Advocate Marketing Tactics: Learnings from the BetterCloud beta tester campaign

Are we having fun yet?

Today I have another fun marketing campaign to talk about via my buddy David Politis, CEO and founder of BetterCloud and his marketing manager Gail Axelrod.  Here is the set-up: BetterCloud launched their product FlashPanel into the Google Apps Marketplace a couple weeks ago.  Before launch, they had private beta testers doing their thing like bug-testing, etc.  BetterCloud and team wanted to turn their beta testers into advocates by creating a highly personal, multi-step campaign that coincided with the launch of their new product.  The result, BetterCloud was able to go to market with happy and vocal customer advocates.  Net–net,  I love it!

  1. Coinciding with the launch, BetterCloud sent a personalized packages to their private beta testers. (They received the day of the launch or before.  Each package had a t-shirt and a personalized note written by David which included a personalized URL.)
  2. The personalized URL was a custom video delivered by David to the private beta tester. As you can see in the picture below, the video was personalized for each user. What you don’t see on this page but you see in the video is employees from BetterCloud thanking the beta tester as well. Really personal, really exciting, lots of fun.   You can watch the actual video here:  http://www.bettercloud.com/flashpanel46/

    3.  The private beta testers were invited back to send a picture of themselves wearing the shirt with their company logo visibile. This will end up on a page on the BetterCloud website.

4.  Mission accomplished as happy advocates leverage the prominent social share buttons  to send positive social messages about the BetterCloud product.  At a minimum, BetterCloud is creating happy customers whether they are vocal (yet) or not.


Great stuff.  Some morals to the story:

1.  Personalization — I love this part of the story.  I am seeing more and more targeted personalization from b2b marketers with great results.   If you listen to all my friends in the business, they will tell you “It’s all about the buyer”.  Well, if that’s true – make it about the buyer and you will succeed.

2.  Promotion by customer advocates is the new black — I just met with Mark Organ, founder of Influitive whose new company is helping companies reward advocates for advocating publicly.  More and more b2b organizations will be identifying, cultivating and ultimately rewarding their advocates.    What I love about BetterCloud’s advocacy play is that they are new but still were able to create advocates pre-launch.

3.  Video — Video is hot and used incorrectly more often than not (Please see the numerous “infomercials” being created by vendors).  This video example is a great way to create a personal relationship with an advocate and have a little fun and excitement.

As special thanks to Robert Warren (featured in the picture) “Genesis Career College for allowing me to use his picture and story in this example.

Craig Rosenberg is the Funnelholic. He loves sales, marketing, and things that drive revenue. Follow him on Google+ or Twitter

Ten social media tools that you can actually use to sell more

Funnelholic Note: This is a guest post by my good friend Matt Heinz, president of Heinz Marketing Inc.  He is a respected resource in the sales AND marketing community and one of my favorite speakers and writers. 

Matt offered to write a guest post and I told him the new ground rules on this blog: tell them something they can actually use.  No concepts or pie in the sky stuff.  He came back with a great article on social tools which I think you will enjoy.

You have to start with a strong understanding of your audience, and an active content plan that speaks to, engages and builds trust and preference with that audience.  But once you have that, and it comes time to execute, you need to find and rely on a set of tools that will help you execute faster, more efficiently and more consistently to achieve results.

Here are ten of my favorite tools for helping sales professionals and organizations (big and small) accelerate customer engagement, lead generation and closed business from social media.

HootSuite (free or Pro)
I prefer HootSuite over TweetDeck, but both work fine (and there are others). HootSuite lets you not only separate and filter groups of social contacts and content you may be following, but allows you to do so via multiple social channels (Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and more) all in one place. This really is the hub for engagement, and with a dedicated process you can get in, do your business, and get out – social engagement with minimal time requirement. HootSuite helps make that possible.

TwitHawk
Think of it as Google Alerts for Twitter. Say you want to know anybody says “car broke down” within 50 miles of your city. TwitHawk does that for you. Not only does it push those alerts to you, but is also makes it fast & easy to respond with up to five different offers per search, and throttle those responses out over time so you aren’t spamming the world all at once. Great tool for finding new early buying signals you may have otherwise missed in the social fire hose.  InboxQ and Nearstream are worth looking at as well with similar features and benefits.

TweetAdder
I don’t recommend using TweetAdder to mass-add followers to your account (which is what the tool was built for). Rather, I like the search and sort functionality TweetAdder offers to find more prospective customers, influencers and more you may want to follow, engage and eventually sell to. For example, you can search for anybody with certain keywords in their bio and more than 1,000 people following them back. Lots of ways to slice and dice the searching, great way to find people headed to a conference you may be attending, and so on.

FeedRinse
Let’s say you want to mine LinkedIn Answers for buying signals among IT professionals.  You don’t want to have to read every question, every answer or every thread.  FeedRinse makes it easy to filter any RSS feed for specific keywords you are particularly interested in.  Want to know when “server failure” comes up in an IT forum?  Or when sales training comes up in a conversation on Quora?  FeedRinse can do it for you, integrated and delivered right into your RSS reader.

 Dlvr.it
Anytime your RSS feed is updated, Dlvr.it automatically syndicates your new content to the social channels of your choice – Twitter, Facebook, Foursquare, etc. It also separates the tracking links so you can see unique clicks on shortened links by channel. Simple, free tool that saves you time but will accelerate visibility of new content you publish.

Timely.is
If you find a bunch of links worth sharing with your followers all at once (say, by reading through your collection of RSS feeds), the last think you want to do is post or tweet them all out at once. Timely separates those tweets out over time, sending for example three a day into your Twitter stream with auto-determined timing based on the highest engagement, clicks & retweets from your past Twitter performance. At any given time, I have about a week of great sales, marketing and productivity links queued up and throttled out.

UnTweeps
To keep your Klout scores high and your follower list clean, you should occasionally unfollow anyone who’s gone socially dark. UnTweeps helps you do that by sorting your followers by those who haven’t posted in XX days. Fast & easy. Do it once a month.

TextExpander and ActiveWords
If you find yourself typing the same things often as a response to followers or requests via social media, consider an auto-entry tool that fills in a full set of text for you with just a short keyword or key combination. ActiveWords is my favorite, but works only on Windows. TextExpander has less functionality, but works on the Mac. Both will save you a ton of time.

Email Alerts
Those who stand out in the social world not only publish but respond. One of the best ways to filter your followers is to sign up for email alerts that highlight news, profile updates and more from your primary accounts. You can get daily alerts from sites like Facebook, LinkedIn, Focus, Quora, Gist and more. Set up an email rule to put them all in a special folder that you look at once a day, and take action on what looks good.

Morning Coffee
This is a FireFox plug-in that, when you press the embedded browser button, opens up a series of pre-determined browser tabs. You can designate some sites to come up every day, or only workdays, or only Tuesdays. But if you’re in the habit of checking certain sites once a day, want to be reminded to send birthday notes on Facebook each morning, give K+ to new people, Morning Coffee is a quick and easy way to remember and execute.

OK, that’s my list. What’s missing? What tools are part of your regular social arsenal to help you engage and sell better?

Matt Heinz is president of Heinz Marketing, and is a frequent speaker and author on B2B marketing and sales strategy. You can connect with Matt via emailTwitterLinkedIn or his blog.  Get an advance copy of Matt’s new book, Successful Social Selling, here.

Craig Rosenberg is the Funnelholic. He loves sales, marketing, and things that drive revenue. Follow him on Google+ or Twitter

Influencer Marketing: SugarCRM’s influencer playing cards

Here is a fun play on influencer marketing or influencer relations.  I am not going to write a big post on the importance of influencers.  However,  Paul Greenberg just wrote a comprehensive post on influencer relations you can see here.  Net-net: Most technology companies recognize that influencers write (blogs, whitepapers, etc)  and talk (speaking engagements and lots of 1-to-1 end user conversations) to their target customers.  As such, they want influencers to stay close to what they are doing.

Here is a tip:   Everyone likes to be recognized and everyone likes to have fun  (not just influencers, I mean everyone).   Chris Bucholtz from SugarCRM for SugarCRM‘s annual user conference had some fun and created memorable leave-behinds for his influencers.  Here is what he did: Chris had baseball cards created of each influencer that attended.  They had their pictures on the front with brief bios and one “fun-fact” on the back.   Unlike other chotskies that don’t make my desk, my card already has and I see SugarCRM every day.  I was honored by having the card made and I am reminded of that fact all the time!  For Chris, mission accomplished.  Oh and Chris loves baseball so I am sure he enjoyed this even more.

The cards:

This is the signed version!

Craig Rosenberg is the Funnelholic. He loves sales, marketing, and things that drive revenue. Follow him on Google+ or Twitter

Crazy Hacks in B2B Social Marketing and Engagement: InsideView’s Twitter Followup

My new hobby is to identify creative, fun hacks from b2b marketers which as you can imagine b2b folks are not known for.  Here is one I ran into the other day. I went on InsideView’s website to download their Ultimate Guide To Using Twitter for Social Selling.  And not so ironically, they used Twitter to creatively follow-up with me.

Check this out.  First of all, the reg form asked for my Twitter handle.  Yes, of course, it’s a guide to Twitter so its certainly appropriate, but don’t be a naysayer –  I am hoping to give you idea fodder for new hacks you can do.  I love capturing the Twitter handle.  For one, it’s a channel by which your buyers communicate but also can provide incredible insight into the buyer.


Then, once I filled out the form to download the PDF.  I received a tweet regarding my download.

The Twitter shout-out is crowd-pleasing and completely different than those boring, ridiculous canned emails we send when people download.  “Thank you for downloading the Twitter Guide blah blah blah”.  Also, the tweet got me to respond which is awesome.

All in all, this tactic is not going to get you another 100 leads this month but it is definitely a highly engaging, very personal way to follow up.  How about these ideas:

1.  Have sales reps send this type of Twitter followup? If the prospect scores high-enough, why not?

2.  I think doing this for webinars and online events is a killer application. We create these event hashtags, lets get em cooking well in advance of the event.

3.  Make it personal – you have an opportunity to be  real and drive 2-way engagement.

What do you think?

Craig Rosenberg is the Funnelholic. He loves sales, marketing, and things that drive revenue. Follow him on Google+ or Twitter

Linkedin Lead Nurturing for Sales People

Over the last three weeks, I have viewed someone’s profile and they have sent me a note within a day. I clicked on one woman’s profile I haven’t spoken to in months. BOOM, hours later, I got a Linkedin message: “How’s business?” I love it. The idea here is very similar to what you do with marketing automation, ie, a prospect you have been pursuing or you haven’t seen in awhile starts spending time on your web page and you can see that is happening and you reach out. You can do this on the biggest b2b site in the world and you should. Think about it, you have someone who just took the time to click on a description of YOU.

Use cases are endless:
1. Inbound marketing – people find you via your keywords, etc and you see that aka “awesome”
2. Prospecting — trying to get a person on the phone, include your linkedin profile in your email. You will see them check you out and when you do…shazam.
3. Customer Nurturing — Avoid “checking in”. You see someone looking at your profile, they are thinking about you, reach out. The “How’s business” message I received falls into this category.

Click the “who has viewed your profile” link:

Boom, you can see who is “checking you out”.

Craig Rosenberg is the Funnelholic. He loves sales, marketing, and things that drive revenue. Follow him on Google+ or Twitter

“This Week in Sales”– Video interview with Kevin Gaither

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8hG4-fATfw&w=560&h=315]

This is my interview with Kevin Gaither on This Week in Sales. It was awhile back but I haven’t had a blog in awhile. I had fun in the interview and I am just getting back into getting the Funnelholic up and running.

Craig Rosenberg is the Funnelholic. He loves sales, marketing, and things that drive revenue. Follow him on Google+ or Twitter