Posts Tagged ‘Facebook’

India Inc looks beyond Facebook, Twitter

August 3rd, 2011

India Inc now has its own Facebook or Twitter, minus the personal diaries. New friends are made and colleagues ‘followed’, but business always comes first as employees connect within corporate firewalls, reports Shelley Singh

Business process outsourcing guru Pramod Bhasin is an avid advocate of networking. And who would know better how to do it. He expanded Genpact from one customer to more than 400 and built the country’s largest business services company.

The networking he talks about is in no way related to the popular social hangout zones -LinkedIN or Facebook – but a host of business networking software that companies are now downloading from the cloud or installing on corporate servers. India Inc is staying in the loop, using social networks imaginatively named Yammer, Jive, Socialcast, Quad, Connections, Chatter, SociatText and more.

“Social networking can be the killer application in corporate strategy, but not the way people do on Facebook, Twitter or the like,” adds Bhasin, vice chairman (non-executive ), Genpact. He believes it’s a must-have tool to encourage teamwork and best practices. Bhasin did log on to Facebook and within a week, got off it. “I was inundated with friend requests. I didn’t want to know what people had for lunch. It was too much to digest!”

Corporate social networking has added pizzazz to the intranet, without diluting the seriousness of connecting online. If there are friends to be followed or images to be uploaded, there is also information on best practices and innovations that can be shared. Companies organised into separate regional, productline and functional ’silos’ see social networking as the tool that’s “bringing together manufacturing and marketing,” as Manish Choksi, chief of corporate strategy & CIO, Asian Paints puts it. “Now both are on the same page,” he adds.

Genpact is doing a toss-up between Yammer and Jive, while Asian Paints and Federal Bank recently got started on IBM’s Connections. Bajaj Auto Finance, Mahindra & Mahindra, Wipro Technologies and a host of others have started off with business social software to help employees ‘follow’ colleagues beyond their cubicles.

Cisco is piloting Quad, launched in India two months ago, at one of the largest public sector banks in the country. Ffreedom, a two-and-a-half year old wealth management company, works out of Chatter, a business social network tool from salesforce.com.

Less than half of its 48 employees come to ‘office’. “We have a mobile application of Chatter. The office is ‘on our hands’ and we track people and work on the cloud,” says CEO, Sumeet Vaid. For the Mumbai-based start-up, it also means saving on expensive real estate.

Such a buzz within corporate firewalls may lack the bells and whistles that social networking darlings Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIN offer, yet are the new face of business networking. If global trends are any indicator, India Inc too will soon be Yamming, Chattering or Jiving away.

A 2010 report from Morgan Stanley says, there are increasingly more social networking users than e-mail users. According to technology research firm Gartner, by 2014, social networking services will replace e-mail as the primary vehicle for interpersonal communications for at least 20% of business users.

The research firm expects spending on social software to support sales, marketing and customer service processes will exceed $1 billion worldwide by 2012. Computer networking company Cisco Systems claims a 100 people team of specialists can now do the work of 120, by merely tapping resources within the company. That, in salaries, overheads and so on, translates to a saving of $5 million a year.

From Consumers to business
In the larger consumer community, though, the reach of social networking sites is unparalleled. Facebook, with 750 million users (25 million in India), is the largest. LinkedIN, a professional networking site with 100 million users (10 m in India) is the biggest in its niche.

But public networks are not where companies want their employees to put out office work on, share office gossip or comment on client engagements. “It’s hard to justify you are working on Facebook,” says Jessie Paul, CEO of marketing consultancy Paul Writer.

Yet, companies want to give employees everything that social networks offer: have fun, follow friends, upload images or scout for subject matter experts.

That’s where business social networks fill the gaps. “What Facebook is to personal life, Chatter is to business life,” says Sarah Patterson, product manager, SMB segments, Salesforce.com, a $1.6-billion provider of customer relationship management software. Salesforce.com launched Chatter in June 2010.

Chatter and the band of business networking tools have also to thank corporate policies for their popularity. Most companies bar employees from using public social networks during office time.

For example, Genpact bars access to public networks in office hours, citing security and customer concerns. Says Sanjay Shelvankar, CEO, ScaleneWorks People Solutions, “Most tier-1 companies block sites. R&D outfits even block chats.

Employees can’t log in at office time.” Shelvankar started ScaleneWorks, an HR consulting firm after quitting MindTree in 2010, where he headed the HR function.

Serious networking
There are three distinct eras in corporate networking – e-mail, instant messaging and now social networking, says Minhaj Zia, national sales manager, Unified Communications, Cisco, India & Saarc.

“Each tool has led to greater collaboration. With social networking the whole company is on the same page at the same time,” he says. He advocates any company with 1,000 or more employees must have a business social networking tool. “It brings collaboration among people not sitting next to each other,” adds Sanjay Manchanda, director, Microsoft business division.

Take the case of $2-billion Novozymes, a Denmark headquartered biotech company with 5,400 people in 30 countries including India, at Bangalore. Frank Hatzack, innovation manager at Copenhagen, who was exploring a new idea for food and seed industry, was seeking information on a particular enzyme (a kind of catalyst). He posted his requirement for details on Yammer, seen by all employees.

Arnab Guha, from the company’s R&D lab in Bangalore had read about food and seed enzymes, and shared the information with Hatzack. Now he has leads to explore the potential of the project. Without social media, Hatzack wouldn’t have known which ‘expert’ to reach out to within the company. Instead of shooting in the dark he got on Yammer to complete the task.

Last week, communications solutions provider Polycom’s engineer in Sydney, Australia posted a query on Yammer on how to integrate Polycom systems with those from other vendors. Within minutes, he got a dozen replies from colleagues around the world including India to fix the integration challenge. At Asian Paints, the annual budget planning exercise now happens on social media.

IT planning takes about three months and now, the 60-people technology team meets on its social media, IBM Connections. Says Choksi, “Earlier we were doing it on e-mails. The cumbersome inbox filling has been replaced by social media.” Choksi anticipates the tool will speed up work and help employees access knowledge from within, through greater collaboration. Genpact sees the potential of social media unfold in accessing subject matter experts across the company in banking and insurance.

“The gains are greater collaboration and less duplication,” adds Gitanjali Puri, director, marketing, CSC India. CSC uses a Jive-based platform, branded 3C – Connect Communicate Collaborate.

About 85% of the technology services company’s 91,000 employees (20,000 in India) use 3C. Prior to this, e-mail was the mode of communication. Over the past one year that it has been in use, CSC has seen a 20% reduction in e-mail and time to respond to a ‘request for proposal’ is down from an average of 45 days to 30. “That’s because business teams are collaborating in real time,” Puri adds.

Telecom-focused technology services company Aricent sees Yammer assist in “crowd sourcing of knowledge.” Says CEO Sudip Nandy, “If an engineer is stuck on an issue he can discuss the problem on Yammer with 8,000 connected minds.” At present, Aricent employees on Yammer are discussing whether they should embrace cloud for its enterprise applications.

Besides, social networking is bringing employees from diverse cultures and countries closer. At the $21-billion Xerox Corporation, such benefits are already real. A Yammer post asking people from non-English speaking countries to share where they work and the language they speak got response from 40 countries, where it operates.

Says Renee Heiser, director, corporate and employee communications, Xerox, “that one conversation connected employees within and across those countries and languages.” This was apart from sharing notes on Lean Six Sigma, customer service and healthy living habits.

Goodbye to intranet
Critics argue much of such collaboration was already in place through corporate intranets. It’s just that social networking is the flavour of the season. Employees have woken up to the idea of ‘following’ colleagues, much like they follow friends on Facebook. And now the platform looks jazzy, compared with the staid corporate intranet.

“Intranet is like black & white TV compared with where we are now,” says Salesforce.com’s Patterson. Where business social networks differ from corporate intranets is the ability to follow colleagues and know what’s happening on a real-time basis. Nandy of Aricent points to social software’s ability to follow people, form groups and communities, which intranets lack.

He says, “On Yammer, we have photography enthusiasts to adventure seekers, from robot fans to coders – a mix of discussions taking place. About a tenth of the talk is on lighter topics, the rest is work-related.” Saatchi & Saatchi has done away with corporate intranet, now replaced with Chatter. At CSC, intranet has been merged with Jive.

At Federal Bank, its chief blogs on IBM Connections, more than he uses the intranet. Ffreedom’s CEO Vaid sees social software as an “e-mail killer” besides impacting intranet.

Business social software appeals to companies as it mirrors what public networks offer. Minus the headaches of having employees share office secrets in public. Much of the openness within firewalls, though, depends on how senior managements view the shift.

Choksi of Asian Paints says, “Everyone can be on the same page but you need senior management to evangelise networking.” Nandy sees business social networking driven “transparency and accountability will create better leaders.” All ears are now on company chatter!

Source:http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/enterprise-it/services-apps/India-Inc-looks-beyond-Facebook-Twitter/articleshow/9458024.cms

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

Offshore Outsourcing Cuts Facebook Page Costs 60%

July 12th, 2011

Should brands outsource their Facebook presence in part or full, to a company in another continent and hence become the brand’s eyes, ears and voice on social media?

Budgets for social media are growing at unprecedented rates and these numbers will come under scrutiny more often than not as companies optimize their social media spending. By outsourcing social media activities (in part or full), a brand can cut its social media spend by anywhere between 25 percent 60 percent and still achieve the same, if not better, results.

When we talk about social media outsourcing, I always tell brands that there are some things that are outsourcable and some that are not. About 60 percent 65 percent of all social media work done is outsourcable, and about 35 percent 40 percent is not.

For example, what’s outsourcable is developing an application or custom tabs on Facebook, having a content writing team help with Facebook status updates or blog articles, assistance in uploading videos and helping in tagging, titling and optimizing them, assisting in data collection and data mining of keywords (or some kind of social listening), getting design options for landing pages, blogs, apps — basically a majority of the back end work for managing social media.

What’s not outsourcable is creating and establishing a social media strategy for the brand. A company in India, Vietnam or the Philippines, cannot and will not be able to assess your brand, what you stand for, your customers and your market, and therefore cannot help in coming up with a strategy for the brand on social media. This must either be done in-house by the company’s social media team, or by the brand’s domestic agency.

Say Brand X pays their social media agency $10,000 to $15,000 per month to manage various digital assets on social media, come up with strategy, execute them, assist with design and development and there’s no outsourcing whatsoever.

Then Brand X decides to outsource portions of their social media activities, ones that you would call back-end. They say, development of all custom tabs and Facebook applications, all uploading of videos and pictures (including posts on YouTube and Flickr), all content writing (of status updates and blog articles), all “social listening reports” and some designing, is now outsourced and being managed by an agency in India for say $2,000 to $3,000 a month.

Now, is it justifiable for Brand X to continue paying their agency a $15,000 retainer fee? This fee will probably drop by 40 percent 45 percent, as the agency is now only helping in strategy, brand direction and ideation. What if I told you that Brand X is actually a major U.S. automaker that we currently work with using the same structure!

Due diligence is when you outsource social media. You will find plenty of mom-and-pop agencies offering ridiculously low prices and promising fantastic work, but not delivering.

Make sure the agency has done quality social media work before. Ask for samples of Facebook pages, applications and blogs that the outsourcer manages so you can assess the quality of the work, both technical and creative.

Outsourcers in India would be ecstatic to work with a company in the U.S., so you might even be able to get some freebies as you assess their quality, timeliness, creativity and deliverability. Request a demo custom tab or a application and share your desire to work with the company, expressing that if you are satisfied with the demo work, you’ll sign on the dotted line.

Source:http://www.allfacebook.com/facebook-page-outsourcing-offshore-2011-07

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

Keep social media outsourcing under control: Facebook, Telstra

June 7th, 2011

Organisations looking to promote their brand through social media channels like Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn should manage it with internal resources to avoid outsourcing the public image of the company, according to representatives from Facebook and Telstra.

Kristen Boschma, head of online communications and social media at Telstra, said organisations at least need to have someone who is going to be the “intermediary” between the in-house marketing team and a social media outsourcer.

“It’s okay to outsource social media consulting, but you also need someone who is going to recognise a good idea for the company and champion that idea,” Boschma said.

Equally, organisations need someone who will recognise a bad idea, so there is a need for both in-house and third-party social media skills, Boschma says.

[See this recent three-part CIO guide to social media: Part 1; Part 2; and Part 3.]

The head of Facebook in Australia and New Zealand, Paul Borrud, said marketing professionals talk a lot about “knowing your language and brand” so it would be difficult to manage social media completely external to the organisation.

“It’s certainly really critical have a focus internally to keep it connected,” Borrud said.

Borrud recommends finding “owners” of what the business is trying to do with social media, says but once it’s started, it’s “always on”.

“It’s not the six-week microsite strategy that will live and die, and then you start over,” he said.

Borrud and Boschma shared their views during a panel discussion on social media at the CeBit 2011 conference in Sydney last week.

See photos and all the action from the event.

A general consensus was social media tends to be more of a challenge of companies that don’t live in the digital world and it’s always difficult to outsource a company culture. An outsourcer might know about the public brand of a company, but not the internals of the company so the social media split has to be at least 50-50.

Telstra’s Boschma said marketing in the 80s was all about the product, and then it moved into the “new marketing” era which was about “you deserve this car because you are amazing” and now we are in the era of “us marketing”.

Telstra is running a blog and coaching people to become better bloggers and then sending them to Africa to become citizen journalists to help “improve the world”.

“It’s not enough to just build a community,” Boschma said. “It’s like organising a party and you don’t have a plan – it’s the same thing with a closed group forum.”

Source:http://www.techworld.com.au/article/389086/keep_social_media_outsourcing_under_control_facebook_telstra/

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

01Synergy launches Youtube Channel

May 17th, 2011

01Synergy –  announces the opening of its official Youtube Channel.

The channel, which can be found at http://www.youtube.com/user/01schannel , showcases 01Synergy’s services & event videos. 01Synergy’s Youtube page compliment its core value of communicating with an increasingly far-reaching and diverse audience.

Davinder Singh, General Manager adds, “01 Synergy is constantly seeking ways to support effective, two-way communications with our global client base. The opportunities provided by social networking sites such as YouTube fit in well with our existing channels. We are also working with a number of multinational clients to explore how technologies such as these can be used as elements of blended learning and communications programmes within their organisations.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

Yahoo engineers talk of outsourcing to bangalore; yahoo PR disagrees

September 7th, 2010

This has been one of the more interesting stories to track down. We got word over the weekend that Yahoo is in the process of moving large numbers of engineering jobs within the YOS group to Bangalore. Yahoo PR mostly denies this.

This includes YDN (Yahoo Developer Network, the platform for third party apps to be installed on the Yahoo home page) for the most part. And Yahoo confirms that some California based YDN engineers are being moved to other projects, calling it a “pretty minor internal shift of resources.” But At least two senior engineers were fired outright, we heard (we’re holding the names until Yahoo confirms of denies that).

The YOS (Yahoo Open Strategy) group, run by SVP Jay Rossiter, includes YDN as well as other products aimed at developers like YCW and YQL. The idea, a few years ago, was to counter Facebook platform. Only problem is the third party developers never showed up to the party.

Some of the writing has been on the wall, even in a sea of continued Yahoo defections. Neal Sample, Yahoo’s VP Social Platforms, left earlier this summer. And Cody Simms, previously Head of the Yahoo Developer Network, took a new job at Yahoo outside of Rossiter’s group.

Source:http://techcrunch.com/2010/09/07/yahoo-engineers-talk-of-outsourcing-to-bangalore-yahoo-pr-disagrees/

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

Farm Outsourcing

August 16th, 2010

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

LAN systems hosts Dacula business association lunch

June 28th, 2010

LAN Systems, a leading Atlanta IT Outsourcing company, hosted the Dacula Business Association June lunch. The attendees enjoyed the networking opportunities at the business meeting and a presentation on social media.

The Dacula group has grown to include many businesses from Gwinnett County and beyond. “LAN Systems is pleased to be part of this growing group,” said Lauren Maxwell, Business Development Manager. “Our presentation on social media was very targeted. We suggest that businesses guard their corporate personality and deliver the right message through their social medial initiatives.”

The presentation is an abbreviated version of the training workshops offered by LAN Systems. Workshops are designed for those that want to increase their company reach and promote their products and services using Social Media. This type of training is part of the ongoing educational offerings from LAN Systems on topics of business interest.

Discussion included how to create and update social media platforms used to promote business. The most used platforms and tools to aid in getting the most from your social media investment were discussed.

“Strategy is the foundation of any social media initiative,” said CEO Mary Hester. “We help businesses develop social media marketing goals and policies to safeguard their image.”

Social media allows businesses of all sizes to reach a wide audience and add personality to the corporate message at a fraction of the cost of traditional marketing campaigns. But companies have to be watchful of the results of their social media presence.

Topics included LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and blogging. Emphasis was placed on the most used and most effective types of social media and the strategy needed to run a successful social media campaign. Often, getting started and understanding the time investment is the most difficult part.

“This presentation was a great opportunity to introduce social media concepts to those that want to delve deeper into social media,” said Liz Hansen, Senior Account Executive. “Everyone realizes how important social media is for businesses today and the importance of using tools to run a successful campaign.”

LAN Systems ( http://www.lansystems.com ) has a LinkedIn group, Social Media Strategies for Business, where the discussion can continue. The group is devoted to helping businesses understand and use social media for positive impact.

Source:http://www.sbwire.com/press-releases/sbwire-48724.htm

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks
Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes