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23Dec/110

Altimeter: the average corporate Social Media Team consists of 11 members

Altimeter’s recent survey to 144 global national corporations with over 1000 employees has some interesting insights on how today’s social media teams structured.
They found a trend of four key groups within these teams:

  1. Leadership team, focused on leadership, vision, the overall program ROI, and driving business results.
  2. Business Unit Facing team, helping multiple business units get on board.
  3. Marketing Facing, focused on customer interaction, but shifting towards advocacy or enabling customers to respond to each other.
  4. Program Management: developers and analysts who conduct reporting and brand monitoring programs.

Data: Composition of a Corporate Social Media Team

Further reading:

12Nov/100

Social Media decision maker: are you thinking long term?

In a 27-page report Career Path of the Corporate Social Strategist: Be Proactive or Become Social Media Help Desk, web strategist Jeremiah Owyang explores the two possible career paths for the social media decision maker in a company (he calls them Social Strategists, but you might just as well think of them as Conversation Managers).
In short:

  • Most Social Strategists and their programs lack maturity, with only 23% of Social Strategists having a formalized program with long-term direction.
  • They are overwhelmed with six major challenges – with little relief in sight:
    1. Resistance from internal culture,
    2. Measuring ROI,
    3. Lack of resources,
    4. An ever-changing technology space,
    5. Resentment and envy of the role,
    6. A looming increase in business demands.

With demands just about to increase, they have two possible career paths:

  1. Fall behind in requests from vocal customers and internal business units, thereby becoming reactive which we call the “Social Media Help Desk”, or
  2. Develop a proactive program that gets ahead of the demands, and operate from a strategic planning position.


Further reading: