The advent of today’s new intelligent services (Google
Assistant/Home, Cortana, Siri and others) has created an accelerated curve.
Google, Bing, Apple, Yahoo, Amazon and other increasingly intelligent services
are driving a good deal of change, with more expected in the future.
This evolution needn't be scary for search-engine
optimization (SEO) managers, brand managers, social media managers or chief
marketing officers. It’s actually an exciting opportunity that creates career
options for those willing to take on new responsibilities.
In fact, today’s world of structured data needs
professionals to provide context for maps, info cards and specific answers.
Customers and companies alike increasingly demand the most accurate data from
the most authoritative sources. After all, how can an intelligent service be
intelligent if it’s wrong?
Companies are responding with a new role: Digital Knowledge
Manager. Think of “manager” here as an action, not a title. Real-life examples
include Sam Dresser, the Vice President of Knowledge Management and Engagement
at School of Rock. Glenn May's position at T-Mobile is called Senior Category
Manager - Local Marketing. Other
businesses actively are seeking to create similar positions. In a broad sense,
these new roles focus on five skills: investigation, negotiation,
communication, thought leadership and building.
Skill 1: Investigation.
A Digital Knowledge Manager, or DKM, is first and foremost
someone who can track down all the authoritative sources of knowledge about
your brand, people, products, events and locations from within your
organization. This could be an easy job at a small company. But it could become
a huge undertaking for large corporations. It likely would require
conversations with departments such as Marketing, IT, Legal, Facilities, Store
Operations and others. It's no small feat to identify and find all the public
facts about your business that you want in customers' hands.
A good DKM doesn’t simply settle for data the organization
says it has. Instead, the DKM investigates what consumers are demanding and
then works to source the data within the organization. For instance, Google
reports that 70 percent of hotel searches now include a specific type of
amenity. A DKM digs into the specifics. What amenities -- or granular details
-- do consumers seeking about your people, products, events and locations
today? What will they be tomorrow? An investigative DKM is critically important
in this stage.
Skill 2: Negotiation.
Because a DKM must work with many teams, he or she also
needs to help arbitrate conflicts among data sources and people within the
organization. Digital Knowledge Management is about boiling all of your data down
to clear sources of truth. And to do that, conflicts must be resolved in ways
that promote accuracy, stability, and efficiency.
Some clients come to us at Yext with multiple data sources
across a wide variety of materials -- from their Content Management System
(CMS) to basic spreadsheets. These clients all need someone to identify, vet
and shepherd that data to best effect.
Let’s look at this in context. Think about the internal
teams and even franchisees that own the data for McDonald’s: locations, menus,
nutritional information and more. To deliver this structured data via today’s
intelligent services, the DKM must negotiate the twists and turns of internal
and franchise politics to ensure the consumer sees one brand, hears one voice
and can rely on one accurate data set to answer their needs in the moments that
matter.
Skill 3: Communication.
As technology evolves, so does a brand's responsibilities
and opportunities related to digital knowledge.
For instance, the DKM should be the first in an organization
to know about new intelligent-services features that will require a robust set
of digital knowledge. Uber provides one example. At major air hubs such as
Atlanta, Chicago, Dallas and San Francisco, Uber customers can select multiple,
specific pick-up/drop-off points within the larger location. It’s the DKM’s
role to spot the opportunity and communicate it to appropriate teams. This is
how companies source information and fully leverage that data to provide
customer value. Uber recognized an opportunity and capitalized on that gap.
Skill 4: Thought leadership.
A DKM always must keep one eye on the future to monitor how
intelligent services are evolving. A true professional will spot what's new and
develop a plan of action. He or she will ask questions: What does this mean for
our company? Our customers? How does technology change our consumers'
behaviors?
Believe it or not, one of Lego's partners has created a bot
on the Alexa skills store. Brickbot will allow any Echo user to ask questions
and get detailed answers about new and old Lego sets, themes and other
products. With 20 percent of Google searches already run via voice command,
it's smart to be thinking how to prepare all that digital knowledge to
interface with voice search.
Skill 5: Building.
Ultimately, the Digital Knowledge Manager must structure the
people, processes, and technologies that will ensure the accurate and timely
creation, distribution and ongoing maintenance of a company’s digital knowledge
base.
While platforms such as ours can help with technology, the
people and processes pieces rest with individual clients. Done right, digital
knowledge becomes a competitive brand differentiator. It can help attract more
customers through an ever-increasing array of intelligent services.
Bringing all 5 skills together.
It doesn’t take superhero strength to be a DKM. In fact, the
core skills look similar to those needed in many positions. But the DKM role is
bigger. It has a broader impact on a company, works across more teams and
focuses on goals beyond simply attracting searchers or social-media shares.
The DKM protects a company by making certain its digital
knowledge is developed and deployed in the best ways possible -- both
internally and externally -- to serve the business. Within an organization, the
positioning of such a role may be more or less senior, with tasks, goals and
responsibilities aligned as such. Here's a mocked-up job description that helps
define the DKM's scope.
This substantial shift is really a change of focus, mindset
and investment. Leaders who realize they're closer to this outcome than they'd
believed have the potential to become DKMs and own their space in the market.
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