
Social commerce is the idea that we as business leaders can harness the power of our consumers' social networks in order to create products, not campaigns, that our consumers need.
Let's try an example...
Say for instance you wish to purchase a new bike. Instead of typing in "bike" to a search engine (giving you over 1 million results), you do this but on a social networking site, say Facebook for example (although they have not yet mastered this type of searching). When you search "bike" on Facebook, you see that 200 of your friends recently commented about bikes, 75 about a recent bike purchase. Of those 75, 25 purchased mountain bikes, which is what you wish to look into further. Seven of your friends purchased the same brand of mountain bike. You're friend John is an avid mountain biker with a lot of knowledge and a tight wallet. You know he would be willing to spend more for quality and knows the best bikes to chose. He is a fan of the mountain bike brand page and notice he has commented about his new bike, saying "I can't believe the quality and value of the new model. This is my third bike from this brand and I have never had any problems! LOVE YOU GUYS!!!". You decide to go to this brand.
"This intimate knowledge of people within your social network is key, and is the main reason why reviews via social media have gone to the next level compared to other online reviews in the past"(Qualman, 2013, p. 76). "Next level" means a purchase. Like noted before, you are more likely to trust the review of your mountain biking friend, than a random biker you have never met, nor know their own level of expertise when it comes to mountain biking.
As a business, we can gather knowledge gained from social networking sites in order to modify, change, and invent old and new products and services. After development, we then take these products to social media, gain feedback, better refine, and then allow our social sites to push these products to consumers based on their thoughts, needs, actions, and connections.
A lot to process, but imagine it as the world's most efficient and realistic focus group. Creating products that market themselves, doing away with the need to advertising and making it more of an enhancer, than an initiator.
What company's have you seen that are trying this concept, successful or unsuccessful? How many times have you wanted to show a video that came up on your news feed on Facebook and wished you could search the video title and find it on the site instead of scrolling for minutes trying to find it again?
Qualman, Erik. 2013. Socialnomics: How Social Media Transforms the Way We Live and Do Business. Second Edition. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Hi Courtney,
ReplyDeleteGreat example of how crowdsourcing can be used on both the consumer and business end. Consumers can use it to poll their networks for product reviews and recommendations, as you mentioned with the bike example, while businesses can use social networking to find the next big idea for a product or service.
One company that does this extremely well is Mountain Dew with their “Dewmocracy.” The campaign kicked off in 2007 with the goal to “create the next Mountain Dew product by harnessing the collective intelligence of the brand’s passionate fans” (Smith, 2012). The result of this collective brainstorming was Voltage, the citrus version of Mountain Dew released in 2009.
You bring up a really interesting point that this crowdsourcing is essentially a larger scale focus group. I agree that it is more efficient and accurate to prompt your network for feedback rather than provide incentive for people to participate in a focus group and talk about the product for an hour. How do you see this revolutionizing market research? Do you think this will ever fully replace the traditional focus group?
Thanks for sharing!
Meagan
References:
Smith, Alex. (2012). Three Amazing Crowd Sourcing Campaigns. Social Media Today. Retrieved February 14, 2014 from http://socialmediatoday.com/alex-smith/492666/three-amazing-crowdsourcing-campaigns.
Courtney,
ReplyDeleteInsightful posting on crowdsourcing! With the nonprofit work that I do, crowdsourcing has become integrated into the healthcare sector. We have found this to be truthful with those affected with NPD as well. "Crowdsourcing health care cannot substitute doctors, but it can provide a valuable alternative source of information for those struggling with their health” (Fischer, 2014). At our last Family Support and Medical Conference, back in August 2013, we had a presenter discuss the idea of working with the crowdsourcing tool called PatientsLikeMe.
PatientsLikeMe is another website that lets patients with particular diseases and conditions share and compare data. It pulls in revenue by selling user-reported data to partners such as drug companies. The platform also has its Open Research Exchange, which lets researchers conduct surveys based on data from community members. (Fischer, 2014)
We are looking forward to the process of implementing this resource to our families. They are looking forward to taking their medical Facebook conversations off to a different venue as well. I think that this system will be incredibly impactful to our community, who is always searching for answers to a disease that does not yet have a cure. A great piece of advice came from one of my great friends, mother of a boy with Niemann-Pick disease, “When managing a difficult situation, grasp for the positives and don’t let go. Take stock of your resources, and those of your friends, family and community, and let them help” (Weingarden Dubin, 2012). I think this is one of those resources our community will need.
References:
Fischer, K. (2014, February 14). Crowdsourcing as the next health care solution. Retrieved February 14, 2014, from Sheknows.com: http://www.sheknows.com/health-and-wellness/articles/1030383/crowdsourcing-health-care
Weingarden Dubin, J. (2012, June 14). Mom story: my son has niemann-pick disease. Retrieved February 14, 2014, from SheKnows.com: http://www.sheknows.com/parenting/articles/962672/mom-story-my-son-has-niemann-pick-disease
Courtney,
ReplyDeleteI really liked that you talked about how people feel about reviews from their peers. While search engines are great tools to help you find information, nothing is as trustworthy as advice from a friend. People who we trust are often the first place we turn when trying to find an answer to a question. Being able to get this advice from friends and then check online is probably how most of us go about finding this type of information. This would suggest that search engines are a great secondary source of information, but most of us would rather seek advice from friends.
You also mentioned that typing in a term on a social site can sometimes give you many more results than are needed or are relevant to the decision you are trying to make. I can see how this could get overwhelming and make some people not way to do things this way. You also brought up the example of seeing what friends on Facebook said about products you were interested in. This was a good example because you are able to get advice from the people you know who have had experience with the product. This could be extremely valuable information to a company. How would you go about getting people to go to friends about your product? Is the best way simply to have great customer service and make all customers happy, or to target these opinion leaders in key groups?
Great Post!
Hi Courtney,
ReplyDeleteGreat post! I particularly like your section of gathering knowledge from social networks to build a product, then going back to social networks to measure how it's doing.
I shared this buyer behavior model on my blog, I think you'd enjoy it too: http://www.marketingproblueprints.com/the-buyer-behavior-model-in-demand-creation-planning/. I really like how simple it lays out the process, and the questions within each section to get to the root of creating not only the best product, but the best experience. I think the point you raise about the consumer relying on personal reviews falls under the search section, but is not something a lot of brands have figured out how to incorporate into their campaigns or their interaction authentically. I think cracking the code of getting WOM marketing, two-way communication, and brand humanization to align under one strategy will provide the secret to consumer satisfaction success.