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Tag Archives: malaysia

My 1000 Awesome Things: Representing Your Country

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September 18, 2011

| Jan Wong

In case you’re wondering – this site also reveals part of my happenings in life, injecting a little bit more flavour to the site as a whole; something lighter than the usual information dosage, especially for the weekend :)

opening ceremony of igem 2011 @ KLCC

A week ago I was given the privilege to represent my country Malaysia as a delegate to the International Greentech & Eco Products Exhibition to share about how social media can be used to increase the level of awareness and participation among consumers in the green industry held at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre hosted by the Ministry of Energy, Green Technology and Water of Malaysia.

a picture with the other Asian delegates

It was an awesome (yet scary) opportunity as the sharing session was done among international delegates all over Asia, representing their country’s green ministry including Singapore, Thailand, Taiwan, Cambodia, Vietnam, Pakistan, Japan, Fiji, India and more.

What can I say about this but awesome?

AWESOME!

1000 Awesome Things is initiated by Neil Pasricha and I’m simply sharing my own 1000 awesome things to remind myself of how awesome life can be if we pay attention to the small yet awesome things in life.
What is that awesome thing that happened in your life today?

 Personal |  1000 awesome things, malaysia |  1 Comment

Brand Focus #9: Mobile and Facebook Integration for Your #SocialMedia Marketing Campaign [Carrefour Malaysia]

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September 17, 2011

| Jan Wong

In conjunction with one of Malaysia’s largest festive celebration the Hari Raya, Carrefour Malaysia launched an interesting marketing campaign using a combination of a free downloadable mobile app from the Apple AppStore and Facebook.

wholah campaign by carrefour malaysia

carrefour malaysia wholah social media marketing campaignThe app ‘Wholah’ requires the player to identify as many Facebook friends within 60 seconds to win different prizes including a can of Coke on their first play or subsequently a packet of Twisties or Oreos, all redeemable from any Carrefour outlet with no strings attached. To increase gameplay, the app also gave out in-game badges on different occasions.

If that isn’t enough, the campaign built towards a Tweetup, bringing the consumers together for a festive celebration together with the brand Carrefour.

3 Reasons Why Integration Matters for Your Next Social Media Marketing Campaign

#1: It Goes Beyond A Contest

Everyone can run a contest on social media platforms such as Facebook but not many can integrate a content into their marketing objective / brand message. The Wholah campaign took advantage of a festive season – also a season where shoppers flood hypermarkets to stock up for the festivity. A simple prize redemption method such as the requirement for players to come by and collect may in turn generate sales as consumers may just end up shopping at Carrefour since they’re already there.

#2: An Opportunity to Exercise the ‘Human’ in the Brand

Hari Raya celebrates the conclusion of the fasting month for Muslims and it is often celebrated with your family members. It is a time where children seek forgiveness from their parents and to celebrate as a family with great food. Using this fundamental concept, Carrefour became human by organizing a Raya Tweetup as a follow-up to the campaign, bringing the spirit of togetherness as the nation celebrates this joyous season.

#3: Easily Measureable

One of the main challenges businesses face when running marketing campaigns using social media is the ability to measure its effectiveness and conversion rates. Sure, there are tools out there to do the math but most of them comes back with an estimated figure. By having your social media marketing campaign tied to a offline business operation (such as the redemption of prizes), it will allow your business to determine the effectiveness of the campaign from the redemption rate – leading to other more accurate estimations on the increase of sales figures during the promotional period.

If you’re curious, check out the campaign’s microsite here

What do you think of the Wholah campaign? In what areas Carrefour Malaysia have succeeded / failed?

 Insights, Marketing, Social Media |  brand focus, facebook, iphone, malaysia, mobile, online, social media, trend, web 2.0 |  2 Comments

The Lelong.my E-Commerce Fair 2011 and A Social Media Experiment

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September 1, 2011

| Jan Wong

The last couple of weeks has been nothing but busy, followed by a major downtime of my site caused by some rather irritating server problems but I’m glad that they are all sorted out now and I can finally go back to my blogging routine.

team managing the e-commerce fair

I recently launched an event for a client (Lelong.my) which is also Malaysia’s first E-Commerce Fair held at one of the busiest exhibition centres in Malaysia – the Mid Valley Exhibition Centre. The event lasted for 3 days over the weekend with the main objective to highlight the E-Commerce industry in Malaysia and to educate consumers on the convenience of E-Commerce.

Before you go about wondering why an event of such nature is required, consumers in Malaysia generally are not very comfortable with online purchases and the limitation of payment services makes things worse. However the E-Commerce scene in Malaysia is slowly picking up over the recent years which led to Lelong.my’s decision in bringing the online experience offline for all to see.

paypal at lelong e-commerce fair

The event brought online retail businesses from electronics, books, gadgets, fashion apparels, home appliances and etc together along with various support industries such as payment gateway giant – PayPal, web hosting providers, shopping cart solutions and more. By doing so, consumers are now able to find out more about such services and get started right there and then, ultimately mass educating many who were clueless about e-commerce.

e commerce talks at e commerce fair

As a whole, the event attracted over 60,000 visitors throughout the 3-day event with over a million impressions online across various platforms including blogs, Facebook updates and tweets plus complementary press write-ups on several local newspapers.

A Social Experiment at the Event

Being myself, I thought it would be great to put to see if social media is effective for a corporate consumer event in Malaysia. A part from the usual online promotional campaigns using Facebook (which was well received), I tested the usage of Twitter and Foursquare, two platforms that aren’t as big as Facebook in Malaysia.

The experiment is simple and it comes in 2 different parts:

Part 1: Using Foursquare to target existing Foursquare users.

A new venue is created on Foursquare prior to the event (without any specials) just to test the popularity of checking in. The results?

simple foursquare experimentIt didn’t cook up a storm but the results are rather interesting. The newly created venue managed to bring in 24 check-ins (with a mayor crowned) and 1 tip from a visitor within the 3-days as compared to the venue’s other check-ins (Hall 1, Hall 2 and Hall 3) which have been created at least a year ago.

This suggests that visitors are more inclined to check-in to an event compared to a location (like the exhibition centre) even when there are no specials to be given away.

Part 2: Using Twitter’s location based search to target tweeps within the area.

We closely monitored users that were checking in to the Mid Valley Megamall and those that are tweeting within the vicinity of the venue and sent them an invitation to check out the e-commerce fair at the exhibition centre.

tweeting at the e commerce fair

While the temporary Twitter handle only received a handful of followers, the invitation sparked conversations among interested tweeps and we were able to share the event with many others.

What does this mean for other corporate consumer events in Malaysia?

  1. Facebook reaches the consumers at a larger scale in Malaysia as compared to other social platforms
  2. Foursquare specials have the potential to be an attraction or incentive for visitors to come by (or just to check-in)
  3. Twitter is a good tool to create conversations, create interest and responding to feedbacks
  4. Twitter’s location based search allows you to capitalize on the crowd that is already in the vicinity. You just need to give them a reason to come by.
  5. You should not rely on one social platform alone. Consider other platforms to reach out to other pockets of consumers as each tool have their individual strengths and audiences.

What are your thoughts on utilizing social media as part of an event’s marketing mix? Any ideas to spice things up?

Note that the experiments were done on an as-it-is basis with its conclusions drawn from a personal perspective only.

 Personal, Projects |  business owners, entrepreneurs, experiment, malaysia, next generation, online |  Comment

4 Common Excuses in Adopting E-Commerce for Your Business in Malaysia. Are You One Of Them?

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August 11, 2011

| Jan Wong

ecommerce excuses

#1: “I Don’t Have the Technical Skills”

This is perhaps the most common excuse of all – the limitation of the necessary skills / knowledge and you’re right to say that technical skills are required… 5 years ago. In actual fact, starting an E-Commerce site today is so easy that you hardly need any technical knowledge at all! For instance, you can simply setup a blog using platforms such as WordPress or Blogger. Platforms such as WordPress makes it so easy even for beginners as it only takes minutes to get your site up and running!

#2: “I Don’t Have the Time”

Believe it or not, E-Commerce saves you even more time. The reason is simple – the moment your product is online, the purchasing process becomes automated. You’ll no longer need to physically monitor and track individual orders as the system does it for you. Your job will just be revolving around fulfilling that order. Even better if you’re selling electronic products such as e-books as your job ends at setting it up.

#3: “It Doesn’t Suit My Product / Service”

Recent reports in Malaysia revealed that RM1.8 billion was spent in year 2010 online, which indicates the growth and the amount of people that are already buying online. Whether it is the payment of bills, buying of books, electronic goods or fashion related items, consumers today are looking for that convenience in their busy lives and E-Commerce is just the right solution for them. You just need to get your online service across to them.

#4: “I’ve Tried and It Didn’t Work”

Are you sure? Are you VERY sure? List down ALL the things you’ve done and identify what you have not done or what else you could’ve done better. This time, put down an action plan and EXECUTE them. Most E-Commerce sites fail because business owners think that it’ll generate revenue automatically, in which they’re wrong. Just like a conventional business, E-Commerce also requires dedication and commitment to make it work.

Remember, technology has changed the way we communicate and do business today. The question is, are you ready to drop these excuses and make a change for your business?

What other excuses have you come across so far? I’d love to hear them too!

 Technology |  e-commerce, malaysia, web 2.0 |  Comment

Brand Focus #6: The Power of a Common Cause Using #SocialMedia

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July 12, 2011

| Jan Wong

You may have heard of many stories on how powerful social media platforms are to drive causes such as the Pepsi Refresh Project that rewards individuals with refreshing ideas or the Fair Tweets campaign by Ben & Jerry’s. What do they all have in common? 1. A great cause 2. An innovative idea and 3. Huge participation that led to success.

While there isn’t a success formula that you can reproduce, the one thing that stands among all successful marketing campaigns or causes is that there is something for others to talk about – a common passion, a common interest, a common curiosity or even a common anger like the recent lashings against designer brand Versace.

Having that said, it is not the level of innovation that draws people together (although it contributes to its success) but the level of the common ground established.

The Power of a Identifying a Common Goal / Cause on Social Media

A community is a powerful ‘being’, be it offline or online and today’s social media networks makes it so easy for one to start their own community. It is no wonder why businesses jump unto the bandwagon almost immediately as they recognize the need and the power of having their very own community.

It was all over the news – Malaysia, the country I live in became famous over the weekend as it was broadcasted globally due to a recent event named Bersih (clean) which involved a peaceful rally in the heart of Kuala Lumpur demanding for a fair and clean upcoming election. You may have only heard about it and perhaps are aware of what happened during the rally but what caught my interest most was how the entire cause was promoted heavily over social media networks such as Facebook and Twitter weeks before.

spreading a cause using social media

You’ll realize that the cause not only drew close to 160,000 fans but people also spread the cause willingly because it was something they can relate and resonate with, to the extend that they opted to place a badge on their display pictures (as seen in the screen shot above) to indicate their support.

What happened on Twitter? Well, you can simply search the hashtag #bersih to find out for yourself. All I can say is that the tweets flew by so quickly that I can’t even read them (and I thought I was well trained on #blogchat).

On top of that, Malaysians in other countries such as Taiwan, Melbourne and Singapore also ‘participated’ in the rally by gathering where they’re at to show their support. The medium of communication? Social media. Live updates on Facebook, Twitter and even recorded videos on YouTube.

From a business viewpoint, that is definitely a success story as word-of-mouth has taken its course and in this case, internationally.

What is it in your cause that causes others to resonate?

This is the question you should be asking yourself whatever your cause is, profit or not.

What makes others passionate about the cause? What is it that causes others to feel the same? Could it be empathy? Could it be anger? Could it be pride? Could it be fun?

Have that answered, then all that’s left is to identify the right communication medium to spread the word.

Is there a specific cause that strikes you the most? What is it that draws you to it?

 Branding, Insights, Marketing, Social Media |  blogs, facebook, malaysia, social media, twitter, web 2.0 |  Comment

Brand Focus #5: Groupon in Malaysia – Friend or Foe for Your Business?

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July 5, 2011

| Jan Wong

will groupon help businesses grow?It has been a couple of months now since Groupon officially came into Malaysia by acquiring GroupsMore.com and many businesses have hopped unto what I call the Groupon hype – a similar scene happening around the world. Businesses go on Groupon for marketing purposes, to draw crowd or bargain hunters to their store / outlet and hopefully translates into future sales (click here if you’ve never heard of Groupon before).

I managed to talk to two different business owners recently and we somehow got to the topic of Groupon and it would seem that they both have been badly ‘pinched’ by Groupon.

Initial Observation: Groupon As a Foe

1. Their business actually experienced losses. Groupon deals attracts the crowd, that’s for sure. If your products already have low margins to begin with, you may experience losses – especially when the crowd pours in for your awesome deal.

2. Their business cannot cope with the crowd. So you’ve got a deal up and you’re fully booked for the whole of next month – but you do not have the resources and the capacity to manage each and every customer. Mismanagement may turn away customers for good and if you’re planning to invest into more manpower and equipment, you better have the margins well calculated because…

3. Your existing customers (that may not be on Groupon) will also want discounts because of the awesome deal you’re already giving to others.

4. On top of that, the customer retention rate is said to be very low, at about 5% – 10% and in some cases it still does not make up to the ideal margin.

While the above may not be true for every business out there, many have experienced the negative affect of Groupon which led me to think – is Groupon really that bad of a business / marketing model to adopt?

My answer is: no.

7 Tips on How to Maximize Groupon for Your Business

#1: Know Your Margins

Understand this before proceeding: while every business can use Groupon, not every business should use Groupon. The reason is simple – if your business operates on very low profit margins, you’ll definitely end up with a loss – especially if you’re a small business without any marketing budget set aside. Know how much of a margin you’re able to spare (and survive), even if there’s a large crowd. Set the group discount rate at a level in which you’re comfortable at and yet remain attractive.

#2: Know Your Business Operations

This applies best to the service industries. Know when are your peak and off-peak seasons or timings in a day. ‘Sell’ your off-peaks cheaper in return for crowd. This is where Groupon can truly shine – put in terms and conditions specifying that the offer / deal will only work during specific timing of a day (e.g. 3-5pm) to boost sales rather than not making any sale during the off-peak hours.

#3: Never Give in Quality for Quantity

Use the crowd to your advantage – show them what you’re able to offer even when you’re under pressure. Whether it is customer service or food preparation, make sure you’re showing your customers the best you can offer. This is the time to give them a reason to come back for more!

#4: Build Your Database – Engage

Take this opportunity to build your database by engaging with your customers individually. Talk to them, get them to subscribe to your newsletter, ‘like’ you Facebook page, ‘follow’ your Twitter handle, sign-up for a loyalty programme, participate in a contest or even to write a testimonial for you. In other words, do not let them leave without leaving you with something valuable for your business. On top of that…

#5: Follow-up Offers

Don’t let them leave empty handed! Give them something in return to invite them to come back for more. Something along the lines of “bring a friend on your next visit to enjoy a similar treat” can do wonders. Retention rates are low because businesses do not give the customers sufficient reasons to stay. So why let them leave empty handed?

#6: Make The News

Make use of the crowd to spread the news! Snap pictures, tweet away, launch a Foursquare special and create buzz across existing social media platforms. Customers are drawn to crowd and if you are already attracting one, let them know you have one!

#7: Encourage Feedback

This is the most important of all – always ask for feedback from your customers so that you’ll know what went wrong / right to do better in your next Groupon deal. Offer as many feedback options as possible – through Twitter, Facebook, contact forms or emails and be sure to respond to everyone of them positively.

Have you used Groupon for your business? How did it work out for you? How else do you think Groupon can benefit businesses?

 Insights, Marketing, Social Media |  brand focus, business owners, crm, entrepreneurs, groupon, malaysia, social media, trend |  2 Comments

Brand Focus #4: Using #SocialMedia for an Offline #Marketing Campaign

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June 28, 2011

| Jan Wong

So I was heading to Digital Mall a week ago and this caught my attention:

@the_officeguy spotted working outdoors

The guy was dressed in working attire, complete with a tie, in a pair of orange boots sitting by the pavement by a busy road. I moved on since I initially thought it was some flyer distribution gimmick but there were similar guys situated all around the area. They were pretty difficult to miss and I was totally intrigued with what’s the entire concept all about. I spotted the Twitter handle @The_OfficeGuy and decided to look him up.

the_officeguy twitter profileSo, the Twitter profile and the timeline did not say much about him. I dropped him a @mention and he introduced himself the same as in his profile. That made me wonder – if this is supposedly a promotional campaign (and I was pretty sure it is), why isn’t he promoting a single bit on the product / service? After observing the timeline for about a week now, @The_OfficeGuy is all about running contests and replying @mentions.

At this stage, I was determined to uncover this ‘mystery’ of @The_OfficeGuy. After several searches I found that it is actually a campaign by Microsoft – promoting their cloud solutions (that’s why the cloud is there) such as Office 365.

@The_OfficeGuy is related to Microsoft cloud solutions

3 Things We Can Learn from This Campaign

#1: Curiosity drives conversations

It is a good idea to use social media platforms to drive conversations for your offline promotional campaigns. The reason is simple: you get people talking – especially if the campaign actually DO drive conversations! Why not bring the conversations online in which you too, can respond to them?

#2: You put a face to your campaign

Microsoft managed to put a ‘face’ and a real-life scenario to its cloud solutions. This way, the promotion takes a more human and conversational approach without being in-your-face. Consumers had it enough when it comes to blatant advertising.

#3: Provide a reason to follow you

Here’s where I think @The_OfficeGuy should have done better. The campaign created curiosity and people (with Twitter) naturally began engaging with them but it would seem that not many decided to follow him. Why? I came up with 3 reasons:

1. People somewhat know that this IS a campaign. So why follow an advertisement channel?
2. All it does is to talk, talk and talk. What can I get out of listening to his conversations with others?
3. (Referring to the Twitter profile) What value can I get out of the misadventures of someone?

I can’t argue it’s capabilities in drawing curiosity and responses but if you can’t keep the consumers, you’re merely a shopfront display. It may be more effective if  there is a balance between the tweets – engagement vs providing value. You do not need to sell your product, but cleverly picking out its benefits and usage in an educational tone will do better.

Bonus: This works great with local businesses

There’s no need for expensive print advertisements. If your business has a targeted audience in a specific geographical area or even with limited budget, you may want to consider narrowing your promotional focus such as Microsoft. Concentrate on one location to build visibility and utilize social media platforms for engagement to take place. Your business may be the next talk of the town!

What do you think about the campaign? Are there areas that you think they’ve done well? Is there anything lacking?

 Branding, Insights, Marketing, Social Media |  brand focus, malaysia, microsoft, social media |  2 Comments

Brand Focus #3: The One Thing That Should NOT Happen on #SocialMedia for Your Business

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June 23, 2011

| Jan Wong

We all know how social media spreads both the good and bad and your business should be careful on what and how you’re responding to your customers. A couple of weeks ago I shared on how just one dissatisfied customer can lead to 10,000 dissatisfactions and you will most definitely want to pay attention to the below screenshot of a conversation on Facebook below:

social media mishaps in malaysiaAre You Listening Attentively?

Clearly the company above isn’t. Sure they are responding quickly to the complain but addressing the customer wrongly takes away the merit – especially calling him / her “shameful”. Good thing the company spotted the error and apologized not too long after but that has remained as a joke in Malaysia for days.

What Can You Learn Out Of This?

#1: Double and triple check before posting. I know most companies have a standard template reply and have grown to use them a bit too much resulting in simple errors such as inconsistency in addressing the customer’s name or in situations such as the above.

#2: Train your staff / social media manager. This may sound like common sense but from what happened above, there IS a possibility that the person you’ve put in-charge may not know their way around the tool (in this case, Facebook) well.

#3: Know your language. I’ve to admit that not everyone may be excellent in English, especially when it comes to writing but know this – if your audience is proficient in English, make sure your employees are proficient in English;likewise for any other languages be it Chinese, French, Spanish or Arabic.

#4: Don’t respond for the sake of responding. Are you sure that post / comment / feedback meant what you think it is saying? Are you making assumptions? Responding on social media platforms have a major advantage – time. Unlike over the phone where conversations become awkward if you take too long to reply, you can afford to take some time to read, re-read AND re-read to make sure you’re getting it right before responding.

#5: Admit your mistake and make up for it. Although it has already become a joke, it is important for you to own up to your mistakes and not to sweep them under the mat. NEVER delete them to cover your tracks. Accept it, respond to it positively and do not let the jokes bother you too much. Lesson learnt!

What is the one thing you think should not happen in businesses on social media? Do share them below :)

 Insights, Social Media |  brand focus, business owners, entrepreneurship, facebook, malaysia, social media |  Comment

How Much Should You Spend on Setting Up Your #SocialMedia Presence?

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June 19, 2011

| Jan Wong

This topic have been really hot lately in Malaysia due to a recent “finding” where Tourism Malaysia stated that they’ve spent RM1.8M (about USD600k) to create 6 tourism Facebook pages to promote the tourism industry in Malaysia. This caused quite a stir among the public, leading to tons of complains and debates both online and offline. If you’re interested, click here to know the full story and here are the clarifications made by Tourism Malaysia.

As I followed the news closely, it is interesting to see remarks made by various individuals and some of them can relate to how businesses react to social media integration today when it comes to $.

free parking on social media?“Social media is FREE. Why do I need to pay?”

Sounds familiar?

While most social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter are free where you can simply ‘park’ your brand / business on a page, there are several areas that don’t come cheap – especially if you’re thinking of an elaborated campaign or planning to hire someone to do the job for you. Having that said, randomly putting aside a figure won’t do you good. At the very least, consider the following areas:

How Should You Plan Your Social Media Budget?

1. Consider Your Expertise

– Do you have the knowledge and / or the skills to manage social media tools?
– Will you be doing the job or are you hiring?
– Do you have a team to determine the social media strategy?
– Do you even have a social media strategy? (hint: creating a Facebook page to get as many likes as possible is NOT a strategy)
– Do you need a consultant to help you with your social media strategy?
– Do you have the technical skills to execute those strategies (if required. e.g. Facebook apps)

2. Consider the Promotion Itself

– How will you go about promoting your social media presence (blogger write-ups, reviews, online advertising, email marketing, etc)?
– How big of a team is required to carry out the promotion?

3. Consider Long-Term

– Who will be managing (i.e. creating content, engaging, monitoring, etc) the social media accounts?
– Will it managed in-house or outsourced?
– Do you need a consultant to keep you on track?

Considering all of the above, you should be able to tell by now that social media CAN cost quite a bit or it could cost you nothing but time and effort if you’re doing all of it alone. It is interesting to note that even though many feel uncomfortable spending on social media, a recent study indicated that businesses plans to spend more on social media in 2011 as compared to 2010.

Need an idea on how much to spend? Click here to take a look at this survey done in the US.

On top of that, companies (especially experienced ones) are also seen outsourcing the design and development, content creation and analytics to social media agencies instead [source].

Social Media Spending Trending Up

How much do you think businesses should spend on social media? What are the areas they should consider the most?

 

 Insights, Social Media |  business owners, entrepreneurs, facebook, malaysia, social media |  Comment

An Era of Online Commerce in Malaysia: Signs Towards Social Commerce?

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April 26, 2011

| Jan Wong

If I have to talk about an improvement in Malaysia, this has to be of the bigger stuff – it is recently reported that Malaysians spent RM1.8 billion (about USD600 million) in online shopping in 2010, a figure 3 times the amount 3 years ago.

Looking at the published figures, I’m actually not surprised to see travel and bill payments dominating the list but this shows that Malaysians are becoming more open to online payments, something that has been scarcely present in the past years.

So, What Could This Mean?

#1: Increased Consumer Confidence

The consumers are beginning to see and experience how the Internet can benefit them in providing convenience and accessibility to more product options that leads to increased buying power (and knowledge).

#2: Increased Consumer Knowledge

Consumers have grown to accept technology as part of their lives, putting aside the fear of security threats – which was one of the main excuse or hinderance expressed in the past. In fact, I would think that this growth in knowledge is evident as a survey in 2010 revealed that Malaysians spend 9 hours on social networking sites weekly which also suggests the amount of time spent seeking ‘knowledge’. Apart from that, local businesses and companies are also seen to be more incline and receptive towards online marketing than previous years!

#3: Good News for Online Businesses… and the rise of competition

This growth definitely benefit all online businesses as they will be the ones directly benefiting from it but they too, can expect a growth in the number of new competitors. This means that the importance of Search Engine Optimization (SEO) and the usage of social media will also increase as businesses attempt to create a niche to find their footing in the industry.

It’s finally taking off! Is Social Commerce anywhere in sight?

I’ve waited for this day long enough and although I’ve personally been feeling the improvement, this acts as a confirmation. Having that said, it is just a matter of time for social commerce to start in Malaysia itself, especially considering the fact that Malaysians are spending so much time on social media. Couple that with the confidence in online purchase, I can say that Malaysian consumers are close to being ready for social commerce.

What say you? Do the figure show promise or do we still have a long way to go? How has it been where you’re at? I’d love to hear them all!

See the published article online here

 Insights, Technology |  blogs, business owners, malaysia, trend, web 2.0 |  Comment

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