car driving through a page. A paid search ad,
prompted by keywords, is the most important technique.
Mobile advertising is the fastest growing category. Many of
these also have interactive capability—involving mutual
action between consumers and producers. This occurs when
the advertiser provides a link, game, or direct purchase shopping cart within the ad, and the consumer can click on the ad
to activate a drop down menu or other interactive feature.
For example, Virgin America created an interactive ad that
allows users to vote for their favorite in-flight feature: (a)
Electrical plugs at every seat, (b) MP3s, movies and TV or
(c) fresh food, mixed drinks. The bottom of the ad indicated
the number of people voting and if the ad is used in a social
network, how many of the voters are the user’s friends.
Advertisers use social media to build brand awareness,
engage existing customers, increase size of community
(friends, followers, fans) and drive traffic to an online destination. Advertisers also use social media to introduce new
products, build databases, and gain feedback from users.
Next, are some examples.
Display Ads
These use text and graphics, as well as the company’s logos
and contact information/Web links. Display ads are popular
offline in billboards, the Yellow Pages, and movies. Internet
display ads come in many different sizes, the most popular of
which are banners, buttons, rectangles, and skyscrapers (tall
and narrow) ads. See the Interactive Advertising Bureau for
definitions of standard display advertising units and many
other new creative “rising star” formats (go to (iab.net/guidelines/508676/508767/ad_unit). All major search advertising
companies (e.g., Google, Yahoo!, Microsoft’s Bing) gain revenue by selling their huge audience’s attention to advertisers
via display ads. Display ads also appear as overlays on videos;
however, these only account for a small portion of all online
advertising. The reason for this may be that social media marketing is more effective (consumers are tired of seeing display
ads), according to a survey of 10,000 brand marketers, social
media consultants, and influencers (Denny 2013).
4
Marketing Communications in Social Media
exchanges, and Web portals. In many cases, posting regularsize classified ads is free, but making them larger, in color, or
with some other noticeable features is done for a fee.
Choose-Your-Own-Ad Format
Hulu “Ad Selector” is an online video format created in
2010, which lets users choose their own ads. The AdSelector
allows consumers to select what ads they like to view prior
to streaming content (they are presented with two or three
options). This model has been in use mostly for online videos with Hulu. Publishers like Yahoo! and CBS use the Ad
Selector. For details, see Learmonth (2010). For an interactive demonstration of how Ad Selector works, see hulu.com/
watch/76466.
Social Ads
A social ad is “an online ad that incorporates user interactions that the consumer has agreed to display and be shared.
The resulting ad displays these interactions along with the
user’s persona (picture and/or name) within the ad content”
(Interactive Advertising Bureau 2009). A social ad has
three criteria: Ad content customization based on profile
data, targeting information, and social interaction functionality. Data to create these ads comes from the user’s profile
data, social data (connections between individuals), and
interaction data (data about the user’s online interaction
with friends). For example, Fig. 4.5 displays an ad that was
created from Judy’s Facebook profile, indicating she
watched a cool new movie (movie title deleted in this
example). The ad is then presented to the Facebook friends
that she selected to view it and thus, share her excitement
Judy will watch this
new movie, will you?
Classified Ads
These usually use text, but may also include photos. The ads
are grouped according to classification (e.g., cars, rentals),
and tend to be the least expensive format.
Classified ads can be found on dedicated sites (e.g., craigslist.org and superpages.com), as well as online newspapers,
Fig. 4.5 Social ad. Source: Adapted from Strauss and Frost (2014)
4.5
Paid Social Media: Advertising
about this new movie (or product). A social ad also can
include interactive features such as polling, votes, sharing,
and other types of user engagement.
In general, when companies incorporate social networks
into ads, Facebook advertising is quite effective. One study
of more than 800,000 Facebook users and ads of 14 different
brands showed a big increase in ad recall, awareness, and
purchase intent—this occurred when the home-page ads
mentioned the friends of users who were already fans of the
advertised brand (Neff 2010). In 2012, Facebook began to
generate billions of dollars from advertising. For example,
users’ “Likes” can appear in ads targeted to friends. For 45
‘tips and tricks’ for mastering Facebook marketing, see
Marrs (2014).
Video Advertising
Video advertising refers to the insertion of video ads into
regular online content. The Internet Advertising Bureau
(IAB) believes in the importance of video ads, and created a
guide on the topic; see slideshare.net/hardnoyz/iab-guideto-video-advertising-online and the accompanying document transcript. Video ads are common in Internet TV
programs and YouTube videos.
Video ads are growing rapidly, mainly due to the popularity of YouTube and similar sites. A 2013 IAB report shows a
growth of digital video ads revenue from 731 million in 2012
to 807 million in 2013 in the United States (Interactive
Advertising Bureau 2014b). Online video is growing nearly
40 % annually while TV viewing continues to fall. For
monthly statistics, see marketingcharts.com.
Video ads appear all over the Web, both as unsolicited popups, or when you give permission to see a demo or information
about a product. Video ads have become very popular in the
Web 2.0 environment and in social networking.
The major reason for the popularity of videos is that
almost everyone who uses the Internet now watches online
videos. Videos are also viewed on all mobile devices (e.g.,
smartphones, tablets) and they can be posted on social networks (e.g. Twitter). Social media and the accessibility to
increased broadband mobile access are also reasons for the
growth of online video usage. Another reason is the power of
visualization and the popularity of social networking (e.g.,
see Walter and Gioglio 2014).
Behaviorally Targeted Ads (Also Called
Contextual Ads and Remarketing)
Advertising networks track user click behavior, usually
through cookie files placed on the user hard drive and then
present ads to the user based on their previous behavior.
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For example, when you search for a particular CD on
Amazon, an ad for that CD might appear on Amazon.com or
another site on a subsequent visit. This is accomplished via
ad networks that maintain a large number of website clients
and use the cookie data to present ads to appropriately targeted users on one of their sites. The largest ad networks are
search engines—e.g., the Google AdWords has a network
that reaches 67 % of Internet users (Google’s overall market
share). For example, the BMC Music Source, a music store
in Connecticut, used AdWords, and by selecting appropriate
search key words, increased sales significantly (see google.
com/adwords/success-stories.html for more success stories). Google’s AdSense program also uses behavioral targeting to display appropriate ads on someone else’s website or
mobile application. The website owner gets paid when the
targeted ads appear on its site. Finally, Google+ enters this
scene when users search for a retailer or restaurant and get an
AdWord that also displays a friend’s face or comments from
Google+. This happens because the Google+ friend previously endorsed the ad.
Sponsored Content
Sponsorships integrate editorial content and advertising
based on either underwritten (someone else's content) or
advertiser-created content. These can include content features or functions in social media stand-alone micros or other
websites or interactive functions, associating the sponsor’s
brand with the content. The IAB has observed the following
types of sponsorships: content creation, mobile/Web applications, branded interaction, contests/sweepstakes, games,
podcasts, polls/surveys, and trivia.
For example, a food company might pay for space on a
cooking blog or wiki to insert recipes using its products as
ingredients. This looks like content from the site, but is
actually paid space. Companies also can pay bloggers
directly to endorse products by writing positive reviews. A
problem with sponsored content, however, is that bloggers
are not required to disclose that they are being paid (or
receiving gifts) for their endorsements. However, if they do
not tell and are found out, they can be exposed with a huge
and negative amount of discussion online. In an example
taken from the early days of blogging, a couple named
Laura and Jim created a blog about their journey across the
U.S. in an RV (“Walmarting Across America”). They stayed
overnight in Walmart parking lots and wrote about their
experiences on the road. Other bloggers believed that the
blog was misleading, noting that that the Laura and Jim
never said a bad word about Walmart, and on further digging, discovered that their trip was actually sponsored by
PR firm Edelman on behalf of their client, Walmart. This
fake blog (“flog”) created a huge negative backlash for the
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authors, Edelman, and Walmart, who did not follow their
own rules for transparency (see businessweek.com/stories/2006-10-17/wal-mart-vs-dot-the-blogosphere
businessweek-business-news- stock-market-andfinancial-advice).
A sponsored content intermediary, PayPerPost (payperpost.com) runs a marketplace where advertisers can find
bloggers, video bloggers, online photographers, and podcasters who are willing to endorse advertisers’ products. A
company with a product or a service to advertise registers
with PayPerPost and describes the type of endorsement it
wants and how much it is willing to pay. A sneaker company,
for example, might post a request for people willing to write
a 50-word blog entry about their shoes or upload a video of
themselves playing basketball wearing the sneakers. The
company also describes what it is willing to pay the bloggers
for such posting. Bloggers create the blog post (or whatever
content is requested) and inform PayPerPost, which checks
to see that the content matches what the advertiser asked for,
and PayPerPost arranges payment. Note that the PayPerPost
Marketplace requires full disclosure by all participants (per
payperpost.com/terms_and_conditions).
Product Placement
Advertisers can deeply embed products or ads in TV shows
or films. Game publishers are now using the same tactic—
product placement in online multiplayer games or videos.
This is similar to movie product placement offline. For
example, the online music video game Guitar Hero often has
advertisements on the stage behind the musicians. Game
players enjoy this kind of advertising because it makes the
games seem more realistic, given that there are ads in live
offline concerts too.
Text Link Ads
Link ads are ads that are simply a hyperlink placed in specific text in a blog post or other social media content—
including content downloaded by mobile phone users. In a
hypothetical example, a flower shop might buy a specified
number of links for the word “rose” on many blog sites, and
these would have a hyperlink to the flower shop’s website.
The goal of these ads is to raise a site’s rankings in search
engines. For example, a furniture store bought three key
words in a large number of related websites and in over a 1
year period, the store moved from a rank of 97 to 4 in a
Google Search Engine results page for those three key words
(see textlinkbrokers.com/client-rankings.html for other
client success stories).
4
Marketing Communications in Social Media
More Social Media Advertising Examples
Paid messages can be placed in another company’s online
content, using any of the social media platforms listed previously, either on the Web or delivered to mobile phones.
Social networks provide huge advertising opportunities
because of their rapid user growth. According to one source,
social media advertising totaled $6.2 billion in 2013 and is
still growing rapidly (13.9 % of all online advertising; PR
Newswire 2014). The following are some good examples of
social network ad campaigns.
Facebook Advertising
By advertising on Facebook, advertisers can reach over 1.28
billion members (with 829 million active daily users), with
over 63 % of users logging in on any given day, according to
Latka (2014). However, most advertisers prefer narrower
targeting to reach their well-defined markets, and this can
easily be done via member profile information (as seen in
Fig. 4.2, p. 79). When placing the ad, the marketer selects the
desired target profile. For this ad in, Fig. 4.2, the criteria
were Facebook users with the following information in their
profiles:
• Live in the United States,
• Live within 50 miles of Reno, NV,
• Are age 18 and older, and
• Like meditation, tai chi, Reiki, power now, sound healing,
metaphysics, meditating, Buddhism, Deepak Chopra,
spirituality or yoga (as mentioned in their profiles).
This narrow targeting resulted in 4,980 Facebook users,
who were presented the ad on their walls and would likely be
interested and able to attend the Reno gong concert. The cost
for the ad was based on the number of people clicking on it,
at a rate of 88¢ per click.
Facebook advertising is important for global advertisers
because Facebook is available in more than 70 different languages on the site, and over 81 % of active users live outside
of the United States and Canada. Facebook ads can include
interactive features, links to other brand content, and are
very easy to create. Advertisers simply upload an image and
type the text right into the Facebook template. Facebook
offers excellent metrics to see how many people were presented the ad, and whether or not they took an action, like
clicking on a link. Furthermore, advertisers can choose to
pay either by using the CPM (cost per thousand views) or
CPC (cost-per-click on the ad) pricing models by setting a
maximum daily budget.
Here are some additional interesting ways to advertise on
Facebook:
4.5
Paid Social Media: Advertising
• Boosted Posts. For a $5 fee, users can boost a
Facebook post so more people will see it. A boosted
post can reach friends of your friends or new audiences. This is good for promoting special events,
offers and company news.
• Facebook Offers. These involve posting special
promotions or product discounts. Viewers on
Facebook can click on the “get offer” button to
claim the offer or share it with other friends.
• Facebook Exchange. This is a form of remarketing
that allows advertisers to “reach people on Facebook
who have expressed an interest through their online
behavior (e.g., visiting your site) so you can reach
them with a similar product or service” (per facebook.com/business/a/online-sales/facebookexchange).
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or age, or (4) LinkedIn Group membership. Advertisers have
the choice of paying for the number of impressions or clicks
(see more in the pricing model discussion below). According
to Matt Johnson of uTest, “50 % of our paid inbound leads
come from LinkedIn. LinkedIn is our most cost-effective
online marketing channel” (see linkedin.com/ads for more
information).
Advertising in Seconds Life
Interestingly, it is possible to advertise in virtual worlds. For
instance, in Seconds Life, companies can pay virtual clubs,
stores, or malls to put up posters or kiosks featuring brand
information and links, and can even provide “teleports” to
the company’s virtual property.
Mobile Advertising
For going global using Facebook, see Adobe (2012).
Twitter’s “Promoted Tweets,” “Trends,”
and “Accounts”
Barking at Facebook’s heels, Twitter is a strong competitor
for advertisers’ dollars. According to Learmonth (2011),
Twitter launched its first ad product—promoted tweets—in
2010 and netted $45 million in ad dollars. That was due in
part to the enthusiasm among brands like Virgin America,
Coke, Ford, and Verizon to give the untried format a whirl.
eMarketer estimates the promoted tweet ad revenue to be
$540 million in 2014, with 90 % coming from U.S. companies (reported by Indvik 2012). Promoted tweets are ads purchased by advertisers that appear as content at the top of a
Twitter search page or within a user’s timeline. They can be
targeted to Twitter users by geographic location and by
whose Twitter streams users follow. Users can interact with
promoted Tweets just as they can with organic Tweets.
Promoted trends are ads placed on hot topics in Twitter that
are presented near a user’s timeline. Promoted accounts
invites targeted Twitter users to visit brand accounts that may
be of interest to them. These ads help companies attract more
users. (See business.twitter.com/ad-products for more
about Twitter ads.)
LinkedIn Advertising
The LinkedIn social network is great for advertising to narrowly targeted business professionals. Advertisers can use
the LinkedIn Ads product to target by (1) job title and
function, (2) industry or company size, (3) company seniority
Mobile advertising is a rapidly developing area, with a global
expenditure increase of 105 % in 2013, and is predicted to
increase another 75 % in 2014 (Schmidt 2014). Mobile
advertising refers to advertisements on smartphones and
other wireless mobile devices, such as tablets (e.g., iPad).
The competition for mobile ad revenue is intensifying, especially with the increased use of cell phones with Internet
access. Recently, watching video clips has become popular
on smartphones. Advertisers are starting to attach ads to
these video clips. Finally, advertisers use microblogging,
especially Twitter, to reach large audiences with short messages (SMS) ads via mobile devices. According to Patel
(2011), a Nielsen study of iPhone users compared Apple’s
iAds involving Campbell Soup Company as an advertiser
against similar TV ads. The study found that those exposed
to one of Campbell’s iAd campaigns had higher brand recall
than those who had seen similar TV ads: The 5-week study
showed that consumers shown an iAd remembered the brand
“Campbell’s” five times more often than TV ad respondents,
and the ad messaging three times more often. For details
about this study, see Patel (2011).
As seen in the table below, mobile ads were found to create the greatest advertising opportunity versus Internet or
traditional ads, as suggested in research from Meeker (2014).
It is notable that advertisers spend more on media that are not
consumed as often by their markets.
Medium
Print
Radio
Television
Internet, in general
Mobile
Proportion of time
spent by users (%)
5
12
38
25
20
Proportion of money
spent by advertisers
19 %
10 %
45 %
22 % ($43 billion)
4 % ($7.1 billion)
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For news, statistics and more about mobile advertising,
see mashable.com/category/mobile-advertising.
Location-Based Ads
Delivering location-based ads to mobile devices is becoming popular. Location-sensitive businesses can take advantage of this feature to deliver location-based ads. A good
example is a Google Map that can show nearby convenience
stores, gas stations, hotels, and restaurants when a location
is searched. Some of these are paid ads (see Chap. 5 for
details).
Advertising Pricing Models
Social media price their advertising space using many different models. Cost per thousand impressions (CPM) and
cost per click (CPC) are the two most commonly used
models for all Internet advertising and are also used by
social media properties. Cost per action (CPA) includes
social actions, such as the number of chocolate gifts sent to
friends (from an ad), number of posts to a profile, number
of comments to a blog, number of users who play a game
or watch a video trailer, or number of fans as a result of
an advertisement. Cost per install (CPI) is the cost charged
for a unique installation of a widget or other application
included in a social media page. Finally, cost per engagement (CPE) is the cost of each user-defined engagement,
such as submission of branded content generated by the
user, contest entries, votes/polls, reviews or comments,
ratings, engagement or replies to interactive ads, to, clicks
or favorites, a Promoted Tweet or other social actions
(clicking on “Like” button or a “thumb up/down” icon).
Download the “Social Media Buyer’s Guide” at iab.net/
guidelines/508676/801817/sm_buyers_guide for definitions and more examples.
In one interesting example, JC Penney hired Gigya to create a widget that allowed its teen market to add hats, mustaches, and other fun things to photos of their friends using a
social network application. Called “Stuck on You,” the campaign paid the social media property using a CPI model, with
a goal of 2.9 million starts by users in 2008–2009. The result
was over 43 clicks for every widget install (engagement),
and an average of 22 friends was reached in addition to the
original install (Interactive Advertising Bureau 2010). In
Chap. 5 you will learn all about these performance metrics
and other measures of success for social media marketing
communication campaigns.
Finally, there is one burning issue asked by all marketers:
How does one integrate these new media into traditional
marketing communication plans?
4
4.6
Marketing Communications in Social Media
COORDINATING SOCIAL, INTERNET,
AND TRADITIONAL MEDIA
PROMOTION PLANS
The primary goal of marketers has always been to become
monomaniacally customer driven and build long term relationships that bring revenue to the company. This all starts
with customers and discovering their needs and wants—discussion and listening via social media is a great way to do
that. Many online media do not allow for social interactions,
such as some traditional websites and e-mail campaigns.
Traditional marketing communication media only allow
one-way communication, yet these are still important for
building brand awareness (e.g., an ad in the SuperBowl that
reaches 60 % of the U.S. population), creating desire and
interest, and moving prospects and customers to purchase
(e.g., a coupon or calendar event listing in the Sunday print
newspaper). Yet, marketing is moving more to the concept of
inbound marketing: a strategy that has as its objective to
bring customers to a company’s website, instead of “interrupt” marketing (distracting them with one-way communication, such as advertising, while they are engaged in viewing
content—such as watching a television program or reading a
story on a website). Inbound marketing entices customers
with relevant content and earns their attention. Although it
may still be sponsored content, paid for by an advertiser, it is
in a more relevant context that attracts viewers.
According to a Marketing Sherpa survey of 3,300 marketers, roughly 25 % extensively integrated social media
with both offline and online tactics (see marketingsherpa.
com/article/chart/social-media-integration).
Research
from a 2011 survey by the Pivot Conference and Brian Solis
found that 70 % of marketers who use social media
campaigns noted that they mostly integrate social advertising at the campaign planning stage to drive engagement
(eMarketer 2011).
These marketers face a mashup of new and traditional
media that can carry the promotional tools of advertising,
sales promotion, direct marketing, public relations and personal selling. The guiding force for selecting appropriate
tools and media is the communication objectives in desired
target markets. For example, if a company’s goal is to sell its
new software package to accountants, it could do any of the
following: (1) use PR by describing the software on its own
website and with a social media press release, (2) use Twitter
to talk about software needs in the industry and offer codes
for free sample downloads (sales promotion), (3) include
recommendations from current customers on a LinkedIn
page, (4) upload a video demonstration with software tutorials, or (5) advertise in a traditional print accounting industry
Summary
magazine and on the industry’s website (including testimonials from the LinkedIn pages). All this could direct prospects
to a website where they can download a free sample and purchase the product after a 30 day trial. This would be much
more effective than giving away free iPads on Facebook,
because that tactic does not align with the campaign goals or
target market.
Below is another example of how to drive traffic to both
digital sites and physical retailer stores, as described in the
Starbucks’ opening case of Chap. 1. 3dCart (3dcart.com)
lists the following:
• Use a Facebook Page for your company and add a
Facebook Store. Customers will become “fans” of your
business to check on updates and meet others with similar
interests.
• Tweet about the business and any promotions/new products, etc.
• Blog to your customers to keep them updated about new
products, etc.
• Integrate videos (e.g. YouTube) on your website.
• Add social bookmarking to your product’s page for easy
return.
• Embrace mobile apps.
• Add a Facebook “Like” button with its sponsored story to
your product (e.g., Gatorade brand scored 1.2 million
conversations in 6 months using their ‘Mission Control’
campaign).
For more details, see blog.3dcart.com/7-socialcommerce-tools-to-increase-traffic.
There are many other tactical ways to integrate marketing
communications media, and they primarily involve providing links to all the Web and social media sites in all promotional media and integrating positive conversation into
various appropriate media.
The main thing to remember is that the traditional and
some Internet media carry corporate monologues, while
social media contain dialogs with target markets. Both play a
role, but the dialog is becoming much more important and is
more true to the well-accepted company goal of customerdriven marketing. This is the subject of Chap. 5.
95
2.
3.
4.
5.
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC issues as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. List and define the six social media promotion steps.
The first step in effective and efficient social media marketing communication is to identify and gain a good
understanding of the organization’s target market(s) and
its social media use and behavior. Seconds, companies
develop marketing communication goals for their social
media campaigns, and third, they select the social media
6.
platforms, such as Facebook or YouTube videos, and
tools (such as advertising or sales promotion). The fourth
step is to execute and monitor the campaign, and fifth is
to define/review performance metrics (such as number of
clicks on an ad). Finally, the marketer refines the other
five steps based on how well the campaign is working.
Identify the key social media communication objectives. The key communication objectives include building awareness, interest, desire and action (AIDA). Other
important objectives are building brand loyalty and
purchase frequency/quantity over the customers’ lifetime
and engaging customers and prospects in social media
content.
Explain how to select social media tools and platforms
to achieve campaign objectives. Selection among the
communication tools of advertising, sales promotion,
public relations, direct marketing, and personal selling
depends on the communication objective in the target
market. The most important criterion for platform selection is to find which social media are used most by the
company’s target markets. Companies achieve this by
getting user statistics from the social media company, surveying customers, or experimenting to see if a site’s users
want to engage in the company’s content.
Compare and contrast the essentials of owned and
paid media. Owned media includes content that is partially controlled by the company, such as a Facebook
page. It serves to build longer-term relationships with
customers. Paid media is space the company buys in
someone else’s medium, such as an ad on a YouTube
video. It acts as catalyst that feeds owned and earned
media. Companies must create the content for both types
of media; however, they pay additional money for paid
media when buying the space.
Give examples of several owned social media channels
and tactics. Exemplary channels include online public
and private communities (e.g., a company’s Facebook
page), blogs (e.g., a company executive writes a blog)
and microblogs (e.g. Twitter), multimedia sharing sites
(e.g., a company creates a video about its products and
uploads it to YouTube), virtual worlds (e.g., the company
creates a virtual webstore in Seconds Life), companyhosted virtual events (e.g., an online Webinar), and mashups (e.g., businesses list their name and location on
Google Places). Other important owned media are online
games, online gifting, branded apps and social media
press releases.
Explain the advertising formats for social media.
Display ads use text and graphics, as well as the company’s logos and contact information/Web links. Classified
ads can be found on dedicated sites, such as Craigslist.
Social ads incorporate user interactions that the consumer
has agreed to display share, such as a profile picture and
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4
name. Behaviorally targeted ads present ads to the user
based on their previous behavior. Sponsored content integrates editorial content and advertising based on either
underwritten (someone else’s content) or advertisercreated content. Product placement embeds products or
ads in online multiplayer games or videos (as well as traditional media). Text link ads include a hyperlink placed
in specific text in social media content.
KEY TERMS
Advergaming (in-game advertising)
Advertising
Content marketing
Direct marketing
Earned media
Inbound marketing
Owned media
Paid media
Personal selling
Public relations
Sales promotion
Social ads
Widgets
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Marketing Communications in Social Media
3. How can a social media marketer use Facebook to reach
international markets?
4. What are the advantages and disadvantages of using
social media compared to using a company’s own
website?
5. Which would be the best social media for advertising
the college book store to students at your university?
Explain and defend your answer.
6. Compare and contrast the use of a blog instead of a
Facebook page for social commerce.
7. Which social media platform(s) would be best for a sales
promotion tactic, such as a coupon or contest? Why?
8. Discuss the potential business use of Twitter for social
commerce.
9. What are the advantages of a social media press release,
and why would a company use that instead of a traditional release?
10. The Pivot Conference research found only 9 % of
respondents using social media to sell products (see pivotcon.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/RotSA2011.
pdf). Why use social media if this is not the goal?
11. Do you think that social ads have any privacy risks for
Facebook page owners? Why or why not?
INTERNET EXERCISES
REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Describe the six steps of social media promotion.
2. Identify several social media markets.
3. What are the main communication objectives companies seek to achieve with customers and prospects?
4. List and define the five traditional promotional tools.
5. What is the most important criterion used by companies
to select appropriate social media platforms for
communication?
6. Define owned, paid, and earned social media.
7. Define all the types of owned social media.
8. What are the key advertising formats used in social
media to aid commerce?
9. How is Facebook used for advertising?
10. How do marketers integrate online and offline communication plans?
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
1. Is there a large risk for bloggers who accept sponsored
content? Debate this issue.
2. If you were running a social media campaign for Nike,
how would you allocate your advertising budget among
social media platforms, and why?
1. Visit Wikipedia and search for the article about your university. Register and edit the article to make it more accurate and engaging. Make a copy of the before and after
pages and write a short report discussing the process you
used.
2. Find three social media display ads that you think are
ineffective and explain why, describing how you would
improve the ads.
3. Visit the Interactive Advertising Bureau (iab.net) and
read the 2013 study on mobile advertising (iab.net/
ovumstudy). What are the key findings and future outlook for mobile ads?
4. Visit us.coca-cola.com/home and facebook.com/cocacola and compare and contrast, explaining what you think
are the objectives of each.
5. LinkedIn is growing rapidly. Visit linkedin.com/aboutus read about it. Do you think business networks like this
will ever draw more traffic than other social networks,
such as Facebook? Why or why not?
6. Visit Twitter.com and read some of the tweets. If you
were an entrepreneur with a new product, how could you
use Twitter to build awareness and increase social commerce (sales)?
7. Enter advertising.com. Find and describe the innovative/
scientific methods that are offered and related to social
commerce.
References
8. Visit Google and do a search for your favorite car. What
sponsored ad appeared on the results page? Now, do a
search for your favorite music group. What sponsored
links appeared on the results page? What conclusion can
you draw about targeted advertising?
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
1. Review the opening case and answer the following
questions:
(a) Identify the online promotional actions adopted by
Johnson & Johnson and relate them to the methods
described in the chapter.
(b) Search the Internet to find more details about Johnson
& Johnson’s marketing activities on YouTube.
(c) Search the Internet to find more details about Johnson
& Johnson’s marketing activities on Facebook and
Twitter.
(d) Search the Internet to find more details about Johnson
& Johnson’s marketing activities on mobile devices.
(e) Outline the major benefits from Johnson & Johnson’s
online marketing activities.
2. Each group is assigned a social network that has business
activities (e.g., LinkedIn, Xing, Facebook, Twitter,
Seconds Life, etc.). Each group will identify all paid and
owned social marketing communication on the sites.
Write a report and deliver a class presentation.
3. Facebook is increasingly offering new marketing tools
(e.g., Open Graph, Social Plugins). Identify all the tools
offered. Each group will concentrate on the implication in
one of the following areas: owned media, advertising,
shopping, market research, customer service, CRM, and
others. Present your findings to the class.
4. Each group will adopt one or two of the following companies that actively promote their products on Facebook and
Twitter: Coca-Cola, Starbucks, Ford, Pepsi, Disney,
Victoria Secret, iTunes, Toyota, Sony, or P&G. Find what
methods they use and how they run their campaigns.
Present your findings to the class.
REFERENCES
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(accessed August 2014).
Corcoran, S. “Defining Earned, Owned, and Paid Media.” December
16, 2009. blogs.forrester.com/interactive_marketing/2009/12/
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2014).
Denny. “Social Media Marketing Outperforms Display Ads.” December
31, 2013. mobilecommercepress.com/social-media-marketingoutperforms-display-ads/8510163 (accessed August 2014).
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Ad Revenue Quarter.” January 29, 2014. businessinsider.com/
facebook-q4-2013-earnings-2014-1 (accessed August 2014).
eMarketer. “Advertisers Begin to Look Beyond Facebook and Twitter.”
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Indvik, L. “Twitter to Top $1 Billion in Ad Revenue in 2014 [Report].”
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(accessed August 2014).
Interactive Advertising Bureau. “2013 Internet Ad Revenues Soar To
$42.8 Billion, Hitting Landmark High & Surpassing Broadcast
Television For The First Time—Marks a 17% Rise Over RecordSetting Revenues in 2012.” April 10, 2014a. iab.net/about_the_
iab/recent_press_releases/press_release_archive/press_release/
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Interactive Advertising Bureau. “Social Advertising Best Practices.”
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Kotler, P., and G. Armstrong, Principles of Marketing, 15th Ed. Upper
Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education, Inc. 2013.
Latka, N. “25 Facebook Facts and Statistics You Should Know in
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2014).
Learmonth, M. “Study: Twitter Ad Revenue Grow to $150M in 2011.”
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7, 2013. Marrs, M. “45 Fabulous Facebook Advertising Tips &
Magic Marketing Tricks.” January 30, 2014. wordstream.com/
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2014).
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Media Ads in 2013.” Newswire, January 29, 2013. nielsen.com/us/
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(accessed August 2014).
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2014).
4
Marketing Communications in Social Media
Schmidt, S. “5 Mobile Advertising Trends for 2014.” MMA, April 14,
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2014).
Walter, E., and R. Gioglio. The Power of Visual Storytelling: How to
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online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424053111904823804576
502442835413446 (accessed August 2014).
5
Customer Engagement and Metrics
Contents
Opening Case: Häagen-Dazs Viral Video Creates a Buzz.......
Learning Objectives
99
5.1
Earned Media..................................................................... 101
5.2
Social Media Engagement Levels ..................................... 101
5.3
Engaging Consumers to Produce Earned Media............ 103
5.4
Engagement Techniques.................................................... 104
5.5
Reputation Management in Social Media .......................
112
5.6
Search Engine Optimization .............................................
116
5.7
Monitor, Measure, and Refine: SM Metrics ....................
118
References .................................................................................... 124
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Describe the five levels of user engagement (5 Cs).
2. Describe the major engagement techniques in social
commerce and implementation issues.
3. Express the role of trust in social commerce.
4. Provide examples of collaborative content creation by
consumers.
5. Describe how a company can build, maintain, monitor,
and repair its reputation in social media.
6. Identify several ways companies can improve their brand
positions on search engine results pages.
7. Define performance metrics used to monitor, measure,
and refine social commerce goals and tactics.
OPENING CASE: HÄAGEN-DAZS
VIRAL VIDEO CREATES A BUZZ
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this
chapter (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_5) contains supplementary
material, which is available to authorized users.
Häagen-Dazs (a Nestlé-owned company), whose brand dates
back to the early 1920s, was established in 1961 and opened
its first store in 1976 in New York with chocolate, vanilla,
and coffee flavors. It was later purchased by Pillsbury, which
was subsequently bought by General Mills. In the U.S., the
ice cream products are produced by the Nestlé subsidiary,
Dreyer’s, although General Mills still owns the brand name.
Häagen-Dazs is served in over 900 franchises and company
owned shops in 50 countries. Häagen-Dazs maintains a website, a Facebook page with over 1.2 million likes (facebook.
com/HaagenDazsUS) and several other Facebook pages for
various countries (e.g., Malaysia, Singapore), as well as an
interactive microsite and videos dedicated to the honey bee
crisis. From the beginning, Häagen-Dazs ice cream sought to
innovate and bring new frozen dessert experiences to its customers, including distinctive flavors such as vanilla Swiss
almond, butter pecan, and Dulce de leche, to name just a few.
Häagen-Dazs was also the first to introduce the world to ice
cream bars for a grown-up palate, with the introduction of
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_5, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
99
100
the Häagen-Dazs brand ice cream bar line in 1986. Other
super-premium innovations followed, such as frozen yogurt
in 1991 and sorbet in 1993.
The Problem
In 2006, Häagen-Dazs (H-D) discovered that the world’s
honey bee populations were quickly disappearing due to a
phenomenon called Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD): when
honey bees mysteriously desert their hives and die. This was
a problem for the brand because bees pollinate the flowers of
one-third of all the food we eat—including pears, strawberries and raspberries—all important ingredients in the company’s ice creams, sorbets, frozen yogurts, and bars.
Häagen-Dazs estimated that 30 of the 73 flavors contain
ingredients pollinated by honeybees.
The Solution
Haagen-Dazs saw this as an important opportunity to initiate
its first “cause marketing” campaign for the brand. For starters, they partnered with leading research facilities to donate
over $1 million to honey bee research. Their funds are used to
help support the largest agricultural facility in the U.S.,
located at U.C. Davis in California. The H-D Honey Bee
Haven was planted in 2009 next to the Honey Bee Research
Facility at Davis (beebiology.ucdavis.edu). H-D then used
traditional and social media to raise awareness and motivate
support for the disappearing honey bee cause. The company
created educational websites (e.g., beebiology.ucdavis.edu/
HAVEN/index.html) with links to bee news, information
and “how you can help.” There were television ads, documentaries, and a video produced for the Internet, entitled
“Bee-Boy Dance Crew” (for the story behind the video and to
watch the video, see Yoerg 2008). The video targeted a young
18–24 year old market (“youth thirsty for honey”) with a hiphop interpretation of how a honey bee “dances” when alerting hive mates to a newly found source of nectar. The video
garnered two million views (on YouTube) within 2 weeks,
while “visits to “Haagen-Dazs’ ‘Save the Bees Site’ spiked,
reflecting heightened interest in the bee issue” (Yoerg 2008).
The strategy: this market was more likely to send the video
link to friends, thus raising awareness for the cause. The company also created a designated cause Web microsite, which
allowed users to watch the video, explore the panoramic
fields by clicking the mouse, and create and send a virtual bee
to friends. The site also engaged users by accepting donations
online, asking for support for reinstatement of the Boy Scout
Beekeeping Merit Badge, and providing downloadable
instructions on how to plant a bee-friendly garden.
5
Customer Engagement and Metrics
H-D hired an online marketing firm, Feed Company, to
promote the Bee-Boy video. It sent creative messages to narrowly targeted online media, including influential bloggers
(such as Huffington Post writers). The message varied
depending on the media outlet. For example, “green” blogs
received information on the environmental impact of the disappearing bee population, and entertainment outlets received
references to the pop culture value of the Bee-Boy video. As
the buzz increased, Feed Company gained coverage in more
mainstream online media sites and offline broadcast and
print media.
Other Social Media Activities
Häagen-Dazs operates in a very competitive environment
(e.g., Ben & Jerry’s) and therefore the company’s strategy
aims at increasing brand awareness and loyalty. The company is extremely active in using social media tools and platforms. Here are a few examples:
• Engagement and word-of-mouth (WOM). Kolah (2013)
reports on activities on the company’s Facebook page in
the UK and creating WOM buzz around the brand and
with brand advocates on Twitter. The objective is to
increase customers’ loyalty. The company wanted to
increase consumer engagement on its Facebook page and
build awareness and bookings for a campaign they were
running targeted at women for a “girls’ night.”
• The company is active in amplifying social presence via
mobile campaigns on Facebook (see Kats 2012).
• For a social media campaign case study on how the company increases customer engagement, see slideshare.net/
QubeMedia/qube-casestudy-hdboudoir.
Results
Within 2 weeks of the campaign’s July 15, 2008 start, the
following results began to emerge:
• The ‘Bee-Boy Dance Crew’ video received over two million views, primarily on YouTube, but also on Yahoo,
Vimeo, and Daily Motion. CNN wrote about the story,
which resulted in 1.3 million video views; it was covered
in over 150 blogs (Yoerg 2008).
• Many high visibility blogs covered the cause. For example, the 6.9 million readers of the Huffington Post and 1.6
million TreeHugger viewers were exposed to the story.
• There was a high level of user engagement with this campaign: over 3,500 YouTube comments, 5,850 ratings of
the video (averaging 4.5 stars and considerable positive
feedback), and 11,024 discussions by users in forums,
blogs, and other social networking sites.
5.2
Social Media Engagement Levels
• Since 2008, Häagen-Dazs donated $620,000 to two
universities and $1 million to University of California at
Davis for honey bee research (Yoerg 2008).
In total, the campaign generated over two million video
views, thousands of conversations, and many impressions.
By August 2009, the University of Illinois scientists had discovered the cause of CCD, and the HD honey bee site continued to report on the disappearing bee population and
search for a solution (see the H-D site).
Sources: Based on Goodby et al. (2008), Kats 2012,
Kolah (2013), Yoerg (2008) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Häagen-Dazs, haagen-dazs.us, and facebook.com/
HaagenDazsUS (all accessed August 2014).
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THIS CASE
Dreyer’s and its Häagen-Dazs brand connected with a
cause that threatened the brand. The passion for the
disappearing honey bee cause subsequently attached to
the brand as well. The company astutely identified its
target market (18–24 year olds) and through its agency,
created social media to attract and engage the market.
H-D placed the information and video on social media
sites which the target would see, and that drove brand
engagement and viral activity. This is an example of
owned media that resulted in widespread positive
earned media: the goal of every company. You will
learn more about these techniques in this chapter.
This chapter discusses many important types of
earned media: how a company can encourage positive
user-generated content (UGC) and protect its reputation in an uncontrollable social media conversation,
and concludes with the ways to monitor and measure
all three types of media (owned, paid, and earned) for
social commerce effectiveness.
5.1
EARNED MEDIA
Well-executed owned and paid social media can drive prospects and customers through the steps from awareness to
product purchase, repurchase, and into long-term customer
loyalty. However, earned media have a multiplier effect (e.g.,
1 + 1 = 5), intensifying and spreading the communication
messages far and wide in social media—as experienced by
H-D in its “Save the Honey Bee” campaign. “Whatever your
methods, find a way to incorporate a social element into
every marketing campaign you run by finding compelling
reasons for people to share. That’ll make every dollar you
spend on marketing look like two” (Dhalokia 2011; Marketo
101
2011). Recall from Chap. 4 that earned media occurs when
“customer conversations become the channel” on blogs,
product review sites, Facebook, news sites, many other
places, and in comments on owned media pages everywhere
they are allowed (see Fig. 5.1).
Earned media is often initiated by the company through
branded (owned) content distribution, such as entertaining
YouTube videos about the product, social media press
releases (public relations), or other activities intended to
engage users, such as placing social hooks on company
brand sites and microsites (e.g., Facebook register, subscribe
or “like,” Digg, Pinterest, Delicious, RSS, and other buttons). Companies also put “follow us” links to these social
sites on their Web pages and in e-mail messages sent to customer or prospect databases. Earned media can have a direct
cost associated with it, such as when the company sponsors
a contest or creates content that spreads, but there is no financial cost when it is simply user conversation. By definition,
others create earned media, and companies have little to no
control over this user-generated content (UGC). This communication can get ugly very quickly—and often does when
people criticize brands online. Professional and citizen journalists share their own opinions and experiences all over the
social media via computers and mobile phones, even at times
when companies are not monitoring these posts.
Before discussing how owned and paid media generate
earned media, it is important to learn the possible levels of
social media engagement.
5.2
SOCIAL MEDIA ENGAGEMENT
LEVELS
Social media engagement occurs among customers and
between the company and Internet users who are actively
discussing the brand (Chap. 3). This is compared to traditional media, which only allows passive exposure, such as
when a consumer is watching television. Occasionally, however, traditional media will prompt engagement when (1) the
consumer writes an e-mail or letter to the editor, (2) telephones a broadcast station, or (3) posts a reaction on their
own or the company’s Facebook or Twitter page. Traditional
media can also prompt communication to companies about
their brands when designed for this purpose, such as awarding a prize to the first 100 people that send a text message to
a company. However, it is not as easy for consumers to
engage when they receive the information via traditional
media and must access their computer, tablet, or mobile
device to respond.
There are many levels of online user engagement. It is
important for a company to understand its social commerce
objectives and what proportion of its customers and prospects operate at each level, so that it can use social media for
102
5
Customer Engagement and Metrics
Ratings
Reviews
Social
recommendations
Many more
Owned
Media
Paid
Media
Viral
marketing
Internet users/
Influencers:
Consume
Connect
Collect
Create
Collaborate
Earned Media
LBS
Tag,
Bookmark
Upload
content
Fig. 5.1 Owned and paid media drive earned media. Note: figure in middle is free clip art
positive discussion online and collaboration with customers.
Forrester’s Social Technographics™ framework includes
seven levels of participation, and this company has data
about the entire Internet population that companies can use
for comparison with their consumer activity levels: “inactives, spectators, joiners, collectors, critics, conversationalists and creators” (Band et al. 2010; blogs.forrester.com/
gina_sverdlov/12-01-04-global_social_technographics_
update_2011_us_and_eu_mature_emerging_markets_
show_lots_of_activity). Evans and McKee (2010) also
suggest a four-level engagement ladder that moves engagement beyond simple owned and paid media consumption.
Figure 5.2 displays an iteration of these ideas, displaying the
levels of engagement from least to most.
1. The least engaged Internet users consume online content
only. They only read blogs, watch videos, look at photos,
listen to podcasts, and read the reviews and opinions
expressed by others occupying higher levels of engagement on websites and forums.
2. At the next level, users connect with others by creating a
profile on a social network, such as “friending” on
Facebook or joining TripAdvisor or other sites that
require registration to access the social media content.
These consumers do not post anything, however.
Connecting is a low-risk level of engagement that allows
people to participate in small steps. Another way to connect is through a social gathering, happening either on or
offline. This is often facilitated by a site that allows
groups to coordinate these meetings. For example, in
2010, St. Supéry winery (stsupery.com) used meetup.
com to create an online global celebration of a wine—
they called it #Cabernet Day (“on social media sites” (the
Fig. 5.2 Five stages of social media engagement
“#” is a Twitter hash tag). In a 24-hour time period, over
1,000 people online and 75 in real life met to celebrate
and purchase and drink the wine. Many messages were
also posted on social network sites and YouTube, and
there were even check-ins at Foursquare (Bakas 2010).
3. Consumers who collect information go through a process
of filtering content and tagging what they find valuable in
social media sites. This could include Delicious for bookmark sharing and Flickr or Facebook for photo tagging or
5.3
Engaging Consumers to Produce Earned Media
“liking” someone else’s content. Collectors might also
subscribe to RSS feeds on blog sites so that they can
actively read content of interest. Finally, collectors show
their preferences by voting in polls online. For example,
collector shoppers at Sears.com have the option of sharing
prom dresses they like with their Facebook friends using a
feature called “Prom Premier 2011.” Sears supplemented
the option with an ad campaign placed on Facebook.
4. Moving up the engagement ladder, creators actually write
or upload original multimedia content to websites, such
as videos to YouTube, pin boards on Pinterest, or music
and podcasts to iTunes. This involves creating content,
which is a higher level than simply voting on someone
else’s content. These consumers write product reviews/
ratings, create their own blogs/Web pages and comment
on other people’s blogs, contribute to wiki sites (e.g.,
eHow, Wikipedia), and generally add much more to the
social media content.
5. Finally, the most engaged customers collaborate with the
company when they work with others in discussion to
find ways to improve products. CNN offers iReporter,
where users send in videos of breaking news, which can
result in CNN sending a company reporter to the event for
a story. Another example is Dell’s IdeaStorm site (ideastorm.com), where users post questions and product problems and others view and vote the posts as important
concerns or not. Dell then responds on the status of each
idea (“under review” or “implemented”). As we are writing this, one of the top ideas that Dell implemented was
use biodegradable packaging material for shipping
(posted by a collaborator and voted on by 202 “collectors”). Finally, Twitter’s hash tag (#), marking keywords
and topics in Tweets, was actually created by Twitter
users. This type of collaboration helps companies and
bloggers improve products.
Fig. 5.3 Proportion of
consumers expressing trust in
media
103
According to the Pew Internet Project, as of January
2014, 74 % of online adults and 89 % of 18–24 year olds
used social media (pewinternet.org/fact-sheets/socialnetworking-fact-sheet). According to its Q2 2014 financial
report, as of June 30, 2014, Facebook had 1.32 billion
monthly active users worldwide. For an infographic listing
Facebook statistics from 2004 to 2014 (“10 years of
Facebook”), see cnn.com/2014/02/03/tech/social-media/
facebook-graphic. In the next sections, you will see how
companies engage customers to create earned media product
discussion and multimedia content uploading.
5.3
ENGAGING CONSUMERS
TO PRODUCE EARNED MEDIA
When a couple becomes engaged to be married, they are
expressing their trust, commitment, and caring for each
other—this is also true when a brand seeks this kind of love
from its markets and wants them to talk about the products.
Wikipedia defines customer engagement (CE) as “the
engagement of customers with one another, with a company
or a brand. The initiative for engagement can be either consumer- or company-led, and the medium of engagement can
be on or offline” (see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customer_
engagement). The essentials of customer engagement are
covered in Chap. 3. For a free e-book on more effective
social media engagement, see Brusselmans (2014).
Trust is a key component of word-of-mouth communication resulting from customer engagement. Edelman, the
world’s largest public relations firm, found that 65 % of
respondents across 25 countries trust a “person like yourself” for credible information about a company (Fig. 5.3).
This is in contrast to the only 43 % who trust the company
CEO (do a Google search for “Edelman trust barometer
104
2014,” and see the results in a slideshare presentation at
edelman.com/insights/intellectual-property/2014edelman-trust-barometer/about-trust/global-results for
more information). “A person like yourself” is someone who
shares similar interests or friends in a social network. For
example, when planning trips or on the road, many travelers
will visit the largest travel site, TripAdvisor, to check out the
over 170 million reviews and opinions of hotels and sites in
43 countries, which are written by travelers across the world.
Thus, when people post opinions about products, over half of
the readers are likely to believe what they say, which will
influence their purchase decisions. In general, the data show
that people trust earned media more than owned or paid
media. This indicates the huge advantage to earned media.
We now turn to a discussion of the “who, what, how, and
where” to engage customers in conversation about a company and its brands.
Who Should a Company Engage?
It is not effective, efficient, or likely possible to get the entire
Internet universe talking about an organization and its products. As discussed in Chap. 4, the company will identify its
target markets and objectives before developing an engagement campaign. For example, Hagen-Dazs selected the
18–24 year old market, as you read in the opening case example. Another tactic used by H-D and many other companies is
to target influential bloggers and members of social networks,
such as Arianna Huffington’s The Huffington Post, with its
50,000 bloggers and over 78 million global unique visitors
(Business Wire 2013). For ways that how bloggers can catch
and keep their readers’ attention, see Ahmad (2013).
Companies identify social media influencers in two ways.
First, they can observe and participate in conversations in
social media platforms where people discuss their industries.
This will help them see who is active and has the most
Facebook fans or friends, Flickr comments, Tumblr or Twitter
subscribers, or simply the most comments on user posts. For
example, the eMarketing Association Network group in
LinkedIn has over 586,000 members, and by clicking on the
“members” tab, members can see the list of “This Week’s Top
Influencers.” These contributors, along with the group creator
owner (Robert Fleming, who is the CEO/founder of the
eMarketing Association), are members who start a discussion
and comment on other group members’ discussions. Under
the “Pulse” tab on the member’s Home page, you can see the
“top posts” for the day, week, of all time, and the most recent
posts. On the “pulse” page, you can also search and find the
“top influencers” and “most searched influencers.” (LinkedIn
Today, Influencer Posts, and Channels - Move your cursor
over Interests at the top of your homepage and select Pulse.)
5
Customer Engagement and Metrics
For a B2B company selling products to eMarketers, this is
an ideal source for building a buzz with influential social
media participants.
The seconds way to find influentials is to use a service
such as Klout, Inc. (klout.com). Klout measures over 400
variables from 8 different networks for each of over 620
million social network participants and ranks them based on
(1) number of people they reach, (2) how much influence
participants have on their followers (e.g., number of “likes”
or “retweets”), and (3) how influential the person’s network
members are. The result is a Klout Score from 1 to 100, with
the top scored people having the most social media influence. According to Klout, “We measure multiple pieces of
data from several social networks, and also real world data
from places like Bing and Wikipedia. Then we apply them
to our Klout Score algorithm, and then show the resulting
number on your profile. The higher your Klout Score, the
tougher it becomes to increase” (per klout.com/corp/
score). Klout also lists the topics these influencers write
about and their social media style (e.g., broadcaster or specialist). Klout also has a “perks” program that offers free
products and discounts from over 500 companies to highKlout score users/the influentials with brands they are likely
to care and write about, such as Starbucks, Audi, Virgin
America, and Dove. People with scores over 55 even get
free access to the American Airlines Admirals Club lounges
in selected cities worldwide. The benefit to companies is
that they can pay to gain access to high Klout score individuals/influentials (see klout.com). In 2011, Canadian
pop/R&B singer, songwriter and actor Justin Bieber was the
only person with a perfect 100 Klout score, while President
Barak Obama had a score of 99. In 2012, Klout changed its
scoring algorithm (to the current 400 metrics from the previous 100 metrics); as of August 2014, Bieber’s score has
fallen to 92, while President Obama’s is 99 (both of their
Klout scores fluctuated within the years). To raise your
Klout score, see the example provided by Kamboe (2014).
For further discussion, see Chap. 10.
5.4
ENGAGEMENT TECHNIQUES
Most social media provide space and tools for earned media
content. You have read about many of them in this book,
such as sites that allow multimedia content uploads
(YouTube, Flickr, Vine), comments, bookmarking
(Delicious), tagging (Flickr, Facebook), reviews, recommendations and more (recall Fig. 5.1). Both websites and
mobile apps offer tools for these connections and conversations. In the following sections, we focus on just a few
important or new techniques not fully described in other
chapters.
5.4
Engagement Techniques
Fig. 5.4 Viral marketing turns the sales funnel upside down
Viral Marketing
Viral marketing is a bad name for a great technique. Viral
marketing (viral advertising) “is any marketing technique
that induces websites or users to pass on a marketing message to other sites or users, creating a potentially exponential
growth in the message’s visibility and effect” (see whatis.
techtarget.com). This marketing technique uses social networks to produce exponential increases in brand recognition
or to achieve other marketing objectives (such as product
sales) through self-replicating viral processes. This is analogous to the spread of physical or computer viruses (see
onbile.com/info/mobile-viral-marketing). It is the opposite of the marketing sales funnel, which starts with many
prospects and then narrows as prospects drop off to fewer
customers, as shown in Fig. 5.4. The viral funnel does the
reverse because it increases the number exposed to brand
messages as content circulates.
Viral marketing can be delivered by offline word of mouth
or enhanced by the network effects of the Internet. Viral marketing can occur when users forward e-mail, send text messages, or share images and videos on Facebook, interactive
Flash games, advergames, e-books, brandable software, and
images. The founder of Hotmail, a free e-mail service that
grew from 0 to 12 million subscribers in its 18 initial months,
and to more than 50 million subscribers in about 4 years,
used viral marketing. Each e-mail sent via Hotmail carried
an invitation for free Hotmail service.
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According to a 2010 survey conducted in Chinese
markets, word of mouth has become an important factor in
consumers’ purchasing decisions. In 2010, 64 % of respondents said that word of mouth influenced their purchasing
decisions, increasing from 56 % in 2008 (Atsmon et al.
2010). Well-executed viral strategies work because individuals trust their acquaintances and family to help them with
their choices (Atsmon et al. 2010).
As with all engagement strategies, the ultimate goal of marketers interested in creating successful viral marketing programs is to create content (1) that appeals to individuals with
high social networking visibility and (2) that has a high probability of being presented and spread quickly by these individuals and their friends in their communications with others.
Viral marketing has long been a favorite strategy of online
marketers pushing youth-oriented products. For example,
marketers might distribute a small game program or a video
embedded within a sponsor’s e-mail that is easy to forward.
By releasing a few thousand copies of the game to select consumers, vendors hope that it is spread quickly to reach hundreds of thousands of others. Also known as advocacy
marketing, viral marketing, if properly used, can be effective,
efficient and relatively inexpensive—as experienced by H-D
in the opening case. eWOM platforms can also influence
consumer product judgment (see Lee and Youn 2009). For
further details, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viral_marketing
and wisegeek.net/what-are-the-different-types-of-viralmarketing-campaigns.htm. For a scientific take on viral
marketing with examples, see helpscout.net/blog/viralmarketing. For five great viral marketing campaigns and
how they worked, see creativeguerrillamarketing.com/
viral-marketing/5-great-viral-marketing-campaignsworked.
Every company wants to create content that goes viral,
but few accomplish this feat. The content has to be entertaining or mysterious, match popular culture and gain user attention. In a sea of online content and information overload,
sometimes even the best content does not go viral.
The term “viral marketing” has also been used pejoratively to refer to stealth marketing campaigns or the unscrupulous use of online astroturfing—the attempt to create an
impression of widespread support for a policy, individual, or
product, where little such support exists by misleading the
public into believing that the position of the astroturfer is the
commonly held view. Tactics include multiple online identities or a reviewer or commentator being paid by a company
to post an opinion or mention a brand or product on Twitter
or blogs (see theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/
feb/08/what-is-astroturfing). Another downside of a viral
strategy is that several e-mail hoaxes have been spread this
way. Viral marketing has also been criticized by consumers
due to a concern over unsolicited e-mails, which many see as
an invasion of privacy. For more details about viral marketing, see McColl (2010).
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Examples of Viral Campaigns
Viral marketing is often very successful with entertaining
videos (especially from YouTube) that are spread via e-mail,
Facebook sharing, and by microbloggers (e.g., Twitter).
Following are some successful viral campaigns:
• Burger King’s “The Subservient Chicken” campaign,
running from 2004, was an extremely successful example
of viral marketing from a microsite with an interactive
video subservientchicken.com of a man dressed in a
chicken costume. The chicken video had received over
450 million views as of 2011. It is particularly relevant
and appropriate for the brand because users could type a
command, such as “dance,” and the chicken will dance in
the video—supporting Burger King’s “Have it your way”
advertising slogan. Then the chicken video disappeared
and in April 2014, Burger King posted on its Twitter page:
“We Miss You Subservient Chicken. #TBT pic.twitter.
com/msrZqeX0PH.” The company also posted ads in the
style of “missing persons” bulletins (“Have you seen this
chicken”?) in many newspapers, such as The New York
Times, while online the hashtag #FindTheChicken
appeared. Burger King issued a press release in April
2014 (the tenth anniversary), that they would reintroduce
the Subservient Chicken alongside the Chicken Big King
Sandwich (Burger King 2014). On the subservientchicken.com site in 2014, Burger King showed an
empty couch with the missing chicken with the line:
“Help. There’s a chicken on the loose and we are desperately trying to find him” (Morrison 2014). On the “resurrected" site, Burger King also posted a video of the
adventures the chicken had for the last 10 years, asking
viewers to share the video using the hashtag
“#ChickenRedemption,” Burger King is also encouraging
people to use the hashtag “#FindTheChicken” to promote
the campaign, which is for the new Chicken Big King
sandwich (time.com/79309/burger-king-subservientchicken-missing; includes the picture of the “Have you
seen this chicken?” poster). This clever campaign will
boost the viral nature of this site once again. Based on
Chithra (2012), Burger King (2014), Morrison 2014,
time.com/79309/burger-king-subservient-chickenmissing/; and subservientchicken.com (both accessed
August 2014).
• In December 2009, podcasters of The Mike O’Meara
Show launched a viral marketing campaign on Facebook
to encourage others to download the show.
• Between December 2009 and March 2010, a series of
seven videos were posted to YouTube under the name
“iamamiwhoami” which led to speculation that they were
a marketing campaign for a band by that name. In March
2010, an anonymous package was sent to an MTV journalist claiming to contain a code, which if cracked, would
5
Customer Engagement and Metrics
give the identity of the artist. The seventh video, entitled
‘y,’ appears to feature the Swedish singer Jonna Lee.
• On July 14, 2010, Old Spice launched the fastest growing
online viral video campaign ever, garnering 6.7 million
views after 24 h, ballooning to over 23 million views after
36 h. Old Spice’s agency created a bathroom set in
Portland, OR and had its TV commercial star, Isaiah
Mustafa, reply to 186 online comments and questions
posted on websites like Twitter, Facebook, Reddit, Digg,
YouTube, and others. The campaign ran for 3 days.
Viral Blogging
Viral blogging is when bloggers conduct viral marketing
activities by leveraging the power of the blog community to
spread content. Viral blogging can be very effective with the
use of tools such as trends on Twitter. Many retailers entice
WOM marketing by bloggers. For example, Paramount
wanted to build awareness and box office sales for a sneak
preview of the modestly budgeted “Super 8” science fiction
film, which opened on June 10, 2011. Paramount sent a single
Tweet and purchased advertising on Twitter via two Promoted
Trends—one a day before the premier and one on the day of
the premier. The “Twitter exclusive” sneak previews generated $1 million in box office sales, and the opening weekend
for the film surpassed Paramount’s goals by 52 % (see business.twitter.com/success-stories/paramount-pictures).
Stormhoek Vineyards (stormhoek.com) initiated successful viral marketing on social networks. The company
first offered a free bottle of wine to bloggers. Within 6
months, about 100 of these bloggers voluntarily posted comments about the winery on their own blogs. Most had positive comments, which were read by their readers and other
bloggers. The Stormhoek example raises an interesting question: Can bloggers be bought? The criticism is that bloggers
have not been required to disclose that they are being paid
(or receive gifts) for their endorsements. Companies can pay
bloggers directly to endorse products, or do so via an intermediary, such as PayPerPost (as discussed in Chap. 4).
However, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission requires disclosure from all bloggers who receive gifts or cash for promoting products. The FTC does not monitor bloggers so this
practice of not revealing the pay or gifts continues with some
bloggers.
Viral Videos and Video Ads
According to Techopedia, a viral video is “any clip of animation or film that is spread rapidly through online sharing”
(per techopedia.com/definition/26863/viral-video). These
videos become popular when they get circulated via e-mail,
5.4
Engagement Techniques
texting, blogs, Facebook, discussion forums, and so forth.
This way, people share videos that receive more attention,
sometimes drawing millions of viewers in a short time.
Popular sites that are used for sharing viral videos include
YouTube (youtube.com) and Vimeo (vimeo.com).
Mobile Viral Marketing
Viral marketing is often deployed to mobile platforms. This
is called mobile viral marketing. A typical approach is to
develop and distribute apps for mobile devices. A successful
example involves the “Get Your Island On” Malibu Bowling
Game, a campaign launched by Pernod Ricard rum in 2009
to support the launch of a new flavor. Their 2009 multichannel campaign included a free bowling game called “Get
Your Island On,” available on iPhones and other smartphones. The game got over two million downloads in the
first 6 months. The managing director of the Great Works ad
agency, hired by Pernod Ricard, said that a phone app is a
perfect way of branding, since the product is featured in the
game (the bowling pins are replaced by Malibu rum bottles).
For details see mobilemarketer.com/cms/news/advertising/3178.html.
Ratings, Reviews, Recommendations
and Referrals
Prior to a purchase, consumers like to collect information,
such as, what brand to buy, from which vendor, and at what
price. Online customers do this via shopping aids (e.g., comparison shopping sites), consulting product review sites such
as Epinions, and conducting research at company sites and
other sources. Ratings and reviews posted on social networks
facilitate social commerce. According to Gartner Inc., the
majority of consumers rely on social networks to guide them
in purchase decisions (per Gartner, Inc. 2010). In the social
commerce environment, shoppers look to their friends, fans,
followers, and experienced customers for their opinions and
advice. With peer-to-peer engagement through social media
and high consumer trust in friends, family, and acquaintances, retailers recognize that their customers’ voices can be
an extremely strong marketing tool for building sales and
improving products. Therefore, retailers want to hear what
the customers have to say. A variety of SC models and tools
is available for this purpose.
• Customer ratings and reviews. This is feedback from
real customers, integrated either into an e-commerce
product page, a social network page, a customer’s review
site, or in customer news feeds (e.g., Amazon.com,
iTunes, Buzzillions, Epinions). Customer ratings are
often summarized by votes or polls.
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• Expert ratings and reviews. The view from an
independent voice of authority, whether professional, or
“prosumer” (professional consumer), can be integrated
into an e-commerce product page, a social network page,
a product review site, an online magazine, and/or in news
feeds (e.g., Metacritic and CNET Reviews).
• Sponsored reviews. These are paid-for reviews written
by either customer bloggers or by experts on social media
platforms (e.g., SponsoredReviews, PayPerPost). Expert
and sponsored reviews are often generated in video format (see expotv.com; sharing “Videopinions” about
products and services).
• Conversational marketing. People communicate via
e-mail, blogs, live chat, discussion groups, and tweets, in
both original posts and in comments. Monitoring conversations yields rich data for market research, product
improvements (collaboration), and customer service.
• Customer testimonials. Customer stories and case studies are often published on a social media site that allows
comments and discussion (e.g., Bazaarvoice site reviews).
Ratings and reviews have been the cornerstone of
e-commerce since 1995 (e.g., at Amazon.com), and are a
great way to boost traffic volume, conversions (from surfing
a site to buying), and increase average order value. Reviews
may result in word-of-mouth marketing through social influence, promoting purchase decisions with credible information. Bazaarvoice (bazaarvoice.com) measured the impact
of ratings and reviews as boosting conversion to purchase by
up to 25 %. According to a 2012 study by review company
Reevoo as reported by Chowney (2012), 30 % of customers
who do not see any negative views become suspicious and
buyers who seek out and read bad reviews convert 67 %
more than the average consumer. Interestingly, negative
reviews appear not to have a detrimental effect on sales; we
do not live in a five-star world, and apparently, shoppers do
not expect this. New developments in ratings and reviews
are review syndications (to social networks), contrast reviews
(showing positive and negative reviews), tagged reviews
(tagging reviews with keywords and hashtags), video
reviews, geotagged mobile reviews, and story-based customer testimonials. For more about the positive impact of
negative reviews, see Abel (2014).
Social Recommendations and Referrals
Whereas ratings and reviews are usually visible to all, recommendations and referrals are personal endorsements that
have higher value for customers and advocates. The in-store
analogy for this strategy is when consumers ask a fellow
shopper for advice. Often, social recommendations take the
form of online versions of traditional referral-rewards programs (e.g., Sky TV’s “Introduce a Friend”), but can also use
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syndication tools via Twitter and Facebook to share recommendations with friends, fans, and followers. These are
closely related to ratings and reviews, and are sometimes
integrated with them.
Traditional online product review companies such as
Amazon.com, Bazaarvoice, and PowerReviews have advised
many consumers. Up-and-coming social shopping software
such as ShopSocially (shopsocially.com), Wanelo (wanelo.
com), Blippy (blippy.com), Swipely (swipely.com), and
Bee BargainsBeetailer (beetailer.com) now enables conversations about purchases. The product recommendations
come from people consumers know and are arguably trustworthier than reviews by strangers (recall the trust statistics
previously mentioned). It will be interesting to see if this
kind of model for product reviews will eventually replace
traditional company-generated website recommendations.
Many vendors provide infrastructures and services for
soliciting recommendations. For example, ThisNext (thisnext.com) is a social commerce site where “experts, top
bloggers, style mavens, and trendsetters of every kind” recommend their favorite products for shoppers to discover (see
thisnext.com/company). It blends two powerful elements of
real-world shopping otherwise lost for online consumers:
word-of-mouth recommendations from trusted sources and
the ability to browse products in the way that naturally leads
to discovery. ThisNext has also developed a suite of
distribution tools for bloggers, online communities, and
e-commerce sites. Another special site, productwiki.com,
collects product reviews from people all over the world and
any user can write a review. Users can review products, comment on products, and make changes to ProductWiki.
Sometimes, social shopping portals that bundle ratings
and reviews with recommendations also provide shopping
tools: A prime example is provided in the Kaboodle shopping community. Common recommendation methods
follow:
• Social bookmarking. Recommended products, deals,
and tips are bookmarked and shared with friends, fans,
and followers, using social bookmarking sites such as
Delicious.com. Members also bookmark many other
types of website content.
• Referral programs. These involve financial rewards for
customers and partners who refer new customers (e.g.,
Groupon, Gilt). For example, Vente Privee’s referral program “Add your referral ad with a referral link.” Some of
these programs give social media sites the opportunity to
make money when a user clicks from the site to the
retailer and purchases a product. For example, the
Amazon.com Associates program (affiliate-program.
amazon.com) provides bloggers and others with linking
tools for their sites; the social media owner gains revenue
by customers making “Qualified Purchases” via clicking
on the “Buy from Amazon.com” link. You can find exam-
5
Customer Engagement and Metrics
ples of this on blogs where the authors have a sidebar of
“books I like” or simply recommend books on a topic of
discussion complete with a link to Amazon.com (e.g.,
Path To Bliss; go to pathtobliss.com/books.html). The
first “matchmaking” referral service in the U.S. is
ReferAround (refaround.com).
• Social recommendations. Personal shopping recommendations are based on profile similarities to other customers (e.g., Amazon Recommendations).
• Other innovative methods. Companies such as Netflix
and StyleFeeder automate personal recommendations
based on algorithms, comparing similarities between customer purchasing histories and profiles and movie similarities. Amazon’s collaborative filtering software
presents product recommendations by displaying additional titles purchased by other consumers who also purchased the same book or CD.
Quick Reference (QR) Codes
QR codes are barcodes that appear as many black modules arranged as a square grid on a white background (see
Fig. 5.5). These barcodes were first developed for the automobile industry in 1994 to track inventory, according to
Wikipedia; however, they are now an exciting extension
of offline paid media that engages Internet users (see en.
wikipedia.org/wiki/QR_code). Consumers who have the
mobile tag reader application on their mobile device can
scan a QR code appearing in a print or outdoor advertisement by taking a picture with their phones. This immediately transports the user to a Web or social media site for
Fig. 5.5 QR Code. Source: created by Judy Strauss for free at qrcode.
kaywa.com
5.4
Engagement Techniques
more information on the brand, contest, or other information provided by the brand online. QR code scanning can
present a user with an online movie trailer, wallpaper for
download, text-based information on an event location
and time, in a form of dynamic promotions. According to
a study by comScore, in June 2011, 14 million users had
scanned a QR code from their mobile phones (as reported in
internetretailing.net/2011/08/14m-americans-scannedqr-and-bar-codes-with-their-mobiles-in-june-2011) and
qrcodepress.com/qr-codes-are-being-scanned-on-anincreasing-basis/8522600). Although many people think
QR codes are dead (replaced by augmented reality apps and
others), we mention them here because they are still a very
popular form of user engagement in branded promotional
content. At the time of this writing, marketers are beginning
to place QR codes on physical objects, such as ads, and by
scanning them, consumers will be transported to Facebook
and record an immediate “like”—just as would happen
when they click the “like” button on a website with a computer mouse. Companies can generate QR codes for free at
many websites and incorporate them in printed materials,
such as ads and business cards (see for example the theqrcode-generator.com, beqrious.com, unitag.io/qrcode,
or qrcode.kaywa.com).
There are many other techniques and examples for successful customer engagement in a brand or organization’s
messages. Next, we move to the gold at the top of the engagement ladder: user collaboration.
Collaborative Content Creation by Consumers
As previously mentioned, the most engaged customers help
the company improve products and promotions because they
either care deeply about the brand or are enticed by a successful engagement technique, such as posting product
improvement suggestions. In the process of reading customer postings, the company gains market research about the
behaviors and preferences of its markets. Collaborative content creation is crowdsourcing at its best.
At the simplest level, when you visit an automobile company’s website and click around to change the color of the
car, give it leather seats and other options, you are helping
the company learn about consumer preferences as it captures
your online click stream—and this will guide their future
product design.
At a deeper engagement level, The LEGO Group, a toy
maker, allows consumers to download software for creating
virtual LEGO designs (“build your dream model”)—Lego
Digital Designs (see ldd.lego.com/en-us; previously
“Design By Me”). Consumers create cool castles, robots,
and other virtual LEGO designs, and then upload their masterpieces to the LEGO gallery online. This is a great way for
109
LEGO to engage customers and to learn which new design
kits might sell well in brick-and-mortar stores.
Wikis are a great example of collaborative content creation because users actually create the content of the site.
For example, Demand Media Inc.’s eHow has over two million articles and videos created by consumers and professionals covering 30 categories and every topic from house
and garden tips to business ideas. All content is created by
site users and screened by site editors for quality and value
(see ehow.com).
Amazon.com, Barnes and Noble, and other online booksellers allow anyone to self-publish content by uploading a
digital e-book and selling it for download by iPad, PC,
Kindle, and other digital book readers. For example, 26
year old Amanda Hocking could not find a publisher for
her young-adult paranormal novels, so she began selling
them at online bookstores for $0.99 to $2.99 per digital
download of the book. In January 2011, she sold 450,000
copies of the 9 titles (Memmott 2011)! In January 2011,
Hocking earned 30 % for every 99¢ book and 70 % of
every $2.99 of the sales price for each book she sells. This
self-publishing capitalizes on the consumer behavior trend
toward more people reading e-books. It also cuts out the
book publishing middlemen and allows the online booksellers to offer many products created by consumer authors.
Incidentally, Amazon.com also allows users to upload
DVD, CD, MP3, and video content created by users for
sales on the site.
Many other social media sites benefit by allowing users to
upload digital multimedia content. CNN’s iReport accepts
videos, photos, and audio from citizen journalists who are on
the scene of breaking news. The best content is shown on the
site, and some receive iReport awards. iTunes and Amazon.
com allow musicians to upload digital music files for sale on
their sites. Musicians cannot upload music directly, but must
go through a distributor, such as CD Baby (the largest indie
online music store), who helps them obtain a bar code and
ascertains that the intellectual property belongs to said musician. Obviously, YouTube, Flickr, and many other multimedia sites contain only user-created content. Their business
models entice users to upload content, draw many eyeballs,
and sell advertising.
Many brands invite consumers to create advertising
(especially in videos) and upload it to a website for public
viewing, voting, and sharing. This UGC is often better than
the ads the company or agency would normally produce
because the authors often understand the market better than
the company.
Example
Beginning in 2010, the Frito-Lay “Crash the Super Bowl”
contest offered consumers the chance to create winning 30-s
television commercials for the Doritos brand and upload the
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videos to the contest site (crashthesuperbowl.com). In
2014, Frito Lay opened the contest up to contestants worldwide, and received thousands of video ad submissions from
over 30 countries. Site visitors vote on the best ad and select
two grand prize winners (one voted by site viewers and the
other selected by the company). The winners get their creation aired as a commercial during the Super Bowl championship football game in January. The winner does not receive
additional money; however, if the spot is awarded one of the
top three of the broadcast, according to the USA TODAY ad
meter rankings, the grand prize winner receives between
$400,000 and $1 million (for the top spot) and a chance to
work with professionals to produce another ad. Other brands,
such as FootLocker, teaming up with the shoe company
Asics, also offer opportunities to win video contests (e.g. see
onlinevideocontests.com and filmthenext.com).
How Do Companies Entice Engagement?
As Oscar Wilde famously noted, “The only thing worse than
being talked about is not being talked about.” How do companies engage the public, gaining trust and guiding people
from passive content consumption, up the ladder to sparking
positive brand conversations and viral activity? This involves
creating content and promotions that encourage people to
interact with the brand and then tag, bookmark or rate the
content and share opinions with others via comments and
recommendations in social media. Because they can reach
millions of people when they share, it is like the old fashioned word-of-mouth on steroids.
As with all effective promotions, three basic criteria must
be met—delivering the right message to the right markets in
the right environment, Kaplan and Haenlein (2010).
Accomplishing this requires a deep understanding of the
audience’s needs, behaviors, and motivations. In a 2011
ExactTarget study about the “Meaning of Like,” a research
company found reasons users don’t hit the “like” button on a
Facebook brand page (eMarketer 2011a):
• 54 % because they do not want to be bombarded with ads
or messages,
• 45 % because they do not want companies to have access
to profile information,
• 31 % do not want to push things into friends’ networks,
• 29 % do not want companies to contact them through
Facebook and
• 23 % did not see the benefit of doing so.
In contrast, Facebook members who do “Like” a company or brand have certain expectations: gain access to
exclusive content, events, or sales (58 %); receive discounts
or promotions through Facebook (58 %); receive updates
about the company in newsfeeds (47 %). The company can
5
Customer Engagement and Metrics
post updates, photos, or videos on newsfeed (39 %); the
name of the company, brand or organization to show up on
my profile (37 %); the company will contact me through
other channels (24 %); and do not expect anything to happen
(37 %) (eMarketer 2011a). For the full report, see exacttarget.com/resources/SFF8.pdf.
Thus, social media participants want to be informed,
entertained, appreciated, and not bombarded with interruptive brand messages, as seen in the following engagement
principles and examples.
Provide High Quality, Timely, Unique,
and Relevant Information
When companies like eMarketer, A.C. Nielsen, ComScore,
or Forrester release statistics from their primary research,
bloggers will write about it, giving their interpretations for
readers to comment upon and share. For example, Internet
marketing consultant Andy Beal started the Marketing
Pilgrim blog in 2005. He began his day in the wee hours by
reading his RSS streams from over 100 sites he followed. He
then would write a blog post about the latest news announced
by Google or another company, and give his expert analysis
on what it means to Internet marketers. Beal built his consulting business from his blog followers, sells advertising
space on his blog, participates in many interviews with
mainstream media, added a team of experts to write articles,
and is often in the top ten media and marketing blogs, as
rated by Advertising Age (see marketingpilgrim.com).
Robert Fleming, President/CEO of the eMarketing
Association in the U.S., wrote a very provocative blog post
on the association’s website. The article, “Social Media has
Ruined Marketing,” was posted on LinkedIn, and this
quickly received nearly 600 comments, creating a very lively
discussion.
Create Entertaining Content
Consumers will watch and share video commercials and
other company-created content that is entertaining, irreverent, interesting or unusual. For example, Blendtec created a
series of infomercials (called “Will It Blend”) showing the
power of its new consumer market blenders. The videos
showed the company CEO blending everything from a garden rake to golf balls, glow sticks, and an iPad. The iPhone 5
blending video alone received 8.4 million views within 12
months, and the blended iPhone remnants from an iPhone 4
blending received over $900 on eBay in 2007. As of March
2013, the Blendtec video series had received over 294 million views on YouTube, an undetermined amount on the
5.4
Engagement Techniques
Willitblend.com microsite, and have had an “amazing
impact” on company sales, according to the company CEO,
Tom Dickson (see digitalsparkmarketing.com/creativemarketing/marketing-strategy-creative-marketing/willit-blend-marketing-campaign and YouTube for more
details).
Offer Competitions
Many people love to compete and win prizes. For example,
the Microsoft Windows 7 launch included a “School Pride”
sales promotion campaign, asking site visitors to vote on
videos created by middle or high school students who hoped
to win a computer lab makeover. Microsoft used a social
graph that allowed voters to invite friends and followers to
vote as well. Microsoft experienced a 75 % increase in traffic
during the competition (Marketo 2011). Incidentally,
Washington’s Whatcom Middle School won the competition, providing another opportunity for social media activity
and publicity from Microsoft and its partner, NBC.
Appeal to Altruism
People like to share stories, videos, and other content about
social causes, such as experienced by H-D for the Save the
Honey Bees campaign. In another example, the American
Red Cross ran an article on their website announcing a blood
drive to assist residents after the storms that battered the East
Coast of the U.S. in 2011. Instead of providing the usual
paper sticker for the donor’s clothing (“I gave blood”), The
Red Cross made a virtual status badge that people could
share on their social networks, encouraging friends and followers to also donate blood (see Marketo 2011). In 2010, if
blood donors checked in via Foursquare, they could “shout”
a 140 character post including the words “Red Cross”
“blood” and “donate” to friends that they were currently giving blood and this would unlock a special donor badge that
appeared on the user’s Foursquare profile and would be automatically sent to a Twitter feed and the user’s Foursquare
profile (Behlmann 2010)
Make an Exclusive Offer
The social psychology principle of “scarcity” often motivates people to take action immediately (such as “only two
left so buy now!”). Artists and movie produces often release
songs or trailers for viewing by their fan bases, prior to
release to the general public. American rapper, Pitbull, went
further when promoting his CD, Planet Pit, by telling fans
that if they sent an early release online track link to friends,
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and three visited the website to listen, the original fan would
get to unlock three additional bonus tracks from the CD
(Marketo 2011).
Reward Influentials and Fans
Following the famous Pareto principle (the “80-20” rule”),
that 80 % of the business comes from 20 % of the customers;
most of the buzz about a brand comes from a small number
of fans. If Andy Beal or the Huffington Post continuously
write about a company, they should be rewarded. Rewards of
appreciation can take the form of exclusive information, first
chance at breaking news, or a free gift—such as the chance
to review a new product that they get to keep, an exclusive
offer or a special discount. Following the principles of customer relationship management (Chap. 7), a brand will do
well to occasionally appreciate its important fans. Foursquare
allows this by awarding “mayor” status to the people who
check in the most number of days during a 60-day time
period at a particular location. Frito-Lay made the Guinness
World Records title in April 2011 for the “most fans on
Facebook,” with more than 1.5 million new “likes” on its
Facebook page (“fans”). They rewarded fans by giving away
24,000 bags of chips, via coupons, to the first fans who
“liked” the page and registered on a special “giveaway tab”
(see fritolay.com/about-us/press-release-20110428.html).
It didn’t stop there: Frito-Lay had 2,356,753 likes as of
August 2014.
Incentivize Group Behavior
Following the social psychology principle of reciprocity,
customers can be motivated to participate in social media if
offered an incentive up front (versus the simple “thank you”
type reward just mentioned). For example, Oscar Mayer
gave consumers an offline discount coupon to an initial product trial of its Oscar Mayer Selects hot dogs. They added a
deal sweetener: share a “Taste-a-Monial” review of the product and receive a seconds coupon. The twist was that for
every 5,000 people who shared Taste-a-Monials, the coupon
value increased by 50¢ until the consumer could receive a
full free pack of the hot dogs. Using the scarcity principle,
the offer was limited to a short time period (Dhalokia 2011).
A key principle of enticing engagement is to make it easy
for users. For instance, most social media and many websites
provide one click buttons for “liking,” tagging, bookmarking
(e.g., offering a Delicious button), subscribing via an RSS
feed button (which can rapidly spread the content) and sharing content on social networks. Many sites also allow users
to register with one click, using their Facebook or other
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5
social network profile. For example, BostInnovation (now
BostsInno) provides information on happenings in the
Boston area. The site implemented Gigya’s social login
application so that users could register and sign in using an
existing Facebook, Twitter, etc. account, and comment
directly on BostonInnovation’s site. This resulted in a 58 %
increase in commenting activity, according to
BostonInnovation’s co-founder Kevin McCarthy (appsthisway.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/gigya-social-roicasestudies.pdf).
Thus far, we have been painting a rosy picture of customer engagement and all the good it can do for a brand or
organization. As hard as marketers try to deliver a good
product and respect consumer communication preferences,
things can quickly go downhill in social media. For example,
in 2006, General Motors emulated the Frito-Lay consumer
generated ad contest, providing consumers with video,
audio, and images to use in constructing commercials for the
Chevy Tahoe. It worked well for GM, too; however, there
was negative backlash—approximately 20 % of the entries
had superimposed text right in the ads mentioning the Chevy
Tahoe’s part in using up the world’s oil and causing global
warming. For example, one YouTube video entry had the following text over images of the Chevy Tahoe driving in wilderness: “Like snow? Beautiful landscapes? Be sure to take
it all in now because tomorrow this (expletive deleted) SUV
will change the world. Global warming isn’t a pretty SUV
ad. It’s a frightening reality.” (See npr.org/templates/story/
story.php?storyId=5320442.) These videos subsequently
were posted as ad parodies on YouTube and received a lot of
press. Regardless, GM felt the campaign was a huge success
because 80 % of the ads were positive about the brand and
many people watched them. The moral: in an online environment where everyone is a critic, expect the brand’s underbelly to be exposed. This brings us to an important topic:
How can a company manage its brand messages and reputation in the “Wild West” environment of social media?
5.5
REPUTATION MANAGEMENT
IN SOCIAL MEDIA
In February 2011, Egyptian citizens used social media to
organize protests against President Hosni Mubarak, high
unemployment, and rising prices. They used Facebook,
Twitter, and YouTube until the government blocked all WiFi
and cell networks. This didn’t stop the people, who then used
dial up phone modems to connect and organize protests.
Mubarak fell from power. If social media conversation can
bring down the government of Egypt, what can it do to a
company, brand or CEO?
Customer Engagement and Metrics
Kitchen Aid, the appliance producer, found out very
quickly in 2012 when the social media manager sent an
inappropriate tweet from the company @KitchenAidUSA
Twitter account that spoke negatively about then candidate Barack Obama, saying something to the effect that
his grandmother died three days before he became president the first time because she knew it wasn’t going to go
well with him as President. That 140 character message
created a fast and huge backlash against the company.
Even though the tweet was meant to be sent from someone’s personal account, the company sent an apology
tweet to the Twitter community and directly to Obama,
taking full responsibility for its social media mismanagement (Moore 2012).
Reputation is “the beliefs or opinions that are generally
held about someone or something,” according the Oxford
dictionary. Abraham Lincoln is attributed to saying that
“Character is like a tree and reputation like a shadow. The
shadow is what we think of it; the tree is the real thing.”
Thus, an entity’s reputation is based on what other people
think of it, not what it thinks of itself. With social media,
there is plenty of opportunity for consumers to shape the
reputation of a company, its brands and its employees.
Brands and companies have lost a great deal of control over
their images and reputations and must now monitor, engage,
and participate in social media conversations or pay the consequences. In a global study of 300 large company executives in 2013, Deloitte found a consensus that reputational
risk was among corporate America’s greatest challenges.
(See the survey results at deloitte.com/view/en_IQ/iq/
press/press-releases/d78b76006de23410VgnVCM3000003456f70aRCRD.htm.)
Quality, transparency, and trust principally influence
company and brand reputations (according to a recent
Edelman annual Trust survey). In order to be trusted, an
entity must be reliable, high quality, authentic, transparent,
and follow through on its promises. Marketers often describe
a brand as a promise to deliver promoted benefits, and if they
do not follow through on that promise, they are open to
attack in the social media. For example, if an automobile
does not get the advertised gas mileage, a customer will lose
some degree of trust in the company/brand and likely talk
about this gas mileage disparity online on product review
sites or in social networks or blogs. Transparency occurs
when companies honestly and quickly reveal the truth before
or during a reputation crisis. If they hide the truth and later
are discovered, the negative social media conversation will
escalate. Transparency includes honest conversation in
social media and revealing product improvement processes,
such as Dell does in its IdeaStorm microsite previously
discussed.
5.5
Reputation Management in Social Media
Consider the following statistics:
• In 2013, only 58 % of the world trusted businesses to do
“what is right” (according to the 2013 Edelman Trust
Survey).
• 25 % of searches for the world’s twenty largest brands
return links to user-generated content (reported by
Qualman 2009). Search engines rank as the first place
people go for information about a company, according to
the Edelman Trust Survey.
• 34 % of bloggers post opinions about product and brands,
and these are read by those people who follow and trust
the blogs (reported by Qualman 2009).
• Only 14 % of people trust advertisements (Qualman
2009). This is likely because the intent of advertising is to
persuade consumers by presenting only the positive about
a product (in contrast, recall the high number of people
who trust people like themselves).
• Who do consumers trust? According to the 2013
Edelman Trust Survey, most trusted are academics or
experts on company issues (68 %), then “a person like
you” (60 %), followed by regular employees (49 %) and
CEO’s (40 %).
• Trust needs repetition: In order to trust a company message, 4–14 % will believe the positive information after
hearing it one to two times, and only 35 % will believe it
after hearing it three times (according to the 2013 Edelman
Trust Survey).
Beyond social media participant responses to company
actions, people often write negative posts in the middle of
the night, surprising the companies who are the objects of
these attacks. This happened to Nestle in March 2010, as discussed in the following example:
Example
Greenpeace UK, the activist not-for-profit organization
working for a green and peaceful world, posted a video on
both their site and YouTube to build awareness of a perceived
problem of the diminishing rainforest and pushing orangutans towards extinction. Nestlé, the maker of Kit Kat candy
bars, was purchasing palm oil extracted from forests in
Indonesia, thus “trashing the Indonesian rainforests, threatening the livelihoods of local people and pushing orangutans
towards extinction,” according to the video’s description
( greenpeace.org/international/en/campaigns/climatechange/kitkat). The video on the Greenpeace site, titled:
“Need a Break? So Does the Rainforest” and on YouTube,
titled: “Have a Break? Greenpeace Campaign against KitKat
and Nestle” (youtube.com/watch?v=VaJjPRwExO8)
shows an office worker taking a break by eating a Kit Kat
bar. When he bites into it, blood gushes from the
chocolate bar.
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The whole series of videos received 1.5 million views by
March 2010; however, the damage really escalated on
Nestlé’s Facebook page. Immediately after the initial March
17, 2010 video post, viewers began complaining about the
palm oil harvesting with comments on the company’s
Facebook page. Some of the protesters created a graphic imitation of the Kit Kat candy bar, replacing the brand name
with the word “Killer” in the same font or stamping the package with bloody orangutan footprints. They made this image
their profile picture on Facebook so every post on the Nestlé
page included this image.
Nestlé responded by saying: “we welcome your comments,
but please don’t post using an altered version of any of our
logos as your profile pic—they will be deleted.” This inappropriate response created a blog storm and many more posts, and
shifted the conversation away from the core issue of forest
destruction and animal extinction to Nestlé's ineptitude in
social media. Nestlé debated with commenters, defending its
decision to censor profile pictures and then started deleting
comments as well. It got very nasty. Eventually, the Nestle
executive running the Facebook page posted this comment:
“This (deleting logos) was one in a series of mistakes for
which I would like to apologize. And for being rude. We’ve
stopped deleting posts and I’ve stopped being rude.”
What is really amazing is the speed at which this
happened:
• March 17: Greenpeace posted the video on YouTube. The
video was viewed 750,000 times in 1 week. Nestle
attempted to have the video removed.
• March 18: 190 Facebook complaints and thousands of
Tweets in response.
• March 19 at 2:26 AM: Nestlé responds on Facebook with
the plan to delete the “Killer” bar logos and comments.
• March 19 at 1:29 PM: Nestlé apologizes on Facebook and
stops deleting the posts.
Several companies analyzed the social media conversations after this incident. One found that social media conversations including both terms “Nestlé” and “Facebook”
jumped by 40 % on March 19, 2010, and that 16 % of this
conversation was negative, 66 % neutral, and 16 % positive
(as measured by the former site, blog.biz360.com). For an
analysis of Nestlé’s social media crisis, see the slideshow at
slideshare.net/ngonza/nestle-greenpeace.
Sources:
youtube.com/watch?v=VaJjPRwExO8;
greenpeace.org/international/en/news/features/Sweetsuccess-for-Kit-Kat-campaign;
and
slideshare.net/
ngonza/nestle-greenpeace (all accessed August 2014).
In Chap. 7, we describe several incidents of how people
use social media to publicize their complaints. Notable is the
case of ‘United Breaks Guitars.’
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Note: To learn how to complain effectively in social
media, see McGrail (2013) and visit gripvine.com, a forum
where unhappy customers can connect directly with customer decision makers to get their voices heard and complaints resolved quickly.
Which Reputations Matter?
As previously mentioned, brand and company reputations
are very important. Twenty-one percent of company market
value on the New York Stock Exchange’s S&P is based on
corporate reputation (according to a study conducted by
intangible asset specialist Reputation Dividend, and reported
by the Holmes Report on May 25, 2014; holmesreport.
com/expertknowledge-info/14999/More-Than-20Percent-Of-SP-500-Value-Attributable-To-Reputation.
aspx). It is very difficult for a company to recover from reputation damage, and according to the experiences of many
companies, it can take several years to repair reputation
damage.
In an interesting example, Brazilian creative agency,
Moma Propaganda, was stripped of two awards and prohibited from entering the Cannes Lions International Festival of
Creativity for a year. The agency entered two fake ads for
Kia Motors Brazil—“fake” meaning that they created the ads
for the competition—but the ads were neither approved by
Kia nor run in any traditional or online media. Cannes discovered this when it came across the firestorm of social
media conversation, which criticized the campaign for overtones of lust and pedophilia. This incident created reputationdamaging publicity for both the agency and Kia Motors
Brazil, until the latter said they had neither seen nor approved
the ads (Wentz and Penteado 2011).
The reputation of a company’s CEO is linked closely to
the reputation of the company. Many PR firms suggest that
problems occur when there is negative company or CEO
news. Often, the reputations of other company executives
also affect the company. For example, the reputations of job
recruiters in a company can make a big difference when trying to attract good employees (Shih 2011). Successful
recruiters build their reputations on LinkedIn and this helps
them build good relationships with previous job candidates
and new hires.
Recently, there has been a great deal of talk and information about using social media for personal branding. This
especially applies to consultants, salespeople, and other professionals, as well as to college students who are about to
enter the job market (see business.unr.edu/faculty/jstrauss/
personal.htm for a series of exercises to develop your personal brand).
5
Customer Engagement and Metrics
Build, Maintain, Monitor, Repair, and Learn
The reputation management process includes four steps:
build, maintain, monitor, and repair. Many of the techniques
for implementing these steps are discussed elsewhere in the
book so we just touch upon them here. There are many promotional techniques for building a strong reputation, but it all
starts with the company’s actions. As previously mentioned,
most social media reputation crises happen because of something the company does or does not do. Given positive
actions, the company can use owned or paid media and join
the conversation in earned social media to communicate its
benefits to consumers and other stakeholders. This book
gives many examples of how companies do this, such as
engaging customers and prospects who participate in social
media, where they hang out online and using search engine
optimization tactics (discussed later in this chapter).
Maintaining positive reputations requires constant
Internet and offline media monitoring and then sometimes
participating when things go awry. We say “sometimes”
because companies decide whether or not to respond based
on three factors: (1) how valuable is the poster to the company, (2) how much potential does the comment contain for
creating reputation damage, and (3) how widely can the discussion travel in social media (Flynn 2012)? For example, if
the comment came from a high value customer or influential
journalist, the company will respond immediately, sometimes by direct e-mail to the person who posted the comment. Conversely, if the poster is a low value customer or
competitor and it does not seem like a big enough conversation to spread far, the company might ignore the comment.
Interestingly, one survey of marketers found that in response
to customer complaints or questions, 29 % seldom or never
respond to them on Twitter and 17 % said the same for
Facebook posts (eMarketer 2011b). These may be low-value
complaints, but this same study found that 22 % of companies do not even know if their customers use social media to
comment on company products, so we suspect that many
reputations are declining unnoticed by marketers.
The Nestlé example shows the need to monitor social
media conversation 24/7 and assign appropriate personnel to
Facebook and other social media for beneficial user interactions. Xbox was found to be the fastest brand to respond to
customer queries on Twitter, with an average response time
of 2 minutes and 42 second(s), whereas another study found
the fastest U.S. retailer responses took over 4 h (Hanger
2011). It is also critically important to understand and fix the
underlying problem, if possible, prior to responding to bloggers and other social media detractors. Without substance,
responses to a crisis can be seen as empty promises to social
media participants.
5.5
Reputation Management in Social Media
When a company creates a Facebook business page, by
default, it allows other Facebook members—potentially
including disgruntled customers or unscrupulous competitors—to post notes on the page, or comment on what the
company has posted. However, if the page owner turns off
the feature that allows others to write on the Wall, people
may wonder what the company fears or is hiding. Turning
off the feature also precludes great customer fan conversations and engagement that could promote the products and
services better than the company could do (because people
trust others like them online). Companies can delete posts,
but that may only encourage the poster to scream louder
about being censored, as happened in the Nestlé case. Most
social media marketing experts advise deleting only the most
offensive posts, while trying to address the rest as constructively as possible. In fact, this is how a company can learn
things that will improve its products and processes.
For example, Coca-Cola has 88 million fans on its
Facebook page worldwide, with 80 % living outside the U.S.
(2011 data). The company uses geotags so that fans see relevant posts in their own language, based on the poster’s IP
(Internet Protocol) address (for example, someone posting
from .de would see only German language posts). Coke
posted something it thought would appeal to fans—“Student
Day:” “Today’s the Day of the Student! If you’re part of this
group [of students], show us by having some fun or posting
a comment here. And congratulations” (Creamer 2011).
Unfortunately, there was a glitch in the geotagging on
Facebook and for 10 minutes U.S. fans saw this post in
Portuguese instead of English. This created a firestorm of
xenophobic comments from U.S. fans, such as “Speak
English or @#* die!” (Expletive deleted). Apparently, U.S.
fans think that Coke is an American brand and should stay
that way. Many of the comments were in blatant disregard of
Coke’s Facebook rules, and Coca-Cola removed the
Portuguese post and all the offensive comments from its
American viewers.
Repairing reputations can take an average of 3.2 years, as
previously mentioned. This involves fixing the fundamental
problems causing the crisis, communicating the solutions to
important stakeholders, and enticing social media participants to spread the conversation. One site to watch is
RipOffReport.com, because it allows users to post company/
product complaints, scams, reviews or frauds. The post often
appears in a Google search for the company or brand. As
with most negative posts, the way to bury it into later Google
search results pages is to be sure the company has many positive posts and pages that include recent content.
Most good companies learn from criticism in social
media and act upon what they hear. Negative comments add
authenticity in balancing a company’s one-sided owned and
paid media, and when handled well, can boost reputations
and sales. Product reviews, complaints, and positive sugges-
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tions help companies improve products, processes, and Web
content. The best way to encourage this type of posting is by
hosting a conversation on the company’s own social media
properties so it becomes easier to identify, learn, and then
respond that changes have been made (if warranted). This
kind of dialog often prevents complaints from going viral as
well. For example, My Starbucks Idea (mystarbucksidea.
force.com) has several hundred thousand users and accepts
ideas for product, experience, and involvement categories.
Mystarbucksidea.force.com lists recent ideas as they are
sent via Twitter, Facebook, or posted on the site, and then
reports on “ideas in action.” Users can click on each idea to
see its status and add comments. This is a brilliant way to
learn from customers without doing expensive market
research, and it yields a lot more actionable data as well (see
Chap. 1 opening case for more information). For more information on using reputation management, see seofriendly.
com/tag/reputation-management.
One important way to avoid unwarranted reputation crises involves building a reputation management system in
company owned social media.
Reputations Management Systems
Reputation management systems use various predefined
criteria for processing complex data to report reputation.
This is a technology solution that helps companies initiate
and monitor reputations. One tactic is to design the system
properly so that there will be more opportunities for positive
comments. A properly designed site will attract the proper
visitors and facilitate proper trust and interactions. Thus,
instead of looking at negatives, reputation systems should
build trust, promote quality, facilitate member matching, and
sustain loyalty.
Example
Most social media platforms have a member profile feature,
which allows others to see more about who is posting on the
medium, and also to view information about some of the
member’s activities. Furthermore, many social networks
require a reply to an automated outgoing e-mail when a user
signs up to access that site, so they know the user actually
resides at that e-mail address and is not simply a spammer.
eBay and other social commerce sites have feedback systems
so that buyers can rate sellers for all future buyers to see; buyers have the same system. Similarly, Slashdot (slashdot.org)
uses a “karma” rating system, and others also have systems
where users can rate the reviews and even the ratings of other
users. These reputation management systems help build
authenticity and trust in contributors to the conversation.
Facebook grew and outdid MySpace partially because of
its reputation management techniques. It initially engaged
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5
users and built trust through e-mail authentication, privacy
settings, building the site around relationships in the offline
world (Shih 2011). Facebook started as a site for Harvard
University and other Ivy League schools, adding to its
credibility.
In another reputation management system example,
Rosetta Stone is a maker of software for language translation. It is mostly a B2B organization. To get the most out of
social media, Rosetta Stone uses a strategy and software to
control its customer interaction on Facebook. The strategy
involves both human intervention as well as an investment in
software to help monitor its social networking presence.
Specifically, the company software helps to monitor Wall
posts and respond to them appropriately. Rosetta Stone uses
Parature, Inc. software to scan fan Wall posts, add them to a
database, and flag those that need a response from the company. This solution is handy because it all occurs on a special
Facebook support tab and separates fans chatting among
themselves from discussions involving company customer
service representatives (Carr 2010). For details, see facebook.com/RosettaStone.
5.6
SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION
Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of improving the visibility of a company or a brand on the results page
displayed by a search engine. Here, we will discuss only a
few principles, which relate to social media and positive
earned media. The purpose of search engine optimization “is
to increase a website’s traffic counts, and eventually conversions, by getting higher search engine placement for the keywords in the search query” (per Bruce Clay; see bruceclay.
com/seo/search-engine-optimization.htm), who provides a
free tutorial on SEO).
Search engines rank sites on search engine results pages
(SERP) using complicated algorithms partially based on
user-inputted key words because the search engines want to
present results that are relevant to users. Ideally, the results
should be among the top five listings on the first page.
Companies often hire search optimizers or try to optimize by
themselves. SEO can increase the number of visitors to a
website, and therefore companies are willing to pay for this
service. To learn how to do this, see Harris (2013). SEO is
performed in all types of online searches, including video
search, social network search, and image search. Google is
well known for using over 200 factors in their algorithm to
determine rankings (e.g., social signals, user interaction signals, trust); however, a few important principles regarding
SEO and social commerce are discussed below (see Google’s
Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide for more detail at
static.googleusercontent.com/media/www.google.com/en/
Customer Engagement and Metrics
us/webmasters/docs/search-engine-optimization-starterguide.pdf). For an infographic and examples of Google’s
search engine ranking factors (2013), see searchenginejournal.com/infographic-googles-200-ranking-factors/64316.
We focus on Google in this section because it had a 68.7 %
share of the search market in June 2014 (according to comScore’s monthly qSearch), while none of the remaining
search engines achieved more than a 19 % share (see comscore.com/Insights/Market-Rankings/comScoreReleases-July-2014-US-Search-Engine-Rankings). The
principles are:
1. Spread fresh content all over the Web. The more sites
and social media pages a company or brand maintains,
the more links will appear on search engine results pages.
This is important because when negative content appears
in social media, it will briefly appear within the search
results but a lot of solid, current Web content, such as
images, podcasts, videos, press releases, and articles,
will quickly drive the negative content to later pages in
the search results. For example, when searching for “Will
it Blend,” the branded microsite appears first on the
results page. This is followed by three YouTube videos,
the Blendtec company YouTube channel, a Wikipedia
entry, the company’s Facebook page, the company’s
blog, and then two social media columns about the company’s blenders and fascinating campaign—one a humorous and positive parody of the viral videos (“will the
blender blend itself?”). See Fig. 5.6 for the top five
results. Of course, a company will only create content for
sites frequented by its target audience and social media
influentials.
2. Relevance and popularity. Google judges relevance by
incoming links to a Web page and the popularity of the
site based on clicks from a SERP or number of tweets or
“likes” or comments on a company’s Facebook page. For
example, if it is a musician’s site and lots of credible
similar sites link to it (such as a radio station blog),
Google assumes it is highly relevant and popular, moving it closer to the top of the SERP. Companies seek
these inbound links—e.g., one blogger we interviewed
for a previous book asked to be linked from our university pages because “.edu” domains have more Google
credibility than do “.com” sites. Social media marketers
put many cross-links to various sites, such as linking
from the microsite to the Facebook page and cross-linking to pages within the site. Google also defines “relevance” as individual-specific using social graphs, so if
you search for “the best restaurant” in your town the top
result might well be one that your Facebook friends rated
highly on Yelp.com, whereas someone else’s SERP will
reflect what their friends commented upon in other social
media sites.
5.6
Search Engine Optimization
117
Fig. 5.6 SERP for “Will it Blend”. Source: Reproduced with permission from © Blendtec and permission standards on google.com
3. Optimize content. A search engine’s automated robots
search websites to see which words are the most important, partially by looking at topic headings, page titles
(words that appear on the browser tabs), URL names,
meta tags (placed in the HTML code for each page), and
other things in large fonts. This means that social media
marketers must understand their audiences’ desired benefits and search habits so they can select key words to
populate the sites used by target markets for searching.
For example, the “Student LoanDown” blog about student loans and Wells Fargo bank financing uses 29 key
words in its meta tag but only 3 of them rank in Google’s
first SERP but don’t rank in Google’s first page for 26 of
them—these are the ones used in the name of the blog as
well (search for blogs.wellsfargo.com/studentloandown). This site needs to revise its key words to focus on
a smaller number to be used throughout the content.
4. SEO tactics constantly change. Google is famous for
adjusting its search algorithm (around 500–600 times per
year; “major” algorithm changes about once a month),
both to improve results and to control site owners from
spamming the system (such as putting key words at the
bottom of the page in white text all over a white background so search engines are able to read it but users do
not; promoting the same piece of content repeatedly;
place unneeded words in title tags). Bloggers who partake
in spamming can have their blog disappear—
“blacklisted”—from Google search. This means that
social media marketers must constantly watch developments and change tactics accordingly. We recommend
visiting
searchengineland.com/library/channel/seo,
searchenginewatch.com/seo, and moz.com (formerly
SEOmoz), for the latest SEO developments and capabilities. Google provides three free SEO tools: Google
Webmasters, Google AdWords Keyword Planner, and
Google PageSpeed (see Dawson 2014).
In one example of what not to do, Nevada’s former governor, Jim Gibbons, posted images from appearances, a blog,
118
5
and his authored white papers on the official State of Nevada
website (nv.gov). When the citizens became critical of his
decisions, a search for “Jim Gibbons” showed the nv.gov
page first on the search results page and then nine links to
criticism on other sites. Some of these links to the negative
content lasted for several years on the first page of the SERP
and could have been bounced to later pages, if the governor
had spread fresh content, such as, posting images on Flickr,
making a unique URL for his blog, creating Facebook and
Twitter accounts, and inserting content in Wikipedia and
elsewhere that would appear in the first ten links on the
SERP for his name. This action would move the criticism on
other sites lower in the SERP in favor of fresh content posted
by the governor on many different sites.
Note that, although password protected sites such as
Facebook and Twitter are crawled by search engines for public display in the SERP, users have to log onto these sites in
order to follow the link. If a company wants its content to
appear on Google and be easily viewed, it will create a public page that is available to people who are not required to be
logged onto the site. Moreover, Facebook provides its own
powerful search engine for users who are logged in, and
there are many specialized search engines for social media
sites, such as Topsy and Bing Social. For 40 advanced and
alternative top search engines, see to blog.kissmetrics.com/
alternative-search-engines. Companies work to be sure
their content is listed by these specialty companies, who
usually allow submissions if the search robots have not yet
found the sites.
As with any social strategy, companies working on an
SEO program first work to understand the Web behaviors
and social sites used by their target market and influentials in
terms of publishing and sharing content. They then set SEO
goals and monitor the results.
In the next section, you will learn about how companies
listen and measure in social media.
5.7
MONITOR, MEASURE, AND REFINE:
SM METRICS
A performance metric is a measure of the organization’s
performance on activities designed to achieve specific objectives (also called “Web Analytics” for the online environment). As shown in Fig. 4.1 (in Chap. 4), a company specifies
which metrics will be used to measure marketing communication success, then uses these measures as feedback to (1)
see if the campaign objectives were met, and (2) continually
refine the strategies and tactics to enhance performance. For
example, Starbucks wanted to engage customers and learn
ways to better meet their needs through product innovation.
It created the My Starbucks Idea microsite and can count the
number of suggestions, measure the sentiment (as positive/
Customer Engagement and Metrics
negative), and identify the number of product changes to see
if its engagement and learning goals were achieved. We will
discuss strategy, tactics, and measurement more thoroughly
in Chap. 10; however, this section includes popular metrics
for measuring the success of communication efforts through
owned, paid, and earned media.
There are hundreds of possible performance metrics, so
it is important to select some that can easily be measured on
a continuous basis and directly applied to the organization’s
social commerce communication objectives. Both Albert
Einstein and sociologist William Bruce Cameron have been
credited for variations of quote: “Not everything that can be
counted counts, and not everything that counts can be
counted.” Marketers are drowning in metrics and many
choose easy metrics, such as number of clicks on a link to a
Web page or “likes” on Facebook. It is critical for them to
be effective and efficient in metric selection and measurement so that the results of their efforts will help improve
marketing communications toward meeting the company’s
goals.
Figure 5.7 displays five general measurement areas, from
awareness through innovation, along with sample metrics
used in each area. For the purposes of measurement, see
Patterson (2014). For ten online marketing metrics organizations need to be measuring, see DeMers (2014). The pyramid
shape represents the fact that the number of consumers acting at each level decreases at higher levels: e.g., (1) the most
people will become aware of a Blendtec blender from the
viral video, (2) fewer will post comments about it (brand
health), (3) fewer still will engage more deeply with the
brand by forwarding or using social bookmarking to tag the
video (engagement), then (4) even fewer will visit the
Blendtec site to read about their blenders and purchase one
(action), and (5) the smallest number are loyal customers
who post collaborative type comments that Blendtec can use
to improve the product (innovation).
We next provide some examples of metrics at each pyramid level. Note that companies also use many of these metrics to monitor their competition.
Awareness/Exposure Metrics
The most accurate way to measure an increase in brand
awareness is to conduct survey research using a representative sample from the company’s target market. However, this
is very expensive and difficult to accomplish due to declining response rates on surveys, so organizations use many
other proxy metrics to gain some measure of progress toward
this awareness level goal. These metrics assume that if users
access an organization’s Facebook page or other social media
content, they will become aware of the product features
discussed in an ad or on the pages:
5.7
Monitor, Measure, and Refine: SM Metrics
119
Number of ideas, trend spotting
Innovation
Click through, contact form completion or
registration, event attendance, purchase
Action
Engagement
Content viewership, tagging/bookmarking/likes,
membership/follower, number of shares, content
creation
Brand health
Share of voice, sentiment, brand influence
Unique visitors, page views, impressions, number
of searches, search engine ranking, number of
followers/registrations/subscribers
Awareness/Exposure
Social Media Measurement Pyramid
Sample Metrics
Fig. 5.7 Social media measurement areas. Source: created by Judy Strauss
• Unique visitors measures the number of visitors—without repetition—who access a site, application, video, or
other social media content within a specific period of
time. Unique visitors are measured by user registration,
cookie files, or by a third party measurement service such
as Nielsen or comScore. Unique visitors additionally are
categorized as either new or repeat visitors. Search
engines also visit these sites, so companies must filter out
visits from automated “bots.” The number of views of
each video on YouTube is posted under the video.
• Page views refer to single pages that are viewed on a
social media site. For example, one unique visitor can
view many different blog entries on one blog site.
Obviously, the more pages users view, the longer they are
on the site learning about the brand.
• Impressions refer to the number of times an ad loads on a
user’s screen. This metric forms the bases of the CPM
(cost per thousand impressions/views) pricing model.
• Number of searches measure the number of times users
search for the brand, company, or associated key words
selected by the organization while typing the key words in
a search engine.
• Search engine ranking evaluates where the organization’s
social media content appears in the search engine results
pages for desired key words. For instance, if a user types
in the name of the company, brands, or executives, ideally
the links will appear in the first ten links/page one of the
results page.
• Number of followers, registrations, or subscribers to
the blog, social network page, video channel, or other
content. These are also used to measure earned media
engagement.
Brand Health Metrics
In this category, companies want to measure the influence
their communications have on consumers. Brand health
refers to the amount of conversation and what proportion of
the sentiment is positive or negative. It also measures the
brand importance to consumers and whether or not this
translates into purchases. Measures in this area include the
following:
• Share of voice (SOV) is the proportion of conversations
about one brand versus its competitors. In the offline
world, SOV measures the weight of advertising space in
traditional media, but in social media, it usually is only
measured by conversation. In a quantitative example, if
your brand “appeared in the media 20 times in 2013 and
there were 150 instances of total coverage among your
company and its competitors, your quantitative share of
voice would be 13.3 % (20/150 = 0.1333 × 100 = 13.3)”
(Cramer 2014). Qualitative measures include the level of
importance for the site that mentions a brand (e.g., CNN
would score higher than an lesser-known local media station). For more details, including a formula for calculating SOV, examples and charts, see socialmediaexaminer.
com/metrics-to-track-your-social-media-efforts.
• Sentiment refers to the proportion of conversation about
a brand that is positive, negative, or neutral, whereas
SOV is simply about the number of conversations. On
August 16, 2014, we typed “Nike” into the social media
search box at socialmention.com and got the following
results (number of mentions): positive (86), neutral
(253) and negative (4). The site calculated brand
strength at 55 % due to a 22:1 positive to negative con-
120
versation (sentiment). This site aggregates user generated content “across the universe.” It monitors over 100
social media properties and SOV (see socialmention.
com/about). For six ways to measure social media see
Bendror (2013).
• Brand influence can include a number of other metrics,
including number of inbound links to a social media property, number of Twitter links that are retweeted, number
of comments on posts, and number of times content is
shared or linked (Jones 2011).
Engagement Metrics
There are many ways to engage social media users, as discussed in this chapter and Chap. 3. Engagement metrics are
endless, and the ones companies select depend on the specific content, promotion, or other communication objectives and tactics. Following are some of the most common
measures relating to the engagement levels previously
discussed:
• Content viewership refers to the number of users who
consume content, such as reading a blog (page views),
watching videos or listening to podcasts, and downloading white papers.
• Tagging, bookmarking or “likes” for content that can be
counted.
• Membership/follower metrics count the number of RSS
subscribers, members in a community, such as a LinkedIn
or Meetup.com group, or number of followers on Twitter.
• Number of shares measures how many times viral content
is shared with others.
• Content creation counts the number of users who upload
ads for a UGC contest, such as the Frito-Lay Super Bowl
promotion. Companies can also measure the number of
people who rate or review products, write comments on
blogs or videos or retweet interesting or humorous tweets,
and other content related items measured in previous
categories.
• Virtual worlds: number of users visiting the company
property, how long they stay, and whether or not they
interact with the various features.
• Online games: number playing, length of time spent in
the game, purchase of virtual properties and clicks on
game links.
Action Metrics
Although engagement metrics demonstrate actions taken by
users, this category takes it to a higher level of action:
• Click through to an organization’s site. The proportion of
all people who are exposed to a communication message
and those who click to visit the site measures this.
5
Customer Engagement and Metrics
• Contact form completion or registration. This allows the
company to add the person to their database of names,
e-mail addresses, and more.
• Branded mobile apps: number of downloads, updates and
number of actions that that are built into the app (such as
“checking in” with a location-based app or earned media
“shares”).
• QR codes: number of scans and other actions, such as
sales, taken at the designated location.
• Event attendance: this can be online or offline,
based on a social media promotion for a Webinar or other
event.
• Purchase is the ultimate goal for social commerce.
Companies measure conversion rates (proportion of all
site visitors who purchase), number of purchases, average
order value, and many other metrics that evaluate communication effectiveness toward this goal. Note that,
many other factors lead to purchase, such as product quality, price, and availability; however, social media communication (especially discount promotions) can play an
important role in motivating purchase.
Innovation Metrics
In this category, companies want to know if their social
media communications are driving customers to comment
and review in ways that help the company improve its products and services. Many of these metrics are also included in
other categories, but we single innovation out because it is a
very high level of brand engagement and builds customer
loyalty. A few measures include:
• Number of ideas shared in a company’s social media site
(such as Dell’s IdeaStorm).
• Trend spotting helps companies know what is hot in their
target markets. Google Trends displays “hot” search key
words and allows users to search trends. Trendsmap
tracks and displays real time Twitter trends worldwide,
and many blogs and other sites provide word cloud displays of the most popular words in posts. Many other
companies report social media trends.
Measurement Tools
Many companies offer excellent tools for measuring the previously mentioned and many other metrics. You can search
Google images for “social media dashboards” and see many
tools. Companies select from free Google analytics, other paid
tools or use more sophisticated analytic dashboards that are
continuously populated with metrics of choice. These tools
help companies monitor progress toward objectives and tactical effectiveness, and help them catch negative conversations
about their products as they occur, which is just as important.
5.7
Summary
121
Fig. 5.8 Salesforce Radian6 Social Media Dashboard. Source: © Salesforce.com, reproduced with permission
Perhaps the simplest free tool is Google Alerts. Anyone
can use this tool by entering the topic for monitoring and
which sources (video, blogs, news, or discussions) and
Google will send e-mails based on the selected criteria at the
requested frequency (real time, daily, weekly). Companies
monitor their names, brand names, executive names, and tag
lines or slogans in advertising campaigns. Google also provides free website or blog analytics to measure the awareness metrics, such as page views and action level
click-throughs. When companies advertise on Facebook,
they get metrics about number of impressions and clicks, and
more. Many social media sites provide various measures so
that organizations can track their users.
Beyond that are complex dashboards, such as those provided for a fee by sdl.com (formerly Alterian), sysomos.
com, Radian6 (salesforcemarketingcloud.com), trackur.
com, and many more. To view many dashboards, simply
type “social media dashboard” into a Google image search.
Figure 5.8 displays a social media dashboard created by
Radian6 (now owned by Salesforce.com) for monitoring
social media. The pie chart and graph below display conversation sizes in various segments over time. The top right box
shows tweets about the conference, listed in chronological
order, and the bottom right dashboard is a word cloud, dem-
onstrating the most mentioned terms in the largest font size.
Conference planners will be watching the social media conversation on this dashboard as it develops.
For more information on social media metrics, see
Altimeter’s 2011 white paper (written by Susan Etlinger): A
Framework for Social Analytics (available at webtrends.
com/files/report/Report-AFrameworkForSocial
Analytics-Altimeter.pdf, and viewed as a SlideShare presentation at slideshare.net/setlinger/altimeter-social-analytics081011final). Incidentally, as of mid-August, 2014, the
SlideShare presentation has received 131,460 views (over
91,000 on SlideShare), over 10,000 downloads, and 18 comments: a metrics company monitoring itself.
The role that metrics play in social media strategy is covered in Chap. 10, especially in Sect. 10.5.
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC issues as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. Describe the five levels of user engagement (5 Cs).
The least engaged Internet users consume online content
by reading blogs and other text, watching videos and
122
2.
3.
4.
5.
looking at photos, and listening to podcasts. At the next
level, users connect with others by creating social network profiles, joining sites of interest, and attending
online events. Consumers who collect information filter
content (e.g., via RSS feeds) and tagging content on
blogs or Twitter, “liking” (e.g., on Facebook), or bookmarking what they find valuable on social media sites.
Creators actually write or upload original multimedia
content to websites, such as posting videos on YouTube
or music and podcasts on iTunes. The most engaged customers collaborate with the company when they work
with others and discuss ways to improve products (e.g.,
Dell’s IdeaStorm site).
Describe several important techniques for engaging
users in social media. Companies attempt to use viral
marketing through viral videos and viral blogging. They
also provide space for consumer created ratings,
reviews, testimonials and conversations via chat, e-mail,
tweets, blogs, and more. Social recommendations and
referrals happen via social bookmarking, referral programs, and other innovative methods. Companies also
seek expert ratings and reviews and sponsored (paidfor) reviews from bloggers and others. Finally, quick
reference (QR) codes provide offline to online engagement. They entice engagement by providing quality
information, creating entertaining content, offering
competitions, appealing to altruistic values, making
exclusive offers, rewarding influentials and fans, and
incentivizing group behavior.
Express the role of trust in social commerce. Consumers
trust other consumer opinions online 65 % of the time and
only 43 % trust the company CEO, according to Edelman.
Social media takes traditional word-of-mouth communication to a much higher level because people trust product reviews and recommendations from others like
themselves much more than they trust company advertisements and other communications. Additionally, a
company’s reputation is built on trust and when that falls,
so do sales.
Provide examples of collaborative content creation by
consumers. Collaborative content creation uses crowdsourcing to gain market research about the behaviors and
preferences of its markets for improving products and
marketing communication. Examples: LEGO virtual
design uploads, wikis, self-publishing content with online
booksellers and UGC for advertising creation (e.g., FritoLay “Crash the Super Bowl” contest).
Describe how a company can build, maintain, monitor, and repair its reputation in social media. Quality,
transparency and trust principally influence company,
brand, executive, recruiter, salesperson, and other
employee reputations. A company must be true to its
5
Customer Engagement and Metrics
brand promises and be authentic in social media. The
reputation management process involves building via its
actions and online content, maintaining its reputation by
monitoring and sometimes participating in online and
offline conversations and repairing the reputation when
things go wrong. Finally, the best companies learn from
criticism expressed in social media and use this information to improve operations and marketing. Reputation
management systems can help social media keep users
honest, positive, and authentic. Finally, companies spread
positive content all over the Web and use SEO to increase
visibility on the first page of a keyword SERP.
6. SEO. This is the process of improving the visibility of a
company or a brand on the results page displayed by a
search engine. Search engines rank sites on search
engine results pages (SERP) using complicated algorithms partially based on user-inputted key words
because the search engines want to present results that
are relevant to users. To improve a site’s SEO, managers
(1) spread fresh content all over the Web, (2) be sure
their sites are relevant and popular with target markets,
(3) optimize content on Web pages and in social media,
and (4) monitor Google for changes in the algorithm
(this is the way Google decides which sites are highest
on results pages).
7. Define performance metrics used to monitor, measure,
and refine social commerce goals and tactics. There are
hundreds of possible performance metrics; therefore, it is
important to select some that are easily measured on a continuous basis, and that apply directly to the organization's
social commerce communication objectives and refine
tactics. They fall into these basic categories: Awareness/
exposure metrics (unique visitors, page views, impressions, number of searches, search engine ranking and
number of followers/registrations/subscribers to a social
media site). Brand Health metrics include share of voice
(SOV), sentiment, brand influence, and more. Engagement
metrics include content viewership tagging, bookmarking, membership/follower, number of shares, and content
creation. Action metrics include click throughs, contact
form completion/registration, event attendance, and purchase. Finally, innovation metrics include number of ideas
shared and trend spotting measures.
KEY TERMS
Customer engagement (CE)
Performance metric
QR codes
Reputation management systems
103
118
108
115
Internet Exercises
Search engine optimization (SEO)
Viral blogging
Viral marketing (viral advertising)
Viral video
123
116
106
105
106
8. Read Merriman (2011) on handling negative feedback.
Discuss the methods described there. How can the feedback be used for improvement?
INTERNET EXERCISES
REVIEW QUESTIONS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
List the five levels of user engagement (5 Cs).
Describe viral videos and viral blogging.
How do ratings and reviews affect social commerce?
Identify several social recommendation tactics.
What are seven ways to create content that entices consumer engagement?
Why does collaborative content help companies?
What creates a solid social media reputation?
Which entities should be concerned about their
reputations?
How can a company repair its reputation online?
Define SEO.
List six important awareness/exposure metrics.
List three important brand health metrics.
List four important engagement metrics.
List four important action metrics.
List two important innovation metrics.
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
1. Do you think that marketers are losing control of
brand images due to the social media? What should marketers do to gain more control, or should they give up the
cause?
2. How can marketers use social networks for viral
marketing?
3. Do you think that user engagement in social media can
result in product sales? Explain your answer.
4. Which level of engagement best describes your online
behavior? How could your favorite brand move you to a
higher level using the principles in this chapter?
5. If you wrote a blog about your experiences at the university you attend in order to help high school students
understand what college is like, which metrics would you
use to measure the blog’s success, and why?
6. Scan a QR code that you find in a print publication and
visit the site. Do you think the additional material was
worth the effort to find? Why or why not? How could the
landing page be improved?
7. Pretend that you are a consultant to your university. Based
on the material in this chapter and Chap. 4, what do you
think are the best owned and paid media for generating
positive earned media about the university?
1. Enter comblu.com. Explore its products and discuss the
role of a social marketing dashboard.
2. Google the president of your university. Review the top
ten links in the SERP and see how his/her reputation is
online. Make recommendations for improving it, using
SEO and other techniques discussed in this chapter.
3. Create an account at delicious.com. Tag an article you
like online and then follow the links to others who have
also tagged it, seeing what else they have tagged. Write a
report about your findings.
4. Enter usocial.com and softcity.com. Identify all the
methods/tools they offer to increase social engagement/
marketing communication. Write a report.
5. Imagine you are planning a vacation to Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil. Visit tripadvisor.com and search for hotels on
Copacabana beach. Examine the reviews of five hotels
that seem right for you. Do you trust all of these reviewers? Why or why not? Based on the reviews, which hotel
would you select, and why?
6. Check out your personal reputation online by searching
for your name on Google (“egosurfing”). If you were a
job recruiter, would you hire yourself based on what you
find? Why or why not? What can you do online to improve
your chances in the job market?
7. Search Google images for “social media dashboards.”
Look at the dashboards and follow their links to the companies that created them. Which one do you think best for
a large consumer goods company, such as Coca-Cola?
Why do you recommend the one you do?
8. Visit doritoscrashthesuperbowl.thismoment.com and
view the top videos in the current contest. Then review the
article about Chevy Tahoe’s negative consumer generated
content and write five guidelines companies should use
while creating strategies involving consumer generated
ads (watch the video “Drew Neisser on Chevy Tahoe
Advertising” at youtube.com/watch?v=1nMRs24Q4oQ).
9. Read the story about how Mattel used social media to reconcile the relationship between Ken and Barbie (see blog.
bazaarvoice.com/2012/01/03/a-social-love-story-how-kenwon-barbie- and-customers-through-paid-ownedand-earned-media). Write a report on how Mattel used
owned, paid, and earned media to promote the Ken doll
and which performance metrics they used to measure the
campaign’s success. Conclude with your insights: why
was this campaign successful?
124
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
1. Review the opening case and answer the following
questions:
(a) Which principle(s) for enticing consumer engagement did Haagen-Dazs use for the honey bee
campaign?
(b) Watch the “Bee-Boy Dance Crew” video at youtube.
com/watch?v=Wa0db-7bsAo. Why do you think it
was good enough to go viral? Suggest ways for
improving the video or tactics that would create more
viewership.
(c) After watching the Bee-Boy video, review the comments. How would you evaluate this “earned media”
for enhancing the brand reputation of Haagen-Dazs?
(d) Select three techniques discussed in this chapter that
were not used in the honeybee campaign but which
might increase engagement and earn media discussion. Defend your choices.
2. Each member of the team will register with a social bookmarking site, such as delicious.com, then research “viral
marketing” and bookmark at least five high quality online
articles. Follow the links to others who have bookmarked
the same articles and see what they have found. Share
your findings and report on the usefulness of social bookmarking for researching this topic.
3. Search for more online videos and discussion about the
Greenpeace palm oil/Nestle issue, discussed in this chapter (such as Kit Kat Greenpeace 2: Go to youtube.com,
and search for “Nestle Kit Kat Greenpeace”). Document
all the earned media you discover and write a report on
this attack against Nestlé’s reputation, including your recommendations for actions Nestlé could take to recover
from this negative conversation using social media.
4. Develop a reputation management plan for building your
own personal brand online so you are attractive to recruiters in the job market. With your team, share your plans
and devise a common plan that uses the best from each.
Explain why yours is the perfect plan. For more resources,
review the personal branding worksheet at personalb r a n d i n g b l o g. c o m / yo u r- p e r s o n a l - b r a n d i n g worksheet. Also see Chris Brogan’s “100 Personal
Branding Tactics Using Social Media,” at chrisbrogan.
com/100-personal-branding-tactics-using-social-media.
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Customer Engagement and Metrics
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Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits,
and Models
6
Contents
Learning Objectives
Opening Case: Groupon—Will the Company Prosper? ......... 127
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Describe social shopping and discuss its drivers.
2. Describe the framework for social shopping, its major
participants, its components, and various models.
3. Define group buying and flash sales and explain how they
work together.
4. Describe shopping together, shopping communities, and
shopping clubs.
5. Describe social recommendations, marketplaces, and
other shopping aids.
6. Provide examples of other innovative shopping models.
7. Discuss shopping for virtual goods.
6.1
Definitions, Drivers, Concepts, and Benefits
of Social Shopping ............................................................. 131
6.2
Components and Models of Social Shopping .................. 133
6.3
Group Buying and Deal Purchasing ................................ 135
6.4
Shopping Together: Communities and Clubs ................. 136
6.5
Social Shopping Aids: From Recommendations,
Reviews, and Ratings to Marketplaces ............................ 139
6.6
Innovative Shopping Models and Sites
and Virtual Goods ............................................................. 144
References .................................................................................... 152
OPENING CASE: GROUPON—WILL
THE COMPANY PROSPER?
Elektronisch zusatz-materialien Die online-version dieses kapitels
(doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_6) enthält zusatzmaterial, das für
autorisierte benutzer ist.
The name Groupon is a combination of group and coupon.
Groupon was founded in November 2008 and it was considered the fastest-growing company ever in Web history (in
terms of revenue and valuation). Initially, Groupon offered
both group buying and deal of the day (one highly discounted
deal per day) models in selected metro areas in the United
States (businessinsider.com/companies-revolutionizingretail-2014-3). As of December 2014, Groupon does business in over 500 markets worldwide, in 48 countries.
According to Groupon’s Q3 2014 financial report, the number of customers that have purchased a Groupon deal within
the last 12 months grew by 24 % year-over-year, to 52.7 million as of September 2014, with about 23.5 million in North
America, 14.9 million in EMEA, and 14.3 million in the rest
of the world. Mobile app downloads have increased in Q3
2014, which has been facilitated by recent initiatives taken
on their mobile platform. As of Q3 2014, worldwide transactions on mobile devices comprised over half of Groupon’s
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_6, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
127
128
6
business and over 100 million people have downloaded
Groupon’s mobile app. Experts predict that mobile will fuel
growth for the company in the future (see forbes.com/sites/
greatspeculations/2014/11/05/groupons-solid-thirdquarter-results-drive-stock-price-higher). For Groupon
statistics and facts, see statista.com/topics/824/groupon.
The Opportunity
Groupon is a start-up that offers special highly discounted
deals, mostly via e-mail. The idea is that when subscribers
hear about a big discount, they will forward the news to
friends who may also place an order (the ‘social’ element).
Initially, in order to receive the deal, there had to be a minimum number of buyers (“tipping point”), thus creating a
group buy. However, this model has been changed, as will be
described next.
The Solution
To exploit the chance that people are likely to spread news
about bargains to their friends on social networks, Groupon
developed a unique business model.
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
The Business Model and the Strategy
According to Groupon (groupon.com), the company, as an
intermediary, offers special sales, called “Groupons,” in each
city that the company serves.
The sales are offered usually by well-known merchants.
The advertised deal lasts for a limited time (usually between
24 and 72 h) and becomes available to all registered members. According to Groupon’s customer service department,
in the past, Groupon’s policy was to guarantee participating
merchants a certain number of sales. In other words, the customer would only get the discount if enough people (hence,
the “group” element) purchased that particular Groupon. If
Groupon did not meet that promised quota, there was no
need for the seller to honor the deal, nor was any commission
paid to Groupon, and the customer was not charged.
Groupon charges advertising and promotion fees, which is
usually a percentage of the revenue generated by the sellers.
The retailers can use the system to promote their business,
gain new customers, and run sales during their slow seasons
(e.g., such as liquidation during the late summer). The initial
process, a combination of group buys and daily deals, is illustrated in Fig. 6.1. Today, Groupon is basically a flash (daily or
longer) discount deal business and an operator of a marketplace. The reason merchants are willing to offer a 50–90 %
Merchants
Redeem
coupons
Customers
Groupons (coupons)
to customers
P
M ay
er
ch
an
y
Pa pons
u
Gro
t
Sign up
Groupon
Email,
daily
deals
Deal (Offers)
Deal finalized
Fig. 6.1 Groupon’s business model and process
Buy
Sign up
Opening Case: Groupon—Will the Company Prosper?
discount to volume shoppers is that the merchants’ marketing
and overhead costs are lower, while their market share
increases due to the attraction of new customers.
Groupon’s business strategy is to work with quality merchants who are willing to provide substantial discounts.
Groupon uses both traditional e-mail and social networking
(e.g., Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, etc.) to promote the deals.
Deals are e-mailed directly to members when available, but
those interested in other products or services can go to
Groupon Goods (groupon.com/goods) to search for something specific. Groupon also offers a goods “clearance” section; the offers change daily. In addition to their daily deals,
Groupon also offers coupons and promotions each month
(e.g., Cyber Monday Mania). Groupon offers a “refer a friend”
program, where shoppers can earn $10 for every friend they
refer who buys their first deal (see groupon.com/referral).
Note that Groupon changes its business model from time to
time. In addition, it provides services to the merchants that
simplify the process illustrated in Fig. 6.1. For example, in
May 2014, Groupon launched ‘Gnome’—a tablet solution that
helps merchants manage their business and connect with customers (for details, see investor.groupon.com/releasedetail.
cfm?releaseid=848707). In October 2014, the company
launched “Snap” by Groupon, a free mobile app that pays customers cash to buy featured grocery items (see investor.groupon.com/releasedetail.cfm?releaseid=874306).
Benefits and Expansion
The major benefits to customers are:
• Steep discounts (50–90 %).
• Discovery of new/specialized services and products.
• No need to search for deals; Groupon organizes them
for you.
The major benefits to merchants are:
• Can sell larger quantities and liquidate merchandise, quickly.
• Save on advertising and marketing expenses (e.g.,
by using viral advertising).
• Get repeat customers (if they like the deal and the
service, customers will return).
• Lower customer acquisition cost.
• Knowledge of, and collaboration with, related vendors in a close geographical area.
129
Limitations of the Model
Some of Groupon’s deals can become too large for vendors
to fill. In one example, according to Crum (2011), a restaurant in Tokyo sold 500 Groupons for a traditional New Year’s
dinner, but the business was unable to process the orders in a
timely fashion due to the overwhelming demand. Customers
complained about late deliveries and about orders arriving
“in terrible condition.” A similar problem occurred in India
when a high demand for onions caused the Groupon website
to crash (see AOL On News 2013).
In response to such a problem, Groupon officials have
created formulas to help participating merchants determine
how to meet consumer demands, and how many Groupons to
offer (capping the orders to a reasonable number).
Another limitation is that some businesses may not make
money on the deal and may possibly even suffer a loss (e.g.,
see Phibbs 2011). Finally, although Groupon and similar
companies can generate large revenues, they may have large
expenses as a result, and actually lose money by offering
more deals. Thus, many question the profitability of the
model, especially in light of the strong competition.
Groupon is attempting to become more than just a “deal
of the day” business. As part of their branching out, in
November 2013, Groupon built a new website and opened an
e-commerce deal “marketplace” (online retail site), called
Groupon Goods (groupon.com/goods), which also offers
discounts on various products and services (e.g., beauty,
automotive, pet grooming). These deals also have a time
limit (ranging from 3 to 7 days) and limited quantities. In Q2
2013, less than 40 % of Groupon’s North America revenue
came from the company’s daily deal e-mails, suggesting the
marketplace store (with over 60 % of revenue) is becoming
successful (see usatoday.com/story/tech/2013/11/01/
groupon-new-website-marketplace/3319943). However,
as of 2014, the company is still in transition.
The Deal Marketplace is Groupon’s shift in strategy from
providing one-off “daily deals” to offering longer-running,
recurring campaigns. With the launch of the marketplace,
local businesses now can offer discounts on their goods and
services for an extended period of time.
In 2011, Groupon partnered with expedia.com to launch
Groupon Getaways (groupon.com/getaways), which
focuses on discounted travel (hotels, tours, etc.). In February
2014, Groupon created “Deal Builder,” a program that allows
merchants to build their own Groupon deal. The program is
a part of GrouponWorks.
In September 2012, Groupon acquired a company called
Savored (savored.com), a leading provider of reservations at
the best restaurants in the US. Participating restaurants in select
cities give diners discounts when they have empty tables.
Unlike the usual daily deal where you buy a voucher, with
Groupon Reserve, you make a reservation online and show up;
130
the restaurant will already have your reservation in their books.
Customers can make a reservation after they purchase the deal
via the Groupon site or via the Groupon mobile app. Groupon
Reserve is available for select high end restaurants.
The Competition
There are many companies that are attempting to clone
Groupon. Hundreds of Groupon clones exist (between 400
and 600 worldwide, as of 2011, depending on the source),
and that number is growing. In addition, software development companies offer Groupon-clone platforms (grouponclone scripts), such as Oorjit and Agryia. For example, at one
time, there were over 1,000 similar companies in China
alone, but many did not succeed. (For more about the top ten
daily deal sites in China in 2013, see thenextweb.com/
asia/2013/02/18/chinas-daily-deal-market-consolidates-astop-10-sites-claim-90-revenue-share-report.) Nevertheless,
as of December 2014, Groupon had many competitors,
including livingsocial.com, sponsored by Amazon.com.
Other notable competitors are giltcity.com, Gilt Groupe
(gilt.com), local.amazon.com, and tiprr.com. For
Groupon’s top five competitors, see brandongaille.com/
the-top-5-groupon-competitors. Indirect competition
comes from Yipit (yipit.com), an e-mail-based “daily deal
aggregator” that gathers deals (in your city) from daily deal
sites such as Groupon. Tell Yipit what you want, and they
will alert you when there are deals that match.
Possible future competitors include Yahoo!, Yelp, local
restaurants offer big discounts, and other service providers
that advertise special deals digitally and in newspapers.
Finally, some major retailers and manufacturers (e.g.,
Walmart, Home Depot) offer daily deals independently.
In November 2014, Twitter joined the list of Groupon
competitors by introducing an online coupon system called
Twitter Offers. The new tool is allows merchants to use the
platform to advertise their goods and offer discounts to their
customers. For more details, see valuewalk.com/2014/11/
groupon-competitors-grows-twitter. For more details
about Twitter Offers, see also blog.twitter.com/2014/
introducing-twitter-offers.
In 2011, online retail giant Amazon.com jumped on the
daily deals “bandwagon” with the launch of Amazon Local,
a local daily deals website that offers savings on products
and services (for a limited time in limited quantities). To
learn more about Amazon Local, go to local.amazon.com.
Amazon itself offers deals on its main Web page. Amazon
also has “Gold Box Deals,” which are viewed by clicking on
the “Today’s Deals” link at the top of most Amazon.com
pages or directly at amazon.com/gp/goldbox.
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
Factors in the Competition
It is challenging to compete with Groupon, given its large
size and resources. Groupon still controls more than 50 % of
all daily deal markets in the U.S. Therefore, competitors use
strategies such as concentrating on a niche market, which
targets consumers in smaller demographics, such as one
product, or one industry (e.g., tickets for travel [jetsetter.
com; for the military and veteran community at troopswap.
com]; free software [giveawayoftheday.com]; food [ddfoodoutlet.com]; and fashion [polyvore.com]). In addition,
some sites concentrate on a small territory (e.g., a particular
[city) where they have a competitive advantage (e.g., see
Hot Deals Hawaii [hotdealshawaii.com]). Similarly, deals
for certain social or professional communities are getting
popular, deal sites geared toward mothers and families
(plumdistrict.com, deal sites geared towards men (mandeals.com), religion- based deals (jdeal.com), and dog
lovers (doggyloot.com), may be very successful. For more
about niche daily deal sites, see business.time.com/
2012/02/09/a-deal-just-for-you-niche-sites-with-dealsfor-moms-dudes-jews-dog-lovers-the-military-more.
Several sites have either folded (e.g., Facebook Deals) or
were acquired by other companies. For example, BuyWithMe
was purchased by Gilt Groupe, Buy.com was purchased by
Japanese company Rakuten.com Shopping (rakuten.com),
and private travel site jetsetter.com was acquired by
TripAdvisor in 2013. As of December 2014, Groupon has
acquired 34 sites, including the hotel booking app Blink
(blinkbooking.com), which is now known as “Blink by
Groupon.” In January 2014, Groupon announced that it had
has acquired ‘Ticket Monster,’ a Korean e-commerce company (a subsidiary of LivingSocial Korea) and online retail
daily deal site Ideel (ideel.com).
The Results
In 2010, Groupon rejected a $6 billion buyout offer from
Google. Instead, the company went public on November
4, 2011, raising $700 million. Share prices soared 31 %
the first day, bringing Groupon’s valuation to about $16
billion. Since then, the share price has declined due to
concerns about profitability. Groupon lost money until the
first quarter of 2013, and in May 2014, share prices were
down 40 %. The share price slowly began recovering in
late 2014.
Sources: Based on Crum (2011), Sennett (2012), Phibbs
(2011), AOL On News (2013), grouponworks.com/
merchant-resources, and groupon.com (both accessed
December 2014).
6.1
Definitions, Drivers, Concepts, and Benefits of Social Shopping
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE CASE
Groupon’s initial business model included group buying, which is a social activity. Later, it changed this
model, concentrating instead on daily deals. In the
daily deals model, we can see how WOM is spreading
via social networks, such as notifying friends about
Groupon’s deals (e.g., sharing on Facebook and
Twitter). Group buying is a powerful social shopping
model, but it is difficult to implement. This chapter
presents group buying and deal of the day social shopping models as well as several others. This chapter also
covers social-oriented shopping aids and provides a
glimpse into the future of social shopping.
6.1
DEFINITIONS, DRIVERS, CONCEPTS,
AND BENEFITS OF SOCIAL
SHOPPING
Social shopping has grown very rapidly and may become a
major portion of B2C sales in the future. According to Regus
(2011), in 2010 about 53 % of companies located in countries
with heavy Internet use were using social networks to acquire
goods and increase sales. Today, the number is higher (see
Stelzner 2014), especially due to the new features such as
“Buy” buttons, introduced by Facebook and Twitter. For how
to create a Facebook store, watch the video “How to Create a
Facebook Store Even If You Are a Beginner” (3:23 minutes)
at youtube.com/watch?v=UWRNVzXXYIM.
This increase in sales is also due to the new innovative
online social shopping opportunities and models. Let us see
how social shopping is done. First, you need a webstore (or
use someone else’s webstore). For example, companies that
provide the technology to set up a Facebook store include
Ecwid, which provides a free Facebook e-commerce app (see
ecwid.com/facebook-commerce), and PinnacleCart (pinnaclecart.com/sell-on-facebook). Then you start selling.
Definitions
Shopping can be viewed as a social activity. Social shopping
(also known as Sales 2.0) is online shopping with social
media tools and platforms and sharing shopping experiences
with friends. It is a growing activity in social commerce.
Social commerce blends e-commerce and social media.
Thus, social commerce takes the key features of social media
(e.g., discussion groups, blogs, reviews, etc.) and uses them
before, during, and after online shopping. According to
131
Popilskis (2014), social shopping is facilitated by companies
having the capability to sell products using social media platforms (e.g., by creating a storefront on their Facebook page),
without requiring the customers to leave the social network
to complete the transaction. Note that social shopping is only
one activity of social commerce. For the differences between
social shopping and social commerce, see personalweb.
about.com/od/socialcommerce/a/Social-ShoppingDefinition.htm.
The Drivers of Social Shopping
An overview of selling on social networks is provided by
Shih (2011) and by Singh and Diamond (2012), who cite the
following drivers of social shopping:
• The large number of people visiting social networks
attracts advertisers.
• Changing customers’ shopping habits (see infographic at visual.ly/social-media-changing-wayyour-customers-show-online).
• The increasing number of recommendations/suggestions made by friends, and the ease and speed of
accessing them.
• The pressure from top management to increase
effectiveness and efforts to improve overall efficiency of marketing in general.
• The need to compete (e.g., by differentiation) and to
satisfy the social customers.
• The emergence of social customers with knowledge
and competence in using the Internet (e.g., in finding reviews and comparing prices).
• The need to collaborate with business partners.
• The huge discounts provided by some of the newer
business models (e.g., flash sales), causing customers to buy more goods/services.
• The socially-oriented shopping models (e.g., group
buying, communities).
• The ease of shopping while you are using social
networks (e, g., the Facebook ‘Buy’ button).
• The ease of communicating with friends in real
time using Twitter and mobile devices.
For more on social shopping, see webtrends.about.com/
od/web20/a/social-shopping.htm and dbpedia.org/page/
Social_commerce. For an infographic, see Kimball (2013).
Note: A considerable amount of information on social shopping is available by searching Google for ‘social media marketing’ (also see Halligan and Shah (2014).
132
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
Concepts and Content of Social Shopping
Why Shoppers Go Social
Social shopping is done through social networks (e.g.,
Polyvore, Wanelo), in vendors’ socially oriented webstores
(e.g., Greenberg et al. 2011), in special intermediaries’
stores (such as Groupon.com), and more. The buyers are
social customers who trust and/or enjoy social shopping. As
will be seen later in this chapter, there is a wide range of
social shopping models that utilize many of the Web 2.0
tools as well as social communities. Finally, an increasing
number of B2C marketers offer stores on Facebook and
other social networks (see e.g., heidicohen.com/
b2c-versus-b2b-the-most-important-social-mediaplatform-research).
The nature of shopping is changing, especially for brand
name clothing and related items. For example, popular
brands including the Gap are sold by e-tailers such as
Shopbop and InStyle. In addition, fashion communities
such as Stylehive and Polyvore help promote the latest fashion collections. Social shoppers are logging on to sites such
as Net-a-Porter to buy designer clothes online. Shoppers
can log on to sites such as ThisNext, to create profiles and
blog about their favorite brands. For practical issues and
guides to social shopping, see digitalintelligencetoday.
com/social-shopping-101-a-practitioners-prime.
Many shoppers like to hear from other shoppers prior to purchasing. Therefore, they ask for recommendations from
friends, or use the communal shopping method.
Communal shopping (also known as collaborative shopping) is a method of shopping where consumers enlist friends
and other people they trust to advise them on what products to
shop for. This results in more confidence in the decisions they
make—whether or not to buy (a phenomenon known as the
“bandwagon effect”). For details, watch Bloomberg TV’s
video titled “New Frontiers in the Communal Shopping
Experience” (2:58 minutes) at bloomberg.com/video/eden-scommunal-shopping-experience- ExvmRAIhTE2AZ
apKKd5aVA.html.
Where Is Social Shopping Done?
Most of social shopping today is done in public networks
and communities, ranging from Polyvore to Kaboodle.
Shoppers can also engage in social shopping through private
social clubs and socially-oriented vendors’ stores.
Furthermore, social shoppers can buy from individual sellers
and directly from manufacturers. For 35 companies that are
changing the way we shop and eat, see 35 slides by Lutz and
Peterson (2014).
There are two basic ways to engage in social shopping:
1. Add social software, apps, and features (e.g., polling) to
existing e-commerce sites.
2. Add e-commerce functionalities (e.g., e-catalogs, payment gateways, shopping carts) to social media and social
network sites.
Major retailers such as Target and Best Buy are increasingly looking to tap Facebook, Pinterest, and Twitter to drive
sales (see Lee 2013).
For more on social shopping sites, see webtrends.about.
com/od/socialshopping/tp/7_essential_social_shopping.
htm and pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2424709,00.asp.
For finding the right social media platform to drive most
sales, see Shopify.com’s infographic provided by Macdonald
(2014).
People’s Roles in Social Commerce
In 2010, Gartner Inc. conducted a study on social commerce
(see gartner.com/newsroom/id/1409213), identifying the
following roles people play in social media and
e-commerce:
• Connectors. These are the people with contacts
that introduce people to each other. Connectors try
to influence people to buy. Consultants and connected people play this role.
• Salespeople. Like their offline counterparts, salespeople’s major effort is to influence shoppers to buy.
They are well connected so they can impress buyers.
• Seekers. These consumers seek advice and information about shopping and services from experts,
friends, and mavens.
• Mavens. Mavens are recognized, but unofficial,
experts in certain domains who can provide positive
or negative recommendations to people who are
seeking advice.
• Self-sufficients. These people find information on
their own; they do not need or even pay attention to
recommendations, and are not influenced by the
opinions of others.
• Unclassifieds. Most people do not belong to any one
of the above categories; some fulfill different roles and
others exhibit characteristics of different categories.
The major influencers are friends, other consumers, salespeople, connectors, and mavens (experts). For further details,
see Dubey (2010). In addition to roles, personality traits such
as ‘feeling’ and ‘thinking’ may influence shopping.
6.2
Components and Models of Social Shopping
133
The Benefits of Social Shopping
Social shopping influences both buyers and sellers.
Benefits to Buyers
Social shopping can provide benefits to buyers such as:
• Get super deals (50–90 % discounts) via group buying, daily specials, and more. Join Groupon for
daily deals.
• Socialize while shopping and receive social support
and rewards.
• Discover products/services you never knew existed
(e.g., see thisnext.com).
• Interact directly with vendor (brand) representatives easily and quickly (e.g., feature available at
stylehive.com).
• Increase confidence and trust in online shopping by
interacting with friends.
• Shop anytime from any place.
• Exchange shopping tips with friends, fans, and
others. Therefore, you can learn from other shoppers’ experiences.
• Build and share wish and gift lists.
• Shop together with people like you.
• Get simplified comparisons, even in real time.
• Communicate in real time while shopping with friends
and others using Twitter and other social media tools.
Kasteler (2009) elaborates on these and other benefits and
provides a list of several dozen start-up shopping sites. For
an overview and infographic, see guerillaconnection.com/
wp-content/uploads/2012/06/Guerilla-Social-MediaTrends.pdf.
Therefore, before you go shopping online, it is wise to
consult social shopping sources. In addition, visit sociallyoriented sites where you can ask questions and get feedback
from your friends.
Benefits to Sellers
The seller can:
• Improve overall sales unit productivity (e.g., see
Smith and Ballve 2013).
• Increase revenue growth per customer.
• Gain feedback from new customers.
• Learn from customers.
• Increase customer loyalty and trust.
• Quickly liquidate overstocked or
merchandise.
obsolete
Note that social shopping sites may generate additional
revenue from advertising, commission on actual sales, sharing customer information with retailers, and using affiliate
marketing.
For more benefits to retailers, watch the video titled
“Social Media a Powerful Tool for Online Retailers—Online
Retail Expert Tips” (4:08 minutes) at youtube.com/
watch?v=1ByDmQICXs4. For answers to questions regarding social sales, see Viskovich (2014). For strategy and marketing tips, see Walker (2014).
6.2
COMPONENTS AND MODELS
OF SOCIAL SHOPPING
Social commerce features a unique set of components. It
also employs distinctive business models. All these are
described next.
What Components to Expect in a Social
Shopping Site
Depending on the social shopping model, the product offering, related information, and the supportive information systems, one may find a diversity of components on a social
shopping site. The following are the major components that
help customers make purchasing decisions:
• Visual Sharing. Photos, videos, and other images
enable shoppers to visually share their product
experiences.
• Online discussions. Ratings, reviews, interactions,
recommendations, blogging, and comments facilitate discussions regarding features and benefits of
products.
• How to use products. These demonstrate, via videos, blogs, and step-by-step instructions, how to use
products.
• Guides. Guides are created by user-generated content (UGC). The users can be experienced consumers, experts, or employees. The guides are supported
by case studies, testimonials, and videos.
134
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
The Major Social Shopping Models
Several social shopping models and strategies have appeared
in recent years, many created by start-ups such as Groupon.
Some are extensions of EC generic models; others are unique
to social shopping. These models can be stand alone, combined, or used within social networks. We have grouped
them into the following categories, followed by the location
where they are further discussed in this book. The grouping
is based on Yin (2010), Strauss and Frost (2014), and the
authors’ experiences:
• Group buying (Sect. 6.3)
• Deal purchases (flash sales), such as daily special
offers (Sect. 6.3)
• Shopping communities and clubs (Sect. 6.4)
• Recommendation sites (Sect. 6.5)
• Marketplaces (Sect. 6.5)
• Innovative models (Sect. 6.6)
• Shopping for virtual products and services
(Sect. 6.6)
• Location-based shopping (presented briefly in
Chap. 5; see also Zwilling 2011)
• Shopping presentation sites (e.g., on YouTube) and
gaming sites (Chap. 9)
• Peer-to-peer models (e.g., money lending; Chap. 9)
• B2B shopping (Chap. 9 and Gillin and Schwartzman
2011)
Note: Both Pinterest and Twitter provide activities that
use several of these models, directly and indirectly. For
Twitter, see business.twitter.com. Note also that public
social shopping sites may generate revenue from advertising,
commissions on actual sales, shared customer information
among retailers, and affiliate marketing.
The major models are illustrated in Fig. 6.2.
To see the diversity of social commerce, see the slide presentation on transforming retail into social commerce at
slideshare.net/oukearts/transforming-retail-into-socialcommerce-retail-ceo-briefing-strategy-boutique-thaesis.
See also Shih (2011).
Traditional E-Commerce Sites
with Social Media Additions
In addition to pure social shopping sites, there are many traditional e-commerce sites that add social media capabilities.
An example from Germany is presented next.
Group Buying
Buy together, special
deals of the day
Social shopping
Marketplaces
Many buyers
and sellers in
one market
Shopping
communities
Like-minded people
share, discuss,
shop
Helping
Communities
Collaborative
Shopping
Buy together
virtually
Recommendation
Engines
Get advice from
friends, conversations
Other types
Virtual products,
Location-based,
Crowdsourcing
Fig. 6.2 The major categories of social shopping
Example: Nestlé Interactive Social Commerce Site
The global food and beverage manufacturer launched an
interactive online social commerce platform in Germany in
September 2011 to engage with consumers while providing
greater access to its products (nestle.com/media/newsandfeatures/nestle-marks-largest-ever-investmentgermany). The Nestlé Marketplace (“Marktplatz”;
nestle-marktplatz.de) website, according to fdbusiness.
com/2011/09/nestle-pilots-social-commerce-with-newinteractive-site, is the first social commerce platform of its
kind in Germany, from a food and beverage manufacturer of
Nestlé’s size and range. Consumers can purchase products
online (including foreign Nestlé products that are not available in most of Nestlé’s physical stores or the physical stores
of retailers who sell Nestle’s products) and also review, rate,
recommend, and ask questions about each product. The site
supports two-way communication. According to fdbusiness.
com/2011/09/nestle-pilots-social-commerce-with-newinteractive-site, people can leave ratings and comments
about the products. Shoppers can submit suggestions for new
products on the site. With more than 2,000 products and 75
different brands available online (February 2014), Nestlé
Germany receives an estimated 6,247 unique visitors and
31,235 page views per day (per whoismachine.com/review/
nestle-marktplatz.de; November 2014 data).
The company wants to enable its customers to engage and
help Nestlé Marketplace to prosper.
Visitors to the Nestlé Marketplace can search for products
using a variety of detailed criteria, including taste, packaging,
color, specific occasions, or diet preferences. Nutritional information can also be found for each product. Nestle-marktplatz.
de is supported by a Facebook page, which provides a space for
6.3
Group Buying and Deal Purchasing
discussion about the company’s brands, foods, and cooking.
For details, see nestle.com/Media/NewsAndFeatures/Pages/
Nestle-pilots-social-commerce-with-new-interactive-sitefor-German-consumers.aspx.To learn about the company’s
strategies, expectations, and experiences, see e-commercefacts.com/background/2012/03/nestle-marketplace.
Other examples for socially-oriented e-commerce stores
are Zappos (app called Ask Zappos; askzappos.apps.zappos.com) and Levi’s webstore. For a comprehensive comparison of social and e-commerce, see Shen (2012). Bessette
(2014) describes how nine companies (‘social media superstars’) use social media platforms to stay ahead of the competition. For an interesting e-book about the social sales
revolution, see Salesforce (2011).
6.3
GROUP BUYING AND DEAL
PURCHASING
The group buying model describes a group of people who
come together to get a quantity discount. The B2C model was
unpopular in traditional e-commerce and seldom used in many
countries. An exception is a modified group buying method
that succeeded in China. The problem with the original e-commerce model was the difficulty in organizing the online
groups, even with an intermediary. Furthermore, even if a
group was organized, negotiating discounts was often difficult, unless a very large volume was involved. However, in the
new model, in order to rally shoppers, sites like Groupon,
LivingSocial, and GiltCity (which acquired BuyWithMe),
offer large discounts or special offers that are available for a
limited time (usually 24–72 h). The social commerce companies act as intermediaries to carefully negotiate the discounts
and other terms with vendors. According to Harbison (2010),
social media and group buying is a “match made in heaven,”
since everybody is a winner. For a discussion, see Dugan
(2010). Unfortunately, the model is still not so popular in the
U.S. and many other countries.
Note: This situation may be changing; see Mander (2014)
and discussion later in this chapter.
Customers post daily deals with comments on Facebook
and Twitter and other social media sites. This is a good way
to find deals without joining any specific daily deals sites.
Group Buying in China
The Chinese created group buying for many products, especially expensive ones (e.g., cars, computers, artwork) even
before sites like Groupon existed. Group buying in China
(“tuangou” in Chinese) differs from that of other countries due
to the Chinese culture. Group buying companies have been
135
active all over China. For example, the giant e-commerce company, Baidu, entered into this business in August 2013 by purchasing a 59 % stake in Nuomi (Renren’s group-buying site),
and in 2014, agreed to purchase the remaining stock (see
Campos 2014). However, according to the research group China
e-Business Research Center, in 2012, half of the group buying
sites have shut down (see pcworld.com/article/260892/
nearly_half_of_chinas_group_buying_sites_now_closed_
amid_heated_competition.html). According to a report by
news portal Xkb.com.cn, in 2010, at the peak of the groupbuying craze, 5,058 such websites were in the market, but in
August 2013, there were only 943. A main reason for this is lack
of funding. For more information on the status of group buying
websites in China, see bambooinnovator.com/2013/08/13/
group-buying-websites-in-china-face-funding-crisis.
In Q1 2013, the largest in market shares was Juhuasuan
(ju.taobao.com; per 2013 research report by Dataotuan, as
reported by Techinasia; see techinasia.com/china-dailydeals-q1-2013-data); however, as of January 2014, the top
daily deals startup is now Meituan, earning almost $500 million in sales annually, roughly double to what it was earning
in 2013, and their competitor, Lashou, is valued at $1.1 billion
(see Campos 2014). Group buying soared in China between
2010 and 2013. About 83 million people in China used group
buying sites in January 2013, up from just 64 million at the
end of 2011, according to the China Internet Network
Information Center. In 2014, all major Chinese Internet companies have launched, or planned to launch, group buying
and flash deal sites. These include Baidu, Sina, Tencent, and
Alibaba. For details, see Madden (2010 ) and watch the
video titled “Group Buying in China” (2:10 minutes) at
cnn.com/video/data/2.0/video/business/2011/01/26/yoon.
china.coupon.gen.cnn.html. Note that, in 2014, China’s
cosmetics deal site Jumei was the first Chinese daily deals
site to seek an IPO in the U.S. (see techinasia.com/
china-daily-deals-site-jumei-files-for-400-milliondollars-us-ipo).
How Group Buying Is Done in China
According to adage.com/article/global-news/advertisingchina-group-buying-discounts-groupon/147641, “years ago,
Chinese Internet users started getting together online to organize as a group to buy the same car from the same dealer in
order to get a [quantity negotiated] discount, and this teambuying concept quickly spread to other categories like computers. [To accomplish this], a group leader would coordinate
the group’s requirements and bargain with prospective dealers to close the sale.” Sometimes the leader brings the entire
buying group to the face-to-face negotiation (read Eunice
Yoon’s report and watch the video “Group Buying in China”
at slinkingtowardretirement.com/?p=23479). In fact, in
136
2008, according to the Adage report, “a group of Ford Focus
buyers got into a shoving match at a Ford dealership when
the employees reportedly reneged on the agreed price, and
the prospective buyers uploaded footage of the melee to
video sites” (watch the video at vimeo.com/8619105).
Group Buying and Flash Sales on Facebook
Several years ago, it was common to combine group buys
with flash sales (also known as daily deals). However, this
combination was not too successful and the two models are
now used mostly independently of each other. For group
buying and daily deals software, see groupbuyingsite.com.
Example
Lot18 (lot18.com) offers access to fine wines at up to 60 %
off. Their team of curators works directly with producers
around the world to bring high-quality, hard-to-find products directly to members. They showcase new wines daily,
made available in limited quantities for a limited time, or
until members have purchased all available quantities.
Several new products appear on the site each day. Lot18
uses Facebook to advertise flash deals. Advertising flash
sales on Facebook provides an ideal environment for recruiting friends into group-buy deals (members who invite
friends to register are rewarded with a Lot18 credit for
future purchases after the friend’s first order ships). Each
member receives a personalized referral link, which he or
she can share with friends via e-mail or by posting the link
on their Facebook or Twitter pages.
Customers post daily deals with comments on Facebook
and Twitter and other social media sites. This is a good way
to find deals without joining any specific daily deal sites.
The Future of Group Buying
There are two opinions regarding the future of group buying.
Mander (2014) and Lee (2014) report an increase in group
buying and flash sales, in Southeast Asia, China, and the
U.S. On the other hand, Jingli (2014) reports the opposite
about China. One possible explanation is that the companies
in these emerging areas are merging into other companies
and do not report results for these models anymore.
Deal Purchases (Flash Sales, Daily Deals)
Gilt Group (gilt.com) pioneered the online flash sale in the
US in 2007. (See business.time.com/2012/10/25/highand-low and Dugan 2010.) There are several definitions of
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
flash sales. For examples, see digitalmarketing-glossary.
com/What-is-Flash-sales-site-definition and seniorplanet.org/online-flash-sales-how-to-get-good-deals .
Flash sales are very common offline. These are short term
deals that are designed to attract people who are already in a
physical store. In addition, “doorbuster” sales between certain hours on a certain day (e.g., Black Friday) also are common offline. There are several variations of flash sales when
done online.
The “deal of the day” may be offered only in one city or
state, while some are offered nationally. For example, Living
Social (livingsocial.com) asks people to sign up for a deal at
a restaurant, spa, or an event in a particular city. You can
click on “today’s deals” or browse “all deals.” The deals are
e-mailed to anyone that signs up with LivingSocial, or you
can browse their site for something in particular. If you like
it, you click on the “Buy it” icon to purchase the deal. After
you buy the deal, you get a unique link to share the deal
information with your friends (LivingSocial also has a friend
referral program).
A common strategy of flash sale sites is to focus on a particular industry. For example, Gilt.com focuses on designer
apparel, jewelry, bags, and upscale home furnishings. iDine
(idine.com) is a loyalty program that rewards customers
with benefits when they dine out at discounted prices in participating restaurants.
Woot! (an Amazon company) offers community information related to its deals. For example, there is a “discussion
about today’s deal,” a Woot! blog, top past deals, deal news,
and what percentage of community members bought this
product and what quantities of the products were sold.
Testimonials by members are also available. Woot! is known
as a community for “gadget geeks.” Thus, Woot! is not only
a brand, but also a culture. See woot.com. Other interesting
flash sale companies are jetsetter.com; acquired by
TripAdvisor in 2013) and ruelala.com. Companies like
Groupon, LivingSocial, and Woot! run promotions for deals
in major metropolitan areas. Discounts of 50 % are common,
and sometimes they reach 80 %.
6.4
SHOPPING TOGETHER:
COMMUNITIES AND CLUBS
Shopping together is an enjoyable activity among many people while in physical stores. Today, due to social software
and social media innovations, it is also possible to shop
together online. As you may recall, social shopping is a mix
of online shopping and social networking. Social shopping is
done in two places: community platforms and online clubs,
as is described next.
6.4
Shopping Together: Communities and Clubs
Online communities (and shopping clubs, to be discussed
later) are places where people gather to spend time talking
about books, investments, wine, and so on, with like-minded
people, for different purposes, including shopping.
Online Social Shopping Communities
According to socialecart.com/social-shopping, “shopping communities bring like-minded people together to
discuss, share, and shop” (emphasis added). For customer
behavior in social communities, see Liu et al. (2013). The
community platforms and forums connect people with
each other, with businesses, and with other communities.
Many such sites allow users to create custom shopping
lists and share them with friends. To date, fashion communities (e.g., Polyvore, StyleFeeder; a Time company,
and ShopStyle) are the most popular ones. For some
examples of fashion communities and online social
networks, see itsjustpeople.com/2012/03/30/the-topfashion-communities-and-online-social-networks-findout-who-they-are-here. However, other shopping
communities are organized around food, pets, toys, and so
forth. For example, listia.com is an online community for
buying and selling used or new items, along with fashion,
in online auctions using virtual currency. Djdoodleville.
com is an online shopping community specializing in arts
and crafts.
For a summary of social shopping communities, see digitalinnovationtoday.com/speed-summary-ijec-socialcommerce-special-edition-social-shopping-communities.
Common Features in Communities and Forums
Communities and forums share the following major features
(per Marsden 2009; Fisher 2010; [slideshow with transcript],
and the authors’ experiences):
• User forums. Forums are discussion places in
social networks where people can meet to discuss
issues or to work together to solve problems raised
by participants in discussion groups.
• User galleries. Galleries are usually hosted by vendors
to display images and videos for discussion by viewers
such as customers and business partners (e.g.,
Burberry’s Art of the Trench; artofthetrench.burberry.com). In January 2013, Twitter added video to its
user galleries and is now calling them “media galleries” (see marketingland.com/twitter-adds-videos-touser-media-galleries-32095).
137
• Idea boards. These are usually located inside
enterprise networks (e.g., mystarbucksidea.force.
com; “free crowdsourcing of product ideas,” Dell’s
ideastorm.com). This is a crowdsourcing mechanism for idea generation and idea evaluation.
• Q&A forums. Online groups where users (e.g.,
customers) can ask and answer questions about
various topics (e.g., a company’s products) and be
helped by product experts and savvy customers
(e.g., Bazaarvoice’s “Ask & Answer” or
PowerReviews’ “Social Answers”). Questions and
answers can be organized in Q&A format.
• Brand communities. Communities that are organized around a brand (e.g., Sony’s MP3) to discuss
a product or brand.
• Comprehensive (multipurpose communities).
Kaboodle is probably the most well-known comprehensive community, while Polyvore is the leading community for fashion (and related products).
Examples of Shopping Communities
There are many sites that can be classified as pure shopping
communities. A prime example is Polyvore, which is presented in Case 6.1.
Case 6.1
SC Application
Polyvore: A Trendsetter in Social Shopping
According to Polyvore (polyvore.com), the company is a
community site for online fashion and style where users are
empowered to discover and develop their style and possibly
set fashion trends. Users do this by creating “sets,” which are
shared across the Web. The company collaborates with
prominent brands such as Calvin Klein, Lancôme (lancomeusa.com), Coach, and retailers such as Net-a-Porter to drive
product engagement; the user-generated fashion products on
its site are then judged by community members and by celebrities such as Lady Gaga and Katy Perry. Today, the company
also uses mobile technologies. For example, it has an app for
iPad with many capabilities (see blog.polyvore.com/2014/02/
new-ipad-and-iphone-updates-clip-to.html).
Note: Some celebrities, such as Lady Gaga, post their
own products for sale on the site.
The story of the now-profitable Polyvore is described in
detail by Jacobs (2010) and Chaney (2011); see also the infographic provided by Grant (2013). Users create “sets” of
their wardrobe designs using a special editor provided free
on the site. These “sets” can then be posted and shared on
Polyvore’s site, Facebook, and Twitter. Merchants (e.g.,
138
designers) can use the site for free by (a) creating a profile,
(b) uploading existing products, and (c) creating sets.
Once merchants create a profile and upload products,
Polyvore encourages them to engage with other community members by reviewing and evaluating the sets.
Polyvore believes that the merchants’ activity will be
reciprocated. To facilitate actual shopping, the sets link to
the creators’ sites.
Polyvore can be viewed as a crowdsourcing fashion business model that reflects the creativity and opinion of many;
plus, it can be viewed as expressing current fashion trends
(see Wang 2011). They now do the same with interior design,
where you can submit your creative room sets (polyvore.
com/polyvore_interior_design_co/group.
show?id=29235). According to Wang (2011), the site provides a new business model for both shopping and product
and style discovery, as well as a venue for designers to hone
their skills by introducing new fashion items.
In October 2014, Polyvore had over 20 million unique visitors importing 2.2 million items to the site each month, creating
about three million fashion sets per month via Polyvore’s website and its mobile app. Over 100 million items have been added
to the network since its debut. Mobile activity is increasing, with
50 % of sets being created on a smartphone or tablet (per techcrunch.com/2014/10/07/polyvore-gets-personalized-withnew-iphone-app-featuring-just-for-you-style-suggestions/).
Polyvore also released a “new and improved” iPhone app in
July 2014. Users spend hours browsing, following favorite taste
streams, asking questions and sharing ideas, which is profitable
for businesses (see corp.wishpond.com/blog/2013/02/05/
understanding-polyvore-for-business). Polyvore is considered by many to be the best place to discover or evaluate fashion
trends, which are facilitated by contests managed by the company. For more information, see venturebeat.com/2012/12/20/
polyvore-gets-a-cro.
Polyvore can be used together with Pinterest to increase
traffic to the site (see Mally 2012).
For Polyvore’s features, see microexplosion.com/tips-2/
polyvore-the-biggest-site-youve-never-heard-of. To learn
how to use Polyvore to drive traffic and sales for your webstore,seeshopify.com/blog/13815533-how-to-use-polyvore-todrive-traffic-and-sales-for-your-online-store.
Sources: Based on Jacobs (2010), Wang (2011), Taylor
(2013), polyvore.com, and crunchbase.com/organization/
polyvore (both accessed June 2015).
Questions
1. How can one use the Polyvore Editor to create designs?
Watch the short video (2:02 minutes) by Polyvore titled
“How to Create a Set in the Polyvore Editor” at vimeo.
com/7800846.
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
2. The company added supermodel Tyra Banks as an investor in 2013. Comment on the logic of this.
3. Jacobs (2010) writes, “Polyvore is a lot like playing paper
dolls with pictures of real clothes.” Discuss.
4. Read Jacobs (2010) and explain what and how people
create at Polyvore. Also identify the critical success factors of this site.
5. Explain the statement made by Polyvore’s vice president
of product management: “Our mission is to democratize
fashion.”
6. Identify all the features of a shopping community in this case.
Kaboodle: A Unique Social Shopping
Community
Kaboodle (kaboodle.com) is a large, comprehensive
social shopping community and network, according to
kaboodle.com/zm/about. According to crunchbase.com/
product/kaboodle, “Kaboodle is a free service that lets
users collect information from the Web and store it on a
Kaboodle list that can be shared with others.” The site’s
primary goal “is to simplify shopping by making it easier
for people to find items they’re interested in and by allowing users to share recommendations with one another
using Kaboodle lists and groups. Kaboodle lists, however,
can also serve a variety of purposes besides just shopping.
[For example], they can be used for planning vacations [or
parties], sharing research for work or school, sharing your
favorite bands with friends, and basically anything else
you might want to collect and share information about”
(emphasis added).
To learn more about how Kaboodle works, take the
Kaboodle Tour at kaboodle.com/zd/help/getStarted.html.
Some of Kaboodle’s Capabilities
The “Add to Kaboodle” button simplifies the online shopping experience because, once installed, the user can simply
click on it whenever a product is selected from any website.
Then, a snapshot of the selected item, its price, and other
product information is automatically uploaded with a link
about where to place it on the user’s Kaboodle lists. The user
then can find any specific item in the future. Users can also
discover deals, find new products, express their unique
styles, connect with others, share their discoveries, blog, create shopping lists, and more.
Kaboodle allows the creation of “Top Picks” from the
Kaboodle lists based on what members like (e.g., the “top 10
weird and interesting products”).
6.5
Social Shopping Aids: From Recommendations, Reviews, and Ratings to Marketplaces
Private Online Shopping Clubs
and Retail by Invitation
French e-commerce company Vente-Privee (us.venteprivee.
com) pioneered the first private online shopping club specializing in “members only” online flash sales. The club concentrates on designer products at discounted prices (up to
80 %). Vente-Privee also sells exclusive designer brands
such as fashion accessories, homewares, sports products,
consumer electronics, and wine. In general, private shopping
clubs run flash sale events featuring luxury brands at huge
discounts. Luxury brands use the clubs to liquidate out of
style items, overstock, or special samples. Consumers like
the clubs due to the steep discounts.
The key to this business model’s success is that, in contrast with the Groupon model, not everyone is allowed to
shop. The members-only model serves a myriad of purposes.
Partially, it is a marketing device that makes members feel
like VIPs, but it also helps the clubs manage healthy growth.
Examples of Private Clubs
Some private (or “members only”) clubs are: Beyond the
Rack (U.S. and Canada), Gilt Groupe, Rue La La, Amazon
BuyVIP (buyvip.com; Europe only), Ideel, and BestSecret.
For members only clubs around the world, see membersonly-shopping.com. Note that, to minimize conflict with
department stores, some luxury brands now offer selected
items at lower prices in stores such as Target Inc.
Shopping Together Sites
Dozens of sites facilitate shopping together activities. For
example, Select2gether (select2gether.com) is a “virtual room
where you can meet and greet your friends, colleagues, customers and prospects. Select2gether allows you to organize
and share all the beautiful things you find on the Web. You can
browse Meet Rooms created by other people to discover new
things and get inspiration from people who share your interests. You can show your stuff to others and get advice and
other views from friends and advisors.” For details and explanations, see select2gether.com/about/help. Select2gether utilizes the WeLiket tool, which lets users “grab” images from
any website to add to the Meet Room. The free WeLiket tool
is unique to Select2gether. For more about the WeLiket tool,
see select2gether.com/pages/toolbar.
139
friends can explore a store, view products, exchange messages, and chat about products. Coshopping provides realtime synchronization of two shoppers’ Web browsers to
create a single collaborative shopping session controlled by
one of the shoppers (with individual’s privacy protected).
Coshopping can also facilitate a customer care center’s
live chat solution by allowing a customer service representative to guide the customer through product browsing and
selection on the site. To learn about the features and capabilities of Coshopping, see ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/SSZLC2_7.0.0/com.ibm.commerce.coshopping.doc/
concepts/csmcoshopping.htm. For other examples of social
shopping networks, see online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10
001424052970204425904578073320375105606.
6.5
SOCIAL SHOPPING AIDS:
FROM RECOMMENDATIONS,
REVIEWS, AND RATINGS
TO MARKETPLACES
In addition to the typical e-commerce shopping aids such as
comparison engines and recommendations a la Amazon.com
style, there are special aids for social commerce.
Recommendations in Social Commerce
Prior to making a purchase, customers tend to collect information that will help them make a decision, such as what
brand to buy, from which vendor, and at what price. Online
customers do this by consulting shopping aids (e.g., price
comparison sites) such as nextag.com, product review sites
such as epinions.com, and researching other sources.
Examining and participating in social networking forums is
another way to compare prices and read product and service
reviews. According to Gartner Inc. (reported by Dubey
2010), the majority of online customers already rely on
social networks to guide them in purchasing decisions. A
variety of SC models and tools is available for this purpose
(e.g., see Dugan 2010). We present two major categories
here. For an infographic on what engages millennials and
influences their purchasing decisions, see quicksprout.
com/2014/11/14/how-to-influence-purchasing-decisions.
Ratings and Reviews
Coshopping
Coshopping is an IBM software package (feature of the IBM
WebSphere Commerce pack) that enables online shoppers to
invite friends to a coshopping session. Shoppers and their
Ratings and reviews by friends, even by people that you do
not know (e.g., experts or independent third-party evaluators), are usually available for social shoppers. In addition,
any user has an opportunity to contribute reviews and
participate in relevant discussions. The information about the
140
tools for conducting rating and reviews, which are presented
here, is based on Fisher (2010), Rowan and Cheshire (2011),
Shih (2011), bazaarvoice.com/solutions/conversations,
and the authors’ experiences. The major types of tools and
methods are:
• Customer ratings and reviews. Customer ratings
are popular. They can be found on product (or service) review sites (e.g., buzzillions.com) or independent review sites (e.g., tripadvisor.com), and/or
in customer news feeds (e.g., Amazon.com,
Epinions). Customer ratings can be summarized by
votes or polls.
• Customer testimonials. Customer experiences are
typically published on vendors’ sites, and on third
party sites such as TripAdvisor. Most sites encourage discussion (e.g., bazaarvoice.com/solutions/
conversations).
• Expert ratings and reviews. Ratings or reviews
can also be generated by domain experts and appear
in different online publications.
• Sponsored reviews. These are written by paid
bloggers or domain experts. Advertisers and bloggers find each other by searching through websites
such as sponsoredreviews.com, which connects
bloggers with marketers and advertisers.
• Conversational marketing. People communicate
via e-mail, blog, live chat, discussion groups, and
tweets. Monitoring conversations may yield rich
data for market research and customer service (e.g.,
Dell’s use of their “Social Media Command
Center”). See Chap. 10 and exacttarget.com/sites/
exacttarget/files/10-Examples-of-Social-MediaCommand-Centers.pdf for details.
• Video product review. Reviews can be generated
by using videos through communities such as Expo
(expotv.com), where consumers can leave
“Videopinions” about products and services.
YouTube users can create reviews that are uploaded,
viewed, commented on, and shared.
• Blogger reviews. This is a questionable method
since some bloggers are paid and may use a biased
approach. However, many bloggers have a reputation of being unbiased. For a list of 50 product
review blogs, see Sala (2012).
Example
Maui Jim (mauijim.com) is a company that designs high
quality polarized sunglasses. According to Business Wire
(2010), the company is using Bazaarvoice Ratings &
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
Reviews to enable customers to rate and review the company’s entire line of sunglasses and accessories. The company
is relying on word-of-mouth marketing to advertise its products and help shoppers. Customers are invited to share their
opinions on the style, fit, and quality of specific sunglass
models. Maui Jim also sends customers opt-in e-mails asking them to review products. The company lists the reviews
with the product listings, and also integrates them in the site
search functionality so customers can see its star rating in the
search results.
Social Recommendations and Referrals
Recommendation engines allow shoppers to receive advice
from other shoppers and to give advice to others.
Social shopping may combine recommendations in a
social network platform with actual sales. Social recommendations and referrals are closely related to ratings and reviews
and are sometimes integrated with them.
Traditional online product review companies such as
Amazon.com and Bazaarvoice have helped traditional consumers, but today’s customers like to receive advice from,
and give advice to, friends and other shoppers. Sites such as
cnet.com, Wired Reviews (wired.com/category/reviews),
buzzillions.com, epinions.com, consumerreports.org, and
thefind.com can be used for this purpose. Amazon.com also
provides reviews on the products they sell.
Example
ThisNext (thisnext.com) is a social commerce site where
community members recommend their favorite products, so
others can discover desirable or unique items and decide
what to buy. ThisNext uses WOM, social experiences, and
personalization to facilitate shopping. To assist with discovery and help finalize shopping decisions, the community
includes experts, bloggers, style mavens, and trendsetters.
ThisNext has also developed a set of shopping tools for bloggers, designers, and shoppers. For a further description, see
thisnext.com/company.
It makes sense to combine recommendations with marketing communications and shopping. Recommendation and
review sites allow shoppers to receive and provide advice to
specific friends, in contrast with traditional online product
reviews that include advice provided by unknown shoppers.
Furthermore, these sites sell ad space, provide coupons, and
some offer automatic cash-back rewards for shopping with
local merchants.
A new trend is to encourage conversations around purchases with a shopper’s “real life” friends. The sites that
include reviews from people one knows are logically more
trustworthy than sites that include only the reviews made by
strangers.
6.5
Social Shopping Aids: From Recommendations, Reviews, and Ratings to Marketplaces
Sometimes, social recommendations are embedded in
social shopping portals that offer shopping tools as well as
bundling recommendations with ratings and reviews. A
prime example is Kaboodle (described earlier as a shopping
community).
Common recommendation methods are:
• Social bookmarking. Recommended products,
services, etc. are bookmarked so members of social
networks can easily find them.
• Personal social recommendations. These are
based on finding people with similar profiles. By
using these customers’ actual purchases, conclusions can be reached about general and targeted recommendations (e.g., see Apple’s Near Me
[getnearme.com]; applications that are popular
based on a user’s current location, Amazon
Recommendations, and snoox.com “your friends’
recommendations, on everything”).
• Referral programs. Affiliate programs (e.g.,
affiliate-program.amazon.com,
apple.com/
itunes/affiliates) pay people for referring new customers. For more about referral programs, see
slideshare.net/getAmbassador/
building-an-effective-referral-program.
• Matching algorithms. Consulting companies and
vendors (e.g., Netflix) provide recommendations
based on similarity algorithms (as described in
Chap. 3).
For more on product reviews, see buzzilions.com and
bazaarvoice.com/product-reviews.
Illustrative Examples of Recommendation Sites
Recommendations, reviews, ratings, and other engagement
activities can be done in the communities described in
Sect. 6.4. For a list of rating and review websites, see epower.
com/rating-review.php. However, the major objectives of
communities like Kaboodle are different because they concentrate on recommendations, reviews, and ratings as important shopping aids.
Crowdstorm
According to Chaney (2011), “crowdstorm.com” is a shopping recommendation website with two goals: (a) [being] a
hub for product reviews, and (b) [being] a source where
shoppers can find the best online prices for consumer goods
such as electronics, sporting equipment, clothing, and jew-
141
elry. The site is fueled by user-submitted product listings and
product reviews. However, it also has expert reviews, buyer
guides, and question-and-answer sessions. The site promotes
an open policy by allowing users to post their reviews to
blogs, other reviews sites and online stores” (emphasis
added). The site is doing extensive price comparisons. The
site claims to have over 300,000 visitors a month; however, it
does not sell anything—it just aids shoppers. Crowdstorm is
also a social shopping experience provider, where shoppers
can ask others for recommendations about products they are
looking to buy and to find the best online prices for many
consumer goods. By adding a social shopping aspect to their
website, Crowdstorm is aiming to be much more than simply
a price comparison site.
Buzzillions
Buzzillions.com is a user-generated product review site. It
gets reviews from its partner company, PowerReviews
(acquired by Bazaarvoice), which provides customer review
software to e-commerce sites. It also incorporates product
reviews from companies that use other third-party providers,
or have an in-house review system. The site provides several
useful tools for tagging and researching the reviews. It also
provides rankings.
Buzzillions’ business model is based on selling traffic
information, or product leads, from Buzzillions right back to
the merchant network that uses PowerReviews. In other
words, Buzzillions’ users read reviews imported from many
other sites, and they can then click on products of interest,
giving them the opportunity to read more about these products and possibly purchase them from the seller’s site.
The company is unique because:
1. The rankings are based on feedback from customers. The
company provides the tools to narrow down the search,
but the consumers have to read the reviews to see if the
product is right for them.
2. Positive or negative, all reviews are encouraged on
Buzzillions. Unless a review is profane or violates the
company’s terms, it will be shown on the site.
3. Buzzillions does not sell products, although the company
has retail partners listed on the site for direct contact by
consumers.
Example: How Intuit Corp—Helps Consumers
with Recommendations
Intuit’s TurboTax program is very popular, with about 20 million users. The company uses a social media recommendation
system, called the TurboTax Live Community (ttlc.intuit.
com). The Live Community has several million questions and
answers in their database; it is presented in a Q&A format
where you can ask questions and get answers from experts
and the community. TurboTax also offers “Customer Ratings
and Products Review.” The reviews and ratings are available
142
so yours can “read unfiltered reviews from [their] customers….” Searches can be segmented into tax-related categories
like ‘bought a house’ or ‘lost my job.’ Intuit also made the
search function on its site more prominent and easier to use.
From the Customer Ratings and Product Reviews page (turbotax.intuit.com/reviews), consumers can also click on any
rating or review and post it on their Facebook or Twitter page.
While on the Customer Ratings and Product Reviews page,
users can easily share their reviews on Facebook and Twitter
with one click. The Live Community (ttlc.intuit.com) consumers doing their taxes can ask a question and get an answer
from another customer or a TurboTax support expert.
Concerns About Social Reviews
and Recommendations
Some people are concerned about the accuracy of the reported
reviews and recommendations. In 2012, Gartner, Inc. predicted
that by 2014, 10–15 % of social media reviews would be fake
and paid for by companies (gartner.com/newsroom/
id/2161315). In fact, consumers are skeptical about social
media marketing (see blogs.wsj.com/digits/2014/06/03/amidfake-reviews-consumers-skeptical- of-social-mediamarketing). For example, see the ‘Alleged Manipulation by
Yelp’ section on Wikipedia at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yelp.
There is also a concern that businesses are paying people
money to post favorable reviews and that in cases of a small
number of reviewers, a bias (positive or negative) may be
shown. Some government agencies are getting involved in dismantling the system of fake reviews. For example, in September
2013, the Attorney General of New York City assessed monetary penalties against 19 companies who created false reviews
for products and services (see nbcnews.com/tech/internet/
ny-attorney-general-cracks-down-fake-online-reviewsf4B11235875).
Other Shopping Aids and Services
In addition to recommendations and marketplaces, there are
several sites that provide social shopping aids, as illustrated
in the following examples.
Yelp: The Shoppers’ Best Helper
Yelp (yelp.com) is a company that operates an online urban
(local) guide that helps people find services ranging from
mechanics to restaurants in a specific city based on reviews
and recommendations of local users. In this way, it connects
people with great local businesses. Community members,
known as “Yelpers,” write reviews of the businesses and then
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
rate them. Yelpers also find events and special offers and can
“talk” with each other by posting and replying to conversations on different topics (yelp.com/talk).
The site is also a place for businesses to advertise their
products and services (there is no fee to create a business
page; however, there is a fee for business owners to post a
“Yelp Deal”). Yelp is also accessible via mobile devices. The
site offers several social networking features such as discussion forums, posting photos, and using Facebook to find
friends who have Yelp accounts. Yelp has a company blog
(officialblog.yelp.com), along with a community blog for
Yelpers and Elite members worldwide (communityblog.
yelp.com). Yelpers who frequently become actively involved
and engage on the site can apply to become an “Elite Squad”
member (see yelp.com/elite).
Since its inception in 2004, Yelp operates in major metro
cities in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, and
other countries worldwide. For 2014 statistics, see Smith
et al. (2014). As of Q3 2014, Yelp had a monthly average of
139 million unique visitors (as measured by Google
Analytics) and Yelpers had written over 67 million rich, local
reviews by the end of Q3 2014. Approximately 73 million
unique visitors visited Yelp via their mobile device on a
monthly average basis during Q3 2014. For more information, see the infographic on Yelp’s “Factsheet” at yelp-press.
com/phoenix.zhtml?c=250809&p=irol-press.
How Yelp Works
Users look for a business in a specific city. Yelp’s search
engine finds available businesses and presents ratings and
reviews as well as accessibility and directions. Yelp connects
with Google Maps to show the location of the businesses and
further aids in discovering related businesses. (Google was
negotiating to buy Yelp in November 2010, but the deal fell
through in January 2011.)
Adding social features to user reviews creates a reputation
system, whereby site visitors can see both the positive and
the negative reviews.
For more about reputation management, see Chap. 5 and
outspokenmedia.com/guides/orm-guide. Yelp became a
major commercial success and was listed on the stock market
in March 2012. Its stock price keeps increasing (with pauses).
Most of Yelp’s revenue comes from advertising (in 2012,
80 % came from local advertising). For Yelp’s business model
and an infographic, see streetfightmag.com/2013/05/06/
how-does-yelp-make-money-and-where-is-it-going-next.
For further information, see yelp.com/faq.
Note that some shopping aids can be used for both
online and offline shopping. One such aid is the touchscreen PC available at kiosks in physical stores (e.g.,
Kohl’s) where you can examine catalogs and place your
order while in the store.
6.5
Social Shopping Aids: From Recommendations, Reviews, and Ratings to Marketplaces
Collaborative Reviews
Sites such as productwiki.com are structured like a wiki;
thus, every user can contribute. The goal is to create a
comprehensive resource collection. The companies believe
that a need exists for unbiased, accurate, and communitybased resources for product information. These sites use
collaborative reviews, a collection of pros and cons about
a product submitted by and voted on by the consumers.
The result is a comprehensive review that takes the opinions of many people into account, and highlights the most
important aspects of a product. A collaborative review is
made up of two things—statements and votes. Community
members submit and vote on specific statements that are
separated by pros and cons, making it easy to see what is
good and bad about each product. For further information
on collaborative reviews, see productwiki.com/home/
article/collaborative-reviews.html.
In March 2013, ProductWiki merged with Bootic (bootic.
com), which is known as a “wiki of products” (see bootic.
com/_aboutus). The idea is for ProductWiki to offer a marketplace in addition to product reviews. Bootic is the first
marketplace that allows shoppers to express themselves by
editing, adding content, and enhancing the overall product
description. As a result of this partnership, ProductWiki, like
Bootic, will offer a marketplace in addition to product
reviews. According to its website, vendors love Bootic’s
marketplace because “Bootic’s e-commerce platform offers
a free suite of easy-to-use Web-based tools and technology
to help our vendors create their own individualized online
shops. Unlike other marketplaces, we don’t charge fees. On
Bootic, storefronts can quickly get up and running without
incurring any set-up costs, listing or on-going transaction
fees. Bootic empowers small businesses to enhance their
online brand while optimizing a new revenue stream.”
Filtering Consumer Reviews
As described earlier, TurboTax, a division of Intuit, also
launched a ratings and reviews page (reviews.turbotax.
intuit.com).This page allows consumers to describe their
particular tax situations, and then filter reviews on TurboTax
products, to see only those written by “people like them”
(similar tax and income situations); then, they can quickly
find which TurboTax product best suits their needs.
Dealing with Complaints
As will be seen in Chap. 7, customers have learned how to
use social media to air their complaints. For a UK survey that
shows that customers are more likely to complain via social
143
media, see xlgroup.com/press/new-survey-finds-customersincreasingly-likely-to-use-social-media-to-complain. See
also wptv.com/dpp/news/science_tech/facebook-fb-twittertwtr-used-to-complain-get-answers.
Social Marketplaces and Direct Sales
to Customers
The term social marketplace refers to a marketplace that
uses social media tools for enabling shoppers to perform
activities, such as the buying and selling of products, services,
and resources. As with any other marketplace, a social marketplace brings sellers and buyers together to connect and
transact. The social marketplace is an intermediary that provides the infrastructure and procedures for transactions,
including display, product discovery, interactions, comparisons, security, and payments (see affino.com/innovationf e a t u re s / i n n o v a t i o n - f e a t u re s / i n t ro d u c t i o n - t o social-marketplace).
Ideally, a social marketplace (like Polyvore) should
enable the members to market their own creations.
Examples of Social Marketplaces
• Craigslist. Craigslist (craigslist.org) is considered a
social network marketplace because it provides online
classified ads in addition to supporting social activities
(meetings, dating, events).
• Fotolia. Fotolia (us.fotolia.com) is a social marketplace
for affordable royalty free photos, images, and video
clips. By December 2014, there were more than 34 million images available on the site. Fotolia serves a community of artists, designers, and other creative people
who express themselves through images, forums, and
blogs. Buyers can legally buy images (pay as you go, or a
daily/monthly subscription). For details, see us.fotolia.
com/Info/AboutUs.
• Flipsy. According to applegazette.com/feature/sellyour-apple-device-using-flipsy-and-get-as-much-cashas-possible, “Flipsy [flipsy.com] is essentially a price
comparison site, albeit with a slight twist. Instead of you
looking for what others are selling, you are looking for
information on the figures that others are willing to pay
for the item you are selling…. Using Flipsy is simple
enough. You just have to specify the item you are selling,
and the site will return offers from various buyback websites.” As of 2014, Flipsy does not charge commissions or
fees. Since Flipsy does not buy products, payment processing for items purchased is handled by a third party,
such as PayPal.
144
• Storenvy. Storenvy (storenvy.com) is a global marketplace for emerging brands and inspired goods. Businesses
can launch a custom store to sell unique goods. At no cost
to sellers, a simple way is made available (no programming experience is needed) to create personalized webstores. Sellers have the ability to make their sites as
socially friendly as they wish, giving customers the
chance to follow or interact with sellers as well as with
other customers.
• ShopSocially. ShopSocially (shopsocially.com) is a
cloud-based social commerce platform, which sells a
suite of social apps to retailers to embed on their site. The
software package enables the retailers’ customers to share
shopping experiences via WOM (e.g., recommending
products to friends). It offers retailers hundreds of apps
such as ‘share-a-purchase’ and ‘shopping community.’
ShopSocially combines the concepts of online shopping
and social networks, creating a new business model for
the retailers that use their products. For example, users
can solicit shopping information from friends via
Facebook, Twitter, and e-mail. Users can ask shopping
questions and get answers. ShopSocially helps companies
to turn visitors in sites to fans. For details and benefits to
retailers, see shopsocially.com.
Example
Firearms manufacturer Beretta Inc. is using ShopSocially’s
social commerce platform and Facebook to increase customer engagement and sales conversation rate. In addition, it
captures customers’ delight after a new purchase, and converting it into valuable WOM recommendations that are
being shared virally on social networks. As a result, the company has added over 10,000 fans on Facebook, experienced a
15 % increase in sales conversion rate, and gained brand recognition and retention. For details, see prweb.com/
releases/2013/12/prweb11440494.htm
Some Unique Marketplaces
Chaney et al. (2013) lists the following marketplaces:
Addoway.com; a site that integrates with Facebook’s Social
Graph, and enables users to recommend merchants that your
friends have purchased from. Pikaba.com; works like a
reverse auction—you post what you want to buy and merchants will compete to offer the best price. Buyosphere.
com; fashion marketplace focused on unique designs; a community where you can ask stylists, bloggers, designers, and
others where to find something that is right for you.
Officearrow.com; a B2B marketplace designed to connect
buyers and sellers, along with providing unbiased ratings and
reviews by community members.
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
Example: How Musicians Sell Online
via Social Networks
Many musicians and other artists used to invest money to
make their own CDs, T-shirts, and other items before they
sold them. Now there is a free social commerce solution.
Audiolife Inc. (acquired by Alliance Entertainment, which
was acquired by video distribution company Super D in
2013) provides artists with webstores (one per artist),
where artists (sellers) can directly interact with potential
buyers. This arrangement also allows artists to sell custom
made merchandise.
To entice fans to order products, artists post their own
Audiolife selection on any large social network site (e.g.,
Facebook). Each order, even for one item, is then forwarded
to the artist for production. Audiolife arranges payment and
shipping to the buyers. By August 2014, Audiolife powered
close to 100,000 webstores worldwide, serving 300,000 artists, including those who are already established. For details,
see audiolife.com/about.html and Billingsley (2010).
6.6
INNOVATIVE SHOPPING MODELS
AND SITES AND VIRTUAL GOODS
There are hundreds of start-ups in social commerce. Even
Facebook is introducing SC services like “Page post link
ads” and the “Buy” button. Twitter began testing a “Buy”
button in fall 2014, and will make it available to the general
public in 2015. Here we provide some representative
examples.
Examples of Innovative Social Shopping Ideas
and Sites
Social shopping includes many new and innovative business
models. Some were described earlier in the chapter. We
include several more models here.
• Getting help from shoppers via TurnTo Networks. The
TurnTo Networks (turntonetworks.com) platform
involves partnering with certain websites to have them
carry a TurnTo link. TurnTo is a Social Q&A platform for
e-commerce sites that enables shoppers to ask questions
about products and get answers from other customers. The
shoppers’ questions are sent out to a select number of customers who have actually bought the merchandise. Their
answers are then e-mailed back to the shoppers and displayed on the merchant’s product pages for others to read.
According to its website, TurnTo’s products are designed
from the ground up to meet the needs of online retailers.
In October 2013, TurnTo announced a partnership
with needle.com, a guided shopping platform specializ-
6.6
Innovative Shopping Models and Sites and Virtual Goods
ing in live chat and customer engagement strategies.
Needle recruits knowledgeable shoppers who are familiar with certain brands and puts them to work chatting
with customers and answering questions, making recommendations, or guiding them toward finding the right
products. These “Needlers” are independent contractors
and are compensated with cash as well as points to
redeem for products.
For how the site works, see turntonetworks.com/
social-commerce-webinar-coffeeforless.com-solvescustomer-engagement-challenge-with-social-qa. Note
that Lenovo and Shoes.com use TurnTo for their Q&As.
For an infographic of the social Q&A model, see turntonetworks.com/social-qa-infographic/.
• Find what your friends are buying. Finding what your
friends are buying was offered, for example, by clubfurniture.com, a North Carolina company that sells online
home furnishings at factory prices directly to customers.
Note: This service was popular between 2009 and 2011
with several companies, but was discontinued mainly due
to privacy concerns.
• Wanelo. This popular social shopping network combines bookmarking and product sharing. Members can
follow others to find trendy items. For details, see
Leahey (2013). According to bits.blogs.nytimes.
com/2013/01/24/a-look-at-wanelo-a-socialcommerce-site-for-younger-shoppers/?_
php=true&_type=blogs&_r=2, the company’s name
is an abbreviation for ‘Want, Need, Love,’ and is popular with young shoppers. Wanelo (wanelo.com) is an
online community-based e-commerce site that brings
together products from a vast array of stores into one
pinboard-style platform. You can browse, save, and buy
items, post new products from around the Web, and follow members, stores, or product collections. Catering to
both brands and shoppers, members create collections—similar to Pinterest boards—from items onsite
or external links. It also has an app on iTunes and
Google Play and a Facebook Fan page. For more information
about
Wanelo,
see
pcmag.com/
article2/0,2817,2424709,00.asp
and
mashable.
com/2013/11/05/wanelo-social-shopping. For the
company’s business model, see businessweek.com/
articles/2014-04-24/wanelo-deena-varshavskayassite-takes-over-social-shopping. Wanelo is unique
since if you see something you like, you can purchase it
with one click.
Additional Examples of Social Shopping
There are many other examples. Here are few:
145
Example 1: Helping Sellers and Bloggers
Sell Products
Etsy is a socially-oriented marketplace which helps bloggers
and sellers (mostly artists) monetize their businesses by
making it easy for them to sell products directly to consumers. Note: A company called OpenSky used to do this; however, they changed their business model. For some new social
commerce business models, see Colao (2013).
Example 2: Event Shopping
Thee are many sites that help buyers, with the assistance of
their friends, shop for a special event (e.g., a wedding). Many
variations of this model exist. For example, in 2010, Wendy’s
gave away $50 gift cards for boneless wings to 100 consumers who organized viewing parties of that year’s NCAA
Basketball Championships over Facebook.
Socially-Oriented Person to Person (P2P): Selling,
Buying, Renting, or Bartering
When individuals conduct business online, they may do so
with some social elements. For example, some consider
Craigslist to be a socially oriented virtual community. Here
are some more examples:
P2P Lending
P2P money lending is growing rapidly, enabling one person
to lend money to another. This is done without a bank but
with the assistance of a matching company such as Prosper
or Lending Club. There are several other types of P2P lending. Another start-up created a community of people that
rent out goods to people, usually for the short term. In P2P
landing, people get to know each other (a social aspect).
P2P Sharing (Also Known As Collaborative
Consumption)
SnapGoods facilitates P2P sharing. Some other sites, like
SwapBabyGoods.com, Swapmamas.com (a social community for moms who want to get to know each other and swap
goods they no longer use for things they need) and
Neighborhood Fruit (that helps people share fruit that are
growing in their yards or find fruit trees on public lands),
have a niche market. The sharing and renting trend is booming, especially during the economic recession, and there is a
“green” aspect as well—saving resources. There is also the
social aspect of sharing, allowing people to make meaningful
connections with others (see Walsh 2010 for details).
Several variations of this model exist. Some people share
cars, others invite travelers to stay free in their homes, or
exchange homes for short periods (e.g., HomeExchange.
com; homeexchange.com) and much more. Lending Tree
146
(lendingtree.com) is another company that allows prospective borrowers to get quick offers from multiple lenders.
In May 2013, Google took a stake in P2P investment site
Lending Club (lendingclub.com; see Hempel 2013).
Start Ups: Examples
In 2014, Facebook started a program to help startup companies go online using Facebook and its services. Here are a
few examples.
Example 1: “Wine Condom” Bottle Stopper
This small start-up (mother-and-son) invented a quality cover for
wine bottles. They placed the idea on Kickstarter and raised
$9,285 from a community of 311 backers (see kickstarter.com/
projects/1269355871/wine-condoms). This is an example of
crowdfunding (see Kavilanz 2014). Once the duo raised the
money, they used Facebook as a platform to find customers and
distributors. They established contacts with wineries worldwide
and connected with cruise ship companies. They use Facebook
for advertising campaigns. The wine condoms are sold to both
businesses and individuals and are available for $10 a package at
winecondoms.com.
Example 2: Divas Snow Gear
In order to attract more women to the snowmobile sport,
Wendy Gavinski invented attractive and flattering clothing
for women. Her problem was that industry magazines and
online forums were geared towards men. Gavinski designed
one outfit as an experiment, and found a manufacturer to
work with her, creating her first sample. Because Gavinski
could not find women snowboarders through traditional
advertising, she decided to use Facebook ads to advertise her
products. She started in 2010 with a Facebook page. Using
Facebook, she directed customers to visit retailers and their
events. According to Gavinski, Facebook became their primary means of marketing since it is the only channel that
allows her company to specifically target women. With over
47,000 ‘Likes’ and the use of other social media channels,
the business became profitable in 2014, adding more products and gained market share in the U.S., Canada, Europe,
and Russia. For details, see Gavinski (2014), facebook.com/
divassnowgear1, and divassnowgear.com
Shopping Without Leaving Facebook
and Other Social Networks
There are several avenues for turning Facebook fan pages
into retail outlets, so fans do not have to leave Facebook to
shop. However, payment and security are two issues yet to
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
be resolved. In 2011, several large brands (e.g., Gap,
Nordstrom, GameStop) closed their shops on Facebook.
Companies closed their Facebook stores for a number of reasons, citing that people prefer to shop directly from the
stores’ website, or on Amazon.com. Some stores wanted to
focus on advertising using broader media. According to
Ashley Sheetz, VP of marketing and strategy at GameStop,
the company did not get enough revenue from using the
Facebook webstore. She told Bloomberg that Facebook is “a
way we communicate with customers on deals, not a place to
sell.” However, this situation is changing. In summer 2014,
Facebook introduced the “Buy” button to simplify shopping
without having the customer leave Facebook. In addition,
security and payments improved. A large number of tools
and apps facilitate e-commerce activities on Facebook. For
example, Soldsie (soldsie.com) can help you sell directly to
your Facebook fans on Facebook through comments on your
page (see new.soldsie.com/how-it-works). For a
ShopSocially infographic that reveals strategies for profitable social commerce with Facebook, see blog.shopsocially.
com/2014/05/15/facebook- drives-social-commerce/#.
VBEksPldWSo. Small businesses are also opening
Facebook stores where customers can buy directly from the
“shop” link on their Facebook page. Examples are
NutriBullet (facebook.com/thenutribullet) and Sweet
Blossom Gifts (facebook.com/SweetBlossomGifts), who
are using Storefront Social to create their stores. (NutriBullet
offers a “Buy” now button; Sweet Blossom Gifts offers a
“Purchase” button.) Some musicians, including Lady Gaga,
Muse, and Greenday have opened Facebook webstores. For
an overview, see Porterfield et al. (2013). For how to add a
store to a company’s Facebook page, see ecwid.com/facebook-commerce and watch the video titled “Setting up a
Store on Facebook to Sell Products” (7:24 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?v=Q9IrJef7zDA.
Note: Many companies direct Facebook users from their
pages to the companies’ own websites. Screen Print Designs
only does business from their Facebook page (see facebook.
com/screenprintdesigns).
Shopping for Virtual Goods
in a Virtual Economy
An increasing number of shoppers purchase all kinds of virtual products and services online. Virtual goods are computer images of real or imaginary goods. These include, but
are not limited to, properties and merchandise on Seconds
Life (such as virtual mobile phones to equip your avatar),
and a large number of items sold in multiplayer games on
social networks (e.g., FarmVille on Facebook). According to
eMarketer (2011), revenues from virtual goods in social
6.6
Innovative Shopping Models and Sites and Virtual Goods
gaming in the U.S. grew almost 60 % from $653 million in
2011 to $792 million in 2012.
According to Wikipedia, “Virtual goods are non-physical
objects and money purchased for use in online communities
or online games … . Virtual money (or in-game currency) is
used to purchase virtual goods within a variety of online
communities, which include social networking websites, virtual worlds, and online gaming sites” (see en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Virtual_goods).
The Virtual Economy
A virtual economy is an emerging economy existing in
several virtual worlds, where people exchange virtual
goods frequently related to an Internet game or a virtual
business. People go there primarily for entertainment.
However, some people trade their virtual goods or properties. A virtual property can be any resource that is controlled by virtual objects, avatars, or user accounts.
According to Lehdonvirta and Ernkvist (2011), the term
“virtual economy” was coined by Edward Castronova,
and refers “to artificial economies inside online games,
especially when the artificially scarce goods and currencies of those economies [are] traded for real money.” For
the characteristics of these properties, see en.wikipedia.
org/wiki/Virtual_economy. For how payments are made
for virtual goods, see Takahashi (2011), and for an overview of Facebook Payments, see developers.facebook.
com/docs/payments. For how one online game developer
accepts payments for virtual goods in Bitcoins, see
coindesk.com/online-game-developer-bigpoint-nowaccepts-bitcoins-virtual-goods.
In
March
2013,
Facebook released figures showing that there is a significant increase in the number of people paying to play
social games, rising 24 % in 2012. Over 250 million desktop game users were playing games on Facebook, jumping from 235 million in October 2012. Further research
showed that in 2012, a total of $2 billion was paid to
developers (see Womack 2013).
Why People Buy Virtual Goods
There are several reasons why people buy virtual goods. For
example, many people in China buy virtual properties
because they cannot afford to buy properties in the real world
(online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702304703
804579380683402958724). According to Savitz (2011; in
collaboration with Ben Perry), there are four major reasons
for such purchases made in any country:
147
1. Generating special experiences. Studies found
(e.g., see Markman 2010) that some people can
maximize their happiness by spending money on the
experience they get in a virtual world rather than
when spending money on physical goods. Happiness
from a dinner or a movie does not last for a long
time, but it makes us happy in the moment. The
same is true with virtual goods, since they are experiential in nature, but these can be very imaginative
and beautiful, providing much more happiness.
2. Generating emotions. Purchasing virtual goods
often fills emotional needs. In the virtual world, you
can be whatever or whoever you always wanted to
be, so people are willing to exchange real money
for real emotions they find in the virtual goods.
3. Small purchases make people happier. Making
small and frequent purchases of virtual goods (for a
small amount of money) makes many people happier than making infrequent purchases of larger
physical goods.
4. Virtual goods are low cost and low hassle. Virtual
goods are among the cheapest form of entertainment. There is no need to store virtual goods, maintain them, or be criticized about why you purchased
them. In short—there is no hassle as long as one
stays within one’s budget.
In fact, several real world retailers are promoting their virtual goods in online games.
Real-Time Online Shopping
In real-time online shopping, shoppers can log onto a site
and then either connect with Facebook or with another
social network instantly from a smartphone or computer,
or invite their friends and family via Twitter or e-mail.
Friends shop online together at the same time, exchanging
ideas and comparing experiences (e.g., see Dugan 2010).
For example, cosmetics company MAC has a feature
called “Shop Together” that lets customers consult with
their friends and family online for shopping help. The
technology allows customers to shop with friends just like
they are in a MAC store, only online. You can invite
friends to chat with you at any time via Facebook, Twitter,
IM, and e-mail. You can shop and chat at the same time,
see what your friends are browsing, and recommend products to each other, all in real time. For more information,
148
see maccosmetics.com/cms/customer_service/shoptogether.tmpl.
Examples of real-time shopping platforms are: BevyUp
(see bevyup.com/about_us.html) and Samesurf (see (samesurf.com/about.html), which empowers multiple users to
share their browsing experiences in real time.
Auctions in Social Shopping
There are several e-auction sites for social shoppers. The
most well known is eBay (ebay.com). Other auction sites are:
Listia
According to Wikipedia, “Listia [listia.com] is a free online
marketplace for trading goods between individuals, by using
a virtual currency instead of real money. The marketplace
uses an auction system where users bid on each other’s items
until the auction ends and the highest bidder wins…. Users
earn credits during sign-up and then continue to earn more as
they place items in the marketplace. Purchasing credits is
also an option, and is Listia’s main business model” (en.
wikipedia.org/wiki/Listia).
Like some other auction sites, Listia experiences both
complaints and responses to those complaints about fake
bidding and cheating by the sellers, or even by the auction
company (e.g., see ripoffreport.com/auction-liquidators/
listia-inc/listia-inc-listia-com-the-auti-fbabc.htm). For more
on Listia, see Chaney (2011).
Tophatter
Tophatter (tophatter.com) is an entertaining virtual auction
site that conducts live online auctions every day (sellers
begin auctions every hour) where buyers and sellers can
interact, chat, and transact in many categories. Tophatter
sends their members a daily e-mail notifying them when a
new auction is starting. For more information on Tophatter,
see techcrunch.com/2013/11/08/tophatter-android and
their Facebook page at facebook.com/tophatter.
B2B Social Networking
B2B social marketers must deal with a number of issues. For
a comprehensive guide to B2B, see Gillin and Schwartzman
(2011). In addition, you can listen to Schwartzman’s 2010
podcast on the topic, available at ontherecordpodcast.com/
pr/otro/B2B-social-networking.aspx.
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
Example: SAP
SAP (sap.com) is a large B2B software company with several million members in its SAP Community Network
(SCN). SCN is one of the most successful B2B and B2C
enterprise networks for employees, business partners, faculty, students and experts.
As of September 2013, SCN (2014) had over 2,500,000
registered members from 230 countries and territories,
over 113,000 contributors, over 30,000 new members per
month, 1.1 million newsletter subscribers, 2.1 million
unique visitors per month, 110 million page views and contributed content by 400,000 members. The network has
over 500 SCN topic spaces, and over 15,000 discussion
threads per month.
Zwilling (2011) presents nine location-based service
(LBS) opportunities for B2B.
Virtual Visual Shopping
Many consumers are driven to impulse buying when they see
interesting or new products in physical stores. Theoretically,
online shoppers in 3-D environments might also make such
purchases.
One aspect of 3D is its ability to put items into a more
physical view than 2D does. A 3-D view of a house interior
could help someone shopping for furniture visualize
whether a large dining table would fit in the intended
space. Consumers can experiment with the location of the
virtual table and see how it will fit into their home before
they buy it. 3-D platforms could take the guesswork out of
buying many types of products online, ranging from furniture
to clothes.
Example
Can you imagine looking at a computer screen where you
can see yourself wearing a piece of clothing you have
selected, exactly as you can in a physical clothing store’s
fitting room? Now wave your hand and the color of the outfit
changes; wave your hand again and a dress will be shorter or
longer. Another wave of your hand and another dress is on
your virtual body. A dream? Not really, it is already here! To
learn about this virtual “try-on” system, see Facecake
Marketing Technology’s “Swivel” (facecake.com/swivel)
and watch their video. For an illustration, watch the video
titled “Tobi Virtual Dressing Room” (1:14 minutes) at dailymotion.com/video/xcg18d_tobi-virtual-dressingroom_tech.
For more information, see virtwayworld.com/EN_
products_3d_virtual_shop.php.
Summary
Social Shopping in the Near Future
Imagine this scenario: A retailer will ask you to log in
through Facebook on your mobile device as soon as you step
into a physical store. (Many of Facebook’s partners have custom Facebook applications (Partner Apps) that users can
download (see facebook.com/mobile).
In this way, users can receive customized recommendations on their mobile phones. What about the risks?
Privacy is a concern to many, but less important to millennials who frequently share their experiences with others.
In addition, sometimes people do not need to reveal their
full identity on an in-store screen. Watch a related video
titled “The Future of Shopping” (48 s) at youtube.com/
watch?v=R_TAP0OY1Bk.
For example, according to Admin (2011), “when you walk
into a dressing room [in a department store], the mirror
reflects your image, but you also see images of the apparel
item [you like] and [certain] celebrities wearing it on an interactive display [in the dressing room]. A webcam also projects
an image of the consumer wearing the item on the website for
everyone to see. This creates an interaction between the consumers inside the store and their social network [friends] outside the store. The technology behind this system uses RFID
[Radio Frequency Identification].” RFID technology has
already been tried by the Prada store in New York City for
showing customers which shoes and purses would go with the
clothes they are trying on in the dressing room. You can watch
a video titled “Future Store (Smart Dressing Room)”
(2:53 minutes) of how a “smart” dressing room works at youtube.com/watch?v=0VII-xdg5Ak&feature=related. Note
that, due to privacy concerns, Prada (and other stores) discontinued their RFID systems.
The concept of virtual shopping is expanding. A new
Internet of Things technology enables the “smart fitting
room.” The “Connected Fitting Room,” by Microsoft,
Accenture, and Avanade, uses smart technology (RFID) to
track what the customer tries on. With a push of a button, the
customer can call for something else and the clerk will
receive notification on his or her mobile device. As of June
2014, the Connected Fitting Room is operating as a pilot
program in the U.S. and the UK (see fastcodesign.
com/3031689/microsofts-smart-fitting-room-is-like-arobo-shop-clerk). To read more about virtual shopping in
the future, see huffingtonpost.com/2014/05/24/shoppingin-the-future_n_5386395.html.
Instagram Marketing
According to Offerpop (2014), Instagram is revolutionizing
the visual Web. With more than 300 million active monthly
149
users and over 70 million photos shared each day (per instagram.com/press), the commercial opportunities are unlimited. For a marketing guide, see Offerpop (2014).
Facebook’s Plans
Facebook is expanding its social commerce advertising
model to include social shopping. Most notable is the ‘Buy’
button, which Facebook introduced in 2014. This feature is
designed to let shoppers purchase items directly from ads
and posts they see on Facebook’s news feed and in mobile
apps, without leaving Facebook (see Axelrad 2014). In
September 2014, the “Buy” button was still in the testing
phase. For benefits of the ‘Buy’ button on Facebook and
Twitter, see Bennett (2014).
Activities on Twitter
According to archive.financialexpress.com/news/comingsoon-to-twitter-facebook-click-to-buy-now/1271913, “If
you see a retailer’s tweet promoting a particular product and
want to get the deal, you might soon be able to click a button
or send a reply to simply add the discount to a stored credit
card—without leaving Twitter’s site or firing up another app.
For the last couple of years, Twitter and American Express
have offered AmEx cardholders the ability to load various
discounts onto their cards through tweets.
The next logical step would be to allow users to click to
buy a product, an idea that Twitter is also exploring, potentially with the payment processing company Stripe.”
In May 2014, Twitter also began testing a “Buy” button
for its users to make instant purchases (see nytimes.
com/2014/09/09/technology/twitter-begins-testing-buybutton-for-posts.html). For more on using Twitter for
e-business, see Krogue (2013).
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC issues as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. Describe social shopping. Social shopping refers to
online shopping that is supported by social media and
involves friends and online social communities. It
includes recommendations, group purchasing, clubs, and
more. It also includes shopping on social networks, such
as Facebook and Kaboodle, and using Web 2.0 tools to
aid online shopping. The major drivers are the large number of people who are engaged in social networks, reliance on the recommendations of friends, the possibility
150
of large discounts to buyers, the potential increase of sale
volume for sellers, the socially-oriented shopping models, and the rise of the social customer. It looks as though
the future of online commerce is socially oriented.
2. Framework and models of social shopping. Social
shopping is done in social networks (public and private),
social communities, and social marketplaces, as well as
in virtual worlds. The shopping mechanisms are similar
to those of e-commerce (Turban et al. 2015) and
e-marketing (Strauss and Frost 2014). What makes social
shopping unique is the social media aspects and the innovative business models. The major models are daily
deals, group buying (which may be combined with daily
deals); providing reviews, recommendations, ratings,
and conversation; shopping clubs and communities;
location-based shopping; peer-to-peer trading; Facebook
commerce (F-commerce); and shopping while you tweet.
Groupon, Gilt, Kaboodle, and hundreds of other startups are active participants. Competition is getting stronger, and success is visible mostly on Facebook and
Twitter (both sites are just starting to implement the
“Buy” button), and Pinterest (which recently partnered
with Shopify).
3. Group buying and deal purchases. Social media is
enabling the revitalization of group buying, which can be
combined with the “deal of the day” offer. Buyers are
encouraged to tell their friends and recruit them to buy the
daily deal(s). If successful, the original buyer will get an
even larger discount, and so will the group when it is large
enough (“cheaper-by-the-dozen”). This model is mostly
successful in China; unfortunately, it has not been yet in
the US. The ‘daily deals’ model, which has many variations and is the backbone of Groupon, is much more popular. Vendors have a chance to boost revenue while buyers
enjoy the discounts. The biggest winner is the intermediary. This is why stiff competition is developing among
intermediaries such as Groupon. There is intense competition in this area, both from vendors who are selling
direct, and from local newspapers, TV, and specialized
companies such as iDine (idine.com), a loyalty program
that rewards consumers with benefits and discounts when
they dine out at participating restaurants.
4. Shopping communities and clubs. Shopping together in
the physical world is a popular activity. Usually, it is done
with family members and friends. Online, shopping
together can be done in different ways. The most popular
method involves communities, managed by an independent company, which provide many services and opportunities. Fashion-oriented communities such as Polyvore
are very popular. The communities provide opportunities
for designers to create designs and see how much the
communities like them.
6
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
Social clubs limit membership, but they operate in a
similar manner to open communities. Communities and
clubs may be structured as marketplaces, or operate as
referral services, generating income per click by potential
buyers who click on the sellers’ logo. They may also
receive a commission from actual purchases.
5. Social recommendations and marketplaces. Social
buyers like social recommendations made by friends,
family members, and other shoppers. Social shoppers
may also like reading negative comments (see reputation management in Chap. 5). Recommendations can be
combined with reviews, rankings, price comparisons,
and so forth. There are several different ways that recommendations can be made (some in communities, others on special sites). Recommendations are also made
by bloggers and may even be posted on sellers’ sites
(e.g., travel sites, Amazon.com, etc.). In certain cases,
recommendations are more trustworthy if made by
experts or independent evaluators. Family members and
friends are usually the most influencing parties.
Recommendation sites use several incentives to attract
buyers. This revenue model is frequently sponsored by
advertisers (pay for clicks on the sellers’ banners) and
from commission on actual shopping resulting from the
click throughs. Several models exist.
Social marketplaces bring sellers and buyers together
and provide the services necessary for conducting transactions. Marketplaces may exist in social communities
and on other networking sites. Some marketplaces help
sellers create innovative products and services.
Marketplaces are sometimes confined to a certain commodity, industry, or profession. They use different support mechanisms as well, including negotiations and
auctions. Like communities, marketplaces encourage
interaction and building relationships. They also provide
shopping aids such as search engines, payment mechanisms, and order fulfillment.
6. Innovative shopping models. There are many innovative
social shopping models. Notable ones are social auctions,
trading for virtual goods, virtual visual shopping, shopping together in real time, crowdsourcing shopping (getting advice from the crowd), selling via blogs, and direct
selling by artists.
7. Shopping for virtual goods. As social networking
games have mushroomed in popularity, people are
spending more money on buying virtual goods. The
most popular transactions are game-related, such as
buying virtual farming tools in FarmVille (a Facebook
game) and properties in virtual worlds (e.g., Seconds
Life). People of all ages may like virtual goods because
of their ability to provide unique experiences, and for
their low price (you can buy an island or a factory for
Internet Exercises
151
only a few dollars). Furthermore, satisfaction can be
great and privacy is usually guaranteed. People can
make their dreams come true, quickly and inexpensively.
This has created a billion-dollar industry. Legality, taxation, and payments for virtual goods trading are still
evolving issues.
KEY TERMS
Communal shopping
Social marketplace
Social shopping
Virtual economy
Virtual goods
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REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Define social shopping and describe its drivers.
2. List the major benefits of social shopping.
3. List the major models of social shopping. Briefly
describe their capabilities.
4. Describe ratings, reviews, and recommendations.
5. How do customers and patrons of establishments conduct ratings and reviews?
6. Relate recommendations to social reviews and ratings.
7. Describe social marketplaces and list their benefits.
8. Define group buying. How does it work with flash sales?
9. Define social communities and social clubs as they
relate to marketing. How do they work?
10. Describe Kaboodle and list its major capabilities. Why
is it so successful?
11. Define social marketplaces and describe what happens
there.
12. Define virtual goods and explain why people buy them.
13. Describe the major shopping aids.
14. Describe social shopping in the near future.
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
1. Compare group buying to shopping together.
2. Enter socialmediatoday.com. Choose five articles that
are related to this chapter and discuss each briefly.
3. Compare Polyvore to Pinterest.
4. Discuss the benefits and concerns of using Yelp.
5. Discuss the reasons why people buy virtual goods.
6. Discuss the critical success factors of Polyvore.
7. Discuss how traditional online vendors can add social
networking capabilities to their sites.
8. Under what circumstances would you trust an expert’s
recommendation rather than a friend’s? What about the
opposite?
9. Debate: Is the social media influence on purchasing
overrated? Start with the slideshow titled “Social Media
Influence on Purchase Overrated” (McCafferty 2011) at
baselinemag.com/c/a/Intelligence/Social-MediaInfluence-On-Purchasing-Overrated-660095. Find
similar, newer data.
10. Debate: One day all e-commerce will be social.
11. Daily deals are being advertised today by many offline
and online retailers. Internet-only offers are common. Is
there a need for intermediaries such as Groupon? Debate
the issue.
12. Discuss the role of trust in social shopping. (Consult
bazaarvoice.com/solutions).
13. Why do you think that Wanelo is so popular with
teens?
14. Watch the video titled “SHOP.CA Realizes E-Commerce
Vision with Smarter Commerce” (3:00 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?v=bFjKZmvNcck and discuss.
INTERNET EXERCISES
1. Enter thisnext.com. What are the site’s features? What
do you like? Dislike? Why?
2. Enter tkg.com/social-media-marketing. What social
media platforms do they offer?
3. Search Google for “social shopping.” Find five articles
that relate to this chapter and discuss each briefly. Start
with venturebeat.com/tag/social-shopping.
4. Enter select2gether.com. What services do they offer?
What is the WeLiket toolbar and how does it facilitate
shopping online with friends?
5. Enter kaboodle.com. What are the major benefits you
can derive from becoming a member?
6. Enter blog.360i.com and find recent material on social
shopping; include the 2012 POV report on social shopping. Write a summary.
7. Enter facebook.com and find what and how you can buy
there while playing social games.
8. Enter powerreviews.com. Compare their activities to
those offered by similar sites.
9. Enter socialmediatoday.com and hubspot.com/customers, and find five recent social commerce customer
case studies. Summarize in a report.
10. Enter socialshoppingnetwork.org. Find material
related to Chap. 6. Write a report.
11. Enter placecast.net. Explain the features offered.
12. Enter bazaarvoice.com, quora.com, and bebo.com.
How can these sites facilitate shopping?
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6
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
1. Assignment for the Opening Case
Read the opening case and answer the following
questions:
(a) It is difficult for merchants to do business with
Groupon. A large percentage of merchants’ applications to do business with Groupon is dismissed by the
company. Why do you think Groupon is so strict and
how will this policy affect the competition?
(b) Some claim that Groupon is an e-mail list that charges
advertisers a marketing fee to send out their coupons.
Comment. Note that Groupon makes money by
charging a marketing fee for advertising and promoting vendors’ offers. In most cases, that fee is a percentage of the revenue generated by selling via
Groupon. (Start with: grouponworks.com/articles/
groupon/overview/business-model/how-grouponmakes-money.)
(c) Write a short essay on Groupon’s chance of survival
in the intensely competitive environment. Examine
its revenue model and expansion plans. Check stock
market analysts’ reports about the company.
(d) Groupon is changing its business model again, moving from coupons to discount sales. Study this business model. Write a report.
(e) Learn more about Groupon’s order fulfillment (e.g.,
ability to handle volume, control of deliveries, and
dealing with marketing and competitors). Write a
report.
(f) Research Groupon’s global efforts. Write a report.
(g) Groupon also deals in B2B. Search the Internet and
find out how this is being done and how successful it is.
(h) Read Phibbs’ (2011) book (Kindle edition) and
debate the following issues: Are deep discounts good
or bad for sellers? What are some of the disadvantages to merchants? What are the advantages?
2. The class will investigate group buying in China and
India. What is the prospect for group buying in Asia?
(Start with businesstoday.intoday.in/story/websitesspecialising-in-group-buying-deals-future/1/198416.
html). Why are group buying sites in India succeeding?
3. Shopping communities for fashion are exploding on the
Internet. Make a list of ten major sites (e.g., Polyvore,
ShopStyle, Pinterest, My It Things, etc.). Investigate their
activities and list their competitive advantage. Why is this
industry a prime setting for social communities? How are
they related to Facebook and Twitter? What are their business and revenue models? Write a summary report.
4. Each group will research one publicly traded social commerce company (e.g., Groupon, Pandora, TripAdvisor,
Bazaarvoice, Yelp). Check competition, stock perfor-
5.
6.
7.
8.
Social Shopping: Concepts, Benefits, and Models
mance, revenue sources, and so forth. Also check the
major Chinese companies listed on the US stock
exchanges (Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu, etc.). Use information from finance.yahoo.com, google.com/finance,
bloomberg.com, and so forth. Write a summary report.
The issue of the viability of Groupon and similar sites is
highly debatable (e.g., Buehler 2012; Srinivasan 2011).
Follow Groupon’s financial performance, conduct a
literature search, and debate the issue. Read fool.com/
investing/general/2014/09/08/why-groupon-inc-stockhas-plunged-40-in-2014.aspx. Write a summary report.
Shopping clubs are gaining popularity. Review the list
provided at stream-recorder.com/forum/list-americanprivate-shopping-clubs-sample-sale-t12846.html. Visit
these and similar sites. Also visit fivefourclothing.com.
Classify the clubs, and list their major features.
Ratings and reviews are popular aids in social
shopping. Compare yelp.com, angieslist.com, trip
advisor.com, and two other sites of your choice.
Concentrate on their capabilities. In addition, find the revenue sources of each site.
Learn “How to Create a Facebook Business Page 2014
(Updated)”
(17:26
minutes)
at
youtube.com/
watch?v=O9SDy58HBYo. Build a page as a class project.
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7
Social Customer Service and CRM
Contents
Learning Objectives
Opening Case: How Sony Uses Social Media
for Improving CRM .................................................................... 155
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Define CRM, e-CRM, and social CRM (SCRM).
2. Describe the major types of customer interactions with
companies.
3. Describe the evolution of CRM to SCRM.
4. Define social customers and describe how they can be
served.
5. Describe how social CRM works inside the enterprise.
6. Describe unique and innovative applications of SCRM.
7. Describe social CRM strategy and implementation issues.
7.1
Definitions and Concepts of CRM, E-CRM,
and Social CRM ................................................................. 156
7.2
A CRM Model for Customer Interactions ...................... 160
7.3
The Evolution of Social CRM ........................................... 162
7.4
How to Serve the Social Customer ................................... 166
7.5
Social CRM in the Enterprise........................................... 170
7.6
Special Applications and Issues in Social CRM.............. 172
7.7
Strategy and Implementation Issues of Social CRM...... 174
References .................................................................................... 177
OPENING CASE: HOW SONY USES SOCIAL
MEDIA FOR IMPROVING CRM
Sony, the giant consumer electronics producer, has been
struggling during the last few years. Now, by using social
media improvement is in sight.
The Problem
Elektronisch zusatz-materialien Die online-version dieses kapitels
(doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_7) enthält zusatzmaterial, das für
autorisierte benutzer ist.
Sony Corporation (sony.com) faces fierce competition from
Samsung, Sharp Electronics, LG Electronics, and other
large, global companies. This competition has intensified
during the economic slowdown in recent years. As a result,
total revenues for Sony declined every year from 2008 until
2012. The company suffered heavy losses in 2009 and 2012,
causing its share price to drop from $35/share in 2010 and
2011 to $9.57 in late 2012. In 2013 the stock rose mostly due
to the recovery in Tokyo’s stock exchange. Consumer electronic products are fairly mature, so the differences in quality
and prices are not substantial. Therefore, the competitors in
the field are promoting their customer service as a strategic
differentiator. Sony is trying to do this with the help of their
social media communities and initiatives.
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_7, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
155
156
The Solution: Social Media Projects
Sony Corporation embarked on social CRM as a vehicle for
improving customer service in April 2013. According to Jack
(2013), Sony combined a customer support and direct marketing program, mostly using social channels. The various
initiatives are managed by Sony’s Customer Experience
Management Team. The team organized Sony’s Community
Site (community.sony.com), which is a central hub for customer information and support. It includes idea boards, discussion groups, blogs, Twitter feeds, and other
content-generating channels. The site is used also for marketing campaigns.
The following are representative activities, many of
which are done at Sony Europe (see Taylor 2013).
• Active social communities; some are for specific products, others are general for the entire Sony brand. The
company’s staff members and consumers are involved in
these communities. Members of these communities are
helping each other and providing feedback. Customer service employees are “listening” to the feedback and using
the information to improve service.
• YouTube videos provide training for customers on the use
of Sony’s products.
• Using Lithium Social Web software (a SAP company), relevant sites are monitored for reviews and comments
(positive and negative). This allows Sony to improve operations, resolve problems, and capitalize on opportunities.
• There is a special “Customer Relations” tab located on
Sony’s Community site, the company’s central social network, for easy communication.
• The company created a ‘Facebook Support Community’
(facebook.com/sony), Twitter ‘Sony Support USA’ (twitter.com/sonysupportusa), Tumblr ‘Sony Support USA’
(sonysupportusa.tumblr.com), and a YouTube Sony
Support Channel ‘Sony Listens’ (youtube.com/user/
SonyListens).
• In the communities, the company’s staff demonstrates
how problems are resolved quickly and efficiently. For
example, there is an “Experts” tab for “How To” videos
and technical support, and so forth. See community.sony.
com/t5/Meet-Our-Experts/bg-p/experts.
• Sony is using all its social media channels, including
LinkedIn, to proactively engage users and provide customer service in a timely fashion.
• Sony Electronic integrates Pinterest (pinterest.com/sonyprousa) to send information about its products to community members (see details in Eckerle 2013 and
ohsopinteresting.com/lessons-from-sony-on-pinterest).
According to Holland (2011), Sony mines social media
conversations and conducts sentiment analysis (Chap. 10) to
improve customer service and product improvements and
design. Note that Sony is using social media campaigns to
7
Social Customer Service and CRM
engage customers (e.g., 2011 ‘CatchTheTablet’ campaign;
see atomicpr.com/results/sony-catch-the-tablet). Finally,
according to Revoo (2011), software from Reevoo helps
Sony automatically translate reviews from one language to
another.
The Results
Significant results were realized in 2014 after the deployment
of most SC initiatives. However, some improvements have
materialized earlier. For example, according to Jack (2013),
the improved communication resulted in a 22 % increase in
‘clicks’ (over 100 % in some cases). Other results are:
• Customers’ trust in Sony increased (Jack 2013).
• Page views, conversation volume, and engagement activities (e.g., posting) increased by 100 % (Jack 2013).
• Customer service was combined with marketing promotions, which resulted in new sources of revenue for Sony.
• In March 2014, PlayStation had about 2.5 million followers on Twitter and 35 million fans Facebook.
Sources: Based on Jack (2013), Taylor (2013), Eckerle
(2013), Revoo (2011), and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony
(accessed July 2015).
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE CASE
The Sony case illustrates that a company can use social
media to not only advertise and sell, but also to provide
outstanding customer service. Operating in a highly
competitive market, customer service can be an important strategic differentiator. Sony has supplemented
their traditional customer service with social networks,
blogs, Twitter, and a Facebook fan page. They have
concentrated on improving communication and interactions with customers. The customer service provided
via social media tools and platforms is more interactive, timely, and direct. Furthermore, the system fosters a truly conversation-based communication. This
kind of service is important to customers, and contributes to the company’s success. In this chapter, we concentrate on social CRM.
7.1
DEFINITIONS AND CONCEPTS
OF CRM, E-CRM, AND SOCIAL CRM
It is well known that customers are the revenue engine of
most organizations. Without customers, there would be no
business. Therefore, customers must receive outstanding service.
7.1
Definitions and Concepts of CRM, E-CRM, and Social CRM
In today’s world, highly valued customers receive even more
attention.
The customer care field is undergoing a significant transformation, both in the way that customer service professionals conduct business and in the way that customers interact
with companies that use the Social Web. The implementation
of social media has altered both the expectations of customers and the way corporations provide customer service (as
the growth of e-mail did many years ago).
At first, one may think that there is not much connection
between customer service and social commerce. In fact, the
opposite is probably true. For an overview, Lacy et al. (2013).
How Social Networks Empower Customers
It is said that one angry tweet can torpedo a brand, but one
sweet tweet can correct a problem (Bernoff and Schadler
2010). According to Sysomos Inc. (2011) and parature.com/
lp/report-2014-state-multichannel-cs-survey-comm.html,
more than 65 % of all customers have ended relationships
with vendors due to what they perceived to be poor customer
service. Let us examine how one angry customer used
Facebook in an attempt to change one company’s policy.
Example: How Facebook’s Chorus Ended
the Instrument Luggage Ban at Qantas Airways
of Australia
Qantas Airways had a policy that required large musical instruments to be stored in the cargo hold, which would sometimes
cause damage to the instruments. In fall 2010, after suffering
$1,200 in damages to her saxophone, Jamie Oehlers of Australia
organized a Facebook campaign to persuade the airline to
reverse the policy. When one person complains, the company’s
standard response is to send the customer a letter of apology,
but usually the policy does not change. However, more than
8,700 people (including members of the country’s symphony
orchestras) joined forces on Facebook by posting similar incidents and pictures of damaged instruments and saying they
would boycott Qantas if the airline did not change their policy.
Qantas announced that they listened to their customers, and in
December 2010, amended the policy, allowing any instrument
in a hard-shelled case on board, provided it falls within the
airline’s length and weight restrictions (based on a news item
from Staff Writers 2010). Alternatively, one may purchase a
seat for a large instrument and carry it as a bulky item. (For
information about Qantas’s new policy, see qantas.com.au/
travel/airlines/carry-on-baggage/global/en).
This story is not unique; similar stories frequently appear
in the media. A well-known case from 2008 is ‘United Breaks
Guitars,’ the saga of a musician named Dave Carroll who
flew United Airlines with his guitar, only to have it broken.
157
Carroll and his bandmates were sitting at the rear of the aircraft waiting to deplane, when the United baggage handlers
threw Carroll’s $3,500 guitar, with little care, causing it to
break. After nine months of a series of e-mails and telephone
calls, the airline’s representative told Carroll that United
refused to take responsibility. Carroll offered them a settlement of $1,200 in flight vouchers, to cover his salvage costs
repairing his guitar, which was rejected. Carroll, however,
realized that as a musician and songwriter, he was not without options. He told the United representative that he would
be writing three songs about his experience with United
Airlines. He would then make videos for these songs and
offer them for free download on YouTube and his own website. Carroll’s goal was to get one million hits on YouTube,
but the first song, titled “United Breaks Guitars,” became a
viral sensation and surpassed 150,000 views the first day and
over three million views in just 10 days. In August 2009,
Carroll and his band released “United Breaks Guitars: Song
2” that has surpassed over 1,700,000 views as of January
2014, and in 2010, he released the final chapter, “United
Breaks Guitars Song 3: ‘United We Stand,’” which has garnered over 672,000 views as of January 2014. The original
“United Breaks Guitars” song has been watched by over
13,700,000 people as of January 2014 (see youtube.com/
watch?v=5YGc4zOqozo).
Since the whole debacle and the release of the songs and
videos, Carroll has published a book about his experience
and has become a public speaker. (Watch the video from
Dave Carroll’s presentation given at the Brite 2010 conference titled “Dave Carroll: Lessons from ‘United Breaks
Guitars’” (20:14 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?v=_
Hd8XI42i2M to learn more about how United changed its
ways, and the lessons for customer service in an age of social
media.) Also see mashable.com/2012/02/02/unitedbreaks-guitars-gripevine. In addition, in February 2012,
Carroll helped launch a customer service platform called
Gripevine (gripevine.com); a forum for disgruntled customers to post their complaints and bad experiences they have
had with companies. Gripevine’s automated response technology notifies the company and invites them to the site to
review the gripe, giving both parties an opportunity to work
towards a positive resolution.
In another example, a customer named Heather Armstrong
complained that Maytag (appliances) customer service was
unhelpful about her new broken washing machine. Frustrated
with her experience, Armstrong told the unhelpful customer
service representative that she has over 10,000 followers on
Twitter. They did pay attention to her only after she tweeted
about her nightmare experience with the company. Within a
day, she received a telephone call from their parent company’s corporate office, and the next day her washer was working. In the past, customer complaints usually received little
or no attention, even when customers threatened to publish
158
their complaint on the Internet. Armstrong said that “Twitter
has become a tool to ‘empower’ customers like her—once a
company figures out she has a listening audience (in this
case, her 10,000 Twitter followers), it’ll need to listen and
act” (see Olson 2009).
These examples show how, at the most basic level of customer service, social media acts as a “social telephone” (see
Sysomos Inc. 2011).
Today, when a customer says, “I will organize a campaign against your company on Facebook or Twitter,” you
can be sure that someone at the company will pay attention.
An empowered customer is a major driver of social CRM
(Bernoff and Schadler 2010). Chapter 5 reveals how companies handle their reputations when under attack in the
social media.
Defining CRM and E-CRM
Three basic concepts are important for an understanding of
this chapter: CRM, e-CRM, and social CRM (SCRM).
Customer Relationship Management (CRM)
Customer relationship management (CRM) is an approach
that focuses on acquiring customers and building long-term
and sustainable relationships that add value to the customers
as well as the organizations. There are several other definitions of CRM. For example, according to Greenberg (2009),
“CRM is a philosophy and a business strategy, supported by
a technology platform, business rules, processes and social
characteristics, designed to engage the customer in a collaborative conversation in order to provide mutually beneficial
value in a trusted and transparent business environment.”
Petersen (2012) provides 16 definitions of CRM, by 21
experts, some in words and some in pictures.
Note: CRM is only one way to deal with customer relationship and care. Traditional marketing activities, such as
providing promotions, have been used for a long time in
business. However, CRM adds functionalities that were not
available before.
Characteristics of Customer Relationship
Management (CRM)
According to Greenberg (2009), “CRM is an integrated business model and a set of operating practices coordinated and
aligned to maximize revenue from targeted customers. CRM
is based on the assumption that customers are the core of a
business, and that a company’s success depends on effectively managing its relationships with them.” The term relationship is unclear. Does it require an emotional attachment
7
Social Customer Service and CRM
or bond between the parties in the relationship? Do the parties have to be interdependent on one another? To some
degree, the answers are yes. In this chapter, a relationship
exists if there are a series of interactive episodes between
two or more parties over time.
For more coverage, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Customer_relationship_management and managementstudyguide.com/features-of-crm.htm.
Defining e-CRM
Today, most CRM programs, applications, and services
depend heavily on IT more than they did prior to the advent
of the Web in 1993. The IT-supported programs constitute
part of what is known as electronic CRM (e-CRM).
Electronic customer relationship management (e-CRM);
also known as CRM 1.0) is the electronically delivered set
of tools that helps manage CRM. E-CRM is related to all
forms of managing relationships with customers when using
information technologies. It arises from the consolidation of
traditional CRM with the e-business applications, and it covers the broad range of information technologies used to support a company’s CRM strategy. For the difference between
CRM and e-CRM, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECRM and
Beal (undated).
However, since nearly all CRM practices use some IT, the
terms CRM and e-CRM are used interchangeably by many.
Numerous CRM software packages are available. For a
review of 40 top CRM software packages including cloudbased see crmsoftwareview.org/2014reviews. For the top
ten vendors of 2014, see crm-software-review.toptenreviews.com. For more in e-CRM, see Online Tutorial T1.
A growing component in e-CRM is social CRM.
What Is Social CRM?
Social CRM is one component of developing a social
business. It is practiced very differently by various
organizations.
Definition
According to Roebuck (2011), social customer relationship management (SCRM) also known as CRM 2.0, is
CRM supported by social media (e.g., Web 2.0 tools,
social network sites, as demonstrated in the opening case),
which are designed to engage customers in conversations,
sharing, and other interactions in order to provide benefits
to all participants and increase trust. SCRM is based on
7.1
Definitions and Concepts of CRM, E-CRM, and Social CRM
social media, in support of companies’ stated goals and
objectives of optimizing the customer’s experience, and
building trust and loyalty, see Huba (2013). Success
requires considering people, business processes, and technology associated with the interactions between customers
and enterprises.
SCRM is an extension of CRM, not a replacement (see
the56group.typepad.com/pgreenblog/2009/07/time-toput-a-stake-in-the-ground-on-social-crm.html). It adds
two dimensions: social media and people. It is designed to
engage customers in conversations using social media tools.
An important goal of SCRM is to add benefits to the sellers
(e.g., increased trust, loyalty, and sales from their customers)
and to the customers (e.g., better, quicker service; more
engagement; product improvements). SCRM is the segment
of business strategy that addresses the issue of how companies adapt to the social customers and their expectations
regarding the companies with which they conduct business.
SCRM evolved from CRM (and e-CRM) in a process that is
described in Sect. 7.3, and in Chess Media Group (2010; in
collaboration with Lieberman). For a detailed presentation of
this process and an overview of social CRM, download the
free “Guide to Understanding Social CRM” at chessmediagroup.com/research/white-papers. For comprehensive
coverage of social CRM, see Roebuck (2011), Lacy et al.
(2013), and Fagan (2014).
Fig. 7.1 The elements of social CRM
159
The Elements of Social CRM
The major elements and characteristics of SCRM are shown
in Fig. 7.1. As the figure illustrates, the characteristics are the
foundations of a social customer who is driven by social networking. As described in Chap. 1, the social customer’s
needs are different from those of the customer who does not
use social media. Social customers, for example, want to
communicate with vendors by using the Internet (e.g., see
Metz 2011). This communication is provided by social
media, which is the major element of social CRM. The social
environment is also a major element of social CRM, since it
is the source of interactions with the social customer (see
Sect. 7.4).
The Benefits of Social CRM
This new breed of customers (the social customer) places
new demands on organizations. However, social media tools
can meet these demands nicely, usually at a low cost (except
for staff time). Social media provides for engagement and
collaboration that eventually results in a competitive advantage to the organization if implemented properly.
Social CRM offers the following potential benefits to customers (“c”) and enterprise (“e”) in the list below.
160
(Note: Several of these are illustrated in Case 7.1 iRobot,
presented later in this chapter). These benefits to iRobot are
marked with an (“I”.)
• Drives quick resolution of customers’ problems (c)
• Provides for effective and efficient business—customer collaboration (c), (e)
• Improves the reputation of companies (e), (I)
• Provides better understanding of customer needs
and wants (e)
• Provides focused, intuitive, and easy-to-use CRM
applications (e)
• Provides better marketing, better targeting, and
improved products/services due to customers’ creation of content, and WOM (e)
• Provides customer input for market research at a
quicker rate and at a low cost for improving products and customer service (e)
• Provides customers with more information about
products/services quickly (c), (I)
• Increases trust and loyalty (e)
• Provides a more complete view of the customer
than what traditional CRM can provide (e)
• Decreases overall customer care costs (e.g., through
self-helping communities) (e)
• Enables salespeople to find sales leads quickly and
easily (e)
• Develops new revenue opportunities and turn new
customers into repeat customers (c)
• Increases CRM staff productivity by teaching them
to use analytics and collaboration 2.0 techniques (e)
• Improves employee performance by benefiting from
knowledge sharing gained in social networks (e)
• Improves customer satisfaction by providing them
with opportunities for engagement using social
media platforms (c), (I)
• Converts leads to opportunities with more effective
campaigns (e)
Petersen (2011) illustrates the benefits of social CRM in
16 case studies. Minkara and Pinder Jr. (2014) describe the
strategic advantage provided by CRM.
An article by Tiffany Brown (at tiffanyabrown.wordpress.com/2011/10/26/social-CRM-as-a-holisticmarketing-tool) includes a video which shows the essential
elements of the SCRM process.
For additional benefits, see Shih (2011), Fagan (2014),
and Ziff Davis (2012).
For more information about social CRM in general,
visit oracle.com/socialCRM and see Metz (2011). For a
7
Social Customer Service and CRM
comprehensive case study, see Egeland (2009). For an
overview of social CRM, see Fagan (2014) and Ziff
Davis (2012).
For Petersen’s free e-book 166 Case Studies Prove
Social Media Marketing ROI, see barnraisersllc.
com/2012/07/166-case- studies-prove-social-mediamarketing-roi-free-ebook. For the case of OCBC Bank see
Hootsuite (2014).
The Projected Growth of Social CRM
The benefits of SCRM and the projected growth of social
media in general have led researchers to believe that SCRM
will grow exponentially during the next few years. According
to Valentine (2011), SCRM IT expenditures grow at an
annual rate of 30 %. Gartner Inc. projected that social CRM
software, which accounted for merely 5 % of the total CRM
software in 2010, will account for 30 % of the total CRM IT
spending in 2015.
Enterprises practice SCRM in a variety of ways, including hosting and supporting social communities, monitoring
conversations in a social network, and facilitating information sharing in social networks.
A major condition required for this growth to occur is the
need to provide clearer and measurable benefits for both customer service and sales. In addition, companies and software
vendors need to provide close integration with traditional
CRM processes.
7.2
A CRM MODEL FOR CUSTOMER
INTERACTIONS
Before we describe the social SCRM field, let us look at the
ways that customers interact with CRM applications and
with enterprises.
The Patricia Seybold Group Model
for Customer Interactions
The Patricia Seybold Group (customers.com) focuses on
CRM, e-CRM, and social CRM from the customer’s point of
view, where a customer is viewed as being interested in a
simplified, straightforward, honest, consistent interaction
and relationship with a company. Toward this end, SCRM
focuses on applications used to make it easy for a customer
to communicate, engage, and collaborate with a company.
The Patricia Seybold Group distinguishes between customerfacing, customer-touching, customer-centric intelligence,
and online networking applications.
7.2 A CRM Model for Customer Interactions
1. Customer-facing applications. These include all
the areas where customers interact with the company: social media channels; call centers, including
help desks; sales force automation; and field service
automation. Such CRM applications automate
information flow and support employees in sales or
service while they interact with customers. Web 2.0
tools are used here to facilitate interactions.
2. Customer-touching applications. In this category,
customers interact directly with the applications,
rather than through a company representative.
Notable examples are self-service activities, such
as using FAQs and involvement in content creation.
Several applications in social networks belong to
this category. For example, crowdsourcing can be
used to create FAQs.
3. Customer-centric intelligence applications.
These are applications that analyze the results of
operations and performance and use the results of
this analysis to improve CRM activities and procedures. Web analytics, sentiment analysis, and social
analytics (Chap. 10) are the prime tools in this case.
4. Online networking applications. Online networking refers to methods that provide the opportunity to build personal relationships with a wide
range of people. Social CRM support includes chat
rooms, blogs, wikis, discussion forums, and social
network sites.
(See the Patricia Seybold Group’s “An Executive Guide
to CRM: How to Evaluate CRM Alternatives by Functionality,
Architecture, & Analytics” by Patricia Seybold Group’s
Executive Series at crmodyssey.com/Documentation/
Documentation_PDF/An%20Executive%20Guide%20
To%20CRM.pdf).
The above four categories of applications are used to
organize our presentation of applications in the remainder of
this chapter. A discussion of the first category follows. For a
discussion of the other categories, see the remainder of this
chapter and Roebuck (2011).
To learn about the Five Waves of CRM, see customers.
com/articles/the-five-waves-of-crm.
Customer-Facing Applications
Customer-facing applications make extensive use of social
media. For definitions and examples, see amduus.com/
cms/?q=node/66 and searchcrm.techtarget.com/definition/
customer-facing.
161
A primary application of customer-facing CRM is in
multichannel call centers, otherwise known as customer
interaction centers. (See the free e-book titled 25 Social
Media Statistics for the Call Center at fonolo.com/
ebook-25-social-media-statistics-for-the-call-center.)
Customer Interaction Centers
A customer interaction center (CIC) is a comprehensive
customer service entity in which enterprises take care of
customer service issues communicated through various contact channels; see searchcrm.techtarget.com/definition/
contact-center. These include social media channels such as
blogs and forums in social networks. A multichannel CIC
works like this: (1) A customer makes contact via one or
more channels. (2) The system monitors the contacts and
integrates than within a database, then determines an appropriate service response. (3) The system directs the customer
to self-service, an avatar, or to a live agent. (4) The service is
provided to the customer (e.g., the customer’s problem is
resolved or the question is answered). For images and infographics, search Google Images for: customer interaction
center.
An example of a well-managed integrated call center is
iRobot’s customer support group. The center, which provides a myriad of cross-channel customer touch points, is
detailed in Case 7.1. As the case shows, social media provides several channels of customer support. For more examples of CICs and call centers, see callcenterops.com.
Case 7.1
SC Application
iRobot Uses Social Media for Multichannel CRM
iRobot (irobot.com), which was founded in 1990 by three
roboticists at MIT with the vision of making practical robots
a reality, designs and builds some of the world’s most important robots. According to their website, in 2013, iRobot generated $487 million in revenue and employed more than 500
of the robot industry’s top professionals, including mechanical, electrical and software engineers and related support
staff. (See iRobot.com/us/Company/About.aspx.) iRobot
makes robots for the government, defense and security, military and civil defense forces worldwide, commercial applications, industries, and home use. The public is mostly
familiar with the Roomba vacuuming robot (see Dignan
2013). Due to the technical nature of its products, the company’s customers may require specialized support and service. On their customer care website, the company provides
self-diagnosis, support videos, live chat, product FAQs, and
more (e.g., see homesupport.irobot.com). However,
there are home market customers who may need more
162
technical assistance since many people are new at using robots.
The company’s objective is to expand the sale of home market products. Therefore, they must provide extensive assistance to inexperienced customers. The company supports a
community and provides discussion boards, community
search capability, and live chat.
Social CRM: Serve the Customers While Learning
from Them
iRobot utilizes a CRM system with the help of Oracle
RightNow Inc. (see oracle.com/us/products/applications/
rightnow/overview/index.html). The system enables customers to contact iRobot’s service group via several different
communication channels, including e-mail, live chat, social
networks, and Web self-service. This way, iRobot can
respond to any online customer communication in a timely
manner, regardless of the channel used. All this needs to be
done at a low cost; therefore, it is necessary to automate the
services as much as possible.
7
Social Customer Service and CRM
Questions
1. What is meant by the term multichannel service
support?
2. What are the activities related to social media at iRobot?
What are their benefits?
3. Describe how the company listens to their customers’
complaints, and how they resolve the problems.
7.3
THE EVOLUTION OF SOCIAL CRM
Now that you have a basic understanding of CRM, e-CRM,
and SCRM, we can look at the evolution of SCRM as well as
some differences between SCRM and e-CRM. SCRM can be
viewed as an extension of e-CRM. Most e-CRM software
companies, such as Salesforce Inc. (salesforce.com), offer
social media features in their products. However, there are
some significant differences between e-CRM and
SCRM. These differences can be seen at slideshare.net/
JatinKalra/e-crm-112520123741 and Cipriani (2008).
Specific Social Media Activities
iRobot customers can post service and support requests or
complaints on homesupport.irobot.com or they can contact
the help desk. The company monitors these messages and tries
to provide immediate responses. iRobot tries to find the identity
of the customers that have problems by monitoring relevant
conversations in the various social channels (e.g., in forums on
social networks conversations). Once identified, iRobot communicates with the customers privately to resolve the issues.
The social media-oriented activities are integrated with
documents and videos in a knowledge base managed by
RightNow. The company uses RightNow’s monitoring tools
to identify the customers who post the comments. Some customers may provide their real names. Anonymous customers
are encouraged to contact iRobot directly. For how the company
listens to social media, see informationweek.com/software/
social/roomba-robots-listen-to-social-media/d/d-id/1100404?
Responding to issues quickly is important because, as discussed earlier, customers can attract a considerable amount
of attention using Facebook or Twitter (the company runs
promotions, such as giveaways and games on Twitter), to
publicize their complaints. In addition to problem resolution,
the company gets valuable feedback from the customers so it
can improve its products and services.
By 2013, iRobot achieved a 97 % Web service rating,
realized a 30 % reduction in customer phone calls, and provided improved customer service at a 20 % reduced cost.
iRobot has a presence on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest,
YouTube, and Tumblr. The company uses these sites to disseminate information and collect customer feedback and complaints.
Sources: Based on Carr (2011), RightNow Technologies
(2010), Dignan (2013), Oracle (2011), and irobot.com
(accessed July 2015).
Cipriani’s Multidimensional Presentation
Fabio Cipriani (2008) outlines the difference between CRM
and SCRM (referred to as CRM 1.0 and CRM 2.0) along several dimensions. Figures 7.2, 7.3, 7.4, 7.5, and 7.6 show five of
these dimensions: landscape, customer touch points, business
processing modeling, technology, and organizational mindset.
The Landscape
The landscape describes the difference between CRM 1.0
and CRM 2.0 in the structure, focus, relationship with the
community, and value creation, as illustrated in Fig. 7.2.
Notice that in CRM 2.0, the community is larger than in
CRM, and it includes interconnections among the customers
that were not present online in the early days of CRM.
Touch Points
The term touch point refers to any point of interaction a customer has with a brand or seller. Some points are company
initiated (e.g., advertising or e-mail discussions) and others
are out of the company’s control, such as word-of-mouth.
CRM 2.0 adds additional touch points, as shown in Fig. 7.3
(all the Web 1.0 tools + Web 2.0 tools). We can add crowdsourcing to this list.
Example: Get Satisfaction for CRM
Get Satisfaction (getsatisfaction.com) is a platform where
customers can interact with one another and voice their opinions
and complaints. Using a forum, they can quickly get resolu-
CRM 2.0
CRM 1.0
Customer
Customer
Customer
Customer
Customer
Customer
Customer
Customer
Customer
Customer
Competitor
Supplier / Partner
Customer
Competitor
Supplier / Partner
Customer
Customer
Customer
Your company
Customer
Your company
Customer
Customer
Customer
Customer
Customer
Focus on individual relationship (company to customer,
company to partner, etc.)
Focus on collaborative relationship (engaging a more complex
relationship network)
Limited view of the customer and his community
preferences, habits, etc.
Multiple connections allow better understanding of the
customer and his community
Targeted messages generate value
Conversation generates value
Fig. 7.2 The landscape of SCRM vs. CRM. Source: Courtesy of F. Ciprianni, “Social CRM: Concept, Benefits, and Approach to Adopt,”
November 2008. slideshare.net/fhcipriani/social-crm-presentation-761225 (accessed July 2015). Used with permission
CRM 1.0
CRM 2.0
• Blogs
• Microblogs
• Price comparison website
• Phone
• Fax
• E-mail
• Service
• Letters
• Personal contact
• Company’s website
• SMS
• Instant messenger
• Chat
• Media
• Phone
• Fax
• E-mail
• Service
• Letters
• Personal contact
• Company’s website
• SMS
• Instant messenger
• Chat
• Media
• RSS
• Podcast
• Wikis
• Social networks
• Widgets
• Video sharing
• Photo sharing
• Auction website
• Forums
• Slides sharing
• Reviews and ratings in retail sites
• Social bookmarking
• Single view of the customer based on the interactions
history, customer profile data residing in the company’s base,
and data integration with internal systems.
• Company owns the data but it is limited to previous
interactions.
• Wish lists
• Single view of the customer is far more complex to achieve.
Besides internal information, the company must rely on external
information such as customer profiles in social networks and his
behavior when participating in a community.
• Customer and other web 2.0 sites own part of the precious
data.
Fig. 7.3 Touch points of SCRM vs. CRM. Source: Courtesy of F. Ciprianni, “Social CRM: Concept, Benefits, and Approach to Adopt,” November
2008. slideshare.net/fhcipriani/social-crm-presentation-761225 (accessed July 2015). Used with permission
164
7
Social Customer Service and CRM
CRM 1.0
Establishing
need
Retention
Marketing
Sales
Decision
Sharing
impressions
Retention
Acquisition
Expansion
Targeting
Acquisition
Expansion
Targeting
Experience
Customer
Service
• Customer processes developed from the company
standpoint (customer life cycle for the company)
• Process centric – adapt and optimize processes to support
better customer interaction
• Focused on CRM processes
Support processes
Value
Operation processes
• Company processes developed from the customer standpoint
(company life cycle for the customer)
• Conversation centric – include the conversation factor to
establish brand community, enable idea capturing and better
segmentation
• Focused on the evolution of CRM processes and resulting
impacts in the value chain
Fig. 7.4 The evolution of business processes in SCRM. Source: Courtesy of F. Ciprianni, “Social CRM: Concept, Benefits, and Approach to
Adopt,” November 2008. slideshare.net/fhcipriani/social-crm-presentation-761225 (accessed July 2015). Used with permission
tions to their problems. Each community is organized around
four topics:
1. Ask a question. Customers can answer one another’s
questions.
2. Share an idea. Aggregated feedback is provided from
customers (by topic, product, vendor).
3. Report a problem. Search to see if anyone posted a similar problem. Post yours.
4. Give praise. Customers can praise a product or vendor.
Get Satisfaction provides management of the customers’
conversations to interested vendors at no charge. For an
example of a Get Satisfaction Support Community, see getsatisfaction.com/safarichallenge.
listening to customers’ needs, based on social media conversations, rather than only on traditional market research through
quantitative surveys or small scale qualitative research. The
objective is to generate value for both the customer and the
company. This difference is illustrated in Fig. 7.4.
The Evolution of Technology
Traditional e-CRM focused on automating and supporting
the internal business processes that relate to customer service. In CRM 2.0, an attempt is made to provide this same
process support, but it is based on community creation and
on improved interactions among customers and between
vendors and customers, as illustrated in Fig. 7.5.
Evolution of Business Processes in CRM
Organizational Mindset
Traditional CRM was a part of a linear process that started
with marketing that led to sales and then was followed by customer service (if needed). In CRM 2.0, the process starts with
In CRM 1.0, there is a dialog between one customer service
employee and one customer, or between a sales support team
CRM 2.0
CRM 1.0
Monitoring /
Interconnecting tools
Conversation tools
Customer
owned
data
RSS
Forums
Process Support
Process Support
Account Management
Contact Management
Activity Management
Lead/ Opp Management
Campaign Management
Sales Management
Service Management...
Account Management
Contact Management
Activity Management
Lead/ Opp Management
Campaign Management
Sales Management
Service Management...
Blogs
APIs
Data
Mining
Widgets
Open Id
Podcast
Wikis
Social networks
Cloud
computing
Brand monitoring
services
CRM Solutions focused on automating and supporting internal
business processes
CRM Solutions focused on community creation internal and
externally
Fig. 7.5 Evolution of technology from CRM to SCRM. Source: Courtesy of F. Ciprianni, “Social CRM: Concept, Benefits, and Approach to
Adopt,” November 2008. slideshare.net/fhcipriani/social-crm-presentation-761225 (accessed July 2015). Used with permission
CRM 2.0
CRM 1.0
Interaction
Conversation
Contribution
Transaction
Feedback
Employee
Customer
Innovation comes from one specialized source within the
company (innovation group)
Frontline employees communicate targeted message for
transactional operations
Employees
Customers
Innovation is gathered from all employees as they are closely
connected to the final customer and to each other via internal
web 2.0 tools. Customers are in the center of the innovation
cycle.
Frontline and non-frontline employees engage conversations
including new customers in the context and rerouting
conversations. New set of employee skills needed.
Fig. 7.6 The organizational mindset for SCRM. Source: Courtesy of F. Ciprianni, “Social CRM: Concept, Benefits, and Approach to Adopt,”
November 2008. slideshare.net/fhcipriani/social-crm-presentation-761225 (accessed July 2015). Used with permission
166
7
and one customer. Most interactions are routine, with limited
innovations. In CRM 2.0, as shown in Fig. 7.6, interactions
occur among all employees (as in the Sony opening case)
and several customers who also interact with each other (as
in the iRobot case). This environment facilitates innovation
and increases customer satisfaction.
Conclusions
Incorporating the previous five areas requires empowering
the employees, which means that a new set of employee
skills is needed. For a long time, marketers have said that
everything starts with the needs of consumers. With social
CRM and all the social media product discussions, marketers
must now learn how to incorporate this philosophy in their
strategies.
A complete presentation by Fabio Cipriani (2008) can
be viewed at slideshare.net/fhcipriani/social-crmpresentation-761225. For an additional presentation on the
previous topics, see slideshare.net/fhcipriani/how-socialcrm-can-help-address-changing-consumer-demands.
Understanding the Social CRM Evolution
A similar description to Cipriani’s of the evolution of SCRM
from the traditional CRM is provided by Morgan (2010) and
Chess Media Group (2010; in collaboration with Lieberman).
These authors explain why the revolution happened by citing
the following drivers:
• 93 % of Americans want brands to have a presence on
social network sites.
• 60 % of Americans regularly interact with companies on
social network sites.
• 92 % of Americans prefer to buy from a reputable
company.
• 88 % of Americans use recommendations from friends
and family to decide which brands to buy.
• 43 % of Americans say that companies should use social
networks to solve customers’ problems.
For a comprehensive discussion and suggestions, see
Boardman (2013).
Finally, Salesforce Inc. provides 18 interesting statistics
regarding the changes introduced by social CRM, in a slideshow, that can be viewed at slideshare.net/Salesforce/
18-gamechangin-customer-service-stats.
7.4
HOW TO SERVE THE SOCIAL
CUSTOMER
Once customers are empowered, the question becomes: How
does a company serve the social customer?
Social Customer Service and CRM
Companies seek an answer to this question, not only
because they are worried about the negative comments posted
by social network members, but also because they see an
opportunity to involve the customers proactively in product
development and problem solving. This can be done in several ways. By listening to social media discussions, companies may be able to find the causes of problems and improve
customer service (Parature 2014). Furthermore, companies
can increase customer loyalty and get more respect from
them, and make their own customer service employees happier. Customer service and CRM are often practiced in organizations by several departments, and these departments need
to integrate the social CRM activities with the traditional
CRM. See Parature (2014), Bernoff and Schadler (2010), and
Fagan (2014). Let us first look at the social customer.
The Social Customer
The Qantas Airways story (Sect. 7.1) shows us that customers and companies’ attitudes toward them are changing. In
the past, customers were frequently poorly treated. Many are
treated better now, because they have more power due to
social media tools and platforms.
Such empowered customers are referred to as social
customers. These customers are usually members of
social networks. They share opinions about products, services, and vendors; do social shopping; and understand their
rights, and they know how to use the wisdom and power of
the crowds and communities to their benefit. The highlights
of the social customers are shown in Fig. 7.7.
As the figure illustrates, the social customer has new
behavior patterns. Social customers are choosing how they
interact with companies and companies’ brands, which poses
challenges to enterprises in regards to handling increased data
volume, dynamic channels, and elevated expectations. The
customers’ new behavior patterns require a new strategy for
both marketing communication and customer service (see
Chap. 5 for more on new marketing communication strategies). The social customer is not just a purchaser but also an
active influencer. Note that individuals are influenced not
only by their own friends, but also by friends of their friends.
Merchants must understand the difference between these consumers (and their numbers are increasing exponentially) and
conventional customers, and therefore provide them with
more effective customer service. For an extensive discussion
of today’s social customer, see Metz (2011) and Shih (2011).
Procedures, guidelines, and software are publically available
for social CRM (e.g., see Smith et al. 2011). For an overview
of the social customer, you can download a free e-book from
SAP titled The Social Contract: Customers, Companies,
Communities, Conversations in the Age of the Collaborative
Relationship, available at thesocialcustomer.com/sites/thesocialcustomer.com/files/TheSocialContract.pdf. Also, see
7.4
How to Serve the Social Customer
167
They are hyper
connected
Control the purchasing
(when, what, where)
Listen to peers’
recommendations before
purchasing. Use Yelp, Trip
Advisor
Reach out to peers and
influencers
The social
customers
Twitter, blog, member in
social networks
Have high expectations
from vendors
Shop online, compare,
search
Help other customers
(Recommendations)
(Reviews)
Fig. 7.7 The characteristics of the social customer
socialcustomer.com. For how SCRM adds customer value,
see Doligalski (2015).
Implementation of Social Customer
Service and CRM
There are several models and methods for implementing
social customer service. First, let us look at what Safeway is
doing in this area.
Example: How Safeway Provides Social Customer
Service
Safeway (safeway.com), a large grocery chain, has a virtual
customer club. Members can get in-store discounts as well as
e-mails with coupons and a list of sale items. An online
newsletter with health news and recipes, shopping tips, and
so forth is also available to members. To extend this service,
Safeway invites their customers to become Safeway Fans on
Facebook (facebook.com/Safeway) and follow the company on Twitter (twitter.com/Safeway. This allows customers/members to know about exclusive promotions,
campaigns, and links to recipes. In addition, members can
connect and share information with other Safeway shoppers.
These are also forums for customers and shareholders to post
comments and complaints about products and stores.
In their ‘Just for U’ program, shoppers can get digital coupons and personalized deals based on their shopping history
(see
safeway.com/ShopStores/Offers-Landing-IMG.
page). There is no need to cut coupons anymore. See the
video titled “Safeway Just for U™ Shopper Tip: Easy Sign
Up” (1:48 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?v=VaRnJCZV
Btw&list=PL2D85D3BE900AA5CB&index=2.
For an infographic about using social media as a customer
service tool, see Smith (2013). For how Nissan Corp. used
social media to improve the customer experience see Solis
(2012).
How Social CRM Works: Problems
and Solutions
The following five real-world examples of how social CRM
works are based on blog.softwareadvice.com/articles/crm/
social-crm-ftw-how-realcompanies-are-going-social-andwinning-1111910.
1. Chordiant Software (now part of Pegasystems)
The Problem: Chordiant, an enterprise software company, needed a better way to find and coordinate the needs
of people who are involved in their products’ information
requirements process.
168
2.
3.
4.
5.
The Solution: They created an online community where
employees, developers, customers, and other partners can
collaborate about information needs for product development. The feedback was very positive, resulting in 15 successful collaborative software product releases.
Linksys
The Problem: Linksys, a Cisco division, needed to
reduce costs while maintaining high levels of customer
support.
The Solution: The company partnered with Lithium (a
social CRM consultant) to create an online support community. The deployment of the community increased selfservice activities engagement and sharing, which reduced
the need for costly phone and other support. Linksys
reported savings of millions of dollars.
Enterasys Networks
The Problem: Enterasys Networks “has hundreds of
employees stationed around the globe.” It required a
social networking tool that would eliminate geographical
boundaries and allow its employees to communicate in
real time.
The Solution: Enterasys decided to deploy Salesforce.
com’s Chatter application, which includes Web 2.0 tools.
“The company experienced improved service performance thanks to real-time collaboration on service issues.
Additionally, the sales team was able to work more
closely together and completed a record number of sales
in the first quarter immediately after implementing
Chatter” (per salesforce.com/chatter/overview).
H&R Block
The Problem: H&R Block wanted to find out what issues
their customers were discussing online in order to anticipate problems before they arose.
The Solution: The company decided to use Radian6’s
social monitoring technology to achieve H&R Block’s
goal. The trend analysis tool from Radian6 allowed the
company to drill down into community online conversations and see which topics were creating the most buzz.
This gave better insight, enabling H&R Block to be more
proactive in their customer service. (For more about
Salesforce’s Radian6, see salesforcemarketingcloud.
com/products/social-media-listening).
Pepperdine University
The Problem: Pepperdine University was looking for a
better way to encourage collaboration among its students,
staff, and faculty.
The Solution: The university used Yammer’s software
(see Chap. 8) “to create a Twitter-like environment where
users can interact, communicate in real time, and do so
with more transparency. The university saw a significant
7
Social Customer Service and CRM
increase in community participation” and collaboration.
See the video of Pepperdine’s Director of E-Learning
discussing the university’s social network – Yammer
(2:21 minutes) at vimeo.com/68710684.
Improving the Websites
Social customers like to see user-friendly websites. Indeed,
many companies are changing their websites by adding tools
for engaging visitors, such as social media hooks (e.g., “Like
us,” “Bookmark this page”) and incorporating better search
functionality.
Example
Bloomingdales, the luxury department store that also sells
online at Bloomingdales.com, restructured its website. The
new site is dynamic, engaging, and easy to browse and search
in multiple ways (by product, size, color, material, price, and
gender). This enables the company to conduct sophisticated
marketing campaigns and then analyze their results.
For more examples on using social CRM for marketing,
see Stelzner (2014) and Solis (2012).
Some Social CRM Tools
In the realm of social CRM, a company’s customer database
can be inundated with information, data, photos, and status
updates, which are fed from social network sites and from
listening to customers’ conversations. Therefore, companies
may need some special tools for information processing and
analysis.
Here are some representative SCRM tools:
• Batchbook (batchbook.com) is an inexpensive e-CRM
tool for small and medium enterprises.
• Rapportive (rapportive.com) is a free plug-in, but it
works only with Gmail. It will show you details of contacts (such as people’s LinkedIn profile, as well as their
Twitter stream, Skype handle, or Facebook profile) right
inside your inbox.
• Desk (desk.com; previously Assistly) is a Salesforce customer service application that helps rapidly growing companies deliver effective and efficient customer service.
For their capabilities, see desk.com.
• Piksel (piksel.com; previously Kit Social Platform) helps
companies maximize reach and return.
For more information about SCRM software, see Jive
Software (jivesoftware.com).
7.4
How to Serve the Social Customer
Automated Response to E-Mail
(Autoresponder)
E-mail is a popular traditional online customer service tool.
Inexpensive and fast, e-mail disseminates information and
sends correspondence on many topics, including responses
to customer inquiries. E-mail is available within many social
networks between members (e.g., on Facebook) and in IMs
(e.g., using Skype).
However, the growth of e-mail messages has resulted in a
flood of customer e-mails. Some companies receive tens of
thousands of e-mails a week, or even in a day. Answering
these e-mails manually would be expensive and timeconsuming. However, customers want quick answers, usually within 24 h (a policy of many organizations). Therefore,
many vendors offer automated e-mail reply systems known
as autoresponders, which provide answers to commonly
asked questions. Autoresponders, also called infobots and
e-mail on demand (see description in Webopedia.com), are
text files that are sent automatically via e-mail, on demand.
They can relay standard information for support of customer
service and marketing communication (see egain.com and
aweber.com). Many automated responses often do not provide actual answers, but only acknowledge that a query has
been received (e.g., “I am out of the office and will return on
Monday”). Customer queries are classified in a decisionsupport repository until a live agent responds. Advance auto
responders use FAQs to select proper answers. Even more
advanced are systems that use natural language processors to
find more accurately what bothers the customers.
Improving the Call Center
Customers who are unsatisfied with a call center’s service
may post negative comments online about the companies.
Therefore, companies know how important it is to have
effective call centers.
Several innovations have been introduced by vendors.
For example, Fonolo (fonolo.com) introduced virtual dialing, virtual queuing, pre-call questions, and smartphoneready features.
Automated Live Chat
Similar to the advanced autoresponders some companies use
an automated ‘Live Chat.’ There are several types of conversation under this title, some of which are in real time with avatars. The avatars allow you to choose a question from an FAQ
menu; the program then provides you with the FAQ answer.
Others allow you to use natural language processing, such as
the eGain system, to converse with an “intelligent” avatar.
169
Example
The eGain system looks for certain phrases or key words,
such as complaint or information on a product, and then taps
into a knowledge base to generate a canned, matching
response. For messages that require attention from a live
agent, the query is assigned an ID number and passed along
to a customer service representative for a reply. Figure 7.8
shows this process. Note that, the answers and their relationships to problems (questions) are stored in a knowledge database which is updated each time a live agent provides a new
solution. Such systems are known as e-mail response management (ERM) systems.
Using Microblogging
As the Sony case demonstrated, company microblogging
(mostly on Twitter) is becoming very popular in SCRM. Some
companies design a special customer care program around
Twitter. One example is Yahoo! (twitter.com/YahooCare),
which is used as a new channel for engaging customers for
facilitating problem resolution (“How can we help you today?”)
and disseminating updates. Their Twitter page also has photos
and videos to help customers with troubleshooting.
Product Review Sites
Many customers post product reviews on general sites, such
as eBay Commerce Network’s Epinions (epinions.com;
“Unbiased Reviews by Real People”), or on industry (or
company-specific) sites. Companies use Web monitoring
software, such as Google Alerts, to receive automatic notifications when people post about their products. For example,
travel site tripadvisor.com has a review forum for guests to
review a hotel, vacation, restaurant, or attraction they visited
(see tripadvisor.com/UserReview). An owner or representative (e.g., hotel manager) is also able to post a response to
reviews about their property. They sometimes apologize for
a guest’s poor experience, and explain what they are doing to
remedy the situation. Other times, they thank guests who
post positive comments.
For a discussion of the evolution process and the integration of social CRM with e-marketing, see Henschen (2012)
and Strauss and Frost (2014).
Monitoring and Analyzing Social Media Reviews
According to their website, Sysomos Inc. (sysomos.com) is a
company with a comprehensive and “powerful product suite
that provides customers with the tools to measure, monitor,
understand, and engage with the social media landscape.
170
7
Social Customer Service and CRM
7 Human agent
composes an answer
answer
8
Updating
knowledge
answer
Corporate Memory
Queries-Answers
Knowledge Base,
Business Rules, Cases
1 Customer
“I have a
problem”.
E-mail it
to My
Company
2 Automatic
acknowledgement:
“E-mail received”
My Company
Autoresponse
is generated
with an
5
answer
YES
4
3
Check content of
message (e.g
keywords against
business rules in the
acknowledge base)
Is there
a good
match?
NO
Send problem
6 to human
agent
Fig. 7.8 An intelligent autoresponder
Sysomos provides instant access to all social media conversations from blogs, social networks, and micro-blogging services to forums, video sites, and media sources.” Sysomos
was the first professional tool to manage Facebook fan pages
(“Facebook Page Central”). For more information about what
they do, see sysomos.com/products and sysomos.com/
resources/facebook-page-central. See Chap. 10 for presentation on this topic.
7.5
SOCIAL CRM IN THE ENTERPRISE
The concept of CRM can be extended from consumer markets (B2C) to the B2B and enterprise environment.
Companies sell to other companies (B2B), and these relationships with business partners are very important. In
B2B, companies work with distribution channels and other
partners or suppliers, this CRM is referred to as partner
relationship management, or supplier relationship
management.
Major contacts in B2B are made by corporate salespeople, either individually or in teams. Field service employees
also make contact with customers. They can serve both individual customers (B2C) and corporations (B2B). Both
groups can benefit from social media, as will be illustrated
later in this section and in the annual conference “Dreamforce”
(see salesforce.com/dreamforce).
Social CRM in the Enterprise and B2B
Environments
Facebook, Twitter, and social media tools have changed the
way people communicate and collaborate. Today, social media
is changing the way salespeople and other B2B personnel collaborate, work, learn, and interact with business customers.
For an overview of the challenges salespeople face, the impact
of social commerce within the enterprise, and the CRM features that are assisting salespeople, see Fagan (2014).
For a comprehensive case study, see Egeland (2009).
Social CRM offers the following benefits in B2B.
• Enables quick discovery of sales leads while helping convert leads to actual sales (e.g., by using marketing communication that is more effective).
• Enables winning sales deals by sending the right
messages to businesses.
• Provides easy and quick access to data and information acquisition and analysis.
• Provides for outstanding business collaboration.
• Increases trust among business partners.
• Improves the procurement process.
• Provides focused, intuitive, and user-friendly business customer care applications.
7.5
Social CRM in the Enterprise
171
Salespeople Benefit from Social Media
Salespeople are beginning to use social media applications
that facilitate collaboration. These applications assist them to
increase their effectiveness and efficiency in performing
their jobs. For a comprehensive overview of how this is
done, see Oracle (2008). This Oracle white paper “examines
the challenges salespeople face, the growing (use of) Web
2.0 in the enterprise, and the drivers for a new breed of social
applications that complement traditional CRM systems to
help sales users identify qualified prospects and close additional sales more quickly.”
Challenges Facing Salespeople Today
•
•
According to Parature (2014), and Fagan (2014), the following are the major challenges facing salespeople today:
• Selling has become harder due to the economic
slowdown and stiff global competition.
• There is no effective way to leverage traditional
collaboration with other traditional customer support technologies.
• Most traditional applications that support salespeople are not intuitive; therefore, they require too
much time and energy from the salespeople who
need to use them.
• There are gaps between what salespeople need and
what the traditional CRM applications deliver.
•
•
•
The Contribution of Social CRM
According to Parature (2014), Oracle (2008), and Fagan
(2014), SCRM can provide capabilities to salespeople that
deal with the following challenges:
• Business collaboration at its best. This is done by
leveraging the collective intelligence of social network members, increasing the interactions, and
facilitating innovations. With better collaboration,
organizations can empower salespeople with the
best in their business network, which will facilitate
the collective intelligence and the productivity of
the involved community.
• Focused, intuitive and easy to use applications
(per Oracle 2008). Social enterprise applications
•
model sales activities capture data as sales representatives conduct their daily tasks, rather than
requiring them to enter data afterwards.
Contextual data available any place, any time.
Sales representatives per Oracle (2008) “can
now have data they need when and where they
need them. For example, mashups allow business users to assemble innovative, composite
applications from many available sources—
spanning Internet and enterprise content—to
pull information from RSS feeds, blogs, or other
services, and embed them into an application” or
a corporate portal.
Find better qualified leads, quickly and easily.
According to Oracle (2008) “by analyzing purchasing patterns of existing customers and mining information across the enterprise and public social
networks,” tools such as Prospector identify what
products and services sell best.
Improve understanding and trust between salespeople and their business customers.
Convert leads to opportunities with more effective campaigns. Individual sales representatives
can be empowered (per Oracle 2008), “to create and
manage their own professional e-mail marketing
campaigns, as well as leverage successful campaign
templates of peers that have been shared and rated
by the broader community.”
Find the right message to close the sale. According
to Oracle (2008), “by harnessing the collective
intelligence of the community, sales representatives
can obtain a competitive edge by leveraging sales
materials that have been highly rated” (by other
salespeople and by customers) in order to close
business deals.
Enable salespeople to resolve problems and challenges with their business customers.
Social media tools facilitate sales force automation.
Sales Force Automation Salesforce Inc.’s Chatter
Salespeople constitute a major source of contact with customers (both individuals and businesses). The more computer support they have available, the better, quicker, and
more accurate service they can provide to customers. Sales
force automation (SFA) applications support the selling
172
efforts of a company’s sales force, helping salespeople
manage leads, prospects, and customers through the sales
pipeline. An example of such an application is a wireless
device that allows quick communication from outside the
company with the corporate intranet. Social media supports
new applications.
A major vendor in this area is Salesforce.com, Inc.
(salesforce.com). The company focuses on helping their
business customers build social profiles of their employees and customers. Salesforce Chatter, according to the
company, “is the leading enterprise social network that
allows teams to sync up and take action, and powers communities to connect like never before.” Also, according to
Salesforce Inc., its latest technological improvements
have made Chatter “a true social business tool, with many
methods available to chat, share, approve, and otherwise
enable the collaborative process.” To learn more about the
features of Chatter, see salesforce.com/chatter/overview. Another addition to Chatter is the ability to include
videos to the chats, like in many instant messaging networks (e.g., Yahoo Messenger or Skype) do today. The
company’s partners also add capabilities (for example,
from Reachable Inc.).
Reachable Inc. (reachable.com)
Reachable Inc. uses a social graph to show the relationships
among individuals. (They call it an Enterprise Business
Graph; see reachable.com/general/reachable-and-theenterprise-business-graph). The tool can be used to discover all connections and relationships in the enterprise. It
can be used for predictive analysis.
Field Service Automation
Field service employees, such as sales representatives, are
frequently on the road, interacting directly with customers
at the customers’ places of business. Examples of field service employees who work at customers’ sites include repair
technicians who work together with a company’s maintenance staff. Providing services employees with mobile
devices can enhance customer service. Field service automation applications support the customer service efforts of
field service reps and service managers. These applications
manage customer service requests, service orders, service
contracts, service schedules, and service calls. They provide planning, scheduling, dispatching, and reporting features to field service representatives. Examples are
industrial wireless devices, such as those provided by
Motorola.
Social media tools can facilitate SFA and field
service automation as described earlier in the Sony and iRobot cases.
7
Social Customer Service and CRM
Other Applications
Enterprises need to have good working relationships with
their employees, suppliers, and other business partners. They
can facilitate these relationships by using private social networks, blogs and wikis, and by deploying RSS and other Web
2.0 tools. Enterprises are also using social media for training,
marketing, recruiting, and more. All major vendors provide
enterprise applications. For example, Oracle provides Oracle
CRM Sales Prospector on Demand, Oracle CRM Sales
Campaigns on Demand, and Oracle CRM Sales Library on
Demand. For details, see oracle.com/us/products/applications/social-crm/index.html. Similar applications are provided by Salesforce, Microsoft, and several other vendors.
7.6
SPECIAL APPLICATIONS AND ISSUES
IN SOCIAL CRM
There are many special applications and issues in SCRM. Let
us look at the following scenario.
Example: A Lesson in Customer Service
As described in Chap. 6, Groupon featured a discount deal to
a restaurant delivery service in Tokyo for the 2010 New Year
celebration. The promotion was wildly successful as more
than 500 “Groupons” were sold. Unfortunately, the restaurant was not prepared for that level of demand and was
unable to accommodate all the orders in time. Deliveries
were late, and many of them were in “terrible condition.”
Andrew Mason, the CEO of Groupon at the time, accepted
the responsibility. He acknowledged that he had contracted
with an organization that was not prepared to deal with the
volume of the Groupon promotion. Groupon refunded the
money to the customers who bought the coupons and gave
away vouchers for future business. Groupon also created a
video that featured a public apology regarding the incident.
The video was sincere and informative, explaining exactly
what happened, holding nothing back.
This incident demonstrates one of the issues that social
commerce companies may face, and it shows the importance
of transparent communication in social media. In this section, we will present several special applications and describe
some major deployment issues.
Social Networking Helps Customer Service
in Small Companies
Most of the social media examples provided so far in this
book have dealt with large companies. What about the small
ones? Do they use social media the same way? Obviously,
7.6
Special Applications and Issues in Social CRM
there are some applications the SMEs (small and medium
enterprises) cannot afford. However, there are many affordable applications, as illustrated next.
Example
Teusner Wines (teusner.com.au) is a small boutique winery
(five employees in 2014) in Australia. Using Twitter for a
few years, the company’s one-person marketing department:
• Initiates online conversations about wine with
influential people in the wine business.
• Sends tweets to people the company find talking
about Teusner Wines, praising them for trying the
wines.
• Starts to build trust with customers via
conversations.
• Invites people to tour the winery and taste the wines
(resulting in an excellent response).
• Advises potential customers in the United States
and Canada where they can purchase the Australian
wine.
• Collects real-time feedback from customers.
• Encourages
customer-to-customer
online
conversations.
• Posts customer reviews on Twitter.
• Shares all information with Twitter followers.
All this was done by a tiny company at a minimal financial cost; however, it did take quite a bit of staff time. The
company now (2015) is using Instagram, Facebook, and its
website for actively marketing its wines online.
For additional examples of small companies and the use
of social media, see socialmediatoday.com/socialcustomer, Chap. 11, and an infographic at socialmediatoday.com/1603731/small-business-guide-social-mediamastery.
Customer-Touching Applications
As described earlier, customer-touching applications are those
where customers use interactive computer programs rather
than interacting face-to-face with a live representative. The following are several popular customer-touching applications.
Personalized Web Pages and Blogs
Many companies provide customers with tools to create their
own individual Web pages (e.g., my.yahoo.com and sites.
google.com and blogs (e.g., wordpress.com and blog.com).
173
Social networks do the same. Companies can deliver
customized information efficiently (such as product information and warranty information) when the customer logs on to
a vendor’s Facebook page, or to the customer’s personalized
page on the vendor’s site. Not only can a customer retrieve
information from the vendor’s site, but the customer can also
interact with the vendor. Much of the interaction is facilitated by social media tools.
Web Self-Service
The Web environment provides an opportunity for customers
to serve themselves. Known as Web self-service, this strategy
provides tools for users to perform activities previously done
by corporate customer service personnel. Well-known examples of Web self-service are the tracking systems provided by
FedEx, USPS, and UPS.
Self-service applications can be used by customers and
employees, suppliers, and any other business partners. An
example is the self-service provided by Canon’s customer
support unit (see Consona 2008–2009 for details). In
general, Web 2.0 also supports self-service by allowing customers to get help from other customers (e.g., see Libert and
Spector 2010).
Self-Configuration, Customization, and Co-design
One of the best ways to provide SCRM to customers is to
provide them with the ability to customize products and services. This is especially important for complex products with
many possible configuration options. Therefore, many buildto-order vendors, such as Dell and Blue Nile (diamond jewelry), provide customers with tools to self-configure products
or services (e.g., “build your own ring”). In addition, social
communities, such as Polyvore (see Chap. 6), facilitate selfconfiguration. Usually, the configured order is transferred
directly to production so that production decisions can be
based on real time customer demand, expediting the manufacturing process. Customers may seek advice from other
customers regarding what to include in a configuration (e.g.,
see Libert and Spector 2010).
Another aspect is co-design, involving customers in customer service design, as well as in products (e.g., the LEGO
Gallery; lego.com/gallery). This can be facilitated by crowdsourcing, as we will illustrate in Chap. 8.
Customer-Centric Applications
The fourth Patricia Seybold Group’s category, customercentric applications, is synonymous with CRM analytics.
CRM analytics refers to the application of business analytic
techniques and business intelligence such as data mining and
online analytic processing to CRM applications. In SCRM
we use social analytics (see Chap. 10).
174
7
Analytics Tools
The main tools used in SCRM analytics are measuring,
reporting, and data mining. Managers collect data from
social media and other websites and mine them to find marketing opportunities, improve CRM, and solve customers’
problems. According to the Web Analytics Association’s
definition, “Web analytics is the overall term for ‘measurement, collection, analysis and reporting of Internet data for
purposes of understanding and optimizing Web usage’” (see
digitalanalyticsassociation.org/Files/PDF_standards/
WebAnalyticsDefinitions.pdf). For details on CRM analytics,
see
searchcrm.techtarget.com/definition/CRManalytics. For coverage of social commerce analytics, see
Chap. 10.
CRM analytics can lead to not only better and more productive customer relations in terms of sales and service, but
also to improvement in the planning and analysis of marketing promotions, as well as other improved marketing
strategies.
7.7
STRATEGY AND IMPLEMENTATION
ISSUES OF SOCIAL CRM
The success or failure of SCRM initiatives depends upon the
strategy and the implementation processes. Unfortunately,
there is no one recipe for either strategy or implementation
since both depend on many variables (see Lacy et al. 2013,
Jamieson 2014, and Chaps. 10 and 11). In this section, we
will cover some key issues related to both topics.
Social Customer Service and CRM
are listening to social conversations, guidelines needed
for solving problems, so that the employees can directly
take care of any issue.
• Proactive customer service engages customers before
there is a problem, and interacts with customers to
improve products and customer service.
• Controlling customer interactions on Facebook.
Companies need to develop a strategy for controlling customer interactions, both for B2C and B2B.
Example: Bonobos (bonobos.com)
According to Bonobos, a small New York-based online
men’s clothing company that aims to provide excellent customer experience, used two social media-driven projects:
1. Bonobos formed 1,000-member alpha and beta testing
groups solely through Twitter. Before they launch new
designs for pants or dress shirts, they use the testing
groups to review the products. By using the groups, the
company has gained valuable information regarding the
customers’ preferences. Then, Bonobos transfers that
information to their designers.
2. Bonobos also ran blog contests.
Example: Social Commerce Strategy at Threadless
Threadless (threadless.com) is a global e-commerce company that produces T-shirts and other merchandise designed
by and for its 2.5 million community members. The company is using crowdsourcing (Chap. 8) to get the most out of
social media. Threadless uses strategy and software to manage its customer interaction on Facebook (facebook.com/
threadless). Specifically, the company’s software helps to
monitor wall posts and respond to them appropriately. See
Swan (2014) for details.
Social CRM Strategy
The topic of social commerce strategy in general will be
described in Chap. 10. Here, we list some basic issues related
to SCRM:
• Strategy for handling negative criticism, a part of reputation management. This topic was described in Chap. 5.
Companies need policies on what is considered negative
criticism and how to react to it.
• Strategy for integrating social media into the traditional
CRM.
• Strategy for dealing with resistance to change by
employees.
• Employing reactive or proactive strategies.
• Reactive customer service can be performed, for example,
by setting up Twitter listening posts using Tweet Deck
(tweetdeck.com) or Followerwonk (follerwonk.com) to
search for conversations with key words relevant to one’s
company. A company can then give their employees who
For more on strategy regarding social CRM, see Chap. 10.
Note that, since SCRM is an integral part of e-CRM, the strategies for the two are interrelated. For a discussion, see en.
wikipedia.org/wiki/Customer_relationship_management.
For implementation issues using Salesforce.com products
and services, see Taber (2014).
Mobile SCRM
As seen throughout the book, social commerce is facilitated
by mobile technologies. This is especially true with social
CRM where interactions, sharing, and collaboration can be
greatly facilitated by mobile devices. For examples, discussion, strategy, and implementation, see Lacy et al. (2013).
For a free e-book Mobilizing Enterprise Applications:
Trends, Best Practices and Strategy Advice, see Sybase
(2011).
Key Terms
For a free e-book on innovative CRM, Top 5 Trends in
Customer Service Innovation see img.en25.com/Web/
Pegasystems/%7B0cd45fa8-9c92-4a2c-a1379a3e7fdc9606%7D_Top-5-Trends-in-Customer-ServiceInnovation-eBook.pdf. For comprehensive coverage, see
zoho.com/crm/mobile and Lacy et al. (2013).
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC topics as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. Define CRM, e-CRM, and SCRM. CRM is a customer
service that focuses on building a long-term and sustainable customer relationship. When CRM is supported and
delivered electronically, it is called e-CRM. Most CRM
programs today are supported electronically and facilitate
the flow of information and interactions between customers and vendors, and enable customers’ engagement
online. CRM is a business strategy and its implementation involves business rules. It is also a technology platform with social characteristics. When the technology
platform involves social media (e.g., Web 2.0 tools and
social network sites), CRM is referred to as social CRM
(SCRM). SCRM provides many benefits for both customers and vendors, which includes an improved relationship
between the empowered customers and the vendors, as
well as providing better service to customers.
2. A model for customer interactions. In this model, the
Patricia Seybold Group divides the CRM interactions into
four major groups: customer-facing applications,
customer-touching applications, customer-centric intelligence applications, and other online networking applications. In each of these, social media can introduce some
improvements to the interaction process. For example, in
customer-facing applications, one can support customerenterprise interactions by monitoring customers’ conversations on social media platforms and by tweeting to
facilitate communication.
3. The evolution of social CRM. SCRM evolved from
CRM and e-CRM. The evolution can be described along
the following five dimensions: The landscape (e.g.,
structure and focus); the touch points (e.g., the use of
social media tools); the business processes (e.g., how to
listen to customers); the technology (e.g., socially-oriented tools); and the organizational mindset (e.g., patterns of interactions). This evolution is driven by the
explosive use of social network sites, by the rise of the
social customer, and by the importance buyers place on
social recommendations.
4. Serving the social customer. Customers are empowered by social networks; therefore, they can get attention
175
quickly for problem resolution. For example, organizing
a Facebook complaint blitz against a company is not difficult. Customers also can make suggestions for
improvements and vote on them. Social media allows
customers to help themselves and each other, simultaneously reducing merchants’ expenses. Customers can
become more loyal because they work more closely
with vendors. Social networking activities may provide
innovative ideas for improved and more efficient customer service (e.g., Twitter can be very helpful).
Companies can listen to customers in social network
forums, provide easy-to-navigate websites, provide
tools for user-generated content and quick problem resolution, and much more.
5. Social CRM in the enterprise. Social CRM is also used
in the enterprise mainly by salespeople and field service
employees. Most applications center on improved communication and collaboration. It helps to increase sales
leads. Major vendors, such as Salesforce.com, provide
social media features in their standard CRM tools. The
use of social media can also facilitate relationships with
employees and business partners.
6. Special SCRM applications and issues. Many special
applications exist. Vendors such as Oracle and Salesforce.
com provide applications that harness social media technologies. These are deployed in all segments of the CRM
field (see Sect. 7.2). Representative applications include
reputation management, SME enablers, Web page personalization, Web self-service and self-configurations,
and the use of CRM analytical tools.
7. Strategy and implementation. For large-scale SCRM
initiatives, strategy and implementation plans are
needed. Several issues need to be included; they range
from a strategy to handling negative customer comments to dealing with employee resistance to change.
These issues are fairly generic and are described in
Chaps. 10 and 11.
KEY TERMS
Autoresponder
CRM analytics
Customer interaction center (CIC)
Customer relationship management (CRM)
Electronic customer relationship
management (e-CRM or CRM 1.0)
Sales force automation (SFA)
Social customer relationship
management (SCRM or CRM 2.0)
Social customer
169
173
161
158
158
171
158
166
176
REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Why and how are customers empowered by social
networks?
2. Define CRM and e-CRM.
3. Describe social CRM.
4. List the major benefits of SCRM to customers and
enterprises.
5. Describe the different ways customers and companies
interact (per Patricia Seybold Group).
6. List the five dimensions of the evolution of CRM to
SCRM.
7. List the capabilities of SCRM that can help salespeople
(including SFA).
8. Describe Cipriani’s different dimensions along which
CRM has evolved to social CRM.
9. Define social customers and describe their
characteristics.
10. Provide some examples of how social customers are
properly served.
11. List some SCRM tools.
12. How can social media improve call centers?
13. Describe autoresponding.
7
Social Customer Service and CRM
4. Enter altimetergroup.com and view the webinar
“Social CRM Use Cases: 5Ms and Marketing” (vimeo.
com/10788611), which follows Altimeter Group’s 2010
published open research report titled “Social CRM: The
New Rules of Relationship Management.” (See slideshare.net/jeremiah_owyang/social-crm-the-newrules-of-relationship-management.) Discuss the
5 M’s: monitoring, mapping, management, middleware,
and measurement.
5. Discuss the five dimensions along which CRM evolved
to SCRM, including the major differences in each.
6. Discuss the role of microblogging in SCRM.
7. Discuss the relationship between autoresponding and
live chat.
8. Discuss the roles that microblogging (e.g., tweeting) can
play in SCRM.
9. Discuss the differences between traditional customers
and social customers.
10. Discuss how SCRM handles customer problems.
11. Read Ali’s (2013) article and discuss its major
conclusions.
12. Enter reachable.com and examine all the tool’s capabilities. Write a report.
13. Enter sproutsocial.com and find its features. Write a
summary.
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
INTERNET EXERCISES
1. Enter socialmediatoday.com/social-customer. Choose
five bloggers’ posts about SCRM and the social customer; discuss each briefly.
2. Compare how customer service can be provided by a
live chat with a person or by a virtual chat that is provided by an avatar (e.g., at ASB Bank’s Virtual Branch
on Facebook; apps.facebook.com/asbvirtualbranch
or at Alaska Airlines; alaskaair.com “Ask Jenn”). Also
check collegeweeklive.com (colleges are chatting live
now) and Microsoft (support.microsoft.com/contactus), which has both live agents online and virtual
(“Welcome! I’m an automated service agent available
24/7 to answer your questions about Microsoft Customer
Service. Type your question or topic in the space below
and click Ask or type ‘?’ to see how I can help you”).
Could customer conversations with virtual customer
service agents be of equal quality to that with live customer service assistance one day? Debate the issue.
3. Clinique has a comprehensive customer service platform. They offer e-mail, phone service, and live chat.
The live chat platform (clinique.com/customer_service/chatlivenow.tmpl) has regular live chat, live chat
with your photo, and face-to-face live chat using a webcam and speakers. Describe the multichannel service
support concept. Comment on the different modes.
1. Enter crmbuyer.com/edpick/69895.html and identify
five strategies suggested for improved customer
service.
2. Enter blippy.com and find the services it provides to
customers.
3. View the video “Social Experience Overview”
(1.38 minutes) from RightNow Company at youtube.
com/watch?v=hg3-mWGttwA. Describe how the
company’s product can help the customer of each participating vendor. Write a summary.
4. Read Oracle’s “Best Practices for Creating a Voice of
the Customer Service Program Using Oracle RightNow
CX Cloud Service” (2012) at oracle.com/us/products/
a p p l i c a t i o n s / b e s p r a c t i c e s - v o i c e - c u s t o m e rprg-1585083.pdf. Find out how they measure customer
sentiment with SmartSense. Write a report.
5. Enter gauravbhalla.com and find ten insights regarding
customer-driven strategies. Write a report.
6. Enter Salesforce Radian6 (salesforcemarketingcloud.
com/products/social-media-listening) and find their
activities in the SCRM area. Write a report.
7. Enter salesforce.com and identify all SCRM activities supported by the company, especially those related
to their Chatter product. View the slide show at
References
8.
9.
10.
11.
slideshare.net/Salesforce/salesforce-customerservicebest-practices-25640141. Write a report.
Enter facebook.com/dreamforce and salesforce.com/
dreamforce. Find topics that deal with SCRM. Write a
summary.
Enter socialtechnologyreview.com and find out what
they offer to vendors in the area of SCRM.
Enter Microsoft Dynamics (microsoft.com/en-us/
dynamics/crm.aspx) and identify all major contributions to SCRM. Write a report.
Enter Oracle Social CRM Applications (oracle.com/us/
products/applications/social-crm/index.html)
and
find out how Oracle uses its technology to provide social
CRM. Write a report.
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
1. Assignment for the Opening Case
Read the opening case and answer the following
questions:
(a) What social media tools and platforms does Sony
use?
(b) How does each tool facilitate customer service?
(c) What are the major benefits of social CRM to Sony?
(d) Relate Sony’s use of Pinterest to social CRM.
(e) Enter community.sony.com. Find CRM-related
activities. Summarize.
(f) Go to Sony’s community and ask a question. Get
results. Summarize four experiences.
2. Read Bernoff and Schadler (2010) article “Empowered.”
Discuss the different tools companies can use to “fight
back.”
3. Post questions on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn,
Wikianswers, and so on, regarding CRM. Check the quality of answers you get from people in these social networks. Write a report about your experience.
4. Search for a group on a social network that is interested in
social CRM. Join the group. Follow the discussions for
one month. Each group member concentrates on one
topic from this chapter and interacts with the group about
this topic. Each member prepares a report, and the group
makes a summary presentation for the class.
5. Major CRM vendors (e.g., salesforce.com, oracle.com/
us/solutions/crm/overview/index.html,
sap.com,
microsoft.com, netsuite, moxiesoft, and lithium.com)
added Web 2.0 tools to their standard CRM packages
(consult Diana 2011). Each team (or member) investigates one vendor and writes a report on the finding. A
summary of the finding is then presented to the class.
6. Read Sysomos Inc. (2011), and build a strategy for airlines, banks, or a telecom company that targets followers,
advocates, and influencers. Comment on each of the four
parts of the paper.
177
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Jamieson, C.M. The Small Business Guide to Social CRM. Birmingham,
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Social Customer Service and CRM
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Part III
Social Enterprise, Other Applications
8
The Social Enterprise: From Recruiting
to Problem Solving and Collaboration
Content
Opening Case: How a Private Enterprise Network
Transformed CEMEX into a Social Business ........................... 181
8.1
Social Business and Social Enterprise ............................. 182
8.2
Business-Oriented Public Social Networking.................. 185
8.3
Enterprise Social Networks .............................................. 187
8.4
Online Job Markets and Training
in Social Networks ............................................................. 190
8.5
Managerial Problem Solving, Innovation,
and Knowledge Management ........................................... 192
8.6
Crowdsourcing: Collective Intelligence
for Problem Solving and Content Creation..................... 194
8.7
Social Collaboration (Collaboration 2.0) ......................... 197
Learning Objectives
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Define social enterprise and describe its types and benefits.
2. Describe business-oriented public social networks.
3. Explain what enterprise social networks are and what
their value is.
4. Discuss the online employment market, including its participants, and benefits.
5. Describe managerial problem solving, knowledge management, and dissemination in social commerce.
6. Describe and discuss online advisory systems.
7. Define crowdsourcing and describe its use in social
commerce.
8. Explain how social media enhances collaboration.
References .................................................................................... 201
OPENING CASE: HOW A PRIVATE
ENTERPRISE NETWORK TRANSFORMED
CEMEX INTO A SOCIAL BUSINESS
CEMEX (cemex.com) is a global building materials company based in Mexico, known primarily for its cement and
ready-mix concrete. They do business in over 50 countries,
throughout the Americas, Europe, Africa, the Middle East,
and Asia, and maintain trade relationships in approximately
108 nations.
The Problem
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this
chapter (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_8) contains supplementary
material, which is available to authorized users.
The global economic slowdown of 2008–2014, and especially
the drastic reduction in construction activities, drove CEMEX
to try a host of traditional activities for cost reduction and
increased productivity. However, this was not enough. In addition, top management was looking for ways to facilitate innovation. Given the company’s global nature, top management
realized that they needed to improve the company’s internal
and external collaboration to foster innovation.
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_8, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
181
182
8
The Social Enterprise: From Recruiting to Problem Solving and Collaboration
The Solution
Recently, many companies have implemented Enterprise 2.0
platforms that include social media tools as well as mechanisms of social network services. CEMEX decided to follow
this trend. The company wanted to fully utilize the institutional knowledge possessed by its thousands of employees
worldwide and make it available to others whenever needed.
CEMEX created an internal private social collaboration
platform called Shift (cemex.com/whatisshift), which facilitates innovation, efficiency, and collaboration by letting
employees share information and jointly conduct problem
solving. Shift integrates some of the best capabilities of
social networks with knowledge management (KM) and collaboration techniques (using IBM Global Business Services).
Shift includes many internal communities; each is composed
of people with similar interests.
The Results
The main result was the major change in the way that people
worked together. The workforce became more cooperative;
employees helped each other, shared more information and
knowledge, were more empowered, and were able to be
more mobile. Using in-house networking led to better internal collaboration.
Projects started to move more quickly, with faster time to
market; therefore, business processes improved. In short, the
company successfully leveraged the collective talents and
skills of its employees. One internal community, the
“Construction for the 21st Century,” was challenged to suggest
the strategic topics that CEMEX should focus on to remain a
leader in the construction industry. The 400 community members of this 21st Century group responded by proposing innovative ideas, tactics, and strategies addressing the challenge.
Overall, Shift drew 5,000 users by the end of its first month. By
2013, Shift had 25,000 users and over 500 groups. By 2014, the
stock price of the company increased by over 300 %.
For more results and discussion, see slideshare.net/
soccnx/shifting-the-way-we-work-at-cemex and Hinchcliffe
(2012).
Sources: Based on Garcia et al. (2011), Hinchcliffe
(2012), Nerney (2012), and Donston-Miller (2012).
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE CASE
The CEMEX case illustrates a successful private inhouse social network whose major objectives were to
foster collaboration among its thousands of employees
worldwide and facilitate idea generation via internal
crowdsourcing. Using Web 2.0 tools, collaboration
became effective and efficient. A major result was idea
generation and the evaluation and implementation of
these ideas that facilitated innovation in the company.
This is an example of social collaboration (Sect. 8.7).
This chapter presents the major activities that social networks support within enterprises and the structure and
benefits of public business networks. This chapter also
presents the issues of the job market, recruiting and
training networking in social innovation and knowledge
management, crowdsourcing, and social collaboration.
8.1
SOCIAL BUSINESS AND SOCIAL
ENTERPRISE
A major forthcoming trend in social commerce is its move to
the enterprise level. This trend is related to the concept of
social business. Let us define both terms.
Definitions: Social Business and Social
Enterprise
The social enterprise concept has several names, definitions,
and explanations. This concept is sometimes confused with
the related concept of social business. Generally, one can
distinguish between the two concepts that are often used
interchangeably. Let us explain.
Social Business
A social business is a commercial for-profit or non-profit
organization that is designed to achieve some social goal(s)
such as improving human well-being, rather than just make a
profit. SocialFirms UK (socialfirmsuk.co.uk) provides several other definitions of what they call social enterprise.
They cite the following UK government definition: “A social
enterprise is a business with primarily social objectives
whose surpluses are reinvested for that purpose in the business or in the community, rather than being driven by the need
to deliver profit to shareholders and owners” (see details at
socialfirmsuk.co.uk/faq/faq-what-social-enterprise-andwhat-types-are-there). About.com (“What is Social Media?”)
distinguishes between two types of social business: one type
that describes companies that “aspire to social purposes more
than to profit-making,” and a seconds type that describes
companies that “use social media to advance their business
objectives.” (See webtrends.about.com/od/web20/a/socialmedia.htm.)
8.1
Social Business and Social Enterprise
The seconds type is the basis for the social enterprise.
In summary, we view a social business as one that is
built mainly around social objective(s), while a social
enterprise uses social networking to facilitate commercial
objectives.
A major organization dedicated to social business
(which refers to itself as a “social enterprise”), is the
Social Enterprise Alliance (se-alliance.org/what-is-socialenterprise).
Social Employees
The successful social business needs to empower its employees (e.g., using IBM Connections). For how IBM, AT&T,
and other large corporations do this, see Burgess and Burgess
(2013).
The Social Enterprise (Enterprise 2.0)
The social enterprise refers to the use of social media tools
and platforms and conducting social networking activities in
organizations, while its major objectives are either commercial or non-profit activities (e.g., the government). For an
overview, see Ridley-Duff and Bull (2011).
The concept of the social enterprise has become a buzzword in recent years. Let us see what it is.
Social enterprise applications are spreading rapidly in the
industry. They appear under different names, mostly as a
social enterprise and Enterprise 2.0. According to Carr
(2012), McKinsey (a management consultant company),
predicts that the global revenue from social enterprise activities will reach $1 trillion in several years (two thirds of all
social commerce value at that time).
Enterprise applications are conducted inside enterprises,
on companies’ private social networks, or on portals. They
also are conducted on public social networks, both businessoriented (e.g., LinkedIn), and general networks, mostly
Facebook and Twitter. Major applications are recruitment,
collaboration, and problem solving. According to Kern
(2012), enterprise social capabilities will facilitate a new
type of collaboration, encourage business upgrades, and
enable more vendor applications.
According to a 2009 IDC survey (reported by BusinessWire
2010), 57 % of U.S. workers in 2009 used social media for
business purposes at least once per week. Today, that figure
is higher. Corporations are rushing to get involved in several
innovative ways, as will be described later in this chapter.
Business networks are a core component in the social
enterprise.
For additional definitions, characteristics, and discussion
on social enterprise, see centreforsocialenterprise.com/
what.html.
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More Complex Definitions
In addition to the above definitions, there are some
definitions that are more complex, as illustrated next.
The Social Business Forum’s Definition
The Social Business Forum defines social business as “an
organization that has put in place the strategies, technologies
and processes to systematically engage all the individuals of
its ecosystem (employees, customers, partners, suppliers) to
maximize the co-created value” (2012.socialbusinessforum.com/what-is-social-business). The Forum also discusses the implications of this definition and its relevance,
across and outside organizations. Note that an efficient creation of value using technology is emphasized.
IBM and IDC’s Definition
IDC coined the term social business to refer to “those organizations that apply emerging technologies like Web 2.0
accompanied by organizational, cultural, and process
changes to improve business performance in an increasingly
connected global economic environment” (see IBM 2010
and IDC 2010). The IBM effort concentrates on improved
collaboration. The basic idea is that social customers require
organizations to significantly change the way they operate,
so they can become social businesses. The new structure
enables organizations to exploit the opportunities created by
the social media environment. IBM is helping organizations
become social businesses. (For an example of how they do
this, see IBM’s A Smarter Planet at ibm.com/smarterplanet/
us/en/?ca=v_smarterplanet). IBM also has an extensive
“social business video library.”
Three interesting videos are recommended to better
understand social business:
1. “Social PhD: Sandy Carter, IBM: How Do You Become a
Social Business?” (1:04 minutes) at youtube.com/
watch?v=OZy0dNQbotg
2. “How Do You Become a Social Business?” (3:28 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?v=3Hov0l7SvAo
3. “Social Business @ IBM” – An Interview with Luis Suarez,
Social Computing Evangelist (8:50 minutes) at youtube.
com/watch?v=enudW2gHek0&feature=related.
Notice that our definition of social enterprise is based on
the use of social media tools and platforms. A related topic is
business networks.
Business Networks
A business network refers to a group of people with a
professional business relationship; for example, the relationships between sellers and buyers, buyers and suppliers, and
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The Social Enterprise: From Recruiting to Problem Solving and Collaboration
professionals and their colleagues, such as the 21st Century
Community at CEMEX. In this chapter, we use the term buyers
to refer to agents buying something for a business (e.g., a purchasing agent). Such a network of people can form business
social networks, which are business-oriented networks that
are built on social relationships and can exist offline or online.
For example, public places, such as airports or golf courses,
provide opportunities to make new face-to-face business contacts if an individual has good social skills. Similarly, the
Internet is also proving to be a good place to network and connect. In this book, we address online networks. The most wellknown network is LinkedIn (linkedin.com). For a discussion
about business social networks, see Bughin and Chui (2013).
Example: Toyo Engineering
Toyo Engineering is a global Japanese corporation. Toyo is
working on large number of plant engineering projects in
more than 50 countries offering a wide range of diversified
technical services for the energy, oil refinement, chemical,
pharmaceutical, and food industries. To improve collaboration between global subsidiaries, external business partners,
and staff in remote locations, and to enhance communication
between project management teams, and engineering, procurement, construction, and other business process units, the
company is using social computing solutions from Oracle.
Oracle Web Center provides: personalization, search and
discovery, enterprise mashups, analytics, and management.
For details, see oracle.com/us/products/middleware/wccontent-customers-in-action-2016601.pdf.
Types of Business Social Networks
There are three major types of business social networks: (a)
public networks such as LinkedIn, which are owned and operated by independent companies, and are open to anyone for
business networking. The networks connect, for example, sellers and buyers or employers and potential employees; (b)
enterprise private networks, which operate inside companies,
like CEMEX’s Shift, in the opening case. These usually
restrict membership to employees and sometimes to business
partners. An example is USAA, which set up an internal social
networking site using Microsoft’s Sharepoint, for employees
to get to know one another and send internal messages; and (c)
company-owned and hosted enterprise networks that are controlled by a company but are open to the public, usually for
brand-related networking (e.g., Starbucks, Dell).
the relationships and communication patterns that make a
company tick, and (c) create a common culture across large
organizations.
The major reasons an organization becomes a social
enterprise are that it has the abilities to:
• Improve collaboration inside the enterprise and
with business partners
• Facilitate knowledge management (increase access
to specialized knowledge)
• Build better customer and employee relationships
• Facilitate recruiting and employee retention
• Increase business and marketing opportunities (e.g.,
meet new potential business partners and/or
customers)
• Reduce operations, communication, and travel costs
• Increase sales and revenue (e.g., more sales leads)
• Improve customer satisfaction
• Reduce marketing and advertising costs
• Improve the performance of employees and
organizations
• Foster internal and external relationships
• Collect feedback from employees
• Build an effective workforce
• Improve decision-making capabilities, including
forecasting
• “Spy” on competitors (intelligence gathering)
• Find experts and advice (internally and externally)
• Improve customer service and CRM
• Accelerate innovation and competitive advantage
For details of these and other benefits, see Carr (2012),
Bughin and Chui (2013), and Sect. 8.2.
Enterprises that use social media extensively can reap
the benefits found in the previous list and be transformed
into social businesses. For details, see ibm.com/socialbusiness/us/en.
Obstacles and Limitations
Some limitations, such as security of information and information pollution, slow down the growth of social enterprising. For details, see Forrester Consulting (2010) and
slideshare.net/norwiz/what-is-enterprise-20.
The Benefits and Limitations of Enterprise
Social Networking
How Web 2.0 Tools Are Used by Enterprises
Social networking appeals to business users for several reasons. For example, social networking makes it easy to: (a)
find people and information about companies, (b) understand
Web 2.0 tools are used in different ways by various corporations. Typical uses are: increasing speed of access to knowledge; reducing communication costs; increasing speed of
8.2
Business-Oriented Public Social Networking
access to internal exports; decreasing travel costs; increasing
employee satisfaction; reducing operational costs; reducing
time-to-market for products/services; and increasing the
number of successful innovations for new products or
services.
For statistics showing which departments in the enterprise
use the technology and what specific social media tools are
used, see idc-community.com/groups/it_agenda/socialbusiness/whatarecompaniesdoingwithsocialinitativesresultsfromthe2013socialbus. Some of the uses outside the
enterprise include recruitment, advice in problem solving,
joint design, collaboration on supply chain issues, and marketing communication.
For a comprehensive slide presentation on Enterprise 2.0,
see slideshare.net/norwiz/what-is-enterprise-20.
8.2
BUSINESS-ORIENTED PUBLIC
SOCIAL NETWORKING
Social networking activities are conducted in both public
and/or private social networking sites. For example, LinkedIn
is a business-oriented public network, whereas Facebook is
primarily a public social network used for socially-oriented
activities. Facebook, however, allows its members to conduct business-oriented activities. “My Starbucks Idea”
(mystarbucksidea.force.com) is an example of a companyhosted social network that is open to the public. In contrast,
CEMEX’s internal social network, Shift (see opening case), is
open only to the company’s employees and is considered private. In this section, we will concentrate on public social
networks.
The following are some examples of business-oriented
public social networks:
• Google +. Google + (“one Google account for everything”), which began operating in 2011, designated
itself as a business-oriented social network. In its
first year of operation, it had over 400 million members. In February 2014, it had over 1.15 billion users
and 359 million active users (per socialmediaslant.
com/google-plus-traffic-stats-February-2014).
For an overview, see martinshervington.com/
what-is-google-plus and Brogan (2012).
• Ryze. Similar to LinkedIn, Ryze (ryze.com),
according to its website and About.com, is a business social networking site with a focus on the
entrepreneur. Individuals can use Ryze to help build
up a personal network and find new jobs, while
companies can use Ryze to create a business com-
185
munity. Ryze is especially liked by young professionals, entrepreneurs, and business owners who
want to create a networking community for their
employees (per webtrends.about.com/od/profiles/
fr/what-is-ryze.htm).
• Yammer. Yammer (yammer.com) is a collaborative social software vendor that operates as an
enterprise social network. It mainly provides capabilities for collaboration. It is used in over 500,000
leading businesses worldwide, and is considered a
socially-oriented communication and collaboration
helper. (Microsoft acquired Yammer in 2012, and it
is now part of the Microsoft Office Division.) For
details, see Sect. 8.3.
• LinkedIn. Known as the premier business-oriented
network, linkedin.com is the most popular network
for business, as illustrated in Case 8.1. (See the infographic at blog.hootsuite.com/social-network-forwork.) LinkedIn is known primarily as a tool for
recruiting and finding jobs (Sect. 8.4 and Martin
2013). LinkedIn shows content and provides customer service in a multitude of languages, including
English, Spanish, French, and Tagalog, among others,
with a plan for adding other languages in the future.
Case 8.1
SC Application
Linkedin: The Premier Public Business-Oriented Social
Network
Let us look at LinkedIn (linkedin.com), the world’s largest
professional network. LinkedIn is a global business-oriented
social networking site (offered in over 20 languages), used
mainly for professional networking. By November 2014, it
had over 332 million registered members in over 200 countries and territories. By 2014, there were 2.1 million different
groups, each with a special interest. LinkedIn can be used to
find jobs, people, potential clients, service providers, subject
experts, and other business opportunities. The company
became profitable in 2006; in Q3 2014, revenue was $568
million, an increase of 45 % compared to $393 million in
the Q3 2013. According to their full year 2014 guidance,
revenue is expected to range between $2.175 billion and
$2.180 billion (per investors.linkedin.com/releasedetail.
cfm?ReleaseID=879471). The company filed for an initial
public offering in January 2011 and is one of the best performing on the stock market. A major objective of LinkedIn
is to allow registered users to maintain a list of professional
contacts (see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LinkedIn), i.e., people
with whom they have a professional relationship. The people
in each person’s network are called connections. Users can
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The Social Enterprise: From Recruiting to Problem Solving and Collaboration
invite anyone, whether he or she is a LinkedIn user or not, to
become a connection. When people join LinkedIn, they create a profile that summarizes their professional accomplishments. This profile makes it easier to be found by recruiters,
former colleagues, and others. People can also meet new
people and find opportunities for collaboration and marketing (see linkedin.com/today/post/article/201408300751117859692-social-network-101-how-linkedin-works).
LinkedIn is based on the concept of “degrees of connections.” A contact network consists of a user’s direct connections (called first degree connections), people connected to
their first-degree connections (called seconds degree connections), and people connected to the seconds-degree connections (called third degree connections). Degree “icons”
appear next to a contact’s name. For more about degrees, see
“Six Degrees of Separation – LinkedIn Style” at thedigitalfa.
com/d-brucejohnston/six-degrees-of-separation-linkedinstyle. The contact network makes it possible for a professional to gain an introduction, through a mutual, trusted
contact, to someone he or she wishes to know. LinkedIn’s
officials are also members and have hundreds of connections
each (see Elad 2014 and linkedin.com).
The “gated-access approach,” where contact with any
professional requires either a preexisting relationship or the
intervention of a mutual contact, is intended to build trust
among the service’s users.
The searchable LinkedIn groups feature allows users to
establish new business relationships by joining alumni,
industry, professional, or other relevant groups.
LinkedIn is especially useful in helping job seekers and
employers find one another. According to Ahmad (2014),
94 % of all U.S. recruiters use LinkedIn to browse for potential candidates. Job seekers can list their résumés, search for
open positions, check companies’ profiles, and even review
the profiles of the hiring managers. Applicants can also make
connections with existing contacts who can introduce them
to a specific hiring manager. Based on the members’ privacy
settings, it is even possible for them to see who has looked at
their profiles. For details, see linkedin.com/company/linkedin/careers and linkedin.com/directory/jobs.
Companies can use the site to post available jobs and find
and recruit employees, especially those who may not actively
be searching for a new position.
Smart Ways to Use Linkedin
LinkedIn is known mostly as a platform for recruitment, job searches, and making connections. However, the
network offers many opportunities for marketing, advertising, sales, and more. Members can ask others to write
employment or personal references for them. For a list of
opportunities, see linkedintelligence.com/smart-ways-touse-linkedin.
LinkedIn Answers, a feature for members to ask questions
and let other members provide answers, was discontinued in
2013; however, there are similar options available (see help.
linkedin.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/35227).
In mid-2008, LinkedIn launched LinkedIn DirectAds
(renamed “Ads” in 2011). Ads, which is their version of
Google’s AdWords, is a self-service, text-based advertising
product that allows advertisers to reach a targeted professional audience of their choosing (see their FAQ’s at help.
linkedin.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/1015). For a comparison between DirectAds and AdWords, see shoutex.com/
linkedin-directads-google-adwords-ppc-1 and shoutex.
com/linkedin-directads-vs-google-adwords-2. According
to a study conducted by HubSpot, LinkedIn has a ‘visitor-tolead’ conversion ratio that is 3 times higher than Facebook
and Twitter (see blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/
bid/30030/LinkedIn-277-More-Effective-for-LeadGeneration-Than-Facebook-Twitter-New-Data.aspx).
In 2008, LinkedIn joined forces with the financial news
channel CNBC. The deal integrates LinkedIn’s networking
functionality into CNBC.com, allowing LinkedIn users to
share and discuss financial and other news with their professional contacts. Community-generated content from
LinkedIn, such as survey and poll results, are broadcasted on
CNBC, and CNBC provides LinkedIn with programming,
articles, blogs, financial data, and video content. Because of
this connection, CNBC is able to draw insights from
LinkedIn’s global user base to generate new types of business content for CNBC to broadcast. In 2014, LinkedIn
acquired Bright.com, which connects prospective employees
with employers by using a computer algorithm (the “Bright
Score”) to find the best fit between a job seeker and a particular job (see linkedin.com/company/bright.com).
LinkedIn can also be used for several other marketing
strategies such as creating special groups to promote interest
in events, purchase paid media space, and following your
competitors’ online activities (e.g., see Schaffer 2011 and
linkedin.com/about-us). Note that about 66 % of LinkedIn
users are located outside the United States. For example,
many users are in Brazil, India, the United Kingdom, and
France. Over 1 million teachers use LinkedIn for educational
purposes.
As previously mentioned, LinkedIn is a public company.
It was an instant success, as the share price almost tripled the
first day of trading. In contrast, shares of Monster, a major
online recruiting company, plunged more than 60 % during
2011, mainly due to investors’ fear that LinkedIn would take
business away from Monster.
LinkedIn is constantly adding capabilities to its site. For
example, in 2014 the company launched features that help
increase local relevance.
Mobile Applications
A mobile version of LinkedIn, launched in February
2008, offers access to most features on the site by using
mobile devices. The mobile service is supported in a multitude
8.3
Enterprise Social Networks
of languages, including Chinese, English, French, German,
Japanese, and Spanish (for mobile devices and supported
languages, see help.linkedin.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/999).
A recent application is the ability to apply for jobs from
smartphones and tablets.
Some Resources for Linkedin
The following are some useful resources for using
LinkedIn: blog.linkedin.com, mylinkedinpowerforum.com,
and linkedin.com/search.
For LinkedIn success stories, see Elad (2014), Schaffer
(2011), and cbsnews.com/news/linkedin-5-job-searchsuccess-stories.
Sources: Based on Elad (2014), Schaffer (2011), Bishop
(2012), Gowel (2012), Ahmad (2014), and linkedin. com.
187
•
•
Questions
•
1. Enter linkedin.com and explore the site. Why do you
think the site is so successful?
2. What features are related to recruiting and finding a job?
3. Conduct an investigation to find the company’s revenue
sources. Prepare a list.
4. Several companies have attempted to clone LinkedIn
with little success. Why do you think LinkedIn is
dominating?
5. Join the group called “eMarketing Association Network”
on LinkedIn (free; it is a private group so you must request
to join) and observe their activities regarding social media
and e-commerce for one week. Write a report.
Several other international networks that are similar to
LinkedIn are Wealink (wealink.com) in China, Rediff Pages
(pages.rediff.com) in India, International High Potential
Network (iHipo) (ihipo.com) in Sweden, and Moikrug (My
Circle; moikrug.ru) in Russia.
There are many public business-oriented networks that
focus on specific industries or types of professional specialties, some which are discussed next.
Networks for Entrepreneurs
Some business-oriented public networks are focused on
entrepreneurial activities. A few examples are listed next.
• Biznik (biznik.com). Biznik is a community of
entrepreneurs and small business owners dedicated to
helping each other by sharing ideas and knowledge.
According to biznik.com/articles/collaborationbeats-the-competition, “collaboration beats the
•
•
competition.” Their policy is that members must use
their real names on the site and Biznik supplements
its interactions with face-to-face-meetings.
EFactor (efactor.com). This is the world’s largest
network of entrepreneurs (over 1 million members
in 222 countries across 240 industries; 2014 data) it
provides members with knowledge, tools, marketing, and expertise to succeed and make real, trustworthy, and lasting connections. Members connect
with like-minded people and with investors.
Startup Nation (startupnation.com). Participants
in this community of startup owners and experts are
helping others to start and operate new businesses.
This is also a forum to grow a business, fund a business, and make connections. Sharing knowledge
and ideas is the main objective.
Network of Entrepreneurial Women (nentw.com).
This is a grassroots organization for entrepreneuriallyminded women. Members can attend events, network, and find programs to help them start and
grow small businesses.
Inspiration Station (inspiration.entrepreneur.
com). Inspiration Station, a place for entrepreneurs
to share inspiring ideas, is one of the best portals for
small businesses and start-ups. It has a lot of useful
information for business owners. It is also a great
community for users to take advantage of, and connect with fellow business owners from around the
globe. Inspiration Station is available on Facebook
(facebook.com/inspirationstation), Twitter (twitter.
com/whatsinspiring), and Instagram (instagram.
com/whatsinspiring).
SunZu (sunzu.com). SunZu is a network for people
doing business that lets you meet, share, learn, trade,
and grow with other business owners. Joining SunZu
gives members access to people, learning opportunities, news, updates, business opportunities, and
insights (see sunzu.com/pages/about-sunzu).
For 20 social networks for business professionals, see
Gregory (2012). For 60 social media tools for entrepreneurs
(2014), see inc.com/jeff-haden/60-awesome-social-mediatools-for-entrepreneurs.html.
8.3
ENTERPRISE SOCIAL NETWORKS
An increasing number of companies have created their own
in-house, enterprise social networks. Some of these networks
can be private, developed for use only by their employees,
former employees, and business partners. Others are open to
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The Social Enterprise: From Recruiting to Problem Solving and Collaboration
the public, although these are mostly used by their customers. Private networks are considered to be secured (“behind
the firewall”), and are often referred to as corporate social
networks. Such networks come in several formats, depending on their purpose, the industry, the country, and so forth.
For the evolution of the networked enterprise, see Bughin
and Chui (2010).
According to Boyd (2008), Scrupski and MacDonald
developed a graphical view of Enterprise 2.0, that can be
viewed as an overlapping space where Enterprise 2.0 intersects with social media, social collaboration, and digital
marketing.
2.0 are described by Tuten (2010) and by Hinchcliffe at
zdnet.com/blog/hinchcliffe.
For additional information, see the International Journal
of Social and Humanistic Computing.
Taxonomy of Social Enterprise Applications
Example
The Greater IBM Connection (ibm.com/ibm/greateribm) is
a global business and professional community (“alumni
site”) for current and former IBM employees that offers
many resources, including a job posting site. Join The
Greater IBM Connection community on a variety of social
networks (e.g., Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn). You also can
share The Greater IBM Connection with your networks by
posting a link to the community and using the hashtags
#greateribm or #ibmalumni in your posts. To find Greater
IBMers that share your interests, go to the ‘Members’ tab of
the LinkedIn group and type a keyword that matches your
interest (for example, ‘social media’). When you find Greater
IBMers you would like to connect with, select the ‘Connect’
button to invite them to connect with you. (See ibm.com/
ibm/greateribm/community_channels.shtml.)
The
Greater IBM Connection also has a blog and a private group
on LinkedIn.
The following terms are frequently used in enterprise networking. Most will be discussed in this chapter.
1. Networking and community building. Conducting
networking and community building, involving
employees, executives, business partners, and
customers.
2. Crowdsourcing. Gathering ideas, insights, and
feedback from crowds (e.g., employees, customers,
and business partners; see Sect. 8.2). Salesforce
Success Community (success.salesforce.com) and
My Starbucks Idea (mystarbucksidea.force.com)
are examples.
3. Social collaboration. Collaborative work and
problem solving using wikis, blogs, instant messaging, collaborative office documents, and other special purpose Web-based collaboration platforms
such as Laboranova (laboranova.com).
4. Social publishing. This is the creation of usergenerated content in the enterprise, which is accessible to all (e.g., slideshare.net; youtube.com).
5. Social views and feedback. Getting feedback and
opinions from the enterprise’s internal and external
communities on specific issues.
Characteristics of Enterprise Social Networks
Enterprise social networks, like any social network, enable
employees to create profiles and interact with one another.
By encouraging interactions among members, a company
can foster collaboration and teamwork, and increase
employee satisfaction. The potential benefits of Enterprise
An Example of a Private Enterprise Network
In the opening case in Chap. 1, we introduced Starbucks’
hosted enterprise network. We also described Sony’s and
iRobot’s hosted enterprise social networks in Chap. 7. Many
other companies also have enterprise networks of all kinds.
Here is an example of another private network:
How Enterprise Social Networking Helps
Employees and Organizations
Enterprise social networking can help employees in one or
more of the following ways:
1. Quick access to knowledge, know-how, and
“know-who.” As people list their skills, expertise,
and experience, enterprise social networks can help
simplify the job of locating people with specified
knowledge and skills.
2. Expansion of social connections and broadening
of affiliations. Enterprise social networks help
managers and professionals get to know people better by interacting with them in online communities,
and by keeping up with their personal information.
Such interaction and information about others can
decrease the social distance in a company.
8.3
Enterprise Social Networks
3. Self-branding. People can become creative in
building their profiles the way they want to be
known. It helps them promote their personal brand
within the corporation.
4. Referrals, testimonials, and benchmarking.
Enterprise social networks can help employees prepare and display referrals and testimonials about
their work and also benchmark them with their
colleagues.
Benefits to Organizations
The benefits to organizations, as well as to employees, were
presented in Sect. 8.1. In addition, the benefits to employees
can develop into benefits to organizations in the long run.
Support Services for Enterprise Social
Networks
Businesses can use a variety of services and vendors to support their social networking. Two examples follow.
Example 1: Socialcast
Socialcast (socialcast.com), a VMware company, is an
online vendor providing internal social network platforms
for businesses. Enterprises can use Socialcast to facilitate
employees with collaboration and communication with
coworkers. In 2014, the company had more than 30,000 customers in 190 countries. The platform connects people to
knowledge, ideas, and resources. For details, see socialcast.
com/about.
Example 2: Socialtext
Socialtext (socialtext.com) is an enterprise social software
vendor, providing an integrated suite of Web-based applications, including social media tools and platforms. The company also provides Web security services. Businesses can
benefit by keeping employees connected to the enterprise
strategy and operations. For details, see socialtext.com/
about.
Yammer: A Social Collaboration Platform
Yammer, Inc. (yammer.com) is a Microsoft company.
According to its website, Yammer is “an Enterprise Social
Network that brings together people, conversations, content,
and business data in a single location. With Yammer, you can
easily stay connected to coworkers and information, collaborate with team members and make an impact at work. And
because Yammer can be easily accessed through a web
189
browser or mobile device, you can connect and collaborate
with coworkers anytime, anywhere. More than 200,000
companies worldwide [2014] use Yammer to engage employees, collaborate and innovate. As a platform, Yammer integrates easily with other systems to connect all of your
business applications in a single social experience.” Yammer
is used for communication and collaboration within organizations, or between organizational members and pre-designated groups.
Key Features (compiled from Blair 2011 and from
about.yammer.com/product/features).
Yammer’s social networks allow users to:
• Converse using enterprise microblogging. Start a conversation, read posts, and actively collaborate with
coworkers in real time using microblogging.
• Create profiles. Report your expertise, work experience,
and contact information. You can upload photos, images,
and documents. This will help you share information with
others, and become easier to find.
• Manage groups. Create new groups or join private or
public groups, and then discuss issues or collaborate with
the group members. Invite team members to join and start
collaborating right away.
• Conduct secure and private messaging. Create a private
dialog with one or multiple coworkers, similar to what
you can do on Facebook. Secure the messages with
Yammer’s security features.
• Create external networks. Create external networks for
working with business partners.
• Create a company directory. Create a directory of all
employees.
• Archive knowledge. Archive all online conversations to
be fully searchable.
• Use administrative tools. Keep the Yammer network
running smoothly with a suite of features built to increase
managerial control.
• Employ tagging. Tag the content and message in the
company’s network to make content easy to search for
and organize.
• Integrate applications. Install third-party applications
into Yammer to increase the functionality of the company’s network.
• Deploy mobile capabilities. Connect to the company’s network from anywhere, at any time. Download free iPhone,
Blackberry, Android, and Windows Mobile applications.
How Companies Interface with Social
Networking
Enterprises can interface with public and/or private social
networks in several ways. The major interfaces, which are
shown in Fig. 8.1, are described next.
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Fig. 8.1 The major interfaces with social
networking
• Use existing public social networks, such as facebook.com or virtual worlds, such as secondlife.
com, to create pages and microcommunities; advertise products or services; and post requests for
advice, job openings, and so forth.
• Create an in-house private social network and then
use it for communication and collaboration among
employees and retirees or with outsiders (e.g., customers, suppliers, designers). Employees can create
virtual rooms in their company’s social networks
where they can deploy applications to share information or collaborate.
• Conduct business activities in a business-oriented
or professional social network (e.g., linkedin or
sermo.com; for physicians only).
• Create services for social networks, such as software development, security, consulting services,
and more (e.g., Oracle, IBM, Microsoft).
• Use Web 2.0 software tools, mostly blogs, wikis,
workspaces, microblogging (Twitter), and team
rooms, and create innovative applications for both
internal and external users.
• Create and/or participate in a social marketplace
such as Fotolia (us.fotolia.com).
For a comprehensive report on implementing Enterprise
2.0 at IBM, see Chess Media Group (2012).
8.4
ONLINE JOB MARKETS
AND TRAINING IN SOCIAL
NETWORKS
A major area of activity in social networks, private and public, relates to human resource management.
Social Recruiting
Finding qualified employees in certain fields may be a
difficult task. To accomplish this task, companies pay considerable fees to executive recruiters or third-party online
companies such as monster.com, careerbuilder.com, and
jobthread.com.
If job seekers are online and active in their search and in
posting their résumés, there is a good chance that they will
be seen by recruiters. In addition, many so-called passive job
seekers are employed and are not actively looking for a new
job. Therefore, it is important that both active and passive
job seekers maintain a profile online that reflects them in a
positive light, especially on LinkedIn and Facebook.
Both recruiters and job seekers are moving to a new
recruiting platform—the online social networks—mostly
LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter (e.g., using TwitJobSearch;
twitjobsearch.com, a job search engine allowing employers
to post job ads on Twitter). Enterprise recruiters are scanning
online social networks, blogs, and other resources to identify
and find information about potential employees.
8.4
Online Job Markets and Training in Social Networks
Clearly, the electronic job market has benefits, but it can
also create high turnover costs for employers by facilitating
employees’ movements to look for better jobs. In addition,
finding candidates online is more complicated than most people think, mostly due to the large number of résumés available
in social media sites. To facilitate recruitment, top recruiters
are seeking the benefits of Web tools, like interviewing candidates by video from remote locations. They also use social
media tools and many social networking sites to help people
get hired faster. Some recruiters send Facebook “friend” invitations to candidates whom they have interviewed. However,
this can be a controversial practice due to ethical implications
(see archive-org.com/page/3465138/2014-01-04/http://www.
naceweb.org/s06122013/social-media-privacy-law.aspx).
Facebook has many features that help people find jobs
(see jobcast.net for jobseekers and employers to connect;
Social Jobs Partnership [facebook.com/socialjobs], a collaboration between Facebook and the U.S. Department of
Labor); and Sundberg (2010).
LinkedIn provides a similar service. For an overview and
examples, see Sundberg (2011). LinkedIn’s search engine
can help employers quickly find appropriate candidates. For
finding employees (jobs) in other countries, one can use
LinkedIn or Xing (xing.com). An interesting global recruiting community is EURES (ec.europa.eu/eures), which specializes in online recruiting in Europe.
Lately, there has been an increased use of mobile recruiting tools in general, and on Twitter in particular (see Martin
2013), as aids for people who are searching for jobs. The
following are possible activities:
(a) Search for posted positions
(b) Follow job search experts
(c) Follow and read about people in your field
(d) Engage, communicate with people, and ask for help
(e) Connect with people at your target companies
For more tips on how to do this, see Scott (2013). For an
infographic showing how using social media can help you
land a new job, see mashable.com/2013/01/23/social-mediayour-next-job-infographic.
Recruiting and Job Searching Using Social Networks
Most public social networks, especially those that are
business-oriented, facilitate recruiting and job finding. For
example, recruiting is a major activity on LinkedIn, and was
the driver for the site’s development (see Case 8.1, page
181). To be competitive, companies must look at the global
market for talent. Luckily, searchers can use global social
networking sites to find it. Large companies are using their
in-house social networks to find in-house talent for vacant
positions. Furthermore, some claim that social media has
significantly changed the hiring process (e.g., see Huff
191
2014). For how to use social media to impress recruiters see
Salpeter (2014).
According to a Jobvite survey on social recruiting (2013),
94 % of companies use, or plan to use, social media to
recruit and hire new employees, while 78 % have hired a
candidate through social media. Of these, 94 % use
LinkedIn, 65 % use Facebook, and 55 % use Twitter. Among
these, the success rate for hiring is very high on LinkedIn
(92 %), moderate on Facebook (24 %), and low on Twitter
(14 %). See web.jobvite.com/rs/jobvite/images/Jobvite_
SocialRecruiting2013.pdf.
As described earlier, LinkedIn, Facebook, MySpace, and
Craigslist provide job listings, in competition with online
recruiters such as Monster. Many other social networks offer
job listings as well. For how to land a job using Facebook,
see Morrison (2011). For a comprehensive case study on
how to use social media to recruit, see Brouat (2011).
In one example, Salesforce.com (salesforce.com), a
CRM software company, has partnered with Facebook to
allow Salesforce.com customers to build Facebook applications using the Force.com toolkit.
Note that, while over 90 % of recruiters use social networks for seeking and researching qualified candidates,
nearly 69 % have rejected candidates due to the content
posted on their social network sites, according to a 2011
Reppler study (reported by Bennett 2011). It is important for
employees to keep their social media personal information
secure (or as private as possible). Another issue for candidates is that many times employers have discovered through
social networks that their employees are looking for work
elsewhere. For recruiting via gamification, see Greenberg
(2014). For a thorough guide to job searching with social
media, see Waldman (2013).
Virtual Job Fairs and Recruiting Events
Virtual job fairs offer strategies for quickly finding qualified candidates at a reduced cost. These are done using special vendor sites (e.g., on24.com, expos2.com, and
brazencareerist.com), virtual world sites, social networks,
or the employers’ websites. For an overview, see Martin
(2010).
The following are a few examples:
• IBM needed qualified employees for leadership positions
in Africa. To quickly attract qualified employees, it used
ON24 to conduct a job fair. For the complete story, see
on24.com/case-studies/ibm-job-fair.
• P&G of Western Europe conducts annual virtual recruiting conferences using INXPO platform. The event is successful and it is used as a model for other European
companies. For a complete description, see inxpo.com/
assets/pdfs/CS_P&G.pdf.
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• The state of Michigan periodically conducts virtual career
fairs where job seekers and recruiters meet online. The
latest ones were held in November 2014. For details, see
michiganvirtualcareerfair.com.
Virtual job fairs occur frequently in virtual worlds, and
may be associated with virtual trade shows, which are
described in Chap. 9.
Training Employees
Several companies use enterprise social networking, and virtual worlds in particular, for training purposes. For example,
IBM has run management and customer interaction training
sessions in Seconds Life. Bernoff and Schadler (2010) provide an example of video training at Black & Decker using
user-generated videos posted on YouTube. These videos help
reduce training time.
For using social networks to enhance employee learning,
see Brotherton (2011) and unitek.com/training/blog/
unitek-education-citrix-training-hands-on-training-in-avirtual-world.
Training for Social Media Use
Some businesses are creating training programs to show their
employees how the use of social media can be a valuable
business tool. Training is done by using traditional training
methods and social training tools. In one example, Telstra
(telstra.com.au), Australia’s leading telecommunications
and information services company, made social media training mandatory for all its 40,000 plus employees. For details,
see mashable.com/2009/12/16/Telstra-social-media. For
how to conduct social media training, see Schwartzman
(2011). For an example of what can be done with social media
to conduct effective training, see trainingmag.com/
how-train-employees-using-social-media.
8.5
MANAGERIAL PROBLEM SOLVING,
INNOVATION, AND KNOWLEDGE
MANAGEMENT
Managers consistently engage in decision making and problem solving; however, some of the problems are difficult to
solve and require specialized knowledge. Thus, a major
activity in an organization is discovering and preserving the
knowledge of experts for future problem solving. In addition, idea generation is the first major task in a problemsolving process, and it is an essential activity in facilitating
innovation. Social media can facilitate all these activities.
For an example of Innovation 2.0, see Spigit (2011).
Idea Generation and Problem Solving
Bernoff and Li (2008) suggest deployment of social
networking for aiding research and development, gaining
insight from conversations, and using the input to encourage
innovations.
IBM’s Innovation Projects and Communities
As a technology leader, IBM has created several innovation
centers around the world. It also has several social commerceoriented projects and communities such as:
• IBM Jams.The IBM “Jam” is an Internet-based platform
for conducting conversations through brainstorming.
Each year, the “Jam” focuses on a different topic. (See
collaborationjam.com.) In 2011, for example, it was
centered around social business (see ftp.software.ibm.
com/ftp/info/social/IBM_Social_Business_Jam_
Report.pdf. In 2013, it was called ‘Client Experience
Jam.’
• IBM Connections. IBM Connections is a social platform
for businesses that, according to IBM, “lets you access
everyone in your professional network, including your
colleagues, customers, and partners.”
Problem-Solving Activities
An increasing number of companies use social networking
and crowdsourcing (Sect. 8.6) to facilitate problem solving.
For an overview, see Liang and Turban (2011/2012).
Here are several examples of problem-solving professional sites:
• HP launched an in-house private social network for their
own IT professionals around the world. This network is
called “HP Enterprise Business Community” (see h30499.
www3.hp.com).
The site offers almost all the features that currently
are being offered by public social networks (e.g.,
Facebook), but is also equipped with HP system management tools. The site offers IT workers a Web platform for
troubleshooting and discussing recurrent IT problems.
The collected information is entered into a repository of
information for future use.
• Some pharmaceutical companies are collaborating with
sermo.com, a social-networking site, exclusively for
licensed physicians. The network provides for interaction
and discussion between pharmaceutical professionals and
the physicians who use Sermo. Sermo generates revenue
by facilitating market research and sharing its content
with pharmaceutical companies and clinical research
organizations, among others.
8.5
Managerial Problem Solving, Innovation, and Knowledge Management
Other examples of problem solving social-oriented activities include finding experts and mapping communities of
expertise.
Consider the following examples of social networking for
knowledge management and expert location:
• InnoCentive (innocentive.com) is a global leader
in crowdsourcing innovation problems with over
355,000 registered problem solvers from nearly 200
countries, who compete to provide ideas and solutions to important business, social policy, etc. challenges (for cash rewards -- $5,000 to $1+ million
based on the complexity of the problem and nature
of the challenge; Data current as of January 2015.)
• Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company
(northwesternmutual.com) created an internal
enterprise social network (called Mutualnet) and an
internal blog (called (Mutualblog). They also have
an internal Yammer account, which is used by over
1,000 employees to have dialog and make
connections.
• Caterpillar (caterpillar.com) created a knowledge
network system for its employees and dealers, and the
company markets the software to other companies.
Companies also create retiree corporate social networks
to keep retirees connected with each other and with the organization where they used to work. Retirees possess a vast
source of knowledge that can be tapped for productivity
increases and problem solving (e.g., Alumni Connect from
SelectMinds; an Oracle Company). With 64 million ‘baby
boomers’ retiring within the next 8 years, preserving their
knowledge is critical.
Knowledge Management and Social Networks
Knowledge management (KM) is a process of capturing
(or creating) knowledge, storing it, constantly updating it,
disseminating it, and using it whenever necessary. This way,
knowledge is shared for useful purposes, ranging from problem solving to increased productivity. Most activities in
knowledge management can be facilitated by social media
tools and platforms.
Knowledge Creation and Sharing
Online communities are a major forum for knowledge creation. For example, social collaboration tools or crowdsourcing can facilitate knowledge creation. This area has several
193
variations. One variety is limited within a single company,
such as Knowledge Network at Caterpillar Inc. Another is a
public social network whose members are interested in a
knowledge management common topic such as knowledge
acquisition. Yet another type is a combination of the two.
The major purposes of such communities are:
• Knowledge creation. The creation of knowledge for a
specific problem or area. Individuals are asked to contribute to a solution or offer valuable advice. For example,
IBM, GE, and other companies have communities of
employees and business partners who contribute to idea
generation and problem solving.
• Knowledge sharing. Members tell other members where
to find knowledge of interest to the community (Currier
2010). Knowledge sharing is supported by tools such as
IBM Connections (see IBM Software Group 2011).
Web 2.0 applications help aggregate corporate knowledge
and simplify the building of repositories of best practices, as
demonstrated by the following example.
Example: IBM’s Social Business
IBM has long used communities for idea generation and
problem solving. One of its best-known communities is the
Innovation Jam, an online brainstorming session which
focuses on a different topic each year (e.g., in 2013, it was
called the Client Experience Jam; collaborationjam.com/
IBMJam). This community of over 150,000 employees and
members of business partners tries to help IBM move the
latest technologies to the market. IBM has been hosting
online brainstorming sessions since 2001. For example, in
July 2006, IBM invited employees, partners, and customers
to contribute ideas about a certain new product. Within 72 h,
more than 50,000 ideas were posted. These ideas were then
winnowed down by using sophisticated analytical software.
Several ideas generated in this process were implemented,
resulting in substantial savings. Sample topics of Innovation
Jams include new technologies for water filtration, 3-D
Internet, and branchless banking. For more on IBM’s
Innovation Jams—the process, example of topics, and
results, as well as the use of virtual worlds—see Bjelland and
Wood (2008) and collaborationjam.com.
Virtual meetings where IBM employees can participate in
virtual Innovation Jam meetings.
Learning Communities
Social networks and Web 2.0 tools can be used in learning
and training as a subset of knowledge sharing. Lenox and
Coleman (2010) provide a comprehensive guide explaining
how to do this in large libraries. The guide can also be used
in other organizations that consider such training. Strong
(2013) provides a guide to content brainstorming for 2013.
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Online Advice and Consulting
Questions and Answers on Social Networks
Offering advice and consulting services is an important use
of knowledge online. The online advice and consulting field
is growing rapidly as tens of thousands of experts of all kinds
provide (for a fee or free) their expertise over the Internet.
The following are some examples:
• Social networks. Several social networks allow users to
post questions and get answers. For example, people use
the LinkedIn Help Center to ask questions.
• Medical advice. Companies such as WebMD (webmd.
com) and others (e.g., LivePerson (liveperson.com/
health-medicine) provide health advice and some consultations with top medical experts, either for free or for a
per-minute fee. Consumers can ask specific questions on
these sites and get answers from specialists. For example,
DoctorSpring (doctorspring.com) offers online consultations with health care professionals (fee schedule determined by category), and allows two free follow-up
questions. Health advising sites offer specialized advice
and tips for travelers, for pet owners, and others. Of special interest is PatientsLikeMe (patientslikeme.com), a
community where patients discuss their health problems
and solutions, with advice and suggestions provided by
other members.
• Gurus. Several sites provide diversified expert services,
some for free. One example is answers.com (formerly
GuruNet), which is free, and provides businesses with an
efficient platform to connect and perform transactions
with freelance professionals, locally, nationally, and globally. The community has more than 130 million members
on the Web and over 225 million registered users (August
2014).
• Expertise is also available at Elance (elance.com).
Companies can use this site to find, hire, manage, and pay
contractors online. On Elance, companies can gain instant
access to tens of thousands of rated and tested professionals who offer technical, marketing, and business expertise.
Of special interest is ScientificAmerican.com, which has
an “Ask The Experts” section (see scientificamerican.com/
section/ask-the-experts), and offers articles by experts on
scientific and technological topics. Some other sites that offer
information from experts are Yahoo! Answers (answers.
yahoo.com), Catholic Answers (forums.catholic.com),
HealthAnswers (healthanswers.com), and North Shore
Animal League (animalleague.org/expert-advice). Some
provide answers for free; others charge fees for premium
services.
One word of caution about online advice: It is not wise to
risk your health, your money, or your legal status on free or
even for-fee online advice. Always seek more than one opinion, and carefully check the reputation and the credentials of
any advice provider.
In a Q&A “answer” function, individuals and companies’
employees can post questions. For example, in LinkedIn,
you can ask the community a question by using the posting
module on the ‘Help Forum’ or by using the posting module on your homepage to ask your network a question.
Additionally, you can use the ‘share box’ on your home
page to ask questions from your connections, everyone on
LinkedIn, or even on Twitter. Many other professional networks and their internal groups provide advice and supporting material for help in decision making. These
services can be either paid or for free. For example,
according to the medical social network Sermo (sermo.
com; “Social Media Meets Healthcare”), a large online
community exclusive to physicians, uses iConsult, an
application that “allows physicians to author and discuss
urgent and interesting patient cases from any Web- or
mobile-enabled device, and based on market tests, be
almost assured feedback from multiple colleagues. Typical
questions and responses include requested/suggested diagnoses and treatments with the best insights often resulting
from collaboration among the doctors” (see sermo.com/
who-we-are/press-releases-view/3).
8.6
CROWDSOURCING: COLLECTIVE
INTELLIGENCE FOR PROBLEM
SOLVING AND CONTENT
CREATION
The essentials of crowdsourcing were described in Chap. 2.
Listed there, as a major capability, was the facilitation of
problem solving.
Crowdsourcing as a Distributed Problem
Solving Enabler
Crowdsourcing describes a set of tools, concepts, and methodologies that deal with the process of outsourcing work,
including problem solving and idea generation to a community of potential solvers known as the ‘crowd.’
More than just brainstorming or ideation, crowdsourcing
uses proven techniques to focus on the crowd’s innovation,
creativity, and problem-solving capacity, on topics of vital
interest to the host organization. An overview of crowdsourcing is provided in Jeff Howe’s video titled “Crowdsourcing”
(3:20 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?v=F0-UtNg3ots. See
also crowdsourcing.org and Brabham (2013). Also watch
Brabham’s video titled “Crowdsourcing as a Model for
Problem Solving” (6:12 minutes) at youtube.com/
watch?v=hLGhKyiJ8Xo.
8.6
Crowdsourcing: Collective Intelligence for Problem Solving and Content Creation
Crowdsourcing Categories
Howe (2008) has classified applications of crowdsourcing
into the following four categories:
1. Collective intelligence (or wisdom). Here, people
are solving problems and providing new insights
and ideas leading to product, process, or service
innovations.
2. Crowd creation. Here, people are creating various
types of content and sharing it with others (paid or
for free). The content may be used for problem
solving, advertising, or knowledge accumulation.
This can be done by splitting large tasks into small
segments (e.g., contributing content to create
Wikipedia entries).
3. Crowd voting. Here, people are giving their opinions and ratings on ideas, products, or services, as
well as evaluating and filtering information presented to them. An example would be voting on
American Idol.
4. Crowd support and funding. Here, people are contributing and supporting endeavors for social causes,
which might include volunteering their effort and
time, offering donations, and micro-financing.
Chaordix Corp. (chaordix.com) classifies crowdsourcing
into the following three models:
1. Secretive. Individuals submit ideas, and the winner is
selected by the company. Ideas are not visible to all
participants.
2. Collaborative. Individuals submit ideas, the crowd evaluates the ideas, and the crowd picks the winners. Ideas are
visible to all participants.
3. Panel selects. Individuals submit ideas, the crowd
evolves ideas, a panel selects finalists, and the crowd
votes for the winner.
A crowdsortium is a community of industry practitioners
whose mission is to advance the crowdsourcing industry
through best practices and education (see crowdsortium.
org). They view crowdsourcing as an ecosystem.
Crowdsourcing also has the potential to be a problemsolving mechanism for governments and nonprofit use via
community participation. Urban and transit planning are
prime areas for crowdsourcing. One project used crowdsourcing to encourage public participation in the planning
process for the Salt Lake City transit system (from 2008 to
2009). Another notable application of crowdsourcing to government problem solving is the Peer to Patent Community
Patent Review project for the U.S. Patent and Trademark
195
Office, see peertopatent.org. (This project opens the patent
examination process to public participation.)
Progressive companies and organizations now recognize
the value of tapping into the wisdom of the crowd to capture
the best answers and the most innovative ideas. For a comprehensive coverage, see Chin et al. (2014).
Example
In 2012, the Brazilian furniture company Galatea
(galateacasa.com.br) tapped the crowd to help design furniture and decide which products to sell. Visitors to their
e-commerce site voted on proposed models. For details, see
crowdsourcing.org/document/in-brazil-furniture-store-tapsthe-crowds-to-help-decide-product-range/12412.
The Process of Crowdsourcing
The process of crowdsourcing, which was described briefly
in Chap. 2, differs from application to application, depending on the models of the specific problem(s) to be solved and
the method used. However, the following steps exist in most
enterprise applications, even though the details of the execution differ. The major steps are based on the generic process
described in Chap. 2. They are:
1. Identify the task (problem) you want to investigate
or accomplish.
2. Select the target crowd.
3. Broadcast the task to the crowd. (Frequently to an
unidentified crowd in an open call, as Starbucks and
Dell do.)
4. Engage the crowd in accomplishing the task (e.g.,
idea generation).
5. Collect the user-generated content. (This may
include a submission of solutions, voting, new
ideas, etc.).
6. Evaluate the quality of submitted material by the
management that initiated the request, by experts,
or by the crowd.
7. Accept or reject a solution.
8. Compensate the crowd.
The MIT Guide for Collective Intelligence
Malone et al. (2010) conducted a detailed analysis about the
use of what they call collective intelligence (CI), which is
an application of crowdsourcing for problem solving, idea
generation, and innovations. The researchers attempted to
answer the question: How can you get the crowds to do what
your business needs done?
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Successfully Deployed Crowdsourcing
Systems: Some Representative Examples
The following are some representative examples of
implemented crowdsourcing systems.
• Dell’s IdeaStorm (ideastorm.com) enables customers to vote on Dell’s product features they prefer,
including new ones. Dell is using a technically-oriented crowd, such as the Linux community.
• Procter & Gamble’s researchers post their problems at innocentive.com and at ninesigma.com,
offering cash rewards to problem solvers. P&G
uses other crowdsourcing service providers such as
yourencore.com.
• Amazon Mechanical Turk (mturk.com) is a marketplace for distributing large scale work that
requires human intelligence. It is limited to large
tasks that can be divided (known as HITs—human
intelligence tasks) and is posted by companies that
need assistance. Then, Amazon arranges workers
(the “Mechanical Turk Workers”), each of whom is
allocated a small subtask, and is paid when the
work is completed. For details, see mturk.com.
• Facebook (facebook.com) used crowdsourcing to
translate its site into more than 65 different languages.
The completion of the English to French translated by
over 4,000 volunteers only took one day; however,
Facebook had to hire a team of professional translators to oversee the whole crowdsourcing process to
ensure that the resulting translations were accurate.
• Goldcorp (goldcorp.com), a Canadian mining
company, was unable to find sufficient gold. In
2000, the company initiated an open call to the public, providing geological data and $575,000 in
prizes to participants with the best methods. Using
the submitted ideas, the company discovered $3 billion worth of gold.
• Frito-Lay (fritolay.com) used crowdsourcing for
designing a successful 2010 Super Bowl advertising campaign (Frito-Lay 2010).
• Wikipedia (wikipedia.org) is considered by many
to be the “granddaddy” of crowdsourcing, and is
certainly the world’s largest crowdsourcing project.
Tools for Crowdsourcing
To launch crowdsourcing initiatives, businesses and developers can make use of crowdsourcing tools and platforms,
such as NineSigma, InnoCentive, YourEncore, yet2,
UserVoice, Get Satisfaction, and IdeaScale.
For related tools for idea generation, see capterra.com/
idea-management-software and collaborationproject.org.
For tools for crowdfunding, see 2013 CF Crowdfunding
Industry report. For additional tools for crowdsourcing, see
crowdsourcing.org.
Crowdfunding and Kickstarter
Raising funds from the crowd for different purposes is gaining popularity with several startups operating in this area. A
notable company is Kickstarter. For how they help small
businesses, see the 2013 video titled “Small Business:
Kickstarter Success” (6:50 minutes) at youtube.com/
watch?v=xudOhEYIwyU.
Examples of Crowdsourcing
An increasing number of startups are using crowdfunding to
initiate their businesses. In Chap. 6 we provided a few examples. Here are three more examples:
• Filmmaker Zach Braff used Kickstarter to raise money
for his 2013 film (watch the video “Zach Braff Uses
Kickstarter to Get Money for Next Film” (0:51 minutes)
at youtube.com/watch?v=CIyJtcxjWhw.
• Zach Danger Brown collected over $52,000 on
Kickstarter in July 2014 for his ‘potato salad’ idea.
For details, see Root (2014) and a video about how the
collection went global at abcnews.go.com/GMA/video/
zach-danger-browns-potato-salad-kickstarter-global24464503.
• The digital music phenomenon, Kawehi, is raising money
via Kickstarter to promote her music projects in Hawaii.
For details, see Russo (2014).
Hypios: A Marketplace for Crowdsourcing
According to its website, Hypios (hypios.com) is an open
call market for crowdsourcing with over 950,000 experts
across the world. As a problem-solving individual or research
organization, Hypios combines intelligent crowdsourcing,
competency discovery technology, and human outreach to
deliver an optimal open problem-solving service. “Seekers”
post R&D problems to the network and select a deadline and
a price offered for the successful “Solver.” The company’s
partners help formulate the problem, set a reward prize and a
deadline. The problem is then posted on the Hypios solving
platform and on Facebook (facebook.com/hypios). Using
its powerful semantic analysis software, Hypios creates a
conceptual graph of the problem to extract and suggest relevant keywords. These keywords are then used to search the
Web using a competency discovery engine that identifies
potential experts. For more information, see hypios.com/
product-services/how-hypios-works-0.
8.7
8.7
Social Collaboration (Collaboration 2.0)
197
considerable benefits (e.g., see examples in IBM Software
Group 2011). For implementation of social collaboration,
see Carr (2013).
SOCIAL COLLABORATION
(COLLABORATION 2.0)
One of the major applications of Web 2.0 and social media in
the enterprise is in the area of collaboration. Some even
equate Web 2.0 with enterprise collaboration (e.g., McAfee
2009). Social collaboration is used for many purposes, an
important one being product design.
Supporting Social Collaboration
Collaboration in business can be defined as “people working
with other people toward a common outcome.” For a comprehensive overview of collaboration supported by social
media, see Carr (2013). For many images of social collaboration, search Google Images for ‘social collaboration.’
Social collaboration refers to people’s collaboration
within and between communities enabled by social media
tools and platforms. The processes help people interact and
share information to achieve a common goal. It is also
known as Collaboration 2.0. Collaboration 2.0 is recognized as a major element in social business that can provide
CollaboraƟon
portals
Social Collaboration (Collaboration 2.0)
Collaboration drives business value up by enabling people to
work together more efficiently. Wikis and other social software tools can be used effectively by all types and sizes of
enterprises for a wide range of tasks and activities.
Collaboration helps with solving business problems and
uncovering new opportunities, especially with the help of
social media tools (see details in Morgan 2012). Collaboration
in social networking is done both internally, among employees from different units working in virtual teams, and externally, when working with suppliers, customers, and other
business partners. For example, ccollaboration occurs in
forums and other types of groups, and by using wikis and
blogs. For details on collaboration in social networks, see
Coleman and Levine (2008). For the use of Collaboration
2.0 in the enterprise, see Dortch (2012) and Turban et al.
(2015). Social collaboration has several dimensions, as illustrated in Fig. 8.2.
Wiki
plaƞorm
Sharing
Social
search
TwiƩer
Use of
mobile
devices
Crowdsourcing
Social
CollaboraƟon
Public
social
networks
Social
soŌware
Expert
discovery
Private
social
networks
Partners
discovery
Fig. 8.2 The various dimensions of social collaboration
Social
customers
CommunicaƟon
model
198
8
The Social Enterprise: From Recruiting to Problem Solving and Collaboration
Some believe that in the future, people will use mostly
Web 2.0 tools, rather than e-mail, for collaboration. For a
discussion, see The Future Organization at thefutureorganization.com.
A large number of Web 2.0 tools are used to support social
collaboration. The support is given to idea sharing, communication, working together on the same documents, and
more. The Web 2.0 tools range from wikis to virtual worlds.
For comprehensive coverage, see Coleman and Levine
(2008). Dunay (2014) provides a synopsis of a webinar he
moderated on how to use enterprise social networks for
internal collaboration.
The development of tools, philosophies, and procedures
of social media support for collaboration allows employees
and managers to engage much more fully in the collaboration process. Furthermore, social collaboration has improved
organizational culture.
Social collaboration is supported mainly by:
• Wikis, blogs, and microblogging (e.g., Twitter)
• Virtual worlds (see Heiphetz and Woodill 2010)
• Collaborative communities (forums and discussion
groups)
• Early vintage Web 2.0 technologies
• Crowdsourcing
• Other tools (e.g., Yammer)
Most of the collaboration software vendors are adding
Web 2.0 tools to their collaboration suites (e.g., Binfire.com).
Using Blogs and Wikis Inside the Enterprise
In Chap. 2, we provided some examples of blogs and wikis used
within enterprises. The use of these tools is expanding rapidly.
Ccompanies use blogs and wikis for the following activities:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Project collaboration and communication
Process and procedure documentation
FAQs
E-learning and e-training
Forums for new ideas
Corporate-specific dynamic glossary and terminology
Collaboration with customers
As you can see, most of the applications in the previous
list relate to collaboration. For additional information, you
can read various blogs at zdnet.com/blog/hinchcliffe.
Using Twitter to Support Collaboration
Twitter is already used extensively in the enterprise to support collaboration. For example, Wagner (2009) describes
using Twitter to facilitate the work of focus groups and other
collaborative teams. Twitter is used extensively for interaction with customers and prospects as well as conducting
market research.
The Role of Mobile Commerce in Social Collaboration
As described in Chap. 6, mobile commerce is growing very
rapidly. Most enterprise social applications can be used on
wireless devices. This is particularly true for communication
and collaboration.
Suites of Social Collaboration Tools
Several companies offer suites of social collaboration tools,
either as stand-alone products or as added tools in existing
collaboration suites.
What is enterprise collaboration? According to
TechTarget, “Enterprise collaboration is a system of communication among corporate employees that may encompass
the use of a collaboration platform, enterprise social networking tools, a corporate intranet, and the public Internet”
(per searchcontentmanagement.techtarget.com/definition/
enterprise-collaboration-EC). For why a company needs
social collaboration, see web.esna.com/blog/social-collaborationat-c-level.
Example 1: IBM Connections
IBM Connections is a leading social network software platform that provides collaboration tools for creating forums,
wikis, and blogs, and new capabilities like advanced social
analytics, which enable users to expand their network of
connections and engagement. For details, see ibm.com/software/products/en/conn.
You can download many free reports at collaborationjam.com. IBM also provides the tools needed to support
innovation.
Example 2: Cisco WebEx Social Meeting Center
WebEx Meetings offers mobile apps for iPad, iPhone,
Android, BlackBerry, Windows Phone, and other devices.
For more information, see webex.com/products/web-conferencing/mobile.html.
For 10 social networks that aim at improved enterprise
social collaboration, see Reisinger (2015).
What is a collaboration platform? According to
TechTarget, “a collaboration platform is a category of business software that adds broad social networking capabilities
Key Terms
199
to work processes” (per searchcontentmanagement.
techtarget.com/definition/collaboration-platform).
Example 3: Laboranova
Under the European Union’s Sixth Framework Programme,
laboranova.com assists professionals who take part in the management and development of innovations. Laboranova’s tools
and methodologies assist in the areas of team building, knowledge management, and the evaluation of innovations. It consists
of a suite of Web 2.0 tools adopted for social innovation and
collaboration. The tools include InnoTube (laboranova.com/
pages/tools/innotube.php?lang=DE), which operates like a
private YouTube for business; and Melodie (laboranova.com/
pages/tools/melodie.php?lang=DE), which creates visual
maps of concepts or ideas submitted by its users, so that other
users can comment or elaborate on the initial ideas.
4.
For a list of the major enterprise collaboration platforms
(2013) and their mobile clients (with an infographic), see
zdnet.com/the-major-enterprise-collaboration-platformsand-their-mobile-clients-7000018519.
5.
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC issues as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. The social enterprise. Conducting social networking
activities in the enterprise can result in substantial benefits. Two types of business social networks exist: public
and private. The private network is company owned; it
may have restricted access, or it may be open to the public. The public network (e.g., LinkedIn) is used mainly for
recruiting, connections, collaboration, and marketing
communication. The private, in-house social enterprise
uses Collaboration 2.0, social CRM, social marketing
media, and more. You can even “spy” on your competitors (see entrepreneur.com/article/229350). All this
translates to improved relationships with employees, customers, and business partners. Significant cost reduction,
productivity increase, and competitive advantage can be
achieved as well.
2. Business-oriented public social networks. Following
the successful examples of LinkedIn and Xing, many
business-oriented public networks were created. Notable
networks are Yammer, Viadeo, and Google+. Applications
vary from recruiting to market research and advertising.
Most notable is F-commerce. One major activity in public networks is external collaboration. Several entrepreneurship networks also exist.
3. Major enterprise social commerce activities. Currently,
collaboration and communication, as well as community
building, are the major activities. In addition, problem
6.
7.
8.
solving via idea generation and finding expertise are
becoming more and more important. Related to this is
knowledge creation and management. Companies recruit,
train, and conduct other HRM activities in enterprise networks. In addition, some companies allow P2P activities.
Several companies also use the enterprise social network
for interactions with customers, suppliers, and other business partners.
The online job market and its benefits. The online job
market is growing rapidly, with thousands of jobs matched
with job seekers each day. The major benefits of online
job markets for employers are the ability to reach a large
number of job seekers at a low cost, provide detailed
information online, accept applications online, and even
conduct skill tests. In addition, résumés can be checked
and matched with positions more quickly by using intelligent software agents. Many job offers are posted on the
Internet, helping job seekers to obtain employment. Job
seekers can also post their résumés for recruiters to discover. Recruiting via social networks, especially via
LinkedIn and Facebook, is growing very rapidly.
Managerial problem solving and knowledge management. Knowledge has been recognized as an important
organizational asset. However, it needs to be properly
captured, stored, managed, and shared. Knowledge is
critical for many e-commerce and social commerce tasks,
and can be shared in different ways; expert knowledge
can be provided to non-experts (paid or for free) via a
knowledge portal or as a personal service (e.g., via
e-mail).
Online advisory systems. Online advisory systems of all
kinds are becoming popular. Some are free, but most
charge money. Users must be careful about the quality of
the advice. Social networks and portals provide a variety
of services. In addition, these systems are in active use
with many organizations.
Crowdsourcing and collective intelligence. Crowdsourcing
is used mostly for idea generation, voting, and problem
identification. Content creation and division of a big job
to small segments (such as translating the Facebook website to many different languages by volunteers) are also
supported by crowdsourcing.
Social collaboration. Many see social collaboration
(Collaboration 2.0) as the major activity that social media
supports. Activities supported range from joint design to
problem solving.
KEY TERMS
Business social network
Collective intelligence (CI)
Crowdsourcing
184
195
194
200
8
Knowledge management (KM)
Social business
Social collaboration (Collaboration 2.0)
Social enterprise (Enterprise 2.0)
The Social Enterprise: From Recruiting to Problem Solving and Collaboration
193
181
197
183
REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Define a business network and an enterprise social
network.
2. List various categories of enterprise applications in
social networks.
3. What are the benefits of enterprise social networking for
companies? For employees?
4. Define public business-oriented networks. Provide an
example.
5. What is an entrepreneur network? Provide two
examples.
6. What are the major features and characteristics of effective enterprise social networking?
7. Describe The Greater IBM Connection and Yammer.
What are the similarities? What are the differences?
8. List all the ways an organization can interface with
social networking.
9. List social networking applications in HRM.
10. How can social networking facilitate problem solving?
11. Why is LinkedIn so useful for job seekers and for
employers? List the specific tools provided to job seekers. List the specific tools provided to recruiters.
12. Relate social networking to knowledge management.
13. Describe online advisory services.
14. Relate social networks to providing advice.
15. Define crowdsourcing; provide four examples.
16. List Howe’s four categories of applications of
crowdsourcing.
17. What are the major benefits of crowdsourcing?
18. Describe the crowdsourcing process.
19. List some issues and concerns regarding crowdsourcing
implementation.
20. Describe the tools provided by Kickstarter and
Hypios.
21. Define social collaboration.
22. List and describe briefly the major benefits of social
collaboration.
23. List several social collaboration tools.
24. Describe The Greater IBM Connection (see ibm.com/
ibm/greateribm/).
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
1. How do public business-oriented networks and private
enterprise social networks differ?
2. Discuss the potential business use of Twitter in the
enterprise (by major categories).
3. What are some of the risks companies may face if they
decide to use public social networks?
4. Private enterprise social networking: beneficial or a
time-waster? What are the pitfalls of enterprise social
networking? Discuss.
5. Review any two Socialcast user case studies at socialcast.com/customers and discuss:
(a) What benefits the companies that embraced
Socialcast have realized.
(b) Lessons learned from these cases.
6. Review the features of Socialtext (socialtext.com).
Discuss how you would make use of this platform in a
small enterprise in (a) retail, (b) manufacturing, and (c)
financial services.
7. Would you use monster.com or linkedin.com for
recruiting top managers, or would you rather use a physical office in a traditional agency? Why?
8. Relate IBM’s Social Innovation Projects to knowledge
management (KM) and social networks.
9. Discuss the role of crowdsourcing in idea generation
and market research.
10. How can crowdsourcing reduce risks to merchants?
11. Discuss the business value of social networking. Begin
by reading Tom Davenport’s post titled “Where’s the
‘Working’ in Social Networking?” at blogs.hbr.
org/2007/10/wheres-the-working-in-social-n.
12. Read the Bernoff and Schadler (2010) article. Then, discuss the top strategies employed by Sony Corp. Idea
generation by employees or customers using crowdsourcing is becoming popular. However, some say that
crowdsourcing is only an electronic suggestion box.
Others disagree. Discuss.
13. Debate: Some research suggests that the use of public
social networks by employees can be good for a business, because employees develop relationships and
share information among themselves and with outsiders,
which increases productivity and innovation. Others say
it is a waste of time and ban the use of Facebook,
YouTube, and other such sites in the company during
working hours.
14. Debate the pros and cons of the following: In order to
control content, Manchester United (UK) does not allow
its players to generate any content on its private social
network site, nor on public ones (e.g., Facebook).
Manchester United has banned its players from using
social networking websites. All players news are communicated via its official website, manutd.com.
Manchester United players are not allowed to maintain
personal profiles on social networking websites.
15. Compare and contrast “social collaboration” and
“crowdsourcing.”
References
201
INTERNET EXERCISES
1. Enter the gillin.com/blog and find information related to
enterprise applications of social commerce technologies. Write a report.
2. Enter events.brazencareerist.com/recruiting and
watch the video on their home page about the services
they provide. Compare the services to the virtual event
hosted at expos2.com.
3. Enter xing.com and identify job-related help features.
Prepare a list of support activities offered.
4. Compare what JobServe (jobserve.com) and Aspire
Media Group (aspiremediagroup.net) offer regarding
solutions for recruitment. Differentiate services to
employees from services to employers. Consult Brouat
(2011). Write a report.
5. Identify a difficult business problem. Post the problem on elance.com, linkedin.com, and answers.com.
Summarize the suggestions you received to solve the
problem.
6. Enter insight24.com and opentext.com/videos and find
the most recent and most popular videos about knowledge management and social media (combined). View
three videos on different topics related to this chapter.
Prepare a report.
7. Enter guru.com and elance.com and compare their
offerings. On which site would you prefer to post your
profile? Why?
8. Enter mashable.com and review the latest news regarding crowdsourcing. Write a report.
9. Enter huddle.com and view the interactive demo (registration required). In addition, watch the video on the
main page. Write a report on social collaboration
activities.
10. Enter eweek.com/videos and find videos related to
social enterprise (business). Watch the most recent two.
Write a report.
11. Enter jivesoftware.com/discover-jive. Summarize the
material related to social business.
12. Enter IBM’s Job Referral Program site (ibm.referrals.
selectminds.com) and write a report about how they use
social media for job referrals.
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
1. Assignment for the Opening Case
Read the opening case and answer the following
questions:
(a) Describe the internal and external factors that drive
Shift.
(b) Describe its major benefits.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
(c) Relate the case to Collaboration 2.0 and to
crowdsourcing.
(d) Review Garcia et al. (2011) and watch the supporting
videos. Prepare a summary.
Have teams explore knowledge management videos and
other resources at portal.brint.com and kmworld.com.
In addition, search YouTube and Google for KM videos.
Relate them to knowledge management and social media
(combined). Prepare a report.
Each team is assigned a question-and-answer company
(e.g., answers.com, ask.com). Check the company’s
features, including social networking/games. Give a
presentation.
The crowdsourcing model works with designers in this
way: (1) A company outlines an area for which they need
a design. (2) The company turns the design outline into a
competition between amateur and professional designers.
(3) The company decides on a winner, either by having
the participants vote in the competition (the crowd), or by
an executive decision. This is all at little to no cost for the
person or company looking for the design. Now, think
about the future of the graphic industry in general. What
will be the fate of large design firms that are competing
for the business of high-profile clients when the clients
are now paying tiny, one-time fees to amateur designers?
Is using crowdsourcing in your business (or a business
you are familiar with) a viable model?
Yammer, Huddle, Chatter, and Jive Software are cloudbased social networking services. They are considered
very useful, replacing traditional enterprise tools.
Investigate the issue and write a report. Begin with
Marsan (2011).
Each team should initiate a new group on LinkedIn and
start some discussions (e.g., try to find some business
opportunities).
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how-to-conduct-a-hands-on-social-media-training
(accessed
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Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons, 2013.
9
Innovative Social Commerce
Applications: From Social Government
to Entertainment and Gaming
Contents
Learning Objectives
Opening Case: Justin Bieber—The Ultimate Story
of Social Media Fame.................................................................. 205
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Explain how governments use social media.
2. Describe social B2B activities.
3. Describe the commercial applications conducted in virtual worlds.
4. Review entertainment and gaming in social commerce.
5. Describe social gaming.
6. Explain how people can use social media to conduct P2P
transactions.
9.1
Social Media and Commerce in E-Government ............. 207
9.2
B2B Social Networking ..................................................... 210
9.3
Social Commerce: Applications in Virtual Worlds......... 215
9.4
Social Entertainment and Social TV................................ 219
9.5
Social Games, Gaming, and Gamification ....................... 222
9.6
Socially Oriented Online Person-to-Person Activities.... 224
References .................................................................................... 228
OPENING CASE: JUSTIN BIEBER—THE
ULTIMATE STORY OF SOCIAL MEDIA FAME
Justin Bieber, a talented singer and guitar player who was
discovered on the Web, has used social media to become
what some call the “King of Social Media.”
The Problem/Opportunity
Justin Bieber was born in Canada in 1994 and grew up in a
very poor family. He was not a musical prodigy, but wanted
to become a musician. From a young age, he started practicing his craft, teaching himself to play piano, drums, guitar,
and trumpet, and practicing for thousands of hours. This was
no small feat. He sang on the streets with a guitar case in
front of him, hoping to earn some money. He collected some,
but not very much. As he got older, he participated in some
small-scale talent competitions. He won some, but this did
not provide much money either.
The Solution
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this
chapter (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_9) contains supplementary
material, which is available to authorized users.
In 2007, when Justin turned 13, his mother posted some of
his videos on YouTube. In one video, Justin was singing “So
Sick,” by R&B singer Ne-Yo. Scooter Braun, a music
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_9, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
205
206
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Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
producer, came across the video by chance. Recognizing
Justin’s talent, he contacted Bieber and started working
with him. However, Braun had difficulty marketing the
young singer, so he decided to use social media to help
promote him.
Bieber was willing to perform anywhere and sing about
almost anything. Therefore, Braun and Justin were able to
post a very large number of videos on YouTube during the
same time period that the site itself was peaking in popularity. This resulted in a flood of comments on these videos.
Shortly thereafter, his music garnered over 10 million views
on YouTube. As a result, Braun introduced Justin to Usher,
the legendary singer, songwriter, dancer, and actor. Justin
signed a contract with Usher and became his protégé. In
2010, the video for his song “Baby,” from his debut fulllength album My World 2.0, was viewed over 408 million
times on YouTube, making it the most-watched video of all
time (it was overtaken by Psy’s Gangnam Style in 2012).
(See mtv.com/news/articles/1654090/justin-biebers-babybed-intruder-song-most-watched-2010-youtube-videos.
jhtml and thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/04/23/youtubes-10-most-watched-videos-ever.html.) At that time, Braun
and Bieber expanded their use of social media even further.
Using Social Media
With Braun’s help, Bieber used social media in several creative ways to promote himself. Like other celebrities,
Bieber regularly kept in touch with his millions of followers
on Twitter, sending them tweets about his plans, new
albums, and so forth. For example, on his first visit to
Australia, Justin granted an interview to a girl who tweeted
that she wanted to meet him. This girl had 90,000 followers
in her Justin Bieber fan club, and when she posted the video
of the interview on the club’s Twitter page, it became a sensation in Australia. In fact, the Australian fans preferred to
watch the video rather than read the newspaper articles
about the visit. In addition, Justin posted the video and the
story on his Facebook page, generating a tremendous
response there as well.
In February 2011, Justin’s first movie, Never Say Never,
was released. Braun and Justin used social media to promote
the movie, prompting many fans to go to their local theaters
to watch the concert film. The promotion included a Web
video campaign through JibJab (a digital entertainment studio that distributes original content via many outlets, including a YouTube channel). According to a JibJab press release,
the JibJab Web campaign resulted in a record of 2.8 million
views from an engaged audience, who subsequently created
400,000 of their own videos within a week. (See prnewswire.com/news-releases/jibjab-and-paramounts-insurgepictures- partner-on-record-breaking-justin-biebernever-say-never-movie-campaign-117063098.html.)
Unfortunately, social media may sometimes cause damage to someone’s reputation as well, and Bieber was no
exception. For example, the social media rumor mill had
been busy churning out several Bieber stories. One of them,
a Web hoax about Justin contracting syphilis, spread via
Facebook and became the #1 item on Google Trends in 2010
(see gawker.com/5563416/how-justin-bieber-caught-acontagious-syphilis-rumor). On July 11, 2011, a rumor
spread that YouTube would delete Bieber’s hit song “Baby”
because it had over 1.5 million “dislikes.” This false information resulted in millions of tweets to YouTube (“#dontdeletebaby”) posting things like “DON’T DELETE BABY!
If they do, I’m never going on YouTube again,” and “WWIII
will start,” and the like.
The Results
By early 2015, Bieber had over 72 million Facebook
fans (facebook.com/JustinBieber), over 5.38 billion
views on YouTube (vidstatsx.com/youtube-top-100-mostsubscribed-channels), over 59.3 million Twitter followers
(twitter.com/justinbieber), and 108 million “plays” on
Myspace. In 2013, he was ranked number two on the list of
Forbes’ Best-Paid Celebrities under 30 ($58 million). In
2011, he was considered more influential in the social networking sphere than President Obama or the Dalai Lama,
according to the social media organization Klout, Inc. (klout.
com), which calculates its influential index from the number
of tweets, pingshots (see Chap. 10), and hits in cyberspace
(see blog.klout.com/2011/01/is-justin-bieber-really-moreinfluential-than-barack-obama). A major part of Bieber’s
appeal stems from his two YouTube channels (youtube.com/
justinbieber and youtube.com/user/kidrauhl). For Justin’s
awards, statistics, and information on his album sales, see the
Wikipedia entries noted in the Sources section and statisticbrain.com/justin-bieber-statistics.
Sources: Based on Thomas (2011), Goldstein (2011),
Bieber (2010), Antkowiak (2011), forbes.com/sites/dorothypomerantz/2013/07/22/lady-gaga-tops-forbes-list-oftop-earning-celebrities-under-30,
forbes.com/profile/
justin-bieber, and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Bieber_
discography.
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE CASE
First, this case demonstrates that talented performers
can be discovered on the Web, especially through videos posted on YouTube. Seconds, with the help of
social media, it is possible for people to not only be
discovered, but also to advance rapidly in their careers.
(continued)
9.1
Social Media and Commerce in E-Government
Social media can direct massive traffic to websites
where artists can promote their products and services,
and where retailers and others can sell products and
services. Third, this is a great example of how social
media can facilitate personal relationships and interactions. Fourth, we learned about the power of tweeting.
Finally, we learn that even greater success can be
achieved when several social media tools are used.
The utilization of social media has facilitated entertainment and its commercial side. This is only one
innovative topic covered in this chapter. The other topics are social government, B2B marketing uses of
social media, social-oriented virtual worlds, social
games, social entertainment, and social P2P (peer-topeer) activities.
9.1
SOCIAL MEDIA AND COMMERCE
IN E-GOVERNMENT
Governments are using social media extensively. We describe
briefly the major topics in this section.
Definition and Scope of E-Government
As e-commerce matures and its tools and applications
improve, greater attention is given to its use in improving the
business of public institutions and governments (country,
state, county, city, etc.). E-government is the use of information technology in general, and e-commerce in particular,
to provide citizens and organizations with more convenient
access to government information and services. It also is an
efficient and effective way of conducting governments’
business transactions with citizens and businesses, and transacting effectively within governments themselves. See
Mergel (2012), w3.org/egov, and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
E-Government for details.
Several major markets fit within this broad definition of
e-government: government-to-citizens (G2C), governmentto-business (G2B), government-to-government (G2G), and
government-to-employees (G2E), as well as internal efficiency and effectiveness (IEE). Recently, many governments
have introduced social government.
E-Government 2.0 (Social Government)
Social government (also known as government 2.0) is an
emerging field where governments use social media to
improve their services to citizens, organizations, and
207
employees, in addition to improving their internal operations.
A social government can be viewed as a subset of e-government.
For an 85-slide presentation titled “Local Government to
Social Media,” see Dawson (2010). Social government is a
new model for delivering the functions of e-government. For
a review of social media use in e-government, see Magro
(2012).
Social Government in Action
According to Baumgarten and Chui (2009), government
agencies often fail to meet users’ needs, despite spending
enormous amounts of time and money on Web-based initiatives. By employing Web 2.0 tools, using new business models, and embracing social networks and user participation,
government agencies can raise the effectiveness of their
online presence and activities. Governments in all levels,
from national to local (Black 2013), are using social media
and social commerce applications. For extensive coverage
on this topic, see NIC Inc. (2010). Government agencies
around the world are now experimenting with social media
(e.g., India; see Banday and Matto 2013). Governments use
social media mainly for collaboration, dissemination of
information, e-learning, and citizen engagement. An example is the initiative in New Zealand, where social networking
tools are being used extensively by the government, both for
internal and external use (see Case 9.1).
Case 9.1
SC Application
Social Networking Initiatives by the New Zealand
Government
The New Zealand government is very active in implementing new technologies. As of 2008, it has created a number of
e-government social networking initiatives (e.g., see ssc.
govt.nz/bps-initiatives-spotlight).
Cross-Government Initiatives
Various government agencies and their employees can now
work better together due to the implementation of numerous
Web 2.0 initiatives.
• Shared Workspaces. Specialist groups and networks
share experience, expertise, and good practices by utilizing a suite of online tools that supports interagency collaboration and information sharing. Blogs and wikis are
the major tools used.
• E-Initiatives Wiki. Individuals working on like projects
share experience and information through an online
library.
• Principals Electronic Network. This interactive online
community allows school principals and leaders to collaborate through discussion and learn from each other’s
expertise.
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9
Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
• Best Practices Forum. A blog with a goal to impart leadership in order to obtain best practices in significant work
programs.
• Research e-Labs. Technology, Web trends, and open
source software in government are explored in a blog in
order to distribute research and case studies.
Public Engagement
Agencies have developed most of the government’s social
networking initiatives with the aim of engaging with the
public. The following are key examples:
• Policing Act Wiki. The New Zealand Police implemented a variety of social media initiatives ranging from
sharing information on their Twitter feed to collaborating
on LinkedIn and Facebook. For example, in 2009, the
Queenstown Police gained worldwide notoriety for using
Facebook to help catch a burglar (see policingwithintelligence.blogspot.com/2009/07/new-zealand-police-usefacebook-to-stop.html). In June 2011, the New Zealand
Police received Social Media NZ’s “Best Use” award.
• National Library of New Zealand. Several initiatives
have been created by the National Library of New Zealand
(natlib.govt.nz), including a blog with categories such as
“behind the scenes” and “collections.” School services
staff in New Zealand provide information to students and
libraries about resources and services to support literacy,
and more (natlib.govt.nz/schools), along with information for librarians on services and digital tools (natlib.
govt.nz/librarians). Staff also share their views about
work progress on the National Library’s technology on
the Library TechNZ blog (natlib.govt.nz/blog/categories/library-tech).
• Twitter. In February 2014, The National Library had over
8,000 followers on Twitter (twitter.com/NLNZ). This
enables the Library to engage patrons online, disseminating information about new collections and exhibits. The
people who run NLNZ’s Twitter account also post on a
Twitter account known as #tbreaktweets. These posts are
usually humorous.
• New Zealand Draft Standards. Standards New Zealand
(standards.co.nz) is New Zealand’s leading developer
and publisher of standards and standards-based solutions.
They provide standards solutions on diverse subject areas
such as health and disability.
• Participation Project Wiki. Established by the State
Services Commission, the wiki is a tool for collaborative
policy making.
• ePetitions. A program created by the Wellington City
Council allows anyone the ability to make suggestions
(create a petition or sign an open petition) related to
Council business, via the Internet (wellington.govt.nz/
have-your-say/epetitions).
• Archives New Zealand Audio Visual Wiki. The public
can view films online, discuss them with other users, and
add information about the content or context of the films
through an Archives of New Zealand initiative (audiovisual.archives.govt.nz).
• Careers New Zealand Outreach. Careers New Zealand
(careers.govt.nz) not only joins social networks where
they are likely to be influential (e.g., on Facebook), but
also actively does social media outreach.
• Crowdsourcing Images. The New Zealand Historic
Places Trust (historic.org.nz) is using Flickr to collect
images from the public for its Register of New Zealand’s
historic places (see webtoolkit.govt.nz/blog/2013/12/
confessions-of-a-social-media-phobe).
• Distributing Content on YouTube. The New Zealand
Ministry for Culture and Heritage uses YouTube (youtube.com/user/ManatuTaonga) to preserve and promote
the country’s culture and heritage.
• Promoting Sports on Facebook. The Triathlon New
Zealand, the national governing body for triathlon, duathlon, and aquathlon, has seen enormous interest and contributions via social media, and raising awareness of the
sports.
• Requesting Data Sets Online. The New Zealand
Department of Internal Affairs (dia.gov.nz) provides
information online to the public about government services, forms to download (birth certificates, marriage certificates), and publications and reports.
Other Agency-Related Social Media Initiatives
Agencies also use social networking tools to collaborate
with nongovernment organizations. Some examples of social
media initiatives involve the use of Wikipedia, Facebook,
Seconds Life, and online discussion groups.
A New Approach to E-Government
The New Zealand government has implemented an initiative called Rethink Online (for details, see ict.govt.nz/
guidance- and-resources/government-online/rethinkonline). This is a new way for the government to invest in
and manage its online channels to attain a more agile strategy, improve the value of financial investments, and achieve
better customer experiences. The Rethink Online program
consists of four principles, which include coordination,
sharing, centrality for users, and collaboration. It also
addresses current difficulties in online information and service delivery, and supports government in order to meet
people’s expectancies as well as the government’s everchanging needs.
Sources: Based on New Zealand Government (2014a, b, c),
New Zealand Government State Services Commission
(2014), and Fielden and Malcolm (2010).
9.1
Social Media and Commerce in E-Government
Questions
1. Given the richness of New Zealand’s offerings, do you
believe that the portal style of e-government will be
replaced by a social networking style?
2. What are the benefits of the internal social networking
initiatives?
3. Comment on the initiative’s connections to YouTube,
Flickr, and Facebook.
4. Why do wikis and blogs play such an important role in
many of these initiatives?
5. Which initiatives are related to e-learning? To
e-commerce? In what ways?
6. Enter ict.govt.nz and identify new initiatives in SC as of
January 2015.
Following are three other examples of effective social
government.
Example 1: Open Government Places (OGP)
This project connects civil servants and government offices,
enabling collaboration throughout communities in the
Netherlands. It cuts the red tape and includes a multitude of
social media-supported activities. The project won the 2011
Management Innovation eXchange Award. For details, see
Spinder (2011).
Example 2: U.S. Cost Guard
Ali (2010) provides an example of how the U.S. Coast Guard
uses YouTube, Twitter, and Flickr to disseminate information
and discuss their rescue operations. (See also the Coast Guard
Social Media’s official blog at coastguard.dodlive.
mil/2009/07/official-coast-guard-social-media.) Notable is
FEMA’s Twitter feed (previously ‘FEMA in Focus’), a channel that provides dissemination of FEMA-related information
(see twitter.com/fema). Law enforcement agencies use social
media (like Facebook and Twitter) to hunt for criminals. (For
some examples, see digitaltrends.com/social-media/thenew-inside-source-for-police-forces-social-networks.)
Example 3: The FBI
The FBI developed an early-warning system about potential
domestic and global threats from material it collected from
social networks. It is a kind of market research application
(Chap. 10). For details, see BBC News (2012).
The Benefits of Government 2.0
According to a December 2009 Australian government 2.0
task force report (finance.gov.au/publications/gov20taskforcereport/doc/Government20TaskforceReport.pdf ),
embracing government 2.0 can provide the government with
the following benefits:
209
• Improve the quality and responsiveness of services
in areas like education, health, public safety, and
environmental management, and at the same time
deliver these services with greater agility and
efficiency.
• Cultivate and harness the enthusiasm of citizens,
letting them contribute more fully to their wellbeing and that of their community.
• Make democracy more participatory and citizens
more informed.
• Unlock the immense economic and social value of
information and other content held by governments
to serve as a platform for innovation.
• Revitalize the public sector and make government
policies and services more responsive to people’s
needs and concerns by:
(a) Providing governments with social media
tools for a much greater level of community
engagement
(b) Allowing the users of government services
much greater participation in their design and
continual improvement of these services
(c) Involving communities of interest and practice
outside the public sector, which offer unique
access to expertise local knowledge, and perspectives, in policy making and delivery
(d) More successfully attracting and retaining
bright, enthusiastic citizens to the public service workforce by making their work less
hierarchical, more collaborative, and more
intrinsically rewarding.
Some people believe that social networking will replace
the current e-government “one-stop” passive portal (e.g., see
Vaz 2014). Government initiatives are very diversified with
the Web 2.0 approach. For example, many governments have
owned islands on Seconds Life (e.g. eGov Island, Coalition
Island) on which they present diplomatic issues and promote
tourist attractions and investment opportunities. With such
initiatives, it is important to have strict security, accountability, and compliance functionality in place, which has proven
challenging when implementing wikis and blogs.
Government experts encourage employees to experiment
with social networking, but suggest that such pilots have to
remain very well-focused and somewhat isolated from mainstream processes for at least the first 2 years. For more about
what the U.S. government is doing in Seconds Life, see
www. rikomatic.com/betterverse/2009/09/federal-government--in-seconds-life.html.
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9
Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
Applications and Resources
discussions and interactions in order to optimize innovation
and responsiveness. It is therefore beneficial to study the
tools, methods, and best practices of building and managing
B2B e-communities.
B2B e-communities are mostly communities of transactions; as such, members’ major interests are trading and business-related information gathering. Many of the communities
promote partner relationships.
Politicians use social networking extensively. For example,
during the 2008 U.S. presidential election, Democratic candidate Barack Obama created pages on Facebook and
LinkedIn, where he made thousands of connections and
received hundreds of thousands of responses to his question,
“What ideas do you have to keep America competitive in the
years ahead?” Many of the responses were very interesting
and insightful. President Obama also created an “Obama for
America” interest group on LinkedIn.
In addition to the New Zealand Case 9.1, you may look at
what is going on in Australia regarding social commerce (see
Australian Government 2012).
For an extensive list of resources on social networks in
governments, including reports, applications, and policies,
see the 2009 Slideshare presentation ‘Getting Started in the
Social Web: Government 2.0’ at slideshare.net/tamera/
getting-started-in-the-social-web-government-20.
For
other presentations, search slideshare.net for ‘social web
government 2.0.’ E-government software and solutions are
provided by most large software vendors (e.g., Adobe, Cisco
systems, IBM/Cognos’s solutions for government, and
Microsoft). For extensive coverage of e-government, see
wisegeek.com/what-is-e-government.htm.
9.2
B2B SOCIAL NETWORKING
Although a large number of companies conduct social networking that targets individual consumers (B2C), there is
also considerable activity in the B2B arena (see Mac 2014).
The social B2B potential is huge, and new applications are
added daily. See Bodnar and Cohen (2012) and the infographic showing the 2014 B2B social media landscape at
b2bmarketing.net/knowledgebank/social-mediamarketing/features/infographic-2014-b2b-social-medialandscape.
E-Communities in B2B
B2B applications may involve many participants in the supply chain and in nonprofit organizations, business buyers and
B2B sellers, service providers, industry associations, and
others. In many cases, the B2B market maker can provide
typical social network services, such as chat rooms, bulletin
boards, and, possibly, personalized Web pages to the community members.
E-communities connect employees, suppliers, distribution channel members, customers, and other business partners and any combination of these. In addition, e-communities
offer a powerful resource for e-businesses to leverage online
The Major Opportunities and Benefits of Social
Commerce in B2B
Companies that use B2B social networking may have the
following opportunities:
• Discover new business partners and build relationships with them (Gillin and Schwartzman 2011).
• Enhance the ability of participants to learn about
new technologies, competitors, and the business
environment.
• Find more sales leads (see Sysomos Inc. 2011 and
Gillin and Schwartzman 2011).
• Post questions and facilitate discussions on
LinkedIn by searching the Help Center, asking the
community a question through the Help Forum, or
by using the posting module on your homepage to
ask your network a question. Post questions on
other social networks and receive helpful answers.
• Use Instagram to tell the companies’ stories (Cohen
2014a).
• Improve participation in industry association activities (including lobbying).
• Create brand awareness.
• Create buzz about upcoming product releases
(Gillin and Schwartzman 2011).
• Advertise new and existing products and services.
• Drive traffic to vendors’ pages in social networks.
Word-of-mouth communication also may increase
traffic.
• Create social communities to encourage discussions among business partners (e.g., buyers and
suppliers).
MarketingCharts Staff (2014) summarizes B2B Marketing’s
2014 Social Media Benchmarketing Report, which found that
B2B marketers are focusing their social media efforts on generating sales leads and on pushing sales with branding and
positioning as the major objectives. (See b2bmarketing.net/
knowledgebank/social-media- marketing/features/
9.2
B2B Social Networking
infographic-2014-b2b-social-media-landscape for the
report and the corresponding 2014 B2B Social Media
Landscape infographic.)
For SC opportunities available on LinkedIn, see Schaffer
(2011); on Twitter, see Maddox (2010); on Instagram, see
Cohen (2014a); and in general, see Jensen (2012).
Most uses of B2B social networking are seen in enterprise
social networking, which involves private social networks
within the enterprise. We discussed this topic in Chap. 8.
Exploiting these opportunities may result in the following
benefits (reported by Wiebesick 2011b):
• B2B companies that blog garnered 67 % more leads
per month than those who do not.
• 69 % of B2B marketers are shifting their budgets
toward social media.
• 41 % of B2B companies acquire customers through
Facebook.
• 82 % of B2C companies use social media, while
86 % of B2B companies use social media.
• B2B marketers improve search results aided by
social media.
These data are probably higher with the passage of time.
Marketo (undated) lists the following benefits of B2B
social media marketing:
• Increases brand awareness
• Builds reputation as a thought leader
• Encourages promoters
• Can improve SEO ranking
For an infographic showing how B2B companies are
using social media, see Melin (2013).
Specific Social Networking Activities in B2B
Businesses can use B2B social networking to improve
knowledge sharing, collaboration, and collect feedback.
Furthermore, social networking sites also may prove beneficial in aiding decision making and problem-solving efforts
(e.g., via crowdsourcing).
By the end of 2012, social networking was playing a
much more important role in B2B. According to a 2010
study by Regus (reported by Leggatt 2010), both small and
large businesses are using social networks quite successfully
to find and retain new business. A few highlights of the study
include:
• 50–75 % of companies globally use social networks for
various networking functions.
• 40 % of businesses worldwide have found new customers
via social networks.
211
• 27 % of companies include social networking activities to
both acquire and retain customers in their marketing
budget.
The main uses of social networks are keeping in touch
with business contacts; meeting with special interest groups;
learning useful business intelligence; and organizing, managing, and connecting with customer groups.
Some interesting statistical data are available in a report
titled Social Strategy for B2B Marketing 2011 from
GlobalWebIndex (see slideshare.net/globalwebindex/
globalwebindex-b2b-social-media-strategy-2011).
For
details, see Cohen (2011).
According to a survey reported by Pardot (2011), social
media use among B2B marketers is already very high.
However, 30 % are not calculating the return on investment
for social media. The survey also ranked Twitter as the most
popular social media channel. Other surveys rank LinkedIn
as the most popular, followed by Facebook, with Twitter in
third place.
According to BIA/Kelsey’s U.S. Local Media Annual
Forecast (reported by MarketingProfs 2011), B2B advertising on social networking sites will grow from $2.1 billion in
2010 to $8.3 billion by 2015. Other reports attempt to answer
the following questions:
• How much will marketers spend on social network advertising aimed at a business audience?
• What types of B2B advertising can businesses do on
social network sites?
• Why are companies creating social networks in order to
market to business customers, vendors, distributors, and
channel partners?
• What are the challenges of developing such networks?
Generating sales leads is one of the major activities of
B2B marketing, which can be facilitated by social media.
Usefulness of Social Networking Activities in B2B
According to MarketingCharts Staff (2014), marketing videos on social networks are most effective, followed by
images and photos. Social conversations and other engagements are somewhat less effective.
Generating Sales Leads in B2B Social Commerce
Generating sales leads can be a time-consuming and complex
challenge; however, it was ranked as the prime area of social
B2B activities (MarketingCharts Staff 2014). Using social
media, companies can use the following lead generation
strategies (per Sysomos Inc. 2011). (See also Matlick 2013.)
• Find and create lead-generation opportunities in the
blogosphere.
• Target competitors’ customers for highly motivated sales
leads.
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Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
• Run special offers and promotions that deliver higher
conversion rates.
For an infographic, see McTigue (2014). For a discussion
about how sales teams generate leads using social media, see
Cohen (2014b).
provided there (at snap.licdn.com/microsites/content/dam/
business/marketing-solutions/global/en_US/site/pdf/cs/
linkedin_vestas_case_study_us_en_130314.pdf) is a comprehensive example (see Internet Exercise #12).
Using Facebook in B2B
Using the Major Social Networks in B2B
Hallam (2014) provides the following percentages of B2B
marketers who use the major social media sites to distribute
content: LinkedIn 91 %, Twitter 85 %, Facebook 81 %,YouTube
73 %, Google+ 55 %, Slideshare 40 %, Pinterest 34 %,
Instagram 22 %.
The following are few examples of some of these uses.
The Major Social B2B Tools and Platforms
Among the social media tools, Twitter is becoming an important B2B sales platform (e.g., see Viskovich 2013). Thomson
(2013) discusses the various social channels which are good
for B2B. According to a 2013 survey of B2B buyers in Europe
(reported by Rayson 2013), Google+ is the most influential
social media networking followed by Facebook and LinkedIn,
while Twitter and Pinterest ranked lower. The survey also
found that industry forums are the most frequently used social
channels. (Friends and networks are the most influential
sources of information in B2B buying decisions.) Thus,
building your social networks and relationships must be an
essential part of your strategy. A special marketplace for B2B
social networking is Tradescraper (tradescraper.com).
There are many possibilities of using Facebook in B2B. Here
are a few examples:
• Pickering (2012) suggests using Facebook to (a) build a
fan base; (b) share engaging content; (c) capture leads and
contact information; (d) make it personal and fun; and (e)
reach friends of fans. The author provides several examples of how this is done.
• Johnson (2013) suggests the following: (a) generate content to capture leads; (b) content strategy is the key; (c)
concentrate on non-lead generation goals as well; (d) use
visuals; and (e) advertise. Johnson (2013) also provides a
presentation and free assessment.
• Harper (2014) suggests the following to make Facebook
marketing works for B2B: (a) have an understanding of
your audience; (b) create and curate thoughtful content;
(c) publish updates on your audience’s schedule; and (d)
target your advertising.
These guides can greatly improve the effectiveness of
using Facebook for B2B.
Using Twitter in B2B
Example
Julig (2013) describes how salespeople in one company use
Pinterest to reach a B2B market. The company grew their
followers on Pinterest to over 18,000 small businesses in less
than 2 years. Their goal is to expand the idea of the brand and
think visually. In October 2013, the company had 92 Pinterest
boards with over 4,000 pins.
Twitter is used extensively in B2C mainly as a communication
tool for customer service advertising campaigns, customer
engagement platforms, CRM, and market research. Similar
uses are evidenced in B2B. More examples are provided in
blog.twilert.com/2014/03/use-twitter-b2b-marketing. The
applications include monitoring conversations for identifying
business opportunities, enabling small businesses to engage
with potential customers, making contacts with potential customers, and buyers discovering potential suppliers.
Using LinkedIn in B2B
Corporate Profiles on Social Networks
Some experts believe that the most popular social media
marketing channel for B2B marketers is LinkedIn. The IAB
has published the B2B Content Marketing Benchmarks,
Budgets, and Trends (North America) data for 2014, (see
iab.net/media/file/B2BResearch2014.pdf). For example,
they found that 91 % of B2B marketers use LinkedIn in some
way to distribute their content.
Interesting examples of B2B case studies on social media
best practices using LinkedIn’s marketing solutions are
available at business.linkedin.com/marketing-solutions/
social-media-case-studies.html. The Vestas Inc. case study
LinkedIn and Facebook include substantial information on
companies and their individual employees. In fact, employee
profiles can be part of a company’s brand. For example, in
early 2012, IBM had approximately 280,000 employees registered on LinkedIn and Microsoft had around 134,000 as of
early 2014. In addition, some sites feature company only
profiles, with comments by employees and customers.
Final note: There are less B2B social media applications than B2C ones. However, this situation is changing.
For details, see Salesforce Marketing Cloud (2012), and
Mac (2014).
9.2
B2B Social Networking
B2B Success Stories
BtoB’s Interactive Marketing Guide (available at btobonline.com; now a part of AdAge) provides the following
examples of successful applications:
• Arketi Group (arketi.com). Arketi Group created and
sponsored a B2B marketing community on LinkedIn, and
is known for its 500 ongoing daily discussions.
• Cisco Systems (cisco.com). Cisco uses Facebook to
aggregate Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, blogs, and RSS feeds
from one interface. With about 40,000 fans, daily postings include a video blog (vlog) from the CEO and social
events (e.g., Halloween photos).
• Hewlett-Packard Co. (hp.com). HP uses animatics
posted on YouTube to promote renewals of their Care
Pack Service agreements (see youtube.com/watch?v=
FIY9VxpIuUM).
• Reed Business Information (reedbusiness.com). Reed
Business Information uses LinkedIn-generated content in
a community of “Automation and Control Engineering.”
The community has about 5,000 members that provide
expertise to one another, in over 100 discussion groups.
• Deloitte (deloitte.com). Deloitte leverages Facebook as a
brand-building tool to build its technology innovation
strategy.
Another example is that of Pfizer Pharmaceutical Co.
Pfizer (pfizer.com) developed a social commerce strategy
initially internally, among its various units. These efforts
were extended to the supply chain (see Dunay 2013). In
Pfizer’s community, over 25,000 fans are engaged in discussions of how to better serve customers’ needs. Pfizer launched
an internal intranet platform in 2010, which drew 41,000
unique users who generated 800,000 page views. In 2011, it
rose to approximately 60,000 users driving 1.6 million page
views. As part of the intranet, Pfizer started a social networking hub, called My World, which they developed in partnership with their Business Technology colleagues. MyWorld is
part of their PfizerWorld intranet platform, which is used to
engage their colleagues. See socialmediacases.blogspot.
com/2014/04/case-study-enterprise-social-network.html.
For steps for B2B social media marketing success, see
Mac (2014). For case studies, read Simply Zesty’s eBook
titled “50 Brilliant Social Media B2B Case Studies” (available for purchase at simplyzesty.com/Blog/Article/
June-2011/50-Brilliant-Social-Media-B2B-Case-Studies).
For a guide to advanced social media, download Simply
Zesty’s free e-book “The Giant Free Simply Ebook: An
Advanced Guide to Social Media” (available in a 2012 article
by Fisher at simplyzesty.com/Blog/Article/November-2012/
213
The-Giant-Free-Simply-Zesty-eBook-An-AdvancedGuide-To-Social-Media-Marketing).
Wiebesick (2011a) provides a slide show of these four
examples of success stories:
• Kinaxis (kinaxis.com): Increased traffic and leads by creating funny and entertaining videos and posting them on
the company blog.
• Archer Technologies (an EMC company): Created an
enterprise social network for customers to interact and
generate ideas for new products.
• Indium Corp. (indium.com): Engineers shared blogs
among themselves and with the industry. (“Content is
King.”)
• Cree, Inc. (cree.com): Created an enterprise social network site for engagement, including blogging, YouTube
videos, and photo contests.
For more success stories, see Moth (2013).
The following are other examples of significant B2B
social commerce activities:
Example 1: American Express-Sponsored Business
Travel Social Network
American Express launched an online social network,
Business Travel ConneXion (or BTX), businesstravelconnexion.com, for the corporate travel industry.
Example 2
Orabrush, Inc. (orabrush.com) is a start-up company that
makes tongue cleaners that reduce bad breath. The company
created funny YouTube videos targeting Walmart employees. In a short time, the company had over 160,000 subscribers on YouTube, and more than 39 million views. In
addition, the company advertised on Facebook at a cost of
only $28, resulting in 300,000 fans. This publicity convinced some Walmart buyers to try the product, and
Orabrush landed a huge contract with Walmart. For details,
see Neff (2011).
Social Media Case Studies in Manufacturing
Hallam Internet Limited provides several examples of using
social networking in B2B by manufacturers; see hallaminternet.com/2014/b2b-social-media-case-studies.
B2B Virtual Trade Shows and Trade Fairs
in Virtual Worlds
Trade fairs and trade shows are popular B2B (and sometimes
B2C) marketing communication practices. Today, they are
becoming popular online.
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Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
How Virtual Trade Shows Are Arranged
The structure of a typical trade show (also known as a trade
fair) often includes a virtual exhibition hall that visitors enter
first. Exhibitors can build virtual booths where they present
exhibits of their products or services and any related information. Both exhibitors and visitors can create avatars of
themselves.
Like their physical counterparts, virtual trade shows can
be built for a whole industry, a specialized group within an
industry, a group of related companies, a government, or an
association. For a comprehensive video on the virtual trade
show, see youtube.com/watch?v=kAFpH5vEhCc.
Benefits of Virtual Trade Shows
The major benefits of virtual trade shows are:
• The cost of a virtual trade show to the organizers is
a fraction of the cost of a real-world trade show.
Thus, the participation fees can be much lower,
attracting many more exhibitors and attendees.
• Many more attendees can afford to visit due to saving money on travel expenses, accommodations,
and registration fees. Additionally, there is no physical space constraint.
• It is possible to have the show as a stand-alone and/
or as an extension to a physical trade show.
• More events, entertainment, and interactions can
occur in virtual trade shows. Although you cannot
get a free cup of coffee, you can, however, get coupons for free coffee and gifts from exhibitors.
• There is no need for organizers to print promotional
material.
• There is no carbon footprint to pollute the
environment.
• Booths can have superb designs (compared to physical ones), including choice of colors, videos, and
so on.
Some trade shows are permanent (always open), whereas
others take place once a year. For a discussion and list, see
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_tradeshow. One example is
Tradefair Plus+ (plus.tradefair.com). For a schematic view
of virtual booths and exhibition halls, search Google images
for ‘virtual trade shows.’ For a live demo, see
3d-virtualevents.com.
For a detailed description of virtual trade shows, see
Lindner (2009), and the ‘Trade Show Guide’ at trade-showguide.com/articles/virtualtradeshows.html.
Example: MarketPlace365
MarketPlace365 (marketplace365.com/marketing) is a
virtual tradeshow platform that gives companies tools to
build virtual trade shows and attract traffic to the shows. For
details, see marketplace365.com/Marketing and marketplace365.com/Marketing/features.aspx.
Note: Social media can be used to support exhibits even in
physical trade shows. For more on using social media at
trade shows, see Patterson (2012) and download his free
‘Social Media Tradeshow Marketing Checklist’ at tradeshowguyblog.com/downloads/Social-Media-TradeshowMarketing-Checklist.pdf.
The Process Used in Virtual Trade Shows
The trade fair participant goes to a specific virtual trade show
homepage, typically registering at the site. The participant
then visits the virtual exhibit floor. On the virtual exhibit
floor, the participant can select a virtual booth, gather information, and engage in “live” interaction (e.g., live chat) and
information dissemination. Technologies enable communication through features such as online chat, Web callback, fax,
and e-mail. Participants have access to community-building
features, such as online discussion boards and online forums
that allow collaborations, discussions, and debates.
Furthermore, the exhibitors can conduct online surveys. In
addition, special speakers or guests can communicate through
video-streamed keynote Webcasts. Attendees can also interact with each other through a chat room. Although this
enables the event attendees to exchange information in a
same-time, different-place mode, it is not as media rich as is
the avatar visibility experience available on Seconds Life.
Virtual trade shows can have all the features that you find
in a physical trade show, and even more. For example, one of
the main reasons for exhibitors to participate in trade fairs is
to acquire new leads and contacts. In a virtual trade show,
exhibitors can receive attendee leads in real time. A typical
attendee report, containing the name of every registered
attendee, is made available to all exhibitors. Exhibitors can
also access traffic reports of all visitors to each virtual booth.
Attendees visiting a booth can drop off an e-business card.
The traffic report includes all attendees’ names, titles, and relevant contact information, and whether the attendee has
requested additional information on any products and services, the company in general, or employment opportunities.
Strategy for B2B Social Networking
Gillin (2010) made several suggestions on how to maximize
the value of multiple social marketing channels. Power
(2014) provides examples and sources for social media strategy for B2B.
9.3
Social Commerce: Applications in Virtual Worlds
Eventually, companies will be able to use social networking more efficiently. Success stories of five companies—
SAP, United Linen (a small laundry service), Forrester
Research, Kinaxis, and Expert Laser Services—are discussed by Jensen (2012).
The Future of B2B Social Networking
Marketing users are developing social media and search
tools. Businesses must embrace social networking in order to
better understand their customers and business partners.
(Note: B2B marketing refers to marketing by manufacturers and wholesalers along the sell-side of the supply chain).
For emerging trends in B2B social media marketing, see
a slide show presentation at slideshare.net/BtoBOnline/
social-media-reportmay2013.
9.3
SOCIAL COMMERCE: APPLICATIONS
IN VIRTUAL WORLDS
Virtual worlds (see Chap. 2) can be effective platforms for
online social interactions, community building, conducting
business transactions, and facilitating learning and training
(e.g., education). As briefly described in Chap. 2, users can
navigate and move around in a virtual world using their avatars, which they can also use for communication and other
activities. Virtual worlds also may enable trading in virtual
goods, and paying for them with virtual money. For the uses
of virtual worlds, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_world
and makeuseof.com/tag/what-are-virtual-worlds-whatare-their-uses-makeuseof-explains. For a list of the major
virtual worlds, see arianeb.com/more3Dworlds.htm. For
using virtual worlds in education, see Angel Learning’s 2008
White Paper titled ‘The Power of Virtual Worlds in Education:
A Seconds Life Primer and Resource for Exploring the
Potential of Virtual Worlds to Impact Teaching and Learning,’
see soma.sbcc.edu/Users/Russotti/SL/PowerofVirtual%20
WorldsEdu_0708.pdf.
Businesses can make use of virtual worlds, not just for entertaining their customers and prospects, but also by engaging
them in an experience that may be unavailable in the real world.
Due to the use of multiple senses in a virtual world, users’ experiences can be more fulfilling than in a 2D world, or sometimes
even more than in a physical one. For instance, according to a
posting on Seconds Life (February 2011), Seconds Life had
over 22 million registered user accounts (unique residents) who
spent more than 115 million hours a month on the site. As of
June 2013, the number of registered users has risen to over 36
million; the equivalent of total time users have spent in Seconds
Life is 217,266 days. (See the article and infographic by
Reahard 2013). Businesses can leverage features and spaces, as
illustrated next, to exploit the opportunities in virtual worlds.
215
For the business benefits of Seconds Life, see Butler-Borrer
(2010). Companies make money in virtual worlds by influencing people to buy virtual items, such as clothes, frequently
while playing games. People are spending more and more
time in online games. For example, in 2012, online game
maker Team Fortress 2 made a half a million dollars from
users who were creating content (making hats), which caused
their PayPal account to break. Team Fortress 2 was competing against their own userbase. (See makeuseof.com/tag/
virtual-world-millionaires-getting-rich-digital-marketplace.)
The Features and Spaces of Virtual Worlds
Virtual worlds have a set of properties or features that provide the capabilities where business can be conducted.
The Features That Businesses Can Leverage
• Shared space. The virtual world provides many
users with the ability to participate simultaneously
in activities, engage in discussions, and participate
in collaborative activities.
• 3-D visualization (graphical user interface). The
virtual world depicts both 2-D and 3-D images.
• Immediacy. Interactions usually occur in real time,
and users experience the results of their actions
immediately.
• Interactivity. Participants can create or modify
customized content. They may do so in collaboration with others.
• Persistence. Activities in virtual worlds are happening whether members are present or not.
• Socialization and community formation. A virtual world provides opportunities for socializing
with other users and facilitates group formation of
different types (e.g., work teams).
IBM, Walmart, Toyota, Sears, Wells Fargo, and many
other large companies have experimented with virtual worlds
for testing new designs, customer service, employee training, and marketing communication.
The Landscape of Virtual World Commercial
Applications
The potential of virtual worlds is large, particularly when
they are integrated with other IT and business systems. A
virtual world is particularly attractive to video game players,
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Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
where sellers can build communities of fans and advertise.
Other businesses are using virtual worlds for collaboration,
design testing, learning, and relationship building.
Virtual worlds can be viewed as a set of the following
multidimensional spaces.
The Spaces in Virtual Worlds
The following are brief descriptions of the major spaces used
in virtual worlds:
1. Social space. Place where users’ avatars (and their
owners) can meet, discuss, share information and
opinions, and socialize.
2. Entertainment space. Place where avatars (and
their owners) can play games, watch movies, and
attend concerts in a 3-D environment.
3. Transaction space. Marketplace where one can
conduct business and financial transactions, sell
and buy available virtual goods as well as some real
goods at a virtual webstore.
4. Experimental/demonstration space. Place in the
virtual world where real-world environments, products, and services can be simulated for experimentation, demonstration, training, and testing.
5. Collaboration space. Place for collaboration, innovation, and new product design and development.
6. Smart agent space. Place where software agents
can seek information and engage with other agents
to fulfill or facilitate transactions for their owners.
7. Fantasy space. A dream world where people can
do things that are not feasible or not affordable in
the real world (e.g., take a trip to the moon or enjoy
an expensive cruise).
8. Educational Space. Certain places in the virtual
world are dedicated to educational activities such as
teaching classes, evaluating projects, or learning by
doing special projects.
One can arrange for the use of one or more of these eight
spaces in innovative ways for business, education, medical,
political, and other uses. Business applications of virtual
worlds are varied and their use depends on the type of business in which a company is engaged, in the organizational
objectives, and the target user profiles.
• Resemblance to the real-world environment.
Businesses can use the technology since it can simulate, and even conduct real world activities (e.g.,
customer service) more promptly and a low cost
(e.g., product design). Additionally, interactions
with business partners are easy. It is also a place for
attractive advertisements. Users can get a feel of the
real world without cost and time constraints (e.g.,
buy properties, travel).
• Shopping for virtual goods. Buying and selling
virtual real estate is the major shopping activity in
virtual worlds. Users can buy land, develop it, build
on it and sell it. Millions of people who cannot
afford their dream house (e.g., in developing countries) are satisfied with buying virtual houses. You
can also shop for fascinating virtual goods for your
avatar or your virtual home on Seconds Life at secondslife.com/shop.
• Attractions for the younger generations. Today’s
youth are tomorrow’s shoppers. They grew up with
computer applications and love games and online
entertainment.
• New means of navigation and discovery. Virtual
worlds enable the creation of visually attractive and
unique products that visitors never knew existed.
• The attributes and capabilities. These are unique
to virtual worlds. First, they are mostly
3-D. Seconds, the worlds are populated with avatars. The virtual worlds are interactive and can be
manipulated and changed by users at very low cost.
• Better online meeting spaces and collaborative
platforms. Virtual worlds provide interesting platforms for collaboration, meetings, discussions, and
chatting (e.g., try to chat in 3D at imvu.com).
• Interactive environment for education and
training. Several activities, as shown in Table 9.1,
can be used to facilitate training and learning.
The Major Categories of Virtual World
Applications
It is common to classify major applications into 18 categories (adapted from Ciaramitaro 2010; Murugesan 2008;
Reeves and Read 2009, and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Virtual_world).
The Major Drivers of Social Commerce
in Virtual Worlds
Business Applications in Virtual Worlds
The key factors that drive business applications in virtual
worlds are:
The following are examples of business applications used in
virtual worlds.
9.3
Social Commerce: Applications in Virtual Worlds
217
Table 9.1 The use of virtual worlds to facilitate learning
Simulation
Distance learning
Class meetings
Exploration
Visualization
Imaginative
scenarios
Information
dissemination
Description
Users can manipulate simulated scenarios and
see results. Creating a virtual business is a
popular activity
A virtual world can be used as a place for
working, learning, and/or collaborative learning
and collaborative problem solving
Learning institutions offer a large number of
virtual classes (many in Seconds Life).
Students can interact and explore, as well as
share and work with teachers, via avatars
The virtual world is a good platform for
explorative learning. Learners can explore in a
way similar to the way they can in the real
world. The information is communicated to the
user/avatar visually, by text, or via other media
Visualization is a key learning enabler. The
virtual world can be used to visualize a process.
It can be used as a set of data helping with
problem analysis and finding solutions
People can create fantasy objects and scenarios
for entertainment
Many organizations, governments, and
universities provide updated interactive
information, which can be used to learn
geography, public administration, hospitality
management, technology, and more
4.
5.
6.
Sources: Based on Murugesan (2008), Terdiman (2008), and secondslife.com (accessed January 2015)
1. Webstores and online sales. Companies have set
up webstores in virtual worlds to enable customers
to have a more immersive experience by trying
out virtual products, including clothes, cars, or
jewelry before they buy them. This is done in a
3-D virtual salesroom. Potential buyers can also
conduct research, dress avatars, and sometimes
complete a purchase through links that lead them
to a secure trading place. For details, see Seconds
Life’s ‘Shop: Learn’ page at secondslife.com/
shop/learn.
2. Front offices or help desks. Virtual worlds can
act as access points for customer service. The care
center is staffed by avatars. This service is available around the clock.
3. Advertising and product demonstrations.
Marketers and advertisers can place 3D display
ads and banners promoting products or services at
various locations in virtual worlds to catch the
attention of visitors. Consumers also can view
demonstrations by avatars on how to install or
assemble products such as washing machines or
furniture.
7.
8.
9.
10.
There are several advantages for using virtual
worlds. Virtual stores allow businesses to reach a
variety of demographically diverse customers.
Furthermore, some real world constraints may
be reduced or eliminated in virtual worlds. In addition, the cost of experimenting with virtual things
is minimal and there is no cost when making errors.
Restrictions and costs that are found in real
world situations are further reduced.
For details, see wiki.secondslife.com/wiki/
Advertising_in_Seconds_Life.
Content creation and distribution. Virtual
worlds can serve as channels for delivering music,
games, art, and other forms of interactive content
for engaging participants.
Meetings, seminars, and conferences. Virtual
worlds are being used as venues for individuals to
virtually meet, participate, and interact through
their avatars. Such interactions can reduce the cost
and time of conducting real world meetings.
Training. Virtual worlds can also be used for
interactive and/or collaborative training. Trainees
can learn by participating in simulations and roleplaying. For example, one hotel chain is using
virtual lobbies to train receptionists. Other organizations are developing applications that can
help them train staff on how to handle emergencies such as accidents and natural disasters.
Virtual worlds can also be used for military training (e.g., flight and battlefield simulations). For
details, see Heiphetz and Woodill (2010).
Education. Universities are using virtual worlds
as a new immersive and interactive platform that
is useful for interacting with students, and even for
teaching courses.
Recruiting. A growing number of organizations,
including governments and the military, are recruiting employees via virtual worlds. All recruiting
activities, ranging from providing job details to
interviewing candidates, are conducted at the
recruiter’s virtual office. This mode of recruiting is
gaining acceptance by technology-savvy graduates
and job seekers.
Tourism promotion. Government tourist boards
and tourist operators are using virtual worlds to
promote their tourism destinations by providing
tourists with 3-D virtual immersive experiences of
real places and activities of interest.
Museums and art galleries. Many artists and
agencies are setting up virtual museums and
(continued)
218
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
9
Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
galleries to display their creations and promote
sales. They also use virtual worlds to stage musicals and other performances.
Information points. Virtual worlds are used as
sophisticated information kiosks. They can act as
extremely powerful, interactive, and dynamic
online resources or brochures.
Data visualization and manipulation. Interactive
data visualization and manipulation in the virtual
environment is an interesting new application of
interest to enterprises and professionals. For
instance, the Glasshouse software by Green
Phosphor (greenphosphor.com) allows users to
export data from either a spreadsheet or database
query to a virtual world and then presents the user
with a 3-D representation of the data in a virtual
world environment for the user to explore interactively. A user’s avatar can then manipulate the
visualization of the data by drilling down into it,
re-sorting it, or moving it around to view from
many different angles.
Renting virtual world land and buildings. One
can earn virtual money by selling or renting buildings and lands in strategic locations in virtual
worlds and by engaging in the “real estate” business in the virtual world.
Platform for social science research. Virtual
worlds are also a good platform for conducting
experimental social science research to observe
how people behave or react (through their avatars)
in structured and unstructured situations, and for
studying customer behavior in virtual worlds.
Market research. Using virtual worlds as a platform enables companies to test new products by
getting feedback from customers. These insights
may give companies a competitive edge.
Platform for design. In order to receive feedback
and opinions, many companies show images of
virtual things such as parks and structures, furniture, and avatars to potential customers and
designers.
Providing CRM to employees and a platform
for socialization. Companies use virtual worlds to
provide CRM to employees and/or customers. For
example, several companies have created islands
in Seconds Life dedicated solely for use by their
employees or for customer care.
Virtual tradeshows. Virtual tradeshows (sometimes called virtual trade fairs), which we
described in Sect. 9.2, take place in virtual worlds
(see Yu 2010).
Example: Sony’s PlayStation Home for a Virtual
Community of Gamers
Sony’s PlayStation Home (us.playstation.com/psn/playstation-home) is a virtual 3-D social gaming platform and a
large gathering place and marketplace for owners of
PlayStation games. As of 2012, it has attracted about 25
million users worldwide who spend an average of 70 minutes per session (see digiday.com/publishers/sonys-homecoming-back). The community of gamers can play
hundreds of games, attend different events, and buy many
virtual goods.
Note: Unfortunately, Sony closed PlayStation Home on
March 31, 2015.
Today, many organizations are looking for ways to conduct
virtual meetings in Seconds Life, instead of in the real world.
For examples of how businesses and organizations are
using virtual worlds to make the world greener, refer to The
Green Book: An Enterprise Guide to Virtual Worlds, published by Association of Virtual Worlds (Note: No longer
available).
Representative Virtual World Applications
Around the Globe
Here are a few other representative examples of virtual world
applications (some of which have changed over time):
For additional examples and discussion, see Reeves
and Read (2009).
• Hana City (hanacity.com). Hana Bank of Korea
uses a virtual world to educate its future customers,
(children) about home financing investment options.
• MeetMe (meet-me.jp). To make your retail shopping experience more exciting, this virtual world
takes you shopping (virtually) in Japan.
• New Belgium Brewing (newbelgium.com). This
brewery provides an interactive tour of the
brewery.
• Aloft
(starwoodhotels.com/alofthotels/index.
html). Aloft, the global brand of Starwood hotels
and resorts tested the design of its hotels on Seconds
Life. The company used the feedback collected
from more than a million visitors to create its final
design for the hotels.
• IBM. IBM is now (2015) selling on Seconds Life.
See
kzero.co.uk/blog/ibm-to-take-orders-inseconds-life.
9.4
Social Entertainment and Social TV
Trading Virtual Goods and Properties
There are many business opportunities for buying and selling
virtual goods. Sales are conducted by using electronic catalogs, classified advertisements, and auctions (e.g., see usd.
auctions.secondslife.com). Payments are made with virtual
money (e.g., “Linden dollars”) that can be converted to real
money. The tax and contract/legal issues are not clear (e.g.,
see secondslife.com/wiki/Linden_Lab_Official:Required_
Tax_Documentation_FAQ and secondslife.com/corporate/vat.php). In 2013, the U.S. Government Accountability
office released some guidelines and definitions for a virtual
economy and currency (see cpa2biz.com/Content/media/
PRODUCER_CONTENT/Newsletters/Articles_2013/
Tax/VirtualEconomy.jsp).
The major products/services in this category are: land,
retail, manufacturing, scripting, fashion, and the adult entertainment industry.
Concerns and Limitations of Commercial
Activities in Virtual Worlds
Although virtual worlds were expected to become a major
platform for commerce, business, and social activities, they
have not yet reached this level. Despite their promise, virtual
worlds present several challenges and constraints of which
developers, businesses, and individual users must be aware.
Virtual worlds such as Seconds Life are not easy to use, and
are expensive to build and operate. Software needs to be
installed and updated, which is too cumbersome for many
users. Additionally, substantial hardware is needed. There
are also administrative issues such as legal, taxation, ethics,
and reliability. Moreover, there are technology limitations,
including reliability and accessibility, and security.
According to en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_
Seconds_Life, there are occurrences of fraud and violation
of intellectual property in Seconds Life. The Seconds Life
Community also provides suggestions for dealing with abuse
and harassment at community.secondslife.com/t5/tkb/articleprintpage/tkb-id/English_KB@tkb/article-id/283.
Virtual worlds are targets for cybercriminals. For instance,
Seconds Life has been attacked not only by outsiders, but
also by groups of residents who created objects that harass
other residents, or disrupt or damage the system.
To protect the users, Seconds Life has increased security.
For a comprehensive history of Seconds Life, see
Vitzthum et al. (2011).
For guidelines dealing with the major concerns regarding
building and managing businesses in virtual worlds, see
Mahar and Mahar (2009).
Note: In 2014, Facebook paid $2 billion for Oculus VR, a
virtual reality company. The idea was that, by delivering an
219
altered sense of reality with a social experience, Facebook
could give users a more compelling reason to visit regularly
(per Kapko 2014).
9.4
SOCIAL ENTERTAINMENT
AND SOCIAL TV
The rich media capabilities of Web 2.0 technologies, the ability to engage millions of people who congregate in social networks and who are interested in online entertainment, the
availability of innovative social media tools, and the creative
and collaborative nature of Web 2.0 all facilitate social entertainment (e.g., Gangnam Style was YouTube’s most watched
video in 2012 and 2013). Web 2.0 tools also are aiding in the
proliferation of on-demand entertainment. The most wellknown entertainment application is streaming music (e.g.,
iTunes, Spotify, Pandora, and Google’s All Access; play.
google.com/about/music). The trend today is to stream music
on-demand usually for free, which gives listeners the ability
to listen to whatever they want, at any time. Jurgensen (2014)
provides comprehensive coverage of digital music today and
tomorrow, including information about new subscription services, such as Beats Music. Beats Music uses algorithms to
discover each user’s taste, and recommends songs based on
what they learn. Their editorial team consists of music experts.
Finally, Facebook and Twitter have entered this area; Facebook
has a music app, and in October 2014, Twitter announced its
new Audio Card for Android and iOs. This section describes
some of the entertainment social networks, as well as other
issues related to entertainment in social commerce. Note
that, a major issue with such social networks is copyright
violations, a topic we discuss in detail in Chap. 11.
Entertainment and Social Networks
A large number of social networks and websites that are using
social media tools are fully or partially dedicated to entertainment. Well known examples are Vimeo, Netflix, and
MySpace. MySpace has a licensing agreement with Sony,
BMG, and other large media companies, that gives its members free access to streaming videos, music, and other entertainment. The following are representative examples of how
Web 2.0 applications are used for entertainment.
Mixi
In Japan, Mixi, Inc. (mixi.jp) is a highly visited social networking service, even though users must be invited to join.
Mixi’s goal is to allow users to build friendships with other
users who share common interests. As of March 2012, the
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Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
site had about 27 million members and over 1 million small
communities of friends and interests. For details, see
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixi and digitalintheround.com/
japan-mixi-facebook.
“frequently asked questions” tab at hulu.com/plus and
watch the guided tour on hulu.com/plus.
Advertising and subscriptions are the primary social commerce business models for most streaming entertainment
sites.
Last.fm
Justin.tv (now Twitch.tv)
Last.fm (last.fm) is a music discovery service that recommends music to its listeners. In April 2014, Last.fm changed
from a streaming radio service to delivering to its customers
personalized music via a new music player. Instead of music
coming from their own servers, it is piped in from YouTube
and VEVO onto the new player. Customers can also listen
through Spotify. For details, see billboard.com/biz/articles/
news/digital-and-mobile/6022007/lastfm-pulls-out-ofradio-streaming-plugs-in-youtube (accessed July 2015).
According to their website and Wikipedia, justin.tv was a
website that allowed users to create, share, produce, and
watch live streaming videos. This network featured thousands of live channels with over 300 live streams available
each month.
In February 2014, the company was renamed Twitch
Interactive, Inc. (twitch.tv). Twitch Interactive is a site for
gaming-related content only.
Web Series and Streaming Movies
Funny-or-Die and Cracked.com
Web series are similar to regular, episodic series on TV (e.g.,
soap operas), but you can only watch them on the Internet.
The number of Web series is increasing, and some are already
available on DVD. Examples include Hemlock Grove, House
of Cards, and Johnny Dynamo. For more about Web series
and other examples, see webserieschannel.com/web-series101
and
variety.com/gallery/top-10-web-series-of2013/#!1/introduction.
According to their website, and Wikipedia, Funny or Die (funnyordie.com) is a comedy video website created by actor and
comedian Will Ferrell, among others. Like other viral video
sites, members of Funny or Die are encouraged to vote on
videos that they watch. If they think the video is funny, viewers cast a vote for “Funny.” The video then gets a score of the
total percentage of people who voted the video “Funny.” If the
video receives an 80 % or greater “Funny” rating after 100,000
views, it gets an “Immortal” ranking. If the video receives a
20 % or less “Funny” rating after 1,000 views, it “dies” and is
relegated to the Crypt section of the site. Cracked.com, another
humor website (which includes videos), also uses crowdsourcing to solicit material from the Internet crowd.
Hulu
Hulu (hulu.com) is an ad-supported online video service
that offers a selection of hit TV shows, clips, movies and
more. Their streaming service offers any current season episode of primetime TV shows from NBC, Fox, Disney
(including ABC programs), and other networks and studios.
Due to copyright laws, Hulu offers videos only to users in
the United States and a few other countries. Hulu provides
video in Flash video format. In addition, Hulu offers some
TV shows and movies in high definition in a manner similar
to Google Sites, Fox Interactive Media, and Yahoo! Sites.
Users can manually share videos they like on their Facebook
page by using the “Facebook” button. It is not necessary to
connect their Hulu and Facebook accounts to do this. Hulu is
one of the most popular Internet video sites (nielsen.com/us/
en/newswire/2013/binging-is-the-new-viewing-for-overthe-top-streamers.html). Hulu offers some of its services
free, supported by advertising. It also offers Hulu Plus,
which includes premium shows and the ability to watch on
more devices, for a monthly fee of $7.99. This service also
features limited advertising. For more about their offerings
and differences between Hulu and Hulu Plus, click on the
Multimedia Presentation and Sharing Sites
Multimedia sharing can be done in several ways, and its purpose is entertainment, advertising, training, and socialization. The following are the major types of sharing, with
representative companies:
• Photography and art sharing. Flickr, Instagram,
Picasa, SmugMug, Photobucket
• Livecasting. Livestream (new.livestream.com),
Skype, Ustream (ustream.tv)
• Music and audio sharing. ccMixter (ccmixter.
org), FreeSound (freesound.org), Last.fm,
MySpace, ReverbNation, The Hype Machine
(hypem.com/popular)
(continued)
9.4
Social Entertainment and Social TV
• Presentation sharing. SlideSnack, SlideShare,
authorSTREAM
• Media and entertainment platforms. Kaltura
Open Source Video (corp.kaltura.com/VideoSolutions/Media-and-Entertainment; kaltura.
org), Accenture (Media and Entertainment) (accenture.com/us-en/industry/media-entertainment/
Pages/media-entertainment-index.aspx)
• Virtual worlds. Seconds Life, The Sims,
Activeworlds, IMVU
• Game sharing. Miniclip, Kongregate
• Mobile social networks. Path, Line.me
• Video sharing. YouTube, Vimeo, Metacafe, Openfilm
Note that many of these have some features of social networks; therefore, they may be referred to as such. In addition, most of the above companies are generating revenue
from advertising and/or subscriptions.
Internet TV and Internet Social TV
Two similar streaming technologies are popular on the Web:
Internet TV and Internet radio.
Internet TV
Internet TV is the delivery of TV content via the Internet by
downloading or streaming videos. The content includes TV
shows, sporting events, movies, and other videos. Several
video-on-demand and subscription services, such as netflix.
com, hulu.com and hulu.com/plus, as well as amazon.
com/Prime-Instant-Video/b?node=2676882011, offer this
service. For a comprehensive description of Internet TV, see
wisegeek.org/what-is-internet-tv.htm. The major advantage is the ability to select what and when to view content
and the ability to do so from computers, tablets, smartphones,
and Blu-Ray consoles. Some major players are: Apple TV
(apple.com/appletv), Roku, Google Chromecast (google.
com/intl/en/chrome/devices/chromecast/), and Aereo.
Social Television (TV)
Social TV is an emerging social media technology that
enables TV viewers who are in different locations to interactively share experiences such as discussions, reviews, tweeting, and recommendations while watching the same show
simultaneously. According to WhatIsSocialTelevision.com
221
(whatissocialtelevision.com), social TV is “the union of
television and social media” and refers to “the phenomenon
of people communicating with each other while watching a
TV show or discussing with each other about television content using the Internet as a medium of communication.” The
communication can be done via texting in social networks,
by tweeting (see Samsung 2014), using smartphones, tablets,
etc. Social TV combines broadcast television programs and
user-generated content with rich social media. Social TV
was listed by MIT Technology Review (reported by
Evangelista 2011) as one of the ten most important emerging
technologies of 2010. The editor of Wired Magazine named
social TV as number three of six important technology trends
for 2011 (see wired.co.uk/news/archive/2011-01/11/davidrowan-predictions-2011).
Characteristics of Social TV
Social TV has several unique characteristics:
• The possibility of discovering new video content
and sharing this discovery with friends.
• Most social TV activities are done in real time by
watching content and commenting on it to others,
even if the viewers are in different locations.
• Social TV allows people to connect in a unique way
with other people who share the same interests.
Social TV is attracting an ample number of viewers. (The
number of traditional television viewers is declining due to
Internet viewing). Programmers are looking at social media
interaction not just as an amplifier of TV programming but as
content in its own right (e.g., see Poggi 2012).
Technology and Services of Social TV
A large number of social TV tools and platforms are emerging. According to Rountree (2011), there are three major
types of social TV:
1. Using a seconds screen (such as a smartphone, tablet, etc.)
or another communication device while watching TV.
2. Using an on-screen experience where information is displayed directly within the TV.
3. Using a personal computer or mobile device to watch TV
shows.
These options are not pure social media tools, but they
facilitate social interaction revolving around TV programs.
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Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
Rountree (2011) and AngelList Social Television Startups
(angel.co/social-television) provide a list of start-ups in the
field (e.g., Kwarter, and YouToo TV). Each start-up and tool
has a different capability for specific TV programs. For a list
of the most tweeted-about shows of 2014, see nielsen.com/
us/en/insights/news/2014/tops-of-2014-social-tv.html.
Vendors are interested in social TV mainly as an emerging tool for marketing communication strategies such as
increasing brand awareness or conducting market research
(e.g., see Proulx and Shepatin 2012). For the future of social
TV, see Redniss (2013). Nielsen Corporation monitors audiences on social TV (see nielsensocial.com).
Example
In 2011, Pepsi launched a robust community platform powered by Gigya’s social technology. The Pepsi Sound Off, a
social TV venture, allowed fans of “The X-Factor” (the talent competition reality show) to meet online and interact
with others to chat about the contestants and the judges.
Interactions occurred mostly in real time.
Internet Radio and Social Radio
Known by several other names, Internet radio refers to
audio content transmitted live via the Internet. It is a broadcasting service that enables users to listen online to thousands of radio stations (e.g., over 4,000 in Europe; see
listenlive.eu). The service can broadcast anything that is on
the radio stations plus broadcasts from organizations, governments, and even individuals. For details, see Beller
(2001) and radio.about.com/od/listentoradioonline/qt/blInternetRadio.htm. Internet radio has the same copyright
issues that apply to Internet TV. Note that, in many cases,
there is an agreement between the content creators and the
distributors (e.g., Warner Music and Apple reached an iRadio deal in 2013; see cnet.com/news/apple-reaches-iradiodeal-with-warner-music-suggesting-wwdc-launch and
apple.com/itunes/itunes-radio). See also blogtalkradio.
com/beverlymacy.
Example: Pandora Radio
Pandora is a leading free Internet radio service that delivers
music not only from radio stations but also from many other
sources. The core of the service is the Music Genome Project.
According to pandora.com/about, the project is a comprehensive analysis of hundreds of musical details on every track.
You can drop the name of one of your favorite songs, artists or
genres into Pandora, and the Music Genome Project will
quickly scan its own entire world of analyzed music to find
songs with interesting musical similarities to your choice.
Pandora is actually a music streaming and automated
music recommendation service that, as of 2015, is available
only in the U.S., Australia, and New Zealand. Users can create up to 100 personalized stations that play pre-arranged
selections. In February 2014, the company opened up its
content submission process to independent artists (see submit.pandora.com,
help.pandora.com/customer/portal/
articles/24802-information-for-artists-submitting-topandora, and Hockenson 2014). For Pandora’s Help Center,
see help.pandora.com.
Social Radio
An extension of internet radio is social radio, which is the
integration of Internet radio with social networking activities. It is about listener’s choice and control from their
news and entertainment sources (e.g., see socialradio.org/
about).
9.5
SOCIAL GAMES, GAMING,
AND GAMIFICATION
A social game is a video multiplayer game played on the
Internet, mostly in social networks or in virtual worlds.
Gamers can play against computers, or against each other.
Many social games are “massively” multiplayer online
games (known as MMOG or MMO), which are capable of
supporting hundreds or thousands of players simultaneously. MMOG players can compete, collaborate, or just
interact with other players around the globe. Many game
consoles, including the PSP, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360,
Nintendo DSi, and Wii, can be played on the Internet.
Additionally, mobile devices and smartphones based on
such operating systems as Android, iOS, webOS, and
Windows Mobile are seeing an increase in the number of
available MMO games. Social games are very popular.
According to the 2013 State of Online Gaming Report, 44 %
of worldwide Internet users play online games (see the
report and infographic at auth-83051f68-ec6c-44e0-afe5bd8902acff57.cdn.spilcloud.com/v1/archives/
1384952861.25_State_of_Gaming_2013_US_FINAL.pdf),
which is over 1.2 billion people (see venturebeat.
com/2013/11/25/more-than- 1-2-billion- people-areplaying-games). Although some games require fees for
enhanced features, many are free (see Pearce 2009).
Games on Social Networks
A social network game is a video game that is distributed
primarily through social networks, and usually involves
9.5
Social Games, Gaming, and Gamification
multiplayers. Social network games may have little or nothing to do with how social the games are. However, some
games have social components such as educating the public,
gift-giving, and helping others, or sharing playing strategies.
For an overview, see Humbarger (2011). Social games are
embedded within major social networks allowing many
users to play together simultaneously. The games are usually
simple and easy to learn and play.
For a game to be more social, it should facilitate and
encourage engagement and communication about the environment outside the game, run on or be integrated with a
social network, and use that network to enhance game playing between players.
Example: Popular Games on Facebook
Players can choose from several thousands of games on
Facebook. Some games are played by 50–150 million each.
The most popular games each attract tens of millions of players. Facebook’s list of popular games for November 2014
includes Candy Crush Saga (the most popular in 2014), Texas
HoldEm Poker, Dragon City, FarmVille 2, Pet Rescue Saga,
Criminal Case, Farm Heroes Saga, and Words with Friends.
(See gamechitah.com/top-games-on-facebook.html.)
As of September 2013, the major Facebook developers
for games are King, Zynga, Social Point, and Pretty Simple.
(See beforeitsnews.com/science-and-technology/2013/10/
top-9-facebook-developer-list-games-September2013-2-2644806.html.) Note that people are playing more
casino games. For example, see doubledowninteractive.
com/games. To enhance the game experience, some platforms utilize the players’ social graphs.
To learn more about social games, go to museumstuff.
com/learn/topics/Social_network_game. To find friends
and share gaming experiences on the Web, see the following
sites: gamerdna.com, raptr.com, wegame.en.softonic.
com, ugamehome.com, and World of Warcraft (us.battle.
net/wow/en).
The Business Aspects of Social Games
To understand the variety of games and their properties and
commercial possibilities, we suggest you watch the video
“Social Media Games: Worldwide Gamification Is the New
Paradigm for Life and Business” at youtube.com/
watch?v=xCWsgBHY_VU. The video presents opportunities for advertising, marketing, and training, among others. It
took Facebook 4.5 years to reach the same level of visitors that
Zynga reached in 2.5 years. However, Zynga’s revenue was
overestimated, causing the stock price to decline drastically.
As far as revenues, Facebook games provide very little income
per person per month. Electronic Arts, Inc., a Zynga competitor, has some games that generate 3–5 times more per game.
223
Both companies have gone mobile. For example, FarmVille2
for iPad and iPhone are now available. For additional discussion, see Reeves and Read (2009) and Humbarger (2011).
Educational Social Games
Games can also be educational, as the following examples
show. Developers have also created environmental apps
for kids for iPad and so forth (see usatoday.com/story/
tech/ columnist/gudmundsen/2013/09/01/ecologylearning-apps-kids/2700271). See also ecogamer.org/
environmental-games.
Example 1: Pollution Reduction Game
The Filipino environmental awareness Facebook game
called Alter Space aims to educate people on how to reduce
pollution. Specifically, it educates players about the concepts
of carbon footprints and cleaner energy, and how they can
help achieve a cleaner world.
Example 2: Economic and Finance
Game—Empire Avenue
Empire Avenue (empireavenue.com) is a social media stock
market simulation game where individuals and businesses
buy and sell virtual shares from each other. The shares can be
of individuals, companies, etc. The share price is based on
the shares’ trading activity coupled with the players’ influence on the major social networks. The trading is done with
reward points called Eaves and Vees. In the game, there are
financial data and decision-making capabilities about dividends, number of shares outstanding, and share prices, to
name just a few. Empire has many variables within the game.
The reward points can also be used as virtual currency to
play the Social Market game. Players can interact via popular social networks (e.g., Facebook, Twitter, Instagram)
across the Web. The more social the player is, the more virtual currency the player will earn, and the bigger the player’s
Empire will become. Several major brands are already using
this site (e.g., Toyota, AT&T, Audi, and Ford). For details,
see Empire Avenue at businessesgrow.com/2014/01/08/
how-empire-avenue-crushed-my-soul/.
For more on social games, see Reeves and Read (2009)
and Pearce (2009).
Gamers Helped Scientists
For decades, scientists were unable to unfold the chemical
chain of an enzyme of an AIDS-like virus. However, according to a September 19, 2011 article in the Balita Filipino
News (balita.com), researchers at the University of
Washington used Foldit, a “fun-for-purpose” video game,
created by the university. The gamers were divided into
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Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
groups, and using Foldit, were challenged to compete by
using their problem-solving skills to build 3-D models of a
protein that scientists had been unable to find for years.
The players solved the chemical chain problem accurately in
just 3 weeks. (See balita.com/online-gamers-crack-aidsenzyme-puzzle.) For more about Foldit (“Solve Puzzles for
Science”), see fold.it/portal.
Gamification
Social games are played by millions of people. Some social
games are designed so that players will connect with vendors
or brands in the game environments. This is only one aspect
of gamification, which refers to the introduction of gaming
into social networking. Gamification can also be viewed as
the introduction of social networking activities into online
games. Our interest is in those applications that are related to
social commerce and e-commerce. For more definitions and
limitations, see Gamification Wiki (gamification.org) and
Duggan and Shoup (2013).
Social activities are not new to online gaming. For example, players collectively agree to the rules of the games. In
addition, gamers need trust between the players. What is new
here is the integration of traditional multiplayer games and
social networking. Given that so many people play online
games, it is not surprising that vendors are encouraging players (e.g., via rewards) to engage in desired behavior (e.g.,
problem solving or collaboration). Vendors also use games
as advertising platforms.
According to a Lithium (2011) and Florentine (2014),
companies can create winning social customer experiences
such as increasing loyalty, building trust, accelerating innovation, providing brand engagement, and increasing relevant
knowledge.
For commercial possibilities and strategies of social
games and gamification, see Radoff (2011), Dignan (2011),
and Zichermann and Linder (2013). According to Pedzai
(2013), gamification provides a new approach to create sustained engagement between sellers and customers.
For additional information, you can download the e-book
titled “The Essential Social Playbook: 3 Steps to Turn
Social into Sales,” at powerreviews.com/assets/new/
ebooks/ powerreviews_essential_social_playbook.pdf ,
see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gamification, and review
Walter (2013).
9.6
SOCIALLY ORIENTED ONLINE
PERSON-TO-PERSON ACTIVITIES
Many person-to-person (P2P) activities are not related to
social media or commerce. However, there is a trend for an
increasing number of socially-oriented innovative applica-
tions in this field. Here we provide only a few examples.
Note that, when individuals trade with other individuals
online, they may do so using some social elements. For
example, some consider Craigslist to be a socially oriented
virtual community. For the impact of P2P on teens, see
Paquette (2014).
For information about selling products directly on
Facebook, see new.soldsie.com/blog/selling-facebookdrive-e-commerce-social-media. For why P2P selling to
teens is taking off, see Paquette (2014). P2P is related to the
topic of the collaborative (or sharing) economy.
Collaborative (or Sharing) Economy
The collaborative (or sharing) economy refers to an economic system constructed around the concept of sharing
goods and services among the participating people. Also
known as ‘collaborative consumption,’ such systems appear
in different forms and frequently use information technologies in their operations. A well-known example is car sharing. The essentials of this concept are described by
Buczynski (2013).
The major benefits for participants are cost reduction for
buyers and ability to sell more for sellers. Societal benefits
include reduction of carbon footprints (e.g., in ride sharing), increased recycling, and increased social interactions.
For comprehensive coverage, see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
Sharing_economy.
Sharing Economy and Social Commerce
Several SC models and companies are based on the concept
of the sharing economy. Examples include Uber, connecting
riders with drivers; Yerdle, a marketplace for trading used
goods; Kickstarter, for crowdfunding; Krrb, a P2P local classified marketplace; and Knok and Love Home Swap for
home swapping. Vacation rentals, where home and condo
owners provide short term rentals, and home exchanges,
where two parties agree to exchange their homes for a short
period of time, are also popular examples of the sharing
economy (e.g., see Airbnb and HomeAway).
P2P Lending
P2P lending is growing rapidly, enabling people to lend
money or other items to each other. During the process, participants also get to know one another. An example of P2P
lending is a community of people who rent goods to people
in need, usually for the short term.
Some sites have a narrow, obvious focus (like
SwapBabyGoods.com), while others are more general like
Neighborhood Fruit, which helps people find and share fruit
locally. All of the sites are encouraging collaborative
consumption. Several variations of P2P exist. Some people
Summary
225
share cars; others invite travelers to stay in their homes at no
cost; others can find a local host when they travel (see
Couchsurfing International; couchsurfing.com), and many
more. Even Google provides a service that connects borrowers and lenders of money.
income? Borrowers may question the interest rate they pay,
the conditions for getting the loans, and how their credit
score is determined (see Exercise # 7 in ‘Team Assignments’).
Social Money Lending
Individuals are using social networking in many innovative
ways to sell to other individuals.
Person-to-person money lending (also known as peer-topeer lending and social lending) (abbreviated as P2P lending) is lending and borrowing that occurs directly between
individuals. Person-to-person lending is usually managed by
a third-party company, such as Zopa (in the UK) (zopa.com),
the pioneer of lending, or Prosper (in the U.S.), prosper.
com. It involves a community of lenders and borrowers.
Another growing area of P2P is a type of crowdsourcing
known as crowdfunding (Chap. 8), where people raise money
mainly from small contributors and investors, both non-profit
and for commercial purposes.
The Lending Club
The Lending Club is an online P2P credit marketplace that
uses an efficient, transparent, and consumer friendly money
lending process. According to lendingclub.com/public/
how-peer-lending-works.action, the company (which is
now on the stock exchange), uses technology to cut expenses
and provide qualified borrowers with loans with lower interest rates, lower than they can get in most banks while providing investors with solid returns. The following process is
done entirely online:
• “Customers interested in a loan complete a simple application at LendingClub.com” (per Lending Club)
• Lending Club leverages the information, assigns interest
rates, and instantly presents a variety of offers to qualified
borrowers, who can evaluate options (with no impact to
their credit score).
• “Investors ranging from individuals to institutions select
loans in which to invest and can earn monthly returns”
(per Lending Club)
For a borrower’s experience with Lending Club, see
Cunningham (2014b). For an investor’s review, see
Cunningham (2014a).
For an extensive review and analysis, see Frankle (2013).
For more information, see forbes.com/companies/
lending-club.
Issues in P2P Lending
Several issues are related to P2P lending. Lenders may ask
the questions: Is it safe? What is the rate of default? What if
Lending Club goes out of business? Am I getting the best
How Peers Use Social Media to Sell to Peers
Example #1
How Kawehi became a digital music phenomenon by using
social media. Kawehi produces songs and videos with computers and digital instruments. Kawehi formed a core of followers. Here are some of her activities:
• She uses Kickstarter to raise funds for her ventures.
• She uses bandcamp.com marketplace to sell her own
releases.
• She made videos and posted them on YouTube and Vimeo,
thus building a fan base. About half of her fans come from
outside the U.S.
• Her most successful music video is “Heart Shaped Box,”
which was picked up by the digital press, giving her a lot
of publicity.
• Her growing fan base comes from her videos.
For details, see Russo (2014).
Example #2
How the Talbots sold their house by themselves. ‘For sale by
owner’ has been done for many years, but you can do it much
better with the help of social networking. The Talbots did the
following to sell their house in Seattle:
• Created a website
• Produced home-tour videos and uploaded them to their
website and YouTube.
• Added a ‘help us sell our house’ link to their blog.
• Posted that their house was for sale on Facebook.
• Got in touch with anyone who typed “move to Seattle” on
Twitter.
For details, see Bankrate.com (2013).
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC issues as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. Social government. Governments use social media to
improve their interactions with the public, to get citizens
more involved, to influence citizens, and to improve their
internal operations. The variety of possible applications is
demonstrated in the New Zealand government case (Case
9.1). Social media facilitates collaboration between governments and citizens and other government partners, as
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2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
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Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
well as among employees of government agencies. Social
governments facilitate more democratization and make
citizens more satisfied.
Social B2B. While most of the attention in social media is
given to B2C market activities, social media tools and platforms are used extensively in B2B markets as well. Some
areas of action are: finding sales leads, discovering suppliers, organizing group purchasing, conducting virtual trade
shows, collaborating on joint projects (such as joint design),
and promoting industry activities. Social B2B commerce
helps small organizations as well, and it can facilitate B2B
global trade. Fostering relationships with business partners
is a major objective of social B2B. Finally, social media
can facilitate building B2B social strategy.
Business activities in virtual worlds. An increasing number of business activities are conducted in virtual worlds,
most notably in Seconds Life. Popular activities are marketing communication, collaboration, learning and training, trading virtual goods, design testing, and customer
service. In addition, there are professional discussions,
entertainment and gaming, direct online sales, recruitment, market research activities, and virtual trade shows.
Social commerce and entertainment. Rich media, usercreated content, and groups and subgroups with common
interests open many possibilities for a seconds generation
of online entertainment. Add to this the wireless revolution and the increased capabilities in mobile devices to
support Web 2.0 tools and social networking activities
and you will discover a new and exciting world of online
entertainment. Social TV, where viewers interact with
each other while simultaneously watching TV programs,
is an emerging area.
Social games. Social games are online multiplayer games
that are played in social networks, mostly on Facebook.
Tens of millions of players play popular games. One
source of income for social networks is the selling of virtual goods related to social games. They also make money
from paid advertising on some of the games. Games can
be educational, but can also be used for training purposes.
Most of all, though, players have fun, make friends, and
sharpen their competitive skills.
Socially-oriented P2P. This emerging application area is
currently limited to socially lending money, facilitating
bartering, and providing services in communities of special interest (e.g., travel, banking, real estate, education).
For example, swapping residences while travelling and
lending money are two popular activities.
KEY TERMS
Collaborative (or sharing) economy
E-government
Gamification
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224
Internet TV
Internet Radio
Social games
Social government (Government 2.0)
Social network games
Social radio
Social TV
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222
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207
222
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REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Describe the essentials of social government.
2. List five major benefits of social government.
3. What are the major areas of social government in New
Zealand?
4. Relate e-communities to B2B.
5. List five major applications of social media in B2B.
6. How can Linkedin, Facebook, and Twitter be used to
facilitate B2B?
7. Describe virtual trade shows and list five benefits.
8. What are the major drivers of virtual worlds?
9. What kind of educational and training activities do virtual worlds such as Seconds Life support?
10. What are the major concerns and limitations of virtual
worlds? Refer to online resources, including the Social
Media & Games Law Blog (socialgameslaw.com).
11. Relate entertainment to social commerce.
12. Describe Mixi and Hulu.
13. Relate social networks to streaming music.
14. Describe the ways you watch streaming videos on the
Web (videos on-demand).
15. Define social TV.
16. Describe social radio and Pandora.
17. Define social games and describe how they are played in
social networks.
18. What are some of the business (commerce) aspects of
social games?
19. Describe gamification.
20. What is social P2P?
21. What is P2P lending?
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
1. What are the features of virtual worlds that businesses
can make use of in deploying their virtual world
applications?
2. From a business application perspective, virtual worlds
can be visualized as multidimensional spaces. Briefly
describe different dimensions of virtual worlds.
3. Discuss different ways of making real or virtual money
in virtual worlds.
4. Discuss some of the opportunities for using social media
in B2B.
Team Assignments and Projects
5. Gamification is attracting the attention of marketers and
social networks. Write a status report on this issue.
6. There are several communities for fantasy sports gaming. Identify some and discuss their social features.
7. Some believe that the classical 4P’s of marketing (Price,
Promotion, Product, and Place) do not apply to B2B. They
suggest using the 5C’s instead (Context, Creation,
Collaboration, Communication, and Competition).
Discuss.
8. Groupon has moved to B2B marketing. Find information on how the system works and compare it to B2C
daily deals.
9. Examine the online game Grand Theft Auto (rockstargames.com/grandtheftauto). Why is it so popular?
Identify some social elements.
10. Relate virtual trade shows to virtual job fairs (Chap. 8).
11. Discuss the implication of P2P trading to using real
estate brokers and other intermediaries.
12. Discuss how collaborative consumption and P2P companies are changing the e-commerce business models.
13. Discuss the benefits of virtual trade shows to international trade. Write a report.
14. Debate: Will P2P lending hurt the banking industry?
INTERNET EXERCISES
1. Enter secondslife.com and find the commercial activities of the following avatars: Fizik Baskerville, Craig
Altman, Shaun Altman, FlipperPA Peregrine, and Anshe
Chung. Briefly describe what they represent. Relate this
to social commerce. Also, check IBM’s activities.
2. Enter Mindpix Corporation (mpixcorporation.us).
Why is it considered an online entertainment service?
What are the benefits to viewers? Compare this site to
starz.com. Also check Strategy& (strategyand.pwc.
com) (formerly Booz & Co.).
3. Enter pandora.com. Find out how you can create and
share music with friends. Why is this a social commerce
application?
4. Enter peerform.com. Describe their P2P lending platform. Compare it to what is offered by prosper.com.
5. Enter abcnews.com and watch the 5:18 minutes video
titled “Social Lending Offers Alternatives” (at abcnews.
go.com/video/playerIndex?id=6123763). What have
you learned from this video?
6. Enter vevo.com and mtv.com. Check what each site
offers. Compare the two.
7. Enter tvweb360.tv. What do they offer? With whom do
they compete?
8. Enter thismoment.com and explain how they use social
media to create engaging experiences. Relate it to other
vendors that provide similar experiences.
227
9. Enter supplegame.com. Review the site. Relate it to
virtual worlds and social commerce.
10. Enter gaiaonline.com and find all the socially oriented
activities. Write a report.
11. Enter Zopa or Prosper and Lending Club and identify
the social elements in their operations.
12. Enter yukaichou.com/gamification-examples/octalysiscomplete-gamification-framework/#.UuzK8vldWSo.
Find Yu-Kai Chou’s framework and discuss its value.
13. Enter business.linkedin.com/content/dam/business/
marketing-solutions/global/en_US/site/pdf/cs/
linkedin_vestas_case_study_us_en_130314.pdf .
Summarize all the different ways that Vestas is using
LinkedIn.
14. Compare the features in the virtual trade shows: InXpo,
McLane Company, and IWCE Expo. Write a report.
15. Watch the video at youtube.com/watch?v=
GRnOEKeXsW8 and find a similar video on the same
topic (trade show software). Comment on the advantages of virtual trade shows.
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
1. Assignment for the Opening Case
Read the opening case and answer the following
questions:
(a) Explain how viral promotion is used by Justin Bieber.
Why is it so successful?
(b) Summarize the use of YouTube, Twitter, and
Facebook by Justin Bieber.
(c) Find some information on the success of Justin
Bieber’s publicity derived from Never Say Never vs.
the success derived from the JibJab promotion.
(d) Many people consider Justin Bieber to be the
“King of Social Media.” Do you agree or disagree?
Why?
(e) According to Thomas (2011), Justin Bieber accounts
for 3 % of all traffic on Twitter. How do you think this
is possible?
(f) Conduct a search (e.g., blogs) to find any other social
media activities that Justin Bieber uses.
(g) Some say that Never Say Never exemplifies the power
of social networks that led Justin Bieber to the top.
Debate.
(h) Experts believe that the most important ingredient of
Justin Bieber’s success is the relationship he created
with his fans (read Antkowiak 2011). Comment on
this statement.
2. Each group will take one area of collaborative (or shared)
consumption and P2P commerce (e.g., money lending,
car sharing) and research some activities in this area.
(Start with Paquette 2014).
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Innovative Social Commerce Applications: From Social Government to Entertainment and Gaming
3. What are IBM, Dell,Toyota,Calvin Klein, and Coke doing
in SL?
4. Enter hollywoodtoday.net and similar websites and check
recent information regarding social TV and social commerce. Check information about social TV conferences
and summits as well.
5. Check the status and competition in the area of streaming
music services (e.g., Spotify, Amazon, Apple, Google,
etc.). Write a report.
6. Money lending is going online and becoming social.
Companies such as the Lending Club are revolutionizing
the process. Investigate all the determining factors (start
with Frankle 2013 and Cunningham 2014a and b). Review
all the major players including online only banks. Write a
report.
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Part IV
Strategy and Implementation
Strategy and Performance Management
in Social Commerce
10
Contents
Learning Objectives
Opening Case: Social Media-Based Market Research
Helps Del Monte Improve Dog Food ......................................... 233
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Describe the strategy-performance cycle and its major
elements.
2. Describe the strategic planning process for social
commerce.
3. Explain the issues involved in justifying social commerce
projects.
4. Explain how market research is conducted to aid social
commerce.
5. Describe the use of metrics and monitoring techniques for
performance assessment.
6. Describe the process and tools for social media analytics
and sentiment analysis.
7. Explain how competitive intelligence and innovations
improve social commerce performance.
10.1
The Strategy-Performance Cycle ................................... 235
10.2
Organizational Strategy and Strategic
Planning for Social Commerce ....................................... 237
10.3
Justification and ROI in Social Commerce ................... 241
10.4
Market Research in Social Commerce .......................... 245
10.5
Metrics and Monitoring Performance ........................... 249
10.6
Social Media Analytics and Sentiment Analysis ........... 255
10.7
Improving Performance via Innovation
and Competitive Analysis ............................................... 257
References .................................................................................... 260
OPENING CASE: SOCIAL MEDIA-BASED
MARKET RESEARCH HELPS DEL MONTE
IMPROVE DOG FOOD
The Problem
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this
chapter (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_10) contains supplementary
material, which is available to authorized users.
Del Monte operates in a very competitive global food industry. In addition to manufacturing canned fruits and vegetables for human consumption, Del Monte produces pet food
such as Gravy Train, 9 Lives, and Meow Mix. Therefore,
using market research, the company constantly looks for
innovative ways to increase its competitive edge. The company noticed the fast growth of social media and decided to
deploy social media projects “in order to capitalize on social
networking as a marketing tool, to help the company get
closer to its customers and create the kind of products consumers want” (per Greengard 2008). Their primary goal
was to decide the best way to use social media-based market
research to support its diverse product line—in this case,
dog food.
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_10, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
233
234
The Solution
The basic idea was first to connect and collaborate with dog
lovers via social networks and then conduct their market
research. The corporate IT department was unable to conduct
social network research; therefore, the Pet Products Division of
Del Monte Foods decided to use Insight Networks, a service
launched by MarketTools, Inc., a provider of on-demand online
market research (see MarketTools, Inc. 2008 for details).
The first activity conducted using Insight Networks was
text analysis—gathering relevant content from over 50 million blogs and analyzing relevant topics of conversation
among the target customers. The seconds activity was to create a special online community of dog lovers, where Del
Monte could observe interactions and stimulate discussions
with the community members. The third activity was ondemand survey research, used to determine the viability of
new strategies and ideas (see MarketTools, Inc. 2008.)
Through previous research, Del Monte Pet Products
Division identified one segment of the dog owner community as their target, and they wanted to understand that segment more in depth. Del Monte created an online community
for dog lovers called “I Love My Dog,” where 400 members
were chosen to join the private network. In order to connect
with millions of dog owners, Insight Networks provided Del
Monte Pet Products Division with a direct, interactive connection to their consumers. Using their propriety software,
Insight Networks monitors millions of relevant blogs in the
blogosphere as well as forums in social networks, in order to
identify key ideas in which dog lovers are interested. These
ideas were then analyzed in order to predict consumer behavior trends. Such analysis is usually done by using computerized tools such as monitoring consumer interactions,
analyzing consumer sentiments, and using social analytics
(e.g., see Jayanti 2010).
By utilizing social media, Del Monte can now conduct
better market research. The conventional approach was using
questionnaires (or focus groups) that were expensive and difficult to fill by qualified participants. Using social media, Del
Monte can gather much of the same data faster and at a lower
cost. All that is required now is to monitor customer conversations, collect the data, and analyze the vast amount of
information. The software provided by MarketTools also
facilitates subgroup creation, idea generation, and panel
creation.
Del Monte received positive results through their use of
Insight Networks. According to Del Monte’s senior market
research manager, they used the results of the text analysis
and communication with the dog lover community to ask
questions about which new products to introduce and
which products to refine. This method saves Del Monte
10
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
time and money, helping them focus on products that customers will value most, while helping them gain a new
competitive edge. After the market analysis conducted by
Insight Networks, Del Monte introduced two new products, with great success. The first was a new variety of
Pup-Peroni® dog snacks, with new packaging and a new
marketing campaign, which resulted in increased product
sales. The other was a new product—Snausages Breakfast
Bites™, with sales figures that pleased Del Monte (see
MarketTools, Inc. 2008).
The Experiment
The results of the above application were used to help
improve the company’s dog treat, called Snausages Breakfast
Bites. For guidance, Del Monte relied on its dog lovers’
social community. By monitoring customer blogs and by
posting questions to customers to stimulate discussions, Del
Monte used text analysis methods to investigate the relationship between dogs and their owners. Del Monte concluded
from the analysis that people who own small dogs would be
the major purchasers of Snausages Breakfast Bites. The
company also found differences of opinions due to the age of
owners. Next, a small sample of the improved dog food was
produced and tested in the physical market. As a result of
using both social media and traditional market research, the
product design decisions were revised. In addition, marketing promotions were modified. Finally, the new approach
solidified the community of dog lovers who are happy that
their opinions were considered.
The Results
The results of the analysis help Del Monte understand its
customers and consequently plan its marketing activities,
communication strategies, and customer service applications. The results also help evaluate the success of special
marketing campaigns, how well the business processes
accomplished the corporate goals, and how to better justify
proposed new activities.
Product cycle time was reduced by more than 50 % to
only 6 months, and Del Monte was able to develop a better
marketing communication strategy. Furthermore, the analysis helped the company better understand customers and
their purchasing activities, as well as predicting market
trends and identifying and anticipating opportunities. Finally,
the quality of the food was improved based on the suggestions of the dog lovers, increasing sales.
Sources: Based on MarketTools, Inc. (2008), Greengard
(2008), Jayanti (2010), Big Heart Pet Brands (2012).
10.1
The Strategy-Performance Cycle
235
10.1
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE CASE
The opening case illustrates that market research can
be useful in a competitive market by providing insights
for better product development and marketing strategy.
In this case, the company collected data online from its
socially-oriented customers. One of the first activities
MarketTools, Inc. provided was text analysis. By monitoring, collecting, and analyzing relevant content from
over 50 million conversations on blogs, MarketTools
was able to determine the current topics of conversation among the consumers. The results of the analysis
helped Del Monte determine what topics dog owners
are most interested in. Using this information, Del
Monte was able to improve its dog food and devise new
marketing strategies. Online market research, as seen
in the case, is related to strategy, planning, performance
monitoring, social media analysis, and sentiment analysis; all these topics are addressed in this chapter.
The main focus of this chapter is on the basic steps
in creating strategic planning for SC companies. The
chapter also presents and discusses issues related to
creating an e-strategy to engage in global SC and the
opportunities that SC creates for small and mediumsized enterprises (SMEs).
THE STRATEGY-PERFORMANCE
CYCLE
Social media projects, like other projects, are implemented
in order to improve organizational performance. Companies
can view improving performance as a challenge, a requirement for survival, or as a key to profitability and a positive
reputation.
In this chapter, we look at performance improvement as a
generic cyclical process, which is based on a strategy, metrics, performance assessment, analysis, and innovation. The
process, illustrated in Fig. 10.1, involves four major steps:
(1) create goals and objectives that express the organizational mission; (2) create the strategy and make plans to
attain the goals and objectives; (3) set performance metrics
and monitor the performance, then analyze the difference
between the two; and (4) develop a corrective strategy.
The remaining portion of this chapter describes the four
steps. A brief description of the four steps follows:
Step 1. Organizations exist to accomplish a mission (top box
in Fig. 10.1). Any SC project is designed to help attain the
goals and objectives. Four major objectives are listed on the
right-hand side of the mission box, including the gain of
competitive advantage and increased performance. Other
goals and objectives relate to specific social commerce projects, and they depend on the specific situation. Examples are:
Gain competitive advantage.
Increase performance.
Improve customer relationship.
Adapt to social environment.
Where do we want to go?
Missions, goals, objectives.
How can we improve?
Performance?
Innovation!
Social media
Web 2.0
Social networks
Crowdsourcing.
Align business and SC
strategies.
How well are we doing?
Measuring performance.
Comparing to metrics.
Fig. 10.1 The strategy-performance model
How shall we get
there?
Strategy, plans.
Strategic planning.
Strengthening
relationships.
Crowdsourcing.
Market research.
Monitoring key
performance indicators.
Dashboards.
Performance metrics.
Critical success factors.
Balanced scorecards.
236
•
•
•
•
•
Facilitate growth
Increase customer loyalty
Improve customer relationships and service quality
Improve partner relationship management
Generate new business models and facilitate
innovation
• Reduce cost
10
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
Note that the process is cyclical. However, at each step, a
return to a previous step in order to conduct some modification is possible.
In the remainder of this chapter, we will describe how
social media and social networking are related to the four
steps (center of Fig. 10.1).
Types of Social Media Projects
Step 2. Once the goals and objectives are known, an organization needs to decide what to do to attain them. That is, how
does the organization get what the organization wants (see
right-hand side box in Fig. 10.1). The key activities in this
step include strategy formulation and strategic planning
(e.g., see Spredfest; spredfast.com). Section 10.2 describes
these activities as they relate to social commerce.
Note that this step involves the justification of the social
commerce initiative(s) (Sect. 10.3). Moreover, this step
requires activities such as an analysis of the markets and the
competition, which are done via market research (Sect. 10.4).
Step 3. Once the strategy and plans are approved, organizations can proceed and deploy the social commerce
program(s). After a few months, it is necessary to assess the
program’s performance (bottom box of Fig. 10.1); namely,
how well the company is performing, with respect to the
attainment of its strategy, in terms of the social commerce
program, and its contribution to the goals and objectives.
This step involves two major activities: (1) setting measurable performance metrics and (2) monitoring, measuring,
and comparing performance for these metrics. Several tools
are employed here, including generic ones such as balanced
scorecards. All these topics are described in detail in
Sect. 10.5.
Once the organizations collect performance information,
they need to analyze the performance level (quantitatively
and qualitatively). This analysis is partially done by using
social media analytics, including sentiment analysis. Results
of the analysis are presented via reports, tables, and dashboards (see Sect. 10.6).
Step 4. The analysis tells management how well the company performs when it uses social commerce initiatives.
Obviously, if the analysis shows negative results, it is necessary to take some corrective action (left box of Fig. 10.1). A
key activity here is to use innovations to improve the performance. However, even if the results are good, the organization may take actions that range from providing bonuses to
the best performers identified in the analysis to raising the
desired levels of employee performance for the future. The
primary point is being innovative, because even a good performance can be improved. In addition, techniques such as
competitive analysis can be useful (Sect. 10.7).
In addition to the organizational goals and objectives presented in Step 1, there are goals and objectives that relate to
the specific types of social media projects.
In Table 10.1, we present representative types of social
commerce projects, along with their potential goals. In addition, Forrester Consulting (2010) identified the major social
commerce activities conducted by companies. Their study
also identified the strategic goals supported by social media.
For additional information, see ibm.com/smarterplanet/
global/files/us__en_us__socialbusiness__epw14008usen.pdf.
Note that, these goals are the basis for strategic planning
(Sect. 10.2), justification (Sect. 10.3), market research
(Sect. 10.4), metrics (Sect. 10.5), and analysis (Sect. 10.6).
To justify SC projects, a company needs to decide which of
the goals listed in Table 10.1 and in Sect. 10.1 it wants to attain,
and then decide the importance of each goal. This is done by
assessing the potential contribution of each specific social commerce project to the attainment of each goal. Note that, the
measure of the goals and objectives is intangible, which makes
the analysis difficult (see discussion in Sect. 10.3). Other challenges include the plethora of possible performance metrics
and the quickly changing nature of social media.
Table 10.1 Major types of social commerce projects and their
possible goals
Types of SC project
Social shopping
Marketing
communication
Social CRM and
customer service
Social enterprise
(Enterprise 2.0)
Crowdsourcing
Entertainment and
gaming
Social engagement/
reputation management
Possible goals
Increase revenue, acquire new customers,
increase customer experience, go global
Increase brand awareness, increase sales,
increase viral marketing, increase customer
engagement, reduce customer acquisition cost
Increase customer satisfaction, increase
customer trust and loyalty, increase sellers’
reputation, improve public relations
Enable better recruiting, facilitate problem
solving and idea generation, facilitate
collaboration, improve efficiency, optimize
workforce
Increase innovation and collaboration,
generate new business models
Increase users’ satisfaction, provide for
cross selling, increase awareness, increase
advertising income
Increase brand awareness, improve public
relations, influence customers to buy
10.2
10.2
Organizational Strategy and Strategic Planning for Social Commerce
ORGANIZATIONAL STRATEGY
AND STRATEGIC PLANNING
FOR SOCIAL COMMERCE
A strategy is a framework a business sets forth indicating the
direction it plans to take to accomplish its mission and goals.
Strategy also outlines the plans and policies that need to be
accomplished. According to Mintzberg et al. (2002), strategic
planning “is an organization’s process of defining its strategy,
or direction, and making decisions on allocating its resources
to pursue this strategy.…Strategy has many definitions, but
generally involves setting goals, determining actions to
achieve the goals, and mobilizing resources to execute the
actions. A strategy describes how the ends (goals) will be
achieved by the means (resources).” In order to determine the
direction of the organization, it is necessary to understand its
current position and the possible avenues through which it can
pursue a particular course of action. Generally, strategic planning is done for 3–5 years into the future. For a comprehensive
discussion about strategy, see Porter (1996).
The organizational strategy also expresses the specific
plans and policies, of how a business plans to take to achieve
its strategy; these policies and plans are referred to as tactics.
For example, a strategy might be to use crowdsourcing for
product improvement, whereas a tactic might be to create a
social media page for consumers to post ideas (e.g., Dell and
Starbucks do this, as discussed in previous chapters). It is
important to note that objectives, strategies, and tactics can
exist on many different levels in a company, ranging from
high-level corporate strategic planning to a strategy of
increasing traffic to a website. Social commerce strategies,
including social media marketing and e-commerce strategies
need to be aligned with the organization’s business strategy
and implemented by appropriate departments.
An organizational strategy is a comprehensive framework
for expressing the manner in which a business plans to achieve
its mission, what goals are needed to support it, and what plans
and policies will be needed to accomplish these goals. Strategy
is also about making decisions on what activities not to pursue
and trade-offs between strategic alternatives. An organization’s strategy (including EC and SC strategies) starts with
understanding where the company is today with respect to its
goals, and where it wants to be in the future. Strategies are
often related to Porter’s competitive forces model.
Porter’s 5 Competitive Forces Model
and Related Strategies
Companies have used Porter’s competitive forces model to
develop strategies and tactics for increasing their competitive edge in their industry. The model also demonstrates how
IT and SC can enhance competitiveness.
237
Porter’s “5 Forces” model has been used by companies to
better compete in their industry. It also illustrates how SC
can facilitate a company’s competitive advantage. According
to Hanlon (2013), the “model helps marketers and business
managers to look at the ‘balance of power’ in a market
between different types of organizations…Porter’s Five
Forces works best when looking at the entire market sector,
rather than your own business and a few competitors.”
The model recognizes five major forces that may impact
a company’s position in a given industry. Other forces,
including the impact of government, affect all companies in
the industry, and therefore may have a less direct impact on
the relative success of an individual company within its
industry. Although the details of the model differ from one
industry to another, its general structure is universal. The five
major forces are illustrated in Fig. 10.2.
The model recognizes the following five major forces that
affect the degree of competition and, ultimately, the level of
profitability, in an industry:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Threat of entry of new competitors
Bargaining power of suppliers
Bargaining power of customers or buyers
Threat of substitute products or services
Rivalry among existing firms in the industry
The strength of each force is determined by the industry’s
composition and structure. Existing companies within an
industry must watch these forces and need to be ready to protect themselves; alternatively, they can use the forces to
improve their position or challenge the leaders in the industry.
The definitions and details of the model are provided in Porter
(1980) and Hanlon (2013). For an in-depth article on the five
forces, along with a video and infographic, see Porter (2008).
Companies identify the forces that influence performance
in their marketplace and then develop a strategy to handle
the forces. Typical generic strategies are shown in Table 10.2.
In Table 10.2, we first list Porter’s three generic strategies
(cost leadership, differentiation, and focus (market segmentation, e.g., niche), then we add nine other strategies. Most of
these strategies can be facilitated by social media, as shown
throughout the book.
Any progressive strategy must consider the Internet.
Porter (2001) argues that “a coherent organizational strategy
that includes the Internet is more important than ever before:
Many have argued that the Internet renders strategy obsolete. In reality, the opposite is true… it is more important
than ever for companies to distinguish themselves through
strategy. The winners will be those that view the Internet as
a complement to, not a cannibal of, traditional ways of
competing.”
238
10
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
Fig. 10.2 Porter’s five forces model
Table 10.2 Strategies for competitive advantage
Strategy
Classic strategies
Cost leadership
Differentiation
Niche
General strategies
Growth
Alliance
Innovation
Operational effectiveness
Customer orientation
Time
Entry barriers
Customer or supplier lock-in
Increase switching costs
Description
Produce product/service at the lowest cost in the industry
Offer different products, services, or product features
Select a narrow-scope segment (market niche) and be the best in quality, speed, or cost in that segment
Increase market share, acquire more customers, or sell more types of products
Work with business partners in partnerships, alliances, joint ventures, or virtual companies
Introduce new products/services; put new features into existing products/services; develop new ways to
produce products/services
Improve the manner in which internal business processes are executed so that the firm performs similar
activities better than rivals do
Concentrate on customer satisfaction
Treat time as a resource, then manage it and use it to the firm’s advantage
Create entry barriers. By introducing innovative products or using EC business models to provide
exceptional service, companies can create entry barriers to discourage new competitors
Encourage customers or suppliers to stay with you rather than switching to competitors. Reduce customers’
bargaining power by locking them in (e.g., by providing superior customer service)
Discourage customers or suppliers from switching to competitors for economic reasons
As an example, travel agencies closed because many were
too slow to embrace Internet progress. Porter (2001) has
identified several ways that the Internet affects each of the
five forces of competitiveness.
The Impact of the Internet on Competitiveness
The Internet’s impact on strategic competitiveness and longterm profitability will differ from industry to industry.
10.2
Organizational Strategy and Strategic Planning for Social Commerce
239
Fig. 10.3 The strategic planning
process
Accordingly, many businesses are taking a focused look at
the impact of the Internet and SC on their future. For these
firms, social commerce strategy involves the formulation
and execution of a vision of how the company intends to do
business electronically while deploying social commerce
projects, such as those listed in Table 10.2 above.
The Key Elements of a Strategic
Planning Process
According
to
dummies.com/how-to/content/majorcomponents-of-a-strategic-plan.html, the major key elements (components) of a strategic plan include a mission
statement, a vision statement, values statement, and strategies. In addition, the key elements of a strategic plan are strategic vision; strategy (explaining the value you deliver);
strategic plans, goals, and objectives; and strategic plan execution and evaluation.
Strategic planning can also be viewed as maintaining a
viable fit between the organization’s objectives, resources,
and its changing business environment (see Strauss and Frost
2014 for details).
The process of strategic planning will differ depending
upon the type of strategy, the implementation method, the
size of the firm, and the planning tools and methodologies
used. Nevertheless, any strategic planning process has a variation of five major stages, as shown in Fig. 10.3: initiation,
formulation, implementation, assessment, and performance
improvement. For a comprehensive look at the basics of strategic planning, including strategic management and the steps
in strategic planning and management, see planware.org/
strategicplan.htm, managementhelp.org/strategicplanning,
and Chap. 13 in Turban et al. (2015).
Strategy Implementation in Social Commerce
Businesses want to be sure they find the right social media
strategies, tactics, and plans to achieve their goals and objectives. The best place to start is with the company’s objectives, as described in Sect. 10.1. There is a continuum of
social media goals, from broad business strategies to specific
brand tactics. As you may recall from Chap. 3, the consumer
purchasing decision process involves three steps: awareness,
attitude, and behavior. These are called the hierarchical
stages. Strauss and Frost (2014) developed a scale that indicates which level of the hierarchy affects each goal in the
strategy. Note that, many social media tools can facilitate
these goals, and that an integrated marketing communication
effort can be a very effective strategy over time. For why you
need social media strategy, see Dragon (2013). Let us now
explore some examples of how businesses implement SC
strategies.
Examples of Successful SC Strategies
There are many successful cases of SC strategy implementation and many SC strategic models (e.g., see Sysomos
2011; Radian6 2012; and Shih 2011). A few examples
follow.
240
Example 1: Groupon’s Strategy for Growth
Prior to its IPO debut in 2011, Groupon’s major strategy was
revenue maximization. In order to attain this strategy,
Groupon needed to work with as many vendors as possible
in each target city. Their tactic was to send special teams to
many cities (regardless of cost) to find qualified vendors and
convince them to participate in Groupon deals. Groupon
then used e-mail and banner ads to promote the special deals
provided by the participating merchants. The strategy
worked initially with respect to growth. However, the model
was not profitable for Groupon. Therefore, Groupon decided
to use mobile applications and also have customers search
for discounts themselves.
Example 2: Walmart’s Strategy for Acquiring New
Suppliers and Products
On January 18, 2012, Walmart launched a contest called
“Get on the Shelf” to let would-be suppliers pitch their products via YouTube videos. In general, suppliers face intense
competition to get their products on any retailer’s shelves
(especially Walmart’s), because in order to add a new product, an old one must be removed or receive fewer facings
(rows on the shelf). Consumers watched the YouTube videos, and voted for their favorite products online (similar to
an American Idol competition). The selected items would be
sold at Walmart.com and the most liked brand would be sold
at the physical stores. Walmart succeeded by using social
media to engage customers and build customer loyalty. For
details, see Hayes (2012). In 2011, Walmart began buying
social media companies (e.g., privately held social media
start-up Kosmix). See Bort (2012). Walmart ran the same
type of contest again in 2013, and found entrepreneurs,
whose new products are now sold at Walmart.com (see
getontheshelf.walmart.com).
Example 3: Zynga’s Strategy for Dealing with
Unpredictable Demand
When Zynga invents a new game for Facebook, they cannot
anticipate if there will be 100 million players or only 5 million. Zynga’s hybrid cloud strategy (Babcock 2011) helped
solve this problem by allowing the company to develop flexibility and speed in their product deployment. This way,
Zynga could adapt its capacity to the market’s fast-changing
demands. In 2013, the company changed its business model
to include online gambling in the UK, but decided not to
invest money in U.S. real money online gambling, instead
preferring to stay focused on free games (see venturebeat.
com/2013/07/25/zynga-exec-explains-why-the-companyis-abandoning-u-s-online-gambling). Note: Gamers in the
UK, but not the U.S., can now use real money to play online
poker. It is not clear if the strategy will work. As of 2014,
Zynga is struggling to survive.
10
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
For ELLE fashion magazine social strategies, see Dragon
(2014). For a primer on social media strategies (2013; with
infographic), see digitalinformationworld.com/2014/01/
what-marketers-should-and-should-not-do-on-socialmedia-infographic.html.
It is important for a company to consider the following
issues when planning a successful online SC strategy (condensed from GoECart.com 2010 and updated with the
authors’ experiences).
• Develop an overall e-commerce strategy with
clearly defined business goals.
• Show how SC strategy contributes to the
e-commerce and overall sales revenue strategy.
• Identify the audiences you want to reach.
• Identify the resources available for SC.
• Decide on appropriate technologies to use.
• Create supportive social culture in the business.
• Effectively market to existing online customers
with the support of social media.
• Know how to sell globally as well as locally (if it is
cost effective to ship internationally).
• Develop consistent and synchronous online and
offline brand strategies (“multichannel” strategies).
• Create a corporate business profile and invite customers to post reviews on public and private social
networks.
• Create surveys and two-way communication mechanisms to solicit feedback from customers.
• Develop monitoring and performance assessment
plans.
Monaco (2013) provides a comprehensive guide to social
media strategy. Additional suggestions on how a company
can develop a business-aligned social media and social networking strategy are provided at ddmcd.com/managingtechnology/how-to-develop-a-business-aligned-social-mediasocial-networ.html. For the needs and benefits of a social
CRM strategy, see Ang (2011).
A Strategy for Successful SC Implementation
To succeed in the implementation of social commerce projects, especially in medium and large companies, a process
needs to be properly planned with a deployment strategy. A
popular strategy involves four steps:
1. Learn and understand the environment inside and outside
the organization.
10.3
Justification and ROI in Social Commerce
241
2. Experiment with a small-scale project so you can observe
and learn.
3. Assess the results of the experiment.
4. Develop or abandon the project.
Gombert (2010) proposed similar steps: evaluate opportunities, prepare a plan, engage your audience, and measure
results.
For the major elements of social media strategy, see
the infographic at socialmediaonlineclasses.com/socialmediastrategy-chart. For implications of global marketing
strategy, see Berthon et al. (2012).
Some Other Strategy Issues
Justification of social commerce is a multidimensional task.
While many people stress the financial justification (ROI and
other methods), one also needs to check the technical justification (and feasibility), the organizational fit to social media
(e.g., appropriate organizational culture), operational justification, and strategic justification.
There are several strategic issues that companies may need
to address when dealing with social commerce. Here are
some relevant questions related to these issues.
• Which channel is better for social commerce:
Facebook, Twitter, or others? (See blog.thelettertwo.
com/2014/08/12/62-of-consumers-preferfacebook-over-pinterest-twitter-as-their-socialcommerce-channel.)
• Which social commerce platform drives the most
sales? (See shopify.com/infographics/socialcommerce; with infographics.)
• How do you select a social network site(s) for paid
media tactics, or in sales?
• How do you generate constant traffic to your SC
site? (For 39 actionable ways to drive traffic to your
website
(2014),
see
forbes.com/sites/
jaysondemers/2014/05/13/39-actionable-ideasfor-driving-traffic-to-your-website).
• What should small businesses do with social commerce? What should they not do? (See digitalinformationworld.com/2014/01/what-marketers-shouldand-should-not-do-on-social-media-infographic.
html; with infographic.)
• How can you have a sufficient number of fans and
friends and encourage them to engage and create
and share content? (See socialmediaexaminer.
com/encourage-fans-to-create-share-visualcontent.)
Some Policies and Guidelines
Dozens of experts provide answers to the previous list of
questions, as well as to similar strategy questions; they also
provide guidelines for success in specific areas of social
commerce (e.g., marketing, security, policy). Several examples can be found in Barnes and Barnes (2009). For 57 different social media policies and resources, see socialmediatoday.
com/davefleet/151761/57-social-media-policy-examplesand-resources. You can also learn from business failures.
10.3
JUSTIFICATION AND ROI IN SOCIAL
COMMERCE
An Overview of Justification
Justification of social commerce projects can be very
complex.
To illustrate the potential complexity of justification,
Brian Solis developed the concept of the social marketing
compass, which includes a large number of interrelated variables. (See briansolis.com/2011/01/the-social-compass-isthe-gps-for-the-adaptive-business, which includes an
infographic and explanation of the four “halos” of the social
compass.)
To begin with, several areas need to be considered: strategic considerations, technical considerations, and operational
considerations. One also needs to manage intangible costs
and benefits. On top of that, there are other difficulties in
executing justifications.
One important aspect of justification is calculating the
rate of return of investments (ROI). For a discussion on how
to measure ROI in social commerce, see Blanchard (2011)
and Sysomos (2011).
The total cost of SC projects (initial and operations) can
be very high due to staff time and cost of potential risks
(e.g., very negative social interactions; for example, conversations on social networks). Therefore, it is wise to justify such systems, including the risks. The methodologies
available for justification are the same as for any other EC
systems and information technology projects. For methodologies and related issues, see Turban et al. (2015). In this
section, we cover only the selected topics that are most
relevant to social commerce. Specifically, we cover the
following topics:
• The justification process
• Some difficulties in conducting justification
• Dealing with intangible costs
• The use of Gartner’s hype cycle
• Risk analysis
242
The SC Justification Process
Justifying large-scale investments involves not only selecting
a justification method but also having a plan to execute it.
The appropriate process is not simple. According to Baseline
(2006) and the authors’ experiences, the major steps of this
process are:
1. Establish an appropriate foundation for analysis
with the software vendor (if you use software), and
then conduct your ROI analysis.
2. Conduct good research on the relevant metrics and
validate them.
3. Justify and document the cost and benefit and the
assumptions made regarding data.
4. Document and verify all data used in the calculations. Clarify all assumptions used in the analysis.
5. Do not leave out intangible benefits, including
long-term ones. Is the project really improving the
company’s competitive and strategic advantages?
6. Be careful not to underestimate cost and overestimate benefits (a tendency of many managers).
7. Make supporting figures as realistic as possible and
include risk analysis.
8. Involve top management and all important partners,
including suppliers and distribution channel
members.
The justification process involves the comparison of costs
and benefits in a process called cost–benefit analysis.
Difficulties in Conducting Cost–Benefit
Analysis and Justification
The execution of cost–benefit analysis for social commerce
projects can be difficult due to the following obstacles.
Difficulties in Measuring Productivity
and Performance Gains
The benefits in cost-benefit analysis are more difficult to
measure and assess than costs. See 14 formulas to measure
benefits as suggested by Schottmuller (2013), and the considerations companies face with the cost of social media in
Nair (2011).
One of the major benefits of using SC is increased productivity, such as with an enterprise social network. However,
productivity increases may be difficult to measure, for several reasons. The major reasons are presented next:
10
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
Data and Analysis Issues
Data, or the analysis of the data, may hide productivity gains.
For example, retailers now use SC to engage customers in
proposing and evaluating new products. Knowing what customers think may result in a benefit for the retailers. However,
retailers must determine how to measure engagement in
order to determine its value.
SC Productivity Gains in One Area May Be Offset by
Losses in Other Areas
Another possible difficulty is that SC gains in certain areas
of the company may be offset by resultant losses in other
areas. For example, a staff member may spend time responding to social media conversations and neglect the creation of
new offline marketing communications.
Hidden Costs and Benefits
Some costs and benefits are less visible, or even completely
hidden. These need to be determined and considered.
Examples of hidden costs or benefits include currency fluctuations; the need to upgrade software over time; and the
cost of underestimation or overestimation of benefits (such
as increased brand awareness).
Incorrectly Defining What Is Measured
The results of any investment justification depend on what is
actually measured. For example, to assess the benefits of SC
investment, one should usually look at productivity improvement in the area where the SC project was deployed (e.g., in
customer care). However, productivity increase may also
result from other factors (e.g., due to a large investment in
non-SC projects).
Intangible Cost-Benefit Analysis
Broadly speaking, SC costs and benefits can be classified
into two categories: tangible and intangible. Tangible costs
and benefits are easier to measure. For example, the cost of
software (cost) and the amount of labor saved (benefit) are
easy to determine. Intangible benefits, such as customer satisfaction, improved communication (e.g., by using Twitter),
or increased word of mouth, are usually more difficult to
measure; thus, it is difficult to determine their value.
Therefore, some experts believe that one should not attempt
to conduct an ROI study on social media projects (e.g., see
Falls and Deckers 2012). This may be correct when the SC
projects are small; however, in large projects, not conducting
ROI may have negative consequences.
First, let us see what the intangibles are, and then see how
companies can handle them.
10.3
Justification and ROI in Social Commerce
Intangible Costs and Benefits
Organizations must develop innovative metrics to track
down intangible costs and benefits as accurately as possible.
Intangible costs may include some vague costs; for example,
the learning curve of the firm’s customer service employees
as they attempt to incorporate an SC system that responds to
customer inquiries. Another intangible cost may involve
having to adapt to changes in certain business processes,
such as processing items returned by customers or operating
a tracking system for customer complaints.
243
Hype Cycle’s methodology shows how a technology or
application will evolve over time. There are many different
categories of Gartner hype cycles; each are customized to fit
certain industries and technologies; research notes are
updated each year (see Gartner, Inc. undated).
Each hype cycle has five overlapping stages that reflect
the technology’s life cycle, starting with a trigger point,
through implementation of technology, and then enduring
disillusionment, before finally becoming more mainstream
and accepted. The five stages (as compiled from Gartner Inc.
(undated) and whatis.techtarget.com/definition/Gartnerhype-cycle are:
Handling Intangible Benefits
The first step in dealing with intangible benefits is to define
them and, if possible, specify how they are going to be
measured.
A straightforward way to deal with intangible benefits is
to make rough estimates of their monetary values and then
conduct an ROI analysis. The simplicity of this approach is
attractive; however, in many cases, the simplification
assumptions used in these estimates may lead to completely
incorrect results. Another way to deal with intangible benefits is to develop a balanced scorecard (Sect. 10.5) for proposed projects. This approach requires listing both tangible
and intangible goals and their measures. For an example of
how this works, see Person (2013).
The Use of Gartner’s Hype Cycle
An important technology that can help in justifying SC projects is Gartner’s Hype Cycle (updated annually).
Organizations can use this approach to assess the status of
specific SC technologies and tools so they can decide the fate
of an SC project before they invest effort and money in cost–
benefit analysis and justification.
What Is Gartner’s Hype Cycle?
According to Gartner, Inc., the hype cycle is a graphic representation of the maturity, adoption, and social application of
specific IT and SC tools and how they are potentially relevant to solving real business problems and exploiting new
opportunities. The term, developed and used by Gartner Inc.,
is a similar concept to the marketer’s “product life cycle”
curve (introduction, growth, maturity, decline). The hype
cycle provides a snapshot of the relative maturity of different
categories of IT technologies and management-related disciplines. It highlights over-hyped areas versus high impact
matured technologies, and provides estimates of how long
technologies and trends will take to mature. The Gartner
1. Technology trigger. The cycle begins with a breakthrough, public demonstration, product launch, or
other event that generates significant media and
industry interest.
2. Peak of inflated expectations. A phase of over
enthusiasm and unrealistic projections during
which a flurry of publicized activity by technology
and media leaders may result in some successes,
but will more likely result in failures as the technology is pushed to its limits. The only businesses that
may make money at this stage are conference organizers, consultants, and magazine publishers. Early
publicity results can be seen in success stories and
some failures (early adopters).
3. Trough of disillusionment. The point at which the
technology becomes unfashionable and the media
abandons the topic because the technology did not
live up to its inflated expectations.
4. Slope of enlightenment. Focused experimentation
and solid hard work by an increasingly diverse
range of organizations lead to a true understanding
of the technology’s applicability, risks, and benefits. Commercial off-the-shelf software methodologies and tools become available to ease the
development process. Understanding how the
technology works and how it can benefit the enterprise as the technology becomes more widely
understood.
5. Plateau of productivity. The real-world benefits of
the technology are demonstrated and accepted.
Tools and methodologies are increasingly stable as
they enter their seconds and third generation. The
final height of the plateau varies according to
whether the technology is broadly applicable or
benefits only a niche market. This is the beginning
of mainstream adoption, success of broad market
applicability, and recognizable relevance.
244
In addition, the time needed for each technology to reach
mainstream adoption (maturity) is indicated on the curve.
For example, in July 2011, Gartner estimated that it would
take social analytics 2–5 years to reach the mainstream adoption. For details on how several social commerce tools are
placed on the hype cycle, see Hodgson (2012).
Application of the Hype Cycle
Gartner Inc. provides an annual report that covers about 80
different hype cycles, evaluating over 2,000 different technologies, services, and trends in over 119 industries. For the
2014 summary, see gartner.com/newsroom/id/2819918. Of
course, Gartner charges high fees for providing their reports,
which include technology trends. The 2013 and 2014 reports
cover several SC technologies such as social CRM, microblogging, social analytics, virtual worlds, location-based
applications, and collective intelligence.
The 2014 cycle for emerging technologies is described in
detail at gartner.com/newsroom/id/2819918. The Pew
Research Center provides an interesting discussion about
several emerging SC and EC technologies in 2014. They also
provide an image of the hype cycle of emerging technologies
in July 2014. See pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2014/08/15/
chart-of-the-week-the-hype-cycle-of-emergingtechnologies.
The Social Business Power Map
This map, created by Dachis Group, is similar to the hype
cycle, but it is completely dedicated to social media and
commerce. Dachis Group defines social business “as the
distinct process of applying social media to meet business
objectives.” The map shows the major social media trends
from the buzz stage to experimentation, adoption, and
maturity.
For
details,
see
stephenslighthouse.
com/2010/08/17/the-2010-social-business-landscape. In
2011, the company launched its social business index. In
February 2014, Dachis Group was acquired by Sprinklr, a
social media analytics firm.
Risk Analysis
Deploying social commerce may involve some potential
risks and possibly complex implementation issues. In justifying social commerce projects, one must pay attention to
the risk issues related to companies engaged in social commerce activities, as well as to individuals who participate in
them. For further discussion, see Thompson et al. (2013) and
corresponding summary/infographic at grantthornton.com/
issues/library/survey-reports/advisory/2013/BAS-socialmedia-survey.aspx, and Shullich (2012).
10
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
The following are representative issues frequently cited
by companies:
• Wrong justification data due to the difficulties cited
earlier
• Legal risks
• Security threats
• Invasion of privacy
• Social media fraud
• Violation of intellectual property and copyright
• Employee reluctance to participate in social
networking
• Data leakage (corporate strategic information)
• Poor or biased quality of user-generated content
• Cyberbullying/cyberstalking
and
employee
harassment
• Misuse and waste of time and other resources (loss
of productivity)
• Risk to the company’s reputation (loss of credibility) due to user conversations and blog discussion
forums (see Chap. 5)
Risk to Users
In addition to risks to the company, there are some possible
risks to users, mostly in the areas of fraud and privacy violation. As a result, some users abandon social networks or refrain
from their use. For a discussion, see della Cava (2010). For an
overview of personal risk and how people can protect themselves, see netsecurity.about.com/od/newsandeditorial2/a/
socialpredators.htm and Alter (2014).
Conclusion
Because of the difficulties cited earlier, many companies do
not measure the value of SC projects. However, this may be
a risky approach, since bad projects may be accepted and
good ones may be rejected.
Despite all the difficulties, there are many reported ROI
studies for successful SC applications. For a list of 166 such
cases, see Petersen (2012) and the corresponding 2014 summary at barnraisersllc.com/2014/04/166-case-studies-provesocial-media-roi. For an infographic on social media ROI, see
Bennett (2013). In addition, many companies and vendors
have developed their own ROI methods and calculators.
Furthermore, several methodologies for e-commerce are suitable for SC justification. To learn more, see Owen (2013). See
also ShopSocially’s new A/B Testing Framework, and how it
helps e-commerce sites, at digitaljournal.com/pr/1661430.
10.4
Market Research in Social Commerce
For six steps to measure social media ROI with an infographic,
see
mediabistro.com/alltwitter/how-to-measure-socialmedia-roi_b60174.
10.4
MARKET RESEARCH IN SOCIAL
COMMERCE
Market research involves data collection and analysis of
information about consumers and competitors, the results
of which are turned into marketing knowledge. Businesses
usually hire a market research company to conduct their
research, but some businesses do it on their own (per
sbinfocanada.about.com/od/marketing/g/marketresearch.htm).
Why Conduct Market Research?
Market research is conducted to understand an organization’s
markets in order to serve them better than the competition
does. Accurate information about consumers and competitors
is essential for the development of a successful marketing
plan. According to sbinfocanada.about.com/od/marketing/
g/marketresearch.htm, “market research allows businesses
to make decisions that make them more responsive to customers’ needs and increase profits.” It is important for both
start-ups and established businesses to conduct market
research. “Small business owners use market research to
determine the feasibility of a new business, test interest in
new products or services, improve aspects of their businesses,
such as customer service or distribution channels, and develop
competitive strategies” (per sbinfocanada.about.com/od/
marketing/g/marketresearch.htm). One major purpose of
market research is to provide information for decision making and strategy formulation as part of a business plan and
justification. Market research is also conducted to help facilitate competitive intelligence (see Sect. 10.7). Another reason
it is used is for justifying requests for funding for marketing
plans, such as new product introductions, as well as for other
purposes. Market research can be done offline and/or online.
In this book, we mostly cover topics associated with online
social commerce as related to the generic topic of Internet
research. Market research can identify problems and opportunities. For example, see Redsicker (2013).
Social commerce provides superb opportunities to conduct market research. In addition, it is necessary to conduct
research on social commerce itself to identify viable SC
strategies and tactics. Much of this research is done in social
networks and/or by using social software.
Factors such as a person’s age, gender, and which websites they use to engage in social networking provide a new
opportunity to assess markets, sometimes even in real time.
One major area is viral marketing (see Chap. 3).
245
E-Marketing Research in Brief
Social commerce, as described in Chap. 1, has its roots in
e-commerce and e-marketing. Therefore, conducting market
research in social commerce includes methods and processes
from these two disciplines.
The Major Generic Topics
The following topics are frequently described as being
related to Internet-based generic market research:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Data sources and data collection methods
Data and information quality
Learning from (listening to) customers
Internet social search methodologies and tools
Support for competitive intelligence
Internet-based research approaches and methods
Ethics of online research
Marketing databases, data and text mining, and data
warehouses
• Legal issues and protection of privacy
For comprehensive coverage of these and e-marketing
research in general, see Strauss and Frost (2014). For
e-commerce market research, see Chap. 9 in Turban et al.
(2015). Both books provide additional resources.
For general related information, see Poynter (2011),
MarketingSherpa (marketingsherpa.com), and Barker et al.
(2011). For research in the B2B arena, see Gillin and
Schwartzman (2011).
Using Social Networking for Qualitative
Market Research
Merchants can easily find customers on social networks and
sometimes even see what they are doing online, as well as
gather information about their customers’ friends. However,
it may not be easy to conduct social-oriented market research.
An unsolicited message that requests the page owner to follow a link to a survey or comment on a brand will likely be
ignored unless it comes from someone the user knows. In
this section, we discuss qualitative market research in social
media, as opposed to quantitative survey research.
Example: Mountain Dew
In the past, Mountain Dew’s strategy was to target video
game lovers and extreme sports enthusiasts, as these individuals tend to drink high-caffeine beverages. However,
because the company wanted to unite all of its customers
246
into one community, Mountain Dew used several
“Dewmocracy” contests, which encouraged consumers to
choose their next soda flavor. This market research (described
next) was conducted for product development purposes.
Although several other food and beverage companies
have also used social networks to help choose new product
flavors, Mountain Dew did this first by using their most dedicated customers, and then expanding to the public. The first
step was to send seven flavors of soda to 50 Dew fanatics.
These people were given cameras and asked to make a video
of themselves debating the flavors and showing their love for
each flavor. Having consumers create videos, was, according
to Hespos (2010), “a great idea because they made the socialmedia effort more personable. Rather than just looking at
static images or Tweets, Dew fans could see like-minded
fanatics in action. One young man proved his allegiance by
brushing his teeth with the soda. After narrowing the seven
flavors to three, Mountain Dew turned to its Dew Labs
Community, a 4,000-person group of passionate soda fans.
Those fans then created nearly every element of the three
sodas, including color, name, packaging, and marketing
campaigns [an example of crowdsourcing at its best!]. After
that process was complete, the three flavors were made available in stores for a limited time, with the general public
selecting a winner via online voting” (emphasis added).
According to Hespos (2010), Mountain Dew’s SC marketing campaign was different from those at Starbucks and Dell.
“Where these two brands set up sites soliciting ideas from all
consumers, Dew began its promotion by reaching out to its
most dedicated, loyal consumers offline, and then gave that
offline community a place to assemble its testimonials and
feedback. The Dewmocracy campaign used Facebook,
Twitter, and YouTube just like the other campaigns used these
social networks to unite consumers through a common interest.” The Dewmocracy campaign, like other brands, also used
Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube to unite consumers through
a common interest. For further details, see Hespos (2010).
According to Mountain Dew’s marketing director, the
campaign helped to increase the company’s social media
presence (e.g., an 800,000 increase in Facebook fans from
the time they started the campaign), and allowed customers
to express themselves about the flavors and feel like they
were being heard. The campaigns also generated word-ofmouth buzz and enthusiasm about the brand. (See adweek.
com/news/advertising-branding/what-mountain-dewlearned-dewmocracy-107534.)
The Process of Conducting Qualitative
Market Research for Social Commerce
There are several ways of conducting SC market research,
depending upon a company’s products, research budget,
and research objective. A company may hire a consultant
10
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
(e.g., Bazaarvoice.com); alternatively, it may join a market
research discussion group on LinkedIn and share ideas and
best practices, expand their network, research and analyze,
and more. Market research is an essential element of the
strategy needed for success in social commerce. Decker
(2010) and Shih (2011) recommend that marketers go
through the following seven-step process:
1. Select social platforms (social networking pages,
blogs, forums, etc.) to give people a place online to
discuss your products or services.
2. “Let these conversations unfold, but also encourage
participation through promotions, contests, ratings
and reviews, user-generated content (photo and
video) uploads, and whatever else drives social
interaction.” (Decker 2010)
3. “Analyze the conversations to find out what people
are saying and why, to spot trends, and to find out
exactly what customers want” (see Sect. 10.6).
(Decker 2010)
4. “Deliver products, services, and promotions that
meet these wants and needs.” (Decker 2010)
5. “Continue to get customer feedback, and integrate
these findings with sophisticated analytics and marketing measurement tools to calculate the exact
return on investment of social [networking] programs” (emphasis added). (Decker 2010)
6. Use conversational marketing as a source for market research. How are consumer conversations and
other user-generated content analyzed?
7. Find opportunities for conducting social-based
market research.
For additional information, see Rekenthaler (2013).
Learning from Customers: Conversational
Marketing
Learning from customers is a major goal of market research.
Long before the Internet and the Web, companies collected
information from customers and about customers, and stored
it in customer databases. They would use the information to
develop marketing communication strategies, and help
designers improve product design and customer service. The
Internet has provided new opportunities to improve this process by providing both methods and tools.
Companies are starting to utilize Web 2.0 tools to get
feedback from customers. This process is referred to as conversational marketing, learning from customers, or the
voice of customers (VOC). In social commerce, customers
10.4
Market Research in Social Commerce
supply feedback and information via blogs (e.g., see
bloombergmarketing.blogs.com/Bloomberg_marketing), wikis, Twitter, online forums, chat rooms, and social
networking sites (e.g., Facebook). For an illustrative video,
go to vimeo.com/81504169.
Companies are finding that using social media tools to
learn from customers fosters closer customer-vendor relationships. For example, Macy’s Inc. quickly removed a
metal toothbrush holder from its product line after the
product was criticized on several social media channels.
Dell and Starbucks allow customers to suggest and vote on
improvements to their products. In general, what companies are learning from the customers on social networks is
frequently less expensive and yields quicker and possibly
better results than the company might learn from using
focus groups.
With enterprise feedback management, companies are
interested not only in collecting information, but also in
facilitating the interaction between customers and companies.
Illustrative Examples
Many methods and software products can be used to “listen”
to customers. The following are a few examples illustrating
how this is done.
Example 1: Cookshack
Barbecue company Cookshack Inc., according to their
Barbecue Forum (forum.cookshack.com/groupee; archived),
“invites customers to ask and answer questions about barbecue sauces, beef smokers, barbecue ovens, and cooking techniques. The community helps (Cookshack) save money by
freeing up customer service personnel who used to answer
such questions by phone or e-mail. The community also fosters customer loyalty.”
Example 2: Del Monte
See the opening case to this chapter.
247
• Polling. People like to vote (e.g., American Idol)
and express their preferences (see the Netflix case
in Chap. 3). They provide opinions on products,
services, and so forth. Voting is also popular on
social networks.
• Blogging. Bloggers can raise issues or induce others to express opinions.
• Chatting. Community members love to chat in
public chat rooms. By following the discussions,
you can collect current data.
• Live chat. Here, you can collect interactive data
from customers in real time.
• Chatterbots. These can be partially interactive, but
quick and inexpensive. Through them, you can analyze logs of communication. In certain cases, people are more honest when they chat with an avatar
than talking to a human.
• Discussion forums. People that have a common
interest join a social media subgroup and use a
discussion forum to socialize and exchange
opinions.
• Collective wisdom (intelligence). This is a kind of
community brainstorming. Researchers can find out
what people are debating, agreeing on, or disagreeing with while working jointly on tasks.
• Find expertise. Expertise frequently is found via
Web 2.0 technologies, many times for free (e.g., the
“help forum” on LinkedIn).
• Folksonomy. This is a user-generated system of
organizing information by social tagging, therefore
making data easier to find and access.
• Data in videos, photos, and other rich media.
Places where these media are shared contribute to
valuable data collection.
For further discussion, see Strauss and Frost (2014).
Methods for Listening to Social Customers
Conducting Market Research Using the Major
Social Network Sites
Several methods are available for listening to customers.
Some are the same or similar to those described in Sect. 10.5.
However, in traditional market research, companies usually
listen to customers during a short time period for a welldefined purpose, whereas in social commerce, it is a routine
and frequent listening. Representative examples of listening
methods to customers are:
Market research can be conducted by using public social
network sites (e.g., Facebook and Twitter), in situations
where social software tools are deployed, in social enterprises, and in social presentation sites such as YouTube,
Pinterest, and Flickr. For using social media for market
research in general, see Nelson (2013). Here are a few representative examples.
248
Using Facebook for Market Research
Facebook is enabling an increasing number of social commerce activities. Here are some relevant suggestions for merchants conducting market research on Facebook:
• Get feedback from your Facebook fans (and their
friends, if possible) on any promotional campaign,
improvement in the product/process, and so on.
• Test market messages: Provide two or three options
and ask fans which one they prefer and why. Do not
forget to tell the fans that you love their contributions. Alternatively, see which messages get the
highest click-through rate.
• Use Facebook to recruit users to participate in a survey. Facebook also allows companies to target their
audience specifically, based on traditional segmentation variables (e.g., age, gender, etc.).
Note that such an approach must be executed carefully by
someone who knows how to do market research; otherwise,
you will get a very low response rate.
Example: Conducting Surveys
SurveyMonkey (surveymonkey.com) provides software for
posting surveys on Facebook or other Web pages. With
SurveyMonkey, businesses can easily share surveys on their
personal pages with SurveyMonkey’s Facebook Collector,
or post a survey questionnaire directly on their fan page with
their Web Link Collector. For more information, see
surveymonkey.com/mp/facebook.
Facebook offers an application called Surveys for
Facebook (see facebook.com/simple.surveys), making it easy
for businesses to create and share surveys on their Facebook
page. For more information, see facebooksurvey.net.
Example: Brown Automotive Group
Brown Automotive Group (BAG) wanted to identify brand
advocates among its fans on Facebook and make it easy for
them to share their experiences with others. In other words,
BAG used WOM to influence people’s car purchasing decisions. The fans were invited to connect with BAG by completing an online survey. Based on this, the company
identified those fans who were highly satisfied with BAG.
(Customers who were not satisfied were contacted by BAG
for problem resolution.) BAG contacted the friends of the
satisfied friends, directing them to the BAG website to
see both special deals as well as customer recommendations. This provided the company with immediate feedback.
To read the case study, see empathica.com/wp-content/
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Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
uploads/2011/10/Empathica-Browns-Jeep- ChryslerDodge-Case-Study.pdf.
For additional information about conducting marketing
research on Facebook, see Silvestre (2012) and Pehrson (2013).
Using Twitter for Market Research
By using Twitter, it is easy to stay instantly updated on many
relevant topics. Just follow @marketresearch or twitter.
com/MarketResearch. The fact that millions of businessoriented people and customers are using Twitter makes it a
valuable monitoring tool. Following tweets is a great potential source of new ideas and resources. Here are a few examples of using Twitter for market research (per Harrison 2009)
and the authors’ experiences:
• Visit search.twitter.com and enter a company’s
Twitter name. Not only can you monitor what companies are saying on Twitter, you can also legally
follow what is said to or about these companies and
what are the replies. All this can help competitive
intelligence and strategy.
• Take advantage of the tools that enable you to find
people in the industries where your company operates (target industries). Use search.twitter.com to
monitor industry-specific key words. In addition,
check out twellow.com, which automatically categorizes a Twitter user into 1–3 industries based on
their bio and tweets, and allows users to categorize
themselves manually.
• To monitor your Twitter account, go to tweetstats.
com. It will provide you with statistical charts
showing information such as how many tweets you
received during a certain time frame (e.g., day) and
whose posts you retweeted. For an example, see
searchenginewatch.com/article/2327748/5Brilliant-Ways-to-Use- Hashtags-in-SocialMedia-Marketing.
Example: Customer Feedback Using Twitter
An increasing number of companies utilize Twitter to solicit
information from customers and interact with them. Several
examples can be found at mashable.com/guidebook/twitter. For how to advertise on Twitter using their tools, see
business.twitter.com/basics. To read the success stories of
companies who used Twitter to promote their businesses, see
business.twitter.com/success-stories.
10.5
Metrics and Monitoring Performance
For effective ways to use Twitter for market research, see
Washington (2013).
Using LinkedIn for Market Research
There are many ways one can use LinkedIn for market
research. One way is to post a question in the “help center”
(e.g., solicit advice) regarding the topic in which you are
interested. You may get better results if you go to a specific
LinkedIn group. Another source for research is the information that people and organizations provide on LinkedIn about
themselves. For a slideshow about using LinkedIn for market research, see Outloutl (2013). For a comprehensive list of
LinkedIn discussion groups related to market research, go to
quirks.com/resources/market_research_linkedin.aspx.
Using Virtual Worlds for Conducting Market Research
Using virtual worlds for market research gives researchers a
clue about new products or services. This can provide companies with a competitive edge.
Several companies are conducting market research on
Seconds Life by presenting a 3-D plan of a product or project
they want to test.
Example: Market Research and Product/Service
Design
Starwood Hotels constructed a prototype of the new Aloft
brand hotels before they appeared in the real world. The
company purchased two islands on Seconds Life: Aloft, for
the hotel prototype, and Argali, where visitors can view the
development project. Working from a preliminary architectural sketch, the designers started the process by roughing
out the hotel’s layout, furnishings, and textures. These were
then refined in response to feedback from the brick-andmortar architects and from Seconds Life visitors who were
invited to assess and critique the design and layout. The
company actually built the hotel after implementing the
feedback from the Seconds Life residents.
Competitive Surveillance in Social Media
When companies use the previously mentioned techniques
to test new products, competitors also see what the company
is planning. This is good input for competitive analysis.
Companies can also search brandtags.com to identify competitive brand images based on descriptive words entered by
users. In addition, organizations often review comments and
how many “Likes” on their competitors’ social networks.
Other good sources to find information about the competi-
249
tion include Google keyword searches for company and
executive names, brands, and marketing communication
campaign tag lines. Company researchers can follow these
links to social media sites. Finally, organizations can search
allfacebook.com/tag/statistics to find demographics, number of visitors, and many other statistics for millions of
Facebook fan pages. These are just a few examples; there are
many other ways to use social media for competitive analysis as well (e.g., unifiedsocial.com). However, it is important for organizations to realize that while they can test
marketing strategies and use competitive surveillance in
social media, they are also being watched. For six free analytics tools to help you understand your competitor’s Web
traffic (2013), see content.infotrustllc.com/infotrust-blog/
bid/180360/6-Free-Analytics-Tools-to-Help-YouUnderstand-Your-Competitor-s-Web-Traffic.
10.5
METRICS AND MONITORING
PERFORMANCE
The next step in the strategy-performance cycle is to monitor
performance and compare it to target objectives. These targets are usually expressed in measurable quantities, such as
increasing the number of Facebook fans by a certain percentage, and they usually appear as metrics.
Performance Monitoring and Analysis Cycle
In order to exploit the huge volume of information generated
by social media, companies use a process referred to as
social media intelligence (see the following discussion),
because it is similar to business intelligence (see Sharda
et al. 2014). The social media intelligence process is illustrated in Fig. 10.4. For the difference between social media
monitoring and social intelligence, see socialbusinessnews.
com/listening-look-social-monitoring-vs-social-intelligence.
As shown in the figure, the process starts by identifying
the social media activities that generate the data and information to be studied. Next, a monitoring system is employed
to find out what is happening. Several methods and tools
exist for this purpose. The monitoring results in various
kinds of social data, from text to numbers, can be processed
and shown to management via reports and/or dashboards.
Many times, however, the collected data need to go through
social media analysis techniques (Sect. 10.6), where they
are compared to the target metrics, and analyzed, sometimes
with the help of scorecards. A special type of analysis is
sentiment analysis (positive or negative conversations, see
Sect. 10.6), which automates the identification and interpretation of subjective information. The results of the analysis
250
10
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
Fig. 10.4 The social media
strategies. Source: Strauss and
Frost, E-Marketing 6e p. 312.
Used with permission
are presented to management via dashboard (Sect. 10.6) and
notification mechanisms, so management can develop
strategies and make decisions. For tools for supporting this
cycle, see Dyer (2013).
Social Media Intelligence
According to psychologist Nicholas Humphrey, social intelligence refers to the capacity of people “to use very large
brains to effectively navigate and negotiate complex social
relationships and environments” (per socialintelligencelab.
com/social-intelligence). The related social media intelligence has many definitions. It is generally referred to as the
monitoring and collection of online opinions and other social
data (such as conversations or reviews) used for guiding corporate decisions and (private and public) actions. For details,
see Moe and Schweidel (2014). The process of using social
media intelligence is more than just collecting and analyzing
social interactions; it also focuses on the ability to find hidden values in the social interactions (and then take appropriate actions based on the findings). Social media intelligence
includes tools that companies use to monitor, collect, aggregate, and analyze social data. For information on how to
implement social media intelligence, see Harrysson et al.
(2012). For a white paper discussing nine insights that drive
business sales, see Bazaarvoice (2013).
The remainder of this section addresses measures and
methods for organizing, analyzing, and displaying the huge
quantity of social data that are collected by companies (Big
Data). First, we present the topic of metrics. Then, we
describe the methodology of scorecards. The section ends
with a description of social media monitoring. In Sect. 10.6,
we introduce social media analytics and sentiment analysis,
followed by a brief description of dashboards. For more on
social media intelligence, including examples, see listenlogic.com/2010/04/what-is-social-media-intelligence.
Using Metrics in Performance Assessment
A metric is a specific, measurable standard against which
actual performance is compared. Metrics are used to describe
many things such as costs, benefits, or the ratio between
them. They are used not only for justification but also for
measuring actual performance and other economic activities.
Metrics can produce very positive results in organizations by
driving behavior in a number of ways, such as improving
performance. According to Person (2013), metrics can:
• Be the basis for specific goals and plans.
• Define the value proposition in business models
(see Primer A).
• Communicate a business strategy to the workforce
through performance targets.
10.5
Metrics and Monitoring Performance
251
Using Metrics in Social Commerce
• Increase accountability when metrics are linked
with performance appraisal programs and rewards.
• Align the objectives of individuals, departments,
and divisions to the enterprise’s strategic objectives.
• Track the performance of SC systems, including
usage, types of visitors, page visits, conversion rate,
and so forth.
• Assess the health of companies by using tools such
as balanced scorecards and performance dashboards.
Social commerce metrics can be tangible or intangible
and must be related to goals and objectives, as shown in
Table 10.1 (p. 230).
Metrics need to be defined properly, with a clear way to
be measured. For example, revenue growth in a company
can be measured in total dollars, in percentage change over
time, and in market share in the industry where the company
operates. Defining the specific measures is critical; otherwise, what the metrics actually measure may be open to different interpretations. For a comprehensive description, see
Hoffman and Fodor (2010).
Key Performance Indicators
Metrics are frequently expressed by a set of key performance
indicators (KPIs), which involve the quantitative expression
of some measures of each metric. One metric may have several KPIs.
A key performance indicator (KPI) is a quantitative
measure commonly used in the industry that expresses the
critical success factors of a company, department, or an initiative. Different companies measure success or failure by a
different set of KPIs. For example, OrderDynamics (orderdynamics.com) conducted a survey to identify the most
used KPIs for e-commerce.
These KPIs are continuously monitored by organizations
(e.g., via Web analytics, social media, or other methods
described in Sect. 10.6).
Examples
In Australia, the government of Victoria is one of the leaders
in exploiting the Internet to provide a one-stop service center called “Do It Online” (see vic.gov.au). In the United
States, the state of California website (ca.gov) offers many
online social media-oriented services for residents. In both
cases, the metric of “waiting time” is used to compare the
government 2.0 services against traditional citizen service
options. Such comparison is done to justify social media
projects.
Social media metrics are different from generic e-commerce
website metrics because users interact with branded media in
several different ways. For an overview, see Lovett (2011),
Poston (2012), and Sterne (2010). Unfortunately, there are
too many different metrics in social media and commerce.
For example, Simply Measured (simplymeasured.com) uses
over 750 metrics. In addition, measurements can be complex.
For example, when an Internet user watches an online video,
he or she might spend 10 minutes watching it, but someone
else might stop watching after 1 minutes. In addition, if the
user uploads, comments on, or shares a branded video, how
can this brand engagement be valued? Social media performance metrics, as described in Chap. 5, must capture the
richness of user activity online in different areas.
Here are a few examples:
• Earned media publicity. This is a message about the
company or brand shared with others after an experience
with the brand. Metric example: number of blogger posts
about the brand or company, or number of users creating
a buzz by sending a video link or Facebook widget to their
friends.
• Company owned social media. These are messages sent
through company owned social media channels. Metric
example: the number of fans on Starbucks’ Facebook
page and the weekly number of posts they shared.
• Paid media. These are messages on someone else’s media
channels, rather than those controlled by the company;
for example, using offline media like television. Metric
example: the number of people who downloaded a placement application on Facebook, or the cost per click on a
display ad on a social media site.
For sample metrics in each category, see IAB (2009),
Chap. 5, and Strauss and Frost (2014). For a guide to tracking social media metrics, see Lee (2014).
A large number of metrics can be used in social media
depending on the area of consideration. In fact, companies are
drowning in metric availability and need to carefully select
those that measure their social commerce objectives and tactics. For a guide to using social media metrics in non-profit
organizations, including social media ROI, what statistics to
measure on Facebook and Twitter, and available metrics
tools, read the articles and tutorials at socialbrite.org/sharing-center/metrics. For a beginner’s guide to social media,
see moz.com/beginners-guide-to-social-media.
Examples
Hoffman and Fodor (2010) and Poston (2012) suggested
metrics that are related to marketing. Representative metrics
are summarized in the following list:
252
1. Track traffic for finding leads (e.g., sources,
changes over time).
2. Find the average engagement duration (e.g.,
4 minutes on a YouTube video).
3. Bounce rate (the percentage of people who leave
your site after only viewing one page).
4. Fans on a Facebook page (numbers and their
demographic composition).
5. Activity levels (by type).
6. Conversation levels (by type).
7. Brand and company/product health/reputation;
positive and negative comments in all social networking activities.
8. Loyalty and sharing: Are members of social
groups repeatedly interacting in the network, and
sharing opinions, content, and links? How many
members participate in discussions about a certain brand? How often do they reshare (e.g., a
post)? (Several possible measures can be used
here.)
9. Extent of viral activity: For example, sharing
tweets and Facebook comments relevant to your
company. The speed of resharing (or retweeting)
and the number of friends and their friends
involved in the resharing.
10. Blog interaction (several measures).
Bernoff and Li (2008) developed success metrics for the
social Web in each of the following categories: marketing,
sales, customer support, operations, and research and development. Most are quantitative. They also provide the following five categories of strategic metrics:
1. “Listening. Learn about your customers by paying
attention to what they are saying online to one
another or directly to you.
2. Talking. Communicate with your customers (and
fans) by engaging in conversations.
3. Energizing. Encourage current customers and fans
to spread the word through ratings, reviews, and
other positive ‘buzz.’
4. Support. Help customers solve problems by providing information and online resources like user
forums, knowledge bases, and other tools.
5. Embracing. Invite customers to generate ideas for
new products and services.”
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Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
Each metric may have several dimensions and measures.
For a comprehensive discussion about social metrics,
types of analysis, actions taken, and more, see personalweb.
about.com/od/socialmediaresearch/a/Social-Metrics.htm
and Poston (2012).
Classifying Social Media Metrics
Given the large number of social media metrics, there are
several ways to classify them. For example, in Chap. 5, we
categorized them as awareness/exposure, brand health,
engagement, action, and innovation metrics. Other classifications follow.
1. Jones (2011) uses the following five categories:
• Awareness and exposure (e.g., video views, number of
followers)
• Share of voice and sentiment (e.g., number of conversations about a brand versus that of a competitor)
• Influence (e.g., the chance that followers and fans are
inspired by messages)
• Engagement (e.g., ratings, retweets, photo views)
• Popularity (e.g., number of “Likes” on a company’s
Facebook page).
2. Another way to classify metrics is by technology; for
example, metrics for Twitter, for Facebook, for e-mail,
for videos, and so on.
3. In the marketing arena, one can apply traditional
e-marketing metrics (e.g., impressions, click-through
rate, cart conversion rate, and attention rate).
4. One can use performance metrics that are related to the
balanced scorecard (see description later in this section).
5. Social metrics for business can be implemented. Lasica
(2010) provides a list of 10 areas, each with a list of specific metrics: customer engagement, sales and profits,
search engine marketing and ranking, traffic and conversation reach, brand sentiment, public outreach, lead generation, customer retention, cost savings, and employee
recruitment.
6. The Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB) provides over
100 metrics in categories such as survey metrics, activity
metrics, ROI measurement, and reporting metrics. The
reporting metrics are subdivided into general social media
metrics, blog metrics, conversation size, size relevance,
author credibility, content, and widget and social media
applications. Within each category, there are 5–10 specific metrics. For details, see IAB (2009). For tracking
these and other metrics, see Lee (2014).
The bottom line is that organizations select the metrics
they need for measuring whether or not they reached their
social media objectives.
10.5
Metrics and Monitoring Performance
253
Sources for Social Media Metrics
There are many sources for social media metrics (try a
Google search). Here we list some representative examples:
• Guide to social media metrics at socialbrite.org/sharingcenter/metrics.
• Facebook Insights.
• Books by Sterne (2010), Poston (2012), Lovett (2011),
and Blanchard (2011).
• The Interactive Advertisement Bureau (iab.net); see IAB
(2010).
• Comprehensive coverage at marketingsherpa.com.
The large number of available social media metrics poses
a challenge for management: which one to use and how. For
example, see how Shively (2012) defines 40 different
metrics. A practical tool that helps someone make such a
determination is the balanced scorecard.
Balanced Scorecards (BSC)
One of the best-known and most widely used performance
management systems is the balanced scorecard (see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balanced_scorecard, and the Balanced
Scorecard Institute; balancedscorecard.org). Kaplan and
Norton first articulated this methodology in their 1992
Harvard Business Review article “The Balanced Scorecard:
Measures That Drive Performance.”
The balanced scorecard translates an organization’s strategy into a set of objectives, measures, goals, and initiatives
in both financial and non financial areas. The non-financial
objectives fall into the following three perspectives:
• Internal business processes. The processes the organization must succeed at, in order to appease its customers
and shareholders.
• Learning and growth. How an organization improves its
adaptability to changes and its ability to learn so that its
mission is achieved.
• Customers. How the organization is viewed by its customers with respect to accomplishment of its vision and
mission.
Aligning Strategies and Actions
As a strategic management methodology, the balanced scorecard enables an organization to align its actions with its overall strategies as well as with risk analysis (e.g., see Beasley
et al. 2006). It accomplishes this task through a series of
interrelated steps, although the specific steps involved vary
from one project to the next. In social commerce, the process
can be depicted in five steps:
1. Identify strategic objectives for each of the three
perspectives listed earlier (about 15–25 in all).
2. Identify related measures for each of the strategic
objectives; a mix of quantitative and qualitative
should be used.
3. Establish goals for all measures.
4. Devise strategic initiatives to accomplish each of
the objectives.
5. Link the various strategic objectives through a
strategy map.
Note: A strategy map is a graphical representation of an
organization’s strategy. It illustrates how an organization
plans to achieve its objectives by delineating the relationships among the objectives across the scorecard’s different
perspectives.
For specific metrics that are used with the balanced scorecard in the areas of e-marketing and e-business, see Strauss
and Frost (2014).
Metrics and Measurements for Social Influence
Setting metrics and measurements for social influence is difficult because influence is mostly subjective; therefore, there
is no agreed upon answer on how to accomplish this.
However, several vendors offer interesting methodologies
and tools to do just that. A major vendor in this area is Klout.
com, which developed a proprietary algorithm. The following is an example of how Klout works.
Example
Klout, Inc. (klout.com) provides a way for users to build
rapport with other users. For example, you can build lists
within Klout and give something called +K’s, which are
tokens of appreciation to someone who has influenced you
on a certain topic. Based on your Klout score and influential
topics, you are rewarded with “perks” (e.g., discounts, gift
cards). Marketers use Klout to find influential bloggers to
spread the word about their products. Klout calculates a person’s influence from a number of attributes; for example, the
number of retweets generated and the amount of engagement
they drive from unique individuals. Klout monitors actions
and stats from social networks such as Twitter, Google+,
Facebook, and LinkedIn (see klout.com/corp/score). Since
Klout is being criticized for being inaccurate, it is working to
improve. In early 2014, Klout changed to a whole new business model. For details, see “The Klout Score” at klout.com/
corp/score. The Klout Score is a number between 1 and 100
254
that represents a person’s influence. The more influence you
have, the higher your score. For example, President Obama’s
score is 99 and Justin Bieber’s is 92. At another site, triberr.
com, bloggers help other bloggers by developing a community of sharing and support.
Monitoring the Social Media Field
The amount of social media data on the Web is increasing
exponentially with billions of videos on YouTube, billions of
photos on Flickr and Instagram, and endless tweets and other
conversations. The problem that companies face is how to
monitor the Web for data that are relevant to them. A major
area of concern is reputation management. Google offers
e-mail alerts for any keywords of a user’s choice, such as a
brand name, or a competitor’s brand name, and so forth (see
google.com/alerts). Users can set up an e-mail alert for the
entire Web, including blogs, social networks, vendors’ websites, etc. (e.g., see Beal and Strauss 2008).
What and Where to Monitor?
Monitoring is done on all social data in all social platforms
and channels. Beal and Strauss (2008) offer these 12 channels for online social media monitoring as it relates to reputation management:
1. Your own content channels—any blogs, comment
sections on the company site, or other websites
owned by the company that allow user posting.
2. Social media and blogs using Technorati.com
alerts and RSS feeds.
3. Google’s network of video, news groups, and
more (e.g., news.google.com).
4. Industry news via e-mail newsletters or competitive site monitoring.
5. Stakeholder conversations that occur on any other
website not monitored in other ways.
6. Social communities in the company’s industry,
such as Tripadvisor.com for the travel industry.
7. Social bookmarking sites such as delicious.com,
which allow users to tag websites for sharing.
8. Multimedia content such as videos on YouTube
and photos on Flickr.
9. Forums and message boards, in Google Groups,
LinkedIn, and Yahoo! Groups, and on any website
in the company’s industry that hosts them.
10. Customer reviews on sites such as Amazon.com
(companies that only sell products online).
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Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
11. Brand profiles on social networks such as LinkedIn.
com, Facebook.com, and ZoomInfo.com.
12. Web analytics (Sect. 10.6) that will help companies monitor the traffic coming to their own sites.
For additional channels, see Paine (2011). In addition,
monitoring can be made simpler with special dashboards (e.g.,
see Sysomos’s Heartbeat social media monitoring dashboard
and video at sysomos.com/products/overview/heartbeat).
Social Media Monitoring Tools
A large number of tools are available for social media monitoring. For a comprehensive list, see wiki.kenburbary.
com and Paine (2011). For 50 top tools for social media
monitoring, see socialmediatoday.com/content/50-toptools-social-media-monitoring-analytics-andmanagement. For five social media tools to simplify
marketing along with a comprehensive beginner’s guide to
social media monitoring, see socialmediaexaminer.
com/5-social-media-monitoring-tools-to-simplify-yourmarketing.
A number of social media monitoring services provide
data to businesses (e.g., Actionly, Radian6; salesforcemarketingcloud.com/products/social-media-listening, Visible
Technologies, and Oracle; oracle.com/applications/
customer-experience/social/index.html). Most of these
services track online content and then feed summaries and
other statistics into dashboards. However, smaller companies
can use a variety of free services to conduct monitoring. (For
example, Google Alerts, Moreover Technologies, and
Yahoo! Alerts monitor news about companies and industries.) Technorati specifically tracks social media sites.
Services such as CyberAlert, ChangeDetect, and Bloglovin’
all offer ways to track activities in the blogosphere. Some of
the monitoring tools provide social media analytics as well.
For a list of free tools, see Rayson (2013). For a review and
comparison of nine top social media monitoring services, see
social-media-monitoring-review.toptenreviews.com.
Example of a Comprehensive Tool: Actionly
Actionly (actionly.com) is a social media monitoring dashboard and listening platform that is integrated with Google
Analytics (see Sect. 10.6). It enables businesses to measure
their social media ROI. Users can pull reports to see which of
the messages are generating leads, page views, or revenue.
To do this, Actionly monitors key words across networks
such as Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and Flickr. Users can
view in one dashboard what their customers are saying about
them. Actionly’s technology also helps analyze social media
10.6
Social Media Analytics and Sentiment Analysis
conversations, provides sentiment analysis, and finds influencers in social media. For more information on Actionly’s
integration with Google Analytics, see actionly.com/support/index.php/category/google-analytics.
For list of other tools, see Zeevi (2014).
Social media analytics, sentiment analysis, and dashboards are presented next.
10.6
SOCIAL MEDIA ANALYTICS
AND SENTIMENT ANALYSIS
The importance of analytics in general has been recognized
in the last few years (e.g., see Davenport and Harris 2007
and Fuloria and Iyer 2011).
Analyzing social media data and information is a comprehensive field that utilizes many methods and tools. For comprehensive coverage, see Sponder (2013). We cover only the
major ones in this chapter.
Definitions, Importance, and Applications
The umbrella term social analytics includes several analysis
techniques such as social filtering, social network analysis,
sentiment analysis, and opinion mining. Therefore, there are
several definitions. Social media analytics describes the
activities of monitoring and recording, analyzing, and interpreting the results of interactions and associations among
people, topics, and ideas. It is the process of gathering data
from blogs and social media sites and analyzing that data to
make business decisions. These interactions may occur during any social networking activity. The analysis is done on
people’s opinions, sentiments, reviews, recommendations,
and even attitudes and emotions (e.g., see Liu 2012). Social
analysis is done frequently in order to check the activities
done in communities, what conversations are taking place,
and much more. For example, see bazaarvoice.com/solutions/conversations/intelligence.
Note that, social media analysis is different from social
network analysis, which we presented in Chap. 3.
Social media analytics is crucial for obtaining a strategic
understanding of what is taking place in social media, either
on the Internet or in private enterprise networks. Johnson
(2013) describes the use of social media analysis in market
research. Social media analysis usually includes some forms
of traditional data analysis, such as data mining (see
McCafferty 2010), to create a comprehensive understanding
of social consumers. Social media analytics provides the
foundation that allows an enterprise to use data to improve
its targeted engagements; to optimize social collaboration
across multiple business functions, as well as support,
loyalty, and advocacy programs; and to enhance customer
255
experience. Social media analytics are most commonly used
to gauge customer opinions to support marketing
communication, product development, and customer service
activities. Social media analytics can help governments better engage and interact with citizens (Ong 2014). For an
overview of Web analytics, its benefits, its best practices, its
hurdles, and the impact of Google Analytics, see Kaushik
(2009) and Peterson (2004).
The Web Analytics Process
According to the Digital Analytics Association, the definition of Web analytics is “the measurement, collection, analysis, and reporting of Internet data for the purposes of
understanding and optimizing Web usage” (see clarku.edu/
offices/its/webservices/pdf/web_analytics.pdf). See also
Beasley (2013). Performance data are collected, such as the
sites from which visitors came, the pages they viewed while
visiting the sites, how long they stayed on those pages, and
how they interacted with the site’s information. Analytics
also reveals what keywords users entered into a search
engine prior to arriving at the site. Such data can reveal, for
example, the success of SEO methods or advertising campaigns, etc. Because the goal of most SC websites is to
increase sales, valuable analysis shows the level of sales
increases.
Information about Web analytics is available at jimnovo.
com. Two of the many Web analytics tools are available at
webtrends.com and google.com/analytics.
Example: Google Analytics
This comprehensive (and free) tool, google.com/analytics,
can perform many statistical activities (e.g., time-series analysis, cross-sectional analysis, scatter diagrams, trend analysis, ROI, and much more). For details, see England (2013)
and google.com/analytics/features. Several companies
have created tools to supplement Google Analytics. Examples
are sproutsocial.com, agencyplatform.com, argylesocial.
com, bazaarvoice.com, and actionly.com.
Social Media Analytics
Social media analytics is a subset of Web analytics that concentrates on social media (see Sponder 2013).
According to Jayanti (2010), Internet consumer conversations facilitate the conducting of market research. Conversation
analysis, according to Vittal (2009), also helps companies to
“understand emerging issues, follow brand sentiment, benchmark companies against major competitors, detect damaging
issues or rumors, spur product development, gather product
suggestions, and discover alternate uses and enhancements
256
volunteered by consumers.” This requires appropriate analysis. Social analytics was named by Gartner Inc. as one of the
top 10 strategic technologies of 2011. For details about social
Web analytics, see Ayanso (2014). See also Gartner’s Top 10
Tech Trends Through 2015 at slideshare.net/success_ehs/
gartners-top-10-tech-trends-through-2015 and “Top 10
Strategic Technology Trends for 2014” at slideshare.net/
ireneventayol/december-10-top-10techtrends2014
dcearley39921.
Social analytics evaluates interactions and relationships
among people, subjects of interest, ideas, and organizations.
Analytics are developed for each social network platform. For example, see business.pinterest.com/en/
pinterest-analytics.
10
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
traffic data and analysis, identification of new threats, and a
detailed blog.
Other Web analytic tools are: IBM’s Social Business and
Social Media Analytics, Sysomos’s MAP (Media Analysis
Platform), SAS Social Media Analytics; watch their videos
at youtube.com/SASsoftware, and IBM’s SPSS offerings,
which includes sentiment analysis (see Taft 2012). For social
commerce analytics tools for small businesses, see dirjournal.com/articles/7-social-commerce-analytics-tools-forsmall-businesses. For a list of the top 29 social media
analytics software (Fall 2014), see predictiveanalyticstoday.com/top-social-media-analytics-software.
Finally, for top 10 social media analytics tools (December
2013), see Hardawar (2013).
Tools for Mining Social Media Activities
Sentiment Analysis and Web 2.0
There are many ways to analyze social media. Generic
e-commerce tools such as Web mining and text mining (e.g.,
Russell 2013 and Sharda et al. 2014) can be used here as
well. Several other tools are also used for data, texting, and
Web mining in social media. Comprehensive coverage on
social media is provided by Danneman and Heimann (2014).
Oracle Cloud (2012) provides a white paper on social media
and business intelligence integration.
Example 1
IBM SPSS Modeler is a predictive analytics software platform that measures trends in consumer views of products
and services as collected from Web 2.0 tools (e.g., blogs
and social networks). IBM SPSS Modeler brings predictive intelligence to decisions made by individuals, groups
and others in the enterprise. It also analyzes data that is
structured (e.g., price, product, location) and unstructured
(text, e-mails, social media). The software covers 180 variables and 400,000 industry-specific terms that can be
analyzed.
Example 2
Wendy’s International uses software (from Clarabridge, Inc.)
to analyze hundreds of thousands of relevant customer messages collected each year. Using Clarabridge’s text analytics
software, Wendy’s analyzes comments from its Web-based
feedback form, call center notes, e-mails, receipt-based surveys, and social media. Before using Clarabridge’s text analytics software, the company used a combination of
spreadsheets and keyword searches to analyze the data by a
slow and expensive manual process.
Sentiment analysis or opinion mining refers to a type of
analysis that aims to determine the attitude or opinion of a
person with respect to a particular issue as expressed in
online conversations (e.g., if the opinion is positive, negative, or neutral). For details, see Pang and Lee (2008).
Sentiment analysis is measured by techniques such as natural language processing (NLP), computational linguistics,
and text analysis.
Automated sentiment analysis is a process of training a
computer to identify sentiments within content using
NLP. Various sentiment measurement platforms employ different techniques and statistical methodologies to evaluate
sentiments, while some use a hybrid system.
IBM Social Sentiment Index
IBM has developed an index that aggregates and gauges
public opinions from a range of social media sources. For
example, the software identifies the emotional context of a
conversation (e.g., between sarcasm and sincerity), and discovers which conversations are important and should be
monitored. For details and a video presentation, see ibm.
com/analytics/in/en/conversations/social-sentiment.html.
For success in sentiment analysis, see Valentine (2014).
For how Thomson Reuters is incorporating sentiment analysis gained from Twitter for their market analysis and trading
platform, see Lunden (2014). For more information on sentiment analysis including resources and related subjects, see
semantria.com/sentiment-analysis.
Dashboards in Social Commerce
Example 3
Compete, Inc. (compete.com) specializes in competitive
analysis via Web analytics. It provides its customers with
a profile of competitors featuring competitive analysis,
Once data are analyzed and summarized in tables and charts,
they need to be presented to management for decision-making
purposes. One popular tool used to do this is a dashboard.
10.7
Improving Performance via Innovation and Competitive Analysis
What Is a Dashboard?
A dashboard is a control panel. Its most well-known
application is the instrument panel facing a driver of an automobile, or a pilot in an airplane. It usually involves many
gauges and indicators. An information dashboard (referred
to as just a dashboard in this chapter) is a visual display or
presentation of data organized in ways easy to read and interpret. The information is presented through gauges, charts,
maps, tables, and so forth. It reveals trends and directions of
the measured metrics. Dashboards are very popular business
tools for use by executives and managers since they visually
summarize the most important information (usually KPIs
and metrics) and point to deviations from targets, using alerts
(e.g., red colors), indicating where actions need to be taken.
Dashboards are usually interactive and integrate information
from multiple sources. Dashboards may be customized in a
multitude of ways, and named accordingly; for example,
“the CEO dashboard” is designed for chief executives.
Dashboards can be very colorful. Several dozen examples can be seen when you search Google Images for
‘dashboards.’
Social Media Dashboards
Social media dashboard software organizes information
from data about a company, brand, or any keyword cited in
conversations, from any social media content, and organizes
it in one place in images. This makes it easy for companies
to monitor conversations and display selected metrics.
Several vendors provide dashboards for social media. For an
example, see the social media dashboard at hootsuite.com.
It lets you do more with social media, allowing engagement,
listening, analytics, and more.
For five top social media dashboard tools (2014), see
business2community.com/social-media/5-top-socialmedia-dashboard-tools-manage-social-accounts-01015451.
For a list of 50 social media tools for monitoring, analytics and management, see Dyer (2013).
10.7
IMPROVING PERFORMANCE VIA
INNOVATION AND COMPETITIVE
ANALYSIS
The last step in the performance management cycle is to
examine the results of the social analytics and take appropriate actions. Three scenarios are possible: (1) performance is
in line with expectations, (2) performance exceeds expectations, and (3) performance falls short of expectations.
In this section, we will briefly discuss two topics used to
increase productivity (if needed): competitive intelligence
and innovation.
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Competitive Intelligence for Improving
Performance
According to en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competitive_intelligence, competitive intelligence (CI) “is the action of defining, gathering, analyzing, and distributing intelligence about
products, customers, competitors, and any aspect of the
environment needed to support executives and managers in
making strategic decisions for an organization.” Two key
points of this definition are:
1. Competitive intelligence (CI) is an ethical and legal business practice.
2. The focus is on the external business environment related
to competition.
Note: The term CI is often viewed as synonymous with
competitive analysis; in reality, competitive intelligence
involves more than analyzing competitors—it is also about
making the organization more competitive relative to its
entire business environment and stakeholders. For comprehensive coverage, see Fleisher and Bensoussan (2007) and
Strauss and Frost (2014). For further resources, see entrepreneur.com/encyclopedia/competitive-intelligence.
For the process of conducting social media competitive
analysis, see Stuart (2013) and Hines (2013). For how to create a social media strategy by spying on your competitors, see
Hines (2013).
Competitive intelligence in social commerce may involve
social intelligence activities, some of which were described
in Sects. 10.5 and 10.6.
Innovation in Social Commerce
Innovation in social commerce is similar to any other innovation activity. It is the key to improving performance and
may determine the success of social commerce projects, as
well as the success of the entire organization and possibly
its survival. What is unique today is that the development
of philosophy, strategy, and tools of social media enable
both management and employees to engage much more
fully in the innovation process. Social media also provides
management with new sources of innovation, such as the
use of crowdsourcing for idea generation and listening to
customers’ suggestions (and complaints) and using their
input for product design or redesign and to improve the
way they run their business (for an example of how Pepsi
used social media for innovation, see York 2010). For 19
ways to get more customer feedback, see blog.clientheartbeat.com/customer-feedback. To learn more about what
companies gain from listening to customers, see yourbusiness.azcentral.com/companies-gain-listening-customer3055.html.
258
Spigit Inc. (2011) provides nine keys to innovation in the
social media environment. A summary of the nine key points
appears in the following list:
1. Treat innovation as a discipline.
2. Use common, dedicated platforms to increase innovation
IQ and strengthen innovation culture.
3. Understand that innovation benefits from a diversity of
perspectives.
4. Prevent employee self-censorship of ideas.
5. Create a culture of constant choices.
6. Focus employees’ innovation priorities.
7. Recognize innovation as a funnel with valuable leaks.
8. If you cannot measure it, you cannot manage it.
9. Pursue a balanced portfolio of incremental and disruptive
innovations.
Finally, for automated review translation tools for global
social commerce, see Realwire (2011).
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC issues as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. The strategy-performance cycle. In order to attain its
goals, an organization needs to implement a strategy
and plans, as well as monitor its performance levels.
Performance needs to be compared to social media metrics using social media analysis. Results are brought to the
attention of management via dashboards. At that point,
management may need to act. Strategy is related to Porter’s
5 competitive forces model, which leads to decision making concerning improved performance. The Internet has a
major impact on strategy and competitive analysis.
2. The strategic planning process. The strategic planning
process includes the tactics that need to be deployed as
well as the allocation of organizational resources. There
are five stages in the strategy process: initiation, formulation, implementation, assessment, and performance
improvement. Companies need to have a strategy concerning the use of social commerce. There are several
guidelines for appropriate planning.
3. Justification of social media projects. It is difficult to
justify social commerce projects due to the intangible
nature of many of their benefits. Other difficulties include
measuring productivity levels and dealing with inaccurate data. To help with the justification, one can use
Gartner’s hype cycle to find the maturity of the social
media technologies. Finally, risk assessment can be a part
of the justification process.
4. Market research in social commerce. Market research
needs to be conducted as part of the justification and strategic planning. However, it also needs to be done as part
10
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
of performance improvement. Relevant market research
can be done in social network sites and in social software
applications (e.g., blogs). Market research can facilitate
competitive intelligence. Market research for social
commerce is similar to any Internet-related market
research. However, the use of communities impacts the
process. A major subject of market research is learning
from customers (e.g., listening to conversations). Many
methods exist for listening to customers (e.g., monitor
chatting, polling, blogging, searching for photographs
and videos, and encouraging customer engagement on
social networks). Other special methods are used to
research social networks (e.g., Facebook, Twitter,
Instagram, and LinkedIn).
5. Metrics and monitoring performance. Monitoring performance and activities in social media can be done in
several ways. One common way is to measure performance against metrics (there are hundreds of them in
social commerce). For example, one can monitor conversations and other social media activities in order to learn
about customer sentiments and then predict performance
levels. There are many types of metrics in social commerce; some relate to customers, others to finance. A tool
that is used to study these relationships is the balanced
scorecard, which emphasizes the major types of metrics
(in addition to financials). Metrics can be measured by
one or more key performance indicators (KPIs), which
are monitored by computerized programs.
6. Social media analytics and sentiment analysis. Whatever
is monitored in social media needs to be analyzed, which
is done mostly by computerized programs due to the huge
volume involved (big data). Analysis is conducted by
generic tools, such as data and text mining, as well as by
statistical tools. In addition, there are methods, referred to
as social media analytics, which are developed specifically
for social commerce. Google Analytics, IBM SPSS
Modeler products, and Webtrends are good examples. A
major area of analysis is the use of natural language processing (NPL) to automatically identify and extract subjective information in social media activities.
The analysis of results needs to be presented to management. Since this is time consuming for management,
the results are often prepared graphically via computerized dashboards. The dashboards can then present several
performance management indications on one page.
7. Improving performance via innovation. Performance
monitoring and analysis may call management’s attention
to a need to improve performance. Improvement can be
accomplished by several methods (e.g., business process
management) as well as via applied innovation.
Additionally, conducting competitive intelligence can
contribute to increased performance.
Topics for Discussion and Debates
259
KEY TERMS
Competitive intelligence (CI)
Hype cycle
Information dashboard (dashboard)
Key performance indicator (KPI)
Metric (s)
Organizational strategy
Sentiment analysis (opinion mining)
Social media analytics
Social media intelligence
Strategic planning
Strategy
Strategy map
Tactics
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250
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REVIEW QUESTIONS
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
What is strategy?
Describe the strategic planning process.
Why is a cyclic approach to strategic planning required?
What is a strategy map and how does it help in the strategic planning process?
List some of the reasons for justifying an SC
investment.
Describe the risks of not conducting an SC justification
study.
What are metrics? What benefits do they offer?
Describe KPI.
Describe the cyclical use of metrics as it relates to organizational performance.
What is Web analytics, and what role does it play in the
justification of SC projects?
How do organizations measure performance and productivity? What are the difficulties in measuring performance and productivity?
Why is it difficult to relate SC investments to organizational performance? List the major reasons.
Define tangible costs and benefits.
How should management handle intangible benefits?
Define Gartner’s hype cycle and describe its five stages.
Describe how the hype cycle can be used in SC.
List some difficulties in SC justification.
Describe the balanced scorecard methodology.
List and briefly describe three risk factors associated
with practicing social commerce.
How can a social network be used to conduct market
research?
How is conversational marketing used for market
research?
22.
23.
24.
25.
Describe social media analytics.
Define and describe social intelligence.
Describe sentiment analysis.
Define computerized dashboard and explain its use in
social media.
26. How is Facebook used for market research?
27. How is Twitter used for market research?
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
1. Your state government is considering an online vehicle
registration system. They want to involve the citizens in
the process of building a social commerce system for
this purpose. Develop a set of SC metrics for assessing
the success of a such project.
2. A large company with a large number of products wants
to start using social media applications. Discuss the
major issues it needs to consider in its deployment
strategy.
3. Watch the video titled “Social Media ROI Examples”
(4:15 minutes) at socialnomics.net/2009/11/12/socialmedia-roi-examples-video. Identify all the issues
related to ROI for social media. Write a report.
4. Watch the video titled “#Socialnomics 2014” by Eric
Qualman (3:15 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?
v=zxpa4dNVd3c. Summarize the major points.
5. Some claim that sentiment analysis is inaccurate and
should not be conducted. Others disagree. Debate the
issue.
6. What are some of the risks companies may face if they
decide to use social commerce?
7. Discuss the business value of enterprise social networking. Begin by reading Brett Bonfield’s “Should Your
Organization Use Social Networking Sites?” at ictknowledgebase.org.uk/socialnetworking.
8. Debate: A cost–benefit analysis may be inaccurate, so
why should a business conduct it?
9. Debate: Should companies build in-house social networks for external activities (e.g., marketing, CRM) or
use existing public social networks?
10. There are considerable disagreements regarding Klout
and similar companies that measure social influence.
Debate the value of such measurements.
11. Discuss the differences between scorecards and dashboards. How are they related?
12. Watch the video titled “How to Measure Social Media
ROI” (6:19 minutes) at youtube.com/watch?v=UhUO
30VRN1M&list=PL142EE084987794BD and discuss
the lessons learned.
13. Read Google (2011) and Rohilla (2013). Explore the
topics that are relevant to social media.
260
10
INTERNET EXERCISES
1. Survey several online travel agencies (e.g., travelocity.
com, orbitz.com, cheaptickets.com, tripadvisor.com,
priceline.com, expedia.com, bestfares.com) and compare the social strategies of three of them. How do they
relate to social media?
2. Enter digitalenterprise.org/metrics/metrics.html and
read the material about Web analytics. Prepare a
report.
3. Enter sas.com, rocketsoftware.com/brand/rocketcorvu, balancedscorecard.org, and cio.com. Find
demos and examples of how to use the various tools and
methods to evaluate SC projects. Write a report.
4. Find information about ROI, metrics, and cost–benefit
tools as they relate to social commerce. See bizshiftstrends.com/2014/05/04/redefining-social-media-roiapply- relevant-metrics-justify-manage-businesscase-scrap-traditional-methods,
matrixsolutions.
co.uk, matrixsolutionsglobal.com, and matrixgambia.com. Write a report.
5. Enter advertising.com. Find the innovative/scientific
methods offered that are related to social commerce.
6. Enter gillin.com/blog and find information related to
enterprise applications of social commerce technologies. Write a report.
7. Enter comblu.com. Explore its products and discuss the
role of a social marketing dashboard.
8. Enter
marketresearch.about.com/od/market.
research.brand.equity/a/Effective-Use-Of-TwitterIn-Market-Research.htm. Write a report on what you
have learned.
9. Enter visibletechnologies.com and identify all products
related to this chapter. Summarize the major capabilities
of each.
10. Enter surveymonkey.com and identify materials related
to social media market research. Write a report.
11. Enter sysomos.com and find tools and materials for
social media monitoring. Write a report.
12. Watch IBM Smarter Commerce’s video titled “Advanced
Social Analytics Platform” (3:44 minutes) at youtube.
com/watch?v=AxzqyMx0Mm8. Write a report about
the platform’s features.
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
1. Assignment for the Opening Case
Read the opening case and answer the following
questions.
(a) How can market research increase the competitive
edge of the company?
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Strategy and Performance Management in Social Commerce
(b) Why did the company decide to choose social media
to conduct market research?
(c) Compare the old research methods they used with the
social media-based methods. Comment on the
differences.
(d) Comment on the dog food case study.
Enter youtube.com/watch?v=qh1drAg1jdg and watch
the video (8:33 minutes) titled “Gartner Hype Cycle.”
Write a summary of the major points and complete the
included assignment.
Conduct a search on the various methods and tools available in the monitoring-metrics-analysis-interpretation
activities of social media. Begin your project by checking
quantcast.com, visibletechnologies.com, and google.
com/analytics. Prepare a class presentation and a report.
The purpose of this exercise is to find how Gatorade’s
social media Mission Control works. The class reads the
articles by Zmuda (2010) and Ostrow (2010) and finds
similar sources. Describe how Mission Control conducts
its monitoring at Gatorade (what data, when, how).
Explain why and how they do sentiment analysis. Write a
report. For a free e-book by Salesforce highlighting 10
command centers created by leading organizations, see
exacttarget.com/sites/exacttarget/files/10-Examplesof-Social-Media-Command-Centers.pdf.
Survey the offerings of companies that deal with the topics presented in this chapter (e.g., social media monitoring, analysis and mining, reputation management,
sentiment analysis). Start with Google Analytics.
In February 2014, Facebook paid $19 billion to acquire
mobile messaging start-up WhatsApp. Research the
details of the deal and prepare a justification paper for the
price paid. Discuss your findings. In addition, research
why Snapchat Corp. rejected Facebook’s $3 billion bid in
2013.
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Implementing Social Commerce
Systems
11
Content
Learning Objectives
Opening Case: Domino’s Employees Post Vulgar
Videos on YouTube ...................................................................... 265
Upon completion of this chapter, you will be able to:
1. Describe the major issues in the social commerce implementation landscape.
2. Discuss the security and fraud protection issues in social
commerce.
3. Describe legal, privacy, security, and cyberbullying
issues.
4. Describe the major technological issues including integration, systems development, and software and vendor
selection.
5. Discuss the major employee-related implementation
issues ranging from wasting time to participation, and the
related guidelines and policies.
6. Discuss organizational impacts including transformation
to social business.
7. Discuss implementation issues related to SMEs and risk
management.
8. Discuss the major success and failure factors, policies
and guidelines, and adoption of social commerce.
9. Describe the future of social commerce.
11.1
Social Commerce Implementation Issues ...................... 267
11.2
Security and Fraud Protection in
Social Commerce ............................................................. 268
11.3
Issues of Legality, Privacy, Cyberbullying,
and Ethics...... ................................................................... 272
11.4
Technological Issues ........................................................ 276
11.5
Employee-Related Implementation Issues .................... 278
11.6
Organizational Issues and the Impacts
of Social Commerce ......................................................... 279
11.7
Other Implementation Issues ......................................... 281
11.8
Successes, Failures, and Lessons Learned ..................... 283
11.9
The Future of Social Commerce..................................... 284
References .................................................................................... 287
OPENING CASE: DOMINO’S EMPLOYEES
POST VULGAR VIDEOS ON YOUTUBE
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this
chapter (doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_11) contains supplementary
material, which is available to authorized users.
Domino’s Pizza is a global company with 11,700 stores
worldwide (May 2015 data). The company is a world leader
in pizza delivery with a significant business in home delivery
pizza. Domino’s pioneered practices including online ordering and expanded product variety, such as hot sandwiches.
The company had a good reputation until 2009.
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2_11, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
265
266
The Problem (The Incident)
In April 2009, during a slow workday at the Conover, NC,
Domino’s Pizza franchise, two employees, Kristy Hammonds
and Michael Setzer, created five prank videos and posted
them on YouTube. The video went viral, amassing millions
of views. These videos, which Hammonds filmed, featured
Setzer engaged in a variety of acts of food contamination,
including putting slices of cheese up his nose and then on a
sandwich and spreading nasal mucus on a sandwich. Over
the course of the video, numerous orders were tampered with
before being boxed up for unsuspecting customers who had
no idea what had taken place. These videos would obviously
be problematic from any standpoint, but the fact that they
featured Domino’s employees in uniform engaged in these
acts clearly represented a significant problem for the company. Furthermore, during the longest video by the pair of
workers, titled “Domino’s Pizza Special Ingredients,”
Hammonds jokes during the contamination of the food
(seemingly intended for delivery to an identified customer)
about this being “business as usual” and that’s how they
“roll” at Domino’s.
Six hours after being posted, the videos were featured on
the consumer advocacy site Consumerist (consumerist.
com). According to Peeples and Vaughn (2009), Consumerist
readers alerted Domino’s to the situation and helped pinpoint
Hammonds and Setzer and the store where they worked.
However, the damage had already been done, even though
YouTube pulled the videos; the links continued to spread
rapidly across the Internet due to people downloading and
reposting on numerous other sites. The precise number of
times the videos were viewed is unknown; however, by the
Wednesday following the release of the videos all five had
trended to the top results on YouTube, and one of the videos
had already been viewed over a million times (Peeples and
Vaughn 2009). The reactions by customers were exceptionally
rapid (there was a “tidal wave of public disgust” (see briansolis.com/2009/04/dominos-effect), with the online research
site YouGov.com (today.yougov.com/opi) reporting that
Domino’s reputation had trended to negative. Even though
the videos were pulled by Wednesday because of a copyright
claim from Hammonds, they continued to damage the
Domino’s brand, with many stores rapidly losing business.
The Solution (The Company’s Response)
Domino’s was unprepared for this disaster; according to VP
of Corporate Communications Tim McIntyre, the company
was in the process of putting together a social media communications team, and was within a week of launch at the
time of the incident. Consumerist readers assisted Domino’s
in tracking down the perpetrators using a geolocation tech-
11
Implementing Social Commerce Systems
nique to identify the location from which the videos were
uploaded. Using this information, the firm identified the perpetrators rapidly and Domino’s immediately fired them,
requiring them to write a letter explaining the videos.
Domino’s also threatened legal action, after ascertaining that
no contaminated food had actually been served to customers.
Domino’s also shared information about this process with
the Consumerist site, garnering positive reactions from the
site’s readers, as well as those on Domino’s own website. In
addition, the company posted an apology on the site, detailing the process they used. (The employees were arrested
later and charged with a felony).
Perhaps the most effective action that was taken by
Domino’s, involved CEO Patrick Doyle making a video, apologizing for the situation and saying that the two employees
have been fired and arrested. This video, which was uploaded
to YouTube under the same keywords used in the vulgar videos, offered a simple message to viewers who had seen the
original videos. By using the same keywords, people searching for the damaging videos would be shown links to the apology video instead. The key message was: We (Domino’s) did
not do this. We are sorry. And Domino’s wants to earn your
trust back. This video was highly effective, given that it offered
a direct response to both Domino’s customers and to others
who had seen the videos, and it also explained what Domino’s
was doing about the problem. Domino’s also expedited its
social media expansion plans by immediately starting a corporate Twitter account, giving customers direct access to the
company’s top management and offering a way to directly
respond to customers concerned about the videos, as well as
any other issues. Domino’s is now actively participating in
social media by doing everything from social CRM to sharing
promotions with its online social community.
The Results
Domino’s immediate reaction was similar to what we
described in Chap. 5 (reputation management), but the company also implemented other measures. One of the most
obvious points is that Domino’s did not have an active social
media monitoring system in place, which is an absolute
necessity for such a large retailer. According to McIntyre, the
incident gave Domino’s the impetus to start a social media
communications and monitoring program (see Chap. 10).
This program started with a presence on Twitter and
Facebook and was followed by an orderly entry into other
online avenues, including using individual Twitter feeds for
senior management; hiring a social media specialist in order
to manage and maintain an up-to-date social media presence,
identifying potential issues; and refining their use of realtime social listening and monitoring software. Domino’s also
started practicing proactive customer interactions via social
11.1
Social Commerce Implementation Issues
media, expanding their initial success with direct customer
engagement and using social media as a means of rebuilding
their brand and maintaining communications. Today,
Domino’s has an active presence on Facebook and Twitter as
well as an official YouTube channel, in addition to active
listening strategies in other social media sites.
Note that some social media gurus give “high marks” to
Domino’s about their response (see usatoday30.usatoday.
com/money/industries/food/2009-04-15-kitchen-prdominos-pizza_N.htm?POE=click-refer).
Sources: Based on Clifford (2009), Jacques (2009),
Peeples and Vaughn (2009), and Domino’s Pizza (undated).
267
What Is Implementation?
Implementation is the process of carrying out, executing, or
practicing a business plan. As such, implementation encompasses all the activities involved in getting the social commerce
system operating properly, including installation, running,
testing, and making necessary changes and updates. Although
the word deployment is sometimes used to mean implementation, some view deployment as just one activity in the implementation process, as we do in this book.
The Implementation Process
and Its Major Issues
LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE CASE
We can learn several lessons about the use of social
media from the opening case. The first and most obvious is that employees are all spokespeople for the
brand; therefore, they should all be trained in social
media use (and misuse) to make them aware of the
potential damage caused by the use of negative brand
videos. A seconds lesson is that reputation-management response should use the same social media channels, allowing the company to specifically target the
desired audience. Third, whether implementing social
media or not, a company needs to explicitly monitor
activities (Chap. 10) and be ready to respond immediately in case of a crisis, given the speed of content
spreading on social media and the potential for damage. This should include the use of real-time social
media monitoring and specialist knowledge of social
media. The final lesson that can be learned is that, in
the social media world, companies do not have the
luxury of long response times that may exist in more
traditional media. Instead, firms must immediately
respond to this type of crisis in order to be effective.
For social analytics tactics that can be deployed ahead
of a crisis, see Hemann and Burbary (2013). The
Domino’s incident demonstrates several issues involving social media implementation: security, employee
behavior, company policies regarding social media,
and technology issues, all of which, and several other
issues, are the subjects of this chapter.
11.1
SOCIAL COMMERCE
IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES
Once organizations formulate and complete a social commerce strategy, they need to carry out the agreed upon strategy and tactics in what is referred to as implementation.
The implementation process depends on what system is put
in place. For example, the process for conducting social
media marketing differs from that used for conducting
enterprise recruiting using LinkedIn. Nevertheless, there
are similar activities in many types of applications.
Additionally, several managerial and technical activities
and issues exist in most of the applications, which are
briefly described next.
The Major Issues and Activities of Social
Commerce Implementation
In Chap. 10, we introduced some activities related to implementation, such as developing justification and improving
processes. Here, we deal with a slew of other issues, which
are summarized in Fig. 11.1. In the figure, we marked the
section numbers in this chapter where the specific issues are
presented. Management needs to consider these issues, since
they may determine the success of failure of social commerce. Note that some of the issues relate to the limitations
and risks of social commerce.
For implementation issues related to marketing activities
on Facebook and Twitter, and for social enterprise tactics,
see the 115-slide show presentation titled “Social Media
Implementation” at slideshare.net/fated82/social-mediaimplementation-slides.
Implementation Activities
Here, we present a brief description of the major implementation issues. For additional discussion, see Safko (2012) and
Chui et al. (2009). For a comprehensive presentation, see
Wollan et al. (2011).
Justification/Economics
The first issue is to find out if you need to get involved
in a social commerce project(s). Then you must justify
268
11
Implementing Social Commerce Systems
Fig. 11.1 The major
implementation issues of social
commerce
your need. This issue is part of strategy formulation, and was
discussed in Chap. 10 under the heading “The SC Justification
Process.”
Security Issues
Public social networks run on the unprotected Internet, and
consequently suffer from security problems ranging from
poor data protection to denial of service (DoS) and other
attacks by hackers. These issues are discussed in Sect. 11.2.
Legal, Privacy, Cyberbullying, and Ethical Issues
These issues are critical to the success of social commerce.
They are discussed in Sect. 11.3.
Technological Issues
Social commerce uses a computerized system; therefore, its
implementation depends upon the hardware, software, networks, website design, and other related issues presented in
Sect. 11.4.
Employee-Related Issues
Employee-related issues include assuring the quality of the
user-generated content, overcoming their reluctance to participate, preventing them from wasting time surfing the
Internet during working hours, and more (see Sect. 11.5).
Organizational Readiness and Impacts of Social
Commerce
Issues such as how to organize the SC unit within an enterprise and how to deal with changing business processes, as
well as other changes influenced by social commerce adoption, are all part of the implementation considerations. In
addition, potential impacts on marketing, manufacturing,
and people need to be addressed. Furthermore, some technical issues, such as connecting to other information systems,
need to be addressed. These are all described in Sect. 11.6.
Other Implementation Issues
There are several other implementation issues, some of
which are generic. Representative examples are provided in
Sect. 11.7. A major issue is the use of social networks in
SMEs.
Critical Success Factors
Section 11.8 deals with some of the critical success factors
related to implementing social commerce projects. This
includes learning from both successes and failures.
11.2
SECURITY AND FRAUD PROTECTION
IN SOCIAL COMMERCE
It seems that hackers and criminals are in love with social
networks, as social networks frequently are subject to social
engineering attacks (e.g., phishing). Therefore, users’ activities such as disclosing confidential and sensitive information
on publicly accessible, or even internally shared workspaces,
may result in security breaches, with possible losses suffered
by both participating consumers and merchants. For an overview, see Wohlgemuth et al. (2014). For a white paper, see
Dinerman (2011).
Major security issues are discussed next.
Social Engineering and Fraud
Social engineering occurs when criminals use psychology
to persuade unsuspecting people to disclose personal information about themselves, in order to allow the criminals to
gain unauthorized access into the user’s computer, to collect
confidential information for use in illegal activities. The
social engineers (hackers) may also attempt to gain access
to the user’s computer in order to install malicious software
11.2
Security and Fraud Protection in Social Commerce
269
Fig. 11.2 Social engineering: from phishing to financial fraud and crime
that will give them control over the user’s computer. The
major social engineering attack method is phishing several
methods. Typically, a phisher sends an e-mail that appears
to come from a legitimate source, for example, pretexting
(e.g., an e-mail allegedly sent from a friend asking for
money), and diversion theft (when a social engineer convinces a courier company that she/he is the real recipient of
the package but it should be “rerouted” to another address,
whereupon the social engineer accepts the package). The
information that is obtained from a victim, is frequently
used for committing crimes (e.g., sabotaging the network),
mostly for financial gain, or for posting advertisements
(e.g., the social engineer creates a problem in the network
and poses as a security consultant offering to help). The
growth rate of vulnerabilities and the volume of e-mails
result in increasing social engineering activities. For a comprehensive discussion and examples, see webroot.com/us/
en/home/resources/tips/online-shopping- banking/
secure-what-is-social-engineering. A typical social engineering process is shown in Fig. 11.2.
As you can see in the figure, phishers (or other criminals)
obtain confidential information by using methods ranging
from hacking to physical theft of information. The stolen
information (e.g., credit card numbers, users’ identity) is
used by the thieves to commit fraud for financial gain, or it is
sold in the underground Internet marketplace to another set
of criminals, who then use the information to conduct financial crimes. For details, see Goodchild (2012). In this section, we will describe how phishing, which is a subset of
social engineering, is conducted.
Social Phishing
In the field of computer security, phishing is defined as a
fraudulent process of acquiring confidential information,
such as credit card or banking details, from unsuspecting
computer users. According to webroot.com/us/en/home/
resources/tips/online-shopping-banking/secure-what-issocial-engineering, “a phisher sends an e-mail, IM, comment, or text message that appears to come from a legitimate,
popular company, bank, school, or institution.” However,
such site is corrupted. Once the user enters the corrupted
website, he or she may be tricked into submitting confidential information (e.g., being asked to “update” his or her profile). Sometimes phishers install malware to facilitate the
extraction of information. For an interesting novel that “cries
out an alarm about cyber security,” read “Marlins Cry A
Phishing Story” by Swann (2012). The process of Web-based
phishing is illustrated in Fig. 11.3
For a discussion of what phishing is and how to recognize
it, see ehow.com/how_7350964_recognize-phishing.html.
EMC/RSA (2014) provides comprehensive coverage of
phishing with statistics and forecasts. Also see RSA Monthly
Fraud Report (September 2014) at emc.com/collateral/
fraud-report/rsa-online-fraud-report-0914.pdf.
Example: Using Fake Netflix
Casti (2014a) describes a phishing scam on Netflix’s brand
where users were tricked into contacting phony customer
service representatives and handing over personal data. This
has led to copycat scammers. Scammers have targeted other
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Implementing Social Commerce Systems
Fig. 11.3 How phishing is accomplished
companies, such as AT&T and Comcast, by attracting users
to fake websites via phony sponsored ads. Another typical
scam that is preying on trusting customers is where targeted
users will see a phony webpage similar to the Netflix login
page (e.g., via a link in a phishing e-mail, pop-up ad, etc.).
When a user enters their Netflix account information into the
fake site, they see a message that their Netflix account has
been suspended due to “unusual activity” and then are provided with a fake “customer service” number for the customer to call. When the user calls that number, a
“representative” recommends purchasing and downloading
“Netflix support software,” which is actually remote login
software that gives the scammers complete access to the
user’s computer, for example, banking information, lists of
passwords, etc. Casti (2014b).
Selling stolen information, like selling any stolen goods,
can be profitable and difficult to stop. Unfortunately, potential e-commerce customers list “the potential risk of fraud,”
and “the mistrust of online merchants that you do not know”
as their primary reasons for not shopping online.
Note that, as companies try to expand their e-businesses
in countries where the legal systems are underdeveloped,
opportunities for fraud expand, making it difficult to conduct
EC and social commerce activities.
There are several different kinds of phishing. One of them,
is spear phishing, which occurs when attackers target specific
individuals by gaining personal data about them through
information they share on the Internet, such as on social networks.
Spear phishing is more dangerous than regular phishing
because the scammers are targeting specific people or organizations, rather than millions of unknown individuals.
Social Media Makes Social Engineering Easy
Social engineering attack tactics have become more diversified with SC (e.g., see Teller 2012 and Ruble 2013). In the
past, social engineers used mostly e-mails to extract information from their victims. Now, however, social media sites
that contain valuable information are major targets for new
attack methods. More users are taking advantage of Web
2.0 applications such as social networking sites, blogs,
wikis, and tweeting. As a result, malware authors, identity
thieves, and other criminals are exploiting the vulnerabilities in the applications’ security, see Mello (2013).The most
popular sites, such as Facebook and Twitter, are attacked
most frequently.
Social networking sites are vulnerable and fertile areas
for hackers and con artists to gain a user’s trust, according
to the following study by Danish-owned IT security company CSIS.
Example: The CSIS Security Group Research (csis.dk)
Dennis Rand, a security and malware researcher at CSIS
designed the following experiment:
1. Using the name “John Smith,” he created a fake profile on
LinkedIn.com.
2. He selected thousands of people at random, inviting them
to join his network.
11.2
Security and Fraud Protection in Social Commerce
3. He targeted several companies and posed on their enterprise social network as an ex-employee.
4. Many existing employees of these companies, who were
included in the randomly selected sample, accepted the
invitation, creating a network of over a thousand trusted
members for Rand.
5. Rand communicated with the members, thereby collecting their e-mail addresses. He harvested confidential data
from some of the members. He also sent links (e.g., recommendations to videos), some of which were clicked on
by the recipients.
The objective of the experiment was to study the potential
security risks in using social networks. For example, messages may include links to malware in attachments which
may be opened since they come from trusted friends. Some
social networks do not even encourage users to select strong
passwords and change them periodically. At the end of the
experiment, Rand sent an e-mail to all participating members, explaining the purpose of the experiment. Then he
closed the “John Smith” profile. See Rand (2007) for details.
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For the top 5 social media scams, see Norton (undated).
Spam in Social Networks and in the Web
2.0 Environment
Social networks attract spammers due to the large number of
potential recipients and the less secured Internet and social
network platforms. Spammers like to attack Facebook in
particular. Another problem area is blog spam.
Automated Blog Spam
Bloggers are spammed by automatically generated advertisements (some real and some fake) for items ranging from
herbal Viagra to gambling vendors. Blog writers can use
software tools to ensure that a human, and not an automated
system, posts comments on their blogs.
Examples
Some examples of spam attacks in social networks (social
spam) are:
For phishing attacks on social networks, see Lemos (2014).
How Hackers Are Attacking Social Networks
Hackers are exploiting the trusted environment of social networks that contain personal information (especially
Facebook) to launch different types of social engineering
attacks, e.g., stealing passwords (see Chumley 2013). There
is a growing trend among hackers to use social networking
sites as platforms for stealing users’ personal data.
Examples
Here are some examples of security problems in social
networking:
• Users may unknowingly insert malicious code into
their profile page, or even their list of friends.
• Many anti-spam social networking-related solutions cannot differentiate between legitimate and
criminal requests to connect to a network.
• Facebook and other popular social networking sites
offer free, useful, attractive applications. These
applications may have been built by developers
who used weak security.
• Twitter users are targeted by phishing, hacking, and
spamming (Cluley 2014).
• Scammers may create a fake profile on a social network and use it in a phishing scam.
• In January 2009, Twitter became a target for a
hacker who hijacked the accounts of 33 high-profile
users (including President Obama), sending out
fake messages in their names.
• Instant messaging in social networks is frequently
vulnerable to spam attacks.
• Cluley (2014) describes how Twitter users are being
attacked by phishing attacks and spammers.
Defending Social Commerce Systems
In addition to standard protection of information systems and
EC security systems, one needs to pay special attention to
social commerce application protection. The major areas are:
Protecting Against Phishing
Because there are many phishing methods, there are many
defense methods as well. Illustrative examples are provided
by Wood (2013) and the FTC Consumer Information at consumer.ftc.gov/articles/0003-phishing and scamwatch.gov.
au. For risk and fraud insights, see sas.com/en_us/insights/
risk-fraud.html. For a comprehensive discussion and infographic on how and why social engineering works, including
examples (e.g., phishing, hoaxes), see DuPaul (2013). For an
overview and analysis of global threat activity, see Symantec
Corporation (2014). Another resource to consult is the
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Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG); this “worldwide
coalition unifying the global response to cybercrime across
industry, government and law-enforcement sectors.”
Protection Against Spam
Sending spam that disguises a sales pitch to look like a personal e-mail in order to bypass filters, violates the
U.S. Controlling the Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography
and Marketing (CAN-SPAM) Act of 2003. The Act makes it
a crime to send commercial e-mail messages with false or
misleading message headers or misleading subject lines.
However, many spammers hide their identity to escape
detection by using hijacked PCs, or spam zombies, to send
spam.
Protecting Against Spyware
In response to the emergence of spyware, security companies are continuously inventing new antispyware software.
Antispyware laws, available in many jurisdictions, usually
target any malicious software that is installed without the
knowledge of users. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission
advises consumers about spyware infections and protection.
For details and resources, see ftc.gov/news-events/mediaresources/identity-theft-and-data-security/spyware-andmalware.
The Anti-Spyware Coalition is a group comprised of antispyware software companies and public interest groups,
which is committed to combating the rise of unwanted spyware. The combined experience of the members gives consumers better ways to defend their computers against
unwanted intruders, improves communications, and offers
proposals for strengthening anti-spyware technology (see
antispywarecoalition.org).
Fraud in Social Commerce
Social commerce is infested with fraudulent activities conducted by sellers, buyers, and computer criminals. Social
commerce has some unique aspects that make it a prime
target for fraud. For example, using fake profiles on LinkedIn
or Facebook, criminals can manipulate innocent buyers and
sellers to commit fraud. Further, social networks are attractive targets to phishing and identify theft. An important issue
in fraud is the sales of counterfeit items both in P2P and in
some B2C transactions. For Alibaba’s problem with counterfeiters and their repair strategy, see Chen (2014). For more
details about the CAN-SPAM Act, see spamlaws.com/
federal/can-spam.shtml.
11
Implementing Social Commerce Systems
Fraud Protection
It is necessary to protect both sellers and buyers (consumers) against fraud they may commit against each other. In
their special annual online fraud reports, CyberSource (2012
and 2013) describes the problem of payment fraud committed by buyers, which has cost merchants several billions of
dollars annually. The reports cover the areas of detection,
prevention, and management of online fraud. The reports
also list tools for automatic screening of credit cards. The
world’s first online platform to fight Internet fraud was
launched in China in 2014. According to McCoy (2014), the
system is used to verify consumer complaints, and if they
are legitimate, Internet users will be notified of the scam
websites.
According to Trulioo (2014), the following are common
measures: card verification, address verification, profile
database, rule-based filters, and automated transaction scoring. Trulioo suggested including a social login as an added
security measure.
11.3
ISSUES OF LEGALITY, PRIVACY,
CYBERBULLYING, AND ETHICS
Several important legal, privacy, and ethical issues are
related to social commerce implementation. Here, we
provide only some representative examples.
Legal Issues
The introduction of social commerce may create a host of
legal issues already relevant to computer systems. According
to Saper (2009), the following are some legal issues related
to social media:
• Employees (and students) freely copying or using
UGC, what they see on the Internet, including
copyrighted material;
• Posting of inappropriate or offensive content on
company bulletin boards or blogs (see the opening
case);
• Discrimination in hiring employees through Internet
job postings;
• Badmouthing a company on personal blogs;
• Using Facebook or other social networks, including
those in-house, to discriminate against or harass fellow employees;
• Requirements for backing up electronic communications in the event of litigation;
11.3
Issues of Legality, Privacy, Cyberbullying, and Ethics
• Management forcing employees to use the in-house
social network;
• Electronic communications policies;
• Employees’ expectations of privacy on their office
computers or in their e-mail, and social media
profiles.
View the slide show “Managing Legal Risks in Social
Media” by Manishin (2010) at slideshare.net/gmanishin/
social-media-managing-legal-risks.
Intellectual Property and Copyright: Violations
Social media is built on a free and open Internet. However,
violations of intellectual property laws, intentionally or unintentionally in user-generated content, are fairly common (see
Case 11.1). For example, not requesting or receiving permission from individuals and organizations while creating content about them or using content created by these individuals,
is a common phenomenon and may become a significant
legal liability. Barnes and Barnes (2009) point to legal risks
related to copyright and trademarks as well as to the inappropriate use of data.
Millennial consumers, also known as Generation Y (born
in the 1980s and early 1990s), like companies that distribute
social media content, such as Google, Facebook, and
Amazon, more than they like the companies that produce
and package the content and insist on being paid for doing
so. Case 11.1 illustrates the controversy over users’ free
Internet access to information against the intellectual property rights of content creators presented online.
Case 11.1
SC Application
Internet Blackout against Anti-piracy Laws
On January 18, 2012, Wikipedia led an Internet “blackout.”
For 24 h, users attempting to access Wikipedia pages were
met with a blank screen and a statement beginning, “Imagine
a world without free knowledge.” Wikipedia indicated they
were making the website unavailable for a 24-h period to
protest against two acts that were being debated in the
U.S. Congress at the time. Protests and outcry against the
Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and Protect Intellectual
Property Act (PIPA) had been growing in online and real-life
communities, and Wikipedia led the way in shutting off site
access for a day. Notably, however, Wikipedia’s blackout
was not complete—the blank screen carrying its protest message also informed users that they could access Wikipedia
during the “blackout” via mobile devices. Facebook voiced
273
opposition to SOPA and PIPA, but did not participate in any
blackout or shutdown that day. Google took part in its own
anti-SOPA/PIPA protest, blacking out its own logo on the
Google search page and providing a link to an online petition
against the Acts. Twitter—the largest social microblogging
site—did not join Wikipedia’s voluntary shutdown.
The U.S. Anti-piracy Bills: SOPA and PIPA
The Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) was a bill under consideration in the U.S. House of Representatives, and the Protect
Intellectual Property Act (PIPA) was the analogous bill under
consideration in the U.S. Senate. Both acts were intended to
reduce online piracy. In particular, the bills sought to combat
the illegal online distribution of downloaded films and other
media when that media was hosted on a foreign server. If
these bills were approved, anyone found to have streamed
copyrighted media on more than ten occasions and without
the copyright holder’s express permission could face a jail
sentence of up to 5 years and pay a large fine. This provision
of the bills concerns Wikipedia, as the site could have been
held liable for copyright infringement by other external sites
to which users linked Wikipedia content. Further, SOPA and
PIPA would have forbidden advertisers, ISPs, and companies
processing payments from dealing with any individual or
website alleged to have infringed a copyright.
For and Against Protest Viewpoints
Wikipedia’s protest found many supporters, and sites from
Reddit to Google joined Wikipedia in a show of solidarity—
or so it seemed. All the sites taking part in the protest had a
lot to lose if SOPA/PIPA had been passed, as they could have
been made vulnerable to legal actions relating to third-party
copyright infringements. The fact is that there is no realistic
means of policing or monitoring information on their sites.
Individuals and websites that joined the protests did so,
believing in the freedom of users to access information on
the Internet. However, sites were undoubtedly also acting
out of self-interest, jumping on the hot topic of the day to
generate Web traffic and revenue for themselves. Opinions
against the Wikipedia-led protest centered on the right of
intellectual property owners to protect their work, or alternatively, on the idea that Wikipedia’s protest went about things
the wrong way. Undoubtedly, copyright infringements are
commonplace in the world of social media, having knock-on
effects on creators of copyrighted material and the economy
as a whole.
Implications of the Incident
In the twenty-first century, content is often distributed rather
than sold in a physical format. This has enabled great creative freedom for everyone, from musicians to filmmakers,
and rappers to violinists. Technology has become more
affordable, and access to digital distribution has widened.
Independent musicians, for example, can sell their music on
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iTunes through distributors such as CDBaby for about $50.
This represents a real bargain in comparison to the costs of
creating CDs for distribution. The digital revolution has
opened up the world of media for unprecedented sharing.
However, this opening has come with a reduction in overall
content quality due to the lack of third-party editing. Andrew
Keen’s 2007 book, The Cult of the Amateur: How Today’s
Internet Is Killing Our Culture, argues that increased access
to content creation has generated situations in which the
Internet is awash with poor-quality media, opinions taken as
facts, and a dilution of real knowledge and expertise. Open
access to copyrighted material can also make it more difficult for creative professionals to earn their living doing the
work they love. Perhaps an album, which a musician has
spent 5 years making, should not be freely distributed without that musician’s consent, partly because he or she cannot
earn a living from that freely distributed work. Finally, the
role of large corporations like Apple and Amazon in controlling media distribution cannot be underestimated. Amazon,
iTunes, and similar content distribution channels commonly
take up to half of all proceeds as a sales commission.
Distribution through a large corporation is expensive for the
copyright holder; however, it is often worth it for the broader
distribution the company provides. In a market where millennial consumers are accustomed to paying low prices—or
nothing—for digital media, making a living as a creative
professional becomes more difficult, and our culture suffers
as a result. The protest led by Wikipedia was successful in
raising awareness of two particular pieces of proposed legislation, but not in changing the landscape of the twenty-first
century digital world.
Sources: Based on BBC (2012), Hais and Winograd
(2012), and Keen (2007).
Questions
1. What did Wikipedia’s blackout accomplish?
2. Has Wikipedia damaged its reputation in the process?
3. How can we keep a free and open Internet while protecting the intellectual property rights and copyrights of
social media content?
Privacy Issues in Social Commerce
Privacy means different things to different people. In general,
privacy is the right to be left alone and free from unwanted
intrusions or disturbances in one’s private life or affairs.
Privacy has long been a legal, ethical, and social issue in
many countries. Today, every state in the United States, as
well as many other countries, recognizes the right to privacy,
either by statute or by common law. The definition of privacy
can be interpreted quite broadly. However, the following two
rules have been followed fairly closely in past court deci-
11
Implementing Social Commerce Systems
sions: (1) The right to privacy is not absolute—privacy must
be balanced against the needs of society and (2) The public’s
right to know is superior to the individual’s right to privacy.
These two rules show why it is difficult, in some cases, to
determine and enforce privacy regulations. Online privacy
issues have their own characteristics and policies. One area
where privacy may be jeopardized is discussed next.
Invasion of Privacy
Due to hacking attacks and the policy of some social media
sites (notably Facebook) to collect and sell members’ information to advertisers, there have been many reported cases
of invasion of privacy. For example, in May 2010, IT World
reported that an employee who disclosed his sexual orientation on Facebook – a fact that was previously unknown to his
employer – was fired when the employer discovered the
Facebook post. Facebook’s insufficient security and weak
commercial use of private data (Facebook controls the use
and display of content published on its platform) has been
cited in many other cases as the cause of invasion of privacy.
However, it is worth noting that Facebook is constantly
improving the security and privacy protection on its site. For
guidelines to protect privacy in SC, see Johansson (2013).
Collecting Information About Individuals
Implementing social commerce may require individual
employee or customer data. In the past, the complexity of collecting, sorting, filing, and accessing cases was a built-in protection against misuse of private information. It was simply
too expensive, cumbersome, and complex to invade a person’s
privacy in many cases. The Internet, in combination with
large-scale databases and social networks, has created entirely
new techniques for accessing and using personal data. The
inherent power of systems that are able to access vast amounts
of data can be used to invade privacy or misuse the information. On the other hand, having such information may benefit
a company or even society. For example, by matching records
using a computer program, it is possible to eliminate or reduce
fraud, crime, corporate mismanagement, and so on. However,
what price must the individual pay in terms of loss of privacy
so that a company can fight fraud more efficiently? People’s
private information may aid in perfectly matching people with
products, but their privacy may be violated.
The Web and Information Collection
The Internet offers a number of methods to collect private
information from individuals. Here are some of the ways it
can be done:
11.3
Issues of Legality, Privacy, Cyberbullying, and Ethics
• Reading an individual’s social media profile and
postings
• Looking up an individual’s profile in a social
network
• Reading an individual’s e-mails, blogs, or discussion board postings
• Wiretapping employees’ wireline and wireless
communications
• Conducting surveillance on employees
• Asking an individual to complete a website
registration
• Recording an individual’s actions using cookies or
spyware as he or she navigates the Web
Mobile User Privacy
Many users are unaware that their private information can be
tracked through a mobile smartphone or other cellphone. For
example, Sense Networks’ platforms are built upon the use
of data from cellphone companies that track each phone as it
moves from one cell tower to another, from GPS-enabled
devices that transmit users’ locations, and from mobile
devices transmitting information at Wi-Fi hotspots. Such
data can be used in location-based systems, for example.
Note: Location-powered behavioral targeting builds user
profiles, which incorporate behavioral attributes from location data.
What happens when LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, or
Foursquare provide the ability for a GPS-enabled mobile
device user to dynamically share its location status with
others? Will businesses begin to take advantage of these
capabilities to build applications, enabling GPS tracking of
different kinds and support personnel, by leveraging the
location status capabilities already available in their mobile
devices? What are the privacy implications? Who will be
held responsible or legally liable for unforeseen harm resulting from so much awareness and connectivity? Clear rules
for social media sites are needed to govern what social
media can do with the massive amount of personal data they
collect, and how they inform their users about their
practices.
275
tools including social media sites, text messages, chat, and
websites. Examples of cyberbullying include inappropriate
text messages or e-mails, rumors sent by e-mail or posted on
social networking sites, and embarrassing pictures, videos,
websites, or fake profiles (per stopbullying.gov/cyberbullying/what-is-it/index.html). For more information, see
cyberbullying.us and stopcyberbulling.org.
Cyberbullying Through Social Media
Cyberbullying through various social media outlets is on the
rise because we are a civilization dependent on social media
of communication. It is easy to hide behind a computer and
post hurtful comments (per socialnomics.net/2011/05/15/
cyber-bullying- rises-but-social-media-fights-back ).
Typical forms of cyberbullying include: (1) harassing another
person; (2) exploiting someone in a sexual or violent manner;
and (3) dissemination of false information that can cause
mental or physical harm to others. According to nobullying.
com/bullying-statistics-2014, one study shows that seven
out of ten young people have been victims of cyberbullying.
The MySpace Example
In 2008, a jury convicted a woman for her role in a meanspirited Internet hoax that apparently drove a 13-year-old
girl to commit suicide. The woman, Lori Drew, upset that a
teen named Megan Meier was spreading rumors about her
daughter, created a MySpace account for a fictitious 16-yearold boy and then sent flirtatious messages from him to the
teenage neighbor. After 4 weeks of flirting with Megan, the
fictitious boy sent her a message that the world would be a
better off place without her, and other MySpace members
who were linked to the “Josh Evans” profile also began to
send her negative messages. Subsequently, Meier committed
suicide. According to the prosecution, this was a clear case
of “cyberbullying,” but the case hinged on an unprecedented
and highly questionable application of the Computer Fraud
and Abuse Act. The jury chose not to extend the law. As a
result, felony conspiracy charges were dropped, and Drew
was convicted of a misdemeanor violation. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Lori_Drew.
A similar case is that of the suicide of the popular 17-yearold soccer star Alexis Pilkington, who took her life following
vicious taunts on Facebook. See Long and Gross (2010).
Cyberbullying
Ethics in Social Commerce
According to stopybullying.gov, cyberbullying is “bullying
that takes place using electronic technology.” Electronic
technology includes devices and equipment such as cell
phones, computers, and tablets as well as communication
Several ethical issues are related to social commerce.
Representative ethical issues that may be of interest in SC
implementations include the following:
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11
Implementing Social Commerce Systems
A Facebook Platform
• Accuracy of computer-generated recommendations
• Ethics in social commerce websites and application
design
• Invasion of individuals’ privacy (e.g., by advertisers or e-mail spam)
• Use of intellectual property, including reports and
expertise, without permission from, or payments to,
the creators
• Accuracy of user-generated content
• Use of corporate computer resources for non-workrelated purposes
Personal values constitute a major factor in the issue of
ethical social commerce. An important ethical issue is
human judgment; even though it may be subjective, it is frequently a key factor in social support and recommendations.
Human judgment may lead to unethical decision making;
for example, should an organization employ productivitysavings procedures that are not 100 % accurate? Another
ethical issue is the use of knowledge extracted from people;
for example, should a company compensate an employee
who contributed special knowledge that was used for
improving organizational efficiency? This issue is related to
the motivation to participate in social commerce activities.
It is also related to privacy and copyright. Should people be
informed as to who contributed certain knowledge?
Companies should provide an ethical code for those involved
in social commerce.
11.4
TECHNOLOGICAL ISSUES
A large number of technological issues relate to the deployment of social networking. (Deployment, which refers to the
introduction of new technology into an organization, is a
major aspect of implementation.) Here are some issues to
consider.
Facebook created a platform that allows websites and apps
to share information about users allowing vendors to target
customers on one-to-one basis to tailor offers, features, and
services to each one’s interest and taste—even if that individual has never visited the vendors’ sites before. See more at
developers.facebook.com/docs, mashable.com/2010/04/21/
facebook-open-graph, and developers.facebook.com/docs/
opengraph/overview.
Open Graph
Facebook’s social graph describes people and the interactions they have regarding everything they care about. In
2010, Facebook introduced an early version of “open graph,”
an extension of the social graph (Chap. 3), via the open graph
protocol. The open graph protocol enables developers to
integrate their pages into the social graph.
Social Plug-Ins
Facebook has developed plug-ins that websites and apps can
deploy to make it easy for users to see information about (and
from) their Facebook friends. Users can share things with
their friends without leaving Facebook. One example is the
“Like” button on each website, which allows users to “Like”
content on a website and share it with their Facebook friends.
(See developers.facebook.com/docs/plugins/like-button.)
Social Commerce Tools
Businesses can use a wide range of social media tools to get
more interactive and facilitate engagement—in other words,
to communicate and exchange information with customers.
Businesses are increasingly using these tools to implement
social commerce. See blog.interactiveinsightsgroup.com
for more details. Several tools were presented in Chap. 2.
Here is a description of some tools, set forth by Sommer
(2010), that can be useful for social commerce:
Social Commerce Systems Integration
Several options exist for an organization to integrate social
commerce functionality into its information systems environment. Examples are: (1) adding collaborative technologies and tools; (2) integrating e-commerce data and
applications with social networks; (3) connecting to thirdparty social media modules; and (4) using third-party system
development platforms. The following sections describe
how the Facebook platform can be used for the implementation of social commerce systems.
• Really Simple Syndication (RSS). RSS is a syndication format that allows websites and blogs to distribute their updated, dynamic content as feeds to
users.
• Photo sharing. Photo sharing tools allow users to
upload and post their photographs online to share
them with other users.
• Podcasts. A podcast is a digital audio clip that is
distributed via the Internet for playback on a user’s
11.4
Technological Issues
277
or their development can be outsourced, as Del Monte did
(Chap. 10). Building medium to large applications requires
extensive integration with existing information systems,
such as corporate databases, intranets, and enterprise and
other application programs. Therefore, although the process
of building social commerce systems can vary, in many
cases, it tends to follow a fairly standard format. Figure 11.4
shows the major steps needed to develop a typical social
commerce application.
computer or portable media device such as an MP3
player or an iPod.
• Social news. Social news sites allow users to submit Web pages and articles and have other users
vote on them, with the number of votes determining
which articles are presented on the social news site
(e.g., Digg.com).
• Video sharing. Video sharing allows users to
upload and share videos to video sharing websites
such as YouTube.
Managing the Development Process
Acquisition of Social Commerce Systems
In general, the information system acquisition issue is not
simple, especially when medium- and large-scale projects
are involved. The acquisition approach depends on the business type, the product line, and the budget, as well as the
functionality of the social commerce system. A simple social
commerce system with a few key components can be developed with HTML, Java, or another programming language.
Companies can deploy social commerce using commercial
packages, which are purchased or leased from an application
service provider (ASP), or from a site builder. Larger or special social commerce applications can be developed in-house
The development process illustrated in Fig. 11.4 can be fairly
complex, and must be managed properly. For medium-tolarge applications, a project team is usually created to manage the process and the vendors. Collaboration with business
partners is also critical. Projects can be managed using
project management software (see examples of various
project management software at en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Comparison_of_project_management_software and
reviews of the top project management software at capterra.
com/project-management-software). Best practice management also includes periodic evaluations of system performance. Standard project management techniques and tools
are useful for this task (see project-management.com).
Finally, do not rule out the possibility that implementing a
Project Identification, Justification, and Planning (Step 1)
IT as enabler
From business goals to information needs
System-required functionalities
Need to solve problems
Business
process
restructuring,
redesign
Identify EC projects
Justify EC investments
EC Architecture (Step 2)
Information architecture
Data architecture
Application architecture
Technical architecture
Organization architecture
Feasibility
Development (Acquisition) Options (Step 3)
Business
Partners
Build
How, which methodology
Buy
What, from whom
Lease
What, from whom
Partner
Which partner, how to partner
Join an exchange,
marketplace
Which one (ones)
Testing, Installation, and Integration (Step 4)
Business
Partners
Testing, installation, integration, training, security,
conversion deployment, etc.
Operations, Maintenance, and Updating (Step 5)
Fig. 11.4 The social commerce
application development process
Operations
Maintenance and updating
Replacement
EC
Infrastructure
Management
Vendor management
Project management
Evaluation
Business
Partners
278
11
Implementing Social Commerce Systems
social commerce project may require the restructuring of one
or more business processes. For a social media starter kit, see
Carter (2013). For a software platform for SC, see jivesoftware.com.
site. Data leakage can lead to losses related to litigation,
fines, or even imprisonment of company officials.
11.5
While social networks can be advantageous to support social
CRM, the data related to individuals may not be secure.
Thus, it would not be difficult for an untrusted or
inexperienced employee to transfer proprietary information
to a competitor (intentionally or unintentionally) using a network of friends/business colleagues on a social network site.
For example, after having built up an extended network of
friends/business colleagues through a social media site, it
would not be difficult for an employee to take the company’s
entire sales database with him.
EMPLOYEE-RELATED
IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES
As illustrated in the opening case, there are several social
commerce-related issues that involve employees.
Representative examples are provided next.
Non-work-Related Use of Social Media
Employees are tempted to use social media while at work
for non-work-related purposes. This use can be higher than
work-related uses of the Internet. This problem has several
dimensions. For example, social media can be used to
harass other employees, which poses a legal threat to a
company. Social media can also be used to conduct illegal
gambling activities. Last, but not least, is the time employees waste surfing non-work-related websites, including
social networks.
Employee Reluctance or Resistance
to Participate
Employee resistance or reluctance to use enterprise social
media applications, or contribute to them, can be a serious
problem. Based on the experience of using wikis in a university administration context, issues such as sufficient user
training, resource availability, and skills to support technology should be considered when planning for social commerce deployment.
Quality of Content and Biases of UserGenerated Content
Any user-generated content, including contributions to
Wikipedia, providing online advice, and generating feedback can be of poor quality or biased. An interesting research
topic is how to judge the quality of user-generated content.
Data Leakage and Loss of Data
It is very easy for employees to post confidential information about their company, regardless of its nature—be it
unwittingly or deliberately—in a blog or on a social media
Transferring Data
Social Media Management at Work
Social media, when used in a corporate setting, represents a
mix of rewards (e.g., business opportunities) and risks for a
company. The following are some guidelines that organizations might undertake to properly deal with such a mix of
rewards and risks (per Osterman Research 2011).
Develop Social Media Policies
An organization should develop detailed and thorough policies that focus on establishing acceptable use of social media.
In addition, the policies must specify which functions and
features are permitted, which are not permitted, and so forth.
Monitor Content
An organization should deploy procedures and technologies
that will monitor social media. To prevent malware infections from social media—protect pages with real-time monitoring and removal of all unwanted content. There is a need
to protect against generated malware, and to prevent potentially libelous comments, trade secrets, or other inappropriate content from being sent externally. This chapter’s opening
case illustrates how inappropriate social media content
shared by employees can damage a company’s brand. For a
discussion of polices, see jeffbullas.com/2013/10/22/whatis-the-right-social-media-policy-for-your-company. For a
list of social media policies and guidelines for corporations,
non profits and media companies, see socialmedia.biz/
social-media-policies. Socialmedia.biz also provides best
practices for developing a social media policy, at socialmedia.biz/social-media-policies/best-practices-fordeveloping-a-social-media-policy.
11.6
Organizational Issues and the Impacts of Social Commerce
Archive Social Media Content
An organization should determine the extent to which formal
and informal communications are being sent and received
via social media.
279
nizations. This section briefly examines each of these impacts
as applied to social commerce. For the impact on social commerce using Twitter, see Mohd and Uwandu (2013).
Improving Marketing and Sales Revenue
11.6
ORGANIZATIONAL ISSUES
AND THE IMPACTS OF SOCIAL
COMMERCE
Limited statistical data or empirical research on the organizational impact of social commerce is rarely available
because the field is relatively new. Therefore, the discussion
in this section is based primarily on expert opinions, logic,
and only some actual data.
Existing and emerging Web technologies are offering
organizations unprecedented opportunities to rethink strategic business models, processes, and relationships. The discussion here is also based in part on the generic model of
Bloch et al. (1996), who approached the impact of
e-marketplaces on organizations in general, from a valueadded point of view. Their model divides the impact of
e-marketplaces into three major categories: improving direct
marketing, transforming organizations, and redefining orga-
For digital products—software, music, books/other text,
photo images, and videos—the changes brought about by
social media are dramatic. These are already delivered in
huge volumes over the Internet. New marketing models, such
as group buying, increase sales potential, as described in
Chap. 6. The potential impacts of social media marketing on
marketing and sales are summarized in Table 11.1.
Many of the changes may impact marketing with a provision of a competitive advantage over those that use only traditional direct-sales methods.
Transforming Organizations and Work
A seconds impact is the transformation of organizations to
become social businesses. This topic is championed by IBM,
which helps companies transform themselves to become
social businesses (e.g., see ibm.com/software/collaboration/
Table 11.1 The changing face of marketing
Relationships with customers
Customer needs
Segmentation
Product and service offerings
Old model—mass marketing
Customer is mostly a passive recipient
Only articulated
Mass market and target segments
Branding
Product line and brand extensions and
modification
Marketing and R&D drive new
product development
Traditional branding and co-branding
Pricing
Fixed prices and discounting
Communications
One way “interrupt” marketing
communications, such as advertising
TV, newspapers, billboards
Traditional retailing and direct
marketing
Marketing power
New product development
Advertising
Distribution
Basis of competitive advantage
Communities
Discounts to members in physical
communities
Sources: Based on Evans (2012) and Shih (2011)
New model—one-to-one and customization
Customer is an active content co-producer
Articulated and inferred
Target marketing is to individuals
Segments looking for customized solutions and segmented targets;
one-to-one targets
Customized products, personalized services
R&D focuses on developing the platforms that allow consumers to
customize based on customer engagement and input
The customer’s name as the brand (e.g., My Brand or Brand 4
ME)
Brand image is shaped by customer’s opinion online
Customers influence pricing (e.g., via blogs or social network
participation, tweeting, and group buying)
Dynamic pricing used for various customer segments
Integrated, interactive, and customized marketing communication,
education, and entertainment; use of avatars as chat bots
Innovative, viral, on the Web, social ads, wireless devices
Direct (online) distribution via social marketing and innovative
models
Marketing finesse and “capturing” the customer as a “partner”
while integrating marketing, operations, market research, CRM,
and R&D
Discounts to members of social networks and groups
280
social/business). IBM sells software for social businesses and
provides several interesting white papers on the topic. Here,
we look at five key topics: organizational learning, changing
the nature of work, restructuring business processes, change
management, and the structure of the social commerce unit.
For a framework for research on social media and business
transformation, see Aral et al. (2013).
Technology and Organizational Learning
Rapid progress in social commerce will force a Darwinian
struggle: To survive, companies will have to learn and
quickly adapt to the new technologies. This struggle will
offer them an opportunity to experiment with new products,
services, and business models, which may lead to strategic
and structural changes. An example is the newspaper
industry, where losses, bankruptcies, and consolidations are
regular events. These changes transform the way in which
business is done. We believe that as social commerce progresses, it will have a large and long-lasting impact on the
strategies and operations of many organizations and
industries.
In summary, corporate change must be planned for and
managed. Before getting it right, organizations may have to
struggle with different experiments and learn from their
mistakes.
The Changing Nature of Work
The nature of some work has been restructured already by
the Social Web. For example, recruiting is moving to social
networks and video ads are reshaping advertising.
Crowdsourcing is an important tool for improved design and
idea generation (Chap. 8). The upheaval brought on by
changes due to social commerce creates new opportunities
and new risks, and is forcing people to think about their
careers and salaries in new ways.
The social age company will have to view its core of
essential workers as its most valuable asset. Human capital
and social capital are as important as physical assets.
Therefore, companies will have to constantly provide
employees with all means needed to expand their capabilities. For details, see Boutros and Purdie (2013).
Restructuring Business Processes
By using technology and reorganization tools, a company
can prepare a work analysis of its operations, including interactions and transactions with its business partners, then
devise an improved organizational structure and business
processes that are an alternative to the existing ones. Such
11
Implementing Social Commerce Systems
solutions may include new job descriptions and workflows.
Several technologies, including business process reengineering and business process management, are available for such
restructuring. Business process reengineering (BPR) is a
methodology for conducting a comprehensive redesign of an
enterprise’s processes, and business process management
(BPM) is (1) a method for business restructuring that combines workflow systems and redesign methods, covering
three types of interactions: people-to-people, systems-tosystems, and systems-to-people; and (2) a holistic management approach focused on aligning all aspects of an
organization with the wants and needs of its customers and
partners. It promotes business effectiveness and efficiency,
while striving for innovation, flexibility, and integration with
technology. For more details, see vomBrocke and Rosemann
(2015), and Dumas et al. (2013).
Change Management
Implementing a social commerce project, especially if it
involves major restructuring, introduces changes to organizations that must be managed properly. Change management “is a structured approach to shifting/transitioning
individuals, teams, and organizations from a current state to
a desired future state. It is an organizational process aimed at
empowering employees to accept and embrace changes in
their current business environment” (per Rajput et al. 2012).
According to change-management.com/tutorial-definingchange-management.htm, a commonly accepted definition
of change management is “the process, tools, and techniques
to manage the people-side of change to achieve the required
business outcome…. Change management incorporates the
organizational tools that can be utilized to help individuals
make successful personal transitions resulting in the adoption and realization of change.”
A formal organizational change management should
begin, according to Rajput et al. (2012), “with a systematic
diagnosis of the current situation in order to determine both
the need for change and the capability to change. The objectives, content, and process of change should all be specified
as part of a Change Management plan.” In addition, a “successful change management is more likely to occur if the
following are included” (per Rajput et al. 2012):
• “Benefits management and realization to define measurable stakeholder aims, create a business case for
their achievement (which should be continuously
updated), and monitor assumptions, risks, dependencies, costs, return on investment, benefits and cultural
issues affecting the progress of the associated work.
11.7
Other Implementation Issues
• Effective communications that inform various
stakeholders of the reasons for the change (Why?),
the benefits of successful implementation (What is
in it for us, and you?) as well as the details of the
change (When? Where? Who is involved? How
much will it cost? etc.).
• Devise an effective education, training and/or skills
upgrading scheme for the organization.
• Counter resistance from the employees of companies and align them to overall strategic direction of
the organization.
• Provide personal counselling (if required) to alleviate any change-related fears.
• Monitoring of the implementation and fine-tuning
as required.”
For additional information, see Boutros and Purdie
(2013). For a comprehensive guide to generic change management, see Cameron and Green (2012).
How to Organize a Social Commerce Unit
in a Company
If a company is engaged in social commerce, it may have
several full-time employees working in this area. The question is how to organize a social commerce unit. The best
organizational structure depends on factors such as:
• The absolute and relative size of the social commerce workforce
• The nature of the social commerce projects (e.g.,
marketing, recruiting)
• The existing organizational structure of the
company
• Whether or not the company is a pure-play Internet
company (only existing online)
• The nature of the products/services sold by the
company
• The internal politics of the organization
• The budget of the social commerce workforce
These factors need to be considered. Most likely, the
social commerce unit will be a part of the marketing department. Large retailers (e.g., McDonald’s) have an independent social commerce department.
For how social entrepreneurship works, see Bornstein and
Davis (2010).
281
11.7
OTHER IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES
Several other topics are related to implementation.
Examples are:
• Adoption of technology.
• Implementation of B2B social networks.
• The issues of social software selection, adoption,
and usage patterns (see searchunifiedcommunications.techtarget.com/feature/SocializeComparing-enterprise-social-software-vendors).
• Corporate culture and social commerce project
implementation.
• Information flow.
• Implementation in small and medium companies.
• Risk factors and their analysis.
Here we will discuss the last two topics only. For other
topics, see Shih (2011) and Safko (2012).
Implementation Issues in SMEs
Most of the social commerce implementation examples provided here and in other books involve large companies. The
same is true of success stories provided by software vendors.
An interesting question is: What are small and medium
enterprises doing in social commerce? According to several
reports (e.g., Leggatt 2010), even small companies can succeed in social commerce. We demonstrate this via the following examples.
Examples: Small Businesses Conducting Social
Commerce on Facebook
Here are four examples of how small businesses are using
social media (see Lai 2011):
• The photographer and owner of Studio Seven, Lydia
Schuster, started her business solely on the belief that
Facebook would work for her. She had more than 600
Facebook friends and had always received positive feedback about the photos she posted on her personal
Facebook page. She then started her Facebook business
page; to attract customers, she offered some incentives,
such as the first person who reviewed a new photo would
get a photo sitting at no charge. As her reputation grew,
she started acquiring more fans, and her photos received
thousands of votes. Schuster said she thinks that people
today look on photographers’ Facebook pages instead of
282
on professional websites. (See facebook.com/
studiosevenMo?sk=photos).
• Portland Nursery (portlandnursery.com) is doing some
philanthropy work online. This includes a social voting
photo contest and an online matching donation program,
which includes promoting the campaign via e-mail and
Facebook (see prweb.com/releases/prweb2011/10/
prweb8875301.htm).
• Virginia McCoskrie, owner of Smockingbirds, started a
weekly giveaway on her Facebook page. People need to
comment on photos in order to enter their name into a
drawing. Since she started the drawing, she has gained
more people as fans of her business page, and her business has grown dramatically (see smockingbirdsgifts.
com/about-us).
• Center Court Office Supplies uses its Facebook page to
update its customers on what is new in the store and about
any promotions being offered. The company is able to
decide on promotions and run them quickly. Networking
has helped the small store (see facebook.com/
centercourtoffice).
For a beginner’s guide to social media for small businesses, see socialmediaexaminer.com/social-media-guidesmall-businesses. For a discussion on the usefulness of
social media for small businesses, see forbes.com/sites/
michaelfertik/2014/08/21/is-social-media-worth-it-forsmall-businesses. For how small businesses are using social
media (with an infographic), see blog.hootsuite.com/howsmall-businesses-are-using-social-media. For 20 social
media marketing solutions for small businesses, see businessnewsdaily.com/5782-social-media-marketing.html.
For a comprehensive guide to implementing a small business
social media strategy, see investopedia.com/university/
implementing-small-business-social-media-strategy.
Some Strategy Issues for SMEs
There are several strategic issues that SMEs may need to
address. Here are some related questions, some of which
apply to large companies as well.
• Which is better for social media marketing: Facebook,
Twitter, or others?
• How do you select a social media site(s) on which to
advertise or sell?
• Do you need an internal private network? Why or why
not?
• How do you generate constant traffic to your social commerce site? See five ways of doing so at ecommerceweekly.com/tips/5-tips-to-increase-traffic-to-your-ecommerce-site. For seven strategies to increase traffic,
see
postcron.com/en/blog/e-commerce-7-strategiesincrease-traffic-visibility-sales.
11
Implementing Social Commerce Systems
• How can social media work for small businesses? How
can a company with a page in a social network have a sufficient number of fans and friends and have these people
participate?
For a discussion on these questions, see Macarthy (2013)
and Gratton and Gratton (2012).
A Small Number of Followers
One of the biggest challenges for almost all brands is the
number of followers garnered by the brand. Unless a brand
has a national reputation like Starbucks, Coca-Cola, and
McDonald’s, it may not be easy for the brand to acquire millions of fans. Hiring a consultant to help is not a bad idea, but
it may be expensive for small and even some medium companies. Reading books, surfing the Internet, and posting
questions asking what to do on Yahoo’s “Answers” and other
Q&A sites, can help. Another way to draw traffic is to build
a “thought leaders within their niche” and show your expertise in social media by answering questions on Q&A sites,
reviewing books on your specialty, writing blogs, and posting slide show presentations and videos on YouTube.
Risk Factors and Analysis
Although social commerce presents many opportunities for
organizations, its deployment may involve some potential
risks and possible complex implementation issues (Steinhart
2009). Concerns and issues are related to both companies
engaged in social commerce activities and to individuals
who participate in them.
Interfacing with social media is not without risks. Aligning
a product or a company with sites where content is user-generated and has not been checked or filtered, may introduce
some risk. A company is a good candidate for social commerce if it has positive customer relationships and strong
positive feedback, and if it is willing to have customers share
this feedback, whether it is good or bad. If, however, the
company worries about what its customers might say, the
business may not be ready for social commerce.
Another potential risk is a bias due to a few contributors
submitting most of the content. For example, in an analysis
of thousands of submissions over a 3-week period on the
site Digg.com, the Wall Street Journal reported that onethird of the stories that made it to Digg’s homepage were
submitted by 30 contributors (out of 900,000 registered
members), and that a single user on Netscape was responsible for 13 % of all stories that reached the most popular
list the top posts on that site. Such distribution may result in
bias in any user-generated content, see wsj.com/articles/
SB117106531769704150.
11.8
Successes, Failures, and Lessons Learned
11.8
SUCCESSES, FAILURES,
AND LESSONS LEARNED
Many vendors, consultants, and experts try to assist companies to succeed in deploying social commerce. Here are
some representative issues and sources for further study.
A Strategy for Social Commerce
Implementation Success
To succeed in implementing a social commerce project,
especially in medium and large companies, an implementation process needs to be properly planned with a deployment
strategy. A popular deployment strategy involves four steps:
(1) Learn and understand the environment inside and outside
the organization; (2) Experiment with a small-scale project
so you can observe and learn before taking a large risk; (3)
Assess the results of the experiment; and (4) Develop or
abandon the project.
Similar steps are proposed by Gombert (2010): Evaluate
opportunities, prepare a plan, engage your audience, and
measure results. For some guidelines, see Wollan et al.
(2011).
There are many ways to execute the previous strategy
(Shih 2011). For example, a strategy that integrates social
media with e-commerce can drive revenue growth, expand
brand awareness, and increase customer loyalty and
satisfaction.
Some Policies and Guidelines
It is useful for a company that is engaged in social commerce
to have guidelines and policies regarding SC technologies.
Several examples can be found at Macarthy (2013), and at
Giordano (2014). For 57 different social media policies and
resources, see socialmediatoday.com/content/57-socialmedia-policy-examples-and-resources and Gratton and
Gratton (2012). For guidelines to getting a business on the
top social network sites, including Facebook and Twitter, see
Williams and Klein (2014).
Learning from Failures
One can learn from both success stories (available at many
vendors’ websites) and failures.
Example: Walmart’s In-House Social Network
In 2006, Walmart launched a social network similar to
MySpace in order to target younger consumers. The company
283
hired professional actors to pose as teens on the site; however, the actors were “not–so–hip” and young people were
not impressed. In addition, in an attempt to avoid potential
lawsuits, Walmart allowed parents to control page content,
which turned off the young viewers. Walmart pulled down
the site after a short time. (See blogherald.com/2006/10/02/
wal-marts-attempts-at-copying-myspacego-down-in-flames.) Today, Walmart actively uses Pinterest,
Facebook, Twitter, and Google+. For guidelines, see corporate.
walmart.com/social-media-guidelines.
For other examples of failures, download the free white
paper “5 Biggest Blunders to Avoid with Enterprise Social
Software” at socialtext.com/solutions/wp-social-softwareblunders.php. For the example of Starbucks’ Foursquare
failure, see Teicher (2010). For 13 brand and enterprise
social media mistakes, see solutions/wp-social-softwareblunders.php.
For 15 lessons of failing social media strategies, see
Liubarets (2013).
Adoption Strategies
Many companies, consultants, vendors, and researchers provide tips, guidelines, and recipes for success. For example,
Dion Hinchcliffe offers adoption strategies at ebizq.net/
blogs/enterprise/2011/09/five_emergent_strategies_for_
social_business.php.
Revenue Generation Strategies
in Social Commerce
The success of social commerce depends on the ability to
generate revenue and on the ability to solve problems. The
following are some interesting ways social media generates
revenue (see the social commerce business models in
Chap. 1 and Primer A for a more complete list):
1. Offer premium service to individuals for a monthly or
per-service fee.
2. Partner with organizations that pay a monthly service fee.
3. Create affiliations with physical venues where members
can meet (e.g., meetup.com). Physical venues, such as
coffee shops, may have to pay a fee to be affiliated with
social media.
Increased Revenue and Its Benefits
Web 2.0 tools can generate revenue growth, user growth, and
increased resistance to competition in indirect ways, which,
in turn, leads to increased subscriptions, advertising, and
commission revenue.
284
11.9
11
THE FUTURE OF SOCIAL COMMERCE
Many researchers and consultants are speculating on the
future of SC (e.g., adage.com/article/the-media-guy/
reasons-google-exploding-hurt-facebook/228851,
Shih
(2011), and siliconprairienews.com/2010/07/lava-row-snathan-wright-predicts-future-of-social-media). The predictions are diverse, ranging from “SC will dominate EC” to
“it is a buzz word and will disappear soon.” The problem is
that there are many drivers of SC. Tzeng (2014) lists ten statistics that drive the future. These include consumer trust,
better shopping experience, future markets, and the future of
e-commerce in general. Given the popularity of Facebook,
Twitter, Pinterest, YouTube, social games, social shopping,
and social advertising, it is difficult to side with the pessimistic predictions. It looks as if mobile social commerce will be
a major area of growth. Also, several of the social shopping
and social collaboration models could be very successful. In
the enterprise area, there is a trend to have a “social as a service” rather than as an application approach (due to the influence of cloud computing). For stats and trends of social
commerce in the U.S. (2014) looking ahead to 2015—or projecting trends in 2015, see adweek.com/socialtimes/
social-commerce-stats-trends/500895?red=at.
•
•
•
•
Creation of Jobs
•
Social commerce and media companies are creating a huge
number of jobs with many opportunities emerging. As of
2015, skilled SC employees have been in large demand,
commanding very high starting salaries.
IBM’s Watson, Smart Computing and Social
Commerce
There are many opinions on what the future of SC will be.
Instead of presenting them, we decided to end this chapter
by looking at IBM’s Watson supercomputer's cognitive
technology. In February 2011, IBM’s Watson won a
Jeopardy 3-day tournament against two world champions.
This was a great achievement for what IBM calls Social
Business and Smart Computing. Aided by intelligent systems such as IBM’s Pure Systems, Watson will be able to do
much more. According to ibm.com/smarterplanet/us/en/
ibmwatson, Watson may assist people in the following
social commerce-related tasks:
• Personal investment advisor. There is no need to conduct research any longer. All you have to do is to state
your investment goals and Watson will make
recommendations after checking all the needed input
Implementing Social Commerce Systems
data. Given what goals you have, Watson can figure out
what you need, recommending what to buy or sell. Upon
your approval, Watson can conclude the deal for you.
Language translator. In SC, in order to exploit global
opportunities, we sometimes need language translation
for introducing websites to people who understand other
languages. We need it also for translating a natural human
language to a language that a computer can understand.
Today’s automatic machine translation is not optimal, but
it is improving. Computer systems, such as IBM’s Watson,
have powerful natural language processors that are getting even better with time, and thus providing better
machine translation.
Customer service. Providing technical support is critical
for success (e.g., see the iRobot case in Chap. 7). Watson’s
intelligence will enable automatic guides for people who
need help, taking them through all the necessary steps.
The service will be consistent, top quality, and available
in real time.
Q&A service. Watson will provide the best answers to
any business, medical, legal, or personal question you
have. It can answer any question and subsequent
subquestions.
Matchmaking. Watson can match sellers and buyers,
products and markets, job seekers and job offers, partners
to bartering, P2P lending participants or any other match
you can think of. For example, Watson will be able to find
you a contact who will fit your stated goals.
Other applications. Engagement advisor or discovery
advisor, in industries such as healthcare, finance, retail,
and the public sector. see ibm.com/smarterplanet/us/en/
ibmwatson/implement-watson.html. Watson, a Smarter
Planet innovation, is related to IBM’s Smarter Commerce
activities (see ibm.com/smarterplanet/us/en/smarter_
commerce/overview; for a full description, see Lawinski
(2011) and ibm.com/smarterplanet/us/en/ibmwatson/
offerings.html).
Conclusion
The commercial aspects of social networking are rapidly
increasing. Facebook is making billions in revenue and profits. Social commerce is continuously changing the face of
marketing (including advertising), customer service, marketing research, collaboration and more. For a discussion, see
Fallon (2014), and Sickles (2014).
Overall, Quora (quora.com/what-is-the-future-ofsocial-commerce) predicts the total market of SC to be $14
billion in 2015 (up from $9 billion in 2014), a 55 % increase.
Yet, it is only 5 % of the total e-commerce 2015 estimate.
But with a growth rate four times that of e-commerce, the
future is very bright.
Summary
SUMMARY
In this chapter, you learned about the following SC topics as
they relate to the chapter’s learning objectives.
1. The major issues of social commerce implementation.
Four major categories exist for implementation: justification and economics (cost–benefit); acquiring and/or
developing the social commerce systems; assurance of
organizational readiness and performance of necessary
restructuring, training, and so forth; and cultivating the
necessary success factors while avoiding the mistakes.
The process of implementing social commerce, and the
issues involved, are similar to those of e-commerce and
IT. The issues can be divided into technical issues (e.g.,
security, systems integration, scalability, appropriate
design) and nontechnical issues (e.g., justification,
employee resistance to contribute and use social networking, lack of management support, lack of resources, risk
mitigation, and training). Companies need to conduct a
cost–benefit analysis of each project, including risk mitigation. Implementation is an important step in corporate
strategy toward social networking and social media
participation.
2. Internet fraud, phishing, and spam. A large variety of
Internet crimes exist. Notable examples are identity theft
and misuse, stock market fraud, get-rich-quick scams,
malware, and phishing. Personal information is acquired
from people by persuasion (e.g., masquerading as a trustworthy entity) and tricks, and that information is then
sold to criminals who use it to commit financial crimes,
such as fraudulently transferring money to fake accounts.
A related area is the use of unsolicited advertising or sales
via spam.
3. Legal, privacy, and ethical issues. Issues of privacy, ethics, and legal exposure may seem tangential to running a
business, but ignoring them puts a company at risk for
issues such as offending customers and disrupting operations. Social commerce operations are subject to various
types of intellectual property (IP) laws. IP law provides
companies with ways to be compensated for damages or
misuse of their property rights. A social commerce
company needs a well-established principle of protecting
customer privacy: Notify customers before collecting
their personal information; inform them about content
and so on; obtain consent regarding the type and extent of
disclosures; make sure the data are accurate and securely
managed; and apply some method of enforcement and
remedy to deter privacy breaches. In this manner, the
company can avoid litigation and gain the long-term trust
of customers.
4. The major technological issues. The major technological issues include the integration of the SC system with
285
other information systems (including supply chain-related
systems), the platforms provided by social networks, the
major support software tools, and the alternative for systems acquisition.
Because of their cost and complexity, large social
commerce sites need to be developed in a systematic
fashion. The development of a social commerce site
should proceed in steps. First, a social commerce application portfolio is defined based on an organization’s strategy. Seconds, the social commerce architecture is created.
Third, a decision needs to be made whether to build, buy,
or outsource the development. Fourth, the system is
installed, tested, and deployed. Finally, the system goes
into operation and maintenance mode, with changes
being made continuously to ensure the system’s continuing success.
5. The major employee-related issues. These major issues
are: (1) employees using social media sites for non-workrelated uses during working hours, and how to control
such use, (2) employee reluctance to participate and contribute to the use of social media, and (3) the quality of
employee-generated content, and data leakage by employees (intentional or unintentional). Related to these problems are solutions that include content monitoring, social
media conduct policies, and the deployment of management controls.
Companies should expect organizational changes in
all functional areas once e-commerce reaches momentum. Change is particularly evident in the financial services sector, where additional services are continuously
offered online. Social marketing and shopping are other
areas with major potential changes (especially in
F-commerce). E-procurement is changing the purchasing
business processes, while affiliate programs are changing
the paradigm of marketing and business partnerships, and
social CRM is changing customer service.
6. Organizational impacts. The topics in this category
include improving marketing and sales, transforming a
traditional business to a social one, developing organizational learning, restructuring of business processes, conducting change management, and organizing a social
commerce unit in the enterprise.
7. Other implementation issues. Several other implementation issues need to be considered. For example, the
issue of deploying SC systems in SMEs is important. This
includes the role of social networks and the strategy to be
adopted. Another issue is how to increase the number of
fans or followers in a social network. Next is the issue of
risks.
There are several potential risks in deploying social
commerce projects in organizations and/or when using
public social networks. The major risks and concerns are
invasion of privacy, opening the gate for hackers, misuse
286
11
of time and computing resources, revealing an organization’s confidential information, introducing inappropriate
or inaccurate content, the possibility of negative reviews,
and the possibility of biased content by a few contributors
(including bloggers) who supply a large portion of SC
content.
8. Successes and failures of social commerce. Strategies
for the successes of, and ideas on how to eliminate failures in, social commerce implementation are essential.
One area to consider is the use of appropriate policies and
guidelines. Also important are the adoption strategies and
the revenue generation strategies.
9. The future of social commerce. Social commerce is
growing rapidly both as an addition to traditional EC and
IT and as a standalone field. A major area of growth is that
of mobility both within the enterprise and in sales. A special area of growth involves intelligent and smart sociallybased computing. This expansion will occur via social
networks and in innovative SC apps.
KEY TERMS
Business process management (BPM)
Business process reengineering (BPR)
Change management
Cyberbullying
Phishing
Privacy
Social engineering
280
280
280
275
269
274
268
REVIEW QUESTIONS
1. Why is the implementation of social commerce so
complex?
2. What are the major elements of social commerce implementation? (Consult Fig. 11.1.)
3. What factors determine the deployment and adoption of
social commerce?
4. Define social engineering and phishing.
5. What are the employee-related issues of social commerce implementation and use?
6. List the major social commerce system development
and acquisition options.
7. Describe how Facebook and Twitter serve as social
commerce platforms.
8. Name and briefly describe the most commonly used
social commerce tools and platforms.
9. Describe how social commerce improves direct
marketing.
10. Describe how social commerce transforms organizations.
11. Discuss the need for change management in deploying
social commerce projects to e-businesses.
Implementing Social Commerce Systems
TOPICS FOR DISCUSSION AND DEBATES
1. Discuss the need to restructure business processes and
how to do so.
2. Consider how a hacker might trick people into divulging
their personal user IDs and account passwords. What are
some of the ways that a hacker might accomplish this?
What crimes can be committed with such information?
3. Discuss some of the difficulties encountered in eliminating online financial fraud and phishing.
4. What are some of the risks companies may face if they
decide to use public social networks?
5. How can we fight online piracy on open and free social
commerce systems?
6. Debate: Should employee communication via social
media be monitored?
7. Watch the video “Paid Social Media Jobs” (at
slicksocialmediajobs.com/paid-social-media-jobsvideos). Also, go to marketplace.paidsocialmediajobs.
com. Identify the best SC employment opportunities
(jobs). Write a summary.
8. Debate: Employees should not be allowed to surf social
networks during work hours.
INTERNET EXERCISES
1. Visit business.com/starting-a-business and find some of
the SC opportunities available to small businesses. Also
visit the website of the Small Business Administration
(SBA) office in your area. Summarize recent SC-related
topics for SMEs.
2. Conduct research on small businesses and their use of the
Internet for SC. Visit sites such as microsoft.com/en-us/
business and uschamber.org. In addition, enter google.
com or yahoo.com and type “small businesses + social
commerce.” Use your findings to write a report on current
small business SC issues.
3. You want to set up an ethical blog. Find sites that deal
with bloggers’ code of ethics. Also find a suggested guide
to publishing a blog. Make a list of the top 10 ethical
issues for blogging.
4. Find the status of the latest Internet-related copyright legislation. Write a report.
5. Conduct a Google search to learn how to prohibit unsolicited e-mail. Describe how your privacy is protected.
6. Enter scambusters.org and identify and list the antifraud
and anti-scam provided.
7. Enter three social business software platforms (e.g.,
jivesoftware.com) and compare their features. Write a
report.
8. Enter staysafeonline.org. Find information on protection
against spam, phishing, etc. in social networks. Write a
report.
References
287
TEAM ASSIGNMENTS AND PROJECTS
REFERENCES
1. Assignment for the Opening Case
Read the opening case. Find some new material about
the social commerce activities at Domino’s Pizza. Answer
the following questions:
(a) What appears to be the business problem facing
Domino’s in this case?
(b) Why did Domino’s choose to apologize on YouTube?
Should the company have provided a press release
instead?
(c) How effective was the YouTube apology?
(d) What impact did the incident have on Domino’s
social media policy?
(e) Comment on how the Internet and social media platforms have changed crisis communications.
(f) What did you learn about social media adoption from
the case?
2. The class will set up a store on Facebook. For a tutorial, see
youtube.com/watch?v=HQh-f1IYSg4 and read the
accompanying article at creatingawebstore.com/how-tocreate-a-facebook-store-in-minutes.html. In addition, see
apps.facebook.com/aradium. You can use the application
from Ecwid (ecwid.com/payvment) or from Bigcommerce
(go to support.bigcommerce.com/questions/1127/How+
can+I+setup+SocialShop+2+to+sell+on+Facebook
%3 F). Have several members place products there while
others shop. Emphasize SC-oriented applications (such as
voting and ‘Like’). Write a report on your experience.
3. Read two Symantec white papers: (1) “The Risks of
Social Networking” (at symantec.com/content/en/us/
enterprise/media/security_response/whitepapers/the_
risks_of_social_networking.pdf) and (2) “The Rise of
PDF Malware” (at symantec.com/content/en/us/
enterprise/media/security_response/whitepapers/the_
rise_of_pdf_malware.pdf). Prepare a summary of both
and describe how they relate to each other.
4. Each team is assigned to one method of fighting online
fraud that is related to social commerce. Each method
should deal with a different type of fraud (e.g., in banking; see IBM’s ZTIC), identifying suspicious e-mails,
dealing with cookies in Web browsers, protecting credit
cards, securing wireless networks, installing anti-phishing
protection for your browser with a phishing filter, and so
forth.
5. Watch the video “Can Social Media Drive Social Change?
Should It?” at youtube.com/watch?v=s2zhhDrJ8Ik and
debate the issue in class. Write a report.
6. Watch the 7:18 minutes video at youtube.com/watch?
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Appendix: Recommended Resources
for Social Commerce
PART A: COMPREHENSIVE WEBSITES
Part A includes only upper level URLs for each source. The
sources in this part are very comprehensive, including articles, videos, white papers, blogs, and so forth. You enter
these sites and then search for the topic and the type of the
resources you need. For example: “social CRM-white
papers,” or “crowdsourcing-case studies.” You can use
Google of course to do the same, but you may get better
results using our list. Note that some of the sites also cover
topics other than social commerce.
answers.com/topic/social-commerce
bazaarvoice.com
bizreport.com
brint.com
cioinsights.com
ecommerce-guide.com
ecommercetimes.com
volusion.com
shopify.com
fluid.com
entrepreneur.com
forrester.com
ibm.com/social
internet.com
internetretailer.com
linkedin.com/groups (several groups discussing SC)
marketingconversations.com
mashable.com
moz.com
powerreviews.com/resources
practicalecommerce.com
searchcio.techtarget.com
securityweek.com
shop.org
shoppost.com
shopvisible.com
socialmediatoday.com
socialmediaexaminer.com
socialtechonologyreview.com
techcrunch.com/social
techrepublic.com
zdnet.com/blog/hinchcliffe
PART B: MORE SPECIFIC SITES
The resources in this list are more specific than in Part A,
sometimes dedicated to one topic.
informationweek.com/events: Webcasts news, analysis,
advice, and free library for IT and SC.
techtarget.com: A useful content search and creation for
case studies, Webcasts, news, and white papers on SC,
EC, and IT.
searchcio.com: Helps you find many topics.
siliconvalley.com: A place for news, community opinions,
SC companies, links, and more.
gartner.com/it: Mostly IT resource center, but some SC.
bitpipe.com: Comprehensive SC and IT resources.
eseminarslive.com: Large collection of Webcasts, videos,
events, and more on technology topics including security,
mobility, and cloud computing.
cio.com/white-papers: Index of white papers by topic
offered by CIO.com.
thesocialmediaguide.com: A social media glossary.
lithium.com: An integrated social platform (analysis, community, measurement—for customer connection.
socialmediasecurity.com: Podcasts on different topics,
blog, videos, guides and research.
socialtext.com: Socialtext is an endless source of Web social
enterprise products/services.
socialcast.com: A customer case stories, enterprise platform
for connecting people to knowledge, ideas, and resources.
thesocialmediaguide.com: A social media guide for small
businesses.
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
291
292
crowdsourcing.org: Leading source of crowdsourcing and
crowdfunding information. Includes a directory of over
2,000 websites.
slideshare.net: Salesforce desk slide show about social customers (2013).
slideshare.net: Comprehensive slideshow (178 slides) about
transforming retail into social commerce.
ibm.com/socialbusiness/us/en/learn.html?Ink=sbnav :
The characteristics of a social business, the IBM POV
(download).
digitalintelligencetoday.com: A comprehensive online
resource for news, comment and analysis in the field of
social commerce and media.
fastcompany.com: Guides, case studies (see the BMW
case), videos, evaluations, articles, infographics, statistics, and much more.
bloomberg.com: Bloomberg Business week; hundreds of
news items, blog items, regarding social media and
commerce.
toprankblog.com: Articles and more on social media marketing, strategy, blogs, search, and more.
exacttarget.com/products/social-media-marketing :
Products, case studies, Radian6, demo, resources.
Appendix: Recommended Resources for Social Commerce
socialmediaexaminer.com/getting-started: An easy guide
for businesses to start using social media.
digitalintelligencetoday.com: A psychology blog for digital
marketers.
mashable.com/social media: Extensive coverage, guides,
social media, news, companies, articles, videos, and so forth.
simplyzesty.com: The most comprehensive blog, viral videos, tips, and useful social media resources. See video at
youtube.com/user/SimplyZesty.
zdnet.com/topics/social+commerce: Collection of news
articles, blog posts, white papers, case studies, videos and
comments relating to social media and commerce.
smartinsights.com/ecommerce/social-commerce :
Resources, strategy, blog and more.
gigya.com/resource-library: A collection of e-books, webinars, case studies and more.
hongkiat.com/blog/free-ebooks-social-media-marketers:
20 free e-books on social media marketing.
socialmediaB2B.com: Exploring the impact of social media
on B2B.
e-commerce-europe.eu/website: Facts, figures, and
articles.
digitalmarketingdepot.com: Comprehensive resource center.
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
Contents
1
Electronic Commerce: Definitions and Concepts ............
293
2
The Content and Framework of the Field........................
294
3
The Types of E-Commerce Transactions .........................
296
4
Capabilities, Benefits, Limitations, and Drivers
of E-Commerce ..................................................................
297
5
Electronic Commerce Business Models ............................
299
6
Resources for E-Commerce ...............................................
302
Note: This Primer was extracted from Turban et al. 2015.
1. ELECTRONIC COMMERCE: DEFINITIONS
AND CONCEPTS
The field of electronic commerce (EC) is diversified and has
several definitions.
Defining Electronic Commerce
A common definition of electronic commerce (EC) is the
process of buying, selling, transferring, or exchanging products, services, and/or information via computer networks,
mostly the Internet and intranets. For an overview, see en.
wikipedia.org/wiki/E-commerce. EC is often confused
with e-business.
What Is E-Business
Some people view the term commerce as describing only
buying and selling transactions conducted between business
partners. If this definition of commerce is used, the term
electronic commerce would be fairly narrow. Thus, many
use the term e-business instead. E-business refers to a
broader definition of EC, not just the buying and selling of
goods and services, but doing all kinds of business transactions online, such as servicing customers, collaborating
with business partners, conducting e-learning, and supporting electronic transactions within an organization. In this
primer, we use the broadest meaning of electronic commerce, which is basically equivalent to the broadest definition of e-business. The two terms will be used interchangeably
throughout the primer.
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
293
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
294
Electronic Markets and Networks
Table A.1 Classifications of E-commerce
Combination number
Activity
1
2
3 4 5
Ordering, payment
P
D
D D D
Order fulfillment
P
D
D P P
Delivery
P
D
P P D
(shipment)
Type of EC
Non EC Pure EC Partial EC
P = Physical; D = Digital
6
P
D
D
7
P
P
D
8
P
D
D
Major EC Concepts
Several concepts are frequently used in conjunction with
EC. The major ones are as follows:
Pure Versus Partial EC
EC can be either pure or partial, depending on the nature of
its three major activities: ordering and payments, order fulfillment, and delivery to customers. Each activity can be
physical or digital. Thus, there are eight possible combinations as shown in Table A.1. If all activities are digital, we
have pure EC, if none are digital, we have no EC, otherwise,
we have partial EC.
If there is at least one digital dimension, we consider
the situation EC, but only partial EC. For example, purchasing a computer from Dell’s website or a book from
Amazon.com is partial EC, because the merchandise is
physically delivered. However, buying an e-book from
Amazon.com or a software product from Buy.com is pure
EC, because ordering, processing, and delivery to the
buyer are all digitally accomplished. Note that many companies operate in partial EC. For example, Jaguar has a
3-D application for self-configuration of cars online, prior
to ordering (see Vizard 2013). For a video titled
“Introduction to E-Commerce,” see plunkettresearch.
com/video/ecommerce.
EC Organizations
Purely physical organizations (companies) are referred to
as brick-and-mortar (old economy) organizations,
whereas companies that are engaged only in EC are considered virtual (pure-play) organizations. Click-andmortar (click-and-brick) organizations are those that
conduct some EC activities, usually as an additional marketing channel. Gradually, many brick-and-mortar companies are changing to click-and-mortar ones (e.g.,
Walmart, Target).
EC can be conducted in an electronic market (e-marketplace)
where buyers and sellers meet online to exchange goods,
services, money, or information. Any individual company or
even a person can also open a webstore selling products or
services. Electronic markets are connecting sellers and buyers via the Internet or via its counterpart within organizations, an intranet. An intranet is a corporate or government
internal network that uses Internet tools, such as Web browsers, and Internet protocols. Another EC computer environment is an extranet, a network that uses the Internet to link
intranets of several organizations in a secure manner (see en.
wikipedia.org/wiki/Extranet).
2. THE CONTENT AND FRAMEWORK
OF THE FIELD
To illustrate the content of the EC field, let us look at Dell
Computers.
Dell is selling computers online in several ways. Most of
Dell’s sales are either business-to-consumer (B2C) or
business-to-business (B2B). In B2C, online transactions are
made between businesses and individual consumers, such as
when a person purchases a dress at net-a-porter.com or a
computer at Dell. In B2B, businesses make online transactions with other businesses, such as when Dell sells to businesses or purchases materials from suppliers. For more types
see Turban et al. (2015).
AN EC FRAMEWORK
The EC field is a diverse one, involving many activities,
organizational units, and technologies. Therefore, a framework that describes its contents can be useful. Figure A.1
introduces one such framework.
As shown in the figure, there are many EC applications
(top of the figure), several of which are illustrated throughout
the Primer (see Plunkett et al. 2014). To execute these applications, companies need the right information, infrastructure, and support services. Figure A.1 shows that EC
applications are supported by an infrastructure and by the
following five support areas (shown as pillars in the figure):
• People. Sellers, buyers, intermediaries, information
systems and technology specialists, other employees, and any other participants comprise an important support area.
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
295
Electronic Commerce Applications
Direct Marketing Search Jobs Online Banking
E-government E-purchasing B2B Exchanges C-commerce Social Commerce
E-learning M-commerce Auctions Travel Online Publishing Consumer Services Collaboration 2.0
People:
Buyers, Sellers,
Intermediaries,
Service, IS People,
and Management
Public Policy:
Taxes, Legal,
Privacy Issues,
Regulations,
Compliance, and
Technical
Standards
Marketing and
Advertisement:
Market Research,
Promotions,
Web Content,
and
Targeted Marketing
Support Services:
Order Fulfillment,
Logistics,
Payments,
Content, and
Security System
Development
Business
Partnerships:
Affiliate Programs,
Joint Ventures,
Exchanges,
E-marketplaces,
and Consortia
Support Services
(1)
Common business
services infrastructure
(security, smart
cards/authentication,
electronic payments,
directories/catalogs,
hardware, peripherals)
(2)
Messaging and
information distribution
infrastructure
(EDI, e-mail, hypertext
transfer protocol, chat
rooms)
Web 2.0 tools
(3)
Multimedia content
and network
publishing infrastructure
(HTML, JAVA,
XML, VRML)
(4)
Network infrastructure
(telecom, cable TV
wireless, Internet,
VAN, WAN, LAN,
Intranet, extranet)
access, Wi-Fi, WiMax
(cell phones)
(5)
Interfacing
Infrastructure
(with databases,
business partners
applications,
Web Services,
ERP)
Infrastructure
Management
Fig. A.1 A framework for electronic commerce
• Public policy. Legal and other policy and regulatory issues, such as privacy protection and taxation,
are determined by governments. Included as part of
public policy is the issue of technical standards,
which are established by governments and/or industry-mandated policy-making groups. Compliance
with regulations is an important issue.
• Marketing and advertising. Like any other business, EC usually requires the support of marketing
and advertising. This is especially important in B2C
online transactions, in which the buyers and sellers
usually do not know each other.
• Support services. Many services are needed to
support EC. These range from content creation to
payments to order delivery.
• Business partnerships. Joint ventures, exchanges,
and business partnerships of various types are
common in EC. These occur frequently throughout
the supply chain (i.e., the interactions between a
company and its suppliers, customers, and other
partners).
296
The infrastructure for EC is shown at the bottom of the
figure and it describes the hardware, software, and networks
used in EC. All of these components require good management practices. This means that companies need to plan,
organize, motivate, devise strategy, and restructure processes, as needed, to optimize the business use of EC models
and strategies.
3. THE TYPES OF E-COMMERCE
TRANSACTIONS
A common classification of EC is by the nature of the transactions or the relationship among the participants. The major
types of EC transactions are listed below.
Business-to-Business (B2B)
All the participants in business-to-business (B2B)
e-commerce are either businesses or other organizations (see
Wirthwein and Bannon 2014). Today, about 85 % of EC volume is B2B. For Dell, the entire wholesale transactions are
B2B. Dell buys almost all of its parts through e-commerce,
and sells its products to businesses (and individuals) using
e-commerce.
Business-to-Consumer (B2C)
Business-to-consumer (B2C) EC includes retail transactions
of products or services, from businesses to individual shoppers. The typical shopper at Amazon.com is an individual.
B2C is also called e-tailing.
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
certain price, or higher). Then a seller may accept or reject
the offer. (Priceline administers this type of C2B.)
Intrabusiness EC
The intrabusiness EC category includes all internal EC organizational activities that involve the exchange of goods, services, or information among various units and individuals in
that organization. Activities can range from selling corporate
products to one’s employees, to online training, and to collaborative design efforts.
Business-to-Employees (B2E)
The business-to-employees (B2E) category is a subset of the
intrabusiness group in which an organization delivers services, information, or products to individual employees. A
major category of employees is mobile employees, such as
field representatives or repair services that go to customers.
EC support to such employees is also called business-tomobile employees (B2ME).
Consumer-to-Consumer (C2C)
In the consumer-to-consumer (C2C) category (sometimes
refered to as person-to-person, P2P) consumers transact
directly with other consumers. Examples of C2C include
individuals selling residential property, cars, and so on in
online classified ads. EBay’s auctions and sales are mostly
C2C, and so are the classified ads at Craigslist. The
advertising of personal services over the Internet and the
online selling of knowledge and expertise are other examples
of C2C.
Business-to-Business-to-Consumer (B2B2C)
In business-to-business-to-consumer (B2B2C) EC, a business
provides some product or service to a client business. The client business maintains its own customers, who may be its
own employees or business partners, to whom the product or
service is provided. An example is godiva.com. The company sells chocolates directly to business customers. Those
businesses may then give the chocolates as gifts or sell them
to employees or to other businesses. Godiva may mail the
chocolate directly to the recipients (with compliments of…).
Collaborative Commerce
When individuals or groups communicate or collaborate
online, they may be engaged in collaborative commerce
(c-commerce). For example, business partners in different
locations may design a product together using collaborative
software and online procedures.
E-Government
Consumer-to-Business (C2B)
The consumer-to-business (C2B) category includes individuals who use the Internet to offer products or services to business (e.g., a consumer may offer to buy an airline ticket at a
In e-government EC, a government entity buys or provides
goods, services, or information from or to businesses (G2B)
or from or to individual citizens (G2C). Governments can
deal also with other governments (G2G).
The previous categories are summarized in Fig. A.2.
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
297
Fig. A.2 Categories of e-commerce transactions
The Interdisciplinary Nature of EC
Because EC is a relatively new field, it is just now developing
its theoretical and scientific foundations. From just the brief
overview of the EC framework and classification, you can
probably see that EC is related to several different disciplines.
The major academic EC disciplines include the following:
accounting, business law, computer science, consumer behavior, economics, engineering, finance, human resource management, management, management information systems,
marketing, public administration, and robotics.
4. CAPABILITIES, BENEFITS, LIMITATIONS,
AND DRIVERS OF E-COMMERCE
EC initiatives play an increasing role in supporting innovations and strategies that help companies to compete and
flourish, especially companies that want to be proactive and
introduce changes rather than be reactive and respond to
them. What makes EC suitable for such a role is a set of
capabilities which are presented next.
The Capabilities of E-Commerce
The essential capabilities that drive EC are the ability to:
• Provide efficient and effective business
transactions.
• Provide global reach for selling, buying, or finding
business partners.
• Conduct business anytime, from anywhere, in a
convenient way. For example, there were about 2
billion smartphones in use in 2015 in the world. For
comprehensive statistics and descriptions see
Mobithinking (2014).
• Disseminate information rapidly, frequently in real
time.
• Compare prices.
• Customize products and personalize services.
• Use rich media in advertisement, entertainment,
and social networking.
• Receive experts’ and other users’ advice
quickly.
• Collaborate in different ways, both internally and
externally.
• Share information and knowledge.
• Increase productivity and performance, reduce
costs, and compress time (e.g., by having smarter
applications).
• Fing information about vendors, products, and
competitors easily and quickly.
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Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
Table A.2 The benefits of E-commerce
Benefit
Benefits to organizations
Global reach
Cost reduction
Facilitate problem solving
Supply chain improvements
Business always open
Customization/personalization
Ability to innovate, use new business models
Lower communication costs
Efficient procurement
Improved customer service and relationship
Help SME to compete
Lower inventories
Lower cost of distributing digitizable product
Provide competitive advantage
Benefits to consumers
Inventory
Ubiquity
Self configuration
Find bargains
Real time delivery
No sales tax
Enable telecommuting
Social interaction
Find unique items
Comfortable shopping
Benefits to society
Enable telecommuting
More public services
Improved homeland security
Increased standard of living
Close the digital divide
Description
Quickly locating customers and/or suppliers at reasonable cost worldwide
Lower cost of information processing, storage, and distribution
Solve complex problems that have remained unsolved
Reduce delays, inventories, and cost
Open 24/7/365; no overtime or other costs
Make order for customer preference
Facilitate innovation and enable unique business models
The Internet is cheaper then VAN private lines
Saves time and reduces costs by enabling e-procurement
Direct interaction with customers, better CRM
EC may help small companies to compete against large ones by using special business models
Using customization inventories can be minimized
Delivery online can be 90 % cheaper
Innovative business models
Huge selection to choose from (vendor, products, styles)
Can shop any time from any place
Can self-customize products
Use comparison engine
Download digital products
Sometimes; changing
Can work or study at home or any place
In social networks
Using online auctions, collectible items can be found
Shop at your leisure without pushy sales clerks bothering you
Facilitate work at home; less traffic, pollution
Provided by e-government
Facilitate domestic security
Can buy more and cheaper goods/services
Allow people in rural areas and developing countries to use more services and purchase what
they really like
Because EC technology is improving over time and
decreasing in cost, its comparative advantage over manual
systems is continuously increasing, further contributing to
the growth of EC.
benefits to organizations, individuals, and society. These
benefits are just starting to materialize, but they will increase
significantly as EC expands. It is not surprising that some
maintain that the EC revolution is as profound as the change
that accompanied the Industrial Revolution. The major benefits are summarized in Table A.2.
Benefits and Limitations of Electronic
Commerce
The Limitations and Barriers of EC
Few innovations in human history encompass as many benefits as EC does. The global nature of the technology, the
opportunity to reach hundreds of millions of people, its interactive nature, the variety of possibilities for its use, and the
resourcefulness and rapid growth of its supporting infrastructures, especially the Web, result in many potential
Barriers to EC can be classified as either technological or
non technological. The technological ones are declining
with time.
The major barriers to EC are: (1) resistance to new
technology; (2) implementation difficulties; (3) security
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
299
Fig. A.3 Major drivers of EC
concerns; (4) lack of technology skills by buyers; (5) lack
of potential customers; (6) cost; (7) insufficient bandwidth;
(8) cultural barriers; and (9) an incomplete set of standards.
The barriers can be classified into: sectoral barriers
(e.g.,
government,
private
sector,
international
organizations); enterprise internal barriers (e.g., poor security, lack of technical knowledge, incomplete B2B interface, and lack of time and resources); external barriers
(e.g., lack of government support); cultural barriers; organizational differences; international trade barriers; and lack
of EC standards. These limitations need to be addressed
when implementing EC.
5. ELECTRONIC COMMERCE BUSINESS
MODELS
One of the major characteristics of EC is that it enables the
creation of new business models. A business model is a
method of doing business by which a company can generate
revenue to sustain itself. A model also spells out where the
company is positioned in the value chain; that is, by what
activities the company adds value to the product or service it
supplies.
Note that, the January-February 2011 issue of Harvard
Business Review is dedicated to business model innovations
(five articles), including several topics related to e-commerce.
Drivers of E-Commerce
The tremendous explosion of EC can be explained by its
drivers and characteristics, benefits, and by changes in the
business environment.
Although EC is only about 20 years old, it is expected to
have non-stoppable growth and expand consistently into
new areas of our life. The question is why? What drives EC?
The Major Drivers of EC
EC is driven by many factors depending on the industry,
company, and application involved. The major drivers are
shown in the self-explanatory Fig. A.3.
THE STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES
OF BUSINESS MODELS
Several different EC business models are possible, depending on the company, the industry, and so on.
A comprehensive business model is composed of the following elements:
• A description of the customers to be served and the
company’s relationships with these customers,
including what constitutes value from the customers’ perspective (customers’ value proposition).
300
• A description of all products and services the
business will offer and the markets in which they
will be sold.
• A description of the business process that is required
to make and deliver the products and services
including distribution and marketing strategies.
• A list of the resources required and the identification of which ones are available, which will be
developed in-house, and which will need to be
acquired (including human resources).
• A description of the organization’s supply chain,
including suppliers and other business partners.
• A list of the major competitors, their market share,
and strengths/weaknesses.
• The competitive advantage offered by the business
model.
• The anticipated organizational changes and any
resistance to change.
• A description of the revenues expected (revenue
model), anticipated costs, sources of financing, and
estimated profitability (financial viability).
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
transaction fee to the broker. The higher the value of
the sale, the higher the total transaction fee.
Alternatively, transaction fees can be levied per transaction. With online stock trades, for example, there is
usually a fixed fee per trade, regardless of the volume.
SUBSCRIPTION FEES
Customers pay a fixed amount, usually monthly, to get
some type of service. An example would be the Internet
access fee. Thus, the Internet provider’s primary revenue
model is subscription fees (fixed monthly payments).
ADVERTISING FEES
Companies charge others for allowing them to place a
banner or other ad on their sites.
Models also include a value proposition, which is an analysis of the benefits of using the specific model (tangible and
intangible), for both customers and organization. A detailed
discussion of and examples of business models and their
relationship to business plans is presented at en.wikipedia.
org/wiki/Business_model.
This Primer presents two of a model’s elements: revenue
models and value propositions.
AFFILIATE FEES
Companies receive commissions for referring customers to others’ websites. A good affiliate program is
available at Amazon.com.
Revenue Models
A revenue model outlines how an organization, or an EC
project, will generate revenue. It includes costs as well.
SALES
Companies generate revenue from selling merchandise
or services on their websites. For example, Amazon.
com and Godiva that sell products online.
LICENSING FEES
Another revenue source is licensing fees (e.g., see
progress.com/datadrect). Licensing fees can be
assessed as a monthly or annual fee or a per usage fee.
Microsoft receives fees from each workstation that
uses Windows NT, for example.
TRANSACTION FEES
OTHER REVENUE SOURCES
A company receives a commission based on the volume of transactions made. For example, when a homeowner sells a house, he or she typically pays a
Some companies allow people to play online games
for a fee or to watch a sports competition in real time
for a fee (e.g., see espn.go.com).
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
A company uses its revenue model to describe how it will
generate revenue and its business model to describe the process it will use to do so. The Internet allows for innovative
revenue models.
The revenue model can be part of the value proposition or
it may supplement it.
Value Proposition
Business models also include a value-proposition statement. A value proposition refers to the benefits, including
the intangible, non-quantitative ones, that a company can
derive from using the model. In B2C EC, for example, a
value proposition defines how a company’s product or service fulfills the needs of customers. The value proposition
is an important part of the marketing plan of any product
or service.
Functions of a Business Model
Business models have the following functions or objectives:
• Describe the major business processes of a
company.
• Describe the business’s (the venture’s) positioning
within the value network linking suppliers and customers (includes identification of potential complementary companies and competitors). Also,
describe the supply and value chains.
• Formulate the venture’s competitive strategy and its
long-range plans.
• Articulate a customer value proposition.
• Identify a market segment (who will use the technology for what purpose).
• Specify the revenue-generation process; where the
company will operate.
• Define the venture’s specific value chain structure.
• Estimate the cost structure and amount, and the
profit potential.
Typical EC Business Models
There are many types of EC business models. Examples and
details of EC business models can be found in Rappa (2010),
slideshare.net/kaiser2009/e-businessmodels-ppt, and Turban
et al. (2015). The following four common models followed by
some less common ones (# 5–18) are:
301
1. Online direct marketing. The most obvious model is
that of selling products or services online. Sales may be
from a manufacturer to a customer, eliminating intermediaries or physical stores (e.g., Dell Computer), or from
retailers to consumers, making distribution more efficient (e.g., Walmart online). This model is especially
efficient for digitizable products and services (those that
can be delivered electronically). This model has several
variations and it uses different mechanisms (e.g., auctions). It is practiced in B2C (where it is called e-tailing)
and in several B2B types of EC (e.g., e-procurement,
e-wholesale).
2. Electronic tendering systems. Large organizational
buyers, private or public, usually make large-volume or
large-value purchases through a tendering (bidding) system, also known as a reverse auction. Such tendering
can be done online, saving time and money. Pioneered
by General Electric Corp., e-tendering systems are gaining popularity. Indeed, several government agencies
mandate that most of their procurement must be done
through e-tendering.
3. Electronic marketplaces and exchanges. Electronic
marketplaces existed in isolated applications for decades
(e.g., stock and commodities exchanges). But as of
1996, hundreds of e-marketplaces (old and new) have
introduced new methods and efficiencies to the trading
process. If they are well organized and managed,
e-marketplaces can provide significant benefits to both
buyers and sellers. Of special interest are vertical marketplaces that concentrate on one industry.
4. Viral marketing. According to the viral marketing
model, people use e-mail and social networks for spreading word-of-mouth advertising. Thus, an organization
can increase brand awareness, or even generate sales, by
inducing people to send influencing messages to other
people or to recruit friends to join certain programs. It is
basically Web-based word-of-mouth advertising, and it
is popular in social networks.
5. Name your own price. Pioneered by Priceline.com, the
name-your-own-price model allows buyers to set the
price they are willing to pay for a specific product or
service. Priceline.com will try to match a customer’s
request with a supplier willing to sell the product or service at that price. This model is also known as a demandcollection model.
6. Find the best price. According to this model, also
known as a search engine model, a customer specifies a
need and then an intermediate company, such as Hotwire.
com, matches the customer’s need against a database,
locates the lowest price, and submits it to the consumer.
The potential buyer then has 30–60 minutes to accept or
reject the offer. A variation of this model is available for
purchasing insurance: A consumer can submit a request
302
7.
8.
9.
10.
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
for insurance to Insweb.com and receive several quotes.
Many companies employ similar models to show price
comparisons and find the lowest price. For example,
consumers can go to eloan.com to find the best interest
rate for auto or home loans. A well-known company in
this area is Shopping.com.
Affiliate marketing. Affiliate marketing is an arrangement whereby a marketing partner (a business, an organization, or even an individual) refers consumers to a
selling company’s website. The referral is done by placing a banner ad or the logo of the selling company on the
affiliated company’s website. Whenever a customer who
was referred to the selling company’s website makes a
purchase there, the affiliated partner receives a commission (which may range from 3 to 15 %) of the purchase
price. In other words, by using affiliate marketing, a selling company creates a virtual commissioned sales force.
Pioneered by CDNow, the concept is now employed by
thousands of retailers and manufacturers. For example,
Amazon.com has over one million affiliates, and even
tiny Cattoys.com offers individuals and organizations
the opportunity to put its logo and link on their websites
to generate commissions.
Group purchasing. In the offline world of commerce,
discounts are usually available for purchasing large
quantities. So, too, EC has spawned the concept of
demand aggregation, wherein a third party finds individuals or small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs), aggregates their small orders to attain a large quantity, and
then negotiates (or solicits a tender offer) for the best
deal. Thus, using the concept of group purchasing, a
small business, or even an individual, can get a discount.
This model is also known as the volume-buying model.
One leading aggregator is Letsbuyit.com. Online purchasing groups are also called e-co-ops. Group purchasing is now associated with social commerce with
companies such as Groupon.
Online auctions. Almost everyone has heard of eBay,
the world’s largest online auction site. Several hundred
other companies, including Amazon.com and Yahoo!,
also conduct online auctions. In the most popular type of
auction, online shoppers make consecutive bids for various goods and services, and the highest bidders get the
items auctioned. E-auctions come in different shapes
and use different models. For example, eBay is using
over 40,000 “assistants” in a model where the assistants
perform the order fulfillment function.
Product and service customization. With customization, a product or service is created according to the buyer’s specifications. Customization is not a new model,
but what is new is the ability to quickly configure customized products online for consumers at costs not much
higher than their non customized counterparts. Dell is a
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
good example of a company that customizes PCs for its
customers; Nike will customize their shoes for you.
Information brokers (infomediaries). Information
brokers provide privacy, trust, matching, search, content, and other services (e.g., bizrate.com, google.com/
products).
Bartering. Companies use bartering to exchange surpluses they do not need for things that they do need. A
market maker arranges such exchanges (e.g., webbarter.com or tradeaway.com).
Deep discounting. Companies such as Half.com and
Groupon.com offer products and services at deep discounts, as much as 50 % off the retail price.
Membership. A popular offline model, in which only
members get a discount, also is being offered online
(e.g., netmarket.com).
Value-chain integrators. This model offers services
that aggregate information-rich products into a more
complete package for customers, thus adding value. For
example, Carpoint.com provides several car buying–
related services, such as financing and insurance.
Value-chain service providers. These providers specialize in a supply chain function such as logistics (ups.
com) or payments (paypal.com).
Supply chain improvers. One of the major contributions of EC is in the creation of new models that change
or improve supply chain management. Most interesting
is the conversion of a linear supply chain, which can be
slow, expensive, and error prone, into a hub.
Negotiation. The Internet offers negotiation capabilities
between individuals (e.g., ioffer.com) or between companies. Negotiation can also be facilitated by intelligent
software agents.
6. RESOURCES FOR E-COMMERCE
E-Commerce Journal (ecommerce-journal.com): Source
for news, events, etc., about e-commerce.
Electronic Resource Guide: (libguides.rutgers.edu/
ecommerce): Offers resources and links to Internet
statistics—see
ClickZ
Stats,
Nielsen/NetRatings,
U.S. Census Bureau, and comScore.
Social Computing Journal (socialcomputingjournal.
com): Open forum with articles on the Internet, social commerce, collective intelligence, and all things Web 2.0.
webopedia.com: Online encyclopedia dedicated to computer technology.
whatis.techtarget.com/definition: Detailed definitions
of most e-commerce and other technological topics.
This Primer was extracted from Turban et al. (2015).
Many more resources are listed in the various chapters of
that book.
Primer A: E-Commerce Basics
References
Plunkett, J. W., et al., (ed.) Plunkett’s E-Commerce & Internet Business
Almanac 2014. (Plunkett’s E-Commerce and Internet Business
Almanac). Houston, TX: Plunkett Research Ltd., 2014.
Rappa, M. “Business Models on the Web.” January 17, 2010. digitalenterprise.org/models/models.html (accessed January 2015).
303
Turban, E., et al. Electronic Commerce: A Managerial and Social
Networks Approach, 8th ed. New York: Springer, 2015.
Vizard, M. “Jaguar Launches Virtual Shopping Experiences.” CIO
Insight, June 5, 2013.
Wirthwein, C., and J. Bannon. The People Powered Brand: A Blueprint
for B2B Brand and Culture Transformation. Ithaca, NY: Paramount
Market Publishing, Inc., 2014.
Primer B: E-Marketing Basics
Content
1. WHAT IS E-MARKETING?
1 What Is E-Marketing? .......................................................... 305
E-marketing is the result of information technology applied
to traditional marketing. Applying this to the American
Marketing Association’s definition of marketing, e-marketing
is the use of information technology for the “marketing activity, set of institutions, and processes for creating, communicating, delivering, and exchanging offerings that have value
for customers, clients, partners, and society at large.”
Electronic marketing is only one part of an organization’s
e-business activities. E-marketing is also called Internet marketing, Web marketing, or online marketing.
E-marketing reaches far beyond the Web. First, many
e-marketing technologies exist without the Web, including
software and hardware used in customer relationship management, supply chain management, and electronic data
interchange arrangements pre-dating the Web. For example,
when you call a company to complain about a product, the
information might be stored in a database and automatically
sent over the Internet to marketing managers and product
development teams. Seconds, non-Web Internet communications such as e-mail, Internet telephony like Skype, social
media like Facebook, and text messaging are effective
avenues for marketing communication. Third, the Internet
delivers text, video, audio, and graphics to many more
information-receiving appliances than simply personal
computers (PCs). These forms of digital content also go over
the Internet infrastructure to the television, smartphones,
tablets (like the iPad) and even the refrigerator or automobile. Finally, offline electronic data-collection devices, such
as bar code scanners and databases, receive and send data
about customers and products over a secure internal network, called an Intranet.
It is helpful to think of it this way: Content providers create digital text, video, audio, and graphics to send over the
Internet infrastructure to users who receive it as information, entertainment, or communication on many types of
appliances. As marketers think outside of the Web, they find
many new possibilities for creating products that provide
2 Markets................................................................................... 306
3 Market Research ................................................................... 306
4 E-Marketing Management and Business Models ............... 307
5 Creating Value: Product and Price ...................................... 308
6 Distributing Products ............................................................ 310
7 Communicating Value: IMC ................................................ 310
8 Building Value: CRM ............................................................ 312
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
305
306
Primer B: E-Marketing Basics
value and communicate in ways that build relationships
with customers.
E-marketing affects traditional marketing in two ways.
First, it increases efficiency and effectiveness in traditional
marketing functions. Seconds, the technology of e-marketing transforms many marketing strategies. This transformation also results in new business models that add customer
value and/or increase company profitability, such as the
highly successful Craigslist, Facebook, Twitter, and Google
Ad Sense advertising models.
In this primer we include a basic introduction to traditional marketing, and discuss ways that information technology enhances and changes traditional offline marketing
strategies and tactics. Along the way we’ll introduce a lot of
terminology that will help you understand the field.
far from dead and it is still a good way to reach target markets. However, younger generations use social networking
and text messaging more often than e-mail, so again, marketing tactics depend on specific target market behavior.
Both individual and business buyers are more demanding
than ever because they are just one click away from a plethora of global competitors, all vying for their business. As
well, the Internet’s social media provide a communication
platform where individual product comments can spread like
wildfire in a short time and quickly either enhance or damage
a brand image. This phenomenon is only one part of a trend
that has been growing for years because of the Internet—the
power balance has finally shifted from companies to individuals and this has huge implications for marketing strategies and tactics.
2. MARKETS
3. MARKET RESEARCH
E-marketing is only effective if an organization’s target markets use the Internet. Most government agencies, non-profit
organizations, and businesses use the Internet for business
purposes. However, only 87 % of U.S. adults use the Internet.
It would not benefit a company to use e-marketing tactics if
its markets were mostly in the 13 % of Americans who don’t
use the Internet. The less-connected groups tend to be older,
less educated, in ethnic minority groups, do not have children, live in rural areas, and have a lower income (according
to research from Pew Research Internet Project 2014).
Also, only 42.3 % of the world’s population in 233 countries
uses the Internet (3,035,749,340 people). Many countries have
fewer than 50 % of the population using the Internet. Asia has
the largest number of users (1,386.2 million), but North
America has the highest penetration rate at 87.7 % (Internet
World Stats 2014). China has 642.3 million users but that represents only 47.4 % of the population. Without major shifts,
some countries may not ever achieve high levels of Internet
adoption among individual consumers, although high cell
phone adoption may change this picture eventually. This is
important to know as e-marketers chase international markets.
Marketers also want to know what their prospective and
current customers do online. Table A.3 shows that e-mail is
Marketers use both primary and secondary research for
understanding their markets. The Nielsen Company recruits a
panel of over 200,000 people and measures their Internet
usage behavior at over 30,000 sites, then sells this to site owners and advertisers as secondary research (Nielsen 2014).
Marketers conduct quantitative primary research online
through panels and survey research and also via their Web
server logs that capture every click from site visitors (Web
analytics). Qualitative online research involves creative
experiments of online ads (e.g., which one got the most clicks
to the advertiser’s site), online focus groups, and observation
(e.g., monitoring conversation in social networks). This information helps organizations to design strategies and tactics
that meet marketing objectives. For an example, see Fig. A.4.
This shows how Purina PetCare turned data into information
and knowledge for advertising decision making. It is important to recall that data need careful analysis and insight to be
actionable.
Survey research response rates are declining, making it more
difficult to collect market information both on and off line.
Some other issues with Internet marketing research include:
1. Respondents are increasingly upset at getting unsolicited
e-mail requesting survey participation.
2. Some researchers “harvest” e-mail addresses from
Internet forums and groups without permission. Perhaps,
this practice is analogous to gathering names from a telephone book, but some people object because consumers
are not posting with the idea of being contacted by
marketers.
3. Some companies conduct “surveys” for the purpose of
building a database for later solicitation. Ethical marketers clearly mark the difference between marketing
research and marketing promotion and do not sell under
the guise of research.
Table A.3 Internet usage data
Percent of internet users
Activity
doing it
Send or read e-mail
92
Use a social network
72
Use a search engine to find information
91
Do online banking
61
Get news online
74
Buy a product online
71
Source: Pew Internet Research Project (March 2011–May 2014)
Primer B: E-Marketing Basics
307
Fig. A.4 From data to decision
at Nestlé Purina PetCare
Company
4. Privacy of user data is a huge issue in this medium,
because it is relatively easy and profitable to send electronic data to others via the Internet.
These and other concerns prompted ESOMAR®, the
European Society for Opinion and Marketing Research, to
include guidelines for Internet research in its International
Code of Marketing and Social Research Practice. ESOMAR
has more than 4,900 members in 130 countries (see boa
Also, the U.S. Marketing Research Association has a code of
Marketing Research ethics regarding honesty, professionalism, fairness, and confidentiality of respondents that help to
support the marketing research profession as marketers conduct online research (see marketingresearch.org/code).
Real-time profiling and real-space primary data collection
are two other important research techniques.
Real-time profiling occurs when special software tracks a
user’s movements through a website, then compiles and
reports on the data at a moment’s notice. Also known as
“tracking user clickstream in real time,” or “behavioral targeting,” this approach allows marketers to analyze consumer
online behavior and make instantaneous adjustments to site
promotional offers and Web pages. For example, if you look
at a particular book on Amazon.com but don’t buy it, you
might see that book presented to you on the Amazon home
page on your next visit.
Real-space primary data collection refers to technologyenabled approaches to gather information offline that is subsequently stored and used in marketing databases to be used for
e-marketing. The most important real-space techniques are bar
code scanners and credit card terminals at brick-and-mortar
retail stores, although computer entry by customer service
reps while talking on the telephone with customers might also
be included here. Offline data collection is important for
e-marketing because these data, when combined with online
data, paint a complete picture of consumer behavior for individual retail firms. Smart card and credit card readers, interactive point of sale machines (iPOS), and bar code scanners are
mechanisms for collecting real-space consumer data.
4. E-MARKETING MANAGEMENT
AND BUSINESS MODELS
Armed with data about an organization’s customers,
competitors, and market conditions, marketing managers
write objectives and strategies for achieving them. Marketing
objectives generally include goals for acquiring new customers and increasing revenue or market share. An objective
usually includes a measurable task and time frame. For
example: “Increase sales on our website by 15 % within 12
months.”
Next, the company designs strategies to achieve its objectives. E-marketing strategy is the design of marketing strategy that capitalizes on the organization’s electronic or
information technology capabilities to reach specified objectives. In essence, e-marketing strategy is where technology
strategy and marketing strategy wed.
For example, a Mexican hotel chain, with many hotel
properties in South America, maintains a sophisticated, large
customer database. It is able to send customized e-mails by
customer segments, such as, customers who are high value,
recent visitors, or who booked through a travel agent. By
targeting special offers to relevant customers, it has increased
hotel bookings and profits. This relevant targeting keeps
customers happy and supports the company’s customer relationship management e-marketing strategy—ultimately supporting the corporate growth strategy. In this example, the
objectives were to increase hotel bookings and profits; the
strategy was to target high value recent hotel visitors and the
key e-marketing tactic was to send special e-mails to these
visitors.
E-Marketing Contributes to Business Models
The term business model is often mentioned in print and by
executives. A business model is a method by which the organization sustains itself in the long term and includes its value
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Primer B: E-Marketing Basics
Table A.4 E-marketing contributes to the E-business model
E-marketing increases benefits
• Online mass customization (different products and messages
to different stakeholders)
• Personalization (giving stakeholders relevant information)
• 24/7 convenience
• Self-service ordering and tracking
• One-stop shopping
• Learning, engaging, and communicating with customers on social networking sites
E-marketing decreases costs
• Low-cost distribution of communication messages (e.g., e-mail)
• Low-cost distribution channel for digital products
• Lowers costs for transaction processing
• Lowers costs for knowledge acquisition (e.g., research and customer feedback)
• Creates efficiencies in supply chain (through communication and inventory optimization)
• Decreases the cost of customer service
E-marketing increases revenues
• Online transaction revenues such as product, information, advertising, and subscription fees; or commission/fee on a transaction or referral
• Adds value to products/services and increases prices (e.g., online FAQ and customer support)
• Increases the customer base by reaching new markets
• Builds customer relationships and, thus, increases current customer spending (share of wallet)
proposition for partners and customers as well as its revenue
streams. This description is in line with the marketing concept, which suggests that the social and economic justification for an organization’s existence is the satisfaction of
customer wants and needs while meeting organizational
objectives. Business partners might include supply chain
members such as suppliers, wholesalers, and retailers, or
firms with which the company joins forces to create new
brands (such as the Microsoft and NBC alliance to create
MSNBC).
Organizations deliver stakeholder value through
e-business models by using digital products and processes.
Whether online or offline, the value proposition involves
knowing what is important to the customer or partner and
delivering it better than other organizations. Value encompasses the customer’s perceptions of the product’s benefits,
specifically its attributes, brand name, and support services.
Subtracted from benefits are the customer costs involved in
acquiring the product, such as monetary, time, energy, and
psychic costs. Like customers, partners evaluate value by
determining whether the partnership provides more benefits
than costs. This concept is shown as follows:
Value = Benefits - Costs
Information technology usually increases benefits and
lowers costs to stakeholders. For example, consumers can
search for the lowest price product online without leaving
home. Conversely, it can decrease value when websites
are complex, information is hard to locate, and technical
difficulties interrupt data access or shopping transactions.
Table A.4 lists e-marketing activities that contribute to a company’s e-business models.
Now we move to the marketing mix. Product, price, place,
and promotion (known as the 4 Ps) combine with information technology to create value for customers. Figure A.5
demonstrates how these tools blend to create both transactions and customer relationships.
5. CREATING VALUE: PRODUCT
AND PRICE
Never has competition for online customer attention and
dollars been fiercer. To succeed, firms must employ strategies—grounded in solid marketing principles—that result in
customer value. What is value? First, it is the entire product
experience. It starts with a customer’s first awareness of a
product, continues at all customer touch points (including
the website experience, e-mail from a firm, and much more),
and ends with the actual product usage and post purchase
customer service. It even includes the compliments a consumer gets from friends while whipping out that iPad, or the
fun she has when messaging friends on Skype or Facebook.
Seconds, value is defined wholly by the mental beliefs and
attitudes held by customers. Regardless of how favorably the
firm views its own products, it is the customers’ perceptions
that count. Third, value involves customer expectations; if
the actual product experience falls short of their expectations,
customers will be disappointed. Fourth, value is applied at all
Primer B: E-Marketing Basics
309
Fig. A.5 Marketing mix and
CRM strategies and tactics for
relational and transactional
outcomes
price levels. Both a $0.05 micropayment for an online article
in a news archive and a $2 million e-commerce computer
application can provide value.
Marketers must make five general product decisions that
comprise its bundle of benefits to meet customer needs: attributes, branding, support services, labeling, and packaging.
Except for physical packaging, all of these can be converted
from atoms to bits for online delivery:
• Product attributes include overall quality and specific
features, such as, color, size, download speed, and so
forth. Benefits, on the other hand, are the same features
from a user perspective (i.e., what will the attribute do to
solve problems or meet needs and wants?). For example,
users can download media, music, software, and other
digital products from the Web or a mobile app. Perhaps
the most important benefit is mass customization (e.g.,
Pandora radio combines songs from many different artists
as desired by customers).
• A brand includes a name (McDonald’s), a symbol (golden
arches), or other identifying information, but is much
more than that. It is a perception in the mind of the customer about the promised benefits. Tangible and service
products, companies, people (politicians/sports figures),
vacation destinations and ideas can all be branded. Brand
names can generate trust in consumers if they deliver on
the promise. E-marketing issues with branding include
the selection of Facebook page and domain names
(URLs), and the need to monitor brand mentions online
for possible reputation damage.
• Customer support services, both during and after the purchase, are a critical component in the organization’s value
proposition. Companies design support services when
designing the product. The topic of customer service
online is so important that it morphed into the topic of
customer relationship management (CRM) and now
social CRM.
• Product labels identify brands, sponsoring firms, product
ingredients, and often provide instructions for use. Labels
on tangible products create product recognition and influence decision behavior at the point of purchase. For online
services, the “label” might include terms of product
usage, product features, and other information on websites. For example, when users download iTunes software
for organizing their iPod music, they can first read the
“label” to discover how to install and use the software. In
addition, many companies have extensive legal information about copyright use on their Web pages.
In the narrowest sense, price is the amount of money
charged for a product or service. More broadly, price is the
sum of all the values (such as money, time, energy, and psychic cost) that buyers exchange for the benefits of having or
using a good or service. For example, beside the dollars, is
your price higher to drive to a physical bookstore or to search
and find that book online? Online you might have to pay
additional shipping costs but less time cost. E-marketers
work this out as they decide which products to offer online
and how to price them.
In addition, the increasing power of buyers means control
over pricing in some instances—such as with online product
bidding. The Internet’s properties also allow for price transparency—the idea that both buyers and sellers can view
competitive prices for items sold online. This feature is available at shopping agent sites that compare prices among many
online retailers, such as shopzilla.com. Online auctions are
another interesting e-marketing pricing tactic, especially in
B2B markets where excess supplies exist (such as a company
trying to unload a lot of excess wire).
Information technology complicated pricing strategies and
changed the way marketers use this tool, especially in online
markets. Some expenses are lower online, such as, self-service order processing by customers, digital media that do not
need to be produced in physical copies and less overhead
310
costs without physical retail stores. Others are higher, such as,
technology, Web page design, and shipping costs.
A final consideration for pricing involves payment methods. Credit card companies and PayPal charge fees to sellers
for each transaction. This electronic money is convenient for
both buyers and sellers but also lowers company profit and
opens the door to potential fraud and credit card database
hacking.
6. DISTRIBUTING PRODUCTS
A distribution channel is a group of interdependent firms that
work together to transfer product and information from the
supplier to the consumer. It is composed of the following
participants:
• Producers: Manufacturers and their suppliers, such as
those who grow the raw ingredients.
• Intermediaries: Firms that match buyers and sellers and
mediate the transactions among them (e.g., wholesalers,
agents and retailers). For example Expedia.com is an
online travel agent.
• Buyers: Consumers or business users of the product or
service.
There are many successful e-marketing business models
involving product distribution:
• Content sponsorship occurs when companies create websites, attract a lot of traffic, and sell advertising.
• The online broker creates a market in which buyers and
sellers negotiate and complete transactions. Brokers typically charge the seller and/or buyer a transaction fee, but
they don’t represent either party for providing exchange
and negotiation services. For example E*Trade brokers
the stock market online and Autobytel allows customers
to receive bids from qualified car dealers on vehicles
available in their area without first phoning or visiting the
dealer.
• Agents do represent either the buyer or the seller depending on who pays their fee. Expedia is paid commissions
by hotels and airlines for booking travelers. Affiliate programs pay commissions to website owners for customer
referrals (such as the Amazon affiliates who show books
and other merchandise on their websites).
• Online retailing is one of the most visible e-business
models and the subject of this book. A huge part of
e-commerce, merchants set up webstores and sell to businesses and consumers.
Note that there are many e-marketing tactics behind the
scenes of these distribution models. For example, when
online retailers send a physical product to a buyer, FedEx or
another shipper will provide tracking information to both
buyer and seller via the Internet. Another important aspect of
product distribution involves multichannel marketing—the
use of more than one sales channel, such as Web, mobile,
Primer B: E-Marketing Basics
brick and mortar store, and catalog. Most large traditional
retailers are multichannel marketers because they also sell
products online.
7. COMMUNICATING VALUE: IMC
Integrated marketing communication (IMC) is a crossfunctional process for planning, executing, and monitoring
brand communications designed to profitably acquire, retain,
and grow customers. IMC is cross-functional because every
touch point that a customer has with a firm or its agents helps
to form brand images. For example, a Home Depot retail
customer might buy and use a product from the website, then
e-mail, Facebook message or call 1-800 to complain about a
problem, and finally return the product to the brick-andmortar retail store. Every contact with an employee, a website, a Facebook post, a blog comment about the product, a
YouTube video, a magazine ad, a catalog, the physical store
facilities, and so forth helps the customer form an image of
the company brand.
IMC strategy begins with a thorough understanding of
target markets, the brand, its competition, and many other
internal and external factors. Then marketers select specific
Marketing Communication (MarCom) tools to achieve their
communication objectives and media for reaching target
markets. During and after implementation, they measure
execution effectiveness, make needed adjustments, and reevaluate the results.
MarCom consists of both planned and unplanned messages between firms and customers, as well as those among
customers. Companies use planned messages when trying to
inform or persuade their target stakeholders, such as the
owned and paid media in Chaps. 4 and 5 of this book.
Unplanned messages include things such as word of mouth
among consumers and publicity in media (earned media).
Using innovative technologies, e-marketers can enhance
the effectiveness (reaching the target market with little wasted
coverage) and efficiency (low cost) of traditional MarCom in
many interesting ways. Online marketing communication can
be used for brand communication (to build brand awareness
and create a favorable brand image) or to elicit a direct
response in the form of a transaction, customer engagement,
or some other behavior (such as website registration, social
media “like”/comment post, or e-mail inquiry). Brand communication works at the awareness and attitude levels (heads
and hearts) of the Social Commerce Brand Decision Process
model, also called the hierarchy of effects model, while directresponse communication primarily works at the behavioral
level (do something). Advertising can be used for both branding and direct response, while marketing public relations aims
to build brand images, and sales promotion, direct marketing,
and personal selling primarily attempt to solicit a direct
response (see Chap. 4 for definitions of these tools).
Primer B: E-Marketing Basics
311
Advertising
Online Sales Promotions
There are many types of online advertising and below are
just a few (recall that this is paid for space in someone else’s
media property):
• Display ads. These contain more graphics and white
space than text, and include traditional banners and many
additional sizes.
• Mobile ad. An SMS text or multi-media message sent to
a cell phone.
• Map ad. Text or graphics linked from, and appearing in
or over, a location on an electronic map such as on Google
Maps.
• Pop-up. A new window, which opens in front of the
current one, displaying an advertisement, or entire Web
page.
• Contextual ads. Ad servers, such as Google’s DoubleClick, maintain an inventory of ads from clients and serve
them into websites as appropriate users are viewing particular pages.
• E-mail advertising. This is generally just a few sentences
of text embedded in another firm’s e-mail content.
• Sponsorships. Also called advertorials, these integrate
editorial content and advertising, such as when Kraft
Foods pays for space to put recipes on a food website.
Advertising is purchased using one of two main models
(or a hybrid of both). Cost per thousand impressions, known
by all media buyers as CPM, charges the advertiser based on
the number of users who are exposed to an ad online. It is
calculated: (ad cost/number of impressions)/1,000. For
example, an online ad costing $500 and reaching 30,000
users would have a CPM of $16.67. The seconds model is
cost-per-click (CPC), which charges advertisers based on the
number of click-throughs to the advertiser’s Web property.
CPC is also known as cost-per-action (CPA) and is performance based. CPC/CPA are the pricing models used most
often by website owners.
Other pricing models include cost per engagement (CPE)
for actions such as number of votes, views, ratings, or submission of branded user-generated content and cost per
install (CPI) for a widget or application on a social network
or mobile device.
Sales promotion activities include coupons, discounts,
rebates, product sampling, contests, sweepstakes, and premiums (free or low-cost gifts). Of these promotion types, only
sampling, discounts, and contests/sweepstakes/games are
widely used on the Internet. For example, some sites allow
users to sample digital products prior to purchase: software
companies provide free downloads of fully functional demo
versions of their software and iTunes or Amazon offer a portion of the song for free listening.
Marketing Public Relations
Marketing public relations (MPR) includes brand-related
activities and nonpaid, third party media coverage to positively influence target markets and generate earned media.
MPR activities using Internet technology include the website
content itself, online events, blogs, communities, and other
social media and many ways to build a buzz online. These
are owned media.
Direct Marketing
These e-marketing tactics include e-mail marketing, text
messaging (also called short message services—SMS),
multimedia message services (MMS), and instant messaging (IM).
E-mail is still the Internet’s killer application: It has not
been replaced by RSS feeds, blogs, or social networking, in
spite of the many people predicting its demise. Instead, marketers integrate e-mail with social media, such as sending an
article excerpt in e-mail and linking to the full article on a
blog, or offering customers the choice of receiving information via an e-mail newsletter, RSS feed, Twitter feed. E-mail
has several advantages over postal direct mail. First, it
requires no postage or printing charges. Seconds, e-mail
offers an immediate and convenient avenue for direct
response; in fact, e-mail often directs users to websites using
hyperlinks. Third, and perhaps most important, e-mail can be
automatically individualized to meet the needs of specific
users—beyond just using a name in the e-mail.
Opt-in means that users check a box to receive e-mail
from a company. Opt-out means they have to uncheck a box
to not get the mail. E-marketers use both techniques but optin techniques are more considerate of customers and produce
better results. They are part of a bigger traditional marketing
strategy called permission marketing.
Search Marketing
Search engine optimization (SEO) is the act of altering a
website and incoming links so that it does well in the organic,
crawler-based listings of search engines. Also called natural
search, this involves HTML meta-tags and the titles and text
on the Web page itself. Search engines figure out how to
categorize the page based on the content, relevance, popularity, and about 200 other variables. Paid search is when advertisers buy keywords that appear as sponsored links on search
engine results pages, such as the Google AdWords program
(this is advertising).
312
Inbound marketing refers to being found online, versus
interrupting users while they are consuming content, such as
with a television ad or display ad on a website or social network. SEO is a key tool for assuring that target markets find
the marketer’s products.
IMC Performance Metrics
E-marketers are drowning in data, yet they need to assess the
effectiveness of their IMC campaigns. The bottom line is that
they want to see whether (1) their marketing objectives were
achieved, and (2) to what extent the various IMC tactics contributed. For marketing objectives involving sales or market
share growth internal records and secondary data about competitive sales will help.
IMC tactics are a different story. We presented some key
metrics at the end of Chap. 5, regarding awareness/exposure,
brand health, engagement, action, and innovation. The metrics selected by e-marketers depend on what they are trying
to achieve, however, some of the most common IMC metrics
follow:
• E-mail response rates, database growth (more customer
information) and return on investment.
• Website analytics tell e-marketers how people found the
site, how long they stay on it and how they move through
the site. If it is a retailer, they want to know conversion
rate (how many site visitors purchased) and cost per
order (the cost to acquire that customer/dollars spend on
orders).
• Sales promotion metrics include number of coupons
redeemed, contest entries, or number of sample downloads (such as music samples).
• Marketing public relations metrics might include number
of video views for a viral video or other viral content and
the size and sentiment of earned media discussion.
Companies also measure the number subscribing to RSS
feeds, number of “Likes” on Facebook pages, Twitter followers, comments to blog posts, and much more.
• Share of voice is the brand’s advertising weight expressed
as a percentage of a defined market segment’s messages
during a specified time period.
• Advertisers want to know the CPC (Cost per Click), CPA
(Cost per Action), CPE (Cost per Engagement) and CPI
(Cost per Installation) for performance-based advertising.
They normally use CPM prior to purchasing advertising
to evaluate its efficiency; however, they will also doublecheck this as the ad runs.
Marketers monitor their selected metrics very frequently
because two of the Internet’s strengths are that (1) these are
easy to measure, and (2) IMC tactics can change in minutes
if something is not working as expected.
Primer B: E-Marketing Basics
8. BUILDING VALUE: CRM
Customer relationship management (CRM) is a philosophy,
strategy, and process. It involves acquiring, retaining and
growing customer value. It is grounded in customer data and
conversations, and facilitated by technology. The benefits of
CRM include increased revenue from better prospect targeting, increased wallet share with current customers, and
retaining customers for longer periods of time. These benefits are quantified through databases that help companies
understand their customers better and use this knowledge to
build loyalty and optimize lifetime value. CRM tactics can
also decrease costs, resulting in greater profitability.
An organization using relationship marketing focuses on
wallet share more than market share. Wallet share is the
amount of sales a firm can generate from one customer and,
thus, reflects a focus on retention and growth rather than an
acquisition focus (market share). For instance, Amazon
wants to sell books, music, household appliances, and more
to each customer. Relationship marketing differentiates individual customers based on need rather than differentiating
products for target groups—such as buyers of novels by a
particular author.
CRM is facilitated online by cookie files, WEB analytics,
databases (and mining them for information on customer
buying patterns), collaborative filtering, behavioral targeting,
and many other techniques discussed throughout this book.
E-marketers use numerous metrics to assess the Internet’s
value in delivering CRM performance—among them are ROI
(Return on Investment), cost savings, revenues, customer satisfaction, and especially the contribution of each CRM tactic
to these measures. Other important metrics include customer
retention rates, average order value (AOV) and customer
lift—increased response or transaction rates. Finally, organizations want to understand the customer lifetime value (LTV)
to the company so they know how much to invest in retention
versus acquisition tactics.
Note: Most of this material is an excerpt from Strauss and
Frost (2014).
References
“Internet World Stats.” 2014. internetworldstats.com. Accessed
January 2015
Nielsen “Online Measurement Methodology” nielsen.com/us/en/solutions/measurement/online.html. Accessed January 2015.
Pew Internet Research Project. “Usage over Time Tip Sheet.” see excel
spreadsheet. (March 2011 – May 2014.) pewinternet.org/
data-trend/internet-use/internet-use-over-time.
Accessed
January 2015.
Strauss, J., and R. D. Frost. E-Marketing, seventh edition. Upper Saddle
NJ : Pearson, Inc, 2014.
Glossary
Advergaming These are (1) games featuring a company’s
product or (2) the integration of advertisements into video
games, especially computer-based ones: both promote a
company’s product or a service
Advertising “Any paid form of non-personal presentation
and promotion of ideas, goods, or services by an identified sponsor” (Kotler and Armstrong 2011)
Autoresponders Automated e-mail reply systems
Avatars Animated representations of humanlike movements and behaviors depicted as 2-D or 3-D graphical
representations that populate virtual worlds
Behavioral targeting The one-to-one targeting of ads to
consumers base on individuals’ Web-browsing behavior,
such as search history
Blog A personal website, or part of a website, open to the
public, where the owners expresses their feelings, opinions, information, and expertise
Business model The method (or plan) implemented by a
company to meet the customer’s needs, and by which a
company generates revenue and creates value
Business-oriented social networks Also known as professional social networks, are networks whose primary
objective is to facilitate business activities and connections. They are built on social relationships and can exist
offline or online
Business process management (BPM) (1) A method for
business restructuring that combines workflow systems
and redesign methods, covering three types of interactions: people-to-people, systems-to-systems, and systems-to-people; and (2) a holistic management approach
focused on aligning all aspects of an organization with the
wants and needs of its customers and partners. It promotes
business effectiveness and efficiency, while striving for
innovation, flexibility, and integration with technology
Business process reengineering (BPR) A methodology
for conducting a comprehensive redesign of an enterprise’s processes
Change management “Is a structured approach to shifting/transitioning individuals, teams, and organizations
from a current state to a desired future state. It is an
organizational process aimed at empowering employees
to accept and embrace changes in their current business
environment” (per Rajput et al. 2012)
Collaborative filtering Using proprietary formulas that
automatically connects the preferences and activities of
many customers that have similar characteristics to predict the preferences of new customers and to recommend
products to them
Collaborative (or sharing) economy An economic system constructed around the concept of sharing goods and
services among the participating people. Also known as
‘collaborative consumption’
Collective intelligence (CI) An application of crowdsourcing for problem solving, idea generation, and innovations
Communal shopping A method of shopping where consumers enlist friends and other people they trust to advise
them on what products to shop for
Competitive intelligence (CI) “The action of defining, gathering, analyzing, and distributing intelligence about products,
customers, competitors, and any aspect of the environment
needed to support executives and managers in making
strategic decisions for an organization” (en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Competitive_intelligence accessed January 2015)
Content marketing “A marketing technique of creating
and distributing valuable, relevant, and consistent content
to attract and acquire a clearly defined audience—with
the objective of driving profitable consumer action…. It is
an ongoing process that is best integrated into your overall marketing strategy, and it focuses on owning media,
not renting it” (Content Marketing Institute)
Cookies Small files sent from a website and stored in a
designated area in your computer. They allow companies
to save certain information for future use
CRM analytics The application of business analytic techniques and business intelligence such as data mining and
online analytic processing to CRM applications
Crowdsourcing Describes a set of tools, concepts, and
methodologies that deal with the process of outsourcing
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
313
314
work, including problem solving and idea generation to a
community of potential solvers known as the ‘crowd’
Customer engagement (CE) “The engagement of customers with one another, with a company, or a brand.
The initiative for engagement can be either consumer- or
company-led and the medium of engagement can be on or
offline” (per Wikipedia)
Customer interaction center (CIC) A comprehensive
customer service entity in which enterprises take care of
customer service issues communicated through various
contact channels (searchcrm.techtarget.com/definition/
contact-center accessed January 2015)
Customer relationship management (CRM) An
approach that focuses on acquiring customers and building long-term and sustainable relationships that add value
to the customers as well as the organizations
Cyberbullying “Bullying that takes place using electronic
technology” (stopybullying.gov accessed January 2015)
Direct marketing “Direct connections with carefully targeted individual consumers to both obtain and immediate
response and cultivate lasting customer relationships—
the use of direct mail, the telephone, direct response
television, e-mail, the Internet, and other tools to communicate directly with specific customers” (Kotler and
Armstrong 2011)
Earned media When customer conversations become the
channel
E-government The use of information technology in general, and e-commerce in particular, to provide citizens and
organizations with more convenient access to government
information and services
Electronic customer relationship management (e-CRM
or CRM 1.0) The electronically delivered set of tools
that helps manage CRM
Enterprise 2.0 Using Web 2.0 tools in the workplace
Folksonomy (collaborative tagging, social tagging) The
practice and method of collaboratively creating, classifying, and managing tags to annotate and categorize content
Gamification The introduction of gaming into social
networking
Hype cycle A graphic representation of the maturity, adoption, and social application of specific IT and SC tools and
how they are potentially relevant to solving real business
problems and exploiting new opportunities
Inbound marketing A marketing strategy that relates
to being found by customers, as opposed to “interrupt”
marketing
Information dashboard A visual display or presentation
of data organized in ways easy to read and interpret
Internet radio Audio content transmitted live via the
Internet. It is a broadcasting service that enables users to
listen online to thousands of radio stations
Glossary
Internet TV The delivery of TV content via the Internet
by downloading or streaming videos
Key performance indicator (KPI) A quantitative measure
commonly used in the industry that expresses the critical
success factors of a company, department, or an initiative
Knowledge management (KM) A process of capturing
(or creating) knowledge, storing it, constantly updating
it, disseminating it, and using it whenever necessary. This
way, knowledge is shared for useful purposes, ranging
from problem solving to increased productivity
Mashup Combination of two or more websites into a single websites that provides the content of both sites (whole
or partial) to deliver a novel product to consumers
Metric A specific, measurable standard against which
actual performance is compared. Metrics are used to
describe many things such as costs, benefits, or the ratio
between them
Microblogging A form of blogging that allows users to
write short messages (or an image, or embedded video)
and publish them, to be viewed either by anyone or by
a restricted group that can be chosen by the users. These
messages can be submitted by a variety of means, including text messaging from cell phones, instant messaging,
e-mail, MP3, or just on the Web
Mobile social networking Social networking where
members interact with one another using cellphones or
other mobile devices
Online customer engagement “Is qualitatively different
from offline engagement as the nature of the customer’s
interactions with a brand, company and other customers
differ on the internet. Discussion forums or blogs, for
example, are spaces where people can communicate and
socialize in ways that cannot be replicated by any offline
interactive medium” (per Wikipedia)
Organizational strategy Expresses the specific plans and
policies, a business plan to take to achieve its strategy
Owned media These carry communication messages from
the organization to Internet users on channels that are owned
and, thus, at least partially controlled by the company
Paid Media When the brand pays to leverage social media
properties. Also called advertising
Performance metric A measure of the organization’s
performance on activities designed to achieve specific
objectives (also called “Web Analytics” for the online
environment)
Personalization The matching of services, products, and/
or marketing communication content to individuals,
based on their preferences
Personal selling “Personal interactions between a customer’s and the firm’s sales force for the purpose of making
sales and building customer relationships” (Kotler and
Armstrong 2011)
Glossary
Phishing A fraudulent process of acquiring confidential
information, such as credit card or banking details, from
unsuspecting computer users
Privacy The right to be left alone and free from unwanted
intrusions or disturbances in one’s private life or affairs
Public relations “Building good relations with the company’s various publics by obtaining favorable publicity, building up a good corporate image, and handling
or heading off unfavorable rumors, stories, and events”
(Kotler and Armstrong 2011)
QR codes Barcodes that appear as many black modules
arranged as a square grid on a white background. They
are now an exciting extension of offline paid media that
engages Internet users (see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QR_
code accessed January 2015)
Reputation management systems Various predefined criteria for processing complex data to report reputation
RSS (Really Simple Syndication) A family of Web feed
formats used to publish frequently updated content such
as blog entries, news headlines, audio, and video, in a
standardized format
Sales force automation (SFA) Applications that support the selling efforts of a company’s sales force, helping salespeople manage leads, prospects, and customers
through the sales pipeline
Sales promotion “Short-term incentives to encourage
the purchase or sale of a product or service” (Kotler and
Armstrong 2011)
Search engine optimization (SEO) The process of
improving the visibility of a company or a brand on the
results page displayed by a search engine
Sentiment analysis (opinion mining) A type of analysis
that aims to determine the attitude or opinion of a person
with respect to a particular issue as expressed in online
conversations (e.g., if the opinion is positive, negative,
or neutral)
Social ad “An online ad that incorporates user interactions
that the consumer has agreed to display and be shared.
The resulting ad displays these interactions along with the
user’s persona (picture and/or name) within the ad content” (Interactive Advertising Bureau 2009)
Social bookmarking A method for Internet users to organize, store, manage, and search for bookmarked URLs of
resources online with the help of metadata
Social business “A business that embraces networks of
people to create business value” (per ibm.com/smarterplanet/global/files/us__en_us__socialbusiness__
epw14008usen.pdf accessed July 2015)
Social capital The value created by connections among
individuals and within social networks. It highlights the
value of social relations and the role of cooperation. It
also helps to get economic results
315
Social collaboration People’s collaboration within and
between communities enabled by social media tools and
platforms
Social commerce (SC) E-commerce transactions delivered via social media
Social computing A type of computing that includes an
interaction of computers and social behavior
Social customer relationship management (SCRM or
CRM 2.0) CRM supported by social media (e.g., Web
2.0 tools, social network sites, as demonstrated in the
opening case), which are designed to engage customers
in conversations, sharing and other interactions in order
to provide benefits to all participants and increase trust
Social customers These customers are usually members
of social networks. They share opinions about products,
services, and vendors; do social shopping; and understand
their rights, and they know how to use the wisdom and
power of the crowds and communities to their benefit
Social engineering When criminals use psychology to
persuade unsuspecting people to disclose personal information about themselves, in order to allow the criminals
to gain unauthorized access into the user’s computer,
to collect confidential information for use in illegal
activities
Social enterprise The use of social media tools and platforms and conducting social networking activities in
organizations while its major objectives are either commercial or non-profit activities (e.g., the government)
Social game A video multiplayer game played on the
Internet, mostly in social networks or in virtual worlds
Social government (government 2.0) An emerging field
where governments use social media to improve their
services to citizens, organizations, and employees, in
addition to improving their internal operations. A social
government can be viewed as a subset of e-government
Social graph A diagram that illustrates the interconnections among people, groups, and organizations in a social
network
Social influence “The change in behavior that one person
causes in another, intentionally or unintentionally, as a
result of the way the changed (persons) perceive themselves in relationship to the influencer, other people and
society in general” (see changingminds.org/explanations/theories/social_influence.htm)
Social marketplace A marketplace that uses social media
tools for conducting activities, such as the buying and
selling of products, services, and resources
Social media Online text, image, audio, and video content created by users using Web 2.0 platforms and tools,
which people use for social interactions and conversations, mainly to share opinions, experiences, insights, and
perceptions
316
Social media analytics Describes the activities of
monitoring and recording, analyzing, and interpreting
the results of interactions and associations among people,
topics, and ideas. It is the process of gathering data from
blogs and social media sites and analyzing that data to
make business decisions
Social media intelligence The monitoring and collection
of online opinions and other social data (such as conversations or reviews) used for guiding corporate decisions
and (private and public) actions
Social media marketing (SMM) The use of social networking and social media as marketing communication
and marketing tools (McAfee, A. Enterprise 2.0: New
Collaborative Tools for Your Organization’s Toughest
Challenges. Boston: Harvard Business School Press,
2009)
Social network A social structure that describes a virtual
community. It is composed of nodes (which are generally individuals, groups, or organizations) that are tied
by one or more specific types of interdependencies, such
as values, visions, ideas, financial exchange, friendship,
kinship, dislike, or trade. The structures can range from
simple to very complex
Social network analysis (SNA) A method for analyzing
social networks. It involves the mapping and measuring of both relationships and information flows among
groups, organizations, and other connected entities in
social networks (see Scott and Carrington 2011)
Social network game A video game that is distributed
primarily through social networks, and usually involves
multiplayers
Social network sites Web-based services that allow individuals to join a social network (community) and perform
social media activities, including interaction, sharing, and
building profiles
Social networking The act of exchanging information,
private or public, through various forms of networks technology, such as the Internet, cellphones, and other devices
and services, using social media tools, Apps, or networks
Social networks services (SNSs) Also known as social
networks sites such as LinkedIn or Facebook, provide a
Web space for people to build their homepages, which
the service organizations host for free. They also provide
basic communication and other support tools (e.g., blogs,
e-mail, and chatting capabilities) for conducting different
activities
Social radio The integration of Internet radio with social
networking activities
Social shopping Online shopping done with social media
tools and platforms
Social software A range of software tools that allow users
to interact and share data and other media
Glossary
Social support One’s perception of being cared for,
receiving responses, and being helped by people in their
social group
Social TV An emerging social media technology that
enables TV viewers who are in different locations to interactively share experiences such as discussions, reviews,
tweeting, and recommendations while watching the same
show simultaneously
Social web “A set of social relations that link people
through the World Wide Web”
Software application (App) A piece of software (usually
small) that is run on the Internet, or on an intranet on your
computer, or on your wireless device, such as the iPhone
and iPad. Apps are designed for end users. Numerous
Apps are available for social media
Strategic planning “An organization’s process of defining
its strategy, or direction, and making decisions on allocating its resources to pursue this strategy.…Strategy has
many definitions, but generally involves setting goals,
determining actions to achieve the goals, and mobilizing resources to execute the actions. A strategy describes
how the ends (goals) will be achieved by the means
(resources)” (per Mintzberg et al. 1996)
Strategy A framework indicating the direction a business is planning to accomplish its mission and goals.
Strategy also outlines the plans and policies that need to
be accomplished
Strategy map A graphical representation of an organization’s strategy
Tactics The specific plans and policies, a business plan to
take to achieve its strategy
Tag A key word or term assigned to a piece of information
(such as an Internet bookmark, digital image, video clip,
or any computer document)
Tweets Short text-based posts (up to 140 characters)
posted to Twitter
Twitter A free microblogging service that allows its users
to send and read other users’ updates. An online social networking and microblogging service that enables its users to
send messages and read other users’ messages and updates
User-generated content (UGC) Various kinds of media
content that are produced by end users and are publicly
available
User profile Describes customer preferences, behaviors,
and demographics
Viral blogging When bloggers conduct viral marketing
activities by leveraging the power of the blog community
to spread content
Viral marketing A word-of-mouth (WOM) method by
which people tell others (frequently their friends) about a
product they like or dislike. Passing marketing messages
to gain exponential visibility
Glossary
Viral marketing (viral advertising) “Any marketing
technique that induces websites or users to pass on a marketing message to other sites or users, creating a potentially exponential growth in the message’s visibility and
effect” (see whatis.techtarget.com)
Viral video A video that is spread rapidly through the process of online information sharing
Virtual community A community in which the interaction
takes place over a computer network, mostly the Internet
Virtual economy An emerging economy existing in several virtual worlds, where people exchange virtual goods
frequently related to an Internet game or a virtual business
Virtual goods Computer images of real or imaginary
goods
Virtual presence (telepresence) Being present via intermediate technologies, usually radio, telephone, television
or the Internet
Virtual world A 3-D computer-based simulated environment built and owned by its residents (the community)
317
Vlog (or video blog) A blog with video content
Web 2.0 O’Reilly viewed this term as describing a seconds generation of Internet-based tools and services.
Some properties cited by O’Reilly were: user-generated
content, online collaboration and information, and sharing data interactively
Widgets Mini Web applications that are used to distribute
or share content throughout the social Web, downloaded
to a mobile device or desktop, or accessed on a Website or
blog” (Interactive Advertising Bureau 2010)
Wiki (wikilog) A tool that allows users the easy creation
and editing of any number of interlinked Web pages
via a Web browser, using a simplified markup language
or a WYSIWYG text editor (What You See Is What
You Get)
Word of mouth Oral communication that passes information from person to person (per investopedia.com/
terms/w/word-of-mouth-marketing.asp
accessed
January 2015)
Index
A
Advergaming (in-game advertising), 87
Advertising, 4, 24, 49, 76, 105, 128, 156, 184, 210, 234, 269,
295, 306, 313
Autoresponder, 169, 170, 313
Avatars, 39–41, 86, 147, 161, 169, 176, 214–218, 227, 245, 279, 313
B
Behavioral targeting, 10, 55, 57, 68, 82, 91, 275, 307, 312, 313
Blog, 4, 24, 49, 76, 100, 131, 156, 186, 207, 232, 270, 291, 310, 313
Business model, 15–17, 20, 29, 30, 34, 40–42, 109, 128–129, 131,
133, 138, 139, 141, 142, 144, 148, 150, 152, 158, 207, 220,
227, 234, 236, 238, 248, 251, 279, 280, 283, 298–302,
306–308, 310, 313
Business process management (BPM), 256, 280, 313
Business process reengineering (BPR), 280, 313
Business social network, 36, 184, 185, 199
Business-oriented social networks, 33, 35–36, 41, 185, 313
C
CE. See Customer engagement (CE)
Change management, 280–281, 285, 286, 313
CIC. See Customer interaction center (CIC)
Collaborative (or sharing) economy, 224, 313
Collaborative filtering, 48, 49, 55–57, 68, 108, 312, 313
Collective intelligence (CI), 4, 14, 29, 30, 37, 171, 194–196, 242, 302, 313
Competitive intelligence (CI), 243, 246, 255, 256, 313
Content marketing, 8, 83–85, 212, 313
Cookie, 56, 67, 91, 119, 135, 245, 275, 287, 312, 313
CRM. See Customer relationship management (CRM)
CRM analytics, 173–175, 313
Crowdfunding, 37, 39, 41, 42, 146, 196, 224, 225, 292
Crowdsourcing, 10, 14, 16, 19, 24, 26, 29, 37–39, 41, 42, 63, 67, 109,
122, 137, 138, 150, 161, 162, 173, 174, 181, 182, 188,
192–196, 198–201, 208, 211, 220, 225, 234, 235, 244, 255,
280, 291, 292, 313–314
Customer engagement (CE), 20, 31, 60–62, 99–124, 144, 145, 212,
234, 250, 256, 266–267, 279, 310, 314
Customer interaction center (CIC), 61, 116, 160–161, 174, 175, 192,
266–267, 314
Customer relationship management (CRM), 10, 18–19, 80, 84, 85, 97,
111, 155–177, 184, 191, 199, 212, 218, 234, 238, 242, 257,
266, 278, 279, 285, 291, 298, 305, 307, 309, 312–315
Cyberbullying, 242, 268, 272–276, 314
D
Direct marketing, 82, 94, 95, 156, 279, 301, 310, 311, 314
E
E-government, 207–210, 296, 298, 314, 315
Earned media, 58, 83–85, 88, 95, 101–104, 116, 118–120, 123, 124,
249, 310–312, 314
Electronic customer relationship management (e-CRM or CRM 1.0),
158, 314
Enterprise 2.0, 9, 11–13, 16, 19, 182, 183, 185, 188, 190, 234,
314, 316
G
Gamification, 191, 223, 224, 314
H
Hype cycle, 239, 241–242, 256, 258, 314
I
Inbound marketing, 25, 85, 94, 312, 314
Information dashboard (dashboard), 255, 314
Internet radio, 221, 222, 314, 316
Internet TV, 91, 221–222, 314
K
Key performance indicator (KPI), 249, 256, 314
Knowledge management (KM), 32, 182, 184, 193, 199–201, 314
M
Metric, 43, 61, 63, 77, 79, 92, 94, 95, 99–124, 233, 234, 240, 241,
247–253, 255–258, 312, 314
Microblogging, 8, 14, 26, 29–32, 34, 41, 43, 58, 60, 79, 83, 85–87, 93,
95, 106, 169, 189, 190, 198, 242, 273, 314, 316
Mobile social networking, 36, 37, 221, 314
O
Online customer engagement, 61, 314
Organizational strategy, 235–239, 280, 281, 314
Owned media, 83–85, 88, 95, 97, 101, 311, 314
E. Turban et al., Social Commerce: Marketing, Technology and Management, Springer Texts in Business and Economics,
DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-17028-2, © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2016
319
320
P
Paid media, 83–85, 88, 90, 95, 101, 102, 104, 108, 114, 115, 123, 186,
239, 249, 310, 314, 315
Performance metric, 79, 94, 95, 118, 122, 123, 233, 234, 249, 250,
312, 314
Personal selling, 82, 94, 95, 310, 314
Personalization, 24, 29, 31, 40, 48, 49, 51, 54–57, 63, 69, 87, 132,
136, 138, 140, 144, 167, 173, 175, 184, 210, 220, 222, 279,
297, 298, 308, 314
Phishing, 268–272, 285–287, 315
Privacy, 16, 19, 30, 36, 57, 69, 105, 115–116, 139, 145, 149, 151, 186,
191, 242, 243, 268, 272–276, 285–286, 295, 302, 307, 315
Public relations, 11, 31, 82, 94, 95, 101, 103, 190, 234, 310–312, 315
Q
QR codes, 108–109, 120, 122, 123, 315
R
Reputation management systems, 30, 115–116, 122, 315
S
Sales force automation (SFA), 161, 171–172, 315
Sales promotion, 11, 16, 82, 85, 86, 88, 89, 94, 95, 111, 310–312, 315
Search engine optimization (SEO), 114, 116–118, 122, 211, 253, 311,
312, 315
Sentiment analysis (opinion mining), 156, 161, 233, 234, 247, 248,
252–258, 315
SEO. See Search engine optimization (SEO)
SFA. See Sales force automation (SFA)
SMM. See Social media marketing (SMM)
SNA. See Social network analysis (SNA)
SNSs. See Social network services (SNSs)
Social ads, 88, 90–91, 94, 95, 279, 284, 315
Social business, 9–11, 15, 16, 19, 41, 158, 172, 181–184, 192, 193,
197, 201, 242, 254, 279, 280, 284, 286, 292, 315
Social capital, 8, 33, 49, 64, 66–68, 280, 315
Social collaboration (Collaboration 2.0), 41, 182, 188, 193, 197–199,
201, 253, 284, 315
Social commerce (SC), 5, 23, 49, 79, 101, 131, 157, 182, 207, 233,
267, 291, 302, 310, 315
Social computing, 5–9, 18, 40, 183, 184, 302, 315
Social customer, 18–19, 131, 132, 150, 155–177, 183, 224, 245,
292, 315
Social customer relationship management (SCRM or CRM 2.0),
158–169, 171–177, 315
Social engineering, 268–271, 315
Social enterprise (Enterprise 2.0), 183, 234
Social games, 18–19, 29, 34, 147, 151, 207, 222–224, 226, 284, 315
Social government (government 2.0), 205–228, 315
Social graph, 33, 63–66, 68, 84, 111, 116, 144, 172, 223, 276, 315
Social influence, 14, 17, 49, 64, 66, 68, 69, 107, 251–253, 257, 315
Social media, 3, 25, 54, 75, 100, 131, 155, 182, 205, 231, 266, 291,
305, 314
Social media analytics, 233, 234, 242, 247, 248, 252–256, 316
Social media intelligence, 247, 248, 316
Social media marketing (SMM), 5, 10–12, 18, 19, 28, 37, 42, 59, 62,
78, 79, 90, 94, 95, 115–117, 131, 142, 160, 210–213, 215, 235,
246, 258, 267, 279, 282, 292, 316
Social network, 4, 25, 48, 77, 100, 128, 156, 182, 206, 231, 268, 297,
306, 313
Social network analysis (SNA), 64, 65, 253, 316
Social network games, 222–223, 316
Social network services (SNSs), 5, 17, 33, 116, 182, 194, 210, 312
Index
Social network sites, 10, 12, 27, 28, 33–35, 40, 64–65, 86, 102, 132,
144, 158, 161, 166, 168, 175, 191, 200, 213, 239, 245–247,
256, 278, 315, 316
Social psychology, 8, 19, 49, 51, 63–66, 68, 111
Social radio, 222, 316
Social software, 9, 12, 19, 30, 32, 34, 132, 136, 185, 189, 197, 243,
245, 256, 281, 283, 316
Social support, 8, 10, 14, 18, 19, 49, 51, 63, 66–67, 133,
276, 316
Social TV, 219–222, 226, 228, 316
Social Web, 5–7, 18–19, 49, 88, 156, 157, 210, 250, 254, 280,
316, 317
Software application (app), 28–29, 88, 256, 316
Strategic planning, 233–239, 256, 316
Strategy, 8, 28, 51, 76, 100, 128, 158, 189, 208, 232, 267, 292, 296,
307, 313
Strategy map, 251, 316
T
Tactics, 10, 30, 53, 54, 58, 66, 78–80, 86, 92, 94, 95, 104, 105, 114,
115, 117–118, 120, 122, 124, 182, 235, 237–239, 243, 249,
256, 267, 270, 306, 307, 309–312, 316
Tweet, 4, 6, 16, 31–32, 51, 55, 58, 68, 76, 79–82, 86–88, 93–95, 103,
106, 107, 112, 113, 116, 120–122, 140, 149, 150, 157,
173–176, 206, 207, 221, 222, 244, 246, 250, 252, 270, 279, 316
Twitter, 4, 25, 55, 76, 100, 129, 156, 183, 206, 239, 266, 306, 316
U
User profile, 32, 55–56, 81, 216, 275, 316
User-generated content (UGC), 6–8, 16, 18, 19, 26, 28–30, 82, 101,
109, 113, 120, 122, 133, 175, 188, 195, 221, 242, 244, 268,
272, 273, 276, 278, 282, 311, 316, 317
V
Video blog (vlog), 29, 30, 60, 92, 121, 213, 317
Viral blogging, 59–60, 106, 122, 316
Viral marketing (viral advertising), 12, 18, 58–60, 69, 87, 105–107,
122, 124, 234, 243, 301, 316, 317
Viral video
communal shopping, 132, 313
social marketplace, 5, 41, 143–144, 150, 190, 315
social shopping, 6, 8, 12, 15–17, 19, 51, 55, 56, 63, 64, 108,
127–152, 166, 234, 284, 315, 316
virtual economy, 147, 219, 317
virtual goods, 28, 144–150, 215, 216, 218, 219, 226, 317
Virtual world, 9, 17, 26, 29, 34, 39, 41, 82, 83, 86, 93, 95, 120, 147,
150, 190–193, 198, 207, 215–219, 221, 222, 226, 227, 242,
247, 313, 315, 317
W
Web 2.0, 5, 7–10, 12, 13, 18, 19, 26, 28–30, 33, 40–42, 59, 76, 91,
132, 149, 158, 161, 162, 168, 171–173, 175, 177, 182–185,
190, 193, 197–199, 207, 209, 219, 226, 244, 245, 254, 270,
271, 283, 302, 314, 315, 317
Widgets, 16, 88, 94, 249, 250, 311, 317
Wiki (wikilog), 5–7, 25, 26, 28, 30–32, 34, 39, 53, 56, 60–61, 63, 65,
66, 86, 91, 101, 103, 105, 108, 142, 143, 147, 148, 156, 158,
174, 185, 206–208, 214–217, 219, 220, 224, 251, 252, 255,
275, 277, 293, 294, 300, 313, 315, 317
Word of mouth (WOM), 8, 14, 15, 19, 30–32, 49, 51–54, 57–61, 68,
84, 87, 100, 103, 105–108, 110, 122, 131, 140, 144, 160, 162,
210, 240, 244, 246, 301, 310, 316, 317