Social Selling: A Live Conversation with Koka Sexton and Jill Rowley

eCornell hosted a great webinar last week with Koka Sexton and Jill Rowley all about Social Selling.  With ten+ years of sales experience and a passion for social media, Koka is the perfect evangelist for social selling. His expertise extends beyond his endless knowledge of social networks into his skill at employing them to drive lead generation, create new opportunities, and engage customers. Jill is passionate about culture, customers, content and connections. Her core value system is Give-to-Give versus Give-to-Get and The ABCs of Social Selling = Always Be Connecting & Curating Content.

Together they made for one dynamic, informative and interesting webinar as they shared their thoughts on:

  • creating your personal brand
  • providing content that resonates with your target audience
  • measuring ROI and getting buy-in for social selling initiatives
  • engaging customers, increasing lead generation, and driving sale

We also fielded some great questions with the folks attending.

Because we know how crazy busy most people are and that attending the live event may have been impossible, we recorded the webinar for you. To get this recording, simply go here and fill out the form. Make sure you let us know what you thought after watching it!

 

Game Theory for Business: Overcoming Rivals and Gaining Advantage

The application of game theory in business is a natural, as it serves to answer the central question “What are my opponents thinking and what is their next move?” Chess masters know how to think a few moves ahead, and put themselves in the shoes of their rival.

The game theory approach in business can give you a clear advantage and position you for growth in highly competitive markets. In this one-hour webinar, you’ll learn to:

  • Get inside the motivations and strategies of your rivals
  • Exploit their weaknesses and bring more value to your business proposition
  • Identify concepts for maximizing the size of the piece of the pie you grab in business dealings

This discussion is tailored for CEOs, execs, VPs, upper-level management and anyone involved in competitive analysis and overall business strategy.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM EST

Join Cornell Prof. Justin Johnson for a free webinar on Friday 5/2/14 1:00 –
2:00PM EDT
entitled Game Theory for Business: Overcoming Rivals and Gaining
Advantage.

Seats are limited so register soon!

Update: Even if you weren’t able to attend this webinar, you don’t have to miss out on all the great information shared. Go here and fill out the form to get the video recording of the webinar along with the SlideShare presentation. Then come back and let us know what you thought!

 

Motivating and Evaluating Performance with Prof. Robert Bloomfield

Incentive compensation is one of the most powerful tools managers have to motivate and direct their employees—but only if they are used properly! On Wednesday, 4/23 from 1 – 2 PM EDT join eCornell for a webinar with Cornell University Prof. Robert Bloomfield entitled “Motivating and Evaluating Performance.”

During the webinar, Prof. Bloomfield will discuss how to:

  • Link performance evaluation and incentives to organizational strategy
  • Revise strategy and operations to accomplish strategic goals at lower cost
  • Help employees collaborate and work together across departments and functional areas, and communicate more effectively with colleagues about the goals and performance of their organization

There will be time for a Q&A session with Prof. Bloomfield so you can ensure that you get information relevant to your area of business.

This webinar is perfect for managers and leaders, including accounting and finance professionals who are responsible for managing costs, margins, revenue, or efficiency and would like to take a more strategic approach to motivating performance.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014 1:00 PM – 2:00 PM EST

Seats are limited, so register soon!

Update: Even if you weren’t able to attend this webinar, you don’t have to miss out on all the great information shared. Go here to get the video recording of the webinar along with the SlideShare presentation. Then come back and let us know what you thought!

 

Develop Your High Potentials into Results-Driven Leaders

High potentials usually have good ideas, but what transforms a high potential into a genuine leader is the capacity to move agendas and get results. Ideas must be implemented. Samuel Bacharach believes that leadership is about “executing” and getting things done. Leadership need not be driven by charisma or personality, but by the exercise of specific microskills that allow leaders to move an agenda through an organization.

In this world of mergers and acquisitions, turf and uncertainty, in which the solution mindset is replacing the product mindset, your high potentials need to have the political skills to mobilize groups and the managerial skills to sustain momentum.

This webinar will discuss some of the specifics of these pragmatic skills and elaborate on how you can implement a program to help high potentials within your organization develop these skills.

Wednesday, March 12, 2014 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM EST

Samuel Bacharach is the McKelvey-Grant Professor in the Department of Organizational Behavior at Cornell University (ILR). He is also the co-founder of the Bacharach Leadership Group (BLG), an organization which specializes in leadership development programs with an emphasis on microskills of change, innovation, execution, negotiation and coaching.

Sam writes a weekly column for Inc.com, focusing on issues of pragmatic leadership, and has published over 100 academic articles and over 20 books. He is the author of Get Them on Your Side, Keep Them on Your Side and the forthcoming volume, Moving Your Agenda: Leading for Innovation and Change.

Measuring and Improving Business Performance

Management reporting systems are like power tools.  They can help organizations measure and improve their performance, motivate workers, and achieve strategic goals quickly and effectively.  But if you aren’t careful, it’s easy to make big mistakes, and maybe even injure yourself in the process.

In this presentation, Professor Robert Bloomfield of Cornell’s Johnson Graduate School of Management will review best practices in management reporting and provide some essential “safety” tips.  Key topics include:

  • The importance of seeing beyond the measures to the true performance those measures are trying to capture
  • Using a Balanced Scorecard to define, achieve and improve your strategy
  • Choosing the right way to measure financial performance for your organization’s goals (whether it is a for-profit, not-for-profit or governmental concern)
  • Tying pay to performance, and more!

Original air date: February 25, 2014

View the video and download the slide deck here.

Maximize Social Media ROI with Strategic Planning

If you feel challenged to measure ROI of social media, you are not alone. But you can measure ROI in social media. Gone are the days of faith-based investment. In the year 2014, social media have been around long enough for us to know how they create value, and to estimate how much value they could likely create for a brand. The value levers are known, and the likely costs are known.

If you are interested in learning how to improve your ability to estimate ROI from social media, or how to build a business case for social business transformation, please join me in a webinar with eCornell on January 7 1PM EST, where you will discover how to:

  • Better understand and present the business case for creating a social media plan that delivers targeted, organization-wide results
  • Use a proven framework for implementing your social media plan and put the right infrastructure in place.
  • Increase social media ROI for brands of any size.

For those unable to attend, here’s the archived video of the webinar.

Game Theory for Business: Gaining Competitive Control

Organizational leaders are often so focused on handling the many surface-level problems they must deal with, that they lose sight of the big picture. Yet, by taking a more expansive view one can gain true control of a market.

This is the essence of game theory: finding ways to give players (or firms) more control. The key is to develop a better understanding of your competitive environment and how that environment will respond to your actions. Once you have this understanding, manipulating your rivals to do what you want them to do becomes a possibility.

You can’t outcompete what you don’t know.

Putting game theory to work for your organizations starts with three key concepts: understanding other competitors; understanding how other competitors see your firm; and understanding “added value” and “outside options.” These concepts require you to put yourself in your competitors’ shoes. Remember, it’s not all about you. In this article, we’ll focus on understanding other competitors to kick things off.

Understanding rivals

Let’s start with building an understanding of your strategic environment and how to influence it. Here are four questions you need to ask in order to better predict how your rivals will react, and to gain more control:

What are my rivals really after? Just profits, or are other goals important? Maybe market or customer service leadership is their goal, or being the biggest, even is these goals don’t bring the highest profits. Even if rivals are only interested in profits, are they long-run or short-run thinkers?

  1. How do my rivals think they can obtain their goals? For example, do they think M&A is key, or developing resources organically? Do you have any biases or preconceptions about how they see the market?
  2. What are my rivals capable of doing? What are their resources?
  3. What do my rivals think I’m going to do?

Playing the game

Game theory isn’t a Jedi mind trick. It’s using your knowledge of rivals to predict how they’ll react, and hopefully, using this insight to get them to act in ways that are beneficial to your firm. Once you understand your rivals, you may be able to choose your own actions so as to get your rivals to behave in a manner that suits you.

I’m not saying this is easy, by the way.

How does it work? Here’s an example. Your rival is trying to decide whether to introduce a high or low quality product. You find out they’re leaning towards the high quality product, but this is also a move your firm would like to make. In this case, you have three options based on what you know:

  1. Let your rival introduce a high quality product, then introduce your own high quality product. This might lead to pretty fierce competition, especially if the products are similar.
  2. Introduce a low quality product.
  3. Be first to market with your own high quality product, and perhaps demonstrate a real commitment and dedication to that product.

If you choose Option #3, the assumption is that your rival is still trying to decide which product to offer. This allows you to “force their hand,” making it more likely that they will introduce a low quality product instead — decreasing direct competition for your new product, and potentially increasing revenues because you now corner the market for this high quality product, have a reputation for excellence with customers, and may be able to charge a premium price.

Options vs. decisions

The key concept of game theory is understanding the overall competitive environment, and how individual players think and behave within it. This understanding makes it easier for your firm to make profitable decisions. But game theory doesn’t tell you which decision to make—it only tells you which factors to consider. It’s just one part of competitive analysis. Typical industry analysis and market positioning frameworks are still crucial tools for honing your competitive advantage.

Rethinking Traditional Guest Satisfaction

Historically, hotels have relied on extensive post-stay surveys and mystery shoppers to ascertain service levels, customer satisfaction, and areas for improvement. Today, online reviews are providing hoteliers with rich data about guest satisfaction to help them please customers. In addition, online reviews provide a social currency that drives new bookings and trust in hotels.

We can learn a lot from the growth of online reviews to determine better ways to administer and use survey data. First, and perhaps most obvious, online reviews are useful to both hoteliers and consumers because of their free-form structure that allows guests to talk only about the services and amenities that impacted their stays. With traditional surveys, primarily closed-ended questions such as “please rate your satisfaction with your room from 1 to 10” will not yield rich data about what a customer liked or disliked about, for example, his room, or who at the hotel made his hotel special. Rather, traditional surveys are formulated by hotels to focus on areas that they feel need to be measured, rather than what is most important and top of mind to customers.

The highly structured nature of traditional surveys used to be critical for accurately measuring and reporting on guest satisfaction but today new sentiment analysis technology makes it possible to easily analyze and report on unstructured data in just as reliable a way, with a much richer data-set. Through reports that show which topics, from ontology specific to hospitality, are trending positively or negatively, management doesn’t have to know what to ask in advance to find hot-button issues or get detailed feedback about any service or amenity on property.With reliable reporting comes the ability to fully operationalize the data, even basing compensation plans on the results. Equally important, it allows you to bring voice of the customer data into your discussions around capital improvements, training programs and operational changes.

The second reason why many hoteliers are rethinking traditional guest satisfaction survey methods is because they recognize the value that public guest feedback has on new bookings. The TripBarometer Survey states that 93% of travellers worldwide say online reviews have an impact on their booking decisions. This trend, in addition to SEO benefits and the fact that TripAdvisor’s Popularity Index takes review frequency in mind, makes it clear that hoteliers should focus on driving guests to share feedback publicly, through social channels, to reap the best rewards.

For hoteliers that worry what will happen when survey feedback can be shared publicly, it’s time to accept the reality that your guests are already writing and reading online reviews, tweets and posts about your hotel at an increasing rate. Embrace the transparency as it drives consumer trust, allows you to connect with guests and access data not only about your hotel, but your competition. This competitive data can be easily mined to understand where you are winning and losing in guests’ eyes.

In April, 2012, the largest hospitality company in the world, Wyndham Hotels & Resorts replaced their traditional guest survey system with a solution that collects review style feedback directly from guests. The decision was based on extensive research and testing, and this bold move has successfully unleashed the power of feedback to drive marketing exposure and bookings, in addition to providing even richer intelligence. As a result, the hotels are benefiting from powerful insights about their guests that they can easily analyze with sentiment analysis technology, along with more public reviews, which is helping drive awareness of the hotels, in addition to popularity index scores.

For hotels and brands that believe in customer-centric approaches and aren’t afraid to rethink conventional solutions, Revinate, eCornell and Cornell University invite you to learn more about inGuest Surveys, Revinate’s 360° approach to guest feedback. Join us on June 11th at 11am EST for a free Webinar with Cornell University’s Bill Carroll, PhD. Space is limited. Sign up here.

Building a Global Talent Management Strategy

If you missed the eCornell webinar titled Building a Global Talent Management Strategy and would like to view it, or would like to share with colleagues, the archive is available at www.ecornell.com/mar14archive. The presentation slides are at www.ecornell.com/mar14ppt.

In today’s marketplace, going global is more necessity than luxury, as businesses regularly find customers, suppliers and partners from all over the map. That broader focus for business requires a global talent management strategy to properly support a global initiative.

We’ll show you what a global talent management strategy consists of, how to build one that delivers measurable business outcomes and how to deploy to a diverse global workforce. During this interactive webinar, Heidi Spirgi, co-founder and president of Knowledge Infusion, will walk you through the process and steps organizations need to go through to build and deploy a global talent management strategy:

  • How to tie your talent management strategy to business initiatives.
  • The importance of developing a long-term talent management strategy to have better business results.
  • How a successful talent management strategy is one designed for the workforce, not the HR department.
  • Why HR departments cannot focus on “go live” when deploying talent management solutions, but rather must focus on user adoption and outputs, ensuring the new system is driving outcomes aligned with the business, not HR goals.

 

 

Learn How to Build a Global Talent Management Strategy

In today’s marketplace, going global is more necessity than luxury, as businesses regularly find customers, suppliers and partners from all over the map. That broader focus for business requires a global talent management strategy to properly support a global initiative.

We’ll show you what a global talent management strategy consists of, how to build one that delivers measurable business outcomes and how to deploy to a diverse global workforce. During this interactive webinar, Heidi Spirgi, co-founder and president of Knowledge Infusion, will walk you through the process and steps organizations need to go through to build and deploy a global talent management strategy:

  • How to tie your talent management strategy to business initiatives.
  • The importance of developing a long-term talent management strategy to have better business results.
  • How a successful talent management strategy is one designed for the workforce, not the HR department.
  • Why HR departments cannot focus on “go live” when deploying talent management solutions, but rather must focus on user adoption and outputs, ensuring the new system is driving outcomes aligned with the business, not HR goals.

Webinar presented by Heidi Spirgi, Co-Founder & President of Knowledge Infusion
March 14, 2012 – 1:00pm Eastern
Register Online