Social Media Measuring Stick 11/28/2010
According to Econsultancy.com 47% of businesses today are unable to measure their social media campaign ROI. How much would you say you make for every dollar you spend on your social media campaign? According to the Direct Marketing Association, the only interactive marketing channel that drove more sales than social media’s $14.3 billion was email marketing. If the Direct Marketing Association can do it with a team of mathematicians and troves of raw data from years of research, why is it that it is so hard to measure for the average business owner? It is simply the lack of raw data, time set aside to evaluate and familiarity. Business owners are at a loss of which measuring stick to use. There are ways to try and funnel your social media efforts into a hard summed total. However, there are far too many variables to add up. For example, you may find someone first hears about you on a social site, clicks through to your shopping website to research only to return in person to buy. In this instance there is no way of tying your social campaign to a hard sales number. Instead, let’s consider 3 separate areas, that when consistently analyzed together, can give you a more capable measuring stick. 1. Quantitative – track how many followers, friends, or likes to you receive each month as well as how many unique visits you receive and the bounce rate of those visits from your social media sites. Bounce rate is the percentage of visits that were the person left from the same page, signifying low interest or relevance. 2. Qualitative – read what is being said about your company and tally how many “likes” your campaign receives. Also consider using services like Rapleaf or Adobe Online Marketing Suite to gain valuable insight on what your customers are saying about you. You can also do a simple Google search to see what pops up on blogs and/or comments. 3. ROI Metrics – track what you can back to your campaigns by tagging customers’ receipt of or delivery of a social campaign. Use a software like salesforce, zoho, or a spreadsheet if nothing else. Mesh these together and you’ll end up with a pretty good idea of how your efforts are going. Track in a spreadsheet at each quarter and take time to make changes and/or tend to this aspect of your marketing efforts as you do your all other important aspects of your business. Your cash register will be glad you did. Add Comment Excuse me... do you have any grey Groupon? 11/18/2010
Excuse me... do you have any grey Groupon? No not Poupon. That's right, Groupon. Its the next marketing craze, the next small business tool. Yeah, but aren't businesses losing money? I mean, they only get half of the asking price... how is that good? Business owners, consider this: -Don't ever pay out of pocket (Groupon takes a portion of sales) -Reach hundreds/thousands of targeted new prospects -97% of those businesses listed ask to be listed again -You only honor groupon if enough people sign up -New customers in your store OVERNIGHT While most of us have learned to ignore traditional media, those receiving groupons are usually looking forward to it. I know I do. I just purchased my latest Groupon though "Seize the Deal" and I'm looking forward to my half off dinner at Nothing but Noodles. =] | About the AuthorDynamic and highly-talented marketing professional with 5 years experience in developing and implementing marketing strategies that develop clearly defined brands, increase visibility and ultimately increase revenue. ArchivesSeptember 2011 CategoriesAll |



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