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Guest Column: How to Use Social Media to Connect with Large Companies

Guest Column: How to Use Social Media to Connect with Large Companies

Dave Gardner is a member of the Private Roster Mentor Program Million Dollar Consultant® Hall of Fame.

How to use social media to connect with large companies

By Dave Gardner

People seem to think that social media is about attracting followers, “friending” people, liking this, that or the other, or spending hours trolling Facebook, Twitter, Google+, etc. It doesn’t have to be that way.

What if you use social media to simply attract big companies to you? Let me show you how to do this.

My understanding comes not as a result of a carefully crafted social media strategy but as a result sitting back and watching what has happened. Coming to this understanding was my 1% for a day. I hope it will be for you as well.

There are 2 potential avenues to be aware of when leveraging social media:

  1. The big company you are targeting is most likely monitoring social media
  2. The public relations (PR) firm used by the big company you want to connect with is also likely monitoring social media

Here’s my story about how I’ve been able to leverage these 2 avenues.

I have been a Dell customer since 2004. Back in 2009 and 2010, I experienced a few Dell business execution issues. I heard another story or 2 and decided to write about it on my Fast Company Expert Blog. I wrote the article on a Friday afternoon and pushed the article to Fast Company that evening to be published the following week. I chose a provocative title: “Dell used to be a fast company,” probably not the title that Dell would wish for in Fast Company! The article wasn’t mean-spirited or ranting—it simply pointed out areas where Dell had stumbled and could improve.

A Dell social media person contacted me via email about 90 minutes later—before the article had even been published by Fast Company—and asked if we could talk the following week. I said, “Sure.” Soon, I was invited to be a member of Dell’s Customer Advisory Panel (DellCAP). Dell felt I had insights that would valuable as they sought outside perspectives to improve their business by learning what real customers are experiencing.

Was it important that the article was in Fast Company? Not at all! None of the other 29 social media folks invited to participate in DellCAP blogged for a prominent media outlet like Fast Company. Dell, like many big companies today, trolls the Internet to find out what’s being said about them so they can reach out and help as well as implement corrective action.

PR firms are also on the lookout for their clients and troll the Internet. A few weeks later, Dell’s PR firm contacted me about meeting them in their San Francisco office. Knowing that I blog for Fast Company, they offered to make introductions to senior executives who come into town for pieces that I might want to write, they see that I’m invited to media events—often paying my travel and accommodation to attend, and they said they would look for opportunities within Dell to make introductions. All of these things happen with regularity. I enjoy a wonderful relationship with Dell’s PR firm.

In a Fast Company blog post called, “What Dell is doing to create customers for life,” I challenged a PC World survey that was unfairly critical of Dell and HP. HP’s PR firm contacted me the same day the post was published to thank me for defending HP and offered to make introductions to anyone I wanted to meet. This is when I reached the conclusion that social media monitoring is not an accident—the big companies do this with great discipline and follow-up as appropriate.

Here’s another example of using social media to help with my mission of meeting prospects within Dell. I recently authored a Fast Company blog post called If I sell you my company, will you respect me in the morning?” This piece, which I strategized with Dell’s Consumer, Small and Medium Business internal PR team before attending a major media event, enabled me to meet and interview the heads of 4 recently acquired business units plus the Senior Vice President of Corporate Strategy. I wanted to meet these executives and see if I could learn about the “secret sauce” of Dell’s merger and acquisition process. The article research opened the doors. I doubt I’d be able to pick up the phone and get these people to sit down for an interview. This piece forged relationships in a fun and exciting way.

Do you ever see areas where a prospective client could improve that you could write about? Of course you have! Social media can be a terrific way to create your superhighway into big companies. You have to use the right bait:

Talk about what you’ve observed,

Be provocative, and

Encourage them to do better.

Then, when you hear from the company or their PR firm, begin to create an enduring relationship. This is a very effective way to create marketing gravity.

__

Dave Gardner is a graduate of San Jose State University (BA) and Santa Clara University (MBA). Dave is also a member of the Society for the Advancement of Consulting (SAC); he is Board Approved by SAC in “Configurable Products and Services Strategy & Implementation.” Dave is a member of Alan Weiss’s private roster mentoring program. In 2010, he was inducted into the Million Dollar Consultant® Hall of Fame. Dave is a Fast Company Expert Blogger in the area of Business Execution and a member of Dell’s Customer Advisory Panel. He can be reached through his website at www.gardnerandassoc.com and Twitter @Gardner_Dave

Written by

Alan Weiss is a consultant, speaker, and author of over 60 books. His consulting firm, Summit Consulting Group, Inc., has attracted clients from over 500 leading organizations around the world.

Comments: 3

  • Rob Eagar

    December 23, 2011

    Nice article, Dave! Very insightful. Thanks for writing it (and Alan sharing it).

  • Dave Gardner

    December 23, 2011

    Thanks, Rob! My pleasure. I’m delighted Alan shared it with his community.

  • Jagan Nemani

    May 17, 2012

    Hello Dave,
    Thank you for writing this blog, I agree 100% with you on this.

    To share my experience along these lines. Once I was on a business trip to Atlanta with a few of my colleagues. We finished our meetings early and wanted to fly out on an earlier flight. We went to the Delta kiosk and it would not let us standby, the agent behind the kiosk could not help either. So we went to the Delta club (my colleague had the membership), and there was this nice lady who helped us get on the earlier flight. She went out of the way to accommodate our request, and it was like breathing fresh air after a week long business trip.

    So I tweeted thanking her for her excellent customer service. Within few minutes, I had a Thank You tweet from Delta Airlines assuring me that her good work will be rewarded.

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