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The Listening Post
  • About

    In the technology era, there are a million-and-one ways to connect with the world. With a million-and-one different needs and personalities, it is difficult to choose just one channel that will allow us to most effectively listen to and communicate with our customers and partners.

    Through the wisdom of experts and research by the authors, The Listening Post offers insights into a variety of aspects of today’s communication with a more specific focus on communicating effectively G2G (geek-to-geek).

  • About the Authors

    Darcy Pierce

    I’m actually just a kid trapped in a semi-adult body, I love cartoons, coloring and mac and cheese. I enjoy listening to Claire de Lune while taking ballet classes, but at the same time, a well-tuned muscle car is like music to my ears. I thrive on opportunities to spin what others find to be completely boring (or overly technical like microchips) into exciting and engaging marketing programs, because of this, Synopsys is my Disneyland and social media is my platform.

    Geeky Confession: I secretly love math and numbers. I can recall phone numbers after only a short glance, and for some reason find it necessary to memorize my credit card numbers.

    Hannah Watanabe

    The “jaw-dropper” fact that most people are surprised to learn is that I was homeschooled K-12. I have never regretted this, and in the end, I am still just your everyday California girl—can’t get enough beach or sun. Whether it’s a day trip to Santa Cruz, a weekend in L.A., or an adventure on the other side of the world, I love to travel. My favorite outdoor activity is camping, and my true love is tap dancing. Other than social media, my passion is working with children because I’m reminded of the days when a crisis was not getting a second cup of animal crackers at snack time.

    Geeky Confession: I occasionally spend an hour clicking on the ads on my Facebook page trying to figure out why they are targeting me. Then, I enter keywords into my profile in an attempt to capture ads that I’m actually interested in.

  • Archives

An Interview with Michael Brito

Posted by rick jamison on August 31st, 2009

Michael Brito is a social media strategist and community builder at Intel. “I blog, communicate and build relationships with other people,” says Michael. “I Twitter actively. I believe that marketing is good; and if you love your customers they’ll love you back and tell people about it. I believe that business results are critical but should not be the driving force behind connecting with people.”

You can find Michael on Twitter, Facebook and his social media blog. In the following interview, we chat about Twitter best practices, why brands need to be believable and his top objectives as a social media leader at Intel.

brito

Rick: You recently hosted a session for Synopsys’ Conversation Central at DAC where you talked about Twitter best practices. In a nutshell,  what are they?

Michael: I also wrote an article on this topic recently for Mashable (see 10 Twitter Best Practices for Brands), which are:

  1. Do your research before engaging customers
  2. Determine organizational goals
  3. Utilize either a branded or personal profile
  4. Build your Twitter equity and credibility
  5. Track metrics and conversation trends
  6. Don’t go overboard; less structure is better
  7. Listen and observe before engaging
  8. Be authentic & believable
  9. Track, measure, and iterate
  10. Don’t just strategize: execute!

Rick: During your Conversation Central session, you emphasized the point that brands need to be believable. Beyond producing great products and all else that one expects from leading brands, what do you mean by that?

Michael: Being authentic and believable are two different things.  I may indeed be authentic at every customer touch point, whether offline or online. But if the people I interact with and within my community don’t believe what I say, then there is an obvious disconnect. In other words, if I spend time in a community, build and foster relationships and listen, then the community will begin to trust me and believe what I have to say. So, if blog/tweet about a netbook and how awesome it is for me, the community just might believe me and maybe even go buy one.

Rick: As a social media leader at Intel, what are your most important objectives?

Michael: Great question. My most important objective is to authentically “build community” on and off of Intel.com. If I build a successful community, everything else will fall into place (i.e., metrics, user engagement, increase in sales) – basically, the stuff management values.

Rick: Finally, do you see any unique considerations or barriers within engineering communities that influence their adoption and use of social media?

Michael: I have to be honest. Dealing with the IT community, specifically engineering is new to me. I have always been focused on consumers. I do know that IT/Engineering use social media for a variety of things (research) and it’s important for brands who value that demographic to be present within these communities. It’s important to realize that “building community” doesn’t just mean to create a social network on a brand’s site.  It also means participating in external communities where the conversations are taking place.

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