CMO.com: Dell Lends its Ear to Social Media

The first rule about getting involved in social media is being a good listener. And probably no one does this as well as Dell. The computer giant has been slowly improving its listening abilities, and late last year formally opened its Social Media Listening Command Center at its headquarters outside of Austin, Texas.

The listening room is just one of many social media marketing strategies that Dell is using. The company has numerous Twitter accounts that broadcast special prices, a series of Facebook pages with user-generated content promoting its products, and formal ways to incorporate customer-based suggestions into the next round of product features.

While the room is a sexy cross between an air traffic control tower and a TV production studio, it really is just a room. The more important aspects aren’t to be found in the room, to the point where when I asked Manish Mehta, Dell’s vice president for social media and community, how many people worked for him he couldn’t tell me. And he wasn’t just being coy. “The biggest misnomer is that you have to be physically present in the room to listen to the social Web,” he said. “We have others located around the company and indeed, around the world who are monitoring and participating in these conversations.”

The social media listening and command center may or may not be appropriate for how marketing is done in other companies. It depends how they are organized or want to organize for social media, as well as the volume of conversation about their business, products and services. Mehta says, “However, the social media listening command center offers us a great, real time global view of conversations and enables us the aggregate and track the data so that in real time we understand what topics matter to our customers. When you are embedding social media as a tool across virtually every aspect of the company to be used by employees as one of the ways they stay in touch with customers every day, then we cannot total up number of people or dollars we are investing, as it is part of how we do business”

And listening has really become part of Dell’s marketing, and by extension its core business. The company tracks tens of thousands of Tweets daily that mention the company and its products, in 11 different languages. “You have to start with social media by listening and understand how many conversations or places you are being mentioned and which are relevant to your business,” he says. Issues are tagged and delegated to the appropriate department for quick resolution.

It is ironic that Mehta is such a good listener, given that one of his earliest jobs was an engineer for the Three Mile Island nuclear plant, although working there about a decade after the accident. “The nuclear industry did a really bad job back then about addressing public fears and safety concerns,” a lesson he has taken with him for his tenure at Dell.

To give you an idea of their global reach, the Dell.com Web site is now delivered in 34 different languages and locales. Many of the conversations are in English, despite the native language of the original customer. “Quite a few people use English in Asia and elsewhere, so our coverage works out to about 80% of all conversations we could have,” he says. “Listening is core to our company and our values.” Dell plans on opening new listening rooms in China and Europe later this year to extend its model and to focus attention on the function. “The listening room is a great tool to galvanize our work force and employee base to show physically how to do it and how easy it is to participate in these conversations,” he said.

The company counts on social media being part of a lot of different jobs throughout the company, and to emphasize this has trained more than 5,000 out of the more than 100,000 Dell employees worldwide. As part of an effort that they call Social Media University, Dell has developed a series of 11 different internally created classes that staffers can take to get certified in using social media, starting with a two-hour basic class. “We have a pretty regimented curriculum to go through, and all told it is probably a day and a half of different classes,” he says.

The classes are held all over the world, including in Dell’s offices in China, Germany and India. “Our goal is to get to the next level where we do more engagement using social media. We can’t expect everyone in the company but we want to certify and train more of our employees.” Once you finish the class sequence, you are authorized to blog, tweet, and post as an official Dell representative. “We need to get the level of engagement where this becomes a natural part of people’s jobs,” he says. “That is our next frontier.”

Social media can be used for a variety of marketing purposes, including helping with better communications or handling crisis management. “Some companies use social media as a defense play or for thought leadership, such as promoting their blogs and position pieces. And cable companies and airlines will use it for better customer service. Some will use it for idea generation, like Starbucks, to improve products via customer input, or to generate demand for viral marketing or ad campaigns or lead generation. And others have used social commerce, putting social media feeds right inside their Web sites to drive conversions and sales. The difference here at Dell is that we are using it in every one of these functions. Every department uses it distinctly for their part of the business.”

There are lots of examples how Dell uses the information it gets from all this listening. These conversations have influenced a wide number of its past and present products and plans, as well as helping to refine several of its marketing messages. What has happened is tighter and quicker feedback loops between customers and the company are happening in many different areas:

  • They fixed Bluetooth drivers when a software update resulted in significant issues;
  • They have launched new Products based on input from Ideastorm
  • (Product Red);
  • Feedback from ratings and reviews resulted in new drivers and speakers in a laptop model;
  • They are currently following up on some packaging questions raised across the Web;
  • Have gotten feedback on some of their mobility products hasresulted in constant improvement on newer versions..
  • They changed images on Dell.com because customers thought there should be clearer representation of size and shape of replacement batteries.

As another example of its marketing reach, Dell’s main Facebook page contains an item called “tag team” which aggregates user-generated reviews to help customers choose the most appropriate system. It allows much of their marketing of their systems to be placed in the hands of their customers, since they identify how they want to use a certain system and they can compare it to suggestions from what other customers have chosen.

Mehta compares the state of social media to the state of Internet email back in the mid-1990s, when corporate standards were still evolving and not everyone understand the power of the connective tissue of the technology. “We didn’t think about having any return on investment for the telephone or for corporate email back when they were introduced,” he said. Now Dell has corporate standards for how it creates new social media accounts – employees are identified by their first name appended by “@Dell” in their Twitter handles for example. “We register everyone who gets trained so that we can keep track of who is posting. We also do this so we can terminate your account when you leave the company. There are lots of issues that we haven’t really seen yet, such as what happens when a Twitter user leaves and takes their fans or followers with them to a new company?”

The same standardization is true for the official Dell Facebook pages. At one time, the company had hundreds of them, proliferating as various product and account teams set them up. “Now we have less than 50, and we are trying to make more sense of using Facebook,” he says.

While Dell got it fabled start in a college dorm room and became big by selling directly to customers, the company lost its way in the mid 2000’s with a series of quality control and attitude issues brought on by hypergrowth. That thankfully has been turned around, and today the company is on the forefront of how it listens and reacts to its customers.

Charlene Li, the founder of Altimeter Group and author of Open Leadership, gave Dell one of her awards for organizations that best demonstrate open leadership principals. She says, “Dell has been an active participant in social media but what continues to impress us is that they are committed to continually pushing the boundaries of social business by pushing engagement into all areas of their business practice. What started out as basic monitoring and reputation management has turned into a way of doing business that permeates through every department. This does not come easily or quickly and Dell is being recognized for their dogged determination to being “direct” with their customers in multiple ways.”

By listening and engaging with customers via discussion forums, product photos and videos, member profiles, and chats, Dell’s Enterprise Technology Center has influenced new sales cycles and has helped move current sales cycles forward.  In one year, the Tech Center community has experienced a 270% growth in website traffic, according to Dell representatives.

Dell has had some cybersquatters or others who misrepresent themselves as official corporate spokespeople, but so far these have been just blips on the radar. “Usually people back away when our legal department contacts them. But it is a bit of a whack-a-mole, in that you can’t rest, there will always be someone popping up.”

Despite all the social media marketing efforts, Dell isn’t resting on its accomplishments. Manish wants more staffers certified and trained. “I feel that we are in the lead, but we are in inning two of an extra inning ball game of the social web. I also want to see examples of other companies that have turned the tide and doing great things with social media.” Always the listener.

How to suck at social media

I have a confession to make: I suck at social media. Yes, your humble servant (maybe that is one reason why) who advises thousands of IT workers how to implement the fanciest technologies can’t do squat when it comes to FaceTwitLinkbooking. Or whatever.

Yes, I have a blog, and a Twitter account, and do all sorts of stuff on LinkedIn and Facebook. And I have even learned how to tie them together, so one blog post proliferates the Twitterverse et naseum. But I fail when it comes to something that is so basic, so un-tech, so easy, that is almost embarrassing.

I am not a good listener.

I realized this the other day when I was interviewing one of Dell’s big honchos in social media, who was talking about how he (and by extension, the greater Dell) has become better at listening. To social media. And interacting with its customers.

By and large, I don’t interact with my readers. Yes, I get some emails, Tweets, comments on my blogs and Facebook and other messages. Sometimes I respond, if they ask me a direct question that has a reasonable answer. (Unreasonable question: I am doing a report for my class on firewalls, can you tell me how to evaluate their features? Yup, I sure can: go find some other sap.)

But most of the time, I don’t really listen. Sure, I do a lot of listening when I am on the phone with a source, typing madly as I try to record for posterity their words of wisdom for all ITkind. But that is a very selective form of listening, reserved for when I am doing the research phase of whatever it is that I am assigned to write that particular day or week.

I even subscribe to a few different email listservs, that traditional form of group grope before we got that kid from Harvard unbelievably rich (and on stock options that he can’t even sell for real hard cash money either). But do I post and engage the audiences there? Nope: most of the time, I just lurk and read whatever is going down on the ‘boards (dating myself here, I know).

Sure, I tune in to the Twitstream and check my Facebook wall to see what is happening. And sometimes I even scroll down a few screens to see what my peeps are up to. But that isn’t what this social media thing is all about.

At a lecture today by another professional speaker, he spoke about how he uses Facebook for positioning – meaning he lets his followers/friends know what he is working on. I usually don’t do that – if you look at my posts, they are links to when the articles and other good stuff that I have produced is actually in a finished state. By then, the listening room has moved on to something else.

So my moral for today is this: spend some time listening to your clients, customers, partners, colleagues.

Okay, time to practice (a little) of what I am preaching. What do you want me to write about next week? I am all ears.

ITworld: TechSoup Global connects non-profits with critical technology

Supporting remote users is never easy, but when you have a population spread across more than 30 countries and in some very out-of-the-way places, it can become a nightmare. Luckily, this isn’t the case thanks to some careful planning by the back office provider for numerous non-profits called TechSoup Global.

You can read the entire case study, along with links to some of the organizations they have helped over the years, on ITworld here.

Techtarget: Does Microsoft Kinect have a future in the enterprise?

A game controller that sold 4 million units in its first six weeks may seem like an unlikely prospect for an enterprise computing application. But since Microsoft Kinect launched in November, computer programmers have purchased units for applications in robotics, videoconferencing, image processing, augmented reality systems, 3-D rendering and other corporate uses.

You can read my article on SearchEnterpriseDesktop.com, here.

IT World: Behind the scenes at the Cowboys stadium for Super Bowl XLV

It isn’t easy to get a press pass to cover the Super Bowl, especially since my sports credentials are nonexistent. Nevertheless, I braved ice and snow to travel this week to Dallas and attend the media day with 1,700 other journalists to see what is going on in advance of the big game on Sunday. This is my second visit to Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas and I still am in awe of the place. It is big, it is wonderful, and it is filled with lots of high tech. Oh, and I think there are some big beefy guys that come here from time to time to throw a ball around too.

The most noticeable thing as you enter the stadium is the assembly of midfield multiple video screens, stretching between the 20-yard lines. It is the largest high definition screen in the world, typical Texas. In addition to these TVs, the stadium has thousands more TVs, each with its own IP address and media server that are used for menu boards for the concessions and to carry advertising in the hallways around the stadium. All of this video is controlled from a central command center, where producers can schedule particular images to appear at specific times in different places around the arena. It is an ad-man’s wet dream to monitor how many hot dogs and t-shirts are being sold in real time and replenish low inventories in an instant.

Unlike older stadiums, including the one it previously occupied, the Cowboys wanted this to be as high-tech as possible. “With the new stadium, we’ve jumped to the forefront of a lot of new, emerging technologies. We started back in 2004, and we knew then that we wanted to build an infrastructure that would be available for future years,” says Walsh.

To give you an idea of the scope of the IT infrastructure here, there are 884 Cisco wireless access points scattered around, and more than 70 different wiring closets containing more than 40,000 wired ports. There are several different wireless networks for staff, press, guests and attendees that segregate their traffic. There is more than 8 million feet of Ethernet cabling, and 260 miles of fiber to support all the connections, and more than 100 TB of data storage too. Everything operates on a single network, including the point of sale terminals at the concession stands, 185 security cameras and access control doors, entrance ticketing stations, the scoreboards, and the public Wifi network as well as the more prosaic business computing needs of the staff. There is AT&T Wifi throughout the place, and enough cellular horsepower to support a hundred thousand individual phone conversations and video uploads concurrently.

“We wanted to have Wifi throughout the stadium, which we rolled out on our last Thanksgiving Day game,” says Walsh. “We know for a normal Cowboys game, we get 60/40 split of AT&T and Verizon cellular customers. We have spent the last six months having all the carriers increase their throughput and infrastructure to ensure that the fan experience continues to be great. We see peak loads for kickoff, halftime, and end game periods when everyone is doing video uploads. The mix of carriers depends on what part of the country our attendees come from.”

In essence, the Cowboys stadium IT organization has been getting ready for several months for its Super Bowl party. “We had the Cotton Bowl here and that was our big test run. During the first half of the game we fine tuned our access points (APs). And by half time we worked with Cisco and AT&T to push a patch out to the APs and got more Wifi throughput then all the previous games combined. We try to have 250 seats per each AP antenna and learned how to tune their radios to get the closest access points. It is a real challenge to get the optimal performance, but we are able to look at all of our access points in real time and tweak their performance. ”

CDW handled the large-scale conversion and consolidation from several older Cowboy data centers that were spread around town. They helped design the 5,000 square foot data center that now sits inside the stadium. (Link to the CDW B-roll video here.) “In the old stadium they couldn’t support any wireless upgrades, mainly because the building was built in 1969 and it was made out of solid concrete, making it difficult to pull cable through it,” said Lance Caserotti, the solution architect from CDW that helped design the project. The old data center had more than 600 aging physical servers, which were converted to 127 virtual machines running on 16 different HP blade servers using VMware. In addition to handling the stadium activities, the new data center also supports more than 30 different independent business units that are part of the Jerry Jones empire, such as souvenir stores and pro shops located across the country in more than 100 different locations and more than 500 employees.

Part of my fascination with the video technology is its ability to send real-time video streams to the jumbo midfield screens, in close to real-time.  “Older stadium video display tech took sometimes as long as ten seconds to broadcast live video from the field to the arena screens. But ours has a 300 millisecond delay, which is about the blink of an eye,” says Walsh. They also are filming their games in 3D that are broadcast to private suites in the arena. “It is totally awesome,” says Walsh.

On Super Sunday, you will see some new technology. The NFL has developed several apps for Droid and iPad/iPhone to download and interact with during the game. Fans can have online real time stats, and be able to vote for Most Valuable Player at the end of the game from their cell phones even before they leave their seats.  There is also a souvenir program for the iPad too.

And the Cowboys IT department isn’t sitting still. They are looking at other mobile apps, such as the ability to order food from your seat and go to an express pickup line where your order will be automatically charged to your cell phone account. “We have got the infrastructure in place and probably will roll that out next year,” says Walsh.

Tom’s Hardware: Is server virtualization the new clustering?

In a word, yes.

Virtualization has become the new computing cluster. Clustering–the ability to have two or more computers operate in lockstep for highly available systems–has been around since almost the earliest PC and mainframe days. But a new take on clustering is emerging that leverages virtualization tools and is becoming more appealing, particularly for enterprise IT shops.

You can read the full article posted today on Tom’s Hardware here.

 

Baseline: 8 Ways to ensure outsourcing success

Outsourcing isn’t new, but, by now, many IT shops have accumulated enough experience to use this service more effectively. We spoke with several managers who have used outsourcers to build and augment their systems, and we came away with eight suggestions to help ensure that your next outsourcing contact—and contract—will be successful.

You can read my article that was published in this month’s Baseline magazine here.