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Businesses still fail to grasp social media

Companies are doing a poor job of using social networks, such as Facebook and Twitter, to engage their customers and employees. In fact, 70 per cent of consumers want to interact with businesses via social media, but only 30 per cent of companies are equipped to handle it.

The grim news comes from a study by research firm Yankee Group, commissioned by Siemens Enterprise Communications.

Most customers and employees would rather use social media for business communications, but one-third of enterprises either lack formal social networking polices, don’t allow their employees to use social networks at work, or are unaware of their company’s participation in social media, the study showed.

By failing at integrating social networks, including corporate blogs, into regular business communications, enterprises are missing a golden opportunity to engage their customers and enhance worker productivity.

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“Social media is changing the way businesses, customers and employees interact, and this creates significant opportunities for contact centres and the enterprise as a whole to leverage the integration of these tools into business processes,” said Yankee group research Zeus Kerravala, in a statement.

Other study findings show the importance of a strong social media presence for business:

The Siemens news release for the study included a pitch for its OpenScape software tools, which help enterprises unify their communications services with social networks. The self-serving nature of the announcement (“Your social media strategy stinks, so buy our software”) might lead some to question the veracity of the study’s conclusions.

However, the Yankee Group’s findings corroborate earlier studies that essentially say the same thing: Most businesses are too disconnected from social media for their own good.

A poor or nonexistent social media presence gives customers and employees the impression that your business is out of touch or disinterested in open communication–a strategy that could drive business elsewhere in the long run.

Source: PCWorld

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