Social Commerce - Chapter 3
Social Commerce - Chapter 3
Social Commerce
CHƯƠNG 3.
CHIẾN LƯỢC KINH DOANH TRÊN MẠNG XÃ HỘI
Learning objectives
1. Liệt kê và phân tích được các vấn đề thách thức trong vận hành mô hình kinh
doanh trên mạng
2. Xác định và thực hành các nguyên tắc xây dựng chiến lược kinh doanh: mục
tiêu, mô hình, tài chính, vận hành, nhân sự, marketing
3. Phân tích các vấn đề về chiến lược kinh doanh thương mại xã hội đối với các
SMEs
4. Liệt kê và phân tích các vấn đề về giao tiếp kinh doanh trong thương mại xã
hội
5. Trình bày được các cấp độ giao tiếp, các cấp độ tham gia của khách hàng, và
các vấn đề trong xây dựng danh tiếng 2
1
11/13/2023
Contents
❖ Communication strategies
❖ Customer engagement
2
11/13/2023
❖ Cultural attributes:…………………………………………………………………………..
……………………………………………………………………………………………….
❖ Globalizing the business websites: creating different sites for different countries, taking
into account site design elements, price quotes and payment infrastructures, currency
conversion, customer support, and language translation.
❖ Legal Issues
◼ International legal issues: the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law
(UNCITRAL) Model Law on Electronic Commerce 1985, 2006 (to provide national
legislators with a set of guidelines that are internationally acceptable, which specify how to
overcome some of the legal constraints in the development of e-commerce).
◼ UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration 1985, With amendments
as adopted in 2006
❖ Geographic issues and localization: transportation and communication infrastructures between
and within countries and the type of product or service being delivered.
❖ Web localization: names, colors, sizes, and packaging.
3
11/13/2023
❖ Taxation
❖ Pricing
❖ Think globally, act consistently: brand management, pricing, ad design, and content
creation and control are consistent with the company’s strategy.
4
11/13/2023
❖ Value the human touch: human translators are preferred over machine translation
programs.
❖ Clarify, document, explain: Pricing, privacy policies, shipping restrictions, contact
information, and business practices should be well documented, located on the website,
and visible to the customer.
❖ Offer services that reduce trade barriers: It is not feasible to offer prices and payments in
all currencies, so provide a link to a currency exchange service (e.g., xe.com) or to a
currency conversion calculator. In B2B e-commerce, integrate EC transactions with the
accounting/finance information system of the major buyers.
10
5
11/13/2023
◼ Low cost
◼ Differentiation
11
12
6
11/13/2023
13
14
7
11/13/2023
1. ……………………… (e.g., sessions and users, new and returning visitors, goal
conversion rate, time on page, average page load time, organic vs paid sessions, average
session duration, top 5 search queries, pages per session, top 10 landing pages…)
3. …………….. data (e.g., Web traffic sources, leads, page views, cost per lead, returning
visitors, conversion rate, click-through rate).
15
16
8
11/13/2023
17
18
9
11/13/2023
❖ Social commerce can be one of the most effective business strategies for small and
medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
❖ SMEs initiated online presence and opened webstores because they realized there were
opportunities in marketing, business expansion, cost-cutting, procurement, and a wider
selection of partner alliances.
❖ Challenges: SMEs’ inability to handle large volumes of products, lack of knowledge or IT
expertise in the SME, and limited awareness of the associated opportunities and risks.
❖ Choosing an social commerce: must be made in the context of the company’s overall
business strategy.
❖ Opportunities: social commerce helps reach a larger number of buyers and sellers.
19
20
10
11/13/2023
21
❖ People use social media for social interactions and conversations. Social media are one
type of media, with two differentiating characteristics:
2. They blend technology and social interactions for the co-creation of value.
22
11
11/13/2023
❖ Commerce is the ultimate goal of social media communication with customers and
prospects, as mentioned previously. Organizations set very specific, measurable objectives
before beginning any communication campaign, thus, helping to determine the
budget/staff time.
❖ Companies can also set tactical objectives to support sales goals, such as increasing
conversations, driving traffic to the website, gaining a large number of “likes” on
Facebook, or changing negative views of the brand.
23
24
12
11/13/2023
Listening to customers
❖ Collective listening occurs through quantitative and qualitative primary market research
and social media monitoring via live dashboards.
❖ Individual listening occurs through participation in social media conversations and by
monitoring these conversations through various techniques.
❖ Marketers want to know three critical things that relate to a consumer’s experience with
the AIDA model (……………..,………………,………………….,……………….):
1. What proportion of their target markets know the company’s brands and individual products
(attention)?
2. Are the attitudes of the markets positive or negative toward these brands (desire, interest)?
3. What proportion of the market purchases the products and how frequently do they make
repeat purchases (action)?
25
Listening to customers
26
13
11/13/2023
❖ Understanding consumers >> developing marketing communication goals >> social media
campaigns
❖ Social media participation increased employee productivity while working with customers:
information gathering and sharing, idea generation, and morale building.
❖ Social media also connects business partners and distribution channel members for
increased social commerce activity.
❖ One important feature of social media communication is that, with their messages,
companies can effectively and efficiently target markets as small as one person.
27
28
14
11/13/2023
Role Build “social CRM” channels for Ability to reach consumers in social Social media as earned media is often the
longer-term relationships with platforms and act as catalyst that feeds result of a well-executed and well-
consumers owned and earned media coordinated owned social and paid media
Benefits Engagement with consumers at Targeting Peer to peer/social
various stages of purchase funnel Immediacy Brand can direct message in paid/ owned
Multiple social channels/touch points Scale media
Each fan/follower can influence Peer to peer social distribution Transparent
one-to-many via social graph Branded content Consumer voice
Increased targeting Measurable Measurable
Builds customer loyalty Brand safe (moderation) Spreads quickly via social graphs
Brand directed
Challenges Multiple channels to build/ maintain Industry standards in early stages Active brand involvement
Ongoing interaction Pricing models evolving Consumers can ignite positive or
Content controlled/not distributed Rapidly changing environment negative conversation quickly
platform
Public CRM
29
30
15
11/13/2023
31
32
16
11/13/2023
33
❖ Social media engagement occurs among customers and between the company and Internet
users who are actively discussing the brand. This is compared to traditional media, which
only allows passive exposure, such as when a consumer is watching television.
❖ Traditional media will prompt engagement when (1) the consumer writes an e-mail or
letter to the editor, (2) telephones a broadcast station, or (3) posts a reaction on their own
or the company’s Facebook or Twitter page.
34
17
11/13/2023
35
Engagement metrics
❖ Engagement metrics: depend on the specific content, promotion, and communication objectives/tools.
❖ Content viewership: the number of users who consume content, such as reading a blog (page views),
watching videos or listening to podcasts, and downloading white papers.
❖ Number of shares measures how many times viral content is shared with others.
❖ Content creation counts the number of users who upload ads for a UGC contest.
❖ The number of people who rate or review products, write comments on blogs or videos, retweet
interesting or humorous tweets, and other content-related items measured in previous categories.
❖ Online games: number playing, length of time in-game, purchase of virtual properties, and clicks on
game links.
36
18
11/13/2023
❖ Reputation: the beliefs or opinions that are generally held about someone or something
❖ Social commerce users can shape the reputation of a company, its brands, and its employees
❖ Brands and companies must control, monitor, engage, and participate in social media
conversations or pay the consequences.
❖ Quality, transparency, and trust principally influence company and brand reputations. In order
to be trusted, an entity must be reliable, high quality, authentic, transparent, and follow through
on its promises.
❖ Marketers often describe a brand as a promise to deliver promoted benefits, and if they do not
follow through on that promise, they are open to attack in social media.
37
❖ There has been a great deal of talk and information about using
social media for personal branding. This especially applies to
consultants, salespeople, and other professionals, as well as to
college students who are about to enter the job market.
38
19
11/13/2023
❖ It all starts with the company’s actions. The company can use owned or paid media and
join the conversation in earned social media to communicate its benefits to consumers
and other stakeholders.
❖ Maintaining a positive reputation requires constant Internet and offline media monitoring
and then sometimes participating when things go awry.
❖ We need to monitor social media conversations 24/7 and assign appropriate personnel to
Facebook and other social media for beneficial user interactions
❖ Does deleting posts work? Rarely! In many cases, it may only encourage the poster to
scream louder about being censored, as happened in the Nestlé case. Most social media
marketing experts advise deleting only the most offensive posts while trying to address
the rest as constructively as possible.
39
40
20