Social media as a tool to find a job

10

October

2012

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Yesterday I read an online article about the use of social media to find a job. It is a Dutch article, therefore I will outline the most important facts of it.

Last year 21% of the Dutch people who were looking for a job did this via social media. This year there was an increase to 38%. Especially the use of LinkedIn plays a big role in this process, it is used by 79% of the jobseekers in the Netherlands.

Besides the use of LinkedIn also the use of Facebook has increased this year. It is used by 41% of the jobseekers. Even though this percentage is not as high as the percentage of  LinkedIn, it is a high number for a social networking site compared to a professional network site. There is a difference in how men and women use social media to find a job. LinkedIn is more use by men and Facebook is more used by women.

Employers are also making more use of social media for offering jobs, it is about 29% this year. Even though social media is very upcoming to find a job, the vacancy sites are still the most popular, it is used by 97% of the jobseekers, so almost by everyone. But the decisive factor is still the face-to-face interview.

The full article can be read on: http://www.managersonline.nl/nieuws/12773/inzet-social-media-explosief-gestegen-bij-zoektocht-naar-baan-.html

 

 

 

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Homework Assignment: Project Runway and The Voice

19

September

2012

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Social media is upcoming in the world of digital marketing and advertising. It has the advantages of low costs and a fast delivery to the consumers (Trusov, Bucklin & Powels, 2009). The use of social media as a marketing tool brings up that these kind of marketing is not marketer-controlled, but more consumer-controlled. So it cannot be compared with traditional marketing tools. With social media a company can make consumers involved, make them aware and encourage them to use word-of-mouth referrals (Hoffman & Fodor, 2010).

The effectiveness of the use of social media is hard to measure in money, it can more be measured in consumer behavior. The motivations of consumers to use social media and their engagement with certain brands or companies are the factors that have to be measured by the marketers. But when the social media campaign is launched, the marketers should not sit back and relax, but listen carefully to their consumers and do something with it (Hoffman & Fodor, 2010). Social media is a great tool to involve consumers in your company (Weinberg & Pehlivan, 2009).

The examples I used to illustrate the use of social media as digital marketing and advertising are two television shows, namely Project Runway and The Voice.

Project Runway is a show where upcoming fashion designers can show their skills and abilities. To promote the start of their 10th season they launched the social media campaign ‘Make It Work’. Within this campaign several media platforms were used, such as Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Piictu and Viddy. With this social media strategy they wanted to keep the ‘old’ fans involved, this was more important than attract new fans.

The campaign was very consumer-controlled and they emphasize the engagement of the fans with the television show. But what was missing in the campaign was that the marketers, or the organization, did not respond to the comments and ideas of the consumers. The social media campaign did not help to make Project Runway a success, because it had 25% less viewers than the season before.

The second example is the television show The Voice. I think everyone knows this show but I shall explain it quickly. It is a talent show, but not like any other show, because there are blind auditions. It started in the Netherlands, but it is now also a big success in other countries.

During the show there is a social media room, where a social media correspondent is actively keeping the viewers up to date about what is happening on the social media. Also big screens hang up during the show where the tweets are posted from the viewers. The viewers can communicate with the contestants and with the coaches, so it’s very interactive.

Both television shows make great use of social media platforms, but in a total different way. They both involve their audience and make watching the show more of an experience. But there are also some differences.

Project Runway uses a lot of social media platforms were the consumers are asked to be active, but the marketers do not respond to these comments. This is the opposite with the strategy of The Voice, where the comments of the fans are shown in the television show itself. Also makes The Voice use of just one social media platform, namely Twitter.

For me it’s clear that The Voice has a much better social media strategy than Project Runway, they can learn something from The Voice.

Literature

Hoffman, D. L., & Fodor, M. 2010. Can you measure the ROI of your social media marketing? MIT Sloan Management Review 52(1) 41-49.

Trusov, M., Bucklin, R. E., & Pauwels, K. (2009). Effects of word-of-mouth versus traditional marketing: Findings from an Internet social networking site,” Journal of Marketing (73) 90-102.

Weinberg, B. D., & Pehlivan, E. 2011. Social spending: Managing the social media mix. Business Horizons 54(3) 275–282

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The sixth sense

16

September

2012

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This week the topic was social commerce. One thing we talked about were the upcoming technologies that gave us the opportunity to make the right decisions, for example the social shopping. With this social shopping you can communicatie with your friends and decide you should by that dress or not.

Also in physical stores the technologies are upcoming, think about the example of the computer that scans your body and than you can try clothes on your virtual body, without putting them actually on.

I thought that connected to this topic is the following video about the sixth sense. It is about a tool that gives you all extra information that makes decisions less difficult. Let me know what you think about this!

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Try, but not buy

12

September

2012

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Connecting to the topic of social commerce, the following is based on an article I read a while ago in the newspaper Het Algemeen Dagblad. The article is not available online, therefore I add a link of a website where the article is described. Because it is in Dutch I will give a recap of the article in English.

The article focuses on the fact that more and more customers try products on in psychical shops, and then buy the products online for less money. This is a frustration for a lot of shop-owners nowadays. Especially shoes, clothes and electronic devices are products who are tested in the physical shop and than bought online.

The physical shops can not do much about it. A shop specialized in sportshoes did recently put posters on the windows with the text: We don’t let you try shoes, so you can buy it online! Another shop specialized in sportshoes counts 30 euros for advice. Once you buy the shoes there, you do not have to pay the 30 euros.

It is difficult to decide what is a good method to discourage these activities. Fact is, shopping behavior is changing. The shop owners must change their customer approach. The best way to go with this modern developments is to offer the products of a particular physical shop also online.

The Dutch article is available on this website: http://www.joop.nl/economie/detail/artikel/15517_winkels_kunnen_niet_internetshop_op/

I think this changing shopping behaviour is a big threat for physical shops. Do you think these shops will eventually disappear?

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