Commentary

9 Out of 10 Companies Don't Think They Use Social Media Effectively

There's no question that social media is the hottest part of the Internet from an advertising and marketing perspective, with companies big and small pinning their hopes on its huge potential for engaging consumers and propagating messages through word-of-mouth. But that doesn't mean they're actually doing it right, as reflected by endemic self-doubt among marketing execs at 2,100 companies surveyed by the Harvard Business Review Analytics Services on behalf of SAS.

The most remarkable finding: just 12% of the companies surveyed believed they were currently effective users of social media, meaning almost nine out of ten respondents relegated themselves to the "ineffective" pile. But this is hardly surprising in light of some other figures from the same study: for example, 75% of the companies surveyed said they didn't know where their customers were talking about them online, while 31% said they don't measure the effectiveness of social media, and just 23% said they are using social media analytics tools.

The implications of the Harvard-SAS study are quite clear: social media, for all the buzz and excitement, is for from having "arrived" in most important sense. Indeed, any discipline in which 69% of practitioners fail to measure the impact of their efforts can only be described as experimental. The real question is: when is it going to leave the experimental phase?

The answer might include more precise, broadly-applied metrics -- at least enough to set a common baseline in terms of measurement, which could then be adopted as an industry-wide best practice. This would follow the example of the digital out-of-home industry, which came together to create a common metric under the auspices of the Out-of-home Video Advertising Bureau (now the Digital Place-based Advertising Association).

This sounds like a tall order, but the alternative is letting this nascent medium stall in its experimental phase.

On that note, the results of the Harvard-SAS report bear a worrying similarity to figures from an earlier survey by KingFishMedia of 457 marketing executives in the second quarter of 2010. While 72% of respondents in the KingFishMedia survey said their company had a social media strategy of some kind, only 30% of respondents said they had executed a social media ad campaign -- and only half of these (15%) had attempted to measure the ROI of their campaigns.

Now, maybe it's too much to expect these figures to rise noticeably in just six months; I realize it's hard enough to actually execute a social media campaign in the first place, and equally challenging to define benchmarks of success in what is (as noted above) a new, emerging discipline. But the measurement outlook needs to improve rapidly over the next year or two if social media advertising spending is going to scale up to a level commensurate with the size of the audience. Otherwise, without a firm handle on ROI marketing execs -- under pressure to account for every penny -- may simply take a "wait and see" approach, drastically slowing social media's revenue growth.

6 comments about "9 Out of 10 Companies Don't Think They Use Social Media Effectively ".
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  1. Jerry Johnson from Brodeur, January 14, 2011 at 6:23 a.m.

    It is not surprising to me that so few think they use social media effectively when there is so little agreement in the world of social media on what 'effective' means and how to measure it.

  2. kevin lynch, January 14, 2011 at 1:05 p.m.

    Our 2010 study of 275 online branded communities of 78 major brands shows that fewer than 50% used a majority of established best practices for social engagement. Here is a link for a free download.

    http://comblu.com/news/social-media/the-state-of-online-branded-communities-2010.aspx

    Kevin Lynch
    ComBlu llc
    www.comblu.com

  3. Jen Knoedl from JenChicago, January 14, 2011 at 3:13 p.m.

    @Jerry Great point! That's what I was going to say!

    And somewhere in there we will all have to stop trying to measure everything and just have a little faith. How do you measure your friendships or family? Can't exactly be done.

  4. Jesus Grana from Independent, January 15, 2011 at 12:18 p.m.

    I welcome you to visit my blog and comment - the objective is to demystify social media through sound classical marketing thinking

    jrgrana.com/blog

  5. Kenneth Hittel from Ken Hittel, January 16, 2011 at 1:50 p.m.

    granted that we're all in early innings here -- granted that we're not yet close to consensus in re: effectiveness -- but, good lord, knowing that whether or not what you're doing is working doesn't have to be rocket science!
    what was your vision when you launched? what were your goals? objectives? how tactically did you expect to reach them?
    so, are your tactics working? are you meeting your objectives? why on earth launch anything at all if you can't answer these simple questions?

  6. Jack a. Silverman from Bolin Marketing, January 17, 2011 at 10:29 a.m.

    Good point Jerry. We all can remember when everyone was debating whether to measure "click-throughs" or "impressions" of online banner ads and the discussions went on endlessly. ROI can come in many forms regarding soicla media. Yes you can actually measure sales tied to SM promotions, velocity of conversations, sentiment, etc but I also like Jen's comment, How do you measure your friendships or family? Lets all relax social media is not going away and we all have to be a part of it, the measurements will gain sophistication and depth as we evolve. FYI, for companies to be effective regarding social media they actually have to participate in it, it's not an afterthought.

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