Blogwell Conference – Kaiser Permanente’s Case Study

If nothing else, the Blogwell conference was one of those rare occasions when case studies are presented clearly and without hype. All of the presenters were focused on making a difference with their respective constituents.

Hilary Weber, Kaiser Permanente’s Director of Internet Marketing Services presented Kaiser Permanente’s social media strategies and tactics. Kaiser Permanente (KP) is one of the largest health care providers in the country with over 8 million members. They have an ongoing need to communicate with their constituency, but since they are in a very highly regulated industry, they have to choose their communication themes carefully.

For example, HIPPA regulations restrict them from revealing patient information. Another example they cited referred to suicidal postings on a member forum. If they are aware of it, they have to respond to it. Obviously the selection of the topics they blog about has to be done carefully.

That’s why much of their work online reinforces brand awareness rather than engagement in all of the issues that concern their community. Their experience with blogging has taught them several fundamental lessons about making your corporate brand work for you, not against you. They focus on their brand positioning as health advocates – proactively helping people to be as healthy as they can be. In other words, KP helps people to thrive. Lessons learned include:

1) How to begin blogging – Don’t go it alone. Find out who in your industry is blogging and reach out to them to find out what worked and what didn’t work. Don’t re-invent the wheel.

2) Recognize that we’re all in this together and much of it is “uncharted territory.”

3) Start out with a “safe” topic.

4) The best way to get a good resource is to be a good resource. Best practices

A corporate blog is simply another tactic when it comes to brand. KP had an internal homegrown newsletter that evolved into a branded weekly newsletter for members. It was a natural step to change the format to a blog. They’ve found that their best bloggers have the passion, creative talent and motivation to contribute on a regular basis. The very best are true brand advocates.

Know your audience – Much of KP’s view of social media is influenced by Charlene Li’s book, Groundswell. KP’s member research identified what their members do while online. They found that most users are viewers, collectors and critics. That lead them to create a mini site that satisfied their member’s need to view, collect and critique. The mini site is a hub for interactive components such as the Burn It Off fitness calculator. The calculator allows you to figure out how long it takes to burn off calories from the snacks you’ve consumed.

Contrast that with another idea, a recipe contest. KP found that the contest does not align well with user behavior because it takes too long. It was simply too much work for their members and they had very little uptake on the contest. On the other hand, an interactive poll saw lots of user attention because it meshed with their audience’s penchant for critiquing.

KP’s recently been working on sonic branding as a part of branded music initiative. Making the music available to the members satisfied another favorite user activity, collecting. KP does a similar thing with video files on their mini-site because it plugs into the desire to view. Future ideas include a daily brain teaser (for seniors), daily office yoga pose, more polls and a suite of blogs.

Their media relations team monitors blogosphere sentiment weekly. They note positive, neutral and negative sentiment that is relevant to their brand. They have guest bloggers posting on various sites to counter inaccuracies.

Their current focus is building an internal social networking capability using Jive Clearspace. That should prove interesting. That will be nothing short of a massive change management project for their organization. Maybe we’ll hear more at the next Blogwell event.

LinuxWorld

Client ACCESS is going to LinuxWorld in San Francisco next week. They’ll be  showing their new NetFront Browser widgets for mobile handsets, mobile internet devices and consumer electronics products. All of this is made possible by their ACCESS Linux Platform (ALP). They’ve recently launched a site devoted to NetFront Browser widgets. You can download and try Windows Mobile device widgets for free.

ACCESS is sponsoring a Developer Day on Tuesday, August 5th and they are speaking on a panel called Mobile Linux and the Open Internet Generation. I’ll be there all day Tuesday and will be featuring ACCESS on  a few episodes of Digital Society, my BlogTalkRadio show. Hope to see you there!

TechCrunch 3rd Summer Meetup

Going to TechCrunch’s 3rd summertime fling wasn’t at the top of my list for a Friday night. I ignored the event until Twitter-aided social alchemy came into play.

I was without Twitter for 10 days. A series of epic hardware/software fails kept me off the grid. On the eleventh day I settled in with a reconditioned Lenovo (oy!) and installed Twhirl. One of the first tweets I spied was Arrington putting up 200 invites for grabs. I jumped on it. Within 4 minutes all were taken.

The gig started at 5.30. Not that the Valley is a 9 – 5 place, but I figured that there would be a lot of Fred Flintstones sliding down the tail of their dino at 5 and making their way to Sand Hill Road. I got there at 6.30 to find a minor traffic jam adjudicated by rentacops. Once parked, there was a long line, but the socializing wasn’t bad. The shock for me was this…. young entrepreneurs being carded at the door. The borders of the sub 21 crowd’s badges had a different color to indicate their lack of drinking age.

I often ask myself why I give up a Friday night to attend such events. After all, none of the ideas are nearly as interesting as what you can find at MIT’s Media Lab or Stanford’s AI lab. The reward I get is seeing so many old friends. These are the ones that were there when this whole damn thing got started. I won’t name names, but they are the ones that were ambling about the West Coast Computer Faire thinking that this is cool shit.

Every generation has inventors. There are visionaries born every day. I just hope that none of us ever forget that seeing the unseen is still the game. We all need a bigger dose of that.

Intel’s Developer Confab

I’m headed up to San Francisco this morning to sample the panels and products at Intel’s Developer Forum. Why is a software guy like me hanging out with hardware guys? It’s because Intel has been leveraging social media platforms to better serve their constituencies. From establishing three developer communities in Second Life to marketing Suite Two, Intel is showing the rest of corporate America how enterprises can benefit by richer online interaction with employees, customers and partners.

Intel recently put its money where its mouth is with the acquisition of Havok, the makers of the tools that create 3D virtual spaces like Second Life and Halo. Clearly, Intel sees a bright future for those that embrace the digital lifestyle.

Intel will be using Ustream to webcast some of the noteable panels. You can catch Gordon Moore‘s keynote at noon Pacific time here. There’s also an interesting panel called “Social Media: Friend or Foe of the IT Organization?” That panel will also be on Ustream today 9/18 at 3pm Pacific time.
I’m looking forward to meeting new folks, learning new things, generating a few new posts and maybe even a few BlogTalkRadio shows. Should be fun….

Awareness Networks on BlogTalkRadio

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Date: Friday, September 7, 2007
Time: 9.30am pst
Call in number: (646) 716-9346
URL: http://www.blogtalkradio.com/hostpage.aspx?show_id=94997

Tune in Friday 9/7/7 at 9.30 am pst to the Social Media Club‘s interview with David Carter, founder and CTO of Awareness Networks. Their Social Media platform has been adopted by brands like Cannondale and McDonalds to support the needs of their online communities. Learn how major brands are finding highly engaged customers and driving brand loyalty with social media tools.

Blogging 101

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I’ve put together a great program and panel called Blogging 101 for the next Silicon Valley Social Media Club meeting. It’s an ambitious overview that covers everything from consuming blogs to the future of blogs. The event is FREE and will be in North San Jose at the NBC11 studios.

Date

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Time
6:00 pm PT – 8:00 pm PT
Location
NBC11/KNTV
2450 N. First Street
San Jose, 95131

The evening’s panelists to blogging from a variety of perspectives but enterprise experience is one thing they have in common. The panelists are:

  • Tony Bove – author, journalist, publisher, blogger, musician, consultant, technophile, WordPress Guru, blogger
  • Elisa Camahort – Blogher co-founder, author, marketing executive, consultant, vegan, blogger
  • Jeremiah Owyang – PodTech web strategist, innovator, consultant, Ustreamer, blogger
  • Lisa Padilla – BlogTalkRadio VP Marketing, podcaster, technophile, narrowcaster, blogger

Here’s the outline:

Where’s the value in the blogosphere?

  • Another marcomm channel…
  • What about PR…
  • Touching customers and partners…
  • Workgroups…
  • Market intelligence…

Thinking about your Blog

  • Audience
  • Messaging
  • Engaging the conversation

Consuming blogs

  • Finding relevant blogs and bloggers
  • Feeds and aggregation
  • Alerts and updates

Starting a blog is easy

  • Tony will create something in WordPress
  • widgets
  • customization.

You have a blog, so what?

  • The role of strategy
  • Where are the relevant conversations happening?
  • How to engage
  • The communication channel mix

The future of enterprise blogs

  • Blog as website paradigm
  • Is it really a CMS?
  • The multimedia blog (and new applications)

Hope you can make it. Be sure to RSVP at eventbright…we need to know how much pizza to order!

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