We recently launched a new product, Ripple6 OnDemand, designed to serve small to medium-sized publishers and marketers. Ripple6 OnDemand has a few key benefits: scalability, turnkey implementation and new monetization opportunities.
You may have heard of it during the Robert Scoble interview, but if not (and even if so), we’re here to tell you more about this new offering.
Ripple6 OnDemand is a template version of our White Label offering, able to be implemented in as little as 24 hours.
Here’s what you’ll find if you dig around a bit:
Ripple6 proprietary features are included:
Social Insights allows you to conduct research within your community and across others on our platform
Brand Communities delivers another way to monetize your site without cannibalizing existing display or PPC ad revenue
Ask/Answer helps to encourage new members to join your community while also connecting current members 1-to-1
Facebook Connect comes with Ripple6 OnDemand.
We’re finding that our customers are viewing this tool as increasingly important, and wanted this product to support this application out of the box.
We took care to design this product with our customers’ top concerns in mind. Publishers want and need to generate incremental revenue, especially with social tools.
We’ve noticed growing frustration about the current monetization ‘limits’ (subscription-based revenue and PPC advertising revenue) and am happy to offer this product as a true alternative.
Robert Scoble visited Ripple6 HQ and interviewed Sang Kim our CEO and discussed community lessons learned. Sang tells Robert about Ripple6′s newest product Ripple6 OnDemand and how it is positioned to help many media companies and marketers who want enterprise class capabilities, but in a streamlined, low-cost, high ROI product.
Some questions Robert asks, “How does a brand participate in a [community] without being too creepy or coming across as too salesy?” Sang explains why community want the brands there, how they are the experts on the subject and how they can add value to the dialog.
Other questions and issues covered in the video:
“People are freaked out about the… negative things people say online… what do you do about that for brands?
“What attributes do you find [in] a great community?”
“How do you move conversations across networks without them fragmenting?”
Congratulations to Mixing Bowl, one of Ripple6′s communities which was featured on NBC’s Today Show yesterday morning (July 23rd). The segment included one of Mixing Bowl’s most popular bloggers Rob Barrett.
Rob runs several groups on Mixing Bowl including Cooking for Dads (moms, kids, college students … and Dude Food both center on easy recipes for the less experienced cooks.
Operating a social site becomes a challenge when you make what appears to you to be a small change to the system and the users revolt. This is being experienced by the operators of Twitter, the exploding social microblogging site. Twitter made a small change to the way their system works without announcing the change, or apparently consulting the users beforehand. You may recall that Facebook has seen a series of these user revolts recently over their change in the layout, and changes in their terms of use.
So what is a concerned community manger to do when they want to change something?
Talk with your users-Duh!
So what is a concerned community manger to do when they want to change something? Talk with your users. Identify your most vociferous, super-users and invite them into a VIP Group. Discuss changes you’re considering with this group. Seek their feedback, and see what they find interesting, frustrating, useful and useless. If you happen to be running your community on the Ripple6 platform, you can use our consumer research tool Social Insights to help you create this group and monitor it. (Marketers use Social Insights to conduct consumer research too.)
You may also want to create a second group of newbies who are not experienced with the site, who can look at it with fresh eyes. The newbies will see the that your super users have grown immune to over time. Taking input from both groups and giving them a little advanced notice on upcoming changes will defuse the Revolution before it begins.
But the bottom line here is that you should be communicating with your community. Don’t fall into the trap of thinking like old media and declaring that you know what’s best for your audience. Because it’s not an audience any more. “Audience” comes from audio and it means to listen. Community is related to commune which means to meet. You work with a community, not an audience as long as you keep that in mind you’ll do fine.
Photo credit Flickr Uploaded on February 26, 2006 by weaponofchoice
On his widely read blog this week, Web Strategy by Jeremiah, Jeremiah Owyang of Forrester talks about the coming ages of the social web. It’s an excellent post and you should read it. He discusses the coming age when websites will be able to offer capabilities like social commerce. We here at Ripple6 agree wholeheartedly with Forrester that social commerce will change the face of the web as we know it. However, we disagree with them in one tiny area- the timing of this occurrence. That’s because we believe that the Era of Social Commerce is upon us.
In the chart at right you can see that Forrester is predicting the Era of Social Commerce will begin in 2011 and reach maturity in 2013. Ripple6 believes that this assessment misses the mark because Ripple6 is offering Social Commerce products today. So while it may take 1 or 2 years for the market to mature, we believe that the advantages of social commerce will be so dramatic that online businesses will need to adopt social commerce into their sites merely to stay competitive.
Why will the ubiquitous adoption of social commerce happen so quickly? Because it will change the face of the online purchase experience for the consumer and create such a tremendous advantage for the websites that deploy it that it will force the competition to match them or go out of business.
Let us give you an example; you just bought a new book and the estore you purchased from suggests that you may want to join a reverse book club. What’s a reverse book club? In an ordinary book club the club tells you which book to read and everyone discusses that book. In a reverse book club, you decide which book you want to read and then join a club based upon people who bought that book at the same time.
The social commerce site will connect you with the people in the community who share your tastes. With the next gadget you buy you are offered to join a club of people who’ve all purchased the same gadget at the same time. Everyone in the club can share their experiences, their knowledge and how they use the gadget. Ripple6 is offering this Smart Group technology to ecommerce vendors today. And when added to the already “baked in” high value social applications our system offers it creates an unbeatable social commerce capacity. (If you would like to discuss this technology for your ecommerce site contact us today.)
This technology will cause a revolution in ecommerce that will make the adoption of user reviews seem minor in comparison. User reviews first appeared on ecommerce sites about 2005, and in 2008 they were nearly ubiquitous.
The first websites to deploy social commerce technology will be live this year, and their competitors will need to jump on the bandwagon very quickly to have any hope of competing with game changing technology like this. We feel that social commerce will be such a great advantage that sites will be forced to deploy in 2010 in large numbers to stay competitive.
Therefore, while we agree with Forrester on their assessment of the coming changes, we feel that the time frame may be compressed significantly for the Era of Social Commerce.
How long do you feel it will take social commerce to be adopted by a majority of ecommerce sites? Please leave your comment below:
Image credit- we copied a small portion of the chart Forrester published for purposes of illustration. The original image is Copyright Forrester all rights reserved and can be found here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeremiah_owyang/3478041905/