youtube

  • February 7, 2011
  • Many good things were spawned by Salesforce’s Super Bowl ads. The ads themselves left us curious and wanting to know more, and that was their job.   Salesforce placed some compelling videos on YouTube, one at five minutes and another at two.  Find them here.  For me, the longer video, “Chatter.com: The Making of Do Impossible Things as a Team,” is where Chatter became a star and the videos were where you could find the real information and messaging.

    What I am left with is the notion that Super Bowl ads are so expensive that only companies selling beer and pretzels can make something that tells a story adequately because we already know how to use them.  Trying to introduce a new idea and trying to explain it in thirty seconds is nearly impossible.  Another notion, though, is how powerful and inexpensive YouTube is and what a big market there is for Internet TV.

    Many people have aspects of Internet TV already with devices like Apple TV or whole PCs plugged into their conventional HDTVs.  A new generation of hardware with all the components integrated will surely appeal to a waiting audience.  Once that happens we’ll see more short ads that are not much more than inducements to get viewers to check out a Website or a video.  Possibly, the ads will be simple stubs of the videos.

    If anything, Salesforce’s Super Bowl ads yesterday were a harbinger of that future just as the Beatles videos on Ed Sullivan presaged the appearance and widespread use of music videos.

    As for the ads themselves, they were good animations and powerful incentives for people to learn more about Chatter, so they achieved their purpose.  I would have preferred having the ads connect to the YouTube videos though.  Close to fifteen thousand people have already viewed the longer Chatter videos on YouTube and that number will only grow.  That number, while considerably smaller than for the game, represents the real audience for this new form of collaboration software.

     

    Published: 13 years ago


    Is video becoming a part of your sales, marketing or service outreach?  Many companies have begun producing interesting and entertaining video to communicate with their customers and prospects.  If your company is already participating in this growing trend we’d like to see what you’ve been up to.

    We’re looking for the best examples of front office corporate videos produced and deployed in 2010.  Our research is limited to videos with running times under six minutes and it doesn’t matter if the piece is a straight video or something done with animation.  Please send us links to your videos that meet these criteria.

    Any company that considers itself a front office or CRM software supplier or service provider is welcome to participate in this research.  Please send links only to this address:

    Denis@BeagleResearch.com

     

    Published: 13 years ago


    I have been remiss in not paying enough attention to social media monitoring software.  I suppose it’s understandable given that social media is at the margin of CRMmoving to the center, but still in the outer shelland monitoring software is somewhere beyond that orbit in the software equivalent of the Kuiper belt.  Maybe it’s time to pay a little attention there because monitoring software can be a big addition to your marketing strategy, and much of it is free.

    First, what is it?  Social media monitoring software is a class of applications, delivered on-line that track aspects of how you and your company are being talked about on the Web. 

    There are applications that track texttwitter feeds, blog posts, comments and the like.  These have been around for a while and a classic example is what might still be called a vanity search on Google and other search engines.  The basic idea is that the search engine looks for fragments like Beagle Research or Pombriant, and brings links back to your email.  If you recall the Steve Martin classic movie, “The Jerk” getting a Google Alert is equivalent to receiving a new phone book.

    There are lots of sub-specialties in this area.  For example, products like del.icio.us can tell you when someone bookmarks a web page.  Blogpulse can tell you who is picking up on a blog posting that you might not think is going anywhere.  It can also tell you about the use of keywords, like your product name for example.  And Co.mments can track the comments left on blogsdo people like your posting or are they panning it?  What else are they saying?

    The proliferation of different types of social media, especially video, seems to have spawned a cottage industry of companies that will gladly scour the video sites to bring back tidbits that may be informative or salacious.  Suppose someone snaps a photo of one of your executives in a compromising position, a search of flickr, YouTube, Google Video, MetaCafe and other sites can alert you to trouble. 

    Then there are consolidators like Keotag that tracks which keywords are being used as tags.  Is your company name being used as a tag?  It might bear looking into.  I was impressed to learn there is even a search engine productoodlethat scours online job listings and aggregates the information.  Is your competitor advertising a new position for what looks like a new product line?

    Then there’s Edgar Online.  Edgar is the SEC site that captures and makes available public filings on public companies.  It gives you a window into the health of public companies.  There is also SeekingAlpha which lets you subscribe to the RSS feed of conference call transcripts (think earnings calls).  Also, Google Patent Search (beta) is self-explanatory.

    There’s more too.  Marketing Pilgrim (www.marketingpilgrim.com) lists 26 of these and similar sites that are available free to track what the world is saying about you and yours.  I don’t have the heart or the stamina to go into all of them though.

    What’s the net of all this?  A couple of ideas.  First, social media is not just for individuals, companies can make very good use of free filters to understand customers and competitors better. 

    Remember clipping services?  They were dedicated to scouring magazines and literally clipping articles for you.  Every month you would get a file of clips that helped you understand what the market thought about you last month, or more realistically, three months ago when the reporter filed the story, in the case of magazines. 

    Now it’s instant.  Everyone is a reporter too, wittingly or unwittingly.  That photo of you or your boss three sheets to the wind and scantily clad playing tiddlywinks at midnight at the user conference in paradise last month was a lark but it ended up on-line.  Can you say damage control?  In the arms race that is marketing, you need to know because your competition wants to know and you know what that means.

    As you might expect, there are consolidators of these filters and companies that span the differences in media and I think they bring a certain cloak-and-dagger quality to all this.  Imagine being able to get a clippings service worth of this kind of information streaming into your face every day.  The sheer volume of information out there is impressive and there is almost a CIA-like (I am sure they will track this keyword, Hi, guys!) quality to getting this kind of market intelligence. 

    It’s a great use of technology but I wonder about some of the ramifications and potential for abuse.  In the time it took to write this, it feels like social media just grew up.

    Published: 15 years ago