Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Andreas Customer Centricity: The Art of Social Data cleverbridge Networking Event, Boston 12 October 2011.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Andreas Customer Centricity: The Art of Social Data cleverbridge Networking Event, Boston 12 October 2011."— Presentation transcript:

1 Andreas Weigend @aweigend www.weigend.com Customer Centricity: The Art of Social Data cleverbridge Networking Event, Boston 12 October 2011

2

3 Building Computers 1970’s

4 Connecting Computers 1980’s

5 Connecting Pages 1990’s

6 Connecting People 2000’s

7 Connecting Sensors 2010’s

8 Social vs Transactional Data vs Social Media Revolution vs Evolution

9 “Social Data is the New Oil” UN General Assembly, 8 November 2011

10 Irreversible Shift in Customer Mindset

11 Customers - engage - connect - share 3 times per week on average Nike+

12

13

14 Smartphones and Sensors Context, situation Sound Light Customers interact Tag Scan

15 https://www.google.com/lati tude/b/0/history/dashboard Location: Google Latitude

16

17

18 Location Absolute: Place, time Individual: Identity, History Aggregate: Insights Relative: Distance To places: Advertising Between people: Dating Between devices: Risk

19 Create DistributeConsume Everybody

20 The amount of data a person creates doubles every 1.5 years after five years  x 10 after ten years  x 100 Social Data Growth is EXPONENTIAL

21 This year people will generate more data than mankind has from its beginning through last year Social Data Growth is EXPONENTIAL

22 * With social data being abundant, attention has become the scarcest resource. * To get attention, people will do anything, including socialize their data Economics of Social Data

23 The ABC AttentionAdvertising BelongingBranding CollaborationConfusion

24 Two Monologues don’t make a Dialogue GDI, Zurich, January 2010 Twitter -- The Illusion of an Audience World Innovation Forum, NYC, June 2010

25 Fundamental Shift in Communication One-way  Two-way Asynchronous  Synchronous Planning  Interaction List  Flow Private  Public

26 Situation Geo-location Device Attention Clicks, Transactions Intention Search Connection Social graph User generated Reviews Data Strategy

27 Case study: What data for targeting of a new phone product? Connection data Who called who? Traditional segmentation Demographics Loyalty

28 Connection data Traditional segmentation 0.28% Adoption rate 1.35% 4.8x

29 Company Customers

30 Audience C2B: Customer to Business C2C: Customer to Customer C2W

31 Amazon.com Share the Love

32 Result: Amazing conversion rates since customer chooses Content (the item ) Context ( she just bought that item) Connection (she asked Amazon to email her friend ) Conversation (information as excuse for communication)

33 Or is information just an excuse for communication? Purpose of communication: to transmit information?

34 1993 “On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog”

35 2011 “On the Internet, everybody knows you’re a dog”

36 Fraud reduction: Provide risk scores Social network intelligence Social graph targeting: Provide prospects

37 Audience C2B: Customer to Business C2C: Customer to Customers C2W: Customer to World

38 Amazon.com: Public sharing of interests

39 Where does product knowledge come from? Case Study: Best Buy

40 Who Can You Get To Work For You? 100M Customers 100k Employees 100 Specialists

41 Marketer-generated aware consider buy use opinion share Consumer-generated Funnel Megaphone

42 Reduce barriers for contribution Design incentives that work Get Your Customers To Work For You!

43

44

45 Rooms to Avoid: 01, 21 08, 17 Rooms Ending in: Possible Ice Machine / Elevator Noise Limited View Rooms Corner / Oversized Rooms: 04 24 Oversized, Corner Room, Quiet Room Oversized, Corner Room with North Times Square Views (Higher Floors are Preferred Rooms Ending in:

46 Product Customer Brand

47 From controlled production for the masses… … to uncontrolled production by the masses

48 Who talks to whom? Consumers to consumers Who trusts whom? Shift from institutions to individuals Who is in control? From e- commerce (company focus, Web 1.0) to me- commerce (customer focus, Web 2.0) to we- commerce (relationship focus, Web 3.0)

49 Innovation Internal  External “Most smart people don’t work here.” Bill Joy Data Collect and analyze  Create and share Experiments Push and pray  Launch and learn

50 1. Facebook Customers knowingly and willingly give data Designed for contribution and distribution 2. Google Take whatever you can get 3. Amazon Customer-centric: Help them make good decisions

51 Do not have  Somewhere already Cannot get  Can! User will give Must not use  Embrace it Be secretive  Be transparent Information asymmetry  Information symmetry

52 Help people make better decisions Make it trivially easy for people to contribute Give people an excuse to connect Note: Products and services that use social data improve over time

53 Write the equations of your business in terms of customer centric metrics e.g., View-weighted availability Capture the space created by the disappearing constraints of the past e.g., Communication costs

54 Andreas Weigend @aweigend www.weigend.com Thank you! Customer Centricity: The Art of Social Data cleverbridge Networking Event, Boston 12 October 2011


Download ppt "Andreas Customer Centricity: The Art of Social Data cleverbridge Networking Event, Boston 12 October 2011."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google