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The 7 most interesting social media studies and what to learn from them


Buffer

One of the first things I’ve learnt, close to 2 years ago when taking the plunge into Social Media with Buffer, was that things aren’t yet very defined.

There guiding metrics and studies are really just in their beginning phase and a lot is still quite vague. To help make things a tiny bit more clear, I thought it might be helpful to collect 10 of the most interesting social media studies and see what we can best learn from them.

So without any further ado, let’s dig in and talk about the most important social media stats out there:

1.) Over 120 Billion Facebook Impressions later – what we learnt

In a very interesting study BlitzLocal looked at close 120 billion Facebook impressions and tried to make sense of it all.  Some of the most interesting facts came around lengths of posts. The researchers concluded:

“Longer posts tend to perform poorly. The ideal interaction being driven by posts is between 100 to 119 characters. Questions tend to drive interaction up by 10 to 20 percent.”

Continue reading… 

23 Tweetable Stats on Email Marketing Tactics and Trends

B2C

Email Still Isn’t Dead!

twitterbirdhash cdl life resized 600 23 Tweetable Stats on Email Marketing Tactics and TrendsThere were 1.3 billion Google search results for the phrase “email is dead” when I sat down to write this. Even though some may think that the era of connecting with consumers via their inbox is over, the numbers tell a very different story. Email is actually better than it’s ever been before, and companies who take advantage of the growing need for mobile-optimization and the very latest stats on best practices could see an ROI that makes interruption marketers want to cry.

As the public’s adoption of mobile technology and the Internet continues to grow, email marketing has proven to be one of the most rapidly changing fields within the arena of marketing. If you needed any more evidence that marketing is really a game for the most nimble, take the following stats to heart:

 Read more…

B2B Data: It’s Not About the What, It’s About the Why

Direct Marketing News

While B2C marketing has matured significantly over the past two decades, the B2B world remains stuck in the Stone Age, says Jim Swift, president and CEO of B2B insights provider Cortera.

“Companies are going through this process of trying to understand who their companies are [and] figure out how to get more like them, and they’re still relying on demographic data largely,” Swift says. By contrast, B2C marketers have evolved past that stage and are now using online and purchase behavior data to make decisions.

Swift partially attributes B2B’s late-bloomer development to the challenge of discovering innovative ways to describe businesses. Traditionally, these businesses use Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) codes, (which are four digit business identification codes assigned by the U.S. government), sales volumes, or employee headcount. Swift also says that the large number of privately-owned businesses, which aren’t obliged to release financial figures, can also hinder business’s abilities to build profiles and indentify prospects. According to research by Harvard University and New York University, there are approximately 6 million private employer firms in the United States.

http://bit.ly/Zl6rgo

 

B2B and B2C Marketing: One Size Does Not Fit All

By Harry Henry
Outsell 3/7/13

VP & Practice Leader

Harwich Port, Massachusetts

Today’s marketing environment is fueled by new automation solutions, data analytics and digital tracking. Not all solutions work well for all marketers across the board. We intuitively know that selling and marketing to consumers is quite different to targeting the world of B2B firms where buying cycles and purchase decisions can be quite complex. Different strategies and tools work better for different audiences. At the end of the day, everyone wants to generate activity, traffic and leads, but approaches to that challenge vary widely.

Important Details:

In most things related to marketing, advertising and market research, consumer solutions come first. There is more money involved on the consumer side so companies tend to develop solutions for the B2C market first; they find their way to B2B later. Outsell’s research and market estimates show that B2C advertisers and marketers spend twice as much as their B2B counterparts in a market worth $400 billion in the US and nearly $1 trillion globally. Companies that primarily market to a B2B client base outnumber those that are mainly B2C oriented. A market where fewer companies spend more money and the larger market spends less makes for an interesting dynamic when the marketing services and marketing automation vendors start to look at where they can sell and where they will get their next set of clients. Another important factor is the size of the firm, since small, medium and large firms place value on various lead generation resources differently. Results from Outsell’s latest annual Advertising and Marketing survey (see report 1 March 2013, Annual Advertising and Marketing Study 2013: B2B Advertising Headlines) show that the B2C companies of all sizes rate their own company web sites as the most effective for building leads. On the B2B side, the smaller firms (under 100 employees) rated their company web site as the most effective, but the medium and larger firms place more value on in-person events, exhibitions and conferences where direct contact occurs.

 

Implications:

With this survey data we can now see the fruits of the marketers’ labors over the past few years. For the past two or three years, we have seen an increase in spending on company web sites and infrastructure. More was spent there than on other digital initiatives. These were primarily internal expenditures and money that was (in essence) taken out of the market. Now, by-and-large, those web sites are upgraded, in good shape and waiting for the visitors. The spending on web sites is down this year while spending on social media and other aspects of content marketing is increasing. This where we see a number of product announcements and new funding for companies in social media monitoring and tracking. Marketers are ramping up activity on social media and content marketing, all with the idea of getting consumers to the site. This is where the concept of the brand as a publisher comes into play. The marketer has to develop the content and publish it to social media and other outlets in order to drive the traffic.
 
Once the consumer gets to the site, all the technology behind identifying the persona, serving up the proper content from the likes of data platforms like Neustar, Epsilon, Acxiom and others comes into play. This part of marketing automation, including data feeds, cookies and machine IDs, has been part of the infrastructure build over the past few years.
 
B2B is about the personal contact. Smaller firms do not usually have the personal sales resources and will depend more on web traffic whereas medium and larger firms place more value on leads generated as a result of in-person activities.Lattice Engines is a data management platform company that provides profiling and scoring on the B2B side similar to what others provide for consumer profiles on the B2C side. Marketing services, such as events, are key for this market and a great opportunity for the B2B companies as Outsell identified in an earlier report (Market Analysis: The Marketing Services Opportunity, 2 August 2012).
 
As we see the marketing automation and solutions providers driving into the market and connecting with CMOs, understanding these differences, nuances and segments is key to getting in the door. There are differences between B2B and B2C players, they have their own preferences, and have built their infrastructures. Now, they’re ready to go.

Push vs. Pull in B2B Marketing

IDC PMS4colorversion 1 300x99 Push vs. Pull in B2B Marketing

By, Rich Vancil

In the world of retail consumer marketing, a Push strategy would indicate a manufacturer’s ability and monies to motivate a merchant to carry and promote its products. A Pull strategy would indicate that same manufacturer using advertising and promotion directed at consumers, with the objective of having those consumers demand the product from the merchant.

OK, I paraphrased that from marketing guru Phil Kotler in his eleventh edition of “Marketing Management”, which is a classic text. Also in this edition, Kotler states: “The internet will not become a major advertising medium like televison , radio, and print media. Internet users generally do not welcome advertising.”

When Professor Kotler revises that statement in his 12th edition, he might also write about the new dynamics of Push vs. Pull in B2B Marketing !

B2B marketing and selling  in the tech space is heavy on Push. There is a parallel here to B2C Push as described — with regard to the strong channel influence that manufacturers maintain. But the Bigger “Push” is the heavy-handed salesmanship that is directed at the B2B buyer. Marketing spends about half its budget on demand generation programs. And the Sales function spend four times  as much as all of Marketing, trying to persuade buyers.

It is indeed the internet that is changing this dynamic, as IDC VP Kathleen Schaub has written about exetensively in her New Buyer Journey analysis. The self-educated buyer resists Push. In fact, IDC research  shows that Buyers are practically begging their vendors: “Don’t sell so hard!.  So, don’t sell so hard; don’t push so hard. Customers don’t want to be sold to. They want to make self-determined choices.

The mantra for B2B marketers has to be Pull. If we acknowledge that the self-educated buyer  willmake his or her own choices on where to get educated, our job is to attract them to our thinking. The new Pull will continue to be advertising and promotion, but it will be more about helpful Social connections; an emphasis on educational marketing content; and greater demonstration that we have deep knowledge of  the customer’s business issues.

As you think about the next round of your marketing planning and budgets, also think about the general quotient of Push vs. Pull that you have in your overall mix. And ramp up the Pull — the gravitional forces that will hopefully guide your prospects to your way of thinking.

 

I look forward to hearing your thoughts and discussing this topic further on the blog!

Top 13 Social Business Trends in 2013!

#ibmsocialbiz #socbiz

These are my top 13 trends for 2013 around Social Business!

1.  Meet the new C Suite!   Full of T shapped Skills!

Social and social tools means that CMOs need to know more about Technology, and that CIOs need to understand more about how to engage clients, and marketing.    With CEOs, according to IBM’s CEO Study, understanding that social will be the #1 way to engage clients by 2015, it is imperative that both roles learn more about the broader equation.

2.  Social is more than Technology — it is like a Diet.  It is a life style change!

Social changes the way that employees work.  It changes the way that clients interact with you!  At Aberdeen’s 2012 Chief Service Officer (CSO) Summit, 85% of attending business leaders stated that their organization was placing an increased importance on customer service.  Social is the preferred way that clients want to get your help!  Are you ready?  So you have a social client service model?

3. No longer B2B, or B2C.  It is now P2P.  2013 is the year of People to People.

Corporations are people.   But they don’t act like it on social sites like Twitter and Facebook sometimes.   Since people want to do business with people, not businesses.  2013 is the year to focus on relationships — not fly by social!  Social networks and mobile devices put brands in front of customers and employees at all times—and give them the power to impact them at warp speed and interface with people!

http://bit.ly/Vxpn8u

43% of B2B CEOs of Never Consider Social Media in Decisions

Social Media B2B

As social media becomes an important part of business culture, considering the social media impact of decisions has to be part of the process for B2B companies. According to a recent study by the Zeno Group, CEO of all companies, but especially B2B companies, are not taking social media and its impact on their reputation online into account when making decisions. This has potential impact on attracting prospects and retaining customers, as social media sites and other online sources continue to be business people’s first stop when searching for information about companies.

View the infographic to learn more

Content Marketing Drives Social Media and Sales – Are You Spending Enough?

ClickZ

Content marketing is critical to feeding social media and driving engagement on these platforms. Further, it’s an effective tool to build brand, support the buying process, and provide post-purchase support. Whether it’s B2C or B2B products, customers research their purchases online first. They seek non-promotional, informational content to help assess their product needs. Effective creation and distribution of content marketing supports this process.

Top on marketers’ list of content marketing challenges is coming up with topics for original content and finding the time to create original content. Look deeper at these challenges and you’ll see that marketers’ true problem is that they’re not allocating sufficient resources, both human and financial, to meet their content marketing needs.

Read more…

3 Digital Marketing Trends To Watch in 2012 and Beyond

B2C

Chances are on any given workday, marketers take advantage of a social feature, channel, tactic, or strategy that didn’t exist 12 months ago. An accelerated rate of change has always been a hallmark of social marketing, and with this in mind, eMarketer published a study in this area, Top Digital Trends for 2012. It explores digital marketing trends in 2012 and beyond, and predicts dramatic industry changes as both the hardware and software platforms of choice shift in favor of mobile devices, social media sites, and dynamic content. I was particularly struck by three key ideas:

1.         Companies are no longer satisfied with standard social media success metrics

2.         Magnetic content allows companies to succeed in the social and digital spaces

3.         2012 will see a dramatic increase in Smartphone and tablet users, as well as an increase in online video consumption

Read more… 

 

72 Fascinating Social Media Marketing Facts and Statistics for 2012

Business 2 Community 

Social media and inbound marketing techniques have been a boon for marketers. Not only do leads generated through social and content marketing cost half as much as traditional outbound-generated leads (see below), they also close at higher rate (again, see below).

And social media isn’t just about lead generation of course. While prospective buyers are using search and social to research products and services before making purchase decisions, marketers and PR professionals can use those same tools to research buyer wants and needs. And their competition. And…even social media itself.

View the stats