June 27, 2010

A quick and dirty study on Social Media

I’ve noticed lately that my buying behavior has been switching to brands who are on social media and, more importantly, brands who would engage with me (more on that soon). I wanted to see if I was an oddity or a norm here.

So, like anybody else would on a Sunday I created a 30 second survey on Google Docs and Tweeted. This is by no means a comprehensive survey but a quick and dirty fact finding mission. As many of the respondents (around 65%) located the survey on Twitter you can say that the pool is somewhat biased when comparing channels. For those wanting real specifics, n=40 (with two disqualified for incomplete information, not bad for an hour on Sunday afternoon). Read into the results as you wish, my followers helped me collect the data so it is only fair I share it.

70% of respondents indicated that a companies social media account influences their purchase decisions. All users who responded to this survey are clearly social media savvy (and thus the results are only applicable to a similar crowd) but it does demonstrate that people on these channels expect representation from businesses.

60% of all respondents indicated social media as part of their purchase criteria (the difference here being that a company must be on social media to make a purchase) and that they have purchased from a company because they were active on social media where competitors were not. Again, this applies only to a social media crowd but shows that non-savvy small businesses are likely losing sales for not being present.

most influential social media channel

Respondents were then asked to specify the most important social media channel when investigating purchase options / companies. Twitter was considered the most important channel, perhaps due to ease of access and simplicity. Company blogs came in last; my best guess on this one is that company blogs are rarely conversations whereas Facebook Pages and Twitter profiles are often very conversation heavy.

most popular social media marketing channels

Respondents were then asked to rank important factors when evaluating a channel; specifically, when two products / companies maintain social media channels and the user is making decisions. The rate of activity and level of interaction came in at number 1 which, as mentioned earlier, may be why Twitter and Facebook were considered more important than blogs.

Finally, and perhaps most surprisingly, 30% of respondents indicated they regularly pay a higher price for products active on social media over competitors who are not. We already knew social media was an important evaluation tool but this number was somewhat surprising to me.

Read into the facts as you will. As always I love the e-mail, Twitter and comment feedback.

June 14, 2010

Why are you blogging?

I’m not going to state the benefits of blogging. Oh wait. Over 73% of internet users regularly read blogs. 45% run their own blog (excluding micro-blogs i.e. Twitter) and over 39% know what RSS is.  More importantly over 88% of people Google something before they buy it.

What can we conclude from this mountain of stats? This thing called the internet is important. Blogs are no longer online diaries, people read, trust and know how to use them. And, perhaps more importantly, there is a high saturation and competition in the blogosphere.

As most of you know I offer Digital Marketing and Social Media Marketing services in Toronto (shameless plug). When I first propose blogging to many of my clients the response back is similar: ‘I have tried that and it doesn’t work’. Unfortunately we jump head first into technology (it is so quick and easy to set up) without first deciding WHY am I here and WHAT do I want?

Sit down and ask yourself:

  1. What is the purpose of my blog? (i.e. new leads, sales from existing customers, technical support)
  2. How will you achieve this / How will people find it? (i.e. mailing list, search engines, social media)

Seems simple? It is! But deciding ahead of time what the purpose of each stream, blog and post is will save you time and probably deliver the results you want. Perhaps blogging is not working for you because you are sending out mixed, muddled or confusing messages.

Shameless Plug: Starting this Thursday I will be running a free 5 day course that will teach you how to get sales over Facebook for your business. Click here for details.