Archives for July 2008

Justin Cooper to Present at LATV Festival, Hollywood, July 30th

July 22, 2008 | Posted by Justin Cooper

Thought Leadership, Events

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Passenger Co-founder and Chief Innovation + Marketing Officer, Justin Cooper, joins a panel of industry experts to discuss, "Crowdsourcing: The Killer Development Tool."

LATV Festival
July 30, 2008
11:45am
@ The Highlands in Hollywood, CA

There was a time when every piece of creative content consumed over television was carefully incubated and designed at the budget of a small war. While much remains the same, the times, they are a-changing.

Taking a page from gaming and software development worlds, video content creators are discovering the power of community. Web 2.0 technologies now enable creators to take a job traditionally performed by a designated agent and outsource it to an undefined, generally large group of people in the form of an open call. Done right, it is much less costly and can be more effective.

NATPE’s LATV Festival brings together nearly 1,000 content creators, agents, studio, network and new media executives to celebrate the art and commerce of video content in the TV production capital of the world.


Justin Cooper Interview with "Community Guy" Jake McKee

July 11, 2008 | Posted by Justin Cooper

Thought Leadership

As posted by Jake McKee on CommunityGuy.com

I’ve been running into Jessie Cooper from Passenger at multiple conferences lately, and I have been really impressed with the direction that Passenger is taking with their customer collaboration toolset. As a full-time community manager I struggled to find tools that would help me do my job, rather than services who offered to do all the hard work of building customer relationship for me.

I’ve been talking a lot lately about my opinions of the industry players in the customer collaboration space. I believe that most of these service providers are trying to create a “safer cigarette”; they are playing off the traditional desire of marketing managers in a campaign-based, 1.0 world to write a fat check, check out, and be updated via weekly report on success. The Passenger toolset, however, strikes me as the “anti-smoking campaign”, sending a clear message that the way marketing managers must work today is different and there needs to be a tool that honestly helps them engage and manage the flood of communication and interaction.

It is my pleasure to post the interview below with Justin Cooper (no relation to Jessie). Hopefully we can have Justin come back again soon - I want to hear more about what they’re up to.

1. Who are you?

I’m Justin Cooper, the Chief Innovation + Marketing and Co-founder of Passenger. I consider myself a student of customer experience design, brand strategy and customer collaboration, because my perspective evolves every day. Over the last 6 or 7 years, I’ve worked with dozens of globally recognized brands with focus on bringing them to the table with their customers for purposes of innovation. I have an enduring love for my family, my friends, the arts, technology, the collective intelligence, surfing and sushi.

2. Tell us about Passenger - what is it and what makes it different than the competition?

There’s a lot of noise out there surrounding ‘community’. The notion of community means very different things to different people. For Passenger, ‘community’ is the venue for very purposeful interactions between a company and there customers, employees and business partners. ‘Community’ is also an inherent byproduct (a sense of ownership in the process) of inviting customers to contribute to meaningful change from outside the confines of the corporate walls. We’re different because we understand the subtleties of the word ‘community’ and how we focus on enabling companies to innovate with their customers in a very transparent way. We also believe that the design of the member experience is critical to the successful collaboration. We spend an incredible amount of time understanding how we can improve the member experience within the Passenger platform, so that brands can continue to optimize these interactions. The experience too often gets overlooked, which should be counterintuitive to and environment that is designed specifically to discuss how to improve the customer’s experience with a brand. We’re also leading the ‘no incentives’ charge, because the only incentive for people wanting to participate should be access to the brand and the social currency that comes along with being able to tell your peers, “you’ll never believe what I talked to Adidas about today.”

3. What do you consider to be the unique features of your software? Which feature are you most proud of?

Passenger is not focused on features as much as we are on delivering only the features that are necessary in order to optimize collaboration within the community. The platform consists of collaboration, networking and analytics technologies. We’re focused on involving as many people within an organization in customer collaboration as possible. For this reason, we don’t pretend to be able to provide you with reports highlighting the things that we think may be important to you, we put you in the conversation and provide you with a Dashboard that enables you to synthesize all of these conversations into action that YOU feel is important. Aside from the tools that we provide for you to get in on the mix, our ‘Sessions’ feature is pretty powerful. Sessions enable the community to come together synchronously to view rich-media (things like television pilot rough-cuts, new shoe ideas, new vehicle designs) and to discuss both with participants from the brand as well as with other members the feelings surrounding these topics or ideas “ a very visually stimulating experience.

4. I’ve been pretty hard on your industry lately, mainly because there’s a trend to let clients write a check and check out of the process. Have I been too hard on the industry?

I would appreciate you keeping the heat on! Customer collaboration requires a fundamental redesign of the way that brands have traditionally approached the market. You can’t just build it and they will come, you have to show-up and actively participate. This takes commitment. Collaboration dies if the brand is not participating. You have to not only listen, but respond AND anticipate customer needs. You’re also grooming and recognizing champions both internally and with your customers. Recognition for contribution carries a lot of weight and ultimately drives the community’s momentum.

5. Do you empower customers to move beyond the confines of the small groups and into the larger community? If so, how?

Empowerment comes from involvement in the process of bringing the most salient ideas to life. It’s the sense of “I helped build this”, which translates into advocacy as I had mentioned before. Beyond that, people are already involved in the larger groups anyway, technology enables this. The best part about this information being delivered back to the larger community is that it is coming from a trusted source in a time when people no longer trust companies.

6. How do suggest that customers translate the private, behind closed doors activity into the rest of the community or customer base that doesn’t get to see this private activity?

This activity is simply transferred by the customers themselves. People can’t wait to talk about things that happened behind closed doors. The rest of the community or customer base will realize the effects of collaboration in the form of better experiences, products and services going to market.

7. As more and more companies become interested in, and perhaps even start community engagement projects, what do you think is the biggest potential danger zone?

Danger zones include:

* Not having objectives.
* Being absent. You must show-up.
* Not recognizing contributions.
* Not being conversational.
* Not being transparent.
* Not demonstrating action.
* Treating people as respondents to research.
* Paying people to participate.
* Not having the Passenger platform and team in your corner.


Firm Cultivates Online Communities for Feedback

July 7, 2008 | Posted by Admin

Passenger in the News

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MARKETING: Passenger helps clients test products with customer base.


By JOEL RUSSELL

Los Angeles Business Journal

Remember the focus group?

Companies may still put people in a room to watch them try their products while marketing executives watch from behind one-way glass. But the old-fashioned marketing concept is quickly turning virtual.

Passenger, a tech company on L.A.’s Miracle Mile, builds online communities that give feedback to large corporations. In most cases, the communities are formed from the customer base and are designed to provide the company with insight and feedback about its products.

“These aren’t projects, they’re not campaigns, but an ongoing part of the business process,” said Justin Cooper, co-founder of Passenger. “For a marketer looking at a multimillion dollar decision, it’s a great competitive advantage.”

For Chrysler LLC, Passenger created a “customer advisory board” to help test new auto features and promotional offers. Other Passenger clients include Coca-Cola Co., ABC, American Express and Fox Broadcasting.

“It’s like having a consumer sit in a room with us and participate in the process,” said Melva Benoit, senior vice-president of audience intelligence and research strategy at Fox. “So far, we’re pretty happy with the results.”

The online community is filling a role that was traditionally played by focus groups.

Benoit pointed out that her collaboration group only includes people who regularly watch Fox. When the network brings out a new show, it wants to attract people who don’t watch the network. That’s an audience that Passenger doesn’t reach.

“I’m only talking to people who watch our shows,” she said. “You can’t really generalize it to the U.S. population.”

Companies recruit members of their online communities from existing databases of faithful customers. In the case of Fox, the network specifically targets the 18- to 40-year-old demographic, so younger teenagers and more mature audiences are not invited to join the online community.

Passenger provides software and a team of consultants to manage the community. Clients pay an annual subscription fee. Communities can vary in size, but they usually include thousands of customers.

To use the system, a client puts a product demo online and monitors the conversation, both between customers and with the sponsoring corporation. ABC might post a full 45-minute video, or Chrysler a rendering of a new interior. Companies can post the material at a scheduled time “ such as the screening of a TV pilot “ or just place a video online and allow the members to view it at their convenience.

Paying people to answer questions is common in market research, but Passenger discourages the practice. “Incentives for participation dilute the process,” Cooper said. “You end up with a high rate of churn and people who are in it for the wrong reasons. The way they are rewarded is empowerment, such as access to a TV studio they care about.”

Since start-up in 2005, Passenger has retained every client it has landed. It currently has 65 employees at offices in L.A., New York and Palo Alto, California. Revenues have doubled in the last year.

Passenger currently has 24 clients and most run multiple communities. The company has been concentrating its efforts on high-profile brands, but will now try to sell its services to smaller clients.

“We have efforts in our R&D group in Palo Alto to go after the secondary and tertiary markets,” he said.

Cooper and a partner self-funded the company’s startup until L.A.-based Shelter Capital made a venture investment. Later, the company gained a second round of funding through Steamboat Ventures, a unit of Walt Disney Co. Passenger recently ended its third round of financing with StarVest Partners as the lead investor.

To grow the company, Cooper plans to open an office in the United Kingdom. Also, Passenger has started to expand to non-customer communities, such as employees and business partners.

For example, WellPoint Inc. has built a community of independent insurance brokers who give feedback on how the health care giant can provide better policies and services. One computer manufacturer uses the software to connect with retailers.

Besides signing on new customers, Cooper expects to grow revenue by expanding services to existing clients.

“I don’t know what the next several years will bring, but one thing we’re good at is listening to our customer’s needs,” he said. “We practice what we preach.”