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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

7 timing tools for twitter

June 10th, 2011 Posted in Apps, Digital comms, Media Tips, Monitoring, Social Media, Social Network, Social Tools, Twitter No Comments

Timing is especially important when it comes to Twitter. According to BuySellAds.com, of the millions of tweets produced daily just 39% provoke a reply or retweet. Of all tweets that do get a response, 85% only get a single reply.

With such a steady flow of chatter it’s easy for your tweets to get lost in the crowd, but not if you’re smart about catching your followers at the right time – namely, when they’re online. Here are 7 tools that will help your tweets gain the most reach through the magic of timing:

1. When to Tweet

The appropriately-named Twitter service, When to Tweet, analyzes when your followers tweet and then recommends the best times for you to tweet. It is a fairly simple and free service consuming your account’s data and creates one easy-to-understand graph.

2. Tweriod

Tweriod pulls Twitter data and generates a multitude of graphs consisting of weekend and weekday mentions, hourly breakdowns of online followers, and weekday and weekend online followers. Tweriod offers a well-rounded look at all areas of online impact including responses, active followers, and week and weekend differences.

3. Tweetstats

In addition to providing an excess of analytics, TweetStats looks at when your account tweets the most and when your followers tweet the most. TweetStats generates an easy-to-understand chart of tweet density in a 24-hour period.

4. Timely

Timely sifts through your account’s last 199 tweets, and accounts for the number of tweets that didn’t “reach their full potential.” Timely offers the four best times for your account to tweet based on follower’s engagement. If you sign up for Timely, you can access more analytics including more data on the times of tweets, retweets, mentions, and viewers in a time period. After analyzing your account, the service can auto-schedule tweets and adapt as your followers change Twitter behaviour.

5. SocialFlow

Not only does SocialFlow share information on click-throughs, mentions, and reach, it also pairs up this information with hourly frequency.  SocialFlow can also compare present tweet information with that of the past to further understand changes in follower and engagement behavior.

6. Crowdbooster

Crowdbooster asks a simple question, “how are my tweets doing?” and makes tweet-schedule recommendations based on in-depth analysis of impressions, retweets, responses, and followers. Crowdbooster will then explain why these times are best through a bubble-chart, similar to TweetStats.

7. TweetWhen

Hubspot’s TweetWhen offers two generated graphs: one for the most influential time to tweet and one for the most effective day to tweet.

Source: OneForty

What you need to know about IPv6

June 9th, 2011 Posted in Internet, Monitoring, Online, Technology No Comments

Last Wednesday was World IPv6 Day. That’s not some strange new epidemic disease or political campaign; IPv6 (or Internet Protocol Version 6) is a new version of IPv4, which in layman’s terms is the way in which all Internet addresses are created and assigned. For 24 hours, Google, Facebook, Yahoo and 315 other companies provided content over both IPv6 and IPv4 in the biggest test of the system to date.

Here’s what you need to know about the move to version 6:

1. How many IPv4 addresses are there?

There are about 4 billion IPv4 addresses, because the length of the addresses in binary form — 32 bits — allows for that many possible unique combinations. IPv6 addresses are 128 bits long, so there are many more unique sequences of numbers that can be created for them: specifically, 3.4 times 10 to the power of 38. This is also known as 340 undecillion (or alternatively, lots and lots). Nearly all of the possible IPv4 addresses are now in use.

2. What would happen if I had IPv6 and tried to view an IPv4-only site?

In the worst case, you wouldn’t even get the familiar “server not found” message. In reality, you would probably get to see the website anyway. Service providers are evaluating a variety of tools for delivering IPv4-only content to IPv6-only clients. When a name server can’t find an IPv6 address associated with the website that the user wants to visit, an appliance can take the host’s IPv4 address and encapsulate it within an IPv6 address, creating something that the IPv6-only client can understand.

3. How long can I keep my company on IPv4?

As the supply of new, unique IPv4 addresses dwindles, some enterprises and service providers will use traditional network address translation (NAT) to conserve the addresses they already have. This technique allows multiple clients on an internal network to share one or a few unique IPv4 addresses to talk to the Internet. Each shared IP address could keep as many as a few hundred systems chugging along without the need for new IPv4 or IPv6 addresses. In any case, IPv4 and IPv6 are expected to coexist on the Internet for many years to come.

4. What did World IPv6 Day prove?

In short, World IPv6 day proved that the new version does work. Nobody participating in the effort reported any significant problems, although they didn’t see a huge uptake in IPv6 traffic. The real test will be getting companies to migrate to it sooner rather than later.

Source: PC World

Where Social Media Monitoring Services Fail

May 17th, 2010 Posted in Chatroulette, Monitoring, Social Media, Stats, Twitter, Viral, Youtube 2 Comments

It doesn’t matter which social media monitoring service you use. None of them do what you want them to do. They’re good at doing part of the job, but not all of it. And sadly, they probably won’t ever be good at doing all of the job because you have to do it.

Social media monitoring, whether done with free services like Google Alerts and custom searches, SocialMention.com or even free versions of great tools like Trackur; or using paid services like Radian6, Sysomos, Alterian, HubSpot or Scout Labs, are all software platforms. They’re computer algorithms and search spiders that collect information and put it together in a place where you can find it. Some of them do a decent job of organising and stacking and sorting all that data so you can hit a button and get a pretty chart or graph, too.

But none of them do what you want them to do. They only do half the job.
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