Perry Goldschein - Sustainability Strategy, Communications & Marketing

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CONSCIOUS CLICKS - The Blog

News and analysis on sustainability, corporate social responsibility, stakeholder engagement, and Internet and other digital marketing and communications. You'll even get some very practical tips on these topics that you can put to immediate use!

February 1st, 2012

Cultivate Your LinkedIn Network for Best Results

I was at a networking event last year in Manhattan for the Marketing Executives Networking Group, when I started speaking with a former CMO from a mid-size company sitting next to me.

We started talking about different ways he was going about exploring new opportunities, when he mentioned his use of LinkedIn.

To my surprise, he mentioned his disappointment with it.  He explained that he had over 200 people in his LinkedIn network to whom he had recently reached out, yet only one to two dozen or so had responded – a 10 percent response or less to people he knew with a simple request for help.

Then, I was even more surprised. I had just reached out to my whole LinkedIn network for the first time since it had gotten sizable (and first time in years).  My network was about three times larger than the CMO’s, and received over 200 responses, for roughly a 35 to 40 percent response rate. The response I had gotten had blown me away, but I figured it must be typical for personal networks.

I reached out again another couple of times to more or less my whole network over the last year and got similarly impressive, if smaller response rates.  The last time was in October.

There are a lot of factors that affect what percentage of your network would respond to a message you convey – all similar to email marketing generally. These include the message itself, its source, the frequency of messages received from the source and their relevance, the call to action, etc.

Perhaps the biggest though, is cultivation of your network.  This starts with who you connect with in the first place; and includes how you keep in touch and add value for each member.  I try to LinkIn only with people I’ve met or talked with on the phone – that represents over 95 percent of my LinkedIn network, with over half of those I’ve actually met in person. Then, over time, I provide general information to many, as well as specific information useful to one or a few individuals, along with truly personalized messages when appropriate and relevant.

When I do reach out with a request or call to action, I bake in mutual value with it – an exchange of ideas or other contacts, for example.  Thoughtful blog pieces on leading sustainability portals has also helped with credibility and recognition. Recently, I’ve been able to make a number of connections for people in my network that have led to strong opportunities — for new business in one case and a full-time position in another.  The grateful response from colleagues has been gratifying.

This approach has led to some new business for me over the years, a job offer I accepted, and dozens of new and high-quality executives, entrepreneurs, and other professionals joining my network. I’m sure this would work well for any organized networking – I have simply found LinkedIn to be the best tool for my purposes so far, even though there is still plenty of room for improvement.

I’m counting on my network coming through for me again as I prepare to reach out another time in the next several days.

October 30th, 2009

MoveOn blasts US Chamber Facebook page

Just before noon EST, today, I received a remarkable email from MoveOn.org as one of its millions of email subscribers.

The email revealed an existing story about the  US Chamber of Commerce’s (USCC) either very misleading, or completely false, membership and representation numbers.  The USCC has apparently, for a long while, mislead the public into thinking it had 3 million members, when its actual paid membership is something in the order of 10% or less of that number.

The MoveOne email then asked recipients to post a comment on the USCC’s Facebook page, calling it out on its lies. I reviewed the post, then went to the USCC’s Facebook page to participate. It was already inundated with a phenomenal volume of negative feedback.

The Chamber became flustered as evidenced by its responses to the comments and remained defensive, rather than owning up to its deception or apologizing for any confusion. It had its page settings initially set so that visitors would see its fan’s comments; but anyone can become a fan to comment and that’s what the MoveOn crowd did — the Chamber subsequently set its page to automatically show only its own comments within two hours after the onslaught started.

This was something to watch in action and shows the power of combing email and social media to vastly increase the audience from a traditional media story. There is simply nowhere for opaque organizations to hide; those that try, and then especially those that get defensive about it, will loose oodles of brand value, not to mention stakeholders leaving for the exits.  Anyone know exactly how many of the Chamber’s actual members are still left?

October 28th, 2009

CSR is Inside Baseball – Take the Quiz

This is the first of our guest posts here at SDialogue.  We promised to continue the dialogue about how social media is advancing the sustainability dialogue after the launch of our  paper on the topic.  This post is from Deron Triff, CEO at Changents.com – a great organization which is indeed furthering the sustainability dialogue.

CSR is Inside Baseball

Take the Quiz and Prove Me Wrong

I often use the expression “inside baseball” to describe corporate social responsibility.  Too many of the best companies using business as a positive force for change talk about their incredibly cool CSR projects in gauzy details only an insider could love.  Almost all stumble in their well-intentioned efforts to really connect with mass audiences around shared values.   Is this a big deal?  You bet it is!

Like no time in history companies are investing hundreds of millions of dollars to do “good” in the world.  Their ethical business practices and truly innovative approaches are bringing about social and environmental change in ways that drop right to the bottom line.  But instead of connecting with consumers through pop-culture channels, the good work, the cool projects, the amazing engagement opportunities get stuffed away in a 100-page dust magnet called the CSR Report. Consumers want to purchase from responsible corporate citizens.  Why make it so hard to tell the story!

To prove that CSR is about as inside baseball as it gets, I challenge you to a 5-question CSR quiz matching Fortune 100 companies with their blockbuster CSR achievements.  To make it worth your while, I will award the winner with 100,000 consumer impressions by placing an ad of their choice (benefiting a company or a favorite non-profit) on the homepage of Changents.com.

If answering the questions felt like throwing darts, you’re not alone. Last week Grail Research rolled out a study revalidating a proven point: most consumers have no idea companies like HP, Cisco, The Gap, Microsoft, Nike and General Mills are socially and environmentally responsible companies.

For years, however, studies by Cone, Manning Selvage & Lee and AMP Agency have shown the positive relationship between CSR and consumerism.  Despite this well understood fact, companies have a hell of a time creating values marketing experiences that are exciting, interactive, easily understood and ‘connectable’ through social media.

Case in point.  Intel’s CSR achievements are among the most notable in the world.  Trust me, snuggle up with its CSR report (which I am not advocating:) and you’ll be blown away. However, the punch line is on page one where CEO Paul Otellini states “…I am proud of the many recognitions…including our number one spot on Corporate Responsibility Officer magazine’s 100 Best Corporate Citizens list….” Don’t get me wrong, Corporate Responsibility Officer magazine is great for us inside baseball players, but c’mon Intel, you have a story to tell to the masses!

Now, there are some great examples of companies bringing their “good” to life on the Internet. For example, in 2009 the American Express Member’s Project caught lightening in a bottle with 400,000 people registered and 1.8 million unique visitors. AMEX masterfully used the Web to crowd source people with exciting projects for change under the company’s brand. They leveraged the best of our increasingly “ego-altruistic” culture and engaged the public. It worked not only because AMEX offered sizable financial support to the winners, but also because it understands Seth Godin’s paradigm that explains how agents of change are turning to the Internet and connecting one-by-one to form groups – which catalyze into movements – that take responsibility for creating change.

A company’s ability to help consumers connect the dots between commerce and values is a challenge, no doubt about it. With that said, the level of creativity, content and entertainment value in the values marketing space is beginning to rival that of product marketing.   Perhaps Fast Company said it best when describing Timberland’s CEO Jeff Swartz as a visionary business leader who is “using the hard financial metrics of profit, return on investment, and, oh yes, shareholder return, to try to prove that doing good and doing well are actually self-reinforcing notions.”

Deron Triff, CEO, Changents.com

October 22nd, 2009

Social Media for Sustainability

I attended the Social Media for Sustainability conference organized by Justmeans in San Francisco on Monday. Along with hundreds of others who attended, I was excited to see a conference so laser-like in its focus on the intersection of two topics our firm seems to be addressing on a daily basis now.

The conference was designed to help answer such questions as: How should your company using social media to engage your customers, employees, activists, and other stakeholders online?  What are the best tools and platforms? How do you develop the right incentives for building community and keeping your community engaged? What is the ROI of social media and what metrics should your company be using?

While the conference didn’t answer all of these questions, many great insights were provided by both panelists and audience members from companies like Intel, Cisco, Nike and Disney, as well as Seventh Generation, Treehugger.com and TriplePundit.com.

Some major takeaways included:

  • Empowered by social media, customers, employees, activists, and other stakeholders are demanding far more from companies than ever before — with the power to affect and even define brands (e.g., United Breaks Guitars is closing in on 6 million views)
  • Social media helps co-create great ideas (e.g., MyStarbucks Idea)
  • Your brand is being discussed, whether or not you are part of the conversation — Google it, YouTube it, Twitter it and see for yourself (we’ve tried to stress this with clients ourselves — at the least, you should be “listening” in on the conversation with basic tools)
  • Sustainable brand leaders like Seventh Generation and Timberland are moving away from annual sustainability reports and towards more real-time storytelling and data — they’re looking for meaningful conversations (we’ve been helping clients with this type of activity for a while)
  • Leading brands are starting to crowd-source their efforts around sustainability
  • “‘Open companies are already performing some 30% more profitably than closed companies” (Dwayne Spradin, Innocentive) — “we” are smarter than “me”; but this requires a different mindset and culture than traditional or closed innovation — “culture eats strategy for lunch”
  • @katbaloo A good overview of Social Media Listening and Monitoring Tools as you think about tracking ROI: http://bit.ly/VBlmY

What’s been your experience with social media and sustainability?  Let us know!  More commentary at Twitter, of course (#justmeans).

January 20th, 2009

Adults Quadruple on Social Networks

The share of adult internet users who have a profile on an online social network site has more than quadrupled in the past four years — from 8% in 2005 to 35% now, according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project’s December 2008 tracking survey.



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