Posts Tagged ‘Facebook’

Deborah de Freitas Sephora exec talks mobile, Facebook, and the “next generation” of UGC

March 4th, 2010 by Deborah de Freitas Director, Marketing Communications

SephoraLast week, NRF’s retail blog recognized Sephora as a brand that’s truly “getting” social media marketing. Sephora has long been a highly active Bazaarvoice client, and we were excited to see the brand recognized for their innovative efforts at engaging their customers in the social sphere.

NRF interviewed Julie Bornstein, Sephora Direct SVP, for the post. Some of Julie’s comments really struck a chord with us, and we’d like to share them here.

Julie discussed the brand’s use of MobileVoice, allowing shoppers to access Sephora’s thousands of customer reviews on their mobile devices. “Have you ever tried to decide which moisturizer to use while standing in front of a wall of options?” Julie asked. “Our customers love to talk about beauty and they love to hear what others have to say.” Mobile access to authentic customer opinions helps shoppers in offline channels – in your stores, browsing your catalogue – find the right product for them.

Julie Bornstein, Sephora Direct SVP

Julie Bornstein, Sephora Direct SVP

On Facebook, Sephora strives to make sure there is value in being a fan. “We make changes as a result of [fan feedback],” says Julie. “Given that the people who tend to interact with us are our more serious beauty mavens, they really know what’s going on. It makes us realize how in touch our consumer is!” Customer feedback offers brands a chance to interact with their most engaged customers, learning from their feedback to improve products and services and generate effective marketing campaigns. “Use this audience as a focus group to help drive business decisions,” Julie suggests.

Integrating social networks like Facebook into UGC efforts offers brands the opportunity to make this content especially relevant for shoppers. “If the first generation of ‘user-generated content’ was Ratings & Reviews, I think the next will be around filtering that input by your own network and friends,” Julie suggests. TurboTax is doing this with its “Friends Like You” feature, which not only allows shoppers to filter reviews by personal aspects like “bought a home” or “had a baby,” but also allows them to find reviews submitted by their connections on Facebook, Twitter, and Myspace.

You can read NRF’s full interview with Julie here. To learn more about integrating your brand’s UGC with mobile and social networks, request a demo here.

Heather Brunner Early social media adopter Golfsmith talks about what’s next

August 26th, 2009 by Heather Brunner Chief Operations Officer

golfsmith_logo-convertedThis blog was guest-written by Sherrie Nguyen, Bazaarvoice Community Manager.

Golfsmith, a leading manufacturer and provider of golf and tennis gear, was one of Bazaarvoice’s first clients, and started Tweeting (@golfsmithHQ) and set up a Facebook fan page in spring 2009. Like a lot of retailers, Golfsmith is new to social media, but they’re not new to listening to their customers – the company celebrated their 40th birthday in 2007.

Right now, they’re trying to measure the impact of Facebook and Twitter for their business, and it’s an experiment at this point. According to Eric Mahlstadt, Senior Online Store Manager, and Dillon Smith, Search & Marketing Analyst, they currently have more than 1,200 Twitter followers and almost 7,000 Facebook fans. They track click-throughs from these pages to their site, follow responses to posts and numbers of followers, and are pleased with their results thus far. And it’s part of their corporate strategy of listening to their customers.

“It’s very important to us to walk the line between being engaged and being obtrusive,” said Eric. “The value right now to us as a retailer is not as much about what kind of people these are, but what kinds of experiences they’re having. We’re interested in providing as many choices and platforms as possible for our customers to share thoughts and ideas and provide input. The struggle then becomes having enough engaged ears to hear all the feedback and to be nimble enough to act on that feedback.”

So, for Golfsmith, the next step involves tying these conversations to real commerce. As an early adopter of our new Social Network Accelerators, they’ll have the opportunity to use Twitter and Facebook to directly impact sales conversion on their site. It starts with increasing participation.

“With Social Network Accelerators, we expect to start seeing crossover/cross-pollination to and from customer reviews and Q&A and our Facebook and Twitter pages,” said Dillon. “This comes with using these accelerators to drive more participation with Golfsmith, no matter how our Guests want to reach out to us, then aggregating these reviews and answers to our product pages, to have a direct impact on sales. It’s important to Golfsmith to listen to our Guests, over any channel they choose to use to communicate with us, and interact with them as much as possible. The more we hear from our Guests, the better we can work to improve our customer experience.”

While Golfsmith is innovating with Social Network Accelerators to help drive participation, there’s even more to come. Working with Bazaarvoice can help Golfsmith continue to innovate to help them get the most from social profile information – showing Facebook friends on the Golfsmith site – and distribution – allowing consumers to submit content directly from their social networks.

“As we learn more and continue to strengthen our communication with our Guests, we plan to work to increase the ease of sharing information, opinions and media to and from our Guests,” said Dillon. “We aim to provide social commerce applications and social networking in the format that our Guests would most like to use.”

Sam Decker Facebook expands its reach, makes friends even more powerful

August 17th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Become our fan on FacebookWith Facebook’s recent search functionality improvement, it’s working to become more like Twitter. With the changes, Facebook hopes you’ll find information on important topics that your friends – and everyone else – are commenting on.

And Facebook’s acquisition of FriendFeed, an online tool that helps users share information with their friends, further underscores the power of friends and other “people like me.”

Bottom line? If you’re on Facebook, you likely care most about what your friends – and perhaps their friends – think. There’s a reason you’re on Facebook, to share information with the important people in your life.

The power of these people is one of the main reasons we created Social Network Accelerators. When you’re shopping – whether you’re looking for a TV, a new insurance policy, or your next vacation – you automatically ask the people you know best. Social Network Accelerators feed into this by integrating with Facebook. When you go to your favorite retailer’s site to browse, you can see reviews from your friends, and even ask them questions from the site.

With our Facebook Connect application, customers can now shop online with their smartest friends in tow, seeing the products they recommend (or don’t), stories, and questions they have asked or answered.

For years, Facebook users have been able to share their published product reviews with their Facebook friends through applications like ShoutIt!, so their friends can see products they prefer. Bazaarvoice’s Facebook Connect solution takes this a step further, showing friends’ preferences while a shopper searches for a specific product – and guidance on what to buy – online.

This is just one phase of the new Social Network Accelerators we’re developing, part of helping our clients gain value from all their social assets. As discussed in our blog introducing Social Network Accelerators, our Facebook Connect application helps distribute user-generated content among a user’s friends, lets profiles drive which content a Facebook user sees at a retailer site, and lets Facebook users participate on retailer sites when retailers enable users to submit stories, answers, and reviews directly through Facebook.

Mike Svatek Introducing Social Network Accelerators from Bazaarvoice

August 10th, 2009 by Mike Svatek Chief Product Officer

Follow us on TwitterTwitter and Facebook get all the headlines and are clearly great ways to connect, but how do they drive real results for business? At Bazaarvoice, we’re all about results, so we’re creating real ways for companies to use social networks to fuel social commerce.

Our new Social Network Accelerator program, announced today, gives brands a blueprint for plugging into social networks in the right way to drive sales. It all starts with engaging users through social commerce applications such as Ratings & Reviews, Ask & Answer, and Stories – and gives brands an integrated strategy to tap into social networks for better distribution, profile information and participation.

Become our fan on FacebookDistribution: With Facebook Connect, for example, customers can automatically publish reviews, answers and stories directly to Facebook to share their opinions with their network of friends. Unlike other solutions on the market, we give our customers control of the message. They decide when and if the content should post to social networks, ensuring the content is moderated and safe for the brand.

Profiles: Clients that integrate with Facebook Connect can let their customers automatically see opinions of their Facebook friends, and find out what products they liked best. This will help drive sales and increase engagement with the site.

Participation: There’s also an opportunity for customers to submit reviews, answers, and stories via Twitter or Facebook and automatically funnel back to a site, directly to the product and category pages, where they can directly influence sales, increase search, and more.

In addition to the superior technology of our Accelerator program, we’ll also provide recommendations and best practices through our Community Managers. As part of a broader ecosystem, we recognize that our Radius partners will also play a key role in maximizing Social Network Accelerator results for our clients.

This all adds up to help companies broaden their reach, increase engagement with customers, and increase their intelligence about their customers as a whole. And – finally – companies can use Facebook and Twitter to drive real, measurable results. These are just a few ways we’re innovating to drive value throughout all of social.

Sam Decker Warning Signs of “Ghost Town” Brand Communities

May 31st, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

ghosttownHave you ever been exploring online and found yourself in a virtual community where crickets chirped and tumbleweeds drifted by? Message board tallies show the last comment was made in 2007 and any newer threads got a couple of views and zero responses. Welcome to the ghost town, a languishing community where there are few signs of life. Perhaps it was once a brand community launched with high hopes, a substantial budget and ambitious marketing objectives, but it was later abandoned, both by its inhabitants and its founders. The once-promising gold rush moved on.

Gartner reports that 50% of brand communities will fail. And by “fail,” I believe they mean “shut down.” That leaves the other 50% still live. But are they successful? How many “ghost town” communities are out there? Over the past couple years many progressive brands have explored social media and community marketing initiatives — Twitter, Facebook, blogs, viral videos, forums or fully-fledged online communities. With the comeback of the term “community” and the hype and buzz of Facebook, many other brands are likely contemplating everything from establishing a Twitter account to launching a Facebook-like community within their site. The promise is high customer engagement — which the CFO could care less about, but marketers often believe drives sales and loyalty.

I applaud exploration, experimentation and “fail fast” initiatives. But now we’re entering into a time where the key phrase is “show me the results.” The focus on measurability is leading many brands to take a hard look at what they launched, and step away from things that didn’t work. It’s a critical time for these brands, and for any others considering a move into social media. These failures don’t mean that online community-building is a waste of time, or that it can’t be done. But it’s complex, and the appropriate strategy could be markedly different from one brand to the next. Before beginning the virtual barn-raising in a new community initiative, tread carefully and consider what success means to you.

Jake McKee, chief strategy officer at Ant’s Eye View, likens the whole process to personal relationship building. “We date many more people than we marry — i.e. There’s bound to be plenty of failures in our question to create something grand,” he says.

The Community Concept Isn’t to Blame

You should know I’m not anti-community. I’ve been involved in “community” my entire career. In 1995 wrote a book on marketing with computer user groups (the analog to today’s online communities). In 1997 I launched and managed the ThirdAge.com community (chat and forums for baby boomers), I led product management for Dell Support Forums, and I’ve been a participant in Compuserve, eWorld, AOL, blogs, Facebook, Twitter, etc. From these experiences I’ve concluded that communities succeed if they solve a need, share an interest/passion and/or connect me with people I care about. Facebook works because most of your and my friends are there — it solves the need to connect and stay up to date, thus carrying more weight as a “social resume.” Dell support forums work because they allow asynchronous conversations to solve a technical problem for a frustrated computer user. The ThirdAge community (chat and forums) worked in certain topics where there was passion and birds of a feather could discuss that passion.

From a marketer’s perspective, the idea of a brand community sounds great. The expectation is that it will be a petri dish which will virally grow customer engagement, and this type of engagement will lead to sales. The problem is, few customers jump into that petri dish, fewer still will stick around, and the community interaction usually has no contextual bridge to purchasing. That’s three strikes. Most brand communities serve a very, very small set of customers (in relation to their customer base or market size) with either a lot of passion or a lot of time on their hands. And let’s face it, not every brand has the potential to inspire lasting passion and sustain a Facebook-type community. Exceptions are cult brands that have passion and community built into their product ethos, such as Harley Davidson or Apple. But you can’t create that by putting up a community. That starts way upstream, with the product and the brand.

What’s a Community For?

Brand communities are configured to create social interactions between customers, allowing them to share opinions and interact via blogs, wikis, polls, forums and private messages. There are a lot of technological bells and whistles that the product manager can get excited about, but let’s look at it from the customer’s point of view. I’ll repeat what I wrote earlier…the reason people participate in communities is to:

  1. Solve a problem / need (or help others do so)
  2. Share an interest or passion
  3. Connect with people of interest (develop social capital)

#1 is the reason support forums exist, and these reduce support costs, but don’t drive sales. #2 and #3 are usually what Brands are looking for, expecting community to drive engagement and sales. But when visitors are not passionate about the topic, they are less likely to jump in. If the community audience is small and unfamiliar with one another, a prospective visitor’s motivation to build social capital or help others dissolves. In both cases, the vibrance and participation in the community are next to go. This causes the next visitor not to join, which in turn decreases the passion and audience size of the community. This domino effect leads most brand communities to turn into a ghost town.

A study from Deloitte reports that two of the top three obstacles to making communities work have to do with getting people to engage or visit — and the remaining issue doesn’t help solve this problem:

  1. Getting people to engage
  2. Finding enough time to manage
  3. Attracting people to the community

The solution may lie in reframing the objective. A fully-developed Facebook-like community with thousands of regular participants is probably an unachievable — and in some cases undesirable — goal for many brands. I say undesirable because the resources required to build and maintain such a community may not be in line with the returns that they produce. Something smaller scale may not be as glamorous or provide as many opportunities to brag to your digirati friends on Twitter, but it may be just right for your brand and your customer base.

There are a few potential ways to go small. Ask yourself some questions. If you have a million customers and there are 100 community members posting occasionally, is that success? Or is it a ghost town? Gartner may be reporting that the community sticks around, but how much impact can those 100 people, or the few thousand that “watch” the interactions, have on your business? And even if those few thousand are more engaged, is the conversation related to your product or service leading to sales influence? Or is it unrelated?

Research from Communities

There’s nothing wrong with creating a community with the purpose of interacting with the few. A hundred or a thousand participants in a community may not make a sizeable impact on your sales, but they can provide valuable insight. If your objectives are for research or product co-creation, then a community that facilitates that interaction between your brand team and your customers can be very successful. Customers are much more engaged when they know the purpose of the community is for the company to listen to their ideas. A very focused version of this is Dell IdeaStorm or MyStarbuckIdea.com, where customers post an idea and others vote it up or down. Simple. The measures of success there are insights gathered in a much more scaleable and frequent way than traditional market research.

Communities like this have their place, but they don’t necessarily have a direct impact on sales. At least until that product co-creation happens — and most marketers probably have a shorter time-horizon to show ROI, especially in the current economy.

Sales from Social Commerce

commerceTo build a boom town — community features with a direct impact on sales — marketers need to pursue a strategy that creates interactions and contributions around the product or service they’re trying to sell. This Social Commerce model fosters opportunities for the creation of content that helps others make purchasing decisions, driving more sales and resulting in a quicker ROI. This type of strategy needn’t require a person to register or become a full-fledged member — they should be able to write a product review, ask or answer a question, or write a story without feeling like they have to make a commitment. Whether that contributor feels like they’ve joined a community by participating is not the point. Their contribution is useful for the visitors to the site, who came to learn more about the brand and get their questions answered — not to “friend” people or help others. And yet, once a critical mass of content is shared, a community of shared interest will start to form. People will write the 101st review because there’s a community around a product! This “accidental community” starts to form, which amplifies the engagement to the content and profiles.

It’s a challenging time in the social media world. Marketer interest — fueled by hype over Facebook and Twitter — in community-building is rising, just as consumers begin to tire of joining yet another social network. Rather than spending time and energy developing something that’s destined to be the next brand ghost town, consider smaller ways to use social media techniques on behalf of your brand. Perhaps you want to build a community of brand loyalists to act as a focus group for product development. If you’re looking to drive immediate sales, incorporating a user contribution system — reviews, Q&As, and storytelling – around products on your own Web site is the path to success (especially in the eyes of your CFO!). The trendy Facebook-clone route, however initially exciting and attention-getting, may lead to crickets and tumbleweeds, while a more measured approach may result in a thriving little settlement.

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.

Heather Brunner Key Takeaways from SXSWi

March 19th, 2009 by Heather Brunner Chief Operations Officer

This post was guest-written by Melissa Lipscomb, Bazaarvoice Community Manager

Spring break in Austin means SXSW, an exciting celebration of music, film and web creativity. I spent the last few days at SXSW Interactive – the portion of the conference that’s dedicated to social media and web 2.0. Here are my top 10 takeaways:

  1. People expect conversations online. Regardless of the industry/type of site, end users expect to engage with brands and with other users on-line. It’s not enough to provide information to your customers, you have to allow them to interact with your site, with your brand, and with other customers. Of course, tools like Ratings & Reviews, Ask & Answer, and Bazaarvoice Stories build customer engagement and interaction.
  2. Customers expect brands to participate in the conversation. There was lots of discussion at SXSWi about the importance of building relationships with customers, rather than simply focusing on transactions. Responding to feedback (both positive and negative), answering questions and taking action on feedback are an important part of building credibility and trust with your customers.
  3. Customers want authenticity. Several panelists emphasized the value of brand representatives talking “like real people” not robots (or corporatebots), even (or maybe especially) in industries where we’ve come to expect corporate jargon and legalese (like financial services and insurance). 
  4. Online identities are converging. OpenID and Facebook Connect are enabling greater portability/sharing of online abilities between sites. Profiles are important – people are invested in their identities online and want to build their reputations and leverage what they’ve done in one community in the other places they hang out. The most social media savvy customers are aware of their personal brands and welcome opportunities to build their brands on the sites where they shop.
  5. Mobile and web are converging. Many people access the web primarily from their phones, others switch back and forth with the expectation the user experiences will be identical.
  6. Online and offline are converging. GPS technology brings the real world into the mix in a big way (for example, your phone alerting a social networking site of your physical location, which allows your online friends to join you in the real world). Users are less likely to draw a hard boundary between their on-line and off-line lives. MobileVoice brings online UGC into the brick and mortar store, allowing customers to view reviews on their phones.
  7. Filtering and aggregating the massive amounts of data online is critical. There are too many inputs and the most valuable technologies on the web are those that allow people to personalize what they see or provide rolled-up summaries. Filtering by tag or attribute and summarizing data in tag clouds or histograms allows customers to process large amounts of information and make a decision quickly.
  8. Twitter is everywhere. Some of the most compelling and interesting conversations were happening “back channel” via twitter during the panels. Panelists took questions and responded in real time to comments that were made on the twitter stream for each panel. Fast and pithy user-generated contentin real time is incredibly appealing to many people.
  9. Bazaarvoice is ahead of the pack. Admittedly, SXSW Interactive is a social media conference, not one focused specifically on e-commerce, but our ability to measure the success of user-generated content and deliver proven ROI for our clients stands out in an environment where many panelists were unsure about how to monetize UGC or how to measure results.
  10. Bazaarvoice has a great culture! Tony Hsieh (CEO of Zappos)  gave a fabulous speech about the culture at Zappos which was very reminiscent of the Bazaarvoice culture. In addition, Bazaarvoice CMO Sam Decker, hosted a core conversation on building a great corporate culture, which got lots of buzz and positive reactions.

This was a great conference; I look forward to seeing what next year brings!

Sam Decker Q&A with Mike Maples, Jr. (new Bazaarvoice advisor & investor)

March 13th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Behind a great company is a great board of directors, board of advisors, and investors. At Bazaarvoice, we count ourselves fortunate with advisors and investors who have chosen to put their time and resources behind our venture. Today, we’re pleased to continue the trend, and announce that Mike Maples, Jr. has joined as a Bazaarvoice advisor and investor!


Mike Maples, Jr. is the managing partner of Maples Investments, and was recently named as one of “8 Rising VC Stars” by Fortune Magazine for his investments in business and consumer technology companies. His background spans a variety of markets including consumer technology, small business, and the enterprise, and he has led various functions in product development, marketing, business development, and corporate strategy. Mike co-founded Motive and was responsible for worldwide product marketing at Tivoli. Now as an investor, he is behind investments such as Twitter, Digg, Spiceworks, Chegg, IMVU, and Aggregate Knowledge. See his investments here.

Mike shared some of his thoughts on joining Bazaarvoice as an investor and advisor, as well as his investment strategy and perspectives on the market:

Why did you invest in us when some investors are cautious of the “Web 2.0” space?  TechCrunch recently said that Web 2.0 is a bankrupt term.

I suppose it’s more accurate to consider the question in reverse.  I’ve been looking for the opportunity to invest in Bazaarvoice for quite some time and I am thrilled to be *permitted* to invest. I guess persistence does pay off sometimes!

In terms of the market space, and all of the talk of web 2.0, in my view the company’s success speaks for itself.  It’s customers read like a who’s-who of online commerce providers and the company has dared to be new and different in an environment characterized by a lot of me-too companies.  It has also discovered a very efficient business model that can reach scale without raising a lot of money.

What trends do you see in the marketplace that support the growth for our type of service?

The first generation of companies in the social web understood that user-generated content would be important for value creation and many of the companies I invested in earlier were the first to jump on this.  In my opinion, Bazaarvoice is the first company to marry user-generated content with user-generated *commerce*. Combining these two is very powerful because you have the architecture of participation characterized by communities, combined with a very straightforward and efficient way to monetize.

I believe that there will be several very interesting user-generated commerce plays (especially since eBay hasn’t moved quickly enough in recent years) and I think Bazaarvoice is the first in this new wave just as companies like Facebook, digg, and Twitter were pioneers of the user-generated content trend.

The other trend that is powerful is the shift from traditional “old media” style mass-marketing to peer-to-peer marketing enabled by relationships on the Internet.  Bazaarvoice is a leader in leveraging this and I am also working with 750 Industries, who plays firmly into this trend as well.

How does this investment align with your priorities and what you want to invest in?

At a high level, I believe that about 15 startups per year will set themselves apart in a fundamental way from the over 8,000 that will be funded.  If I had to reduce my strategy to one sentence, it would be “Find as many of the 15 as you can every year.”

Finding the 15 out of the 8,000 is a lot easier said than done!  My approach is to invest in companies that have a visionary founding team, a huge potential market, a fundamental advantage backed up with a network effect, modest capital requirements, and a unique value proposition for customers. I believe that Bazaarvoice has been a superperformer in these areas for some time.

As an investor in Digg, Twitter, and now Bazaarvoice, where do you see the “social space” going in the next five years?

The trends in technology innovation have switched from enterprise trickling down to consumer innovations scaling up.  The bellweather companies are now companies like LinkedIn, digg, Bazaarvoice, Twitter, and Facebook and they are the companies to watch to get a feel for what will happen with business solutions in the future.  There will be new types of companies in the business software and services arena that apply IT consumerization to solve problems that have in the past been solved by expensive and hard-to-use enterprise software.  Some of the companies I work with are already demonstrating this, such as Solarwinds, Spiceworks, Demandforce, Egnyte, and Hyper9.   Each of these firms leverage network effects, highly appealing user experiences, communities, and consumer internet sales and marketing methods to build their products and their businesses with great efficiency.

Five years from now the trend toward IT consumerization will be very pervasive and will impact small businesses and enterprises in a very fundmental way.  Traditional enterprise software companies will feel that this is very disruptive but the users of technology will be the big winners.

Brant Barton Zero Love for Toyota’s “Saved by Zero”

January 5th, 2009 by Brant Barton Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer

TIME recently reported on the consumer backlash against Toyota’s “Saved by Zero” advertising campaign.  The ad annoyed one consumer, a freshman student at Binghampton University in New York, so much that he started a Facebook group called “Stop Playing Toyota’s ‘Saved by Zero’ Commercial.” In its first week, the group attracted 400 members.  As of today, total membership is approaching 10,000.  I hadn’t seen the commercial until yesterday, when I decided to blog on this topic.  It is indeed annoying.  So I am now a member of the Facebook group.  See how that works?  But the backlash didn’t stop with the Facebook group.  Check out this video inspired by horror classic, The Ring.

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A few weeks ago, during a visit with my almost four year old niece, Zoey, I heard her scream, “I hate commercials!” during a commercial break as she watched one of her favorite TV shows.  Toyota, this is your nightmare.  Or at least, this will become your nightmare in about 12 years, when my sixteen year old niece starts begging her parents for a car.  It will probably be whatever make and model her friends are raving about at the time, not the car she saw advertised on TV or the Internet.  [For the record: I am the very satisfied owner and primary driver of a Toyota-made automobile.]

All of this brings to mind a short essay called “Brandalism” written by Banksy, the semi-anonymous British street artist that some authorities call a vandal.  He happens to be my favorite artist, as I find his work to be more thoughtful and politically and culturally relevant than most of the work I see in contemporary art exhibits.  Moreover, his work is truly public, whereas most “art” as we commonly know it sits in private collections, to be appreciated by only a privileged few.  In his book, Wall & Piece, Banksy writes:

“People abuse you every day. They butt into your life, take a cheap shot at you and then disappear. They leer at you from tall buildings and make you feel small. They make flippant comments from buses that imply you’re not sexy enough and the fun is happening somewhere else. They are on TV making your girlfriend feel inadequate. They have access to the most sophisticated technology the world has ever seen and they bully you with it. They are The Advertisers and they are laughing at you.

“You, however, are forbidden to touch them. Trademarks, intellectual property rights and copyright law mean advertisers can say what they like wherever they like with total impunity.

“Screw that. Any advert in public space that gives you no choice whether you see it or not is yours. It’s yours to take, re-arrange and re-use. You can do whatever you like with it. Asking for permission is like asking to keep a rock someone just threw at your head.

“You owe the companies nothing. You especially don’t owe them any courtesy. They have rearranged the world to put themselves in front of you. They never asked for your permission, don’t even start asking for theirs.”

To some, the passages above probably sound a bit militant.  To me, they are a wake-up call and a vision of the future.  The day is coming.  My niece is already there.  Colin Anderson, the ‘community organizer’ behind the Facebook group mentioned above, is already there.  With those qualifications, he’ll probably be President one day.  The question is when will The Advertisers get there?

It will take some time.  In the meantime, advertisers will attempt to delay the inevitable by paying their agencies to build websites that allow us to create clever commercial mash-ups that we can send to our friends and post on our Facebook profiles.  In my opinion, that’s the equivalent of handing out free bags of rocks for us to throw at our friends’ heads (see first rock reference above).

For the record, I don’t have the perfect answer to this quandary.  At Bazaarvoice, we’re developing alternative ways for consumers to learn about brands, products, and services and arm themselves with the information and confidence to make the best decision for their needs.  The consumer perspective is the most important one in our product development process, although we sell to . . . The Advertisers.  Products like Ratings & Reviews, Ask & Answer, and Stories are the result.  We’re in the first phase of a massive change in the power structure, and we’re doing what we can to make that transition a smooth one, one that CMOs and CFOs and CEOs are comfortable with.  We’re enabling companies to engage and communicate with consumers in ways they would have never conceived of just a few years ago.  A great example is the Christmas campaign launched by Canadian Tire using our Stories product.  Rather than bombard consumers with a repetitive advertising message (and risk a backlash like the one Toyota has recently experienced), Canadian Tire has simply enabled their best customers to create and BE the advertising for them.

In closing, if you are responsible for your company’s advertising spend or if you report to the person that is, please read and share this post.  This post isn’t a threat, it’s just an opinion piece, and my opinion is that there are other “Saved by Zero”-style backlash movements out there just waiting to happen.  Don’t be one of them!  There are more authentic, creative, and meaningful ways to accomplish the same goal and enlist the passion of your most loyal and satisfied customers at the same time.  If you give your customers the tools, they’ll become the Sales & Marketing department you wish you had – millions strong, absolutely ecstatic about your products, and willing to work overtime to help you succeed.  (No offense intended to Bazaarvoice’s Sales & Marketing teams, who are the best I’ve ever worked with!)

Brett Hurt This Election Was Won by Social Media

November 9th, 2008 by Brett Hurt Founder and CEO

Barack ObamaSo much has been written about the recently concluded Presidential campaign, so I will be careful not to rehash it here.  But if there is one lesson coming out of this period that is relevant for you, as the readers of Bazaarblog, it is that social media defined this campaign.  Back in June, I wrote about Obama and The Open Brand (a reference to Kelly Mooney’s brilliant book).  Then my good friend and fellow entrepreneur Auren Hoffman wrote an article for BusinessWeek in August about technology being the defining factor in election campaigns.  From Obama’s social network to the will.i.am music-video community-collage to his exceptional use of the Web as a fundraising vehicle (raising an amazing 400% more than McCain), Obama’s use of social media has defined a new era for election campaigns.  Remember that Obama’s innovation adoption of social media comes at a time where five social networks, including Facebook, have recently moved into the top-ten most trafficked websites in the world (reference my June post on Mary Meeker). 

When voting moves online, as it undoubtedly will (just think about all of the tax money we would save if we did not have to set up temporary voting centers everywhere), the marriage of social media and election campaigns will be that much more profound.

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