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At first, social media were a new way for individuals to find each other on the Internet. Shortly after, the first B2C companies creating their own fan-pages on Facebook and started tweeting their latest news. The laggard in adopting this way of communicating with the world, is definitely the B2B industry. A recent study by eMarketer.com shows that already, 45% of B2B companies is currently using social media in their marketing matrix. However, it also shows that they are lacking time and resources to effectively manage them. We can find many reasons why B2B companies are hesitating to embark on the social media train. First of all, they are targeting a very specific group, mostly the CEO’s and more often within a very delimited market. The products or services they are offering are usually quite expensive and not easily to be sold without an extensive amount of additional information and support. B2B companies aren’t accustomed to market their company or their products on media that are stigmatized as ‘commercial’ or ‘popular’. These are all good arguments, but are they valid? Aren’t those B2B companies missing out on a whole new way of building long-term relationships with their clients and with their prospects? First of all, you have to ask yourself the following questions when you want to make your B2B company a bit more ‘social’:
1. What do I want to accomplish?
When you are looking for quick sales and short-term relationships with potential buyers, social media isn’t the right option for you. Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter are just a few of the platforms that can enhance your communication and marketing mix. It provides you with a channel through which you cannot only send out information and news, but through which you can really communicate. This two-way interaction is very important when you want to earn the credibility from your clients, but also from prospects. Typical for B2B transactions is the time spend in screening and benchmarking companies and their products. This process is often the responsibility of a whole decision making unit which contains people from every hierarchical layer and every department of a company. The CEO might not be a big Facebook or Twitter expert, but the IT-specialist might be the one who picks up on your latest blog or tweet. Your potential clients aren’t just browsing the Internet for information on your products or services, they are looking for reassurance. Just think of the credibility you get when a satisfied client posts a ‘thank you’-message on your Facebook wall!
Another, very important element that is easily overlooked, is the importance of these channels for internal communications and human resources. The people who know everything about social media are your own employees and your future ones. Having your own community on Facebook, tightens the bond your employees have with the company. They already read the latest news from their favorite brands on Twitter, so why not follow their own company’s tweets? But also when there is a crisis, social media are very important. No news spreads faster then on the Internet. Very often people are informed by outsiders about the takeover of their company before their CEO has the chance to organize an internal meeting. Furthermore, social media provides the human resources department with new tools for recruiting new employees. Imagine what an effect a ‘I am looking for a new colleague’-message has when 10% of your employees post this on Facebook.
2. How much time do I want to spend?
Don’t think that social media are cheap. A lot of time and effort is needed when you want to use your social media effectively. Make sure you have at least one person who knows your company and - most importantly - your target group very well and has some time every day to spend on social media. It’s important when you get comments on a blog, posts on your Facebook wall, or reactions to your tweets, that you respond to them. When you don’t interact, you will loose credibility and loose interest from your audience.
Don’t think that social media are a fast way to get in touch with your target group. It takes a lot of time before you have a thousand fans on Facebook. You will have to advertise your presence, drive traffic to your social media platforms and create unique content to keep their attention.
3. Where is my target audience?
Make sure you use the right social media for your business. If you are in a very niche market and you have only a few clients, you might not obtain your goals by using these channels. A face-to-face approach will be much more successful. When your clients are operating in highly secured environments like the military, government institutions or financial companies, you won’t be able to reach your prospects through social media. These firms are usually not allowed or able to use social media on a professional level due to high security levels. Therefore, browse through different channels, ask your clients or see where they are present, before you pick your social media channels.
4. Do I have enough resources for content?
The most important, critical success factor is content. People will automatically loose interest when you only blog once a month, when your tweets are limited to the three events you announced last year or when your Facebook wall is only hosting the boilerplate of your company. You will have to keep feeding your audience with new information on your products, publish press releases, start discussions and share the latest pictures from your company event. Make sure you have people in your company who want to share their expertise in a blog, who want to write a short review on the latest product-release or who are willing to take pictures at the upcoming company-barbecue.
5. Do I have the support of key stakeholders (management)?
When you are putting your company in the spotlight, you are also putting some knowledge and information up for grabs. There might be people who want to abuse your openness. The directors of your company might not be so eager to share this information. Therefore, it is important that you have their support. It might be good if one of those stakeholders could be a regular provider of an article or a blog that you can share. This way, they partly have control over the content and they feel involved in this new communication approach.
A lot of time, effort and participation of people from all over the company goes into maintaining your social media. The continuous engagement of your stakeholders is very important when you want to achieve long-term goals.
However, don’t feel like you have to reveal everything. Make sure you have certain elements that will trigger the reader into contacting you. Make them curious about a product and put the phone number of your customer service department on several locations.
A lot of CEO’s are finding their way to Twitter and more and more professionals are sharing their expertise in blogs. Effective communication can only be achieved by using the right communication mix. Social media is definitely a part of this and will help B2B companies in tightening their long-term relationships with their client and build their credibility with prospects. Finally, if you don’t think your company is ready for social media, you should still dedicate a small amount of your time to them. Whether you like it or not, you are already present on various social media and you need to monitor this. Clients, employees, suppliers and influencers might already be talking about your company. It is very important that you know what they are saying so you can respond to this. A small comment might be the start of a major crisis, but also new trends might be revealed and new opportunities discovered.
Hola !
I had the pleasure of meeting Juan Santana, CEO of Panda Security, this week. Some people have stories to tell. This man had an interesting story to tell !
Panda clearly competes on technology they develop themselves. As the dynamic in the malware space is changing fast, “Collective Intelligence” seems the way to go. Today, PandaLabs receives about 45.000 suspicious files every day (!), of which 20 to 25.000 are malware, mostly designed to steal personal information. Panda’s Collective Intelligence technology gives them a huge detection capability. 99% of the received malware samples are automatically processed. 1% is still processed manually (thus optimising the system).
Fact is that, while that huge amount of malware daily circulates, pc users have a false sense of security. How come ? Cybercriminals no longer seek ‘notority’, but operate ‘under cover’, thus facilitating financial gain.
How to act safe on the web then, I asked myself. 1. Buy a Panda solution ;-)
- 2. Have a responsible behavior. Not always easy in an environment where everything is just one click away.
Quint Wellington Redwood heeft er een nieuwe consultant bij .
Pedro Moreira heeft ruime ervaring in het begeleiden van projecten en implementeren van processen en heeft deze ervaring voornamelijk opgedaan bij de Europese Commissie.

De perfecte man voor Quint.
O'Neill en Lawson Software gaan samenwerken. Lawson gaat O'Neill helpen om op Europees vlak zijn supply chain te optimaliseren. Lawson heeft de voorbije jaren erg veel tijd en energie gestoken in de verticalisering van zijn oplossingen. Eén van de resultaten is Lawson Fashion waarmee bedrijven uit de mode industrie zoals O'Neill vraag en aanbod op elkaar kunnen afstemmen, sneller inspelen op de markt en zo de winstgevendheid verhogen.
O'Neill Nederland bijt de spits af met de implementatie. Later volgen België, Duitsland en Frankrijk. Andere modebedrijven die gebruik maken van Lawson's oplossingen zijn Quicksilver en Helly Hansen.










