Posts Tagged ‘metrics’
Success Measuring Social Media
Boston’s Social Media Butterflies
Meet to Discuss Social Media Measurement Success
Katie Delahaye Paine, CEO & Founder of KDPaine & Partners wants to encourage others to kick butt in the social media space! Katie, alongside a panel of other successful social media experts started the conversation off with that statement at last night’s Social Media Club Boston event. Attending were some of the top social media butterflies in the city all seeking to share new insights and grasp new ways to measure this new social phenomenon through different means.
Consider social media as one important “spoke” on a large marketing wheel which includes using other channels both online and offline to reach your audience. As Jamie Pappas, Social Media Strategy Manager for EMC mentioned, “I like to think we are doing the butt kicking,” but it’s important as a marketer to make sure that you are integrating your marketing efforts and continue to prove the value of each initiative to the executives.
Finding Out Where The Buzz Goes
Bill Carlson, Editor-in-Chief of CIO.com mentions how much social media can provide a window of opportunity to connect better with the audience where you can react to something in real-time, while Holly Allison, VP of Marketing for Vico software was pleased with the success of her guest blogger campaign. She was able to attract new thought leaders to write blogs and shared Vlogs of individuals on Youtube as each became a spokesperson to champion her brand.
Go out there and listen to what people are saying, rely on such sites as Trackur, Social Mention and Twendz to see what all the chatter is about your brand and react appropriately. Start responding to questions, identifying new keywords being searched to find your product, or make changes to your campaign instantly. As marketers, we need to discover the best ways to interpret the results of social media so companies realize it’s sticking around and believe it’s not just for free. It takes support, time, and creative ingenuity just as any other department to be effective, but more importantly social media can save costs to a company that opens a new means to conduct focus groups, improve customer service, and empower the audience.
Where’s The ROI?
As new technology emerges, marketers can better quantify results of social media to generate potential leads that convert to sales. Chris Penn, VP of Strategy and Innovation of Blue Sky email marketing has been successful aligning a baseline each quarter between the goals set within Google Analytics and the percent of quality leads generated into Sales Force. Chris shared his formula (Earnings – Spent/ # of Leads) for gathering the amount of money earned across different digital marketing efforts and comparing it to the amount of money spent as a percentage of the number of leads generated to drive sales. He can further examine the ROI of each tweet, blog post, PPC campaign, email and more by using Google Analytics URL Builder. Set a unique URL to track instances of where people are learning more about your product or service and how it can help to measure your overall conversion. Mike Proulx, VP of Interactive Marketing at Hill Holiday relies on Meteor Solutions to embed a tracking code that can be associated with different incidences of traffic sources coming in from Twitter, Facebook, or other mediums.
What about the people that live outside of social media and how does one measure their impact on your brand? It’s very important to validate not only the discussions online, but make a point to be engaged with your audience in other ways through face-to-face encounters, customer service calls, and keep track of other interactions where people that form impressions around your brand. Keep abreast of not only the top influencers in your market, but don’t neglect the people creating a buzz in smaller communities. Over time people come together to form their own community and you don’t want to risk not paying attention to the messages, nor miss a new business opportunity to your competitor.
Not everyone is immersed in the online social scene and there are many other audiences that are not accounted for when you quantify results. However, you can establish a dashboard unique to your business comprised of the different touch points the customer is engaged prior to a purchase of product. Carry that information forward followed by the actions after that purchase.
Mike offered his thoughts around creating a dashboard that reflects the goals of marketing and how to evaluate its impact on the overall strategy. There are many ways to look across both the qualitative and quantitative measurements to comprise a picture for management that makes sense of your business and can help marketers prioritize their efforts.
Written by kerisinger
April 30, 2010 at 7:24 pm
Posted in Digital Media, Engagement Metrics, Marketing, Small Business, Social Media
Tagged with measurement, metrics, Social Media, social media club boston
What Does All This Talk About Engagement Mean to Marketers?
How to Measure Marketing Effectiveness in the Virtual World and Finding the Value in the Real World
How does one measure the value of engagement, trust and building the right relationships with your online audience? The Internet has far greater value and measurement available. Yet, how do we define the right metrics that make sense for marketers to validate their worth and provide them with information that is useful to share with other executives.
- Is it really just about the ROI?
- Why is it that marketers want to evaluate engagement across their brands?
- What tools are available today in the marketplace to define the level of engagement?
- How can we align our strategy for the future?
Measuring engagement across one’s products and services is the magic question for many these days. As more technology is developed, it allows greater use for executives to review the data in hopes to take away insights to make improvements to their products and services. When analyzing the level of one’s engagement it’s important to marry both the quantitative and qualitative data, in order to gain a better understanding of the audience, as well as different types of usage across one’s products and services.
Every marketer defines in their own eyes a level of engagement with their customers. For some it maybe brand awareness, for others, it maybe how many people recommend their services. The Net Promoter Score is a way to determine the value of marketing spend. How do we satisfy all the different types of goals for marketers and define what is an engagement index for measuring the effectiveness of one’s marketing efforts?
When evaluating click-thrus, it is a concern, because someone that clicks often on a particular page or decides to go deeper into the website, doesn’t necessarily really mean that individual is really engaged with your website. Perhaps this could be evidence of the individual having a difficult time to find what he/she had the intent to seek. One could go to your site with the hopes to learn more, but it’s important to realize the value of engagement should be measured on what warrants a person to come back and learn more (Retention). It’s important to identify where discovery had occurred and what keeps he/she coming back.
It’s funny how hard the online world is trying to replicate the real world and bring more people together and services through technology. People have gained skills in SEO to attract the search engines, experts have coached others how to craft email campaigns and subject lines to be viewed properly by email service providers, at the same time, we’ve tried our best to add the human element to this type of communication by personalizing the messages to drive actions. In essence people are craving engagement and connections with others and/or products as they have done so well in the real world trying to replicate a portion of that experience online. I believe that companies that can find the appropriate balance between the real world and the virtual world, that combine and understand how to best analyze the information gathered from these two worlds (the quantitative and qualitative) will best engage their audiences. It’s important for marketers to recognize those people online that take action with their product and/or service, use the data to make better analysis and reach out to those audiences through virtual means (social communities, links to blogs, partnerships, etc.), as well as traditional means of contact (interviews, phone calls, attending events etc.) to drive further engagement.
Other Thoughts on this Topic:
Ron Shevlin’s Marketing Whims
WebAnalyticsDemystified.com
Brian Haven’s Blog
Peter Kim’s Blog: A Framework For Measuring Social Media
Todd Defren’s PRSquared
Written by kerisinger
November 19, 2008 at 3:06 am
Posted in Digital Media, Engagement Metrics
Tagged with brian haven, Email Marketing, engagement, forrester research, metrics, offline, online, Social Media, virtual, webanalyticsdemystified.com, website analytics, website retention