Measure Social-Media Efforts to Grow Revenue, Lists and Leads - Despite the trendiness of social-media channels such as Facebook and Twitter, a whopping question lingers: Does marketing on these sites drive revenue or other measurable results? Learn how to treat your social-media forays as more traditional marketing campaigns, so you can begin to muscle through the hype and establish a baseline of actual concrete results.
Measure Social-Media Efforts to Grow Revenue, Lists and Leads
By Dan Miller
Mar 10, 2010 - 11:04:37 PM
Despite the trendiness of
social-media channels such as Facebook and Twitter, a whopping question
lingers: Does marketing on these sites drive revenue or other measurable
results? Learn how to treat your social-media forays as more traditional
marketing campaigns, so you can begin to muscle through the hype and
establish a baseline of actual concrete results.
Figure out what you want from social marketing
Of course, you can easily gauge
the “buzz” factor provided by social media, for example, by monitoring the
number of Facebook fans your company snagged or total hits to your blog. You
can tally customer comments, or you can monitor sites such as Digg or Twitter
as a barometer of brand awareness. (Read How Marketers Can Tweet Their Companies to
Greater Success.)
But if you’re trying to use social
networks to meet revenue, lead-generation, email-list-building or other
conversion goals, you'll need to dig deeper – then experiment to improve your
results. This requires measuring how well your campaigns perform on social-media
sites, compared with each other and with other channels.
To begin, think about what you’d
like to achieve using social media and what is actually measurable. Let's say
driving revenue is the goal of a marketing campaign, so you link to a promotional
offer or coupon from a social-media site. To measure effectiveness, you might
calculate the percentage of social click-throughs that actually make it to an
order receipt or thank-you page.
If growing your email lists is a
priority, you can embed "social sharing" links in your
email-marketing campaigns to encourage readers to post your content on their
favorite social sites, then track how many of your new subscribers come from
social channels.
Or if generating leads is your top
aim, you can look at the number of social visitors who register for a webinar
or download a white paper or even spend a particular amount of time doing
heavy-duty product research on your site.
You’re likely to be disappointed
with the number of conversions that result directly from a social link, but
that doesn’t mean social media is completely ineffective. You should also
measure at least one engagement metric, such as "average time on
site" or "page views per visitor." These can tip you off
to visitors who might not be ready to take action, but who stuck around on
your site past the initial landing page.
But first, you'll need to do a
tiny bit of housekeeping to make your social-media efforts measurable.
Put
adequate tracking on your social links
The best way to report on your
social-media traffic is to assign URL tracking parameters to your links, as
you do with email and keyword campaigns.
This is especially critical when
it comes to social marketing, because much of your social traffic won't come
directly from social Web sites. For example, many Twitter users don't go to
Twitter.com to send or read tweets, they use a third-party application like
TweetDeck. Embedding tracking data in the links themselves ensures that you
count all social traffic, even when it comes from sites you don't expect.
As outlined in the example above,
we recommend adding two tracking parameters to each link: one that designates
the name of the particular marketing campaign you're linking to and one that
designates which social site you're posting on. You must separate your two
tracking parameters with the & symbol.
In our example, the two parameters
are
campaign and
socialsrc. The respective values assigned to
these parameters are
bluewidget and
twitter.
Our example is just that: an
example. You have the freedom to name your parameters and assign values using
whatever words and abbreviations you prefer. (The one exception is if you
rely on Google Analytics. In this case, instead of just adding the tracking
parameters to the end of your URL, you have to follow Google-specific link-tagging instructions.)
Now that you have links with
tracking code firmly in place, use a URL-shortening service such as bit.ly or TinyURL
to condense your links before you post them on various social sites. This has
two advantages:
It gives you more room in Twitter's 140-character
universe to hype your link.
It hides all of your tracking parameters, so your
links don't stand out on social sites like three-piece suits at a family
picnic.
Set
a baseline for your social campaign results
Now you can use your Web-analytics
software, such as Lyris
HQ, to figure out just what kind of
return you're getting from your social-marketing efforts.
Make your goals measurable. You can easily tag pages that represent the
completion of a milestone, such as thank-you pages for making a
purchase, joining an email list or filling out a lead-generation form,
as "goal pages." This lets your software tally up the number
of visitors who took any of the desired conversion actions, without
requiring you to individually analyze each goal page.
Start with a high-level view of your data. Your Web-analytics tool allows you to filter
campaign reports based on any parameter you select. So, to use our
previous example, if you ran reports based on the parameter called
socialsrc, you'd get a table displaying the results for each specific
value assigned to it. So you might end up with separate rows of
Facebook, Twitter and Digg stats that highlight how the sites differ on
variables like the overall number of visitors, the number who reached a
goal page, average time on site, campaign costs and other metrics.
Drill down as needed. When you spot unusual trends, look at navigation
paths on specific landing pages or run funnel reports to try to
formulate theories about what's happening and why. For example, Twitter
and Facebook may send equal amounts of traffic, but Facebook may have
twice the conversion rate. Why? Maybe Twitter users need a different,
more detailed landing page because they only see short blurbs up front.
Track your stats.
Take a snapshot of where you are now. It doesn't have to be fancy or
comprehensive – a simple inventory of a few key metrics is fine. This
tells you exactly what social's doing for you today, so you can get more
out of it tomorrow.
From
social buzz to campaign tracking
Tracking social-media campaigns as
you would other marketing efforts helps you take your eye off the buzz and
put it back on the marketing ball. Practicing this consistently over time can
help you increase sales, enhance your lists, grow more leads and succeed
where your competitors flail.
Dan Miller is sales engineering
manager at Lyris. He is also experienced in managing professional services,
helping companies adopt data-driven marketing techniques to improve their
online and email marketingROI.To learn more about Lyris
solutions and services, visit http://www.lyris.com.
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