The days and ways of traditional marketing are
changing. While companies are still pumping hard cash into print, TV and radio
ads, Social Media has become a key ingredient of any marketing plan. However,
there is a major difference. While in traditional marketing, once the ad/s have
hit the medium, there is not much one can do but, to sit there and calculate
the return on investment (ROI)
using various campaign measurement metrics. On Social Media it is a different
story altogether. As Social Media is always alive', the marketers need to
remember that they have to engage with the customer 24/7 and 365 days of the
year. This 'constant contact' allows you to approach, respond and react in real
time.
Hence to achieve better results a continuous effort has to be made by businesses to satisfy the ever intelligent customer on Social Media. And along with that comes the measurement of Return on Effort (ROE).
In
August 2012, a report published by
Gartner, Inc. said, 'By 2014, organisations that refuse to communicate with
customers by Social Media will face the same level of wrath from customers as
those that ignore today's basic expectation that they will respond to emails
and phone calls. For organisations that use Social Media to promote their
products, responding to inquiries via social media channels will be the new
minimum level of response expected.' And now, in 2013, Justyn Howard, CEO of Sprout
Social, a platform for social business, says, 'The growth, relevance and
reputation of today's organisations are being shaped by social conversations.
Customer care and communication have changed forever. In order to succeed, you
must #BePresent.' Still, there are many businesses who think that Social Media
is just creating a Facebook page and, a little more extravagantly, setting up a
Twitter account and then counting the 'LIKES' and 'FOLLOWERS' and then dwelling
on it. No, Social Media measurement and analysis go far beyond that. Following
are some key elements to measure while analysing your Social Media campaign.
Measuring your Social Media campaign
As social media marketing requires investment of time rather
than money, ROE (Return on Effort) is the best way to capture the cost of
social media marketing. If we start measuring the effort then they key
elements will be the time spent engaged in an activity such as being on
Twitter or Facebook or LinkedIn etc. No matter which activity you do on
social media it has go to be focused, based on the goal/s you have set.
The goal/s may be lead generation,
sales conversions, increasing visibility, building new business
connections, sharing of information or anything else, these must be
monitored and measured to check how near or far are you from your goals.
For example if the goal on Twitter was lead generation and you generated 10
leads out of 100 followers then it would be much better than generating
1 lead out of 1000 followers. And these figures should be measured against
time as well.
Following
are some key elements to measure while analysing your Social Media campaign:
·
Buzz
Volume: This will give you the volume of mentions (of your brand or competitors
brand) over a given time period.
·
Top
Mentions: This will tell you how and what the consumers are talking about your
brand. This is also an excellent way of getting the 'keywords/phrases' for your
website.
·
Sentiment:
This tells you how many interactions/comments made by the consumers are
positive, negative and/or neutral.
·
Influencers:
This gives you the details about those who are most influential to your brands
be it bloggers, tweeters or Facebook 'friends', depending upon the number of
their readers, followers and friends respectively.
·
Location:
This will tell you where your customers are coming from. This, when cross
referenced with 'languages' will allow you to decide whether you need to communicate
with your 'audience' (customers) in more than one language or not.
·
Gender:
While this measurement is still quite ambiguous, it roughly tells you which
gender is more engaged with your brand, again, allowing you to respond and
react accordingly.
Beyond
this, there are some additional measures as well that can be incorporated e.g.
age etc. but still they are not extremely reliable as yet.
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