building b2b communities in a low trust world

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Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World Lou Ordorica Senior Community Manager Reseller Marketing Services Social Networking Conference 2010

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Page 1: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Lou OrdoricaSenior Community ManagerReseller Marketing Services

Social Networking Conference2010

Page 2: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Agenda

• Business climate, business drivers, and business values

• Case Study:

• Construct a B2B community for $3B Hi-Tech distributor

• Building the community — methodology

• Lessons learned

Page 3: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

A Challenging Business Climate

• “Flat is the new growth.”

• “Necessity buying” patterns taking hold

• Doing more with less is the new normal

• Margins are under pressure

• Work much today harder to earn the same dollars

• Weaker companies disappearing

• Customers putting off large purchases

Page 4: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Business Drivers

• ROI

• Gaining net new business

• Protecting customer base and margins

• Filling the pipeline with qualified leads

• Converting leads to paying clients

• Achieving market differentiation

• Reducing costs and improving efficiencies

Page 5: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Business Values

• Trust in corporations is deteriorating in the U.S.

• People buy from people they know

• “This is a relationship business.”

• Success or failure in relationships occurs “one conversation at a time”

• Golden Rule deviations usually end in tears

Our opportunity: to create a business community environment where trusted relationships flourish

Page 6: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Case Study

• $3B specialty distributor of data networking and phone systems with 1,500 employees

• Customer base comprised of resellers, VARs, and ISVs

• Rebooted marketing organization

• Created a marketing joint venture with channel-focused conference organizer in March 2009

• Spending less on traditional marketing and investing in community resources

• Hired Community Manager and invested in Telligent community platform

Page 7: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Business Goals

• Enable resellers to grow their businesses profitably

• Develop “Silver” level dealers into higher revenue producing “Gold” and “Platinum” levels

• Double revenue in 5 years

• Grow wallet share — and take it from competitors

• Gain competitive advantage through innovation and differentiation

• Develop high margin professional services business

Page 8: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Community Model

Page 9: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Community Model

physical events

1 per month

Boot Camps

Partner Councils

Customer Appreciation Events

High Cost

Page 10: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Community Model

physical events

1 per month

Boot Camps

Partner Councils

Customer Appreciation Events

High Cost

webinars

8 - 12 per month

Cisco WebEx Meeting Center

Citrix GoToWebinar

Medium Cost

+

Page 11: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Community Model

physical events

1 per month

Boot Camps

Partner Councils

Customer Appreciation Events

High Cost

webinars

8 - 12 per month

Cisco WebEx Meeting Center

Citrix GoToWebinar

Medium Cost

+ online community

7x24

Private

Branded

Discussion Groups

Managed

Low Cost

+

Page 12: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Building the Community: Describe the Problem

• Who is the executive sponsor? Who are your champions?

• Who are your buyers? Partners? Competitors?

• What are the “people places”?

• Web sites

• Conferences

• Meetings — physical and online

• What keeps your community up at night?

Page 13: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

• Get guidance from executive sponsors and people invested in business goals

• What is generating the most calls?

• What are the big trends?

• Who can speak to issues and opportunities facing the community?

• Group and prioritize the resulting list of topics and people

• Conduct interviews

• Listen generously!

Reaching Out to the Community

Page 14: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Capture the Community Vision

• Clearly articulated, memorable, and easily repeatable

• “We want the online community to be your Google — a starting point for information, best sales practices, and networking.”

• “Enable our customers to grow their businesses with practical advice they can put to work right away.”

• “A tool that brings closer to our customers and partners— one conversation at a time.”

• Group brainstorming is best to capture and refine the community vision.

Page 15: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Selling the Community

• A B2B Community exists for business — customers, profits, productivity

• Make the community relevant to executives. How will the community:

• Make it easier to find new customers?

• Increase customer loyalty?

• Improve employee productivity?

• Decrease costs?

Page 16: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Make the Community Relevant to Executives

Benefits Area Business Impact

• Ask the Experts

• Discussion Forums

• Blogs

• Wikis

• Reduce Support Calls

• Fewer FTEs

• Decrease OPEX

• Improve OI

Reducing S

upport Costs

Page 17: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

What Makes a Business Community?

• Community building blocks are the same

• Identity

• Belonging

• Connectedness

• Social capital

• Caring for the whole

Page 18: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Create Business Community Structures

• Primary audience is C-level business executive

• A “gated” community:

• Exclusive

• Controlled access

• Segmented, based on roles — very important!

• Managed

• Long-term growth

Page 19: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Create Community Member Personas

• Personas are fictions rooted in reality

• Describe roles, motivators, pain points, trigger words

• Use personas to guide editorial decisions — microcopy, too

• Example: William Smith is a CIO at a Fortune 500 company.

• Priorities: Growth (acquisition / retention), Controlling costs, Improving productivity

• Trigger Words: Cover Capital Costs (NPV), Internal Rate of Return (IRR), Payback, Cash Flows

Page 20: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Select Tools for the Business Community

• Focus on the building blocks — identity, belonging, connectedness

• Leverage mass social media where it makes sense

• Survey the landscape — look at competitors

• Focus on requirements, but be prepared to wear many hats

• Design

• User Experience

• Usability and User Acceptance Testing

Page 21: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

To Brand or Not to Brand?

• Does your company possess brand equity? Protect the brand.

• Trademarked names of products and technologies

• Logos, colors, shapes

• No or little brand equity?

• Build the community first

• Let your customer’s needs dictate choices

Page 22: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Build the Community Plan

• Audience definition — primary, secondary, tertiary

• Content — taxonomies that define topics and relationships

• Data sources

• Moderators

• Working Groups

• Steering Committees

• Editorial Calendar

Page 23: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Drive Participation with Content

Effort

Value

Aggregated tools and information covering

business functions — sell, quote, configure

Timely, productive, and visible dialogue that helps

people run their businesses

Repurposed web pages, white papers, podcasts, videos covering products

and solutions

Market research — best practices, competitive

analysis, insights

Page 24: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Content Taxonomy

Community Category Name Description

CEOBusiness

Enablement

Evaluating Investments

NPV, IRR, Payback, Cash

Flows

CEOBusiness

EnablementROI

Capital Costs, Risk

ManagementCEO

Business Enablement

Business Process Refactoring

Improving Productivity

Page 25: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Establish a Social Proof

• Follow people and adoption patterns

• Implement structures and processes that spur interest and growth

• Leverage sponsors and existing community base

• Roll up your sleeves — this is hard work!

• Create interesting profiles for your “starter” members

• Start discussion threads, write blog posts, set up wiki pages

• Get people interested and excited, and ask for their participation

Page 26: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Market the Business Community

• Market within the organization and externally

• B2B outbound marketing is alive and well

• Leverage communication channels and customer touch points

• Email: Newsletters, Email Signatures

• Direct Mail, Tele Marketing, On-Hold Messages

• Webinars

• Tap into existing systems used for digital marketing — SEO, CRM, SEM

Page 27: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Measure and Report

• Be sure to tell the stories

• Unsolicited member praise or criticism is gold

• Don’t fixate on activity — it is not the only measure of business impact

• Perceptions matter — be persistent, talk up the community at every opportunity

• Enlist champions — people who believe and can convert others

• The most useful feedback is rooted in truth. Be open and avoid defensive postures.

Page 28: Building B2B Communities in a Low Trust World

Lessons Learned

• Manage expectations early and often

• Delivering high value content is critical

• Embrace your role as a sales person

• Expect course corrections, sometimes mid-stream

• Guard your time and attention with vigilance

• Be courageous and take risks

• Leverage will get you to your goal faster and with less effort