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Social Network Ads Should Be For Brand Linkage
by Jack Loechner, Thursday, August 9, 2012 6:40 AM
According to a new study conducted by The Incyte Group, consumers want deeper connections with brands – but open social networks are not where they want to build these
connections. Instead, marketers need to invite their “friends” into a branded customer community that converts them into buyers, advocates, and long-term customers, says the
report. U.S. marketers last year spent $3.08 billion on Facebook brand pages and social media advertisements, according to estimates from eMarketer — and the
investment return has been dismal. Companies have invested billions of dollars in two key areas:
- Creating a strong digital presence in social networks, for example, via
Facebook brand pages, Twitter handles, Pinboards, and Foursquare locations, and leveraging social marketing applications like Buddy Media.
- Deploying technologies such as
Hootsuite and Radian to facilitate responding to consumers in open social networks.
Dale Sakai, partner at Incyte, says “Open social networks, such as Facebook and
Twitter, are where consumers expect to interact with individuals, their friends, colleagues, acquaintances, and professional networks. Any benefits they receive from
‘friending’ companies in social networks are considered ancillary.” At the same time, the study showed that consumers want direct connections with companies and other
customers in what are best described as “branded customer communities.” Most shocking, they do not expect, or even want, these communities to be part of an
existing social network like Facebook or LinkedIn. Instead, their preference is for customer communities that are:
- Run separately from open social networks, but have
strong linkages to them so they can easily share information with like-minded friends
- Proactively managed by companies
- Tightly integrated with the company’s
website
According to Sakai, “... customers indicated that they want these branded customer communities to provide access to relevant, trusted information at every
stage in their buying cycle. The context of the buying cycle isn’t happening in traditional social networks. Instead, it’s happening on the broader Internet, primarily on
manufacturer and retailer websites and through organic search.” Social networks are not the first place people go to research products and services. Google and brand
websites are. The study confirmed that the vast majority of U.S. adult Internet users are currently using open social networks:
- 83% frequented Facebook.
- 52%
used YouTube
- 34% leveraged LinkedIn
- Twitter and Google+ closed out the top five
But Facebook, Twitter, and other open social networks are not
necessarily where consumers go to build relationship with companies or learn about and evaluate products and services. They primarily want to use these sites to connect with
friends and family and pursue personal interests; only 12.8% use them to research brands and product details.
Primary Reasons Consumers Use Social NetworksReason to Use% of Respondents Social Networking 70.2%
Hobby / Interest 45.4% Education / Training 23.2% Sports / Entertainment 21.1% Vocation
/ Work 17.2% Personal Causes 16.3%
Company / Brand / Product 12.8%
Source: Incyte/Get Satisfaction,
July 2012 Company Websites are still the primary destinations for information to support a purchase decision. When asked to name their primary
destinations for researching products or seeking customer service via the Internet, participants top choices were:
- Visit company Website to make a purchase decision
— 89.3%
- Visit company Website for service/support questions — 68.8%
- Contact the company via e-mail — 43.5%
- Use an Internet community dedicated to
the product/service — 27.3%
- Use a social network — 21.2%
When people are introduced to a new product, service, or brand through a social network
and want to learn more about it, Only 19% would look at its Facebook page.
What Consumers Do to Learn More About a Product or ServiceTo Learn More% of Respondents Look at Its Website 81.1% Go to a Store 25.7% Look at Its Facebook Page 19.9% Research It on Mobile Phone 3.1%
Source: Incyte/Get Satisfaction, July 2012 When asked how they assess the quality of content provided on company Websites
when making a purchase decision, 49.8% of participants clearly show a preference for content that has been vetted as high-quality by other consumers, and 34.7% preferred content
that has been provided by a consumer with a good reputation for providing strong content. Content vetted solely by the company was not preferred. Consumers don’t want
brand relationships to be a part of their open social networks; instead, they want company Websites to be more like their experiences with open social networks. This way, they get
the best of both worlds when researching new products and services, specifically, detailed product information from the company and real-life answers and opinions from other customers.
They do not want their social networks to become corporate experiences. When consumers who had interacted with customer communities were asked how they discovered those
communities, the most frequently mentioned discovery methods and their corresponding conversion rates are summarized here:
How Consumers Prefer to Be Introduced to Branded Customer Communities and the Impact PreferenceIntroJoin
Facebook: Friend’s Post 64.5% 58% Internet Search 64.4% 51.4%
Company: Website Link 54.6% 38.2% Traditional
Advertisement 41.6% 15.0% Facebook: Social Ad
8.2% 20.4%
Source: Incyte/Get Satisfaction,
July 2012 Branded customer communities that focus on providing social content were of most interest to consumers. When researchers probed
further to find out why, the most common responses included the following:
- Get information more quickly – 32.1%
- Get answers from consumers like me –
21.3%
- Get the most accurate information – 18.0%
What attracts them to customer communities is the relevancy of the content to their needs presale, at the
point of sale, and post-sale. When asked which of the following activities they would most likely participate in on these sites, results showed the following trends:
- Read
content — 27.3%
- Follow posts — 18.8%
- Share with social network — 18.2%
- “Liking” — 8.9%
- Posting replies and answers —
8.3%
- Chatting — 5.9%
The research suggests that the most effective invitation to a branded customer community is a referral from a friend, concludes the
report. The imperative for marketers, then, is to identify and nurture the best brand advocates inside the community and encourage (or even incentivize) them to share their passion for
the customer community and the brand with their own networks. While consumers are willing to passively engage (with “likes” or “follows”) with brands
on open social networks, a customer community is where companies can explicitly address their needs as consumers. Facebook and Twitter are merely a way for them to learn about the
communities they might be interested in joining. To learn more about this study
from Get Satisfaction, please visit here, or from
the Incyte Group, go here.