Time to google yourself

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Much to the chagrin of the rest of the McCarron tribe, my foray into social media began about a year ago when I started dabbling in the world of Facebook and LinkedIn. I had loads of fun catching up with pals from all over the world and even picked up some deals by rekindling old business relationships.
However, the real power of social media and its implications for the trucking industry didn’t hit me hit until this past Spring. I was blown away as I watched ordinary people armed with only the weapons of social media change the world. They accomplished in months what billions of dollars in military might failed to do in years—wipe out three Middle East tyrannies and protest regimes in a dozen more.
I don’t think Facebook and Twitter are fundamentally changing our business—we still move freight on trucks, and shippers still want good service and better prices. But it is revolutionizing how people talk—and hear—about our companies.
How to manage this change is a multi-million-dollar question at a lot of businesses. Not many have a good answer.
According to an Accenture study, only 8% of US companies “extensively” use social media even though 65% of marketing executives say social media is important to their companies’ future success. The survey, of 200 respondents from large ($1 billion-plus) companies, found that only 5% formally integrate social media with other customer and marketing initiatives. About 25% said they were only “slightly engaged” or “not engaged at all” with social media.
Age of Transparency
The days of companies controlling and even hoarding information are over. Now anyone can be Andy Rooney. If you mistreat a customer, he’ll take his complaint online where it will live forever.
What will you do when it happens to you? In a MarketTools study of 330 marketing executives, 95% of respondents said satisfied customers are very important or extremely important to their company, yet only 8% regularly respond to customer complaints online.
Maybe they don’t want to show their weaknesses or vulnerabilities. On the other hand, sharing a problem and how it was solved can build trust. And trust is still the key to a successful relationship, one of the few things Facebook hasn’t changed. If your five-day service was six days last month, you’d better tell people before they tell the world, and explain what you’re doing to get back on track.
Social Media and Sales
It isn’t enough for trucking companies to just be on social media. You need to figure out why you’re on it and how it can help you sell freight.
A study by Gary Breininger & Associates found that supply chain professionals spend an average of 17 hours a week on the net. Not a huge surprise to me. What caught my attention is that 58% of respondents said the most important reason they use it is to source suppliers.
They’re visiting your web site, checking public records, and reading whatever else comes up with your name on it, including blog posts, Twitter feeds, and Facebook pages. Social media may not translate into a direct sale, but what customers read will influence their decision to call you up or skip on down to the next search result.
What Your Employees Say
The best way to attract and retain good employees these days is to embrace these changes and make them an integral part of your corporate culture. You can’t fight it or ban it any more. In fact, you need to use the available tools to empower your employees as a source of ideas to garner innovative ideas and improve your bottom line. I would wager that your top sales producers are using LinkedIn to build your business. It also means they have a permanent online resume for all your competitors to see.
As you plan for the year ahead, talk about how to monitor social media and which outlets are most important. Start with Facebook and Twitter and move on to Yelp, Yammer, Jive, or whatever platform is new as you’re reading this. Then go Google yourself and see what shows up. I bet your prospects and competitors already have, and in growing numbers.
Mike McCarron is the managing partner at MSM Transportation (www.shipmsm.com) in Bolton, Ont., which specializes in moving products from Canada to and from the rest of the world.

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Mike McCarron is president of Rite Route Supply Chain Solutions and a partner in Left Lane Associates. You can reach Mike at mike@riteroute.ca


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  • How you doing Mike, great to have you on board and blogging like the Big Dogs, I love your first blog great content, I spent some time with a book called The Power of Social Networking: Using the Whuffie Factor to Build Your Business” and was blow away by what the proper attention to social media can do for a companies sales. The neat thing of course is it comes at little expense and it comes from directions that you done expect. Whuffie is the concept of giving as much and helping customers as much as you can at no expense to them for peripheral information and advice and then wow bam your business explodes 10 fold because you have built this trust/confidence factor, and where do people want to do business and they tell there social media friends and you off to the races?
    Thanks for the insight Mike
    Ray

  • Great content here Mike. I feel that however many carriers are missing out on the core concept of Social Media in the trucking industry. There are a number of large carriers that are getting it right. I believe that carriers should be looking at using Social Media to build their brand and relationships. I do not believe however that social media is going to have a huge impact directly on your sales and revenue. But for carriers it can be used as a great tool for retention and recruiting. Medium and large carriers that struggle with creating an environment where the drivers feel part of the company can especially take advantage of social media. There is a growing number of drivers and owner operators spending time on Facebook and Twitter. Of course it will also help drive traffic to your website and increase your presence on the www overall, which can lead to new customers, better relationships with your staff, current customers, drivers, and suppliers. You nailed it though as far as transparency. There are negative implications with being out there – but no worse than what is being said about you on the CB. At least with social media you have a chance to address the things that are being said about your company – both positive and negative. Employing a strong social media presence is really becoming a necessity.
    Allan

  • A very good point – we are finding the use of social media in the UK is making a real difference. If you get it right you can really steal a march on your competitors (some of whom are much bigger :))