Are You Developing Raving Fans

It’s no surprise that word-of-mouth can be the best marketing a company could ask for.  It can also be the most detrimental to a company’s brand if that word-of-mouth is negative or even indifferent.  As we are going through difficult economic times, it becomes even more important that you cherish every single customer.  Furthermore, word-of-mouth is now on steroids with the speed at which information travels across and through social networks.  So, how do you ensure that your customers become a positive word-of-mouth vehicle for your company?  One way is through developing raving fans of your brand.

A few years ago I first read Raving Fans: A Revolutionary Approach To Customer Service. Back then I was in college studying sociology.  While the book made sense, it didn’t really sink ravingfansin what a “raving fan” was or why they were so important.  I recently decided to re-read the book again since I’m fascinated in developing positive employee cultures and the concept of developing raving or super fans.  If you haven’t ever read this book, this is a must-read and you should order it immediately.  Even if you have read it before, it’s one of those classic business books that should be read once a year or so just to remind yourself how important it is.

What are some ways that you can develop raving (or super) fans?  These are just some of the ways I try to develop raving fans at my steakhouse.

Developing Raving Fans

  1. Take the time to learn their name and something interesting about them.  Write it down and next time you meet them, ask them about whatever it was.
  2. Set up a listening post.  If you find someone talking negatively about your brand, address it directly with that person.  Chances are, they will appreciate it and may actually become a super fan of your brand.
  3. Learn what your customers actually want and then find a way to deliver it.
  4. Be humble
  5. If you find someone talking positively about your brand, reach out to them and thank them.
  6. Don’t always make it about your top or bottom line.  Zappos.com runs their warehouses 24/7 to provide fast service to their customers.  Inefficient from a labor prospective? Probably.  Develops raving fans who continue to buy?  Absolutely.
  7. Be human

Do you agree with this list?  What are other ways that you develop raving fans of your brand?

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Do You Build Amazing Culture Like Zappos

Over the past 6 months or so I have become increasingly fascinated with Zappos.com.  First, it was how fast the shipping was.  Order something, go ahead.  See when it comes in and you’ll be amazed too.  Next it was that they have over 400+ employees on Twitter.  Don’t believe me? They have a subdomain set-up dedicated solely to Twitter – twitter.zappos.com.  Once I found out about the Twitter piece, I began to dig more.  The more I continued to learn, the more of a fan I became.

I didn’t start begin becoming a fan because I thought they sold cool products at good prices (which they do!) but because of the importance they placed on culture, both internally with their teams, and externally with their customers.  While in Las Vegas for CES I was given a copy of the Zappos 2008 Culture Book.  No, this is not a management book zapposculture08where Tony Hsieh, CEO, talks about all the great things he’s done or his team has done to grow the company to more than $1 billion dollars in sales in just 9 years.  This is a book that starts by asking a simple question on the first page: “What is culture, anyway?”  To answer this question, Tony sent a company wide email stating:

Our culture is the combination of all of our employees’ ideas about the culture, so we would like to include everyone’s thoughts in this book.  Please email me a few sentences about what the Zappos culture means to you…We will compile everyone’s contributions into the book.

What follows at the end of that email is over 460 pages of employees who responded to Tony’s email with what the culture of Zappos.com and what working for the company means to them.  If you had never read about the 10 core values that the Zappos.com culture is based on, you would quickly learn what they are after reading the first dozen or so responses.  Oh yeah, and the reason why you would know what those core values are is because the employees truly believe in them.  It wasn’t a PR, marketing or branding move.  It’s what these employees live, eat and breath by.  Want to know what they are?

Zappos Core Values

  1. Deliver WOW through service
  2. Embrace and drive change
  3. Create fun and a little weirdness
  4. Be adventurous, creative, and open-minded
  5. Pursue growth and learning
  6. Build open and honest relationships with communication
  7. Build a positive team and family spirit
  8. Do more with less
  9. Be passionate and determined
  10. Be humble

So, how do they go about embodying these core values?  Instead of boring you with example after example of what I’ve read through previous interviews, presentations, or through the book, check out these 2 videos.  The first is a piece done by Nightline which goes inside Zappos.com offices in Las Vegas.  The second video is an interview Tony recently did with Seesmic founder, Loic Le Meur.  I highly recommend watching both videos in their entirety.

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Do you actually live by your core values, personal or professional?  What can you learn from what Zappos.com is doing and adapt or create within your organization?  Let’s chat about it in the comments below.

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Are You Focused

Earlier tonight I decided to watch a keynote by Gary Vaynerchuk that I like to watch often as a source of motivation.  I’ve watched this presentation when I’m tired in the middle of the night; when I miss being home while I’m 10,000 miles away from my fiance; when I’ve been stressed out before with projects; or when I’m busy trying to crush it and just want that extra little shove.

If you haven’t seen this keynote before, take the 15 minutes to watch it.  If you have seen it before, then watch it again.  Then, instead of just moving on to the next blog post, or next meeting, or next tweet, stop.  Yes, stop.  Stop and think about if you’re doing what you really love.  I know I am.  I work extremely hard but I’m having more fun with Chris Brogan and Colin Browning over on our pirate ship of New Marketing Labs, than I can explain.  I love running my steakhouse with my best friend, Joseph Gionfriddo.

Think about if you spend all day (or at least most of your day) focused.  Focused on executing on your goals.  Focused on killing it today.  Focused on killing it in 2009.  If you’re not, if you slow down for even a 1/2 second, then your competition is going to pass you by.  Ok, maybe they won’t fly by you for just taking a break for a 1/2 second.  Or will they?  Are you willing to take that risk?  Are you ok with that?  If you are then that’s cool.  But, I’m not.  I want to be producing content, coming up with new ideas for the steakhouse; working on client projects, working on New Marketing Labs events, experimenting with tools, having meaningful conversations and developing strategy/vision all the time.  When I’m relaxing, I’m mulling over new ideas in my head.  I’m always analyzing, thinking of what’s next, and focused on what my goals are.  When most people are watching tv and getting a good night’s sleep, I’m trying to stay that extra step ahead.

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What motivates you to stay focused and kill it every day?  Is it a video, a book, a quote, or someone in your life?

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9 Ways to Use Facebook to Connect and Interact

facebook-logoFacebook continues to grow at a breakneck pace of approximately 600,000 new users per day along with more than 140 million active users of the service.  With so many features built into the service and many additional features that can be added on to extend Facebook, it is only appropriate to put together a list of the 17 ways to interact on Facebook.

9 Ways to Use Facebook to Connect and Interact

  1. Use the “Notes” feature to pull in your blog feed.  Once set up, it will ping your blog platform and post any new posts as a new note in Facebook.
  2. Share interesting links using the “Share Link” feature.
  3. Change your notification settings to be notified when someone you know has a birthday coming up.  Then make sure you tell them “Happy Birthday!”  It’s a nice surprise, especially if it’s someone who you don’t keep in touch with that often.
  4. Join Groups that you care about and then actually interact in them.  A lot of people join groups but then don’t use them.  These are a great area to network with people who share similar interests as you especially around specific topics.
  5. Upload photos (2, 30, 150, 2,000 or whatever).  It’s a great way to connect with people on a more personal level.  Of course, only upload photos that you’re comfortable with sharing.  If you have photos with other friends that are on Facebook, tag them in the photos.
  6. If you own a company or are responsible for marketing/PR/social media, set up a Fan Page and use it.  Upload photos, videos, send updates to your fans and all of the other great features.  You can even use the fan page to build and publish an ad on Facebook.
  7. Record a video directly into Facebook or upload a couple.  Pictures are a great way to connect but videos are another great way to interact too.
  8. Comment on links, photos, videos and statuses that others post.  Posting on walls is great but try using the “Comment” feature.
  9. Add in other social applications such as Delicious, StumbleUpon, Pandora, Google Reader, etc.  These will post links to your feed when you use those services.

These are just a few of the many, many ways to use Facebook to interact and connect more with your friends.  What are some of the other ways that you use Facebook to be more social?

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Using Video to Engage and Strengthen Your Community

Last week I had the great opportunity to be on a panel along with Matt Cutler, VP Marketing & Analytics at Visible Measures, Mike Volpe, VP Marketing at HubSpot, and Matt Kaplan, VP Solutions at PermissionTV. The topic surrounded the idea of using online video to strengthen your relationship with your community. It was a lot of fun discussing the explosion of video and how critical it is to your content marketing strategy! The video is broken into 6 parts to make it easy to watch and I really you can learn a lot from it whether you’re a novice or very experienced in video.

Make sure you check out the cool stuff that PermissionTV did at the beginning during the introductions :)

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