Methods Currently Used For Social B2B Marketing (% of Respondents; Multiple Response OK) | |
Social Site | % of Respondents |
72% | |
71% | |
67% | |
YouTube | 48% |
Blogging | 44% |
Customer Community | 22% |
Flickr | 11% |
Digg | 8% |
Stumbleupon | 5% |
Tumblr | 3% |
Source: BtoB magazine: Emerging Trends in B2B Social Marketing, April 2011 |
While most marketers engaged in social media are using a combination of channels, there are clear preferences. When
marketers were asked to name the single most important method used for b2b outreach, LinkedIn again was the clear leader, chosen by 26% of respondents.
Facebook was chosen as the single most
important channel by 20% of respondents, with blogging (19%), customer communities (14%) and YouTube (7%) also cited. Despite being widely used overall, Twitter was selected by only 13% of marketers
as their single favorite.
Dan Rickershauser, marketing researcher with Landslide Technologies, notes that "... there is better attention paid on Facebook as opposed to Twitter... it's a little more clean and controllable... companies that are using Facebook marketing... are still relatively ahead of the pack."
Branding is considered the primary strength of Facebook, blogging and YouTube, while customer feedback and researching competitive intelligence are seen as the major strengths of customer communities. The main virtue of professional networking site LinkedIn is its lead-generation power. Customer communities, by contrast, are seen as prime listening posts for marketers and natural ways to solve customer issues.
According to the report, the Social Media Marketing Landscape is defined as:
· LinkedIn: lead generation, web traffic
· Twitter: Short and concise promo; social buzz: see who's talking about you
· Blog: Search engine optimization; business and/or idealogy related written content
· FaceBook: Branding and event promotions
Companies of various sizes were represented in BtoB's survey, although small businesses
predominated; 56% of respondents represented companies with an annual revenue of $24 million or less; 23% came from companies with annual revenue of $25 million to $499 million; and 21% represented
companies with annual revenue of $500 million or more.
Technology companies comprised 22% of the respondents, followed by:
· Manufacturing (15%)
· Consulting (11%)
· Financial services (6%)
· Internet/online services (5%)
· Advertising (5%)
· Publishing/media (5%)
· Wholesale trade/distribution (4%)
Lack of resources, cited by 70% of respondents, is the single most pressing obstacle to implementing a social media marketing program, says the report. Other hurdles include: 57% cited poorly defined success metrics and key performance indicators, and 44% said "lack of knowledge about social media" is holding them and their companies back. Management resistance, cited by 22%, may stem from the preceding three obstacles.
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