Maria Ogneva

Maria Ogneva

Yammer
I'm the Head of Community for Yammer, the enterprise social network used by 100,000 organizations, including more than 80% of the Fortune 500. At Yammer, she is in charge of social media and community programs, fostering internal and external education and engagement. You can follow her on Twitter at @themaria or on her blog, and Yammer at @yammer and company blog.
  • 0 comments 1,229 reads
    Posted on 2011-02-16

    LEADING THOUGHTS Social media is great at keeping you in touch with the people you know. It’s extremely powerful to be able to meet someone online and punctuate it with a meeting offline. It’s just as powerful when you meet offline and nurture the relationship online until you meet again.

    Another thing that makes social media really work is the ability to grow your network, meet like-minded individuals and engage in thoughtful conversations with them. The more you can do that, the more people will learn about you, and the more you can help others, the more people will want to work with you and…. Ready? Buy from you!

    We’ve talked...

  • 0 comments 1,292 reads
    Posted on 2011-02-04

    LEADING THOUGHTS I was working on a blogpost the other day, talking about humanness in corporate social media, as well as the phenomenon of the professional and personal worlds blending. I knew that somewhere, a long time ago, I came across someone’s personal anecdote about receiving more compassion in a service role after adding a photo with kids to social media avatars. For the life of me, I couldn’t think of who said that, about what...

  • 0 comments 840 reads
    Posted on 2011-02-03

    LEADING THOUGHTS It’s almost impossible to be effective in social media without adding a personal touch. The only reason I say “almost impossible” is because I don’t believe in absolutes and want to leave the door just slightly ajar for someone to come and prove me wrong. That being said, I haven’t observed many people who can do social media successfully and remain completely anonymous. Below are some reasons why this is the case.

  • 1 comments 1,396 reads
    Posted on 2011-01-30

    LEADING THOUGHTS This post has been twirling around in my head, and catalyzed by all many content-related conversations from the dinner with the Content Rules team. I think often we, content creators, talk about content creation, with the assumption that we got past the first question “The Why”, advancing to the next question, “The How”. Then I started to think about our audience — our end users, friends, solution partners — and where they are on the spectrum. Since the cardinal rule of content is to...

  • 0 comments 1,129 reads
    Posted on 2011-01-26

    LEADING THOUGHTS

    It used to be that branding was more or less straightforward. Mind you, it was never easy — one of my favorite marketing professors from undergrad used to say “A good Brand is like your friend; you can describe what your friend is like to another friend”. The more concisely you can convey your purpose, vision, meaning, and differentiation, the better job you have done at branding yourself. But with social media, just because you as the company say something about your product, does not make people run out and purchase it.

  • 0 comments 1,150 reads
    Posted on 2011-01-21

    LEADING THOUGHTS There are many types of communities: there are user forums and more permanent communities – some “walled” and some open. Blogs are absolutely living, breathing communities, where comment discussions are oftentimes more valuable than the content itself. There are also ad-hoc communities that result from people coming together to discuss something — picture a “tweetchat” that comes together to discuss something. These are all communities, and although they are different in formation process, duration, barriers to entry (signup, pay wall, professional...

  • 0 comments 1,002 reads
    Posted on 2011-01-11

    I spent the past couple of days in Las Vegas for CES, and even though consumer electronics is not my focus, it has an increasingly new media bend to it.  As such, it was great to see my old industry friends and meet new ones. I found myself having a series of conversations about where social media is heading. It’s been on my mind quite a bit lately, and my latest thoughts and conversations are what inspired this post.

    As social media moves out of the experimental stage and into that of business plans and financial commitments, and as the industry matures, we need a better plan than just throwing some tweets into the “social river”. I think the idea of a social business...

  • 0 comments 1,524 reads
    Posted on 2010-12-31

    LEADING THOUGHTS Earlier this week, we discussed the importance of both, increased awareness and an excellent customer experience, to your ability to get and retain customers, as well as increase trial, purchase and repurchase rates. We also discussed the ways in which social...

  • 0 comments 1,471 reads
    Posted on 2010-12-28

    LEADING THOUGHTS Welcome back! Last week, we wrote about the importance of goal setting for your engagement strategy, as it relates to social media in this particular example. What you do on the social web, just like any other business activity, can’t be haphazard. Social media is fun and exciting, and I fully understand the temptation of doing it for the sake of doing it. However, it’s a business activity, and you should approach it as such, with a plan for execution and measurement, metrics appropriate for your goals, and maybe even its...

  • 0 comments 1,185 reads
    Posted on 2010-12-23

    LEADING THOUGHTS In a recent post, we explored a parallel between social media and a giant cocktail party. To make that post more actionable for you, our readers, I want to expand a bit on goal setting in your overall engagement strategy, with a special emphasis on social media. Listening and engagement are a great first step, but you need to do it with an end goal in mind. Daily observations and questions I receive make me think that this is where most...