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Part 3 Implementation
Social media marketing has its own range of specialist measures, which can appear con-
fusing, but are best understood in the context of a combination of website and PR meas-
ures. These show the volume, quality, sentiment and value of interactions. Analyst Altimeter
(2011) has created a useful framework, shown in Figure 12.10 , which helps map out different
social media measures in the context of level of business management.
You can see that there are three levels of KPIs:
●
Business- level KPIs to measure contribution from social media. Th ese KPIs include contri-
bution to revenue through direct sales attributed to social media. Soft er measures include
reputation and customer satisfaction (CSAT).
●
Reach and infl uence KPIs to review reach, share-of-voice and sentiment. Th ese show the
relative comparison of a brand’s reach.
●
Engagement KPIs to manage social media. Th ese are the easiest measures to collect, but the
least valuable since they don’t directly show contribution to business value. Although easy
to collect, data is on interaction with social sites is oft en supplied separately by the own-
ers of the diff erent social presence and tools for managing social interaction. A new class
of social analytics tools have been created to bring this data together. Figure 12.11 shows
an example from the social media management tool Hootsuite where sharing of short-
ened URLs linking to diff erent social media sites has driven traffi c back to a main website.
Direct traffi c is where visitors click directly through from a social media messaging appli-
cation like Hootsuite or Tweetdeck to the site.
A common question within social media is how to assess the value of a consumer connect-
ing with a brand, by liking on Facebook, following on Twitter or placing a brand in a circle
on Google+. Since the tracking of social media can’t show what an individual does on the
network, specific value is difficult to establish. Instead, what we can assess is the relative pur-
chase rates of visitors from social media sites to websites compared to other channels, using
measures like conversion rate and revenue per visitor.
Measuring social media marketing
Focus on
Figure 12.10
A framework for different measures used to evaluate and manage social media marketing
Source: Altimeter (2011) with permission (Creative Commons).
Community managers
and agencies
Engagement
data
Clicks, fans, followers,
RTs, views, check-ins
Business
stakeholders
Social media
analytics
Share of voice, resonation, WOM,
support response, insights intake
Business
executives
Business
metrics
Revenue,
reputation, CSAT
Role
Metrics
Specific data (examples)
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Chapter 12 Digital business service implementation and optimisation
Measuring social media marketing
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