Posts Tagged ‘Social Media Measurement’

Take a Peek at Optimizer

Posted in Optimizer for Twitter, Social Media Analytics, Social Media Marketing, Social Media ROI, Twitter Marketing, Twitter ROI by Kim Cole on August 31st, 2011
 

I thought I would give you an update on the recent progress here at Terametric. We’re moving along with our newest app, Optimizer for Twitter.  This is an amazing product designed to help you calculate and improve your Twitter ROI.

We’ve successfully completed our beta program and are continuing to fine-tune our app.  Our tech team has added amazing features that will help you not only measure how effective each tweet is, but also suggest the most optimum time to send that tweet.

If this hasn’t piqued your interest, this may help:  We’re offering a Pre-Launch Special to the first 100 qualified applicants for our free 30-day trial before September 7, 2011.  If you qualify, you’ll receive a 30% discount off our regular price.

So if you’re looking to Optimize your Twitter marketing by being found by more prospects, identifying & connecting with key influencers, and converting them into leads and paying customers, sign up for our free trial.

Space is limited! Insert the special discount code “optimize30″to be eligible for your 30% discount. There is no obligation to purchase, but to be eligible you must request your trial on or before September 7.

Thanks for reading and we look forward to working with you!

@kimberlyAcole

@terametric

Calculating Social Media ROI

Posted in Social Media Analytics, Social Media Marketing, Social Media Metrics, Social Media ROI by Kim Cole on August 24th, 2011
 

 

As we all know, social media is the latest Internet phenomenon. And social media marketing is the latest twist on the age-old pursuit of gaining more customers and market share, driven by perhaps one of the most ancient of all desires to be the best! (OK I really meant greed but that seemed a little too harsh.)

Social media is even being offered at college campuses around the US.  In fact the Boston Business Journal reported today on a top-ten list of colleges for social media savvy.

One aspect of being social media savvy is knowing how to measure your progress and understand your return on investment (ROI).  The Internet is the most measurable medium even invented, yet marketers and business leaders continue to complain the calculating their ROI is difficult or impossible. 

Please join us for a free webinar for Calculating Social Media ROI with Paul Gillin. In this presentation, Paul Gillin – author of ‘The New Influencers’, ‘Secrets of Social Media Marketing’ and his latest ‘Social Marketing to the Business Customer’ will offer a framework for measuring ROI using three simple criteria that can be applied to everything from Twitter to customer communities.

Additionally our own Chris Selland of Terametric will take us through examples of companies who today are applying these principles, and showcases real-world examples of how social marketing efforts are being measured to help companies pinpoint their ROI.

 Details of the webinar:

Date:  Thursday September 8, 2011

Time:  12:00 – 1:00 EDT

RSVP: Click Here to Join

Looking forward to a great event, hope you can make it!!  If you have any questions for our presenters, please post them in the comment section and we’ll be sure to get answers for you.

Terametric Friday: Top Stories in Social Media

Posted in Social Media Marketing, Social Media Metrics, Social Media ROI, Top Stories, Twitter ROI by Kim Cole on August 19th, 2011
 

Welcome to Friday, August 19, 2011, edition of “Top Stories in Social Media ROI.” This is Terametric’s series where we keep you updated on the critical evolution of marketing Return on Investment in the Social Media Channel. Our top stories for today feature an eclectic mix of social media marketing tips focusing on how using Twitter can positively influence your marketing ROI:

 

Measuring Social Influence

If you want to get a reaction from a public relations or social media pro, ask them about influence. You are sure to get answers from each end of the spectrum. Some will say influence is misconstrued as “popular.” Others believe that follower numbers measure influence.

Ford and Twitter Talk Keys to Marketing to Millennials

But when it comes to Twitter, millennials are over-indexing. Twitter’s director of sales marketing, Shane Steele, citing third-party research, said 55% of the Twitter audience is made up of millennials, compared to 40% of the rest of the internet. Ford has worked with Twitter to reach the social-media savvy set for years, having had a strong presence on Twitter since July 2008.

Twitter users are more likely to impact your brand than any other social network

Now, more than ever, is the time for brands and companies to begin understanding how the chaotic and real-time world of Twitter can massively influence the ways in which consumers perceive them.

Terametric Friday: Top Stories in Social Media

Posted in Social Media Marketing, Social Media Metrics, Social Media ROI, Top Stories by Kim Cole on August 5th, 2011
 

Welcome to Friday, August 5, 2011, edition of “Top Stories in Social Media ROI.” This is Terametric’s series where we keep you updated on the critical evolution of marketing Return on Investment in the Social Media Channel. Our top stories for today feature social media measurement and brand awareness:

11 ways to measure the value of social media

We hear that “data is the new oil” and maybe so, but just like crude oil, data needs to be refined to maximise its value. It needs to be processed into actionable insight. Online and mobile activities generate vast amounts of data and there are no shortage of tools and technology available to analyse it. But the reality in many cases is “analysis paralysis”, little actual insight, or recommendations that can’t then be acted upon owing to a lack of relevant resources.

Brands Now Direct Their Followers to Social Media

MARKETERS promoting their products online have followed a fairly standard arc historically, first buying digital ads and building their own Web sites in the early years of the Internet, and more recently amassing followers on social networks like Facebook and Twitter.

13 Truths About Social Media Measurement

Measurement is a discipline, and it needs to be business-wide. If you’re going to ask about the ROI, value, or impact of social media and how to measure it, I’m going to ask how you’re going about determining those things for other areas of your business, and ask you to translate or adapt some of those practices over to social initiatives.

Begin at the End to Find ROI

Posted in Content Marketing, Social Media Analytics, Social Media Marketing, Social Media Metrics, Social Media ROI by Kim Cole on August 1st, 2011
 

 

Dorothy had it right on her journey to Oz, by starting at the beginning of the yellow brick road.  But we’re not in Kansas any more are we?  What does where you start have to do with social media anyway?  Read on to find my take on where to start with social media advertising.

According to some recent research discussed by eMarketer, it seems that advertisers are utilizing social media successfully, now more so than ever.  About half of those surveyed currently using SM advertising are satisfied with their results.

 

The May 2011 research from The Pivot Conference and Brian Solis found that two-thirds of marketers surveyed were already conducting social media advertising activities.  More than 90% have advertised on Facebook, and 78% have used Twitter to advertise. 

Most agreed that these efforts would prove very valuable, and 54% of those currently running ads were satisfied.  eMarketer estimates that Facebook and Twitter will make $2.19 billion and $140 million, respectively, in US revenues this year.  I totally respect eMarketer and I’m sure they’re right on with their estimates, which is great news for Facebook and Twitter.  But the question I have is, do the companies buying ads know whether or not they are getting a good return on their Social Media advertising dollar? 

In order to answer this question, a well-crafted campaign needs to be established.  And as with all good plans, (wait for it….) you should begin at the end, instead of the beginning.  You need to set your campaign goal first (increase web traffic, increase leads, more sales, increased customer satisfaction etc.) and then pick the metrics to measure that goal.  You need to decide how you will collect the data behind the metric as well.  There are many companies that can assist you with this, some free, some that charge fees, and all this should be taken into consideration when you finally calculate your ROI. 

So before you jump on the social media advertising bandwagon, begin at the end to make a good start.  For a great ROI checklist to help with your planning, click here. 

Good luck with your social media marketing and thanks for reading!

@KimberlyACole

Terametric Friday: Top Stories in Social Media ROI

Posted in Social Media Analytics, Social Media Marketing, Social Media ROI, Twitter Marketing by Kim Cole on June 24th, 2011
 

Welcome to Friday, June 24, 2011, edition of “Top Stories in Social Media ROI.”  This is Terametric’s series where we keep you updated on the critical evolution of marketing Return on Investment in the Social Media Channel.  Our top stories for today are all Social Media and Twitter:

 

Endless Conversations and the Future of Marketing

We have entered the age of Endless Conversations — thoughts, messages, links, photos, video, SMS — all carried along in the massive social river — to be discovered, shared, commented upon, curated, stored, analyzed, and more.

Wall Street Starts to Embrace Twitter

Last year the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority- FINRA, established rules for social media use, but Wall Street has been slow to let brokers participate.

Customer Service Complaints: Taking to Twitter

At BlogWorld Expo in New York last month, more than one panel discussed the phenomenon of people complaining publicly on Twitter and Facebook before even reaching out to customer service. Fact is, it’s easier. And, frankly, anyone who’s ever dealt with customer service for a large company probably thinks they’ll get a response faster that way than if they went through regular channels.

Does Social CRM Really Matter? A Quick Look at Yesterday’s IBM Infoboom Twitter Chat

The June 21, 2011 IMB Infoboom, featuring Chris Selland, our VP of Sales & Marketing here at Terametric, focused on the importance of Social Customer Relationship Management (SCRM). The chat began by defining SCRM and differentiating it from traditional CRM, which is a term that has been around for many years. There is a lot of controversy over what exactly the topic of SCRM is comprised of.

Terametric Friday: Top Stories in Social Media ROI

Posted in Social Media Analytics, Social Media Marketing, Social Media Metrics, Social Media ROI, Top Stories, Twitter Marketing by Kim Cole on June 3rd, 2011
 

Welcome to Friday, June 3, 2011, edition of “Top Stories in Social Media ROI.”  This is Terametric’s series where we keep you updated on the critical evolution of marketing Return on Investment in the Social Media Channel.  Our top stories for today feature using Twitter as an effective Marketing Tool and of course, ROI:

 

 Twitter central to Avaya’s marketing strategy

Avaya Inc. has seen social media, particularly Twitter, become an increasingly important part of its marketing in the past year. The business communications solutions company has used Twitter for everything from developing internal communication to closing sales.

The 6 Step Process for Measuring Social Media

What makes measuring social tricky is that HOW your company uses social media changes the metrics that makes sense for you.  Remember, the goal is not to be good at social media, but to be good at business because of social media. Thus, you first have to understand your business level objectives, and how social media can support them.

There really is an ROI in Social Media – I’ve seen it!

I really don’t get it. I recently saw an article from MarketingSherpa that said 62% of CMO’s believe that social media marketing will pay off … eventually! That’s 6 out of every 10 CMOs. All I can say is what are you reading and where are you hiding yourself?

Cheer Up, We Can’t All Go Viral…

Posted in Influence, Social Media Analytics, Social Media Marketing, Social Media Metrics, Twitter Marketing by Kim Cole on June 1st, 2011
 

I read an interesting blog about the power of a single tweet that turned into a trending topic on Twitter.  The blog entitled, “Anatomy of a trending topic: How Twitter & the crafting community put the smackdown on Urban Outfitters” written by Amber Karnes (@amberkarnes) tells of how one tweet can go viral.  It seems a large company was copying jewelry designs from an independent artist.  The story on the surface was quite interesting and shows the enormous power the individual now has thanks to social media. 

But there’s more to the story when you begin to think about it in terms of your business.  These exciting viral tweets are rare and though we all wish it would happen to us, in all likelihood, it won’t.  You will go about your daily social media routines and chug along.  But you really need to be tracking what’s going on with your brand, and also your competitors.  Amber touches on this briefly, but it can’t be emphasized enough.  You should be actively monitoring your twitter handles, your competitor’s handles, key words for your industry, and applicable hashtags.

And you should also be looking for trends to help you determine how the social landscape is changing for you and your competitors.  Choose a monitoring interval when you’re doing your trend analysis (weekly, bi-weekly, monthly) and track how the various metrics are changing through time. 

If you’re armed with information about your social media efforts, you’ll be nimble and able to respond to the quickly changing landscape of social media.  And you may never go viral, but you can still be just as effective in the long run with your social media efforts.  After all, we know, slow and steady wins the race.

So go ahead and get a little analytical with your social media.  There are many ways to track your efforts, so try out a few tools to find what works best for your situation and don’t be afraid to change the metrics that you monitor.  In fact, the very mercurial nature of social media demands that you ebb and flow along with it, or risk getting left behind.

Here at Terametric, we’re always thinking about analytics so leave us your thoughts and we’d be happy to chat with you!

Thanks for reading!

@KimberlyACole

PS – Here’s a link to another blog, Urban Outrage by Helen Killer, that tells the other side of the story.  Which again, proves that you need to stay on the pulse of social media, and that you need to know all the facts before you blog, but that’s another blog…..

Social Influence – Early Debates, Inevitable Outcomes

Posted in Influence, Social Media Analytics, Social Media Metrics by Chris Selland on May 18th, 2011
 

I fully confess to being fascinated with the debates going on around the topic of ‘influence’. Even more so because of the strong and often negative reactions that have arisen in response to the rise of influence measurement tools (such as Klout and PeerIndex), particularly within the marketing community.

These debates are both inevitable and unavoidable, since the continued expansion in the use of social networks completely flips the dynamic between customer and marketer, rendering many of the tried-and-true methods employed by the latter suddenly ineffective.

Many marketers don’t like it – at all. Nor do those who would like to consider (and advertise) themselves as ‘influential’ care to find that their Klout score is not as reflective of their perceived greatness as they’d like it to be.

So a backlash has begun. Which is also inevitable.

However, if one thinks it through, it becomes clear that while a 100% clear and documentable definition of ‘influence’ may never be agreed-upon (I suspect we might not even get to 50%) that the rise of Influence measurement has only just begun.

Is Klout perfect? As Martijn Linssen tweeted yesterday, probably not. But as Judy Shapiro says in her AdAge piece referenced below, they were the first to stake their claim to actually measure social influence. That stake in the ground does not imply they will be the last or the definitive word, but they deserve credit for focusing the conversation and bringing the discussion into the mainstream.

Chasing the “Influencer” set is a long standing marketing strategy – not a novel concept newly minted from the social media revolution. We may have called them by different names 20 years ago – thought leaders, trend setters, early adopters – but we always understood their disproportionate power to drive business.  Via adage

Back then, it was not hard to know who influencers were (usually confined to public personalities) but it was hard to determine which “influencer,” a.k.a. celebrity, was worth more than another. To solve the problem, a company called Marketing Evolutions introduced “Q Scores”, a well-known popularity metric as one way (albeit limited) to compare one personality’s influencer value from another.

Then, as social media “happened” – BOOM – brands had easy and really really cheap access to more influencers than ever before. The only trouble was sheer quantity made finding the “influencer diamonds in the rough” really – uh – rough.

What we are about to see is an explosion of tools for measuring influence, sentiment and other key online metrics – most if not all of which will derive second-order ‘metrics’ from the massive data sets created by consumers on social networks.

  • Who follows you? 
  • Who retweets you and how often? How influential are they? 
  • Who favorites you?
  • How active are you?
  • Who shares your content? Where? How Often?

These metrics, measures and scores will also evolve beyond the general and beyond the consumer, as a marketer at, say, IBM, cares much less about their influence relative to Justin Bieber and Barack Obama than they do in relation to Microsoft and Oracle. This is the problem we are working on at Terametric.

As these tools, scores & metrics continue to evolve, the debates will get more frequent, in many cases louder, and in some cases angrier. But there is no turning back – the revolution is in full swing, and the customer has taken control of the conversation and isn’t giving it back.

My advice? Use the scores that work for you (and measure that too) but any attempt to deny that such a thing as Influence exists is denying a trend that is inevitable and only bound to accelerate.

 As Josh Brown recently (and correctly) stated – Influence is the new Currency, for both consumers and for businesses. Like it or not (and many don’t), we’re already there.

Terametric Friday: Top Stories in Social Media ROI

Posted in Content Marketing, Social Media Analytics, Social Media Marketing, Social Media Metrics, Social Media ROI by Kim Cole on May 6th, 2011
 

Welcome to Friday, May 6, 2011, edition of “Top Stories in Social Media ROI.”  This is Terametric’s series where we keep you updated on the critical evolution of marketing Return on Investment in the Social Media Channel.  Our top stories for today are all about the ROI of Social Media.

 

The KISS Method for Determining Social Media ROI

Attend any corporate meeting on social media initiatives and it’s likely that you’ll hear a question or two along the lines of “how is this selling us more product” or “what’s the ROI on these activities”? Unfortunately, many social media strategists get caught up in the numbers that relate specifically to social media and they forget about the numbers that are meaningful to their business.

 Forget Social Media ROI

Are you tracking social media ROI? If so, you’re part of a small minority. Currently, there’s a lot of talk about social media ROI and monitoring, which by itself is an indicator that social media marketing is maturing. That doesn’t necessarily translate to action, however, since there’s a lot of confusion around what to track and how to track it.

What Is The ROI Of A Conversation?

Most students of any business course are taught constantly about the importance of having a good Return on Investment. Whether that “investment” is measure in dollars or in time that you or your employees spend trying to do something, we are taught that the benefit must be tangible when it comes back to your business.

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