Posts Tagged ‘social media tactics’

Does social media really impact SEO? YES..it does!

19
April
2010

Some great points to help explain social media’s impact on SEO from Marketing Sherpa’s 2010 Social Media Marketing Benchmark Report.

George Assimakopoulos
CEO & Principal Manager

Two months ago, I purchased Marketing Sherpa’s 2010 Social Media Marketing Benchmark Report. But after receiving it, I must admit that I’ve procrastinated a bit and have not given it the attention it really deserves. That said, I am so glad that other members of my team didn’t follow my example – and have actually read the benchmark report cover-to-cover.

My social media practice lead (Andrew Bates) recently shared with me some points that he read in the report that resonated well with me. As an online marketing consultant, I am constantly asked if social media truly impacts SEO rankings – or is that a myth. Believe me, I have explained and re-explained to clients how social media is a MUST-have for any SEO engagement. But the following two points from the benchmark report serve as a testament to why:

POINT #1: 69% of marketers using social media score its effectiveness at improving search engine rankings at three or higher on a scale of one-to-five, according to Marketing Sherpa’s 2010 Social Media Marketing Benchmark Report

POINT#2: Marketers also are successfully using social media for targeted search goals including:

  • Improving search rankings — 91%
  • Increasing traffic from targeted keywords — 90%
  • Expanding content shown in universal search results — 89%
  • Improving the ROI from search programs — 80%
  • Generating more qualified leads — 78%

The report goes on to include five SEO social media trends to guide an integrated approach:

  • Trend #1. A solid social strategy must come first
  • Trend #2. Search engines are increasingly indexing social content
  • Trend #3. Social media builds inbound links
  • Trend #4. Search and social data complement each other
  • Trend #5. On-site social media is a powerful content generator

In short, Marketing Sherpa’s 2010 Social Media Marketing Benchmark Report is a MUST READ for anyone targeting online social media as part any integrated marketing approach. And since I’ve already spent good-money to buy the report, it looks like I’ve just lined-up my reading-homework for this week.

To learn more about this benchmark report – CLICK HERE.

Your Gatherers: Giving ‘Em What They Want

25
January
2010

It’s time to stop thinking of social media peeps as fans and followers. They’re gatherers and you may not be giving them enough to come back.

Blake Bowyer
Media Program Analyst

I’ve never really liked the terms “fans” or “followers” for Facebook and Twitter users, respectively. It’s the kind of marketing vocabulary that seems presumptuous. As a verb, someone may have fan-ed your brand or followed your company, but that doesn’t mean they’re a fan of your online presence and you don’t have anything to prove. As much as it pains me to throw another term in the mix, “gatherer” is more appropriate and meaningful. For some reason, this mob has approached your brand after an encounter in another medium or possibly through a tangible interaction. They could have read about you, they may have purchased your products, but now they’ve found you online.

What do you do next?

Act. Give them what they want. New fans and followers expect something, but not the same old something. They could get that from where they’ve been before, but they approached you online for something else. What can you give them? How do you keep the gatherers from dispersing? Know what they want and what they expect from you.

eMarketer gathered some recent information from a small MarketingSherpa study on Reasons for Friending or Following Companies Through Social Media and this table shows the results:

110430 Your Gatherers: Giving Em What They Want

Additionally, a Razorfish study exploring the Primary Reason US Internet Users Follow a Brand on Twitter isn’t identical, but in the same vein:

1085511 Your Gatherers: Giving Em What They Want

While these responses seem intuitive (coupons provide instant, tangible benefits through savings), they’re important nonetheless. Your brand has gatherers because – surprise, surprise – they’re looking for an added benefit; they want value. Being a fan or follower is akin to being a member of an exclusive club or a loyalty program. Your gatherers are wondering, “I’ve found your brand and have chosen to show my support. What will you give me in return?” They’ve done something through social media that other media would never facilitate – they’ve reached out their hands and want to make a deal. Those are the three defining attributes of effective social media marketing: efforts are reciprocal, two-way, and both parties benefit to make it work.

They’ve gathered, now bring them back. You might be counting fans and followers, but seeing those terms as literal is old media thinking with new media execution. They’ll butt heads eventually and your gatherers are more likely to lynch your brand than advocate it.

How to Measure Social Media Marketing Tactics

10
February
2009

Study shows that social media tactics are best measured qualitatively.

Stefanie Berliant
Media Coordinator

MarketingSherpa recently released its 2009 Social Media Marketing & PR Benchmark Guide. One of the more interesting findings in this report was the idea that some of the most effective social media tactics typically end up being the most difficult to quantitatively measure. There has been discussion about the best ways to measure social media, however, no consensus has been agreed upon.  Because social media is a tactic more associated with public relations than direct marketing, it is often difficult to measure quantitatively.

The main goal for many marketers is to accurately measure ROI from social media marketing campaigns. But, as seen in the chart below, the tactic ‘user reviews or ratings’ is the most effective social media tactic (47%), but is also one of the more difficult tactics to measure quantitatively (15%).

Most Effective Social Media Tactics are Least Measurable

In order to maximize social marketing campaigns, marketers should employ effective tactics and forgo quantitative measurements such as ROI, traffic, click thru rate, conversions, etc.  Instead, set goals of social marketing campaigns to be measured qualitatively, assessing the value of the resulting conversations and relationships.