Fonctions et évolutions possibles du Community Management

Le community management tel qu’il est pratiqué ou vu par une majorité d’entreprises aujourd’hui n’est qu’une innovation cosmétique. Sous les apparences d’une nouvelle fonction parce que les moyens le sont, il reproduit le modèle organisationnel traditionnel de l’entreprise, qui oppose à chaque catégorie de consommateurs un interlocuteur centralisé. Les pistes d’évolution de la fonction sont riches de potentiel néanmoins, de l’intégration aux différents départements de l’entreprise à la pérennisation de la fonction comme intermédiaire relationnel entre des individus consommateurs et des individus employés. La reconnaissance par l’entreprise du potentiel d’individuation de ses employés à travers du community management interne ouvre une voie royale de véritable intégration du « web 2.0 », avec forcément à la clé une refonte organisationnelle et managériale pour des bénéfices réels en fidélisation client et en innovation.

Retour d’expérience: la stratégie digitale de Cetelem

Le web représente 1/3 de l’investissement communication de Cetelem pour 2/3 offline. La marque pèse un poids considérable tous canaux confondus et génère directement 70% des demandes de crédit issues du web, d’où l’importance de l’entretenir. Les canaux web sont plus rentables que les canaux offline mais plus faibles pourvoyeurs de business. Les réseaux sociaux et le mobile sont aujourd’hui un relais d’entertainement des campagnes nationales sans attente de ROI.

How your digital communications can evolve and innovate

Digital media is constantly evolving, and some trends are long-term while others are more short-lived. Keeping up with the times while making the right choice in terms of which trends to embrace for the brand and its customers is the communications balance that needs to be sought. To be proactive in this sense, all brands need to continually integrate monitoring and experimentation in their annual plans.

How to manage and measure a digital action plan: what are the right performance indicators?

The two main problems relating to the strategic management of digital actions are linked: an excess of available data and the difficulty of aggregating them with actions carried out on other media. This is the starting viewpoint that distorts the situation: if we start focusing on operations and what is measurable, any additions or comparisons will be shortsighted and made at the wrong level. We need to start from strategic objectives and criteria for success and failure to define the right indicators, and to avoid confusing indicators relating to goals with tactical indicators.

How to turn a digital strategy into an action plan

Turning a digital strategy into an action plan is something that should be done in phases to reflect the relative position of the Internet in the overall strategy of means. Using a customer journey and associating different brand goals to it is a way of organising all the content and actions and prioritising them before getting into the detail of the digital action plan. Defining how to steer the project will then be done retroactively.

How to design a digital strategy

A digital strategy is not just the sum total of all the actions your company carries out on the Internet. It involves natively integrating the Internet prior to thinking about strategy even on a company-wide level, and identifying areas of presence and action within each function/job alongside other drivers and means. One way of approaching this is to evaluate the potential impact of the Internet on the business model of the company and leadership methods used by senior management, in order to define the right levels of goals, leadership and organisation relating to various cases. Only then can it be translated into action plans.

How to have a global vision of the Internet (3/3): Internet users, browsing and criteria for selection

The Internet is a virtual space in which we find our way around in the same way as we do in the real physical space: using points of reference and paths that come from experience enabling us to build up a mental image of the space. Content is the tar of the web, the material that is used to build its roads: a strategy of content and a strategy of means are closely linked. Internet users continually pass judgement on the content they find until they reach their goal. Their criteria are often based on the quality of the source as much as on the quality of the content itself.

How to have a global vision of the Internet (2/3): Internet users, uses and motivations

Today, almost everyone is on the Internet. Writing down the many uses in a list that gets longer each year is no longer of any use to brands looking to analyse the web. Instead, they need to step back and look at the main starting motivations of Internet users (searching for information, building relationships, consumption and production) to see where these cross over with the brand’s objectives and thus find the right place for the Internet compared to other media and channels. The Internet is basically a medium of utility, experience and relationships, far less than it is one of image and emotion. It is of far greater benefit for those who participate in it regularly instead of focusing on occasional, tactical use.

How to have a global vision of the Internet (1/3): Internet is a SPACE made up of places

By considering the Internet as a virtual SPACE instead of a media or channel, the different places that make up the web, how they work and the way Internet users use them becomes clearer for companies and brands that have ventured into the web. The same geographical logic can be transposed to define the pillars of a digital strategy: places of presence, traffic, routes, places where audiences gather, accessibility… along with a sense of place and how to behave there.

Why have a digital strategy?

Companies have a growing need to effectively coordinate their different activities on the web and on the mobile, yet they struggle to come up with a digital strategy. Confusion exists between digital expertise and strategic expertise. The development of a strategy first requires the creation of common points of reference for discussing the different actions: a coherent, global vision of the Internet would connect the various professions and stakeholders and would thus provide greater perspective across all channels.