The document discusses the importance of social media for both individuals and businesses. It notes that the global social media audience increased by 18% between 2012 and 2013. For individuals, social media is about networking, collaborating, learning and sharing, while also having fun. For businesses, social media can be used for branding, advertising, customer service, and gaining insights from customer conversations. The document provides examples of companies that have social media command centers to monitor conversations and better understand customer needs. It also warns that social media can amplify situations both positively and negatively, so companies need to have strategies for social media use.
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Many companies are learning to actively listen to social media,
collect social data and insights, and act upon these. At least two
of Australia’s big banks have social media command centres to
learn, in real-time, what their customers are saying about their
products and services– with the overarching intention of improving
existing offerings and co-creating new ones as a lever for customer
engagement, retention and acquisition.
CBA is tracking every single on-line conversation about the Bank
in real-time and responding to it, answering requests and talking to
customers. It recently revealed that it has made nearly $1 million in
revenue by intercepting potential customers’ life events on Twitter.
NAB is using its social media command centre to help acquire,
retain and develop millions of dollars worth of business, and is
proving to be particularly attractive for winning business banking
customers.
All this social media data can be very valuable to insurance
companies for both underwriting and claims management. Consider
a recent case of a woman in Florida who told her car insurer that a
hit-and-run had damaged her car.The woman then told her friends
on Facebook that her daughter had caused the accident.The insurer’s
investigators searched social media, found the post, declined the
claim and the woman was convicted of filing a fraudulent claim.Yes, a
disturbing story in many ways but a sign of things to come.
Another application of social media data analysis is in the field
of investing. An extreme example is the so-called ‘Hash Crash’ in
April 2013. Someone hacked Associated Press’Twitter account and
published a tweet suggesting that the White House had been hit by
explosions.
The Associated Press tweet…
… and the Dow Jones reaction was a two-minute, 140-point drop.
Both Thomson Reuters and Bloomberg have started incorporating
sentiment analysis obtained from social media data in their analysis
of companies believing that arbitrage opportunities exist in scrapping
data from tweeter conversations about health and the future
of companies.
Social media is not risk free.The Associated Press example shows
that it is important to realise that social media amplifies in both
desirable and undesirable ways. In December 2013, Natwest suffered
a couple of computer fails in a short period and customers used
social media to vent their anger, often with considerable wit.
There are a number of examples of companies trying to use social
media for a marketing campaign only to see it hijacked. When
JPMorgan asked customers to tweet questions to the Vice Chairman
they didn’t expect this…
Don’t let these examples put you off. Rather, they are reminders why
businesses need to have a social media strategy and understand
how to use it.
Social media is here to stay. We all need to understand its
uses and misuses as individuals and businesses. Deloitte’s 2013
Globalisation Survey of 423 global executives found that 61 per cent
of these executives expect social media to become much more
or somewhat more important to their company over the next
three years.
I’ll leave you with the words of Giam Swiegers, our CEO at Deloitte
Australia: “You won’t be able to be an effective leader in the future if
you don’t know how to use social media.”
Comment continued
“Social is not a place for a hard sell,it’s a place to build
trust and credibility.”–Julio Viskovich, Author of Social
Selling: How to find Buying Signals on Social Media.
“Listen,Connect,Share and Engage–4 ways to be successful on
social media.”–Jeff Pulver, Chairman Zula