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May 18, 2010
Anne Deeter Gallaher and Marisa Corser of the Deeter Gallaher Group met with Ford’s Global Digital Communications Director Scott Monty at Ford Motor Company world headquarters in Dearborn, Michigan.
May 18, 2010
Anne Deeter Gallaher and Marisa Corser of the Deeter Gallaher Group met with Ford’s Global Digital Communications Director Scott Monty at Ford Motor Company world headquarters in Dearborn, Michigan.
May 3, 2010
by Anne Deeter Gallaher
One of the most valuable shifts in business communication is taking place on Twitter: a global audience can now learn from industry leaders and apply high-level advice in real time. At Amazon.com, there are 28,242 books written specifically on business strategy. Since it’s impossible to read and filter all that advice, there are competitive advantages to connecting with executives and learning from a primary source. And even more valuable to have access to a Fortune 10 executive’s insight. On March 31, Ford Motor Company CEO Alan Mulally joined members of his management team at the New York International Auto Show for 30 minutes on Twitter. Pictured with Digital Communications Director Scott Montyand fresh from co-chairing the prestigious China Development Forum (CDF) in Beijing, Mulally was available for conversation and questions. Named one of Barron’s World’s Greatest CEOs in March, Alan Mulally’s accessibility defines Ford’s corporate culture.
Understanding the value of first-person business knowledge, I sent a tweet focused on his business strategy at Ford: Describe your leadership style & how has it helped you make difficult decisions at Ford more palatable? In a few minutes, his reply to me appeared on Twitter: Focus on the customer, have a compelling vision, relentless implementation, great team. ^AM TY!
An executive with 198,000 employees worldwide, the 7th largest company in the United States and the 17th largest in the world, invited questions from interested people on Twitter. Wow! It’s a new communication model that levels the learning field. I would hope that Scott Monty was flooded with inquisitive tweets for his CEO. Every business student, small business owner, car dealer, and American taxpayer should be interested in the real-time replies from one of the brightest CEOs in the world.
Alan Mulally’s response is a business strategy lesson in 140 characters and is every bit as applicable to small business as it is to the Fortune 10.
Focus on the customer. Common sense? It doesn’t take an algorithm to understand what clients and customers need. But it does require a conversation with the customer. The American automotive industry knows that men and women from every culture want safe, SYNCed, energy-smart, fun-to-drive transportation. The result of Ford’s new obsessive focus on the customer is a litany of consumer and industry recognition for the Fusion, Focus, Transit Connect, Lincoln MKZ Hybrid, and the social media barnstormer—the Fiesta—with 50,000 hand raisers interested in the vehicle before it touched American soil. It’s a reminder to even the smallest business: Never lose track of why you exist, and who you really serve. Alan Mulally understands there is no such principle as Too big to fail or Too small to matter—and that applies to people as well as corporations.
Have a compelling vision. A quick search on YouTube uncovers the Boeing-turned-Ford exec’s passion and vision. His One Ford mantra is unmistakable, and his executive presence and congeniality nearly compel you to say: Where do I sign up? Mulally is laser-focused on restoring Ford to its global leader status. And yet, to reach that finish line, he realizes they can never take their eyes off the true enablers of this success—the consumers from Pittsburgh to Beijing. “It’s about bringing people together around the world and providing safe and efficient transportation for all. I believe that once people are together, they can share ideas and see that they have much more in common than they are different,” he beams in a video clip for The Second Mile on February 5, 2010.
This vision is redefining transportation and positioning Ford as a world leader in technology and innovation. Relentless implementation. Execution is critical. Arriving in 2006, Mulally stopped the music at Ford, leaving entire badges and brands without a chair. He leveraged the Blue Oval for the biggest home improvement loan in American history at $26 billion and committed to fair negotiation with the United Auto Workers. Despite near-crippling debt, the company unleashed its best innovators, engineers, and collaborators to bring it through the downturn, and without a cent of government funding. Unlike Columbus who chronicled his journey in two distinct diaries—one for his actual coordinates and time at sea and an altered version for the passengers to believe—Mulally operates with one transparent journal for the entire international corps. His strength of purpose is contagious and built on a deep faith in the endurance and success of American manufacturing.
Great team. Although the CEO is often acclaimed as singlehandedly turning around the Dearborn behemoth, the reality is that he needs passion equal to his purpose from every team player—the manufacturers, suppliers, dealers, engineers, technologists, marketers, and most importantly, the consumers. Acknowledging the responsibilities and risks ahead, he embraces the role of Coach, not Superhero. “It is an honor to serve,” Mulally says with all the trustworthiness of a Boy Scout. If the best CEOs combine “extreme personal humility with intense professional will,” then Ford’s captain is a Best Practices for every business man and woman.
There is a powerful business message in Alan Mulally’s 140 character tweet; and he shared it with the classroom of the future—the public timeline. “Nearly all men can stand the test of adversity, but if you really want to test a man’s character, give him power,” said Abraham Lincoln.
2008 and 2009 delivered unprecedented adversity to Ford and every corner of global manufacturing and enterprise, but the company’s profitable results in 2009 and the first months of 2010 showcase the tenacity, wisdom, and character of its chief executive and his team. The Ford strategy? You can find it in his tweet.
April 23, 2010
At this seminar for the Harrisburg Regional Chamber & CREDC Chamber Business Women group, Deeter Gallaher Group Owner/CEO Anne Deeter Gallaher discussed: 1.   Who should be using social media
Blogging, Tweeting & Friending PowerPoint Presentation.
March 18, 2010
The marketing communications toolbox is exploding, and social media is fast becoming a game changer for businesses of all sizes and industries. We work with clients who understand the value of powerful language and smart marketing; so we don’t have to spend time educating them on why they should stay current with technology and new media channels. But we’ve had many conversations with people, even communications professionals, who continue to ignore the information channels on the social web. Why? Here are 3 of the most common social media myths and excuses we hear: 1. Our customers aren’t using social media, and who cares if you’re drinking Starbucks anyway?
March 18, 2010
This is an example of a social web post written by Anne Deeter Gallaher for Marketing/Communications Consortium The Social CMO: Three Social Media Myths I Encounter. The piece also features Social Media Sites to Read and Learn From. Enjoy, and thank you for attending the event!
March 5, 2010
Are you tired of reading and hearing about Twitter? You’re bombarded by social media seminars. And now your clients have started asking whether their businesses should have a LinkedIn account, a Facebook fan page, a Twitter profile, or all of the above. (For a complete social media platform base, you’ll also need a blog, a YouTube account, Flickr, and Digg!) It’s time to conquer social media anxiety and join the conversation. Read more of the article at Social Net Daily. |
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