Several years ago our Innovate to Motivate conference hosted then Gallup Managing Partner Ron Balmer to talk about Gallup’s research on customer engagement and how it applies to grassroots organizations. It was one of our most highly rated workstorms. Gallup has been at the forefront of engagement research; they define it as the degree to which people will work for or against your organization or brand. I think most of us would agree that definition of stakeholder engagement is worth pursuing. They have published recent research which reinforces Ron’s prescient admonitions.

Engagement matters because the world is driven to distraction. With engagement, your stakeholders give you the benefit of the doubt when you screw up. They also have your brand as a part of their own identity. They can’t imagine a world without your organization or cause, and criticizing your organization means criticizing themselves.

Gallup conducted research with over 17,000 social media users to determine how people interact with social media and its effectiveness as a marketing tool. Gallup doesn’t conduct shoddy research, so I think it’s worth our time to see if there are applications for those of us in the grassroots persuasion business. After all, we are marketers of ideas and action.  (more…)

July 1st, 2011

Daily Specials

Posted by: K Street Cafe Editor

In Latest Foray Online, President Obama Will Take Questions From Twitter (Tech President)
The affair on July 6 is the latest in a series of events facilitated by an Administration dedicated to interacting with and engaging citizens online.  

Are You Delivering Emails That Matter? (ClickZ)
Make sure your content is relevant to your audience by identifying  key segments through subscriber preferences or behaviors.

April 25th, 2011

Daily Specials

Posted by: K Street Cafe Editor

Highlights from the Pew Research Center’s Report: The State of the News Media 2011 (NHPR)
Pew found that Americans’ increased engagement with news is being driven by the Internet.

Well-Connected Evacuees of Texas Wildfire Turn to Internet

(The New York Times)
Another example of citizens harnessing social media to cope with a disaster.