By Ryan Zuk, senior media and analyst relations manager, Sage CRM Solutions
 CRM magazine, June 2009, cover
[EDITORS' NOTE: This is part of a series of posts that began here, dissecting a two-page chart that appeared in CRM magazine's June 2009 issue on social media. The digital edition of that issue can be found here, and a standalone image of the chart itself can be seen here. (Click on the “View Full Size” button at the top right of that page.) To view all posts in the series, please add this RSS feed to your RSS reader.]
JUNE 6, 2009 — Christopher Carfi of Cerado nailed a big point with his video blog contribution to this social experiment:
Customers belong at the center of CRM magazine’s thought-provoking Social Media Maturity Model, since the model itself focuses on communicating, collaborating, and doing business with them.
Perhaps this is a natural assumption for many people viewing the model, although I think most would also agree it’s important to define your audience, prospects, partners, and customers — your people — and to stay focused on serving them.
Consider the buyer-persona concept that David Meerman Scott encourages in his writing and presentations. [Editors' Note: David Meerman Scott will be participating in this series later this month.] Businesses can benefit by putting a name and a face to all types of members within their addressable markets, keeping current profiles of each, and solving their problems.
Now more than ever, whether considering the struggling economy or the Long Tail nature of commerce, we need to get to know our people better, learn what motivates them, and use this information to create connections that sustain and grow successful businesses.
 Social Media Maturity Model, detail (upper right), CRM magazine, June 2009
Genuine conversations remain the best way to do this, despite all the fancy Web and social networking tools now available to us. (And we do so love the tools! As Esteban Kolsky notes in his comment on Mike Fauscette’s June 2nd post, they’re really a new set of enablers.)
[Editors' Note: CRM guru Paul Greenberg also examined these tools in the November 2008 issue of CRM.]
To successfully relate to customers in our right-now, no-waiting economy, indirect communication needs to give way to direct communication, and, as the Social Media Maturity Model indicates in its upper-right quadrant, dictating needs to evolve into collaborating. (See image, left.)
Social media provides public relations an opportunity to assist this transition while impacting all corners of the social media maturity model. Perhaps the model needs to be expressed in a more circular ecosystem fashion — again, positioning customers in the middle.
Regardless, it will be an interesting journey to the era of social commerce. Here are some thoughts on how PR can help organizations and customers get there:
- Moving the Needle – Organizations need to move from “Why social media?” to “How do we implement social media?” They need someone to demonstrate the benefits of monitoring and participating on the social Web. This is a perfect role for PR, although PR doesn’t have to have sole ownership of it.
- Connecting the Dots – Customers don’t want a megaphone communications approach — they want information that’s tailored to their needs. Social networking gives us an authentic means of discovery. PR can encourage and facilitate customer conversations that help marketing, sales, and service further understand buyer motivations so products and services can address the needs of real people.
- Keeping It Real – As organizations venture into social media conversations, they’ll need to consider bridging virtual with reality. Not every interaction should be online; in-person engagement with customers still matters. PR is in a unique position to help create these opportunities and “events.” As such, PR must also be comfortable providing accurate information not only to traditional media, analysts, bloggers, and market influencers, but also to customers directly. Doing so is the catalyst for authentic collaboration with customers to create products and services that are truly desired, and to shape the branding and messages that support them.
These aren’t flip-the-switch processes. They require learning and maturing, and are well worth the effort of connecting directly with the customers we’re trying to reach in the first place.
My thanks to Josh and the CRM magazine staff for inviting me to participate, to all the contributors of this blog series, and to everyone reading and commenting. Let’s see where this goes.
Ryan Zuk, APR, is senior media and analyst relations manager for Sage CRM Solutions, part of The Sage Group plc, supplier of business management software and services to more than 5.8 million small and midsize business customers worldwide. He also writes the monthly “Digital Dialogue” column for the Public Relations Society of America’s PR Tactics journal — a recent example of his work can be seen here — and blogs at criticalmasspr.com. He can be reached via email at ryanzuk@gmail.com and on Twitter as @ryanzuk.

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June 3rd, 2009 by Joshua Weinberger |
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Here’s the lineup for our 30 Posts, 30 People, 30 Days project.
 CRM magazine, June 2009, cover
(All dates and participants are subject to change, of course.)
[EDITORS' NOTE: This is part of a series of posts that began here, dissecting a two-page chart that appeared in CRM magazine's June 2009 issue on social media. The digital edition of that issue can be found here, and a standalone image of the chart itself can be seen here. (Click on the “View Full Size” button at the top right of that page.) To view all posts in the series, please add this RSS feed to your RSS reader.]
June 1: 30 Posts, 30 People, 30 Days
Josh Weinberger, Managing Editor, CRM magazine, @kitson
June 2: The Conversation Begins
Mike Fauscette, Software Business Solutions Group, IDC, @mfauscette
June 3: The Social Customer at the Center
Christopher Carfi, founder, Cerado, @ccarfi
June 4: The Reactive State of Social CRM — Organizations Have Voice, But Not Control
Caroline Dangson, social media research analyst, IDC, @CDangson
June 5: Social Software Development and Consumer Privacy
Joe Manna, Community Manager, Infusionsoft, @joemanna
June 6: Moving Communication from Dictation to Collaboration
Ryan Zuk, APR, senior media and analyst relations manager, Sage CRM Solutions, @ryanzuk
June 7: The Social Work of Community Service
Ian Jacobs, senior analyst, Datamonitor, @iangjacobs
June 8: The Mutation of Social Media
Oliver Marks, founder, Oliver Marks & Associates, @olivermarks
June 9: “One (Social) Ring to Rule Them All”
Prem Kumar Aparanji, principal consultant, CRM, Cognizant Technology Solutions, @prem_k
June 10: The Singularity Is 5 Years Away
Michael Idinopulos, Socialtext, @michaelido
June 11: The Chart Is Flat. Social Media Isn’t.
Marshall Lager, contributor, CRM magazine, @lager
June 12: Information Wants to Find You
Larry Ritter, senior vice president & general manager, Sage CRM Solutions, @sageCRMsolution
June 13: Denis Pombriant, founder and managing principal, Beagle Research Group, @denispombriant
June 14: Josh Bernoff, senior VP, Idea Development, Forrester Research, @jbernoff
June 15: Esteban Kolsky, founder, Esteban Kolsky & Associates, @ekolsky
June 16: Anthony Nemelka, president and CEO, Helpstream, @tnemelka
June 17: Ross Mayfield, chairman, president & cofounder, Socialtext, @ross
June 18: David Meerman Scott, author, World Wide Rave, @dmscott
June 19: Mitch Lieberman, vice president, strategic solutions, SugarCRM, @mjayliebs
June 20: Jesus Hoyos, managing partner, Solvis Consulting, @jesus_hoyos
June 21: Denis Pombriant, Beagle Research Group, @denispombriant
June 22: Umberto Milletti, CEO, InsideView, @umbertom
June 23: Dirk Shaw, social media strategist, Vignette, @dirkmshaw
June 24: Brian Vellmure, FreeCRMStrategies, @CRMStrategies
June 25: Brent Leary, CRM Essentials, @brentleary
June 26: Anthony Lye, senior vice president, Oracle CRM, Oracle, @adl
June 27: Dan Schawbel, social media specialist, EMC, @danschawbel
June 28: Paul Greenberg, The 56 Group, @pgreenbe
June 29: Warren Sukernek, director of content marketing, Radian6, @warrenss
June 30: Jill Dyché, Baseline Consulting, @jilldyche
Specific dates yet to be scheduled:
- Ray Wang, Forrester Research, @rwang0
- Michael Krigsman, CEO, Asuret, @mkrigsman
- Thomas Vander Wal, @vanderwal
- Paul Gillin, research fellow, Society for New Communications Research, @pgillin
- Mary Wardley, IDC
- Barton Goldenberg, ISM, Inc.
- Natalie Petouhoff, Forrester Research, @drnatalie
- Jacob Morgan, cofounder and principal, Mighty Mouth Media, @jacobm

Tags: 30 Days, 30 People, 30 people 30 posts 30 days, 30 Posts, 30 Posts 30 People 30 Days, 303030, ?rm, Adam Sarner, Anthony Lye, Anthony Nemelka, asynchronous, beagle research group, Brent Leary, Brian Solis, Cerado, Christopher Carfi, cluetrain manifesto, crm 1.0, crm 101, crm 2.0, CRM Essentials, customer centric, customer centricity, customer relations, customer service, david meerman scott, Denis Pombriant, Doc Searls, Esteban Kolsky, experiment, forrester, Forrester Research, Gartner, Helpstream, IDC, InsideView, jeremiah owyang, Jesus Hoyos, marketing, Michael Idinopulos, microsoft, Mike Fauscette, Natalie Petouhoff, Oliver Marks, Paul Greenberg, Prem Kumar Aparanji, public relations, r. buckminster fuller, Ray Wang, real time, Ross Mayfield, sales, Sheryl Kingstone, social, social crm, Social media, social media maturity, socialmedia, Socialtext, steve ballmer, Steve Mann, Steve Rubel, Stowe Boyd, synchronous, The /Messengers, The 56 Group, Umberto Milletti, VRM, xrm, Yankee Group
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