Results 2.0: Social media for financial institutions
April 27, 2009
Recently, a bank sent this request out over Twitter: “Help us figure out what our new blog should be about. Please send suggestions.”
More often than not, when financial institutions deploy Web 2.0 tools, it feels like a tactic searching for an excuse/strategy. They assume they need online social media before they even know what for. What are the goals? How does it fit the business model? What does success look like? What are they saying? To whom?
This is why most social media experiments are duds. In fact, one expert with Gartner research says that 50% of all Fortune 1000 companies trying some kind of online social networking initiative will fail. And out of 16,000 financial institutions, there are only a handful of real success stories.
So why do social media gurus run around the country imploring financial institutions to adopt social media strategies? It seems like everywhere you turn, there’s someone preaching the gospel of blogs, Twitter and Facebook. Yeah okay, we get it…
But for all these recommendations to create “engagement,” transparency” and “authenticity,” you don’t often hear about the underlying business case supporting Web 2.0 tools, nor how to go about building an effective strategy.
This presentation — created by Jeffry Pilcher, publisher of The Financial Brand — that picks up where all those impassioned, touchy-feely recommendations to jump on the Web 2.0 bandwagon stop short. The presentation outlines what you need to know to implement Web 2.0 tools that accomplish real business objectives:
- The hardcore realities behind all the Web 2.0 hoopla
- The right- and wrong way to build a Web 2.0 strategy
- How to link Web 2.0 tools with your brand and products
- How to get your management team on board with a Web 2.0 initiative
Results 2.0
The myths, facts and hardcore realities of social media marketing for financial institutions.
The presentation tackles 9 myths of social media and includes 10 strategies for building an effective Web 2.0 program. There are a lot of examples included, but unfortunately you need to hear the presentation to know how they fit within the presentation’s overall context. The meat of the presentation is 62 slides.
Here are a couple other presentations by The Financial Brand’s Jeffry Pilcher:
Both of these were just given at CSCU’s annual conference this past weekend. Plus, there’s another presentation, “The Future of Branching,” that will be given as a webinar on May 14 at 3:45 EDT.
If you’d like to see Jeffry Pilcher present one of these four topics at your upcoming event, just send an email.
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Previous related stories from The Financial Brand:
- No ROI on social media? Here’s why
- Wanna go to Finance 2.0? Wanna save $733.20?
- Why social media is a fulltime job
- 10 Great Presentations for Financial Marketers
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Filed Under: Events, Webinars & Seminars, Social Media
Tags: social media

April 27th, 2009 at 10:34 am
Great presentation! My favorite part: Don’t say, “That’s where Gen Y is.”
April 27th, 2009 at 4:47 pm
Another excellent, well researched presentation. Thank you!
April 28th, 2009 at 4:11 am
Probably the best presentation on social finance I’ve ever seen. Congratulations!!
April 28th, 2009 at 9:20 am
[...] @ 18:18 Tags: social media Aunque ya he puesto el enlace en Twitter esta mañana, me parece que la presentación de Jeffry Pilcher (quien publica en The Financial Brand) sobre mitos y realidades de los medios sociales en el [...]
April 29th, 2009 at 12:49 pm
Thanks for your comments James, Kate and Alvaro. I really appreciate it.
May 14th, 2009 at 4:25 pm
[...] Future of Branches” is another presentation by Jeffry Pilcher, Publisher of The Financial Brand and President/ICONiQ. It takes a look at trends [...]
September 9th, 2009 at 12:18 pm
[...] Results 2.0: Social media for financial institutions [...]
January 5th, 2010 at 4:24 am
[...] Results 2.0: Social media for financial institutions [...]