230 likes | 363 Views
Social Media Adoption by the Australian Co-op sector. Co-operative Research Group The University of Sydney Business School & Macquarie University. Presentation Outline:. Research context: the Australian Co-op sector: Current challenges Foundations: Organisational adoption of social media
E N D
Social Media Adoption by the Australian Co-op sector Co-operative Research Group The University of Sydney Business School & Macquarie University
Presentation Outline: • Research context: the Australian Co-op sector: Current challenges • Foundations: Organisational adoption of social media • Research aims and objectives • Research method • Pilot project: Qualitative analysis of selected Co-op organisations • Preliminary Research findings • Using Social media to address the current challenges of the Australian Co-op sector • New challenges created by social media • Future research
Research context: The current state of play of the Australian Co-op sector The co-operative sector (Australia) • 1,600 co-operatives • 103 financial mutuals ($83 Billion combined total assets) • 13.5 million members (estimated, overlapping memberships) • $17 billion for top turnover 100 in 2011 • Sizeable examples of co-ops/mutuals • Credit Union Australia (Credit Union, $9 Billion assets) • Co-operative Bulk Handling Ltd. (Grain, $2.9 Billion revenue) • Murray Goulburn Co-operative (Dairy, $2.3 Billion revenue) • Capricorn Society Ltd. (Purchasing Co-op, $1 Billion revenue)
Research context: The current challenges of the Australian Co-op sector Challenges • Decline of Rochdale Co-operative Movement • Demutualisation of Producers Co-operatives • Problems with establishing a national umbrella organisation • Broad shift away from collective solutions since the 1990s • Emphasis on individualism • Focus of business education on non-co-op sector • Low public profile despite IYC 2012 (Australian Institute survey) • 79% of Australians members of co-op • 30% can name co-op/mutually owned enterprise • Only 16% believe they are members of one • Highlights ‘an opportunity or need for the sector to build a stronger public awareness of its prominence and importance’ (Australian Institute Survey, 12)
From Web 1.0 to Web 2.0 • Web 1.0 – static web pages, hyperlinks, customer feedback • Web 2.0 – new forms of engagement with customers and within organisations Categories of social networking applications Turban et al., 2011
Foundations: Social-media platforms • Facebook • Twitter • LinkedIn • Blogs • Wikis • Online forums • Google + • Enterprise social networks • Yammer Number of Facebook users grew 2010-12 from 431 to 901 million jeffbullas.com More than 1 million websites have integrated with Facebook in various ways The Huffington Post
Current research landscape Commercial companies NFPs Co-op organisations Government agencies Current research on Social media applications
Social media in the commercial sector A survey of Fortune 500 companies (Case and King, 2011) • Areas: business, marketing, brand promotion, communication, monitoring user collaboration and knowledge sharing. • Applications: • Creation of communities (Goodwin-Hones, 2003), • creation of virtual customer environments (Culnan et al, 2010), • spreading customer news, getting customer reviews, monitoring customer opinions (Gallaugher and Ransbotham, 2010) • Marketing, brand promotion, HR services (Case and King, 2011) • Knowledge Management (Grace 2009, Kang et al. 2010)
Social Media Application in the Australian NFP organisations Web 1.0 Based on the 2012 analysis of 595 Australian non profit organizations from a range of industries. Web 2.0
Social Media Application in the Australian NFP organisations The 2012 analysis of 595 Australian non profit organizations from a range of industries shows:
Foundations: Organisational adoption of Social-media Source: Gallaugher and Ransbotham, 2010
Foundations: Organisational adoption of Social-media • The Megaphone: Firm-Initiated Social Media Dialog used for: • Promotions, competitions, campaign management, distribution of time-sensitive information, brand positioning, recruitment of new customers & employees • The Magnet: Customer-initiated Social Media Dialog used to: • Capture customer feedback, enhance market research, augment customer service and foster innovation, display/share the interaction of a first with other customers. • The Monitor: Customer-to-customer Social Media Dialog • Social media provide opportunities for customers to interact with each other (independently). The Monitor activities enable the company to monitor, participate and even shift some customer-to-customer dialog.
An illustrative example: Starbucks Source: Gallaugher and Ransbotham, 2010
The “Megaphone” examples at Starbucks Source: Gallaugher and Ransbotham, 2010
The “Magnet” examples at Starbucks Source: Gallaugher and Ransbotham, 2010
The “Monitor” examples at Starbucks Source: Gallaugher and Ransbotham, 2010
Social media in the Australian Co-op sector: Research questions • What is the current level of use of social media in the Australian Co-op sector? • What are the factors that impede the uptake of social media within this sector? • What are the future opportunities for social media adoption? • What can we, applied researchers, do to enable propagation of good practices across the Australian and international Co-op sectors, in a systematic, research-informed manner?
Research method • A pilot project (Australian Co-op survey) with a social media component (currently in progress) • Selection of a sample of Co-op organisations from Australia with social-media presence • Qualitative analysis of: • Identification and analysis of current social media application from the customer (outside) perspective • Analysis of social media applications using the Megaphone/Magnet/Monitor model to establish the current level of social media maturity among the selected Co-ops Next steps: • A more comprehensive qualitative analysis of the Australian Co-ops • Research case-studies of the selected Australian co-ops/ • Presentation of results at the Co-op Research Group Symposium in November 2013.
Using Social media to address the current challenges of the Australian Co-op sector Role of social media: • Communicating the ‘Co-op Difference’ to members and potential members. • Building and maintaining a regional, state and/or national co-op network. • Enhancing member voice. • Building a sense of community. • Online purchasing. • Promotion of sales, events etc.
New challenges created by Social Media Some things we need to be aware of: • Privacy and security concerns • Data ownership • Management of different channels • Better integration between an organisation’s front-end (Social media) and back-end (operations) • Resources (including HR) • Strategy-driven applications • Continuous learning and innovation • The need to become more agile in customer interactions • Current research and practice focus on Social media in the Corporate/Government and NFP sectors – the Co-op sector is yet to be considered.