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Measure the return on your social media investment

December 14th, 2011 Posted in Marketing, Measurement/Analytics, Monitoring, Social Media No Comments

This article from Hubspot neatly sums up something many people have been asking about recently: how can you accurately measure your return on investment from social media? Here are their 5 tips.Start to measure social media networks together and separately. Every social media network has its own set of strengths. For example, you may find that Twitter drives the most site traffic, Facebook generates the most leads, and LinkedIn generates less but more qualified leads. Yes, you should absolutely analyze your social media strategy as an aggregate of all social media networks so you can compare it to other campaigns, but then be prepared to break it down network by network. This will let you determine which networks are best helping you meet specific sales and marketing goals … and which aren’t making the cut.

Track visit-to-lead conversion. Social media helps drive traffic to your site, but traffic doesn’t bring home the bacon. Track (network by network, and as an aggregate) how many of those visitors convert into leads. Knowing exactly how much of a role social media plays in lead generation will help you meet your monthly lead goal by giving you the historical data to set an educated goal based on how much social media brings in, and what that rate of growth looks like month over month.

Track lead-to-customer conversion. The next logical step, right? Now that you know how many leads you get from each social media network and social media as a whole, make use of closed-loop analytics to see how many leads turn into customers. This insight will help you implement a mature lead scoring system so your sales team can focus time on the leads most likely to close. When you use closed-loop marketing on social media leads, you can also learn metrics like how much social media customers cost to acquire, and how much they spend with you compared to leads from other campaigns.

Score leads and monitor the sales cycle. Score social media leads and monitor how much time it takes a social media lead to make it through the sales cycle. Not only does scoring leads help your sales team prioritize its time, but this insight will also help inform your lead nurturing program so you can shorten the sales cycle for social media leads. It also helps you understand how valuable a social media lead is, and where it ranks compared to leads from other campaigns.

Understanding how to properly nurture social media leads will depend heavily on this step. By understanding where social media leads enter, leave, and spend their time on your site, you can see what type of content addresses their specific needs. So before entering them into a lead nurturing queue meant for, say, people in the middle of their buying cycle, you can provide content that addresses their specific problems.

Many marketers are faced with constantly justifying the time and money spent on social media, so being able to tie actual dollars to the process of generating and converting leads from social media networks is crucial. Tracking and evaluating these data points gives marketers the power to say whether social media activity really does – or doesn’t – drive sales and revenue.

Source: Hubspot

New Twitter analytics on the way

November 30th, 2010 Posted in Measurement/Analytics, Social Media, Twitter 1 Comment

With social media marketing increasingly taking a slice of the marketing budget pie, it will become more and more important to justify each euro spent. Especially as it seems that all social media activity seems to be held under the microscope.

So the announcement that Twitter have started inviting a select group of people to test their new analytics tool will sound like music to every social media specialists’ ears.

The above screenshot provides a sneak preview as to what the Twitter analytics dashboard might look like. Mashable claims the product will become available to all users by the end of the year.

The screenshot highlights various aspects such as the number of mentions, retweets and unfollows on a daily trend graph. Whilst interesting, this does not seem to provide much more than other tools out there already. But having control of the firehose of messages and all Twitter-related content will surely provide Williams and co with a great advantage, especially when they will combine the data with their Promoted Tweets and other monetisation products.

A spokesperson for Twitter said: “There’s a strong corporate demand for better monitoring and analytics tools, and we want to help developers take advantage of this significant opportunity. For example, yesterday we partnered with Gnip, which will sub-license access to public tweets and give developers an efficient way to access the Twitter stream for analytics purposes.”

If you’re interested in analytics and data visualisation we recommend you check out this video demo.

(Source: ViralBlog)