Chapter 1
In This Chapter
Understanding the difference between social monitoring and social measuring
Knowing the benefits of real-time engagement
Determining the best social metrics for your business
Understanding the importance of social media measuring
Gone are the days when businesses could operate behind closed doors. The popularity (or should we say, massive explosion?) of social networking has busted open those doors, and there’s no turning back.
Your customers are now social customers. They love to share, chat, post, like, and comment — and when they have something important to say (good, bad, or worse), they’re quick to share it on their social networks. Their comments run the gamut from the best raves to the worst rants.
This chapter first examines the importance of social monitoring and describes ways that you can take advantage of the social conversations related to your niche and your business. From there, we explore strategies related to social measuring, discussing how you can best measure your prospects’ and customers’ social activities, and then use this information in your marketing messages to get your fans to take action.
Your customers and prospects are going to be social with or without you, so it behooves you to pay attention, take notes, and get into the conversations at just the right times. This chapter helps you do just that!
If you’re just dipping your toes into the ever-changing Facebook waters, the idea of taking on social data tracking may be a bit daunting. You may be wondering, “Where do I start?” When you do collect the data, you might ask, “What the heck do I do with it?” We address both of those questions and many more throughout this section.
The purpose of tracking online activity is to identify the overall impact of your efforts. The data that you collect can help you support your customers, promote your brand, and grow your business.
In addition to listening to your fans, run a reality check to find out whether all your social media marketing efforts are worth your time and effort. Is what you’re doing really working? When you’re exploring monitoring and measuring strategies, you first want to set your key performance indicators (KPIs). Ask yourself these questions:
Although you’ll find some overlap in the data, monitoring and measuring are two different processes. When it comes to taking action, you analyze and use that data differently. This chapter closely examines both processes so you can better understand what overall tracking can do for your business.
Monitoring is a bit like eavesdropping while pressing your big digital ear against the computer screen. You get to listen to all the chatter about you and your company as well as hear what’s being said about your competitors and industry. In this section, we explore what it means to monitor social media activity and what you can do with the data you collect to improve your overall marketing initiatives.
After you identify your keywords, you plug them and information about your social media accounts into a monitoring tool. (We review your options for monitoring tools in depth in Chapter 3 of this minibook.) The monitoring tool tracks the communications most important to your niche and business, organizing the data for you in a way that’s easy to digest, such as comprehensive charts, tables, and lists. Overall, monitoring allows you to know who’s talking about a topic (by means of specific keywords that you identify) and what they’re saying about it.
To put a successful social monitoring plan in place, you must understand why monitoring is important to your business and look closely at what you can do with the information you collect.
Monitoring is all about listening to online conversations with the intent to learn, engage, and support. The benefit of social media monitoring is the opportunity to join the conversations that matter most to your business and its relationships with its fans.
When it’s working in your favor, Facebook can function as a word-of-mouth machine, broadcasting every customer rave that hits its airwaves. When you’re engaged with your fans and firing on all cylinders, Facebook can be your best friend. At some point, however, all best friends have spats. Sooner or later, someone will use Facebook to tell the world that your product is lacking, your delivery department is slow, or your call-center response time is horrendous. It’s bound to happen.
In both cases — that is, in the “singing your praises” scenario and the “lackluster results” scenario — your goal is to be prepared to engage. You want to respond to both types of posts as quickly as possible. And that’s why monitoring is a crucial component of your overall social media marketing strategy.
In the case of the raving, happy fans, catching them in the moment only elevates their appreciation for you and their admiration of you. They feel heard and appreciated. See Figure 1-1 for an example of a positive exchange on Facebook.
Situations like these give you the opportunity to protect your brand. One goal of an effective monitoring strategy is to guard your brand’s reputation and keep it polished at all times. Also, you can increase your brand’s social proof by engaging in these important, in-the-moment, two-way dialogs, which increases fan trust and admiration.
Monitoring online conversations is important if you want to stay in the loop about conversations related to your niche and your business. That said, the optimal outcome of social media monitoring is to take full advantage of the opportunity for real-time response. The goal is to get in on the conversations that matter most at just the right time. In this section, we give you a few examples to illustrate just how important real-time response is for your business.
Suppose that you’re the owner of an online store that sells wine, and your goal is to increase overall sales. Monitoring for phrases such as “wine pairing,” “the best wine that goes with,” and “wine recommendations” can help you help others.
To help you grasp the magnitude of real-time monitoring, we want to tell you about a post that was shared on Twitter and Facebook. Tim Ferriss, the best-selling author of The 4-Hour Workweek and The 4-Hour Body (Harmony), was trying to give a $100,000 donation to St. Jude’s Hospital. Not too shabby, right? Although he tried to contact the hospital multiple times, his calls were never returned, so out of frustration, Tim took to the social media airwaves, as shown in Figure 1-2. Imagine that you were St. Jude’s Hospital and saw Tim’s post online, in real time. You’d be sure to reach out immediately, right?
Almost 200 people responded to Tim’s post, making suggestions for his donation. (Note: St. Jude’s did reach out to Tim quickly, and he posted that he was talking with the hospital about his possible donation, as shown in Figure 1-2.) Now do you see why real-time response is so crucial?
Social media monitoring is not just about identifying and responding to your online detractors. To develop a clear picture of what’s being discussed online, you should monitor more than just your customers’ and prospects’ conversations about you. In this section, we take a look at additional ways to use these monitoring strategies to take your marketing initiatives to the next level.
Here are some outcomes of monitoring social activity:
To review, here are some of the most important benefits of social monitoring:
The term social proof refers to the psychological phenomenon of people being motivated to do things that they see other people doing.
Measuring is more statistical than monitoring and occurs over a period of time versus in real time.
In the following sections, we explore how measuring your social activity allows you to evaluate the success of your social media efforts, as well as to better understand the behaviors and habits of your customers and prospects. We also examine what data is best for you to measure, depending on your marketing outcomes. With all the data on the web today, the last thing you want to do is to get bogged down in too much information. When you know what to measure, you can streamline your efforts, saving yourself a lot of time and stress.
The benefit of measuring activity that relates to your brand, company, and industry on Facebook and other social networks is to spot trends, behaviors, and reactions early. The goal is to analyze the data quickly and act on it to get your biggest bang for your time and efforts. Constant benchmarking is crucial to ascertaining whether things are working in your favor.
For example, say you’re a wine seller. When measuring your data, you find that over the past few months, your fans engaged with your content (clicked links, commented, and shared your posts) more often when you posted about wine pairing versus when you posted about the types of grapes used in specific wines. This data helps you determine what content your audience wants to see more of, therefore eventually increasing your overall engagement and reach.
To begin measuring, first identify the keywords that reflect your business and brand. Useful keyword tools for researching and identifying the best search terms for your niche or market include
https://adwords.google.com/ko/KeywordPlanner/Home
Available through Google AdWords, the Google Keyword Planner is free to use, regardless of whether you spend money on ads. We discuss this tool in greater detail later in this chapter.
Use this tool to evaluate content for search terms and common usage. Its plans start at $97 per month.
This tool stresses competitor keyword research, with plans starting at $69.95 per month. However, limited free results available at www.semrush.com/info/empty/phrase_fullsearch include search volume, cost per click, competition on search terms, and number of search results.
After you enter a word or phrase, Google Keyword Planner suggests other popular keywords or phrases that users search for online, as shown in Figure 1-3. You can research which terms are searched for most and determine the words that best fit your brand.
Next, plug your keywords into a monitoring tool. (Again, we review monitoring tools in depth in Chapter 3 of this minibook.) The monitoring tool scans the Internet; grabs all blog posts, online articles, videos, and so on that contain those keywords; and disseminates the information in different data combinations, building patterns that tell a story about the social activity collected. The tool might tell you the specific keywords that were mentioned on specific social media channels and how many times they were mentioned. This type of data is useful for finding out what people are talking about online and where they’re talking.
When monitoring and measuring, it’s important to pay attention to your return on investment (ROI), meaning you want to make sure that your time, efforts, and dollars are delivering real results toward your specific goals and outcomes.
When it comes to tracking and measuring online data, you have numerous options, so it’s important to identify the metric indicators that are most important to you.
One of the ultimate benefits (and goals) of monitoring and measuring, after all, is uncovering information that allows you to increase the impact of your social media posts. Tracking the time of day you generate the most activity on your Page, such as clicks and comments, can help you decide the best time of day to post a call to action.
Suppose you own a store for runners, and you’re having a special on running shoes for men. By analyzing your data, focusing especially on how many men are engaging with your content, the time of day they’re most active on your Page, and what content they’re engaging in, you can find out the best time of day to post your promotion and how to craft your post around this data.
By measuring these behaviors at this depth, you can reach more of your targeted audience with each post and turn your fans into loyal, paying customers.
If you post content with links to your blog, for example, track which links get the most clicks from your fans by using a link-tracking tool such as Bitly (https://bitly.com/).
A free tool with a premium option, Bitly allows users to shorten, share, and track links (URLs). You copy and paste a long URL into the Bitly portal, and the tool automatically generates a shorter link that you can use on social networks or anywhere else on the web. These shorter links are trackable, meaning that Bitly will tell you how many times that link has been clicked and on what social sites it has been shared, as shown in Figure 1-4. Over time, this data helps you see which content your fans interact with most. For more detail on Bitly, please see Chapter 3 in this minibook.
If you’re looking to increase the comments on your Facebook Page, you may want to use Facebook Insights. Insights is Facebook’s built-in analytics dashboard. You can use it to look at trends in the activity on your Page, including how many comments you’re getting from your posts. We talk in detail about Facebook Insights in Chapter 2 of this minibook. This tool can paint a picture of what types of posts your fans respond to best — most favorably and most frequently.
Read on for specific ideas about what to measure, based on your business outcomes and goals.
When it comes to social media activity, you can track and measure numerous indicators. Here are the most important areas to consider:
To help you understand how these indicators can support your marketing efforts, we dive a little deeper in the following sections, exploring the benefits of each indicator. To decide which indicators are a good fit for your business, keep your marketing goals in mind as you read the options.
Engagement refers to the relevance of the Facebook Page to users and the actions they take when they visit the Page. You can measure engagement by taking a look at the types of activities users engage in, such as becoming a fan, writing on your Timeline, liking or commenting on an update, uploading a photo or video, or mentioning your Page in status updates. You can monitor this information weekly and monthly with Facebook Insights (see Book IX, Chapter 2, for details) and by spending time on your Page on a daily basis.
You can also monitor and measure all the words and phrases that your fans and prospects use when they talk about your brand. Are these words and phrases what you expected? Are they the same words that you’re using to explain your programs and services? These words and phrases are key to understanding how people are talking about your business! In addition, when you know the words your fans use online, you can build rapport more quickly because using the same words creates a connection.
Brand awareness refers to how much your company is talked about on the social web and, even more important, why people are talking about you. It also refers to how recognizable and known your brand is to your ideal audience. Is it in relation to a product announcement, a press release, or some company news you’ve played a role in? Or did someone write a review or mention your company in a blog post? Regardless of where the awareness comes from, you don’t want to be the last one to hear about it.
Influence refers to how much your company is referenced and respected on Facebook, other social media, and the web in general. If a company whose Facebook Page has 10,000 engaged fans posts a link to your new video on YouTube, and your video goes viral overnight as a result, you’d be able to attribute your success to being discovered on that company’s Facebook Page. Then you’d be able to monitor the increase in comments, likes, and shares on one of the social listening tools, such as Netvibes (www.netvibes.com), as shown in Figure 1-5.
Sentiment comprises both positive and negative reactions to your brand on Facebook, other social networks, and around the web. Perhaps someone ordered a product from you and was dissatisfied with the color or the overall quality. Perhaps that person went to your Facebook Page and wrote that he’ll never order another product from you. But what if your customer service reps were monitoring the Page in real time, and one of them offered to take the product back, refund the customer’s money, and send him a new model? You could nip the situation in the bud, not only undoing the negative sentiment, but also turning it around significantly.
You should measure how many new Likes can be attributed to individual updates and your collective activity on Facebook. If people respond favorably by liking your Page, and especially if they respond to a specific update, you can gain a good sense of how your users feel about that type of content. If videos get more attention than other links do, for example, you want to post more videos for your fans.
On the other hand, if users unsubscribe in reaction to a particular update, that situation gives you invaluable information, too. Perhaps users don’t want to see that type of content from you, or maybe you’ve overloaded your users with too many updates. Although ascertaining why you lose one fan here or there may be hard, a major exodus would be very revealing. You can monitor the number of new likers and unsubscribes on Facebook Insights.
Click activity refers to the times when a person clicks your Facebook Ad and is taken to your website or a tab on your Facebook Page. We recommend measuring click activity so you’ll know how effective your ad campaign is and whether you want to run it again or tweak it the next time around.
You can monitor this type of data by using Facebook Ads reports. (See Book VII, Chapter 4, for more about these reports.) Clicks are also tracked for Page Likes and event RSVPs. You’ll want to know whether your event is drawing people in on Facebook; if not, you may need to change the description or the date. Will you have enough interest to run it? You can see information about Likes, comments, and shares in the Facebook Insights reports, as seen in Figure 1-6. (For more on Facebook Insights, see Chapter 2 of this minibook.)
Financial return is the same as ROI and looks at the efficiency of your efforts in terms of time, resources, and dollars; it compares those efforts with your end results. When examining your financial returns, you want to make sure that your efforts are paying off — meaning they are moving you toward your overall goals.
Asking yourself specific questions related to your goals and marketing outcomes will help you determine whether you’re moving toward a financial return. For example, what are you getting in return for the time you spend on your Facebook marketing efforts? Have you increased your number of fans? Sold an online or in-person event via Facebook promotions? Brought more people to your web page and in turn sold them your programs or services? Had people download a white paper or report that, in addition to adding value, promoted a product or service? Brought more people to a special offer through a Facebook-specific promo code?
To see a real financial return on your social media activity, think in terms of conversion. The goal is to convert an interested potential customer to an actual, paying customer. Social media allows you to add value and to create engagement, trust, and affinity with your fans. After you capture your fans’ trust, it’s time to sell them your programs and services.
Tracking tools can show you how much traffic is generated, what content is of interest to your fans, and how often fans engage with you. To see a financial return on your social media activity, use these metrics to generate activity and to create and sell products, programs, and services for your ideal audience. Google Analytics, as we discuss in Chapter 3 of this minibook, includes tools to evaluate the ROI of social media, including Facebook.
Volume is how frequently people search for your company in search engines. Facebook Pages come up in search engine results for your company name, so someone who’s looking for your website might also decide to check out your Facebook Page. Google Analytics shows which Facebook custom apps on your Page sent traffic to your website, which is all the more reason why you want to make sure to display your URL prominently in the About box of your Facebook Timeline and on the Info tab.
Commonly used demographics include age, race, gender, language, location, and household income. Tracking tools such as HootSuite (www.hootsuite.com), which we cover in more detail in Chapter 3 of this minibook, can display a breakdown of Likes by region (as shown in Figure 1-7), while Facebook Insights (see Chapter 2) can display a breakdown by gender, countries, cities, and languages, as shown in Figure 1-8.
You may already know the demographics that are most associated with your products and services, but if you suddenly discover (through monitoring your Facebook Insights reports) that a significantly different group is coming to your Facebook Page, that discovery could not only potentially affect your social media marketing efforts, but also demonstrate that your company is connecting to a different demographic than you realized! You may want to adjust your products and services accordingly.