Wednesday, 28 September 2011

Know Your Fans, Friends & Followers

I went along to a Financial Services Club event last night at the IOD Hub in London. Normally, it's not possible to tweet or blog about what goes on there as they stick to the Charterhouse Rule regarding confidentiality. Last night was a welcome break from this restriction as they welcomed Christophe Langlois from Visible Banking to talk about Social Media in Financial Services.





He's doing a good job working with risk-averse financial institutions who, in the main have shifted from 'should we do social media?' to 'when and how should we start?'. He's done this, in part, by turning some of the banks' own jargon back on them. In particular, Christophe's coining of the 'KYF' acronym... Know Your Fans, Friends or Followers... is derived from the now well-established regulatory principle 'KYC' - Know Your Customer.

By hiding-in-plain-sight in this way, Christophe has been able to work with execs and their teams across the industry and encourage them to start asking the right questions about social media, their businesses and their customers, as well as advising them as to how to avoid early pitfalls.

Christophe expressed reservations about Social CRM, (often seen as a great emerging SI opportunity for suppliers hoping to stitch established CRM platforms together with newer Social Media monitoring platforms!). In short, bundling in masses of unstructured and unverified social media content to already burgeoning silos of often unwieldy customer data is the last thing the banks need right now. There may be some exceptions for the new-to-market.

Later in the conversation Christophe said that analysis of followers and friends could, however, be worth a potentially speculative investment in bolstering data held around a bank's social media activities...

Who are a bank's followers?

Customers? Definitely!

Competitors? Probably!

Journalists? Undoubtedly!

So, being able to, where possible, categorise these followers into meaningful groups, lists or even circles could serve to inform and enhance a social media engagement strategy.

The thorny issue of the Tournier Principles cropped up at this point - these are the legal principles which concern themselves with the circumstances under which banks should and should not disclose information about customers.

Naturally, banks are pretty nervous about acknowledging or otherwise commenting on a customer relationship on an open social network, but here Christophe was able to lend a hand, by making a distinction between customers and followers and treating them slightly differently. Followers may well benefit from directed tweets, articles, events, offers etc based on their location or other aspects of their public profile, without the bank needing to delve into a possible customer relationship.

Indeed this kind of engagement may serve to reinforce established customer relationships or encourage new ones, but won't directly augment those relationships, unless the bank has a strategy to direct conversations from an open network to a more secure environment/channel which might include forums, secure email, contact centres or even branches.

Christophe, in closing, dispelled another myth which is causing unnecessary anguish amongst banks nervous about stepping into social media, and that is how to deal with a potential tsunami of customer service queries and other demands the instant a bank announces a presence on Twitter or Facebook.

The reality is, even the very biggest names in banking find this manageable and are able to establish great engagement practices through a relatively slow and steady (albeit growing) number of customer contacts coming in each day in this way.

An army of social media agents is not required. A small number of passionate advisors willing to learn, engage and adapt their established customer-facing skills is all that is needed to start.

There's much more of this in Christophe's book (sadly not on Kindle)  (Update: Christophe tells me there's a Kindle version on the way) and at his site.

It's worth a look.

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

Writes and Shine?




I spent the first half of the year rushing out of bed and eating a bizarre combination of eggs, green beans and lentils before I'd opened my eyes properly, as part of the horrendous Tim Ferriss 'Four Hour Body' Slow Carb diet.

I should at that it works... you lose weight and inches, but you also have zero energy and it makes Jack a very dull boy.

Also, a one-day-a-week binge is an official part of the diet, so when you actually stop, you just carry in with the bingeing every day instead of once per week, ensuring that the weight and the inches pile back on faster than the aftermathh of any other failed diet you're tried before.

Just saying.

Anyway, that's not the point.

Now I'm getting up in the morning and scribing three, detailed, cathartic, stream-of-conscious pages of journal as recommended in The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron.

This is meant to be therapeutic and enable you to be at one with your desires, foibles, strengths and weaknesses, in order that you can focus on the positive things you wish to achieve and move on from any negative influences, whilst also leaving yourself a note to pay the window-cleaner.

I've only done three days and not really noticed a marked improvement in my mental or physical well-being, but perhaps I'm being impatient.

I haven't finished reading the book yet.

Tuesday, 26 July 2011

Losing The Dog

It’s been a week since we lost the dog and I can just about bring myself to write about it now.

It was the shock more than anything. Fidget was due in at the vet for a fairly routine op on his gums (he had an unerupted tooth). In the pre-op check-up the vet felt his stomach and said immediately ‘there’s something not right here’. Next thing, Fidget’s in theatre and the vet is asking us for permission to put him to sleep as he’s discovered an aggressive cancerous tumor attached to the dog’s intestines which can’t be removed... and that was that. Gone. He was only four years old.

Devastated.

Telling the children was very hard. I’ve never seen them so upset. Also, I can’t believe just how distraught I was. Fidget was my first dog and, whilst I’ve loved and lost other pets along the way, nothing has affected me in quite the same way as sharing life with a dog.

So whilst we, as a family, are still grieving... whilst we’re still seeing him out of the corners of our eyes... whilst we still hear him eating his dinner... we’re already putting plans together for a new dog to join our little pack sometime over the next couple of months.

I don’t mean to be maudlin or melodramatic. I just wanted to write this and thank those of you who sent kind messages via Twitter.

Monday, 11 July 2011

Europe Endless - My Data Date...

... or The Traveller's Fear of the Roaming Charge



If you follow me on Twitter, you'll know that I spent the weekend flying out to Geneva and then on a road trip to Milan to see John Mellencamp before driving back to Geneva via France and the incredible Mont Blanc tunnel to catch my flight back to Manchester.

Nervous about my data use and as part of my regular travelling ultra-light policy I decided to take just one device with me... the iPhone.  It was a bit of a wrench leaving the BB, the Android, the laptop, the iPad and the Kindle... but boy doesn't that list sound insanely excessive anyway... no wonder my back hurts ;)

Saturday, 4 June 2011

Required Listening Course for a Nine Year Old - work in progress

I've started compiling a course of classic albums for my son to listen to and critique (if he can be bothered)... got some help from my Twitter friends too - thanks!

There are still some gaping holes though... can you help me fill them. Start with David Ackles - American Gothic... or maybe Kylie...