Buch, Englisch, 310 Seiten, Format (B × H): 154 mm x 233 mm, Gewicht: 452 g
Buch, Englisch, 310 Seiten, Format (B × H): 154 mm x 233 mm, Gewicht: 452 g
ISBN: 978-1-84334-745-3
Verlag: Elsevier Science & Technology
Zielgruppe
Social media managers, marketing professionals, and everyone using social media in an organizational context.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
- List of figures and tables - Figures
- Tables
- About the author
- Preface
- Introduction - I.1 Business context matters
- I.2 Where are we going?
- Part 1: Setting the stage, or what it's all about - Introduction - Setting the stage
- 1. Looking under the hood - Abstract:
- 1.1 Social media: A workable definition
- 1.2 Why context matters
- 1.3 Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT)
- 1.4 Your social media purpose
- 1.5 Where we stand
- 1.6 Conclusion
- References
- Appendix 1a Ropes to skip
- 7 Managing risks - every word comes with its own metadata.
- 8 Do not treat social media marketing as a separate activity.
- 9 Do not think LinkedIn, Xing, Viadeo, et al. are sales tools.
- 2. Who is driving? - Abstract:
- 2.1 Social capital
- 2.2 Social sharing
- 2.3 Brand and reputation
- 2.4 Do we blast or engage?
- 2.5 Why social media can fail us
- 2.6 Taking inventory: Skill-sets matter
- 2.7 Conclusion
- References
- Appendix 2a Avoiding the epic fail: Manage your social media engagement
- 3. Plan your trip - Abstract:
- 3.1 Target audience
- 3.2 Improving the customer experience
- 3.3 Walk the walk
- 3.4 What kinds of interaction help clients most?
- 3.5 Shortened URLs have no shelf life
- 3.6 The importance of positioning in the purchase cycle
- Conclusion
- References
- Appendix 3a Starting off on the right foot
- Part 2: Driving with better benchmarks: The data game - Introduction
- 4. Start your engine - Abstract:
- 4.1 Customers can work magic on your staff
- 4.2 Strategy
- 4.3 What is a workable social media strategy?
- 4.4 If necessary, shift strategy
- 4.5 Where are we now?
- 4.6 E-marketing - paid versus earned media
- 4.7 Customers are not always the end-users
- 4.8 Know the conversation - and own it
- 4.9 The strategy: Saving the client time and/or money
- 4.10 Decide which platforms to use
- 4.11 Set a budget and give your team the right tools
- 4.12 Failure to listen
- 4.13 Conclusion
- References
- Appendix 4a Client focus: Seven fallacies
- 5. Drive: Move beyond impressions - Abstract:
- 5.1 What is the purpose of data collection?
- 5.2 Using a framework: Business analytics
- 5.3 Statistics and type of analysis
- 5.4 Variables needed for measurement
- 5.5 Finding metrics that suit our data crunching needs
- 5.6 Is a picture worth a thousand words?
- 5.7 Conclusion
- References
- Appendix 5a Measurement: When less is more
- 6. Quick tune-up - Abstract:
- 6.1 Manage and monitor the process cycle
- 6.2 Monitor process quality
- 6.3 Assess resource adequacy
- 6.4 The magic of good service
- 6.5 Assess and review performance
- 6.6 Improving processes and performance
- 6.7 Do the numbers really add up?
- 6.8 Conclusion
- References
- Appendix 6a Preparing for the Dakar Rally: The monitoring and analytics journey
- Part 3: With traction and insight, everything is obvious - Introduction
- 7. Case Study - Bakery - Abstract:
- 7.1 Purpose of social media use
- 7.2 Define your target audience
- 7.3 Sometimes, rules are meant to be broken
- 7.4 Accelerating the learning curve
- 7.5 Strategy and key drivers
- 7.6 Assess and review: You cannot beat free
- 7.7 Actionable metrics
- 7.8 Quality management and improvement
- 7.9 Conclusion
- References
- Appendix 7a Learn to walk before you sprint
- Appendix 7b On successful social media use
- 8. Case study - Hospital - Abstract:
- 8.1 Social media audit: Inventory
- 8.2 Reviewing customer experience and performance
- 8.3 Improving process and performance
- 8.4 Honing relevance for better social sharing and engagement
- 8.5 Improving impact
- 8.6 Improving the process: Many quick steps make a difference
- 8.7 Conclusion
- References
- Appendix 8a Making sense of data and improving social media use
- 9. Conclusion - Abstract:
- 9.1 The ropes to skip
- 9.2 Talking the talk without walking the walk
- 9.3 Doing homework improves performance
- 9.4 How to avoid being the next social media screw-up
- 9.5 Social media brings increasingly demanding customers
- 9.6 Conclusion
- References
- Appendix 9a Context matters
- Appendix 9b Social media crisis management: A no-nonsense guide
- Index