Social Media 2010 – Wow, This Is Hard

From our Founder’s Blog

From time to time our founder Brian Roy shares his observations about the state of Social Media, Social Media Analytics, tools and best practices (and any number of other topics) – and we share them here.

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It is true of any “great new thing” – our initial estimate of the work required is drastically underestimated. There are a litany of examples:

  • CRM
  • ERP
  • Service Oriented Architecture
  • Outsourcing (particularly off-shore)
  • Online Self-Service

Now, finally, we can add Social Media to that list. There have been The MarketingProfs report The State Of Social Media Marketing – including one by Brian Solis that is particularly compelling.

In 2010, executives will measure ROI and the direct impact of social media marketing on the P&L. In order to do so, management will experience three phases.

The first will reveal that measuring social media marketing, as practiced to date, is essentially meaningless. …

Second, management will grasp the true cost of social media. In 2010, social media will cease to be free. …

Third, as the entire organization socializes affected departments, strategists will embrace a holistic and informed approach to engagement. …

I’m hard pressed to disagree with any of that. As a matter of fact, I’d actually like to expand on it in three ways:

First, in 2010 executives will measure ROI and the direct impact of social media efforts in multiple organizations. This means marketing will become just one organization using Social Media to improve practices, processes and ultimately the end to end customer experience a brand provides. We will see internal focus shift from “who is paying attention and responding to this” to “who is analyzing, interpreting and acting on this”.

Second, social media metrics and measurement will be highly individualized to the culture, strengths and temperament of the company. And this is as it should be. Intuit is very different than EA – and given that it is vital that the outcomes they pursue and the metrics they measure should be unique to them and the unique demographics of their target markets.

Third, management will begin to see social media as an enterprise wide activity funded at the enterprise level. No longer will social media be a line item on a PR or marketing budget. Multiple organizations will have social media initiatives, tool requirements and staff engaged in social media activities. Support for these activities will begin to be centralized (TIP: Look out IT – 2011 will be the year IT will have to deliver enterprise Social Media integration).

Brian Solis comes to this conclusion:

As a result, social media marketers will shred the cookie-cutter manual and expand the focus based on real world activity. This is social media marketing with a purpose.

I’d offer this slightly broadened version:

Social media will develop from a niche marketing/PR activity into a full blown enterprise solution. As with most enterprise solutions (CRM/ERP) the implementation will be highly customized to the objectives, culture and target market of the company. The solution will be required to achieve real, tangible outcomes measurable in terms of existing business metrics (e.g., revenue, sales, costs, etc).

Yep, Social Media for Business is going to be hard. There will be a lot of work making the promises a reality. It won’t transform your company overnight, but it can transform your ability to better tune your business to your target market – and by doing so grow your market share. The question is, how bad do you want it?

Monitoring Isn’t Enough – TeamConan

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When you market reacts badly to something you’ve done, it is because you should have known not to do it in the first place.

It is just that simple.

That is why Monitoring isn’t enough – it may be for your PR agency, but not when you are running a business.   

We helped the New York Times track the TeamConan meme on social media, but honestly, I’d rather have helped NBC engage the market before they started making decisions. Imagine the press we would have seen if NBC had found a creative way to have an open conversation with the market around one simple question “what should we do with late night”.

imgres.jpegSo, let’s assume NBC has been monitoring – what is the upside now? How do you put the genie back in the bottle?  

This is where monitoring fails. All the alerts, charts, graphs and data visualizations in the world can’t undo your bad decisions.

So, let me propose a radical solution – use justSignal, not at your PR agency, not just in your marketing department, but as a tool to make the voice of the market an important part of every decision you make. Take the data and build it into your product management, customer service, marketing, and billing decisions. Where you don’t have the data – engage the market. Ask them what you want to know – start a conversation and make a better decision.

You might say, “but I’m not NBC – my company will never be a trending topic on Twitter no matter how bad a decision we make” – and you are probably right. The thing is, companies rarely go out of business because of one bad decision – they usually go out of business because they make hundreds of them – every year – decisions that move their product or service farther and farther away from what the market wants.

Great companies own their markets because they make better decisions, consistently. Decisions better tuned to the needs of their target market. Starting today, you can have the information at the tips of your fingers. You can have real insight into the needs of your target market – and the ability to engage them in an open conversation about how you can help. Sounds good, right?

A Simple Prescription for Social Media ROI

From our Founder’s Blog

From time to time our founder Brian Roy shares his observations about the state of Social Media, Social Media Analytics, tools and best practices (and any number of other topics) – and we share them here.

The consensus seems to be that creating an ROI for Social Media is hard. I’d like to suggest that it isn’t.

Formulating an ROI is a very simple formula – and until someone can rationally explain why Social Media is different I’ll get out my cookbook.

  1. Define the desired outcome (e.g., increase conversion rate by 3%).
  2. Define the specific actions that will be taken (e.g., offer specials via blog, Twitter and Facebook with specific landing pages).
  3. Define the metrics and measures that will be used to determine if the actions taken were the proximate cause of the result.
  4. Perform the actions and analyze the metrics and measures.
  5. Determine cost of actions and the value of the resultant change in the outcome.

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The flaw in most approaches to Social Media ROI happens on the very first step. If you can’t assign real value to the desired outcome you can’t create an ROI. A perfect example is “We’d like to double our followers on Twitter and fans on Facebook”. Some people will call this a “soft ROI” – which is simply another way of saying that the desired outcome can not be assigned a real value, but affects another metric that can. The relationship between the desired outcome (more followers/fans) and the real value metric (sales) is usually highly theoretical – our just plain wishful thinking. If you believe more followers or fans equates to higher sales – say so. Design your ROI experiment and prove it.

The other flaw is in step 3. Failing to adequately define the input metrics (the metrics that are the proximate cause of the change in outcome) leads to an ROI that does not bear scrutiny. Examples of poorly defined input metrics are:

  • Increase our Social Media Presence
  • Get more engagement
  • Have better sentiment about our brand
  • Be influential in our space

Avoid those two traps and you’ll be well on your way. But there is one mistake I see more than any other:

Stop trying to create a “pure” or “standalone” Social Media ROI!!

Another way to put this – in terms of our recipe above – is:

If your desired outcome is a Social Media metric or measure – think again.

I’ll end the suspense for you right now, it doesn’t exist. The only way to ROI a Social Media effort is by showing that your Social Media effort is the proximate cause of a change in a fundamental business metric (e.g., sales, conversion rate, leads generated, churn, etc).

CRM is a great example of this – I was involved in dozens of large footprint CRM deployments. Well over half of those were done based on a solid ROI – but it had nothing to do with customers. The ROI was based purely on cost savings in IT. Do I believe those deployments had other benefits which were harder to measure and quantify? Sure. But the way to prove the investment had a return was to focus on what was proven, repeatable and tangible.

I think Social Media is much easier to ROI than CRM was. I don’t think we will end up creating ROI based on savings in IT. I am, however, certain that the ROI will have to point to real dollars saved or real dollars generated.

I’m convinced that when you focus on determining which Social Media metrics are the proximate cause of change in core business metrics you’ll find an ROI – and I’m betting it will be both larger and more diverse than you would have predicted.

Let’s Get Serious – Social Media ROI

From our Founder’s Blog

From time to time our founder Brian Roy shares his observations about the state of Social Media, Social Media Analytics, tools and best practices (and any number of other topics) – and we share them here.

I’m honestly heartened by the sudden rash of efforts to create a methodology to determine ROI (return on investment) for Social Media efforts. It signals something very important for Social Media – the return of rationality to the debate.

head scratch.pngWhen you consider that a few short months ago the prevailing meme was that creating a basis for your Social Media efforts in terms of ROI was “doing it wrong” – it is impressive how far we’ve come. The realization that moral arguments and scare tactics will only get you so far – and in many cases backfire – has led to an overwhelming need to create an ROI model.  

Unfortunately many of these efforts are not really after ROI – they are seeking to justify an already formed point of view.

The reality is we simply don’t know if Social Media has a analytical, fact based ROI. That may sound odd coming from a guy who has bet his personal savings starting a Social Media Engagement and Analytics company – so let me explain both why the ROI hasn’t been proven and why I’m betting it will be.

Social Media is a Niche Opportunity – Today

If you want to know why there is no fact based proven ROI for Social Media investments today, all you need to understand is that Social Media has been adopted in niches. It may be in the Marketing department, or used by your Digital Agency, or perhaps in your Customer Service department. Each of these adoptions was driven out of fear (we have to monitor this and deal with the negative) or the moral (we love our customers – so we are going to do this). The investment was negligible – and in most cases I’d bet it was funded right out of the operating budget of the organization where it was used.

These organizations are beginning to declare victory and are being challenged to prove it. This presents unique challenges, because Social Media runs on anecdotes, not analysis. Dell sells 3 million in product from Dell Outlet after offering those products on Twitter. That is a great anecdote – but it isn’t analysis. When you ask the critical questions:

  • What would you have sold without Twitter?
  • Was that a 3MM increase in sales – or just 3MM net sales from those links?
  • How much did it cost to generate the 3MM in sales and how does that compare to email?
  • Is this repeatable – can it be replicated in other parts of the business – and how do you know?

you quickly find that the anecdote doesn’t equate to ROI. It might… but it isn’t there yet.

These types of anecdotes are justifications. They are about proving the correctness of an already made assumption.

I’ve seen this movie before – it exactly parallels the pattern for CRM in the late 1990′s.

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NOTE: For simplicity I’ve omitted the case where a technology/methodology has a niche ROI without broader adoption.

We are squarely in the middle of the justification phase for Social Media. This roughly corresponds to the height of the expectations (the big peak on the Gartner Magic Quadrant) and always directly precedes the Trough of Disillusionment. This is a recognizable and predictable pattern for adoption of new technologies and methodologies – and here is why.

The initial opportunity is too good to stay on the sidelines for some early adopter group. They – almost always within existing operating budgets and using the promise as a bulwark defense – adopt the technology/methodology. Once they believe they have seen tangible results they attempt to socialize the “win” outside the organization by creating justifications for what they’ve already done. These justifications bring broader scrutiny.

That scrutiny happens in two phases:

  1. Was it worth it?
  2. Can it be done systemically – can I forecast a x% increase in metric z if I do this again.

The second is ROI. A systemic way of proving that adoption generates a return. If, and only if, that can be proven will the technology escape the niche application and be applied on a broad scale.

Why does it work this way – because enterprises are first and foremost risk management systems. They systemically avoid large risks.

Why Will Social Media Attain Broad Adoption

The primary reasons I believe Social Media will in fact generate a valid ROI and attain broad adoption:

  1. It is measurable.
  2. The unrecognized value far exceeds the recognized value.

Measurability

As you might imagine, it is very difficult to justify and create a systemic ROI for something that is exceptionally difficult to measure. Social Media is – in contrast – eminently measurable. Rational decisions must be made about what to measure – and we need more focus on connecting those measures to the core business metrics – but there is no fundamental barrier to creating valuable measures.

The Value Proposition

Today, we’ve put all our Social Media eggs in the PR/Marketing basket. Even the small amount of credibility given to customer service via Social Media has been driven by the (C-Level Down) idea that customer service should “avert disasters” by monitoring Social Media and addressing customer issues. Make no mistake, this is customer service acting in a PR role – the goal isn’t to provide service so much as to avoid negative perceptions.

However, if you take one large step back and think about the opportunity Social Media presents – you can quickly see that the value proposition is in having a huge, open back channel to your market. We’ve had channels to our customers, and sometimes even our prospects – but this is bigger. It is the entire market for your product or service. You get to listen in on what they have to say about what they want and need. You can engage them to better understand their motivations. You can apply what you learn to create incremental improvements in every phase of your business.

Yes, you can send out special offers. Yes, you can address customer concerns. But the real return will come from having a robust back channel with your entire market; and the resulting market intelligence can – if you apply it – help you make every part of your business more appealing to your target market.

So let’s get serious about ROI. Let’s talk about how companies operate and win by continually tuning their processes to better address the needs of their target market. Let’s talk about how Social Media provides them a back channel to that market, a back channel that is an invaluable source of intelligence about the market.

Let’s talk about how a business that applies the intelligence gained via Social Media to all of their decision making processes is faster and more agile in addressing the needs of their market – and thereby wins market share.


Social Media’s Big Problem – Marketers

From our Founder’s Blog

From time to time our founder Brian Roy shares his observations about the state of Social Media, Social Media Analytics, tools and best practices (and any number of other topics) – and we share them here. These posts are Brian’s opinions, not the position of justSignal. That being said, Brian IS justSignal… so draw your own conclusions.

I hate to say it, but Social Media (and Twitter in particular) has a big problem… and that big problem is marketers.

I know, I know, marketers made Social Media – and setting aside weather or not that is true, let’s focus on the facts.

  1. Nearly any relatively popular topic is quickly overrun with marketers trying to get their message into your stream.
  2. The line between spam and marketing is non-exisitent in Social Media.
  3. Any analytical analysis of a topic is becoming more and more difficult as the topic gets filled with marketing.
  4. Traditional marketing approaches work in Social Media… get your message/link in front of enough eyeballs and some percentage will click.

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Case in point. I own a Social Media solutions company – justSignal – and we have a Signal set up to track everything people say is “great” (via a variety of term searches and exclusions using our proprietary filtering mechanism) on Twitter. We’ve just released our SignalLinks Analytic in beta (you can learn more about SignalLinks here). So today I decided to look at SignalLinks for our everything great on Twitter Signal.

The results were disappointing to put it mildly. There is no authentic user voice in this data… only marketing and/or spam (you find the line there).

Here are the most mentioned links over the last 30 days:

Mentions

URL

Domain

33511

http://www.tweeterspeed.com/

www.tweeterspeed.com

12098

http://www.twtfast.info/

www.twtfast.info

6818

http://tinify.net/5

tinify.net

5641

http://twtexpress.info/

twtexpress.info

5394

http://www.twitpwr.com/abuse.php

www.twitpwr.com

5032

http://twittfollow.com

twittfollow.com

3572

http://www.tweeterleaders.info

www.tweeterleaders.info

2904

http://followquick.info/

followquick.info

2484

http://www.prankdial.com/fclicks/fclick.php?3

www.prankdial.com

2212

http://WWW.TWEETERSPEEDY.COM

WWW.TWEETERSPEEDY.COM

2085

http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=304863000&mt=8

phobos.apple.com

1632

www.twtmax.com

1136

http://followersquick.info

followersquick.info

582

http://pollpigeon.com/what-did-you-think-of-adam-lamberts-ama-performance/t/79281/

pollpigeon.com

349

http://pollpigeon.com/did-you-see-new-moonhow-did-you-like-it/t/79376/

pollpigeon.com

346

http://4url.cc/1MM

4url.cc

306

http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=305659257&mt=8

itunes.apple.com

298

http://pollpigeon.com/do-you-like-emily-osment/t/75437/

pollpigeon.com

248

http://boxcar.io

boxcar.io

160

http://www.nutritionaladvantageia.com/signup/

www.nutritionaladvantageia.com

silence_noise_143829_tns.png Let me make one thing perfectly clear – I belive that Social Media provides the best opportunity for opt-in targeted marketing. But when the Signal is so clogged with marketing and/or spam that adds zero value the only effect will be user apathy.

From a development/partner point of view, some of Twitter’s actions to “curate” seem rather annoying – but from an end user’s point of view they are doing exactly what they need to do. After all, at some point Twitter will launch their business model, and the two best bets are:

a) Targeted opt-in Ads

b) Analytics

Both of those revenue paths are put in serious jeopardy if users become apathetic because their Signal if full of marketing noise.

Think MLB Understands Engagement?

Only one game in Baseball today – and that is the AL Central one game playoff between the Minnesota Twins and Detroit Tigers. I won’t  take sides (go Twins!!!) but check out what happened to the number of tweets about the Minnesota Twins at game time:

twins-one-game-playoffWe’ve had a Signal set up for every MLB team since the All Star break – and I can tell you, the volume of tweets about the teams have gone way, way up since MLB (wisely) chose to add Twitter to MLB Gameday.

Social Media is great – and when you put it in your context, limited to the content about your product, service or company you can drive real engagement. Fan to fan, customer to customer, and prospect to prospect conversations that will generate real intelligence about your market, and how you should approach it.