6 Social Media/Marketing Lessons from Richard Branson

Computers & Technology

  • Author Charles Nicholls
  • Published October 31, 2010
  • Word count 1,031

"Screw it, let’s do it," is how Sir Richard Branson described his approach to business at the ExactTarget Connections conference last week.

Branson, the adventuring entrepreneur and chairman of the Virgin group of companies, is a rare individual. He started Virgin Records in 1970, and now 40 years later, the Virgin group of companies has eight businesses generating more than $1billion per year. According to the Forbes 2009 list, he is the 261st richest person in the world, with an estimated net worth of US$3.9billion.

What’s different about Virgin is that it isn’t one company, or one idea, but a global brand with a distinct personality which spans retail, music, airlines, telecoms, media, drinks, energy, and even space tourism. Branson describes the Virgin companies as a keiretsu—a family of companies that form a tight-knit alliance to work toward each other’s mutual success. What unites them is Branson’s vision, drive, personality and the Virgin brand values shared by all members of the group.

There’s much to learn from Branson’s business strategy and his willingness to break new ground in just about everything he does. Here are a few insights that I picked up on during his keynote at the ExactTarget Connections conference:

  1. You don’t have to be a category leader to have a successful business.

"We’ve had a lot of fun taking on fat cat complacent business. What we’ve done is be the small guy, Yap Yapping at the big guys taking a small percentage of their market."

Small percentages add up.

"Virgin has gotten big by being small. I don’t think that any Virgin business has ever been the biggest in its sector. Being small has its advantages—the Virgin Record label was able to attract the Rolling Stones because they know that they wouldn’t be lost on a long list of bigger bands."

  1. Thinking, breathing, and acting like a customer is essential.

‘Customers figure large’ is Branson’s formula. In 1984, with no knowledge of the airline business other than from being a transatlantic airline passenger experiencing appalling service, he set out to create Virgin Atlantic.

"We had this crazy notion that we could do for the aviation business what we’d done for the record business. Banks dropped us like a hot potato, telling us that the last thing the world needed was another airline."

"But we had an advantage of not coming from the airline business. We didn’t know what we didn’t know. We were all fed up with flying airlines with grouchy staff. All we knew was from the customer’s perspective, and we set out to build a value for money proposition based on great service. We recruited staff that actually wanted to fly; fresh, lively and eager to have fun." This is a brand spirit celebrated in this Virgin America ad which reflects on the airlines creation, values and culture (visit http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6cM4EOeJzHA to view ad).

Virgin Atlantic set a new benchmark in transatlantic aviation with a string of firsts: the first ever seat-back entertainment, on board bar, and on board massage.

  1. Free advertising can be a company’s best promotional tool.

Virgin’s approach has been to build a distinctive brand largely on the back of free advertising and often with a sense of fun. Branson recalls how one day he received a phone call telling him that the ‘London Eye,’ a 440ft Ferris wheel in the heart of London—at the time sponsored by arch rival British Airways—was late in being erected. "I thought screw it, let’s do it, and within three hours we had an airship flying over central London with a banner, ‘BA can’t get it up.’ It generated millions of dollars in free publicity for us. I had a lot of fun putting Virgin Atlantic on the map."

Lots of digs at larger competitors can generate a lot of publicity. "The businesses I became closest to are the ones that, like a child, were getting bullied. Virgin Atlantic went through a lot of bullying from the bigger airlines, who went to extraordinary lengths to try to put us out of business. So, it was like having a daughter at school and people being nasty to her. It’s been wonderful to see that child grow into a lovely woman and see her flourish."

  1. Customers define your brand for you.

Branson echoed a theme of the Connections conference, that customers are defining brands through their conversations. "Today it’s harder to keep on top of these conversations. Conversations about our brand are happening everywhere, and with the internet as the great equalizer, it doesn’t matter if you know the brand intimately or if you’ve had just one bad experience—it will be heard."

But great customer service has always been defined by the opportunities presented when things go wrong. A Virgin America passenger, using onboard wifi, tweeted that he wasn’t happy that his meal hadn’t been delivered. The ground team picked up on it, contacted the aircraft, and found him his misplaced meal.

  1. Social media can absolutely drive sales.

Branson describes Virgin’s use of social media as, "We continue to approach social media with a healthy sense of fun."

He gave an example of a Twitter promotion for Virgin America, ‘$5 donated to KIPP Schools for every flight booked today,’ which resulted in the fourth highest sales day for the airline.

  1. Customer engagement is key.

Branson strives to set a culture of being fearless in engaging customers. "I’ve always enjoyed calling randomly selected, newly arrived Virgin passengers in one of our limos to say, ‘Hi, this is Richard Branson. I wanted to say thanks for flying with us and see how you’ve enjoyed the flight.’ On more than a few occasions there have been derisive comments like, ‘Yeah, right. I’m sure the real Richard Branson has nothing better to do. Who the hell are you?’"

Branson’s philosophy on starting businesses is very customer centric: "Get the product right, put a great brand on it, and then you’ll have a great success."

Learn more about SeeWhy at http://www.Seewhy.com

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