Posts Tagged ‘Bazaarvoice’

Sam Decker 10 reasons why 100 billion impressions matter to you

February 28th, 2010 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer
10 Reasons that 100 Billion Impressions Matter To You
This week we passed the 100 billion mark, meaning we have served over 100 billion impressions of social commerce content (questions & answers, reviews and stories). So what does that mean to you as a marketer?
It means that hundreds of millions of people worldwide have made better purchase decisions (including you)
It means that hundreds of retailers and manufacturers are getting “Customer Oxygen” into their company, transforming the way  they do business
It is evidence that markets truly are conversations (See chapter 4 of Cluetrain Manifesto and the meaning of Bazaarvoice)
It means that this is just the beginning. The customer content “flywheel” is now turning at full speed and we will continue to innovate with our clients to keep up.
It means that if you haven’t started to facilitate customer conversations, you have less to fear.
It means there is an ecosystem of relevant product & service conversations across the web, which can amplify the voice of your customer
It means that you will see more search results come from product-related customer content
It’s evidence that customers are more likely to read this type of content than other ‘community’ content that is not relevant to shopping.
It means that social commerce is a scalable marketing strategy, proven by over 750 brands.
It means that you now have a reason to champion the voice of your customer to senior executives.
What else does it mean? I welcome your comments.
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100 billion impressions servedAs Brett posted earlier, this week we passed the 100 billion mark, meaning we have served over 100 billion impressions of social commerce content (questions & answers, reviews and stories).

So what does that mean to you, as a marketer?

  1. It means that hundreds of millions of people worldwide have made better purchase decisions (including you).
  2. It means that hundreds of retailers and manufacturers are getting “Customer Oxygen” into their company, transforming the way they do business.
  3. It is evidence that markets truly are conversations (See chapter 4 of Cluetrain Manifesto and the meaning of “Bazaarvoice”).
  4. It means that this is just the beginning. The customer content “flywheel” is now turning at full speed and we will continue to innovate with our clients to keep up.
  5. It means that if you haven’t started yet, you have less to fear from facilitating customer conversations than ever.
  6. It means there is an ecosystem of relevant product and service conversations across the web, which can amplify the voice of your customer.
  7. It means that you will see more search results come from product-related customer content.
  8. It’s evidence that customers are more likely to read this type of content than other ‘community’ content that is not relevant to shopping.
  9. It means that social commerce is a scalable marketing strategy, proven by over 750 brands.
  10. It means that you now have a reason to champion the voice of your customer to senior executives.

This is an inflection point, and just one data point that pales in comparison to the transformation occurring inside our clients’ businesses. Which, in the end, is making products and services better. Which makes me proud to bring the customer voice to market!

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Brett Hurt The “hidden” impact of 100 billion: the new textbook

February 28th, 2010 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

100 billion impressions servedThis week, you will see a series of Bazaarblog posts by our executive team about the achievement of our biggest milestone to date. As of late last week (the week that CNN profiled us!), we passed 100 billion impressions of user-generated content, including customer Reviews, Answers, and Stories! As of this writing, the real-time counter on our homepage is over 100.3 billion and climbing rapidly. Why count impressions? Well, in a world where 80% of consumers seek user-generated content while shopping, impressions of user-generated content are “the new advertising.” Actually, what is “new” is old – “the voice of the marketplace” (read the story behind our name) has always been with us, but this is the first time in human history that word of mouth is digital, and that’s more transformational than all of us can imagine today.

As we celebrate this milestone, we are also close to celebrating our 5-year anniversary (Brant and I founded Bazaarvoice on May 2, 2005). With 80% of consumers now looking for customer reviews, it is hard to appreciate now just how few U.S. retailers offered customer reviews on their websites in May of 2005. Would you believe only four? Today we serve more than 50 of the top 100 U.S. retailers, more than 25 of the top 50 U.K. retailers, and similar numbers in Australia, France, and Germany. And we serve many clients outside of retail, from health care to manufacturing to financial services. We have rapidly grown into a company of 750 clients and 515 employees globally, operating across 25 international languages. I do not take our success for granted one bit and I’m very proud of and thankful for our partnerships with our clients. I’m also proud of the culture we have created here. We spend the majority of our waking time at work, and we strive to make that time as fun and meaningful as possible. Our passionate culture impacts the way we serve our clients and also give back to the community.

Bazaarvoice School of C2C MarketingAs I look back to my first Bazaarblog post, I think back to my analytical roots, spending seven years building Coremetrics, and reflect on how much we have achieved on the analytical front at Bazaarvoice. The “hidden” impact of 100 billion impressions is how we are writing the new marketing and merchandising textbook together with our clients. In a world of increasingly fragmented media, a dramatic shift to time spent in the online channel vs. other channels, and a rise in the prominence of the voice of the customer, the “hidden” impact is felt in how marketers and merchandisers adopt new practices based on user-generated content. And, to be totally frank, I underestimated the impact in how Bazaarvoice would change the world in this way. The Bazaarvoice School of C2C Marketing Seal to the left is from our first Social Commerce Summit in 2008, which quickly sold-out and was a magical event, full of clients speaking about writing the new textbook together (our fifth Summit is coming up in Austin April 19-21 and is almost sold-out already).

So this blog is dedicated to some of the most dramatic changes I have seen on the path to 100 billion. Here is a look back on just a few of them:

It has been an amazing 4 years, 10 months, and I want to take this opportunity to sincerely thank all of our clients, employees, partners, investors, and advisors. We promise not to take our success for granted, and we are ramping up R&D and Client Services like never before. This quarter alone, we are attempting to hire at least 80 people, but our very high bar makes this difficult indeed (we have 14 full-time recruiters working in our office at Bazaarvoice today and there is nothing more important for our culture than its foundation: our people). If you know of someone that may be interested in joining us, see the many jobs available here and note our referral incentives.

The next 100 billion impression milestone will no doubt be achieved much faster than the first, but I expect our impact to be no less profound than with the first (see our many case studies, webinars, or whitepapers for more). Thank you, thank you, and thank you again for your support. And stay tuned to this blog as we continue this exciting journey. As I said in my first-ever blog post on Feb. 3rd, 2006 (and remains just as true today):

Welcome to the age of customer empowerment in our hyper-connected global village! We look forward to being your tour guide in this wild, wild ride.

Sam Decker Don’t dare a hot dog

January 30th, 2010 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Sometimes you have to risk a little dignity to motivate people or make a point. And that risk goes up when video is involved. If you’ve seen our “More than Words” video or “Freedom” video you’ll see we’re no stranger to this kind of sacrifice.

So maybe it’s not surprising that my events manager, and a collection of Bazaarvoice executives, would put themselves on the roof of our garage in exchange for the Bazaarvoice team breaking the quarter’s Social Commerce Summit registration goals (it’s selling out fast, actually!). We blew away the stretch goal, so Sarah fulfilled her commitment to dance in her hot dog suit, with a few condiment executives joining.

If that’s what it takes, then that’s what it takes!

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Sam Decker Bazaarvoice #1 for Ratings & Reviews Among Internet Retailer 500

August 3rd, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

guideWe’re always excited to see the Internet Retailer Top 500 Guide, and the 2009 edition just came out. Not only does it list the top online retailers based on annual online revenue, but it also gives a breakdown of the top eCommerce vendors these top retailers use.

The intent of the vendor ranking is to help retailers make decisions about suppliers. Internet Retailer is a great organization and we’re happy to be listed as one of the top providers of customer reviews; however, we noticed that the numbers can be a bit deceiving. The breakdown cited Bazaarvoice as serving  40 of the Internet Retailer 500. In fact, we are proud that we partner with over 100 of the Internet Retailer 500, making Bazaarvoice #1 for ratings and reviews, not to mention for social commerce solutions.

Why did they cite only 40? In the case of the Internet Retailer Guide, the methodology is for retailers to self report about which eCommerce providers they used. It’s the prerogative of the one person who fills out the survey to choose or know who their provider is for each function of their ecommerce ecosystem. It’s possible larger clients are less inclined to divulge all their providers, or perhaps the person filling out the survey doesn’t know all of their providers. Either way, according to our actual client records, Bazaarvoice was vastly underreported in this year’s Guide. We noticed other large eCommerce providers, such as IBM and ATG, were also underrepresented in the survey.

You could also look at market leadership in terms of size of clients or business size. In the Internet Retailer Guide, no additional weight was given to the largest retailers – the #1 retailer is ranked the same as #500. While smaller retailers may serve niche markets, the huge mass retailers amass tons of internal knowledge and expertise to become the largest in the United States, and more of the larger retailers choose Bazaarvoice. Among the Top 50 retailers, Bazaarvoice outranks the closest competition by a ratio of nearly 7:1 with clients like Best Buy, Dell, QVC, Macy’s, Costco, Overstock.com, and more. And in the Top 100, we outserve our nearest competitor by a ratio of 4:1.  See our partial client list here (not all clients give permission to display their logos).clients
When you factor in retailers who don’t have reviews or host them in-house, Bazaarvoice’s leadership is even more pronounced, with more than 80% of the Top 100 retailers choosing Bazaarvoice. And we are just talking about our Ratings & Reviews product, not to mention our other social commerce solutions, such as Ask & Answer and Stories.

This is an important point because as a hosted provider, part of our value to each client is learning from the whole. We help shape and share best practices from innovative, smaller clients (such as Vintage Tub and Bath or Fair Indigo) to large multi-channel retailers, such as Best Buy, Dell, and Costco. We truly believe we are inventing the future with our clients, and with a cross-vertical client list across small and large clients, we are able to innovate products rapidly (every seven weeks) and share best practices that help all clients grow ROI from social commerce.

Today over 525 brands, including over 100 of the Internet Retailer 500, turn to Bazaarvoice because we are the leader in ratings and reviews…and moreover the leader in social commerce.  We’d rather not beat our chest about these things, but we are proud of the company we keep, proud of what we’ve accomplished, and believe it’s important that our clients know the facts.

Brett Hurt The “Man Purse” in ‘The Hangover’

July 4th, 2009 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

My wife, Debra, and I don’t get out to the movies much, but when we do we want it to count.  That’s why I check critic and customer reviews online as well as listen to my friends.

Brant, my co-founder and our VP of Business Development, told me he was going to see ‘The Hangover’ with his wife soon, and I decided to do my typical research.  Both critic and customer reviews were positive, so Debra and I decided to go.  Let me just warn you that this is one lewd and wild movie, but it is also extremely funny.  We both had some great laughs, and there are some especially funny scenes that feature a “man purse”.

Roots Village Bag featured in The Hangover

The next week I was reading the June 29th edition of “Feeding the Voice: Cutting-Edge Promotions from Bazaarvoice Clients”.  This is a weekly email from our Community Management team, and it is one of the most important emails I get all week.  Our clients are using user-generated content throughout their multichannel and online marketing in a transformative way (see recent examples from Urban Outfitters, The Home Depot, and Argos in the UK).  And the number of cutting-edge promotions by our clients working with our Community Managers has risen to 20-30 per week, which is about the volume we saw in an entire year just two years ago.  Back to the slide deck – I open it and the first example is our client, Roots, blogging about the “man purse” in ‘The Hangover’.  It turns out it is their “Village Bag in Vintage Tribe Leather“, which is rated a 4.9 out of 5!  I was showing the Roots blog post to Debra last night and her comment was, “that is a really, really nice bag”.

I thought this coincidence was very cool, and you just never know where the impact of social commerce will show up.  And if you are one of our U.S. readers, enjoy your 4th!  We will proudly be watching the fireworks tonight.

Brant Barton Brett Hurt, Our CEO, Founder & Friend, Named Austin’s Entrepreneur of the Year

May 31st, 2009 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

It’s been an exciting couple of weeks at Bazaarvoice. First, on May 21st, Bazaarvoice was named the #1 Best Place to Work in Austin. We got a great photo of our entire team, including international team members who were in town for our quarterly company offsite at the Alamo Drafthouse, in front of our massive 52-inch Sabian Chinese gong in the Austin Business Journal.

Second, just one week later, our very own Brett Hurt was named Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year in Austin – one of four regional winners. The E&Y Entrepreneur of the Year awards recognize entrepreneurs who demonstrate extraordinary success in the areas of innovation, financial performance, and personal commitment to their businesses and communities.

Bazaarvoice CEO Brett Hurt named Austin Entrepreneur of the Year

I can’t think of anyone who deserves this honor more than Brett. In the description above, the word that I would emphasize most in describing Brett’s motivation as an entrepreneur is community. An Austin native, Brett is very mindful of the positive, profound, and multi-generational impact that a single entrepreneur and business can have on the prosperity of a community. He sees Bazaarvoice’s success and his own as a win for all of Austin, and he sincerely hopes that Bazaarvoice’s success will bring prosperity to our community not just in terms of job and wealth creation but in the form of many future companies that our team members will one day start.

When I worked for Brett at Coremetrics, the company he founded prior to Bazaarvoice, he was expecting his first child and was in the process of shopping for a new stroller. Like many first-time parents (I recently went through this process myself), he did a ton of online research, finally landing at Amazon.com and finding an extremely long and detailed review contributed by an aerospace engineer who had methodically deconstructed and reconstructed the stroller in question, documenting the process and his observations on the stroller’s design, materials quality, and workmanship at every step. This experience had a profound effect on Brett, as he imagined the power of this content for every shopper and purchase decision if it were available for every product and website. The idea for Bazaarvoice was born a few months later. Fast forward four short years and here we are – we have served 50+ billion reviews for 525+ global brands in 36 countries and we continue to grow (and hire!) like wildfire.

Please join me in congratulating Brett for his many accomplishments as an entrepreneur (Bazaarvoice is his fifth start-up company!), for the positive impact he has had within the Austin business community, and for being a genuinely sincere and humble person. He never fails to show his appreciation for the team at Bazaarvoice, our customers and partners, and the many supporters that have helped the company and Brett personally along the way.

So far, 2009 has been a big year for us – and there’s still six months left to go!

Brant Barton “H” is for Humor

May 25th, 2009 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

In addition to tagging reviews, questions, answers, stories and other customer-generated content with descriptive codes like “CR” for references to competitors and “CS” for customer service issues, I am starting to think that our content moderators should apply “H” to content that could dramatically boost a product’s conversion rate (because after a fit of uncontrollable laughter and the delirium that follows you simply cannot resist the urge to buy the product that is the subject of the “H”). That’s some actionable business insight for merchandising teams.

The inspiration for this post is the now infamous “Three Wolf Moon T-Shirt”, currently the #1 selling Apparel product on Amazon.com. No, that’s not a typo. I could efficiently end this post by just telling you to read a few of the reviews for this product. That would more than accomplish my goal of demonstrating the value of not taking yourself (or your brand) too seriously. But I have a minimum length requirement to meet, so I’ll go on . . .

Our good friends at Econsultancy in the UK beat me to the punch with an entertaining blog post on the t-shirt. The Washington Post published an article on the same day. No matter who you trust, that’s one damn funny t-shirt. If you trust me and took my advice above to read a few of the reviews, I bet you are now making your way through the checkout process while you finish reading this nailbiter of a post. That’s impressive multi-tasking.

We see our share of humorous reviews and many of those are just too inappropriate to post, but as reviews of the Three Wolf Moon T-Shirt aptly demonstrate, there is a very fine line between inappropriate humor and pure genius, not to mention a word of mouth marketing bonanza. I won’t speak for my colleagues at Bazaarvoice (you know who you are), but this t-shirt is responsible for a major drop in productivity last Friday because I was personally contributing to the millions of word of mouth “impressions” that the product received. While it may be difficult to put a dollar value on each of those impressions, you can most definitely put a dollar value on lost productivity.

In closing, if you offer customer reviews of your products and services, whether you are a Bazaarvoice client or not, I urge you to evaluate whether your definition of inappropriate is too strict and your tolerance of humor too low. Millions of dollars and an immeasurable wealth of customer word of mouth could be at stake!

Brett Hurt Bazaarvoice Named #1 Place to Work

May 22nd, 2009 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO
The entire team at our quarterly All Hands meeting at the Alamo Draft House.

I’m thrilled and humbled to announce that we were named Austin’s Best Place to Work!  The full article in the Austin Business Journal (ABJ) is here (and you can watch my acceptance speech here).  It’s our third year on the list of best medium-sized companies to work for, and this year we are finally #1 (up from #2 last year).

When we started Bazaarvoice, Brant and I knew culture was important. Sam and Andy quickly came on board and embodied that same focus. We knew that we needed the smartest people available, with entrepreneurial spirit and tons of passion, and in four years, through massive growth, we have not let go of our high standards, and we have never taken our eye off culture.

Each year, companies are invited to enter this competition, where employees anonymously fill out a survey asking about things like their trust in management, the level of appreciation they feel, and if they feel they are making a real contribution to their organization. What’s unique about our company is that we, in essence, ask these questions every quarter. Our employees have comprehensive performance evaluations with their managers each quarter, and we use MBOs (Management By Objectives) that we build together with employees to ensure they always know how what they do fits into the “bigger picture” at Bazaarvoice. Managers have regular one-on-one meetings with each employee, with the goal being no surprises at that quarterly evaluation.

Bazaarvoice was voted Austin's Best Place to Work.

What’s more, every employee evaluates managers (including the executives and me) each quarter through an online survey where they rate us on whether or not we are living our culture. I’ve had managers tell me how much they appreciate this – it really uncovers blind spots for them (me too), plus it gives employees a great way to give feedback to their boss. There is no fear of repercussion and we regularly emphasize the lessons learned in the great business book, Fierce Conversations (required reading at Bazaarvoice).

I’m proud to say we got an amazing 96.81 out of 100 possible points on the employee satisfaction survey. It helps me know that the open communication and culture we’ve created at Bazaarvoice is working for our employees. But we never rest on our laurels here. As a matter of fact, we just concluded our two-day executive team quarterly strategy off-site meeting where we had an impassioned discussion (like usual) about how to take our culture to the next level. We have never missed our quarterly meeting and culture has always been a key focus of our agenda.

To celebrate this cultural milestone, I’m taking the entire Austin team to celebrate at the movies – in our own theater to see Terminator Salvation.  And at a theater equipped with motion seats, no less.  We’ll see if it is worth talking about (the pre-buzz has been “interesting” and we are the 4th city in the US to get these).

The ABJ photo above was taken at our quarterly All Hands meeting at the Alamo Drafthouse, and it really exemplifies the fun atmosphere of these meetings. That’s our CMO, Sam, about to hit our huge, 52” gong – another fun Bazaarvoice tradition (and supposedly this 52″ was only one of two left in China that was available for purchase). We gong for big announcements, like when we recently hit 50 billion pieces of  user-generated content served up for our clients. As CEO, I see myself as the Chief Culture Officer (if the CEO doesn’t set the tone, you could have a real cultural breakdown). But we all own culture at Bazaarvoice, and I’m so proud of what we have built together – as a team.

Bazaarvoice is hiring – big time. If you know an incredibly smart, passionate person that wants to join a company built to win, please send him or her our way!

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Sam Decker What Happened at the Bazaarvoice Social Commerce Summit?

May 3rd, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

The second annual Bazaarvoice Social Commerce Summit U.S. ended Wednesday.  We limited attendance to 300, but truthfully we oversold with over 340 registered (70% year-on-year attendance growth). We were thankful for this “good problem to have,” especially as many conferences are 30-40% down or cancelled.

The theme of the Summit was “The New ROI: Return on Influentials”. Executives and managers from top retailers, manufacturers and financial companies came to the new AT&T Conference Center in Austin (on UT’s campus) for 3 days to learn how to build and show the impact of customer voice in their business. See the agenda here.

In the coming weeks we will blog cliff notes from the sessions. But you can also see the stream of Twitter notes here.

I didn’t hear everything (I was running around emceeing the event), but here are some of the biggest takeaways I had:

  • Anyone can be an influencer. You can unearth them by facilitating their contribution and amplifying its impact.
  • Measurement and marketing impact is easier than most think. Measure the impact of UGC on existing marketing campaigns (examples from Helzberg, Sephora, others)
  • Getting C-level buy-in dramatically accelerates the evolution of transforming the business with the voice of customer (ex: Sam Taylor, CEO of Oriental Trading pulled together cross functional team to leverage reviews in supply chain and strategy)
  • Brands realize that the voice of the customer is transformational, but are challenged to accelerate organizational change.
  • We are all working on a comprehensive way to operationalize and measure all the impacts of social commerce initiatives.
  • There’s a big opportunity in merging social content and data with email strategy. Bazaarvoice Social Alerts with JCWhitney had 100% open rate and 50% click through!
  • We’re scratching the surface on the database marketing opportunities with influencers. Those who contribute can help identify others who contribute. Some thought leadership discussed with our partner, Merkle.

And we had fun too…

  • We were in Austin…so we’ll start there!
  • During the sessions, Sunni Brown drew graphic recordings on each session (will post soon).
  • Tuesday night we took buses out to the Salt Lick Pavilion (best BBQ in TX, in my opinion) and hosted the Bazaarvoice Bull Ride contest again.
  • Leslie from Williams Sonoma took the prize this year (Omare from Geico won last year).
  • We had live music from Jeff Hughes and Chaparral
  • We played Chicken Shit Bingo (sorry…that’s just what it’s called!)
  • Attendees grabbed their beverage from the backs of Beer Donkeys!
  • As an unorthodox way to evangelize our message to clients, last year we debuted the video “More than Words”. This year we created two videos, “The Influencer Abduction” and “Freedom! ’09 (Let Their Content Free!)”. Share them with colleagues that need to ‘get’ social commerce!

Abduction of Influencers
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Freedom! ‘09 (Let Their Content Free!)

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If you want to experience the event through images, click through pictures from the event here on Flickr.

To give you a Bazaarvoice “inside perspective” on the event…

Last year’s event received a Net Promoter score of 9.3 out of 10. We were excited to get such positive feedback on our first event, but it also meant we had a high bar to jump over. We want to continually improve. We’re tallying the on-site surveys now, and we’ll be sending out an additional email survey, but just based on our experience and comments from clients, we were thrilled with the results. The majority of the event experience was based on the presentations and interaction between clients, as we learn from each other. One of my favorite quotes “the Summit is an amusement park of ideas.” And because so many clients came, our community management, support, implementation, and sales team members were able to put faces to voices. The entire Bazaarvoice team worked on making this successful. It takes a lot of work and requires juggling a lot of details. I want to give special thanks and recognition to the three folks on my team who were the producers of the event: Sarah Loyens, who quarterbacked the invitations and logistics to get folks there; Chris Wellington, our designer who took the event experience to the next level and tied it all together (including the Polaroids in the notebook!); and Amber Quist, who was the overall Producer of the event with RedVelvet Events. And of course, thank you to our partners who added to the content and made the event possible.

Stay tuned for cliffnotes of the content! For those who attended, stay tuned for presentations and conversations posted to the SCS Community.

p.s. If you’re in Europe or the UK, register for our Social Commerce Summit London on September 22!

Brett Hurt Leadership Themes from My Talk at The Wharton School

April 5th, 2009 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

The Wharton School logo

Earning my MBA from The Wharton School in ‘99 was a transformational experience for me.  A big part of that experience were graduates returning to campus to speak to my class.  So I have returned to the school, once to twice per year (in more recent years, twice), on my own dime, ever since graduating to pay it forward to the best of my ability.  It strikes me that this isn’t unlike shoppers, who we see encouraged to write their own content as they read more reviews, answers, and stories from their peers, receiving value and being motivated to pay it forward (see this study with the Keller Fay Group).

Last Thursday, I spoke from 9am-4:30pm to Dr. Stew Friedman’s leadership and teamwork classes.  Stew has been a mentor for around eight years now.  He authored Total Leadership, an amazing culmination of his life’s work and a book I deployed, with Stew’s help (he graciously visited us in Austin twice, and our London team attended his talk there), to the entire Bazaarvoice staff last year and then this year to all of our new people.  You can read about that experience here, which The New York Times graciously covered.

Every time I return to speak to Stew’s class, I reinvent my talk.  These talks come from the heart, and I prepare for them in the cab ride on the way to speak.  These are the key themes I spoke to on Thursday:

Humility. The single best leadership article that Stew pointed to me in our mentoring meetings was Level 5 Leadership by Jim Collins, author of Good to Great.  It is required reading for our executive team (and his class at Wharton), and I find myself referring to it often.  From the Wall Street meltdown, due to lack of transparency and oversight on very complex financial products (which still cannot be explained in most cases), to the hubris at AIG, we are living through a period of extraordinary transformation.

Lack of humility is a big problem in corporate America.  If you don’t have it, spend some time in the real world (perhaps you should go help Dick Grace build a hospital in an impoverished area in Tibet).  Whatever it takes, get humble and reflective.  Ask the tough questions.  Don’t sit comfortably with bad profits.  A lack of humility almost caused another Great Depression, but this time on a global scale.  It bankrupted an entire country (Iceland).

On the Bazaarvoice front, I believe our solution encourages humility through negative reviews.  You have nothing to be afraid of but having the data and the will to do something with it.  I have seen countless cases of initial shock to the negative, followed by the a-ha moment where the merchandiser realizes the reason they have such a high return rate with that product.  We are, after all, a digital reflection of offline word of mouth.  These are the conversations that people are having every day, like it or not (and you should like it – word of mouth drives your sales).  So have the humility to listen and do something about it.  Then have the wisdom to leverage it.

Transparency. The World Wide Web has brought us sites like Glassdoor.com, founded by Rich Barton, the founder of Expedia.  At Glassdoor.com, you have the ability to rate and review CEOs as well as report your salary information.  HR heads have reported the salary data as 90% accurate for large companies like Microsoft.  I learned about Glassdoor.com at Liberty Media’s NetLeaders event last year, where Rich was a speaker (his theme: everything – people, person, place, service, product, thing – that can be rated and reviewed will be).  The Web has also brought us TheFunded.com, where you can rate and review venture capitalists (and not without an uproar).

Obama embraces transparency.  Leveraging social media, he went straight to the people for his election campaign fundraising efforts, and raised more money, in small amounts, than any other candidate in history.  And now, as President, he is bringing social media to government.  He gets his share of criticism (such as not allowing visitors to comment on some of the government sites), but my belief is that the genie is out of the bottle.  Just like his campaign is being heavily studied, and will be imitated, so will his efforts for social media in government.  No one can question that he is racing through policy discussions, from stem-cell research to reform on Wall Street.  The pace of legislation is unprecedented in modern times.

With the Web, including blogging, Facebook, Twitter, Glassdoor.com, TheFunded.com, reviews, and so many other forces, leaders will be held accountable to a higher level of transparency.  The opaqueness of poor employee satisfaction (and ethics) on Wall Street is coming to an end, quickly.  This transparency will transform leadership as we have known it.  The command-and-control style, coming out of military training, is dying.

Connectedness. My daughter, who is now 4, will literally grow up on Facebook (or something like it), with a digital lifestream of connectivity to her friends.  When she is my age, 37, she will be able to jump to a different job at a much faster pace than my generation.  She will be connected globally to friends that she has known since childhood.  If she doesn’t like the company culture, her friends will know.  The level of transparency will be unlike anything we can imagine now.  As a result, the focus on leadership, management, and culture will be at a level that today we cannot imagine, as employee retention is already, today, often the most costly expense a company has.

Culture. Due to these themes, the importance of focusing on culture is greater than ever.  I’ll spare you our uniqueness here, and instead provide you with this reference to all of our blog posts that have been categorized under culture – there are many.  I spend around 15% of my time focused on culture, and I believe it is largely responsible for our success as a company.

Total Leadership. Stew’s book is the start of many initiatives to focus on the development of the whole person.  Although that may not directly help you sell or service more widgets (although it actually will raise performance), it will lead to greater retention, employee satisfaction, and, ultimately, productivity, in this era of transparency and connectedness.  Learn more at TotalLeadership.org (and check out TLTV).

Soul. The Corporation, a stirring documentary I watched 4 years ago, made me think hard about the soul of a corporation.  I’m a believer in karma, and the more successful we are, the more I focus on the nourishment of our company’s soul.  The Bazaarvoice Foundation is a part of that nourishment, but there is much more (such as the charity CEO speaker series Tony Capasso launched this year).

After speaking all day (both exhausting and exhilarating), Stew and I had the pleasure of hosting dinner at Tequilas, my favorite interior Mexican food in Philadelphia, with Glen Senk, CEO of client Urban Outfitters; Dmitri Siegel, head of Direct at Urban Outfitters; Fiona Dias, EVP of Partner Strategy and Marketing at GSI Commerce; and Dana Lasher, an old friend from CDnow (former VP of Sales and Marketing) that helped me design Coremetrics’ initial reports who is now an entrepreneur herself at get Ready girls, an affinity sportswear company.  It was a magical evening of discussion, and I passed along my endorsement of Total Leadership in the hopes of helping others.

I hope that this post encourages you to speak at your alma mater.  I have found it to be an incredibly reflective process, one of the most important leadership development activities that I do, and have really enjoyed the karma of it all.  To teach is to learn.