Monday, November 16, 2009

5 KEYS for measuring social media success


As the world turns to social media and IPhones, the success of your use of social media can only be verified when measured against five key metrics important to determining success or failure.



Theres been a lot of talk about social media lately. It is Addictive. Fun. Downright social!

But how valuable is it? How do you tell? There are dozens of measuring tools online to tally up any and all countable social media elements. Most of them are interesting and some actually useful.

Here are five key measurements or metrics that might prove useful to the you, the manager of your office communication. Your center may have a website. Maybe you have embraced Facebook or Twitter. Some of you have posted videos on YouTube.com. Others have mounted an Email campaign using Constant Contact or AWebber.

As you post that next message to your social media community, look for these five measurable keys:

1. Did they get the chance to connect with your center?

2. Did they get the message?

3. Did they repeat/retweet it?

4. Did they get a good feeling about it enough to read your message?

5. Did they complete your call to action?


As you write your copy, will it communicate in such a manner as to invoke action at some level in your viewing audience. At Google, every product is developed around the idea that every action can be measured.

Let’s review these 5 keys
1. Did they get the chance to connect with your business?
If you put up a billboard on the highway, so many thousand commuters have an "opportunity to see" your message -- unless they were texting, applying makeup, tuning the radio, disciplining their kids or, heaven forbid, watching traffic. But, the measure of success is not how many eyeballs saw the billboard, but how many phone calls or office visits did it result in?

If you put an ad on TV, it is likely many thousands, even millions of viewers will have an "opportunity to see" your message. That is unless they were fast-forwarding, texting, applying makeup, tuning the radio, disciplining their kids or, most likely, answering nature's call or on the phone. Likewise, if you invest in TV you are interested in how many people respond to that ad. You are looking for a measurable factor or “metric” by which you can judge success vs.failure.

Now, when you post a message online, it is expected that some unknown number of people will have the opportunity to see it if -- they have already subscribed, befriended or followed you or know somebody who did.

The sizzling diamond of what social networking can bring to your center is that they might only have known somebody who knew somebody who knew somebody .. who most likely will see or view your message.
So this is your first metric: the base number of people who are in a position to get a message from you directly.

At AWS CREATIVE SOLUTIONS LLC, I measure our counter, our stats but even more our Google Analytics to really see where my sites are having its greatest results. Your RRS readers, newsletter subscribers, Web site visitors all count for this metric. Throw them all into the stew for this metric. These are the ones to whom you are directly connected.

2. Did they get the message? Because your viewers and visitors are otherwise engaged means accurate measuring of their response to your message is fairly incalculable unless you trust people to tell you the truth when you interview them. "Do you read all my Tweets?" is more than likely to produce 100% positive result. There is a reason Facebook does not tell you when people unfriend you. At least with email, you can get a rough number of opens, but with Twitter, you may as well put your finger up in the air and feel the breeze. So there has to be a way to measure such social media success.

3. Did they like your message enough to repeat or retweet it? Lots of tools are out there to help you monitor what pearls of your wisdom others deem worthy of retweeting. Between Tweetbeep, trackbacks and Google Alerts, you'll be able to maintain your vigilant brand-spread watch. Another great tool is HootSuite.com and Twitterfeed for IPHONE. With these tools you can know when someone retweets or direct messages you. The key is to write content that is so easy to read that it makes them want to repeat it to their friends.

But suddenly, it gets trickier. Did they get your message from others who got it from others? If you're Susan Boyle, they got the message, but this is where you feel the urge to map out the connections and figure out who are the real influentials. This is not as easy as it may seem. Certain specialized tools like Sentinal Visualizer claim o answer questions like: How highly connected is an entity within a network? What is an entity's overall importance in a network? How central is an entity within a network? How does information flow within a network? What does it mean to your success?

Influence becomes the prime mover in the worlds of online virality. Knowing who can lengthen your reach helps you determine what your message should look like.

4. Did they get a good feeling about your message? Sentiment analysis is a different kettle of fish. In Hollywood, Oscar Wilde is right, the only thing worse than people talking about you is people not talking about you. In Hollywood, there's no such thing as bad press. In business, that they are talking is good only if what they are saying is good.

As so, another category of social media tools pops up like BuzzLogic, JD Power WebIntelligence and ScoutLabs. The important thing about sentiment analysis is that it is a more direct window into the hearts and minds of the marketplace. It is the actual pulse of opinion -- whether it's about your brand, your industry or your latest viral video. This is market research at its best.

5. Did they complete your CALL-TO-ACTION?
If you were trying to sell something: did they get out their wallets? If you were trying to get them to buy a product, did they complete the sale? If you were trying to improve customer rating of your business or brand, did the numbers change after the campaign? If you were trying to boost customer inquires, did they call your office?

Finally, we get to the measurement at the end of the equation. We want to improve all of the above in order to move the needle on the bottom line.

Let's not forget that in the end, it is about making new sales, customers or buyers.

And let's not forget that below the bottom line, there is the key metric we must never overlook: Did our message tell the truth? Did it represent your center or business in a positive light? Did it help solve a problem or encourage someone?

Everything you do whether it is working with a someone in person or on the telephone or online, your job is to be a representative of positive marketing at all times.

Embrace and enjoy social media marketing. Take charge of the results to insure that you are not simply spinning your wheels.

A SOLUTION FOR YOUR BUSINESS:

Ask about our social media marketing starter program. For one low cost, you can have your social media network established, your staff trained how to feed the network quickly, efficiently, and legally, Our service provides the setup, layout, configuring of a Twitter, FaceBook, LinkedIn, and Blog to accompany your existing website. A customer feedback and email campaign management system as well as a Google analytics and Hootsuite account will be established on your behalf.
And more than all this, creative copy will be written to establish your network with a concentric message tailored to your existing current marketing or advertising.

For more help contact Ken Freeman
214-703-0505

WHAT IS A SOCIAL MEDIA NETWORK?

As you view this social media map, you see that there are many sources that make up the many dimensions of social media marketing.

The key is to have the means to measure the success of the network you use to accomplish the desired call-to-actions found on your network.

The conversation map below is a living, breathing representation of Social Media. This map will evolve as services and conversation channels emerge, fuse, and dissipate.

If a conversation takes place online and you’re not there to hear or see it, did it actually happen?

Indeed. Conversations are taking place with or without you and this map will help you visualize the potential extent and pervasiveness of the online conversations that can impact and influence the success of your “message.”

As a communications or service professional, you'll find yourself at the center of the prism - whether you're observing, listening or participating.

Brian Solis, of PR 2.0, worked with Jesse Thomas to create the "Social Media Conversation" map.




This visual map is the ideal complement to The Essential Guide to Social Media* and the Social Media Manifesto** Both will help you better understand how to listen and in turn, participate transparently, sincerely, and effectively.

As conversations are increasingly distributed, everything hinges on listening and observing. These two fundamental actions on your part, will help you identify exactly where relevant discussions are taking place, as well as their scale and frequency.

This dialog can be charted into a targeted social map that's unique to your marketing effort. You can reach Ken Freeman at 214-703-0505 or email: support@awebstore.com to learn more about social media marketing helps and services available.

Also visit: http://awscreativesolutions.com

Now, sort through these five key steps and use them to grow your outreach to a higher success rate. SHARE THIS REPORT with at least three others you know. CHANGE is possible.

AWS CREATIVE SOLUTIONS LLC
1813 Eldorado Dr.
Garland, TX 75042
Telephone: 214-703-0505
Email: support@awebstore.com
Learn more at http://social-mediatv.com

*This free ebook by Brian Solis, San Francisco, CA, United States http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Solis contains a great explanation of how to start down the Social Media path.
** Download your own copy of this free report here.
http://www.yoursocialbrand.com/report

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