Dispatch from the Customer Reference Forum: Julie Tung on Oracle’s reference success

This week at the Customer Reference Forum in Santa Clara, CA, I was excited to hear Julie Tung, VP of Global Customer Programs at Oracle, speak about her experiences and best practices managing a successful global reference program.

Julie described how Oracle built an impressive customer reference program by fostering a company-wide customer focus and paying attention to the best interests of their customers. Her presentation really jibed with my experiences in evidence and case study management as a reference professional. Highlighting advocacy, customer centricity, loyalty, and strong relationships as the building blocks of a customer focused culture, Julie spoke specifically about how Oracle expresses its focus. They listen to customers, respond when they have an issue or question, and collaborate with them. It may seem simple, but these small things have made an enormous difference for the company.

In addition to the fundamentals, I’ve found C-level engagement and executive sponsorship are crucial in creating a successful reference program. For Julie, this was also part of the action plan. She and her team specifically targeted executive sponsorship from both parties during customer engagement, along with customer advisory boards and one-to-one issue resolution. Executive sponsorship is important not only because it can mean the reference program gets funding but it can then validate projects and get buy-in from sales and marketing groups around the company. This type of upper-level involvement can also help break silos between teams so they can work together towards a common goal.

At Oracle, the results of creating a company-wide culture of customer focus spoke for themselves. The reference program saw increased participation, a larger pool of customers and communities, open dialog with executives, and an increased ability to fix programs in response to early warnings from customers. In short, customer focus led to happier customers, C-level engagement, and better customer references.

One of the most impressive parts of her program is that her team is able to do all of this successfully while supporting 9,000 Oracle products with 100 reference professionals. Her ideas on how to leverage executive sponsorship to scale her program and meet the demands of the sales team within such a company are remarkable—I’m glad she brought them to the forum.

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I can has creative? (Jog your creativity – and your customer reference knowledge!)

In a creative slump? In our second vlog installment, Amy (the head of our creative department) offers some ideas on how to get out of a rut with the help of some kittens. Meanwhile, Brooke gets excited about great customer reference programs after reading our white paper, Three Basic Elements to Extraordinary Reference Programs.

Missed the first one? Visit our new YouTube channel to catch up or subscribe so you never miss one again!

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Upcoming Projectline and Boulder Logic Webinar: Helping PR Succeed With Customer References

PR is critical to building credibility and raising awareness around your products, services, and technology. Engaging customer references from the onset helps PR become even more compelling. Yet, many organizations don’t have a formal intersection in place between enterprise customer reference management and public relations functions.

Projectline Services and Boulder Logic would like to invite you to join us for our upcoming webinar focusing on the importance of customer referencing and how it positively affects the Public Relations discipline. We’ll offer tips on how to improve the connection between customer references and public relations and provide recommendations for maximizing customer reference potential in PR. (more…)

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We want knowledge! And we’ve got some spare to share.

Can a for-profit company start a non-profit, non-competitive online community? We say, “yes”!  Last month we set out to prove that not only is it possible, but it is also beneficial. Eric Larson, Sr. Projectline Marketing Consultant, (who is as passionate about social media as I am about customer reference marketing), and I put our heads together and formulated what would become the Customer Reference Knowledge Sharing Network (CRKSN).

 

How the community was born:

Our goal was to build an online community where people who live and breathe customer references, (more…)

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