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Social search causing creative
destruction
By Jens Gregersen: I am passionate about turning ideas into profitable consumer and experience orientated 
businesses—being new market entries, or new products in existing markets.  
                                                                                      Stay connected LinkedIn  


With the introduction of social search by Bing and Google on May and August 2011 a structural and disruptive 
change took place online, which will have a direct impact on the profit strategies of most businesses. This article 
describes the logic and premises of the social media economy, how it alters customer behaviour, and finally the 
impact on businesses. 
 
The fundamental premises of social media are, first, that its content is user generated, and second, that people 
use these to socially interact with their friends, family, and increasingly with organisations. As more and more 
interaction take place via social media these will increasingly define and shape the users reputation. Hence, in 
the social economy users, or customers, will increasingly build and accumulate social capital through actions 
and expression of opinions online.  
 
Customer Behaviour Prior To the Social Economy 
Until recently companies operated with a reality of 80% of dissatisfied customers telling about his or her experi‐
ence to 10 people (20% would tell 20 people), and that a happy customer would tell just three people. This has 
all changed with the reach of social media. The bad news for companies is that in the social economy unhappy 
customers will tell the world, not just 10 people! The good news is that a happy customer will also let the whole 
world know.  
 
Another thing that has changed with social media is that in an effort to accumulate social capital far more cus‐
tomers will find the time and energy to express their opinions – this is especially troublesome for non customer 
centric companies as until the rise of the social economy 90% of dissatisfied customers did not complaint, they 
simply stopped buying. Thus, the primary challenge facing businesses today is to make sure that customers get 
an experience beyond their expectations through participation and connection (recommended article: Experi‐
ence Economy: Paris Hilton Retail Shop Case Study by Jens Gregersen). 
 

 Case Study: Dell Hell 
Shortly after Jeff Jarvis had purchased a computer from Dell he contacted the company’s customer service 
department as it suffered from malfunctioning hardware. After basically being ignored by Dell on several occa‐
sions he created a blog called Dell Hell to share his frustration. Within a couple of weeks hundreds of other 
unhappy Dell customers added their stories to the blog – highlighting fundamental service problems at Dell.  
 
Within weeks the company’s share price and reputation plummeted and the founder Michael Dell had to re‐
turn to the company after three years absence. The following year Dell announced a 150 million USD invest‐
ment into the company’s customer service department. 


The Dell Hell case happened back in 2005 when Facebook only had a couple of millions users and Twitter did 
not even exist. Today (August 2011) Facebook has more than 750 million users, and Twitter users are sending a 
daily average of 140 million tweets – and these numbers are growing by the day! In other words, had the Dell 
Hell incident happened today the effect and speed would have been manifold. 
 
 


COMMERCIALISING IDEAS/EN/17 AUGUST 2011/ 
 Theoretical Insight: Social Capital 
 In 1986 Bourdieu articulated social capital to consist of two components; group member‐
 ship and social networks, and symbolic character which only exist in the “eyes of the oth‐
 ers” – in other words, symbolic character is a person’s reputation. Bourdieu explained fur‐
 ther, “The level of a person’s social capital depends on the size of the network of connec‐
 tions that can effectively be mobilized.”. 




Disruptive Business Changes 
Many of the biggest companies such as Carlsberg, Johnson & Johnson, and Coca Cola increasingly understand 
and handle the new reality of customers in the social media economy, but unfortunately this is not an under‐
standing shared by the majority of companies who consider social media as yet a platform for traditional mar‐
keting, hence these are operating blindly and with increased risk to their profits. During just three months of 
2011 (May to August) the power of social media was subject to a significant change, a change which undoubt‐
edly will cause disruption to the business world as we know it – a change which few business managers proba‐
bly understand the full scale of and are unprepared for. 
 
In May 2011 Facebook and Bing (Microsoft’s search engine) announced a partnership involving Facebook’s 
“Like” button, which makes it faster and easier for users of Bing’s search engine to see what their social network 
connections like and are sharing. This initiative was quickly followed up by Google in August 2011 with the beta 
test of Google+ and Google Social Search which now include blogs, recommendations, pictures etc. in Google’s 
search results. You might ask why this will cause disruptive changes to the business world – well, consider the 
following: 
 
Research conducted by Microsoft’s Bing Team has revealed that “[…] 80% of people will delay making a decision 
until they can get a friend’s stamp of approval.” The team also concluded that 90% of people listen to recom‐
mendations of friends and family, 90%! Add to this that customers do not limit their source of recommenda‐
tions to friends and family; for example, when looking to make a hotel reservation customers read and consider 
recommendations and viewpoints from complete strangers in the decision process. 
 
That 90% of people listen to recommendations of friends and family are conditions businesses have operated 
under seemingly always but these change when adding Bing, Google and social media to the equation. People 
measure their social status, they build and maintain relations, and they accumulate social capital via online so‐
cial media – and the internet is their main source of information. Hence, with Bing’s and Google’s inclusion of 
recommendations and viewpoints of people’s connections at the very top of the search results the future of non
‐customer centric organisations looks exceptionally grim – and hand on heart, the majority of businesses are not 
customer centric. Thus, in a world prominently dominated by social media, businesses are hold more liable, and 
crisis management is considered a failure and a last resort happening primarily to businesses without a separate 
social media strategy and customer focus. 
 
Social Capital and the Premises of Social Media 
In order for businesses to navigate confidently in the social media economy they must understand the power 
and logic of social networking. The core concept of social media economy is social capital, which increasingly is 
being used as a metric for a person’s (or company’s) level of influence, and is based on relationships, connec‐
tions and reputation. The term social capital was first articulated by Hanifan (1916) and later became wide‐
spread know through the works of sociologists like Bourdieu (1972) and Putnam (1995).  
 
Little has changed over the years in terms of defining social capital, which remains a combination of a person’s 
contact surface (his or hers number of connections) and reputation – but not exclusively as the Dell Hell case 
revealed. The Dell Hell case did not reach the proportions it did because of Jeff Jarvis’s contact surface nor be‐
cause of him being famous; he simply published his thoughts, thoughts that ended up voicing a general and 


COMMERCIALISING IDEAS/EN/17 AUGUST 2011/ 
widespread problem. In other words, in terms of customer service companies should be careful not to evaluate and 
adjust their response based on the conception of a customer’s level of social capital. The only time companies might 
want to consider level of social capital is when choosing “ambassadors” – people who can create a positive buzz 
(start conversations). 
                                                
In the social economy people’s social capi‐ Case Study: 47 Characters Worth 1,5 million USD 
tal is based on active participation in rele‐ In July 2009 Paris Hilton sent out the following tweet: “Time for a lil 
vant online communities and publishing –  nap before we land. So comfy. :)” along with a picture of her in‐flight 
in other words, through actions and the        bed. According to Adnan Dawood, an expert in celebrity endorsement, 
expression of opinions. Thus during the        the value for the Emirates Airline was 1,5 million USD!  
coming years people will increasingly feel   
the need to have their voice heard to accu‐ Two years later, August 2011, Paris Hilton has 22 times more followers 
mulate social capital, and Bing and            on Twitter, a total of 4,5 million people – just imagine the value and 
Google’s search engines have already           effect of her tweets today. Measured against the principles of social 
started giving these voices a prominent        capital Paris Hilton is without doubt a high worth persona and her opin‐
position among their search results.           ions and actions have an immense impact on businesses. 
 
More Simple In a Complicated Way 
As described in the introduction to this article, before the emergence of the social economy the behaviour of dissat‐
isfied customers was more nuanced, for example 80% would tell 10 people; 90% would not complain, they would 
simply stop buying, and satisfied customers would tell just three people each. In the social economy things are actu‐
ally far more simple, as just about all customers will share their experiences with their network (as of August 2011 
Facebook users have an average of 130 friends) – and indirectly the rest of the world via major search engines like 
Bing and Google! But the simplicity ends here as including social media in businesses profit strategies by no means is 
easy, to succeed the majority of companies will have to make changes to their self understanding – their culture. In 
the social economy only customer centric organisations will thrive, of the rest some will be tolerated but not ac‐
cepted by their customers. 
 
                                                                 About: Jens Gregersen 
Monitor Social Media Activity 
This article has demonstrated the consequences of the so‐        Connect via LinkedIn 
cial economy in the interrelation between businesses and          
their customers, and how this will be disrupted further in       I am passionate about turning 
the years to come. It is beyond the scope of this article to     ideas into profitable consumer 
cover in detail what is required for businesses to succeed in    and experience orientated 
the social economy besides from the mention of the likely        businesses – being new market 
need for structural and cultural changes across many or‐         entries, or new products in 
ganisations, but one practical advice can be given.              existing markets. 
                                                                  
With for example 750 million Facebook users (August 2011)        My track record includes e.g. the introduction of Paris 
the reach and existence of social media is not news per se       Hilton celebrity branded products into 2,500+ shops in 
but even though few businesses have social media monitor‐        40+ countries worldwide; and the conversion of a 
ing tools in place like BuzzMetrics, Radian6 etc., they are      business idea into the leading B2C e‐commerce in 
blindly navigating the social media universe. Small and me‐      Denmark, Saxo.com – which consequently led to 33% 
dium sized businesses with limited budgets should at the         lower retail prices on books nationwide. 
very least use Google’s Alert function to stay updated on         
the social media scene during the work of creating a cus‐        In a world clustered with products and services of little 
tomer centric and experience orientated organisation. Rec‐       difference I develop long‐term competitive advantages 
ommended article: Experience Economy: Paris Hilton Retail        based on consumer oriented strategies – an approach 
Shop Case Study.                                                 which I have implemented in diverse cultural markets 
                                                                 across Europe, the Middle East and Asia. 
                                                                  
                                                                 I am an experienced sales and marketing entrepreneur 
                                                                 with comprehensive consumer orientated strategic 
                                                                 planning and implementation skills.  


      COMMERCIALISING IDEAS/EN/17 AUGUST 2011/ 

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Social Search Causing Creative Destruction by Jens Gregersen

  • 1. Social search causing creative destruction By Jens Gregersen: I am passionate about turning ideas into profitable consumer and experience orientated  businesses—being new market entries, or new products in existing markets.   Stay connected LinkedIn   With the introduction of social search by Bing and Google on May and August 2011 a structural and disruptive  change took place online, which will have a direct impact on the profit strategies of most businesses. This article  describes the logic and premises of the social media economy, how it alters customer behaviour, and finally the  impact on businesses.    The fundamental premises of social media are, first, that its content is user generated, and second, that people  use these to socially interact with their friends, family, and increasingly with organisations. As more and more  interaction take place via social media these will increasingly define and shape the users reputation. Hence, in  the social economy users, or customers, will increasingly build and accumulate social capital through actions  and expression of opinions online.     Customer Behaviour Prior To the Social Economy  Until recently companies operated with a reality of 80% of dissatisfied customers telling about his or her experi‐ ence to 10 people (20% would tell 20 people), and that a happy customer would tell just three people. This has  all changed with the reach of social media. The bad news for companies is that in the social economy unhappy  customers will tell the world, not just 10 people! The good news is that a happy customer will also let the whole  world know.     Another thing that has changed with social media is that in an effort to accumulate social capital far more cus‐ tomers will find the time and energy to express their opinions – this is especially troublesome for non customer  centric companies as until the rise of the social economy 90% of dissatisfied customers did not complaint, they  simply stopped buying. Thus, the primary challenge facing businesses today is to make sure that customers get  an experience beyond their expectations through participation and connection (recommended article: Experi‐ ence Economy: Paris Hilton Retail Shop Case Study by Jens Gregersen).     Case Study: Dell Hell  Shortly after Jeff Jarvis had purchased a computer from Dell he contacted the company’s customer service  department as it suffered from malfunctioning hardware. After basically being ignored by Dell on several occa‐ sions he created a blog called Dell Hell to share his frustration. Within a couple of weeks hundreds of other  unhappy Dell customers added their stories to the blog – highlighting fundamental service problems at Dell.     Within weeks the company’s share price and reputation plummeted and the founder Michael Dell had to re‐ turn to the company after three years absence. The following year Dell announced a 150 million USD invest‐ ment into the company’s customer service department.  The Dell Hell case happened back in 2005 when Facebook only had a couple of millions users and Twitter did  not even exist. Today (August 2011) Facebook has more than 750 million users, and Twitter users are sending a  daily average of 140 million tweets – and these numbers are growing by the day! In other words, had the Dell  Hell incident happened today the effect and speed would have been manifold.      COMMERCIALISING IDEAS/EN/17 AUGUST 2011/ 
  • 2.  Theoretical Insight: Social Capital  In 1986 Bourdieu articulated social capital to consist of two components; group member‐ ship and social networks, and symbolic character which only exist in the “eyes of the oth‐ ers” – in other words, symbolic character is a person’s reputation. Bourdieu explained fur‐ ther, “The level of a person’s social capital depends on the size of the network of connec‐ tions that can effectively be mobilized.”.  Disruptive Business Changes  Many of the biggest companies such as Carlsberg, Johnson & Johnson, and Coca Cola increasingly understand  and handle the new reality of customers in the social media economy, but unfortunately this is not an under‐ standing shared by the majority of companies who consider social media as yet a platform for traditional mar‐ keting, hence these are operating blindly and with increased risk to their profits. During just three months of  2011 (May to August) the power of social media was subject to a significant change, a change which undoubt‐ edly will cause disruption to the business world as we know it – a change which few business managers proba‐ bly understand the full scale of and are unprepared for.    In May 2011 Facebook and Bing (Microsoft’s search engine) announced a partnership involving Facebook’s  “Like” button, which makes it faster and easier for users of Bing’s search engine to see what their social network  connections like and are sharing. This initiative was quickly followed up by Google in August 2011 with the beta  test of Google+ and Google Social Search which now include blogs, recommendations, pictures etc. in Google’s  search results. You might ask why this will cause disruptive changes to the business world – well, consider the  following:    Research conducted by Microsoft’s Bing Team has revealed that “[…] 80% of people will delay making a decision  until they can get a friend’s stamp of approval.” The team also concluded that 90% of people listen to recom‐ mendations of friends and family, 90%! Add to this that customers do not limit their source of recommenda‐ tions to friends and family; for example, when looking to make a hotel reservation customers read and consider  recommendations and viewpoints from complete strangers in the decision process.    That 90% of people listen to recommendations of friends and family are conditions businesses have operated  under seemingly always but these change when adding Bing, Google and social media to the equation. People  measure their social status, they build and maintain relations, and they accumulate social capital via online so‐ cial media – and the internet is their main source of information. Hence, with Bing’s and Google’s inclusion of  recommendations and viewpoints of people’s connections at the very top of the search results the future of non ‐customer centric organisations looks exceptionally grim – and hand on heart, the majority of businesses are not  customer centric. Thus, in a world prominently dominated by social media, businesses are hold more liable, and  crisis management is considered a failure and a last resort happening primarily to businesses without a separate  social media strategy and customer focus.    Social Capital and the Premises of Social Media  In order for businesses to navigate confidently in the social media economy they must understand the power  and logic of social networking. The core concept of social media economy is social capital, which increasingly is  being used as a metric for a person’s (or company’s) level of influence, and is based on relationships, connec‐ tions and reputation. The term social capital was first articulated by Hanifan (1916) and later became wide‐ spread know through the works of sociologists like Bourdieu (1972) and Putnam (1995).     Little has changed over the years in terms of defining social capital, which remains a combination of a person’s  contact surface (his or hers number of connections) and reputation – but not exclusively as the Dell Hell case  revealed. The Dell Hell case did not reach the proportions it did because of Jeff Jarvis’s contact surface nor be‐ cause of him being famous; he simply published his thoughts, thoughts that ended up voicing a general and  COMMERCIALISING IDEAS/EN/17 AUGUST 2011/ 
  • 3. widespread problem. In other words, in terms of customer service companies should be careful not to evaluate and  adjust their response based on the conception of a customer’s level of social capital. The only time companies might  want to consider level of social capital is when choosing “ambassadors” – people who can create a positive buzz  (start conversations).      In the social economy people’s social capi‐ Case Study: 47 Characters Worth 1,5 million USD  tal is based on active participation in rele‐ In July 2009 Paris Hilton sent out the following tweet: “Time for a lil  vant online communities and publishing –  nap before we land. So comfy. :)” along with a picture of her in‐flight  in other words, through actions and the  bed. According to Adnan Dawood, an expert in celebrity endorsement,  expression of opinions. Thus during the  the value for the Emirates Airline was 1,5 million USD!   coming years people will increasingly feel    the need to have their voice heard to accu‐ Two years later, August 2011, Paris Hilton has 22 times more followers  mulate social capital, and Bing and  on Twitter, a total of 4,5 million people – just imagine the value and  Google’s search engines have already  effect of her tweets today. Measured against the principles of social  started giving these voices a prominent  capital Paris Hilton is without doubt a high worth persona and her opin‐ position among their search results.  ions and actions have an immense impact on businesses.    More Simple In a Complicated Way  As described in the introduction to this article, before the emergence of the social economy the behaviour of dissat‐ isfied customers was more nuanced, for example 80% would tell 10 people; 90% would not complain, they would  simply stop buying, and satisfied customers would tell just three people each. In the social economy things are actu‐ ally far more simple, as just about all customers will share their experiences with their network (as of August 2011  Facebook users have an average of 130 friends) – and indirectly the rest of the world via major search engines like  Bing and Google! But the simplicity ends here as including social media in businesses profit strategies by no means is  easy, to succeed the majority of companies will have to make changes to their self understanding – their culture. In  the social economy only customer centric organisations will thrive, of the rest some will be tolerated but not ac‐ cepted by their customers.     About: Jens Gregersen  Monitor Social Media Activity  This article has demonstrated the consequences of the so‐ Connect via LinkedIn  cial economy in the interrelation between businesses and    their customers, and how this will be disrupted further in  I am passionate about turning  the years to come. It is beyond the scope of this article to  ideas into profitable consumer  cover in detail what is required for businesses to succeed in  and experience orientated  the social economy besides from the mention of the likely  businesses – being new market  need for structural and cultural changes across many or‐ entries, or new products in  ganisations, but one practical advice can be given.  existing markets.      With for example 750 million Facebook users (August 2011)  My track record includes e.g. the introduction of Paris  the reach and existence of social media is not news per se  Hilton celebrity branded products into 2,500+ shops in  but even though few businesses have social media monitor‐ 40+ countries worldwide; and the conversion of a  ing tools in place like BuzzMetrics, Radian6 etc., they are  business idea into the leading B2C e‐commerce in  blindly navigating the social media universe. Small and me‐ Denmark, Saxo.com – which consequently led to 33%  dium sized businesses with limited budgets should at the  lower retail prices on books nationwide.  very least use Google’s Alert function to stay updated on    the social media scene during the work of creating a cus‐ In a world clustered with products and services of little  tomer centric and experience orientated organisation. Rec‐ difference I develop long‐term competitive advantages  ommended article: Experience Economy: Paris Hilton Retail  based on consumer oriented strategies – an approach  Shop Case Study.  which I have implemented in diverse cultural markets    across Europe, the Middle East and Asia.      I am an experienced sales and marketing entrepreneur  with comprehensive consumer orientated strategic  planning and implementation skills.   COMMERCIALISING IDEAS/EN/17 AUGUST 2011/