Strategy vs. Tactics

Posted: March 12th, 2013
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“Strategy without tactics is the slowest route to victory. Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.”
― Sun Tzu, The Art of War

One major topic of discussion at Think! is whether a client who ask for strategy really wants a strategy, or wants a list of tactics.

Here’s a guide to strategy and tactics.

STRATEGY VS. TACTICS

A strategy is a long-term approach to achieving a big goal. It spans over a longer period of time and describes an approach to achieve that goal. It’s often complex and muli-layered. A strategy allows you to set priorities and focus your resources. It should also define what success looks like.

Tactics are smaller, short-term actions to deliver on the strategy. Tactics need to be evaluated and adjusted constantly based on what is learned along the way. But a strategy needs time and typically stays in place for a longer time unless the goal or other macro variables change.

THE DANGER OF TACTICS WITHOUT STRATEGY

Some people are focused on doing. Strategy to them looks nebulous and intangible. It doesn’t contain specific tasks. But random tactics without a strategy leads to short term actions with unpredictable long-term results. It’s like driving a car around without knowing how to reach your destination. And everybody on your team is driving their cars around in all directions hoping to eventually get there.

That’s why every tactic needs to deliver on a strategy. “Running ads to grow a Facebook page” is a tactic. But why are we doing it? What purpose does it serve? Why is it more important than anything else? And once we have more fans, then what? And how does Facebook fit in with everything else?

WHAT TO ASK YOURSELF (AND US)

  • Do you need ideas for things to do over the next few months based on your existing strategy? You need a tactical plan.
  • Do you need an approach in order to reach a long-term goal and the starting points to go about it? You need a strategy with tactical starting points.

NOTE: This post is reprinted from wilhelmus.ca, the blog of Think!’s William Bakker.

5 levels of social media sophistication at the DMO

Posted: April 23rd, 2012

Imagine you had to start a DMO. Your DMO. You have been given the same budget and must start from scratch. Would your DMO look exactly the same as it does now? The same departments, same positions? The same budget allocations? The same marketing tactics?

The internet, and social media in particular, have completely changed tourism marketing. Forever. People might not talk on Facebook about which fabric softener they use or which soft drink they prefer, but everybody talks about their travels. Social media sophistication is crucial to modern marketing. Yet the tourism industry is way behind.

We have worked with dozens of DMOs around the world, ranging from very small to very large. And we have spoken to hundreds more. Based on our conversations and experiences we have identified the following levels for social media adoption and integration into the organization.

1) Ignoring social media
This level represents DMOs who are not active at all in social media. Social media is seen more as a threat than an opportunity.

Characteristics you can find at this level are:

  • Leadership that is very skeptical of social media (“Facebook is a waste of time,” “I don’t care what my old high school buddy had for dinner last night,” “Twitter is for young people,” etc.)
  • Fear of negativity
  • Restricted staff access to social networking sites through policies or technology
  • Lack of an internal social media champion
  • Lack of social media knowledge at marketing agencies
  • Traditional marketing methods
  • No budget for social media

Two years ago, there were many DMOs at this level, but by today most have moved on. Most DMOs that remain here are tied to very restrictive government policies.

2) Experimenting with social media
DMOs experiment with social media without a specific strategy through random tactics.

Characteristics you can find at this level are:

  • Leadership that is skeptical, does not know activities are happening, ignores them because of disinterest, allows it because an influential stakeholder asked questions, or is swamped dealing with politics
  • Fear of negativity and overreaction when something “bad” happens
  • Enthusiastic internal champions who have created rogue accounts but sometimes lack skills to properly execute. These people eventually leave the organization to properly grow their skills elsewhere
  • Hit or miss results
  • Chasing anything that is new and hot
  • Lack of social media knowledge at marketing agencies
  • No or very little budget
  • No metrics

There are still a lot of DMOs operating at this level. It often takes a noticeable event to move them to the next level. This could be spurred by a social media success internally or by the DMO next door. For example, a rival’s viral YouTube video or growing number of Facebook fans.

3) Social media supporting marketing campaigns
Due to a lack of strategic knowledge, DMOs incorporate social media in paid, outbound marketing campaigns. Often this is an add-on to traditional marketing campaigns, such as a YouTube channel showing videos originally made for TV or using Facebook and Twitter to broadcast campaign messaging.

Characteristics you can find at this level are:

  • Leadership that realizes social media can be powerful but still relies/insists on traditional methods because they are more comfortable with them, or do not know how to measure and compare the difference in results
  • Marketing agencies that reluctantly incorporate social into campaign strategies, often as an afterthought and/or without understanding social media principles
  • Little integration or collaboration with members/partners/industry
  • Heavy scheduling and approval processes for social media activity
  • Broadcast-style communication in social media
  • Viewing and communicating with fans and followers in a traditional outbound marketing way, such as a consumer email database
  • Year-round efforts on Twitter, Facebook, etc., that lack strategic direction
  • Social media black-outs when there is no campaign in market
  • Frustrated and/or maxed-out staff who understand the potential of social media but are not heard by leadership and sometimes need/want more training
  • Often staff skilled in social media leave the organization out of frustration
  • Budget that is a small portion of marketing campaigns
  • Lack of appropriate metrics, with success often measured either by big numbers (# of fans/followers) or a campaign’s level of creativity

Most DMOs operate at this level, sometimes with some additional effort to keep Facebook and Twitter going year-round. Often the level of success depends on the sophistication of one or two staff members.

DMOs at this level want to succeed but cannot break out of the traditional way of doing business. Getting to level four is usually achieved by having a strong social media success as part of a bigger initiative or having an epiphany that social requires a different way of thinking. Usually, level two experiments continue alongside level three activity.

4) Following a social media strategy
This level is typified by a DMO having a social media strategy in place or having social media integrated into its marketing strategy. The DMO still believes that it is in full control of the destination brand.

Characteristics you can find at this level are:

  • Leadership that understands social media and has given it dedicated resources
  • Marketing campaigns that have social at the core
  • Agencies in place that are dedicated to social or a digital agency that (really) gets social
  • Social strategies in place tied to marketing goals and objectives
  • Stronger alignment/integration with members/partners/industry and other stakeholders
  • A move from mass to niche marketing
  • Activities that are measured and adjusted in real time
  • Staff that is trained in social media
  • Empowered staff that is allowed and encouraged to participate as a DMO professional in social networks
  • Social media monitoring and engagement that is in collaboration with members/partners/industry
  • Social media that is incorporated in customer service
  • Relaxed social media access policies and limited approvals for posting content
  • Crisis plan in place
  • Systematic experimentation that is part of the strategy
  • Dedicated staff and budget for social media

Leading DMOs have entered this level. Over the next few years we expect a rush of DMOs moving here. DMOs that enter level four first are the ones with less restraining operating environments (such as funding) with innovative leaders and marketing managers.

5) Embracing the social business model

The level five social business recognizes that the destination’s story and reputation are based on visitors’ experiences at every touch point during their trips (see point 1 in “Top 5 Wrong Assumptions in Destination Marketing”). This DMO knows and accepts that it is no longer in control of the destination story. It recognizes and acts on the need to collaborate closely with its industry, residents, influencers and visitors, and that it must change the way success is measured.

The level five DMO starts with the core of the passions that make a destination relevant and leads all partners that have an impact on those experiences. The sole focus is on delivering outstanding visitor experiences that are unique to the destination, and then making it easy for visitors to share these experiences in their own voices.

As painful as it may be, the DMO re-organizes, ending much of its old way of doing business. Staff is re-trained and assigned to new activities.

Characteristics you can find at this level are:

  • Leadership that understands that business models from 15 years ago must change and is willing to undertake the pain of changing the organization
  • Relentless focus on the consumer
  • Majority of marketing resources are allocated to digital
  • A shift from destination marketing to destination management, where the customer experience is seen as the primary way to build brand
  • Marketing strategies that are a collaborative effort between the DMO, industry, residents, passionate consumers and other stakeholders
  • A move from mass marketing to niche marketing
  • Culture of collaboration, internally as well as with members/partners/industry and even consumers
  • Flattened organizational hierarchy to increase efficiency and speed needed to respond and adjust quickly
  • Lean processes
  • Staff that is trained, empowered and supported to make decisions without requiring lengthy approvals or spending time in meetings designed by management to control every aspect of every tactic

We’re not aware of any DMOs at level five. We have spoken to many DMO executives who know they need to get here and want to get here. Often, their funding models or destination-specific politics stand in the way.

The DMO closest to a level five we are familiar with is Visit Sørlandet in Southern Norway. As a newly created regional DMO, this organization quickly realized it would be impossible to build a Southern Norway brand the traditional way. By creating a strategy based on collaborating with local DMOs and industry members to improve the visitor experience and elevate the collective digital marketing efforts, Visit Sørlandet is building it’s brand through every touchpoint while growing repeat visitation and encouraging word-of-mouth.

For many DMOs that have not reached level four, level five may seem pie in the sky. But the further you move your DMO through the levels, the more you realize just how much the world has changed and the true impact this has. Once you enter level four, you can see level five. It is no longer pie in the sky. It is tomorrow.

At what level is your DMO?
Your DMO’s current level is not a sign of success or failure. Every DMO is different. Politics and funding models have a big impact. So does the size and scope of a DMO. A country DMO is different from a city DMO. This affects specific marketing strategies and tactics.

It is also not a race. It is a process that organizations need to go through. Some might skip a step. For others, the levels could overlap. But in order for DMOs to stay relevant and effective, they need to climb up.

We have worked with DMOs in all shapes and sizes at every level of this process. We enjoy helping DMOs make the climb.

We have conducted audits, started Facebook pages, trained staff, implemented social media as part of bigger campaigns, run social campaigns, created strategies, helped to define entire business plans centered around social principles and much more.

Inventing the future
Alan Kay, the inventor of the GUI and object-oriented programming once said, “The best way to predict the future is to invent it.” Instead of all DMOs trying to invent level 5 independently, we think the best future is that we all invent it together and collectively stay relevant.

This is a cross post on William’s blog. Please leave your comments there.

Think! opening in Amsterdam starring Isabel Mosk

Posted: December 19th, 2011

We’re very happy to announce Think! will open an office in Amsterdam on February 1, 2012 to serve the European market.

Our operations in Amsterdam will be lead by Isabel Mosk. She is well respected and brings a wealth of modern destination marketing knowledge and expertise to our team.

Isabel joins us from the Netherlands’ Board of Tourism and Conventions (NBTC) where she started in 2007 as a marketing consultant. In 2009, she made the jump to being an online consultant and started focusing on social media, online campaigns, trends and development.

While at the NBTC, she established the Innovatielab – a joint initiative between the NBTC, HSMAI Netherlands and NHTV Breda University. This group works together to increase the knowledge of social media in the Netherlands’ tourism markets and helps bring consumers and operators closer together. Isabel also established #LoveHolland, a social platform where visitors and residents share their finest videos and photos of Holland.

She earned her degree at the NHTV Breda University for Applied Sciences, specializing in Tourism and Marketing. She also spent time as the marketing communications specialist for Beverwijkse Bazaar B.V., Europe’s largest indoor bazaar – a multicultural market that saw four million visitors a year.

Having traveled around the world, Isabel has found a natural match in tourism with her love for travel and getting in touch with other cultures.

Her experience and passion for tourism will fit right in with the innovative crowd at Think! We’re all thrilled to be opening operations in Europe and are very pleased to have Isabel on board to kick things off.

Interested in learning more? You can reach Isabel at Isabel@thinksocialmedia.com and follow her on Twitter @isabelmosk

Qantas Twitter Fail shows the importance of a social media crisis plan

Posted: November 22nd, 2011

The unfortunate happenings of a Twitter campaign by Qantas is making the rounds through the blogosphere, Twitter and traditional media as we speak. Qantas was running a hashtag based giveaway promotion during a time where passengers were stranded around the world because of a strike, leading to massive complaints on Twitter instead.

The timing of the promotion was poor, and so was the way Qantas dealt with the underlaying customer service issues. But the reality of of social media is that this situation can happen to anybody. Qantas could have seen this one coming but it’s not always this obvious (ask Nestle, United Airlines or Seaworld).

Calling for a boycot of tourism in a destination is a well known tactic for activist organizations who take issue with something controversial that happens there. Social media is the perfect vehicle to get this message across and organize a stunt with the purpose of attracting main stream media. There are also incidents such as riots, diseases or natural disasters that can seriously affect a destinations image through the stories floating around in social media.

Anybody active in social media needs a crisis communications plan where issues are detected early and responded to in a timely and appropriate matter. We’ve worked on a few of these and the biggest challenge organizations face is that traditional PR methods don’t apply in this situation. It requires a new and unique approach.

When you do it right, you can turn a crisis in a moment of glory as the Red Cross did with a rogue tweet. Qantas should come clean in a transparent way, fix the root customer service issue and offer the prize for their competition to every stranded passenger who has tweeted a complaint.

Everybody else, get a plan ready.

Think! opens in the U.S.

Posted: October 3rd, 2011

David Serino

Think! has been steadily growing this year, but today is a big milestone for us: We have expanded to the United States.

We are truly excited to welcome David Serino to Think! as a strategist and educator. Dave is based in our U.S. office in Michigan. He brings a significant depth of experience in digital marketing for tourism that includes important programs which have been serving the U.S. travel industry for several years.

David has worked more than 15 years at the intersection of technology and marketing. He worked in sales and marketing positions within the travel industry before he founded Gammet Interactive in 2000 to serve the travel and tourism industry in its use of digital marketing.

To help the tourism industry understand and improve its use of social media, Dave developed a tourism-focused social media ranking system called How Social is Your DMO? in 2009. Then last year, he brought a valuable educational resource to the industry when he launched the Social Media in the Tourism Industry Symposium (#SoMeT), attracting attendees from destination marketing organizations, hotels, resorts, attractions and other tourism-related businesses.

Dave is a well known speaker at travel industry conferences, having presented at more than 85 events. You will continue to see him on the road, but now as a part of Think!

Dave’s joining our team also marks the integration of Gammet Interactive with Think! and the continued expansion of our full suite of digital marketing services. Gammet Interactive’s clients will continue to get leading strategic consultation and support from an even bigger team of experts at Think! Gammet Interactive’s programs, like How Social is Your DMO? and Social Media in the Tourism Industry Symposium, will also continue.

Welcome, Dave!

Announcing Holly Cuny as the latest Think!-er

Posted: August 25th, 2011

 

The Think! team keeps growing, and we’re very happy to announce our latest addition to the team starting September 8.

Holly worked with William at Tourism British Columbia as Online Manager for 5 years and served as acting Director of eMarketing for the last  10 months. Holly has a proven track record of getting things done. When we heard she was leaving Tourism BC and about to take a position with another company, we had Ben grovel and beg her to join us instead.

We’re extremely happy to have Holly on our team. She brings a wealth of online marketing and destination marketing knowledge and leadership to our company. Her responsibilities will include managing the delivery team and providing strategic input on our projects.

A Simple Facebook Page Engagement Metric

Posted: June 10th, 2011

The success of your Facebook Page is dependend on the engagement (likes, comments & fan posts) of your fans. Facebook measures the relevancy of pages with it’s Edgerank algorithm (more info here). Simple put, if fans don’t like, comment or post on your page, Facebook will deem it irrelevant and hide it your fans’ newsfeeds.

Keeping fans engaged also generates organic growth. Fans that like, comment and post on your Page generate newsfeeds in their personal networks, exposing new potential fans to your content.

Facebook’s insights reports how many impressions each of your post generates. At Think! we have a simple target metric for posts on the Fanpages we manage:

[impressions]/[fans]>1

When posts generate more impressions than the number of fans, it strongly suggests that the overall engagement of the Page is strong. After all, posts are potentially presented to non-fans. Impressions are not ‘unique’ and one fan could generate multiple impressions.

The formula is not perfect, but we like the simplicity.

Welcome on-board Aaron Nissen

Posted: June 1st, 2011

Think! is growing fast and we’re incredibly excited that Aaron Nissen has agreed to join our company.

Aaron has a long track record of working in digital marketing and technology at DMO’s. In his last job as Director of e-strategies at Travel Alberta he gained a nationwide reputation as a leader in digital marketing and an overall nice guy. He’s been co-chair of the Provincial eTourism Committee and sat on the advisory board of the Canada eConnect and Online Revealed Canada conferences.

Aaron left Travel Alberta last year and when we heard he was looking for his next career move, it was a no-brainer for us. He’s just as passionate about tourism marketing as us and his enthusiasm in contagious.

He will strengthen our team with his knowledge of the tourism industry, the specifics of DMO’s and his strategic skills in digital marketing and technology. He will be responsible for strategy development and lead some of our technology implementation.

The story of our Super Bowl Social Media Campaign that got 2.4 million people talking

Posted: January 31st, 2011

This is the story about the ‘Mystery Man’ campaign we ran on behalf of the Dallas Convention & Visitors Bureau last week. It’s a story of the power of social media, passionate communities and bringing people together. We knew it was a great idea but the results exceeded our wildest imagination.

Background

Social Media is about sharing and bringing people together. When the Dallas CVB asked us to design a campaign around Super Bowl XLV we thought ‘Why not use social media to get people talking to each other about Dallas?’.

At Think! Social Media, we work with the concept of passionate communities. These are groups of people connected through a shared passion. Engage a passionate community in the right way by offering something remarkable, and they will do the marketing for you through word-of-mouth.

The Big Idea

Needless to say, every NFL team has an extremely passionate community… and offering a chance to win Super Bowl tickets is pretty remarkable. Remarkable enough get people out into the street talking to each other.

We decided to send a Mystery Man to each city of the teams who made it to the Super Bowl. The first person to find the Mystery Man and tell him the secret phrase,  ‘Have you been to Dallas lately?’ would instantly win tickets to the big game, 4 nights accommodation, tickets to the NFL experience and some cash towards travel.

The Process

We researched NFL and travel/lifestyle bloggers in each city and asked them if they would like to participate.  As “Exclusive Bloggers”, their role would be to share daily clues about the location of the Mystery Man.  We were careful in choosing bloggers that have strong social media presences and very engaged readers.  We chose 5 in Green Bay and 4 in Pittsburgh.  Their role was crucial in tapping into the existing communities and raising awareness about the campaign.

The clues tied in to imagery and facts about attractions in Dallas and became increasingly specific as the weekend went on.   By printing the clues on photos they were easy to share through Twitter, and were eye-catching on the blogs and Facebook.

The secret password could only be revealed by ‘liking’ the Visit Dallas Facebook Fan Page.  A campaign Twitter account (@DallasSBHunt) was created to coordinate all activities, answer questions and share the latest updates.  In addition two hashtags (#SBHuntGB and #SBHuntPGH) were introduced to facilitate discussion around the contest.

Results

Sunday

The conference finals were played on Sunday January 23. We were prepared for each of the 4 cities. At the end of Sunday we knew the contest would run in Green Bay and Pittsburgh.

Monday

We finalized the details of the contest and sent out materials to the bloggers so they could prepare their first blog posts announcing the contest.  At this time we activated the contest tab on the Visit Dallas fan page which only had 600 fans.

Tuesday

By noon, the bloggers in each city had announced the contest.

Green Bay: Total PackersBrent FarvrePackers ClubPurple Pants Green Jersey, All Green Bay Packers

Pittsburgh: IheartPGHSteelers GabPittsburgh Sports and Mini Ponies

Slowly the word started to spread.  At the end of Tuesday, the fanpage had grown to over 1,000 fans and the followers of the campaign Twitter account began to grow.

Wednesday/Thursday

We continued to build awareness over the next few days. By carefully listening in on Twitter, tapping in to relevant communites and joining the conversations where appropriate we were able to rapidly spread word of the contest. By Thursday, traditional media had gotten wind of what we were up to and a few stations began to report on the contest on the the nightly news.  By the end of Thursday over 3000 people had liked the Visit Dallas page.

Friday

At 9am the Exclusive Bloggers announced their first clues and the contest began.  We quickly learned that we had struck gold in both cities. The streets were full of people searching for our Mystery Man, many tweeting as they went and following along on Facebook.  By Friday @DallasSBHunt was trending in both Pittsburgh and Green Bay.

Best of all, two whole cities were out on the streets talking to each other about Dallas.

That night, the hunt for the Dallas Mystery Man was the headline news on all the local stations. The Visit Dallas Fan Page had grown to 8,000 fans and the campaign Twitter account had well over 1500 followers.

Saturday

We were lucky that Friday’s clues had been vague enough for our Mystery Men to keep from getting caught, but by Saturday the amount of people on the street made it significantly more difficult to make it through the city unnoticed.

Just after noon our Mystery Man in Green Bay was found and not long after our man in Pittsburgh was caught as well.

The hunt was over, but the ride wasn’t. The winners were invited on news shows and the winner in Green Bay was invited on Breakfast TV the next day. Countless blogs, websites, radio stations and news papers were reporting on the contest and its winners.

Sunday and beyond

The winners in Green Bay turned out to be a very nice couple who are homeless and live in a local shelter. They were invited on Fox 11′s morning show to tell their story.  Shorty thereafter CNN picked up the story and we had reports from our contacts all over North America (even as far as Australia) who saw the campaign on the news.

The Results

We definitely succeeded in getting people talking about Dallas. We also proved that when you run a Social Media campaign within passionate communities, you don’t need a big media budget.  And, if the community is passionate enough, you’ll even make it on the news.

We grew the Visit Dallas Fan Page by almost 10,000 fans in three days. The fanpage received about 100,000 pageviews and generated over 500,000 news feed impressions.

But what we’re most proud of is the incredible positive reaction from the people in Green Bay and Pittsburgh. We received many messages from individuals telling Dallas how much they enjoyed the weekend.

We want to thank the Dallas CVB for giving us the opportunity to execute our crazy idea and give a big thank you to all the local bloggers and the great people of Green Bay and Pittsburgh. May the best team win on Sunday!

Your fans are passionate, use it.

Posted: December 6th, 2010

I’m sure you regularly check your Facebook fanpage insights right? It gives you a wealth of information about who your fans are. Demographic information but also where your fans reside.

For a DMO, there are typically a large number of local residents or ex-pats as part of your fanpage. That’s understandable. People are passionate about where they live and the strongest communities form around a shared passion. Everybody else is likely passionate about your destination for one reason or another as well. Some are probably your best and most loyal customers.

The key to Facebook success is to turn this passion into action. Passionate people want to engage and want to display their passion to their network of friends. Instead of just marketing to your fans, let them do the marketing for you. By giving them a reason and the tools to do so.

Our Facebook applications are a good way to allow people to share their passion. By sending postcard or souvenirs to their friends or sharing their favourite experiences.