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Tag >> social media
Jun 02
2013

TIE Kinetix Launches Social Media Syndication for Impactful Channel Marketing

Posted by Brian_Tervo in tie kinetixsocial syndicationsocial mediasiemenschannel marketing

Brian_Tervo
Siemens Turns On a New Feature to Increase Customer Engagement on Twitter
 
TIE Kinetix , a software-as-a-service provider of ecommerce and channel marketing solutions, recently announced the launch of its Social Media Syndication Solution  as an addition to its Content Syndication Platform . The new element is designed to help companies accurately and effectively deliver their marketing message on a dynamic basis through the partner community via Twitter, while closing the marketing loop at the partner level. 
Twitter, specifically, has emerged as one of the most influential social channels available for business use, and the ability to tap it effectively for marketing purposes is a huge advantage for companies selling through partners. This new solution is the first of its kind to distribute marketing content in this way. Key features include:

The ability to send messages out from multiple partner Twitter handles, with no detectable involvement from the original company
PDFs included in Tweets are dynamically co-branded for each partner
Links included in Tweets instantly direct traffic back to the website of the partner who originally tweeted the message
Vendors utilizing this solution are able to connect the Twitter message with the right content and lead capturing tools to drive conversions on the partner websites via syndication. This drives traffic and leads to the channel partners, which boosts sales, benefiting both parties.  

Siemens Enterprise Communications , a long time TIE Kinetix customer, is the first to utilize the new solution to assist its indirect channel partners to enhance their engagement via Twitter. “The TIE Kinetix solutions we currently use have helped ensure that our product information is displayed accurately and consistently across our partner web sites, which is critical to enhancing the web experience for our partners’ customers while maintaining the integrity of our brand,” said Robin Pilcher, head of global channel marketing at Siemens Enterprise Communications. “Using the Social Media Syndication Solution from TIE Kinetix, we are able to help cultivate their Twitter presence by automatically posting our own content to their followers, thereby enabling them to find, engage and nurture new potential sales opportunities.”
This solution allows companies to not only tap into their own Twitter base but also effectively access their partners’ Twitter followers, which increases the number of eyeballs on their marketing material exponentially, in turn boosting sales and revenue for all. Twitter is an extremely powerful tool in today’s business world, and this exciting new offer will help TIE Kinetix customers enhances their marketing efforts and better utilize this key social avenue.

For more information about Social Media Syndication, go to: http://ow.ly/lylvX 

Jan 14
2013

How Disruptive Technologies Can Contribute to U.S. Innovation and Productivity

Posted by Nick_Evans in social mediamobileglobal economydisruptive technologyCloud Computingbig data

Nick_Evans
In recent weeks, the issue of the fiscal cliff, has stirred intense debate across the U.S. and has been closely monitored overseas in relation to its potential impact upon the broader global economy. The term refers to the planned tax increases and spending cuts, originally beginning in January 2013, in order to reduce the U.S. budget deficit.

As expected, with potential tax increases in sight, businesses are collectively sitting on their hands and being very cautious in regard to new spending on jobs and equipment. As reported by CNBC, a recent survey by the National Federation of Independent Businesses found that, among small business owners, just 5% plan on adding new jobs and 19% on investing in new equipment in the next three to six months.

With the specter of an economic recession looming, the question is how large and small business can minimize the impact of external forces, such as the fiscal cliff, upon their own organizations’ fortunes and profitability.

I believe part of the answer lies in U.S. innovation, which can have a powerful impact at both the individual organizational level, whether private or public, and at the national level. According to KPMG, one of the solutions to counteract increased taxation and reduced spending is to increase revenues and overall economic productivity. It is here that U.S. innovation can play a key role in both increasing revenues and creating breakthroughs in organizational efficiencies necessary to increase productivity.

While innovation within an organization is often thought of as something that’s championed in good economic times when internal funding flows freely, my belief is that it is something that can be applied regardless of economic condition to both help grow revenues and reduce costs and improve productivity. Certainly it’s easier to gain access to investment dollars in times of economic prosperity, but a corollary to the adage “you have to spend money to make money”, is that in some cases “you have to spend money to save money” as well.

Today, businesses are looking for flexibility in how they allocate their investments on jobs and the internal products and services they need to conduct business. This is perhaps evidenced by the rise in the number of part-time workers as a percentage of full-time employees. In retail in particular, according to the New York Times, the sector has cut a million full-time jobs and added more than half-a-million part-time jobs since 2006.

Organizations can take a similar approach for flexibility in how they finance and utilize the internal products and services they need for operating their business. If we focus on the IT part of this equation, the nexus of forces of cloud, mobile, social and big data technologies clearly have a powerful role to play.

Let’s take a look at the economic potential of these technology forces and how they might collectively contribute to U.S. innovation and productivity:

Cloud computing enables organizations to “pay per use” and scale up or down computing resources on demand based on their specific usage requirements. It also enables companies to reduce their internal data center footprints and move to a more virtualized data center concept. Financially, it enables them to shift many of their IT costs from upfront capital expense to ongoing operating expense across the entire IT stack from infrastructure as a service, to platform as a service, and software as a service. Community clouds have the potential for multiple organizations, and even sectors within an industry, to share their computing infrastructure costs and pool their investments. Some of the quantifiable economic benefits in the literature, such as a KPMG report commissioned by the Australia Information Industry Association, include an estimated increase in U.S. GDP by 8.64% to 10.37% over the next ten years, or 0.83% to 0.99% per year, and a cost savings in IT related expenditure of between 25 and 50%.

Just like the other disruptive trends, mobile computing provides multiple benefits ranging from new revenue sources from mobile-enabled, customer-facing products and services, to cost savings and productivity enhancements from mobile-enabled, employee-facing applications. One of the most interesting areas is the opportunity for businesses to re-invent and re-design their existing business processes, and even some of their existing business models, for the new mobile context. According to the Aberdeen Group, productivity improvements for field-service employees are typically cited in the 20% range with 40% being “best-in-class” in certain industries and scenarios.

In the social computing arena, a report this year by McKinsey estimates that by fully implementing social technologies within their organizations, companies have the potential to improve the productivity of interaction workers by 20 to 25%. This estimate factors in tasks such as reading and answering e-mail, searching and gathering information, communicating and collaborating internally, and role-specific tasks. The same report also highlights a $900 billion to $1.3 trillion of annual value that could be unlocked by social technologies in four sectors of consumer packaged goods, financial services, professional services, and advanced manufacturing. In addition, “social shopping” could influence an additional $940 billion in annual consumption.

The economic potential of big data has also been well published over the last several years. In U.S. Healthcare alone, McKinsey estimates that big data could yield over $200 billion in value per year in the form of reducing healthcare expenditures primarily related to R&D, clinical operations, and accounting and pricing processes. Big data is a key component of the so-called “Internet of Things” where intelligent sensors are ubiquitously deployed to provide real-time data that can yield actionable insights across numerous industry verticals such as transportation, manufacturing and healthcare. According to some estimates, as discussed in my post, 10 CIO considerations for disruptive trends in 2013, the “Internet of Things” has the potential to contribute $10-15 trillion to global GDP by 2030, that’s the size of the current U.S. economy. 

If we look across all these forces and start to add up the economic potential, we see trillions of dollars of benefit particularly in regard to productivity improvements and cost reductions, but also in regard to opportunities for new revenue growth (figure 1). Of course, as with all these cited quantitative improvements, the level of benefit is highly dependent upon the specific use cases involved so these numbers are more for illustrative purposes in terms of their relative order of magnitude.
 

While recent issues such as the fiscal cliff are clearly complex societal matters with multiple dimensions, one of the best ways to minimize its impact is to explore ways to harness and accelerate U.S. innovation, and therefore growth, cost savings and productivity improvements, at both the organizational and national levels. Information technology and new, disruptive forces such as cloud, mobile, and social computing, together with big data and intelligent analytics are just some of the tools at the disposal of corporate executives and government leaders to effect such a change.

In applying this thinking to government, the “cloud first” policy of the U.S. Federal government has been highly successful with demonstrable cost savings. Perhaps now is the time to evaluate a broader policy towards U.S. innovation with a technology component that takes a similar “first” approach across all these disruptive technologies which can add significant financial value back into the economy.
Dec 13
2012

TIE Kinetix Predicts Rapid SaaS Adoption Will Level the Marketing Playing Field for SMBs

Posted by gami1996 in social mediaSMBsSaaScontent syndicationcontent marketingcloud adoptionbrand fragmentaiton

gami1996
TIE Kinetix , a software solutions company that facilitates every step of the e-commerce lifecycle, has put out a list of predictions for the content syndication space in 2013.
 
The company believes that the shift to cloud and SaaS-based solutions will make it possible for SMBs to market content more effectively, affordably and compete with bigger players. TIE Kinetix's 2013 outlook forecasts that while selling through partners will continue to be a major growth strategy for organizations, without the right tools, they will still struggle to maximize the full potential of the channel.
 
TIE Kinetix's Predictions for 2013:
 
1. Uptick in SaaS/cloud adoption will give SMBs a bigger piece of the pie - Larger, formidable enterprises will need to watch SMBs as they make the shift to cloud/SaaS and harness the power of enterprise technology that was not previously affordable. With the same tools as large enterprises, SMBs will be able to market smarter and broader, reaching new customers across the channel.
 
2. The end of brand fragmentation - A critical focus for marketers will be to stop the brand fragmentation that comes through the indirect channel and with multi channel and multi device touch points for customers. To provide a seamless user and brand experience, organizations will look to enterprise software that can streamline marketing content and provide a 360-degree view of the purchase lifecycle. 
 
3. Content marketing expands footprint with mobile and social - In an effort to create a single, unified customer experience across the indirect channel, organizations will seek to better control their marketing content through global syndication. Content marketing will get its fair share of the marketing budget as organizations leverage mobile platforms to deliver location-based content to handheld devices.
 
4. Social media marketing refined - Marketers often embrace new tools enthusiastically at first without fully understanding customer preferences. Growing evidence suggests consumers don't enjoy direct marketing efforts via Facebook but instead prefer more conversational interactions. In 2013 marketers will take a more cautious and educated approach to make sure they are more aligned with customer expectations when it comes to interacting on social media. Social media will continue to play an important role in the marketing mix as long as the right channels are used for the right communications. 
 
5. CMOs tackle tech decisions - Historically, IT has driven integration and e-commerce decisions and has done so from a cost efficiency perspective. In 2013, a paradigm shift will occur whereby more power to source and choose will move to CMOs as they are charged to leverage technology and SaaS-based solutions to reach more people faster. CMOs will look to increase speed to market through technology that can push out timely pricing and product info across all channels and the ones who can do this effectively will own the market. IT's role will be to support these efforts and play a true part in driving revenue.
 
6. Online retailers seek security and protection support - Regulatory changes for security standards in online and mobile technology will plague retailers in the coming year. TIE Kinetix expects that with the increased data breaches and more poorly encrypted data out there, online retailers will struggle to find the optimal way to protect customers and their brands. By choosing SaaS-based solutions from vendors with a proven track record in security, businesses will be able to bring the focus back to selling, with confidence that compliance and advanced security certification management are in safe hands.
Dec 22
2010

Gartner Predicts Rise in Enterprise Social Software Sales

Posted by caragarretson in software-as-a-servicesocial softwaresocial mediareportGartnercloud

caragarretson

To answer the question whether or not social media software has a place in corporations, Gartner recently released a report predicting that enterprise social software revenue will surpass $769 million in 2011.

The report, called Market Trends: Convergence Restructuring the Enterprise Social Software Market, Worldwide, 2010 and available for purchase here, attributes this 16 percent growth over the $664 million expected to close out 2010 mostly to the same factor that has driven social software's growth in the consumer market --  users' desire to connect to other people, says Gartner.

Dec 05
2010

Innovation by Committee Versus CXO as Chief Innovation Officer

Posted by tomhoff in social mediaInnovationCXOcross-functional teamsCMOCIOCFO

tomhoff
 

Companies have been getting a lot more serious about investing resources in innovation as CEOs push to generate new revenue streams in a sluggish economy. As they do, a growing number of companies such as Harley-Davidson, Motorola and Xerox have set up cross-functional innovation teams to brainstorm on breakthrough ideas to support different areas within the organization. More on that later.

First, how important is it to have a single senior business executive to spearhead innovation within the organization? To that end, which executive should it be? The CIO? CMO? COO? The answer to this depends on a few factors, including the industry the company is in, the culture of the organization and the person who's best suited for that role.

Nov 29
2010

How to Add Structure To Social Media

Posted by epearlman in Tom Davenportstructuresocial mediaSalesforce.comproductivityCognizantChatter

epearlman

For companies that are still questioning the value of giving employees the freedom to use social media at work, some new thinking on the subject might give them reason to re-examine their policies. Tom Davenport, an IT and management professor at Babson College, well-known for his books on analytics says he is becoming convinced that the way to gain value from social media is to "combine computer-based sociality with computer-based structure."

 

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