There is no question that social media marketing is becoming a significant driver of consumer product discovery. But how much it drives discovery when it comes to business-to-business (B2B) or capital goods is still largely unknown.
People are inundated with information on their Facebook wall or Twitter feed (see our 900-98-1.5-0.5 rule). Clicking 'Like' on a brand's page is one thing, but regularly returning to that page or reading its content is another matter.
How much is a Facebook Fan worth?
Trend 1: Discussions about the hypothetical value of a Facebook fan or a Twitter follower will continue in 2011, but the wise will leave this discussion behind, instead focusing on better customer relationship management, engagement of target groups and so forth.
Tip 1: The theoretical value of your Facebook fans is a useless navel-gazing exercise. Bottom line: answer your fans' questions, help your clients and keep your customers coming back for more. If Facebook helps, clients love your tweets and the Xing group brings business, more power to you. Otherwise, re-align your scarce resources.
My clients do not participate in social media polls - do yours?
18- to 34-year-old respondents of the survey are embracing certain social media activities. But how much trust can you put into such polls or surveys?
Most industrial purchase folks or busy professionals do not respond to pollsters or emailed surveys. In fact, when was the last time you said yes and participated in a telephone survey?
Trend 2: Survey results are taken with a grain of salt; they can help highlight trends and movements in a changing market. To manage risks smartly, more people look at many surveys at a time, but beware of the snapshot survey, which usually obscures more than it captures or clarifies reality in the social media realm.
Tip 2: Check with ten of your clients and ask them when they were last asked to participate in a survey; did they? The results might surprise you.
ROI for social marketing seems to confuse more than clarify
Return on investment (ROI) is a measure of a company's profitability, equal to a fiscal year's income divided by equity and long-term debt. ROI also measures how effectively the organization is using its resources to generate a financial profit.
Hence, social media marketing may be a moderator of some of the factors that influence ROI such as customer feedback or complaints, product satisfaction and so forth, but it is not a primary cause of ROI.
There will always be people who would want to participate in a sweepstakes like the one offered by PayPal (see image below) to get a chance to win 1 of 10 iPads. This is regardless of how small the probability might be to win.
But even those participating in the sweepstakes might not use PayPal for a long time, if at all, if they can avoid it due to shabby customer service. See more resources:
- ComMetrics - Measuring ROI: Why it fails
Measuring social media to boost ROI
Boosting ROI through social media measurement
2011 trends: Social media best practice and ROI
KPI experts' top 5 secrets
Trend 3: Social media experts will continue to use ROI to push their fare and confuse budget committees wherever they do. By contrast, return on engagement (ROE, or return on involvement - ROIn) will become increasingly popular among social media strategy folks.
Tip 3: Creating good content on your blog might help get it curated in people's information stream, while comments and re-tweets increase your visibility. In fact, they may help sales efforts.
Are you with me on these three social media marketing trends for 2011 or am I completely off? What have I missed? Please leave a comment; the floor is yours!
- Article source: 2011 trends: Social media marketing and ROI