Companies Call Social Media Marketing -Trade Show Marketing - For the Online MediumA true social media ROI is just as difficult to bring together as a true trade show ROI. |  | Visited: 2460 |
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| | by Oliver Feakins April 28, 2009 |
| Oliver Feakins |
Oliver Feakins is a diverse Online marketer and entrepreneur. With a rich background in social media Oliver currently is the President of a boutique social media marketing agency called WebTalent SEO. For more information on WebTalent SEO, please visit http://www.webtalentseo.com . |
| Oliver Feakins
has written 2 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Oliver Feakins... |
Prior to
starting at a social media marketing agency, I was a corporate sales executive.
Throughout my career I loved attending trade shows. It was different; it got me
out of the standard routine of cold calling and scheduled meetings. It also
appealed to me because of the unique way in which I could get in front of my
potential client base to build relationships, answer questions and build my
company’s brand. Management would always
try to cut tradeshows from the marketing budget listing the expense and time
that goes into them as the reasons. They would also complain tradeshow
marketing was hard to justify because there was not a clear Return on
Investment (ROI). With the rise of
social media marketing, I’m beginning to see a lot of these same questions and
concerns being raised about Social Media Marketing that were once raised about
tradeshow marketing.
Like tradeshows,
Social Media Marketing is about engaging a passionate group of potential
customers and turning them into brand evangelists or enthusiasts. So instead of directly selling to a consumer
(which you can do as well) you are hoping to indirectly sell them by
influencing key influencers within the target market. The goal here is what is
referred to as ‘viral exposure’ of your company’s brand and or product to
people that will share your company’s message peer-to-peer, using the
invaluable ‘word of mouth’ messaging we all strive for. Companies like
Coca-Cola, Starbucks and other leading companies have seen outstanding results
from their Social Media Marketing campaigns and have pushed social media into
their mainstream marketing mix.
So how can
you measure the process of generating “buzz”? Trying to measure the return on
social media by using traditional online metrics is like trying to fit a square
plug into a round hold - it just doesn’t work. It’s easy to measure visits,
sales, inquires or other conversion items attributed to the Social Media Marketing
campaign by using analytics. You’re then able to attribute a cost per visitor
or even a cost per sale -just like handing out coupons at tradeshows. What you
can’t account for is the buzz and brand building that Social Media Marketing offers.
It may take months (and usually does) for Social Media Marketing campaigns to
gather enough steam for companies to start seeing the results and even then they
often come in ways that can’t be easily tracked. Some companies prefer to look at the number
of engaged users from a campaign. They track server logs, monitor RSS feed
subscriptions, count friends on social networking sites and users on widgets
and many other ways. They then assign a cost per engagement metric. Be assured
that as the campaign continues to build steam and generate lots of positive
“buzz” about your company you are able to see your initial investment pay off
and continue to grow right before your eyes. Like trade shows were to off-line
marketing, Social Media Marketing builds and maintains a large list of potential
brand enthusiasts that will work for your brand for free!
I’m a firm
believer that a unique set of metrics needs to be defined for Social Media
Marketing campaigns. When you take the cost of the campaign, along with the
amount of engagement, site visits, sales and inquiries you’re able to put a
number to the ROI of the Social Media Marketing campaign. And it’s important
not forgot the other benefits to Social Media Marketing such as an increased in
back links and rankings. These two very important benefits bring in tons of
qualified traffic and also produce sales as well.
This inability
to show hard trackable results is just one example of the difficulties of
attributing a comprehensive ROI to social media. In my opinion Social Media Marketing agencies
need to do a better job explaining social media ROI along with reasonable
expectations to their clients prior to starting any kind of viral or social
media marketing campaign.
Like
tradeshows, corporate marketing executives are going to have to accept and
realize the fact that there is a conversation going on right now in your industry
within the social landscape. Socially “savvy” companies are already in the
conversation and are subsequently enjoying the benefits of talking to potential
customers in a somewhat “empty” space. By adding Social Media Marketing to your current marketing campaigns you
can join the conversation and get in front of a highly influential set of
individuals that have the ability and really influence and engage your company’s
target market at the peer group level.
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