Books that matter: Tim Nekritz on ‘The Business of Awesome/The Business of UnAwesome’

When I asked Tim Nekritz to contribute a piece to this series on books that matter for higher ed marketing/branding/PR folks, he was already working on a post on his own excellent blog about his selection for that one book he believes all higher ed marketers should read. So here it is, reproduced for your reading pleasure, complete with Tim’s original headline. Enjoy!

When unicorns fight bears, we all win: Book(s) on Business of Awesome/Unawesome reviewed

Review by Tim Nekritz

Awesome_UnAwesomeBusinesses and organizations have opportunities to be awesome and spread awesome in person and on the Internet every day. Businesses and organizations also have opportunities to be unawesome and spread unawesome in person and on the Internet every day. Fortunately, author/blogger/speaker Scott Stratten (aka Unmarketing) has these phenomena more than covered with his must-read two-headed book, The Business of Awesome/The Business of UnAwesome.

It’s two books in one, unflinchingly honest and unstoppably funny, but it makes one unifying point: How much you care about your customers says far more about your brand than anything else. We’ve all had good customer service and bad customer service, and these experiences linger with us long after we remember our purchase, our meal or our stay.

The Business of UnAwesome side chronicles the many awful things companies do in customer service, marketing and social media. The misguided case of the unfortunately named Boners BBQ, which assailed a customer via social media for her even-handed review (and incorrectly claimed she didn’t leave a tip). Using social media to blast information but never respond to questions. Unbelievably awful marketing gimmicks. Lavishing gifts on new customers while ignoring your loyal customers. Poor use of QR codes. So many truly terrible things somehow conveyed with great entertainment.

If that side says beware the trolls, the Business of Awesome side asks you to embrace the unicorns. Stratten repeats the beautiful story he told at #pseweb about how one man’s heartfelt apology saved his whole view of Hilton Hotels. Even awesome people and businesses make mistakes, but he shows how they make things right. Stratten lovingly details customer service that brings a smile instead of a frown, social brands that make loving them fun, small gestures that make huge impressions, companies that don’t take themselves too seriously but are very serious about pleasing their customers.

A unicorn boxing a bear, or why Chad Frierson from Austin's Pizza is awesome.

A unicorn boxing a bear, or why Chad Frierson from Austin’s Pizza is awesome.

He saves perhaps the greatest example for last: John, a customer who placed an online pizza order and added a small, silly request in the comment field, “Please draw a unicorn fighting a bear on the box.” Chad Frierson from Austin Pizza’s Call Center took the order and knew it wasn’t something the stores were equipped to do. So he drew a picture of a unicorn boxing a bear on a Post-It and sent along with a nice explanatory note ending with “I hope this suits your needs.”

“Needless to say this is the greatest thing of all time,” Stratten worte. “John uploaded the picture to display its awesomeness, which then went viral and was seen by millions of people. This story reigns supreme over all others, not just because it includes a unicorn, although that certainly helps. This was done by somebody in a frontline position with seemingly little autonomy, at no cost to the company, in an industry not known for being mind-blowing. It was done with immediacy and personality, without focus groups or a meeting beforehand. … He simply decided that unawesome is unacceptable, saw the window and acted on the awesome …”

If you’ve enjoyed perusing Stratten’s @unmarketing Twitter feed, checking out his blog or seeing him speak live, you’ll love this book. If you haven’t, yet you work in social media management and/or customer service, you really should catch up on his awesome work.

Coming up: Branding roundtable on Higher Ed Live

Wednesday, March 13, 2013: The video of our discussion is now available.

Thursday, March 7, 2012: Thanks to everyone who tuned in today! Hope you had as much fun as I did. If you missed today’s show, check the Higher Ed Live website or YouTube channel in a few days for the archive.

I’m excited to be part of a roundtable discussion about branding in higher education on this week’s edition of Higher Ed Live, the weekly live webcast about issues in higher education.

This episode airs at a special time — earlier than usual, at 11 a.m. EST Thursday, March 7 — and features two past winners of Educational Marketing Group‘s International Brand Master Award: 2011 recipient Emma Leech, director of marketing and communications at Nottingham University in the UK, and me. (I won the award in 2009). Our discussion will be moderated by Travis Brock, director of business development for Educational Marketing Group and one of the people who tweet from @EMGonline. (Travis also tweets from @tbrock111.)

I hope you’ll tune in and chime in on the #higheredlive back-channel on Twitter. With Emma’s participation, this will be a branding discussion with a truly international flavor — not only because she hails from the UK, but also because her team’s work extended beyond the UK to China and Malaysia.

What: Higher Ed Live Roundtable Discussion with Former Brand Masters

When: 11 a.m. EST Thursday, March 7

Where: On the Internet (watch live at higheredlive.com/live/)

Thursday’s episode will mark my third appearance on Higher Ed Live. In my first show, host Seth Odell and I talked about the future of PR in higher ed and a roundup of the CASE V/VI joint conference held in Chicago last December.