At last week’s #OMMASocial panel during Internet Week #iwny, panelists talked about “Social Media, Beyond the Like.” In
recent years, many advertisers and brands ran headlong into the Facebook gold rush. But after these initial experiments, they are taking a step back and wondering about actual business impact and
ROI.
Doing social media should not be just sticking display ads on Facebook, which no one looks at and even less click on (see CTRs of Facebook Ads Are A
Rounding Error to ZERO). Big companies like GM are realizing this and decided to pull $10 million of Facebook ad spending because the ads simply didn’t work. Right on!
There are much
better and more advanced ways of using social media.
Social Media Is Not Media
First we have to move away from thinking of Facebook as yet another channel to blast an
ad out to a ton of people “at scale.” Brand advertisers that are used to asking for reach and frequency metrics continued to ask for “number of impressions.” Facebook was happy
to oblige, and take their money by displaying several hundred billion ad impressions per month.
But people’s conversations and social activity are not media and should not be bought and
sold. Instead “those conversations yield valuable insights that drive not only marketing strategy but also product innovation” said Sandra Lopez (@nycsf) Global Marketing Strategy Director for New Business at Intel. “This two-way dialog between our engineers and the consumers or IT
professionals that are our customers allow us to test ideas very quickly, versus focus groups or other market research which could take years.”
IBM is another great example of applying
social media principles to enterprise knowledge management. Thousands of internal blogs facilitate information sharing across departmental “silos” and job function and thus increase the
speed of innovation and business.
Social Amplification Occurs When Customers Want to Talk About You
Next, brands talk about finding influencers and then having them
talk about the brand and advocate it to their friends and followers. That’s all nice in theory, but why would anyone talk about you -- e.g. a toothpaste brand -- all day long? They
won’t.
However, if you enable your users to help you amplify something that they already believe in or are passionate about -- think, cause related marketing -- they may indeed want to
talk about it with their friends. For nonprofits, small businesses, or for-profit cause-related organizations like RecycleBank, the actual social amplification done by their fans and friends is
crucial when marketing dollars are scarce.
“Using a points-based rewards system and also social badges, we reward specific things like sharing, group activities, and even getting smarter
about environmental topics,” says Samantha Skey (@samskey7) Chief Revenue Officer, RecycleBank. “Social media allows us to drive
much higher engagement with much lower budgets; in fact, it’s all about ‘expressions’ (by our users) not “impressions’.”
Users Trust Peers Most, Ads
Least
When the message comes from a friend, and not the advertiser, users tend to trust it more and are open to reading it. That’s why Facebook, Twitter and the like are trying
to insert themselves into our timeline and feeds via “sponsored stories” and “sponsored tweets.” But unfortunately these brand advertisers are not our friends, and users are
usually ticked off. There’s a reason people don’t “friend” Lipitor on Facebook. Maybe someday they will be our friends, but they haven’t earned that right, yet.
“When users reach out to friends and peers during a purchase decision process, it’s about the trustworthiness of the input and the reduction of risk in making the purchase,” says
Matt Goddard (@R2iMatt). “Like-minded peers have no reason to trick them, because they are not selling the product.”
Brand
advertisers still think they can use personal data supplied by users, their connections (social graph), and their conversations (interest graph) to target users with ads. What if we thought of
stimulating more of those conversations in places we could listen, instead of trying to use them as additional targeting parameters? Then users’ sharing and recommending behavior can determine
how brand advertisers activate all marketing channels. This is the feedback loop they never had with one-way channels like TV, print and radio.
Content Enables And Inspires
Conversation
So how should advertisers stimulate more conversations and what should they talk about? “Content is, or should be, the cornerstone of any search and social media
marketing strategy,” said Tom Gerace (@tomgerace) founder/CEO, Skyword. “Right now, brands are like awkward teenagers at the prom. They
walk into the room, don’t listen to anyone, walk up to random strangers, and talk about themselves the whole time.”
If brands took the time to understand what customers were
looking for and then created something worth talking about, this content becomes the “social lubricant” that initiates or facilitates a dialog. Pampers is a great example. They don’t
just write content that talks about diapers; they create content that is useful and informative for new moms. Because they created and conveyed value, those moms not only talk about it with Pampers,
but also do that on their site or social channels.
Of course, this is immensely difficult for brand marketers -- because they have done decades worth of one-way TV ads where they talk just
about themselves. Going from one-way talking “at” people to two-way talking “with” people is very hard. Notice these are customers’ conversations enabled by brands, not
“branded entertainment” meant to shove the brand in front of peoples’ eyes where they can’t avoid seeing it. Another related analogy -- having an agency do your social media
for you is like sending someone else to prom for you.
Change Mind-set From Campaigns To Commitments
So if brands shouldn’t send someone else to prom or on a date
for them, what should they do? Some, and I mean a very select few, agencies are successfully guiding clients in the use of social media -- all of those do not just involve display ads, but rather ways
to truly engage and interact with customers and fans.
“I spend every day asking clients whether they or the planned marketing campaign matters and helping to change their mind-set from
ad campaigns to social media commitments,” said Tim Fogarty (@n0her0es) senior strategist, M80. “What things actually matter to people,
how does it matter, and can they relate to it.” Paid media campaigns may be able to drive sharp spikes in traffic to a site, but social media should build long-lasting value instead. The
conversations must lead to relationships that are meaningful.
Commitment planning is different from campaign planning and budgeting. But this new mind-set also ensures that marketers
don’t go chasing the latest “shiny object” like Groupon or Pinterest, because overnight sensations don’t build lasting value for the brand.
Are You Ready to Do
Advanced Social Media Instead of Just Facebook Ads?
The question is how to move beyond the initial loss-making experiments to a more advanced or sophisticated use of it. We’ve
talked about many best practices and examples.
To name a few: 1) relevancy rather than scale -- are you relevant to your customers versus how many you can shout at, 2) social is additive --
social media should be the feedback loop for all your other marketing 3) your brand is what your customers say it is, not the one, generic way you talk about yourself and 4) social media is not free
-- the conversations are free and should never be bought or sold; but “we have team members dedicated to interacting with customers through their medium of choice -- Facebook, Twitter, etc. --
and we have processes to escalate topics or questions to the right team, like legal” said Julie Fajgenbaum (@jfajgenbaum) group vice
president, brand social, American Express OPEN.
Conclusion
Advanced social media, going beyond the “like” or the display ad, is something all advertisers
should set their sights on now. They should learn how to earn the right to have conversations and relationships with customers. Go from one-way “storytelling” to many-way
“socializing.