Version: 2008

August 7, 2007 10:32 AM PDT

Perspective: Web 2.0 and the CEO

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I often get to sit down with CEOs of large companies to talk about new technology.

These days, the topic of conversation frequently turns to Web 2.0--how to sell insurance or aircraft parts or cars when the 30-second TV spot and the one-page newspaper ad are dying. Here's what I tell them:

• Your company is inside-out in an outside-in world.
Imperious CEOs often have trouble with this one. They still see their company dictating pricing, product configurations and service levels--a one-way street, with the company lording over subservient customers. The mentality is: "We'll do what we want to do, and the world will love it."

It's this sort of logic that results in GM focusing on trucks ("Hey, it's good for our profit!") in an age of $3 a gallon gas and Airbus building the A380 ("It's bigger than the 747!") when the hub-and-spoke airline topologies are crumbling. Customers are changing too fast, they have seemingly unlimited choice and, to borrow a phrase, they want what they want.

Advice to the CEO: It's now a two-way conversation. Listen, respond and talk intelligently. Stop dictating to customers. It's your customers, not you, who have the power.

• Your company has a bad Web site.
I always hate to break the news, but hey, who will? After eight years of evaluating more than 1,000 large corporate Web sites, Forrester found only 3 percent with passing grades.

The vast majority are hard to use, confusing, poorly designed and cast an unfavorable shadow over the brand. So, Mr./Ms. CEO, don't get confident that your company is great at marketing or selling online: it's not.

Go to your Web experts and ask them two simple questions: 1.) Do we use scenario design? And 2.) Do we use personas? If the answers to these questions are "no," you are building your site inside-out--a recipe for Web junk. Enable your team to make it right.

Advice to the CEO: It's now a two-way conversation. Listen, respond and talk intelligently. Stop dictating to customers. It's your customers, not you, who have the power.

• You should be asking your customer one question.
In an age when the buyer has the upper hand, gauging satisfaction is critical. Get your marketers to throw out those 30-question customer surveys, and focus on one question: "Would you recommend this product or service to a friend or colleague?" It will yield something called the "Net Promoter score," used by Enterprise Rent-A-Car and Intuit, among others, to understand and improve satisfaction.

Net Promoter is a simple, powerful tool that will help focus your company on winning and retaining customers. Read Fred Reichheld's book The Ultimate Question. He's the guy who came up with Net Promoter scoring.

• You don't own your customer; your customer owns you.
My father always bought Fords. And he bought them through bad (The Pinto) and good (The Comet). The company owned him, regardless of its quality, design or pricing.

Web 2.0's transparency means that a company gets fired at the slightest drop in service or failure in design. Or, more maddeningly, as a result of a bad online report or a tough, pointed blog entry.

The antidote to this world is No. 4 above (know the customers better than the competition) and No. 1 above (be outside-in). You've got to earn the respect and allegiance of your customers every day--both of which can wither with unparalleled speed. See Dell and the flaming batteries, circa 2006.

By the way, what did Dell do about its problem? It employed some classic Web 2.0 strategies--listening to its customers and talking to them via a blog. This spring, it launched Ideastorm, where customers make suggestions and vote on them. The result: Dell's Net Promoter scores are back on the rise.

• Bits want to be free, bits want to break the law.
The first part of this quote is from Nick Negroponte, chairman emeritus of the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The point is that digital is highly fluid, and it abhors restrictions.

The second part of this quote is mine: You may try to restrict your digital content through laws, rules, digital rights management and/or security systems. The cold reality remains that customers, citizens, consumers want what they want, regardless of how you may try to restrict them.

They see the power of digital and its inherent flexibility. They know that it can do amazing things, and they could not care less about artificial, archaic restrictions that are designed to protect somebody's 50-year-old business model. So, Mr./Ms. CEO, wake up and face the brutal truths, and get on with inventing the future. Stop trying to litigate and legislate your way back to 1992.

• Great marketing + Great technology = the only way forward.
Web 2.0 has forever changed the relationship between your company and your customer. Who best to understand and forge the new relationship? Marketing. Who best to create the technology to get it done? Your business technology/IT group.

So there is only one path: Marketing and technology in your company must work together to design and implement your Web 2.0 strategy. And you, and only you, can get the dogs and cats to interbreed. It's an unnatural act, but one that must occur before your company can become an opportunist, rather than a victim, in the world of Web 2.0.

Ignore my advice at your peril. We are still living in primitive times--we are cave dwellers in loincloths, sitting around campfires, chewing on bones. After Web 2.0 will come Web 3.0, followed by Web 4.0. We are at a beginning, not an end. Don't dump the problem in your successor's lap; deal with it now.

Biography
George Colony is chairman and chief executive officer of Forrester Research.

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Additional Resources
by Brent_Norris August 7, 2007 1:46 PM PDT
This is the first time I've heard of net promoter. It's a shame they aren't web 2.0. Web 2.0 mandates having a site that is easy to use, simple to understand and useful. I'll spend about 30 more seconds at net promoter and see if I can figure it out. Is there at tool on the site or is it just selling some hidden agenda.

Here's an example of a web 2.0 tool for checking your Page Strength: http://www.seomoz.org/tools

I wrote a post that may proove useful to CTO and CEO's here:
http://brent.fm/50/do-you-need-a-web-20-roles-and-responsibilities-upgrade/

Nice article, poor tool selection.
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Corporate websites
by Phillep_H August 7, 2007 4:46 PM PDT
Most of them are purely useless. If I want to buy a particular item, get help with something, or check on a type of item, I don't want to have to wade through a bunch of hype designed to sell stock in the company or inflate the ego of the CEO or the twit that designed the web site.

Nor do I go along with security problems and bandwidth wasters like Flash or Java Script, god forbid Quicktime.

Oh, if the price is not up front where I can find it, I agree with the people who refused to put the price out there: The item is over priced. There's no point in looking for the secret hiding place or sending sales an email asking about the price.
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Agreed, like Forrester.com
by Randys2cents August 7, 2007 5:50 PM PDT
Try finding something on Forrester's own web site. First you are
greeted by a start page that is one of the most cluttered sites I've
seen lately. Reminds me of one of those cheap gossip rags you
see at the checkout line at the local grocery store. Are you listening
Forrester? Clean that mess up! Randys2cents
Web 2.0 must be adapted within Corporate world
by apereymer August 7, 2007 6:05 PM PDT
I very much agree with this article. In working with some of the top Fortune 100 companies, I notice that many senior executives are still living in the Web 1.0 era. Their web sites are not focused on the customer at all. In fact, most are very basic "brochure-like" web sites. Bottom line is that senior executives at large organizations need to wake up and spell the "web 2.0 air". Upgrading their web site's to be more user-centric will drive more business in the short and long-term.
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"Bits want to be free"
by jlipnack August 8, 2007 4:10 AM PDT
George - this is a great piece. One tiny nit: Stewart Brand, the one and only WHOLE EARTH guy, was the first to use the phrase "Information wants to be free." I've got the email trail to prove it :). First heard him use the expression in 1984. If Mr. Negroponte can claim prior rights, I shall correct the many credits I've thrown Stewart's way over the years.

--Jessica Lipnack (www.netage.com/endlessknots
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Man this guy hit on the head!
by WJeansonne August 8, 2007 6:36 AM PDT
Aside from Web 2.0, I've watch for years how stupid, stubborn and imperious managers at GM continue to build some of the world's ugliest and shoddy automobiles. I mean those managers should have been summarily fired years ago before running Detroit into the ground the way they did. It's utterly shameful. The Japanese or Toyota eve tried to help GM, and they still didn't learn! Well, they are all paying the price now that Toyota and European manufacturers have successfully eaten their lunch.
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Mrs Brown, You've Got A Lovely Daughter
by Len Bullard August 13, 2007 6:39 AM PDT
The design of the corporate web site focuses on getting the customer to register for information or to call and talk to a person. In a time when information is changing fast, the more you post the faster you are wrong, late, or silly.

It may not be Web 2.0, but it is marketing 101: controlling the terms, the subjects and the order of a presentation is the key mojo. In this model, one isn't listening for new information; one is waiting to hear what one wants to hear.

Honesty isn't the best policy; it is the least policy.
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