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Transcript: Sylvia Marino - Edmunds.com
Aaron Strout:
I’d like to introduce today’s special guest. We have Sylvia Marino. Sylvia is the Executive Director for
Community Operations at Edmunds.com.
Welcome, Sylvia.
Sylvia Marino:
Thank you very much.
Aaron Strout:
So, Sylvia, let’s jump in.
You’ve got a wonderful background.
You’ve actually been in community I think a lot longer than most
people. According to your bio I think
you’ve been at Edmunds since 1997, and what impressed me the most was before
that it said you were actually doing online community consulting for some
fairly well known companies, like Intuit.
Can you give us a little bit of your background, how you came into this
space and what’s kept you at it all these years?
Sylvia Marino:
Absolutely. I
actually started in the early ‘90s as a member of one of the original online
communities from The WELL, out of the dial-up bulletin board systems, and went
to work for one of their software spin-offs, Well Engaged, on the software side
for community applications, and came to meet Edmunds through that, as Edmunds
was one of the first customers. And just
over the course of the years had been a friend and advisor to Edmunds.com
before becoming a full-time employee, and during that time was doing some
consulting work for other outfits, such as the Wall Street Journal and Intuit QuickBooks and KB Toys and some
others.
So having consumers talk about, you know, a product or
services on a Web site and brands has been something that I’ve been doing for
now well over a decade. But I would have
to say that Edmunds.com had a very strong vision. When I met their chairman and founder back in
1996 he was very clear about his mission, which was to allow consumers to
discuss the types of deals that they were seeing in their car-buying experiences,
to share their experiences with each other, and to really provide a transparent
online area for community exchange and community dialogue, and has really
stayed true to that original community mission regarding empowering the
automotive consumer.
Aaron Strout:
So to that end, we did a previous podcast with you at our
Community 2.0 event, which now belongs to IAR.
But you were kind enough to come and be a speaker at the event, and one
of the things that you talked about that really, I still to this day I think I
mentioned it at the Web Guild, Web 2.0 event, when we bumped into each other,
you talk about the importance on that interview, and I’ve heard some other
interviews with you, about user-generated content or user reviews being stacked
up against expert reviews. And I still
point people to that podcast because it’s such a great explanation of the
importance of that. Can you talk a
little bit about how you guys do that and why you see the value of that and how
your users see the value of putting user reviews against expert reviews?
Sylvia Marino:
Oh, absolutely. You
know, when we think about car buying we think of any type of purchase that
we’re making. You always want to go to
the expert and you also want to know what your neighbors or peers think about
the purchase. You look for different
opinions. And what has become very
important to us is at Edmunds we have really three types of content; we have
our data, we have our expert or editorial content from our rather large
editorial resource, and then we have our large online community. So when you go to make a car buying decision
and you’re researching vehicles it’s so important to know what the data says
and it’s important to know what the experts think, and then to look at what the
consumers – what your fellow consumers are thinking and what their experiences
have been. It really provides a full,
well-rounded experience.
And what we see out there so often is that you have to go to
one Web site to get the expert opinion, and then you have to go to another Web
site to get the consumer opinion, and then perhaps yet another Web site to go
get the data. So by providing this in
one easy to use site it really does provide the consumer with everything that
they’re looking for in that one space.
Aaron Strout:
Now I think one of the things too that you’ve mentioned is
because of the fact that the experts – one of the examples I want to say was
like a minivan – and maybe I was just having this conversation with
someone. Just because a minivan may be
right for me, maybe it’s not right for my friend that has one child, and so I
think because of the fact that it does that it really has an ability for people
to get a much better, more well-rounded view of things, and I think obviously
this is the power of communities.
Sylvia Marino:
Sure. You know, as
deep as our editors have this automotive expertise, every single family and
everyone’s needs are going to be a little bit different. So what you do is you can look at well what
do the editors think.
And we actually have launched over the past year an Edmunds
road test blog, where our team of editors take out vehicles that we have in our
fleet for testing, and they apply it to their everyday lives. So you might find one day that Kelly, with
her kids, is driving a particular minivan, and she’ll talk about her
experiences, “It was easy getting kids in and out. It was great for hauling the Girl Scout
cookies.” And for somebody else you might
find that they took the minivan and they went on a long road trip, and you get
their everyday experiences, but from that authoritative expert point of view.
And at the same time you can start to read across the
consumer reviews and in the forums to see, you know, how does this vehicle
perform for somebody else’s family after three months, after six months, after
12 months. And that’s just something
that you’re not going to get in a test drive.
Aaron Strout:
The long tale I
guess, so to speak.
Sylvia Marino:
Absolute long
tale. Absolute long tale.
Aaron Strout:
So talk a little bit about – this is the good side of it,
what are some of the challenges that you face?
Obviously introducing the third party, the user-generated reviews I’m
sure does get challenging. I know beyond
the expletives or the sort of nonsense that people put up there, what are some
of the things that you all face in terms of day-to-day issues?
Sylvia Marino:
You know, because we’ve been doing this for so long we
almost forget about what some of the early fears and challenges were. Not to say that we don’t have them, but
they’ve just become so second nature.
One, because we’ve always had a commitment to quality, we read all new
content on a daily basis. If you click
on a discussion that says it’s going to be about the 2008 Honda Accord, it will
be about the 2008 Honda Accord, because if our members go off topic, you know,
we take those posts and we move them to the appropriate discussion.
So a lot of it has to do with the community management, that
we look at the content, we look at where it’s been placed, make sure it’s in
the right place so that people clicking into it are getting exactly what they
expected, and people who are looking to ask a question are having it asked in
the right place.
So that said, because we’ve been doing that since 1996 there
is a great example set there for new users coming in. You know, we kind of set the bar, so when
that new person comes in and they’re reading, they know by example, if they
need to post a question or they’re going to post a review, there’s an example
already set as far as how to do that.
Aaron Strout:
That’s wonderful.
Thank you for throwing that out there.
I guess building on that a little bit, because you’ve been doing this
for such a long time, really well beyond most people who are in the community
or social media space, starting with your experience at The WELL, could you
share some of your best practices? One
of the things that we do on this podcast series is we do try to talk to people
that have either been thinking about writing about this space for a long time
or actual business practitioners that have lived it with the idea of imparting
two people, trying to start up a community, or people that are actively
managing their communities, how do they do it best? How do the best community practitioners do it
these days?
Sylvia Marino:
Well, we spend a lot of time listening to our users. You know, we make mistakes; we’re going to
put in a new feature that we think is just going to be perfect, and you know,
that the community is going not love, and they absolutely hate it. And we have to kind of, you know, listen,
take it back out, and do a retry. So we
do spend a lot of time listening to what their needs are; where they’re having
difficulty finding information; if we do a redesign, how to do it better; if
they’re looking for a new tool or a new feature, getting very clear
understanding of what it is they want and why.
So there’s a great deal that we actively listen to and try
and act upon, and we do that both in our customer support, whether it’s for the
entire Web site experience, and we also do it actively within each community
area regarding the users who are key to providing input, as well as to looking
at metrics to those who aren’t posting, who aren’t contributing content. We will look at padding. We will look at the metrics as to why are
people dropping out of that process and trying to maybe identify where we might
be losing someone who did want to ask a question or provide an answer and making
sure that we’re actively looking at the user experience and what it is that
potential community member or that active community member is looking for.
Aaron Strout:
So it sounds like you guys are doing all the right things,
and for many companies this would be a dream come true because I think people
are starting to understand the power of community and understanding the power
of listening and really collaborating with their customers and partners to get
it. Why did they get it? What was that light that went off for them 10
years ago that said, “Guys, this is really important. We need to be listening to that”? Was there a particular background or a moment
or, you know, someone that they followed that really made that light
click? You know, is that something
that’s repeatable for some of the folks that are listening to share with their
management to get them to really see the light in terms of the power of community?
Sylvia Marino:
You know, I have to say it was our chairman, Peter Steinlauf. From day one he said – I guarantee you, this
is what people want to do. They walk
over to their neighbor and they say, “So how do you like your new car?” They may not be willing to say, “So what did
you pay for it,” but every person who’s thinking about going to the dealership
would love to know what the ten people before them paid. They want that transparency. So for us it really came from our founder and
his vision of just saying, “There needs to be transparency in the
marketplace. Consumers want to, they
already do, they do it in their everyday lives, they do it at the coffee shop,
they do it wherever they’re socializing they are asking peoples’ opinions and
advice. So if you’re going to provide
information online about such a major purchase decision it almost became very
common sense that you should be providing them with a place to have dialogue
about it as well.
Aaron Strout:
If only everyone could be so fortunate. That’s great.
So I have one last question for you, and it’s more of a
personal nature, but I like to ask a lot of the folks that I interview if you
had one blog that you could read and it was one blog only – I know that’s a
tough one because there are so many good ones out there- whose blog would it be
and why?
Sylvia Marino:
Well, you know, of course, because people from my company
might be listening, I have to say our professional automotive blogs, whether it
be Auto Observer or Straight Line or Carl on Cars or Green Car Advisor. I mean that’s almost too easy.
So, you know, I was just thinking, when I go to read blogs
on a daily basis, whether I read them for news or entertainment, I really look
at the ones that almost poke fun at the industry. They poke fun at us, people in high tech,
people who’ve been doing it for a long time, where you have days where you think,
“I’ve invented it all” or “I’ve invented something new and it’s really more of
just an improvement on the evolution of people and technology and how we use
information.”
So I really like Fake Steve, the blog where you have the
gentleman impersonating Steve Jobs. I
just think it’s hilarious and it pokes fun at us as an industry in high tech
and everything that we do. So that’s the
one that makes me laugh every single day.
Aaron Strout:
That’s great. And I
have to admit, I’m always amazed at how much of a phenomena that has become and
how many people like the fake Steve Jobs blog and how many people sort of
follow that, so you’re not alone in that regard.
Sylvia Marino:
Well, you know when you read it and you say, “Gosh, I wish I
had thought of this. I wish I could be
this funny,” that’s when you know it’s a great blog, and he certainly does a
great job with it.
Aaron Strout:
It is very clever.
Well, Sylvia, we are just about out of time, so I wanted to thank you
for your time today and I really appreciate the insights you were able to
share.
Sylvia Marino:
Thank you very
much for having me.
Aaron Strout:
It’s our pleasure. And so we look forward to having more
conversations with you in the future.
Sylvia Marino:
Absolutely. Thank you very much.
Fri, Feb 08 2008
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