Posts Tagged ‘webinar’

Meghan Meehan Social Commerce transforms Nationwide’s company culture

February 22nd, 2010 by Meghan Meehan Client Success Director

Nationwide InsuranceIn the last post from our recent webinar with Nationwide, we talked about how the insurance provider was able to overcome organizational concerns about adopting social media in a highly-regulated industry. Once they achieved internal buy-in, Sue McManus, Nationwide’s VP of Direct and Customer Solutions Marketing, and Shawn Morton, Director of Mobile, Social & Emerging Media, faced a new challenge: driving real business results through UGC.

Setting measurable business goals for UGC

Once Nationwide decided to move forward with a social strategy, their first step was to identify goals for their UGC. At a high level, Shawn and Sue wanted to build trust and confidence in the Nationwide brand among current and potential policy holders. Consumers want to hear from their peers before making a purchase decision. Recognizing this, Nationwide wanted to give customers the opportunity to share their experiences, helping prospects find the information they need at the point of purchase.

At a more specific level, Nationwide needed to show real, direct business benefits from UGC. To do this, the brand aligned its social commerce efforts with three key business goals: increasing policy conversion rate, driving SEO traffic, and improving marketing effectiveness.

Meeting these goals with social commerce

Nationwide has leveraged Ratings & Reviews in a number of ways to meet their corporate goals and grow their business.

Nationwide reviews

Enabling customer reviews on auto insurance. Customer reviews on insurance policies provide relevant content that consumers trust, helping them determine the right policy for their needs and take the next step towards a purchase decision.

Pushing content to customers’ social networks. Using Social Network Accelerators, Nationwide customers are invited to share reviews with their Facebook network, helping Nationwide reach new audiences and bringing traffic back to the brand site.

Nationwide reviews on FacebookDriving SEO with fresh content. Enabling UGC provides the site with rich, relevant content that is continually updated, driving organic search traffic to Nationwide.com.

Improving paid search ads. Keywords pulled from customer reviews make for compelling paid search ads, bringing new traffic to the brand site by reaching customers in their own words.

Measuring the results

Nationwide segments site visitors who interact with UGC from those who don’t, and compares their behavior against the goals above.  Specifically, they look at the quote start rate, quote completion rate, and policy bind rate for both audiences, and measure the difference in performance. They also track “intent to buy” metrics, like finding an Agent’s office or contacting Nationwide directly. Additionally, they look at click-through and conversion rates for homepage ads and paid search landing pages with UGC, benchmarking the performance of both segments over time.

Spreading these results to the entire organization

The impact of UGC doesn’t end on Nationwide’s website. Since launching Ratings & Reviews, they have embraced customer oxygen across the organization, transforming the brand’s culture and the way they talk to customers.  “As much as we can bring the voice of the customer to every employee in this company,” says Sue, “the more effective we’re going to be.”

Any Nationwide employee can read customer reviews online, giving everyone from claims representatives to executives tremendous insight into how the brand is doing and what their customers value. This translates into recommendations and improvements, helping pinpoint what the brand is doing well and where they can invest more to better serve customers.

There’s also a strong motivational effect, Sue says. Many reviews praise claims reps that went out of their way to help customers. We are in the business of putting people back to normal after something bad happens,” says Sue. “When you see that we’re doing that every day, over and over again, and you see the emotions that our customers share in a very positive light, it really helps drive and prioritize our behavior as an organization. It’s very inspirational content internally.”

Want to hear more about Nationwide’s use of social commerce?  The full webinar, “Overcoming Your Fear of User-Generated Content: A Webinar for Highly-Regulated Industries,” is available to download for free, here:

Download the webinar

Jacob Salamon Australian webinar: Leverage your Customers to Drive Online Sales

February 18th, 2010 by Jacob Salamon Marketing Manager, International

Register for the WebinarThe Web is becoming increasingly social, with networking tools such as Facebook, Twitter, MySpace, and YouTube. Customers are demanding social tools, but how do you incorporate social with business? How can you effectively drive sales using social media?

Vodafone Hutchison AustraliaEnter social commerce — combining social interactions and community with a focus on increasing sales and driving measurable business results.

In this webinar, join Steve Rhodes, Head of E-commerce for Vodafone Hutchison Australia, and Sam Decker, CMO of Bazaarvoice, for a glimpse into the tools and strategies available to online retailers. Hear real-world results on how over 750 brands around the world are leveraging customer-created content such as Ratings & Reviews to increase sales, reduce returns, and make business sense of social.

In this webcast, you’ll learn:

  • What is social commerce, and how does it work for online retailers?
  • What tools and strategies are available for driving sales?
  • How are retailers measuring the ROI of social commerce?

Thursday, 11 March 2010

11:30 – 12:30PM Australian Eastern Standard Time

Register for the Webinar

Meghan Meehan Overcoming Your Fear of User-Generated Content: A Webcast for Highly-Regulated Industries

February 4th, 2010 by Meghan Meehan Client Success Director

Webinar RegisterIt’s a fact: consumers want to hear from others like them when they shop for insurance, banking, healthcare – just as when they shop for everything else. How do you conquer corporate fear, consumer privacy, and liability concerns to give potential customers what they really want?

This webcast gets to the heart of these concerns, explaining how Nationwide Insurance tackled these issues – and won big with consumers.

Join us and see how Nationwide partnered with Bazaarvoice and Rosetta to:

  • Overcome organizational concerns about posting user-generated content on their website
  • Assess the issues and find the right solutions
  • Measure the results of user-generated content across the entire business

Thursday, February 11, 2010
11:30 to 12:30 EST

Speakers

Sue McManus
Leader of Nationwide Direct and Customer Solutions
Nationwide Insurance

Shawn Morton
Director of Social Media
Nationwide Insurance

Adam Cohen
Partner, Social Media Lead
Rosetta

Marc Ostryniec
Vice President of Financial Services Division
Bazaarvoice

Webinar Register

Amber Quist Participate – interact – sell: Building relationships online

January 11th, 2010 by Amber Quist Senior Marketing Manager

Every interaction with a consumer – no matter how small – drives conversations, which drive business results. Our recent white paper, “Get Them Talking: How Growing Participation Chains Will Grow Sales” shows how even small interactions can increase sales and loyalty – and every word counts. Read more about participation chains in this blog post.

Now we’re following up with a webinar featuring new media visionary Ze Frank and Bazaarvoice CMO Sam Decker: “Participate, Interact, Sell: Building Relationships Online.”

Tune in to learn:

  • How to create a participation chain strategy that captures every interaction possible
  • How top brands build successful participation chains
  • Top reasons people are motivated to participate or contribute content

Join Ze and Sam for this webinar on Tuesday, January 19, 2010, at 1 pm CST by registering here:

Register for the Webinar here!Download the free white paper, “Get Them Talking: How Growing Participation Chains Will Grow Sales,” here.

Download the white paper here!We look forward to talking more about how to get consumers participating – and buying.

Sam Decker CMOs Plan for Higher Social Media Measurability in 2010

December 17th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

CMO ClubWe recently surveyed global CMOs in conjunction with the CMO Club, an organization of CMOs with both global and domestic P&L responsibilities. As suspected, social media initiatives will be even more important in 2010. What was surprising – and encouraging – is that CMOs realize their social efforts must track to the bottom line.

Here are the major points our survey found.

Social must drive revenues, not just web metrics. 81% of respondents expect to link their annual revenues to their social media investment in 2010, up from just 44% of CMOs in 2009. Social marketing metrics that focus solely on web goals (traffic, page views, fans) are starting to be supplanted by metrics like conversion, revenue, and average order value that track to the bottom line.

CMOs unsure about the exact impact of current social tools. 53% of respondents are unsure about their return on Twitter; 50% are unsure about the direct value of LinkedIn; and 50% are not sure how to measure the impact of industry blogs on business metrics. Customer ratings and reviews is the best understood marketing activity from an ROI perspective.

As social spending grows, so do revenue expectations: More than 64% of CMOs reported that they plan to increase their social media budgets within the next year. Nearly three-fourths of respondents (72%) who did not attach revenue to social spend in 2009 reported they would create such a link in 2010. CMOs who are already seeing a strong link between social media and revenue in 2009 expect this impact to be even more profound in 2010, with the majority of respondents (81%) expecting to attribute up to 10% of their 2010 revenues to their social media investments.

Social initiatives must now track to the bottom line. In 2009, the top metrics tracked for social media initiatives included site traffic, number of page views, and number of fans. In 2010, CMOs expect top metrics to track more closely to P&L business goals – not just web-related goals. The fastest-growing metrics for 2010 include revenue, conversion, and average order value, which grew 333%, 174%, and 150% respectively.

CMOs tap more consumer-generated content to shape products or services: Today, 80% of CMOs use customer insights to shape decision-making at the executive level and 90% of those surveyed use customer stories and product suggestions to shape a brand’s product or services. By the end of 2010, almost all CMOs say they plan to incorporate a broader range of content sources including customer reviews (59% increase), pre-sales Q&A (24% increase) and Twitter (407% increase) to influence product decisions.

In short, social isn’t just for the “cool” factor anymore – now it must drive real sales results, just like any other media. Download the full study here for all the details.

Download the White Paper here

Sam Decker Webcast: 120+ CMOs have spoken – a look ahead at Social in 2010

December 15th, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

cmo clubNo doubt: social media will dominate in 2010. So how do CMOs link social marketing with real, bottom-line results? 120+ CMOs shared their biggest challenges, plans, and expectations for social marketing in a recent survey by The CMO Club and Bazaarvoice.

We’ll share our findings and quiz a panel of top CMOs at this upcoming, insightful webcast.

Panelists include: Sonny Ganguly, Wedding Wire; Kent Huffman, Bearcom; Ted Rubin, e.l.f. Cosmetics; and Sam Decker, Bazaarvoice.

Webcast: 120+ CMOs have spoken – a look ahead at Social in 2010
December 17, 1:00 – 2:00 pm CST

Click here to reserve your seat now – attendance is limited.

Hear a panel of top CMOs share their views on:

  • Plans to blend social with commerce in 2010
  • Prioritizing the quality of social interactions over sheer quantity
  • Measuring social media’s direct impact on business metrics

Register Now

Sam Decker Webcast: 120+ CMOs have spoken – a look ahead at Social in 2010

December 1st, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

No doubt: social media will dominate in 2010. So how do CMOs link social marketing with real, bottom-line results? 120+ CMOs shared their biggest challenges, plans, and expectations for social marketing in a recent survey by The CMO Club and Bazaarvoice.

In short, CMOs will spend more on social media, and they expect a direct impact on revenues. So how do they plan to get there?

Find out as we quiz a panel of top CMOs at our upcoming webcast.

Webcast: 120+ CMOs have spoken – a look ahead at Social in 2010
December 17, 1:00 – 2:00 pm CST

Hurry; space is limited to the first 500 guests. Reserve your spot now.

Hear a panel of top CMOs share their views on:

  • Plans to blend social with commerce in 2010
  • Prioritizing the quality of social interactions over sheer quantity
  • Measuring social media’s direct impact on business metrics

Register Now

Heather Brunner How do your top contributors and their UGC improve marketing campaigns?

October 28th, 2009 by Heather Brunner Chief Operations Officer

This blog post is guest written by Vaughan Heilman, Training Team Lead at Bazaarvoice.

Our second “Take Action” webinar focused on utilizing top contributors and the content they provide to enhance and improve client marketing campaigns. Studies show that consumers look to reviews more than traditional marketing channels (such as print or TV). Companies are aware now that increasing reviews on their site is a standard part of a company’s social commerce strategy. So what else can you do with reviews and reviewers?

The topics covered included gaining additional top contributors, using top contributors in marketing campaigns, and reviewing a variety of alternate marketing channels where UGC can provide additional site visits and submitted reviews.

Most companies have loyal contributors that write more than one review on a site. These contributors tend to write detailed product specific reviews that are relevant to the buying process. A great way to increase the number of multi-review contributors is through simple contests. Bazaarvoice’s reporting tools make it easy to track the progress of these contests, and allow you to identify top 10, 20, or 50 contributors to your site.

Once you have garnered additional top contributors, what can you do with these individuals? A great example by Free People shows how you can make reviewers more ‘like me.’ This creates more relevance to the reviews when your community is able to relate to the reviewer. In a campaign highlighting their top six reviewers, Free People saw an increase in total review volume by 93%.

In addition to looking at top contributors and how to integrate them into marketing campaigns, there are other opportunities to use UGC in offline marketing channels. Some examples include in-store signage, invoices, packing slips, and even TV ads.

Take your UGC to the next level by turning your reviewers into real people and know that UGC should not be limited to your online marketing channels!

Our Take Action webinar series tackles a variety of ways UGC can help solve business problems, drive sales, and reduce costs. Look for future blogs recapping these informative sessions, created especially for Bazaarvoice clients. They’re just one more way we help our 600+ global clients maximize their UGC investment.

Sam Decker Social Commerce Pays Off: Real Stories of ROI

October 21st, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

This blog post is part of the Social Commerce Summit Quarterly series.

According to analysts, the top question from CMOs who engage with social media is, “How do I measure results?” A recent study by Forrester found that less than half of interactive marketers measure the ROI of their social applications, and a recent study by Bazaarvoice and The CMO Club suggests it’s even less than that.

While measuring conversations’ ROI seems as elusive as capturing a chat between two friends at a cafe, word of mouth on your site can uncover critical insights and real metrics. In this two-part webinar, you’ll get specifics on how 1-800-flowers.com increased engagement and sales through a tailored campaign that encourages consumer stories to be shared on site. You’ll also gain insights from automotive parts giant JC Whitney on how to execute and measure social strategies – and exactly how they pay off.

In this webinar, you’ll learn:

  • The social commerce metrics that matter most to your business
  • The right strategy, tools, and techniques to measure success
  • How to use metrics to gain buy-in throughout your organization
  • Social strategies that pay off for all brands

Guest speakers:

October 29, 1:00 – 2:00 CST

Register and attend for a chance to win a free pass to the U.S. Bazaarvoice Social Commerce Summit and gift certificates to 1-800-Flowers.com and JC Whitney.

Register Now

Sam Decker Webinar Wrap-up: How to Deal with Negative Word of Mouth

September 22nd, 2009 by Sam Decker Chief Marketing Officer

Andy Sernovitz, author of Word of Mouth Marketing: How Smart Companies Get People Talking, and I hosted a well-attended webinar last week about the all-important topic of negative reviews.

Andy Sernovitz Webinar with Bazaarvoice CMO Sam DeckerAlmost four years ago, when I started at Bazaarvoice, negative reviews were the #1 concern of prospects; we battled this by proving that most reviews are positive with research done by Keller Fay in 2006, showing that 80% of all reviews are positive. With the proliferation of social networks, today brands know that negative feedback is inevitable, and they’re learning to use negative feedback to improve offerings and build trust with consumers.

As always, Andy gave some great insights in the webinar, which boil down to these steps:

Monitor. Google your brand, stay alert on Twitter – always look for ways people are talking about your brand. Do this daily; you don’t want to be caught unaware four days after a negative reaction has spread over the internet.

Respond to negative WOM. Responding starts way before a negative interaction!

1: Preempt The Negative. Create a long-term outreach program, know relevant bloggers in your space, and build authentic rapport. Let your critics and fans interact by bringing your critics “inside the tent,” on your site or in relevant, public interactions with your brand.

2. Let your fans respond first. This is the home-run scenario. Don’t wait too long, though, to say “Thank you” for the feedback and “I’m sorry.” Don’t respond at all when a complaint is so small that you don’t want to give it credibility, when you’re obviously being set up or if it’s a known crackpot that’s pursuing you. Most of the time, however, you should respond. When you do, do it the same day, respond as a human, not a corporation, make sure to put your side on the record, and don’t try to “win” – you just want to look responsive.

3. Know the ethics rules. The best way to respond is to authentically say, “I work for ______, and this is my personal opinion.” This instantly builds credibility, as many people will assume you’re being paid by the company to tow the company line. If you have a PR person or outsider speak on your behalf, give full disclosure; never pay someone to bolster your side of the story. Be transparent.

4. Training. The biggest risk in today’s user-generated, Internet-enabled society is to not be prepared, companywide, for negative feedback. As a company, you want to create a formal policy and training program, and hold your agencies to the same standards as your employees – in writing. The Social Media Business Council has excellent resources for helping large organizations build social media strategies.

At Bazaarvoice, we’ve seen several companies turn negative reviews into big wins – companies have improved products and offerings, built trust in their brands, and decreased returns by setting better expectations. The Land of Nod remanufactured a craft table and Oriental Trading Company improved more than 700 products and/or marketing materials due to negative feedback from consumers.

Our content moderation process also helps clients easily see ratings trends and potential liabilities through moderation reports, so brands can see problems long before they become huge and impact the entire community. We’ve also created ways for brands to communicate directly with consumers and the community to publicize what they’re doing to solve the problem.

Samsung is a good example of this. On one of their refrigerators, the ice machine begins working six hours after it’s plugged in, but some consumers didn’t know this, so they assumed the fridge was broken. Return rates were very high, and Samsung used reviews to uncover the issue. The product manager improved communication around the issue, even creating a video explaining this, which plays in stores. Shortly after this improvement, return rates plummeted, and more people were happy with their purchases.

QVC, along with dozens of other brands, have regular executive-level meetings around negative reviews, using this first-hand customer input to drive continuous improvement.

Today’s consumers have the chance to have a real impact on products, services, and consumer awareness. More and more smart brands are using Bazaarvoice tools to let those consumer voices fuel real operational change.

Want to watch this webinar? Request it here.