Business Networking OnlineA study, conducted by WebTrends, reveals that only five per cent of companies see the blog as a valuable tool and more than three-quarters have never used the medium. However, Smallbusiness.co.uk recently reported new research, which claims that small businesses should make more use of blogging on the internet so they can better communicate with their clients. Access to information is key to advancing in the workplace, and having direct access to that information creates great opportunities ' in particular for women - in large corporations, especially if they are working part time, from home or are on maternity leave. Head of employer brand and diversity at professional services firm Deloitte, Tom Crawford, encourages employees to use Facebook whilst at the same time, providing guidelines and advice on how to use it responsibly, instead of banning it from the workplace as have many other employers. If you are concerned about how much information about you might already be online, Garlik.com offers a service called Data Patrol which scours the internet and then offers you advice, depending on the information that it manages to unearth. But how can social networking work best for small businesses, who want to increase their ways of keeping in contact with new and existing clients? In the Dow Jones White Paper "Tracking the Influence of Conversations: A Roundtable Discussion on Social Media Metrics and Measurement", Jeremiah Owyang and Matt Toll tell us that "The advent of social media ' blogs in particular ' (bring) with it at least the potential for removing the barrier between a seller and buyers who are remote ' geographically, economically, culturally or otherwise." They go onto say that "Those questioning social media's impact on corporate marketing strategy today may well work for the same corporations that questioned whether creating a corporate Web site in the mid- and late-1990s, or allowing employees (gasp!) to access the Internet at work, was a wise move." Aleks Krotoski, conducting research at the University of Surrey into the psychology of online social networks, believes that social software encourages collaboration. It is the social in the software which will bring communities together, building upon the success of its technological predecessors and enhancing, rather than replacing, human interaction. One online directory of professional service providers has launched a social network online for the exclusive benefit of their service providers. Whether it is to share newsletter links with each other, hobbies, or favourite charities, they hope it will become a place where their professionals UK-wide will be able to get to know each other better, or just pop on occasionally to see what others are up to. What's SNO? One Social Network Optimiser, writing for O'ReillyGMT about how social network optimisation can become part of a marketing strategy for businesses, believes that companies can no longer deliver a one-way web, 'interact with the consumer or fade away' is the message which every business needs to hear. Search Engine Optimisers have generated large amounts of value in focusing search engine results towards their client's one web site. Now a new breed of "Optimiser" can take the message of the client to the many eyes and in turn create new "conversations" and "awareness" about their client and their business. This social network optimiser believes that SNO Agencies will be another facet of existing disciplines in Public Relations and Marketing Agencies. They will use their own network of Friends and Contacts on-line formed through social networks with which to build new links and ideas between their clients and their audience. SNO Agencies will work with existing Public Relation and Marketing Agencies utilising current conversations and ideas to help promote and direct awareness of the product without directly advertising or "spamming" those communities.
Article Directory: http://www.articledashboard.com To learn more about how you can use SNO to benefit your business, contact: Nik Butler at www.certainshops.com. For a humorous guide to social networking, visit Blogging For Blondes. |