Twittering Away Time And Money
One of the most common questions I’m getting these days is “how should I measure the value of all the social marketing things we’re doing like Twitter, Linked-in, Facebook, etc.?”
My answer: WHY are you doing them in the first place? If you can’t answer that, you’re wasting your time and the company’s money.
Sounds simple I know, but I’m stunned at how unclear many marketers are about their intentions/expectations/hypotheses for how social media initiatives might actually help their business. In short, if you can’t describe in two sentences or less (no semi-colons) WHAT you hope to gain through use of social media, then WHY are you doing it? Measurement isn’t the problem. If you don’t know where you’re going, any measurement approach will work.
Here’s a framework for thinking about social measurement:
1. Fill in the blanks: “Adding or swapping-in social media initiatives will impact ____________ by __________
extent over _____________ timeframe. And when that happens, the added value for the business will be $_____________, which will give me an ROI of ______________. ” This forms your hypotheses about what you might achieve, and why the rest of the business should care.
2. Identify all the assumptions implicit in your hypotheses and “flex” each assumption up/down by 50% to 100% to see under which circumstances your assumptions become unprofitable.
3. Identify the most sensitive assumption variables — those that tend to dramatically change the hypothesized payback by the greatest degree based on small changes in the assumption. These are your key uncertainties.
4. Enhance your understanding of the sensitive assumptions through small-scale experiments constructed across broad ranges of the sensitive variables. Plan your experiments in ways you can safely FAIL, but mostly in ways to help you understand clearly what it would take to SUCCEED — even if that turns out to be unprofitable upon further analysis. That way, you will at least know what won’t work, and change your hypotheses in #1 above accordingly.
5. Repeat steps 1 thru 4 until you have a model that seems to work.
6. In the process, the drivers of program success will become very obvious. Those become your key metrics to monitor.
In short, measuring the payback on social media requires a sound initial business case that lays out all the assumptions and uncertainties, then methodically iterates through tests to find the model(s) that work best. Plan to fail in small scale, but most important, plan to LEARN quickly.
Measure social media as you should any other marketing investment: How did it perform versus your expectations of how it should have? If those expectations are rooted in principles of profit-generation, your measurement will be relevant and insightful.
Similar Posts:
- 3 Tried-n-True Ways to Decide Which Social Media Tools to Use
- Online Marketing Trends – How to Profit From Trends in 3 Easy Steps
- When Is the Right Time to Start Marketing Your Book?
- 7 Must Use Internet Social Media Avenues
- Track And Measure Your Advertising, Customer Acquisition Costs, And The Lifetime Value Of A Customer
- 7 Social Media Tactics for Explosive Results in Your Business
- Social Media Optimization- Four Rules for Success
- The Reasons Why Marketing Plans Fail
- Split Testing – Why And How To Produce Better Marketing Results
- 5 Tips for Joining Your First Social Media Site
- Are There Any Real SEO Secrets?
- Online Businesses That Don’t Fail
- How To Get Free Press
- The Power of a Tiny URL
- Social Marketing: Not Nearly As Awful As I Feared
Tagged with: business • ebook • facebook • Family • marketer • marketers • marketing • money • ping • social marketing • social measurement • SUCCEED • success • time and money • Twitter
Filed under: Internet Marketing • Social Networking
Like this post? Subscribe to my RSS feed and get loads more!
Possibly related posts
- 3 Tried-n-True Ways to Decide Which Social Media Tools to Use
- Online Marketing Trends – How to Profit From Trends in 3 Easy Steps
- When Is the Right Time to Start Marketing Your Book?
- 7 Must Use Internet Social Media Avenues
- Track And Measure Your Advertising, Customer Acquisition Costs, And The Lifetime Value Of A Customer
- 7 Social Media Tactics for Explosive Results in Your Business
- Social Media Optimization- Four Rules for Success
- The Reasons Why Marketing Plans Fail
- Split Testing – Why And How To Produce Better Marketing Results
- 5 Tips for Joining Your First Social Media Site
- Are There Any Real SEO Secrets?
- Online Businesses That Don’t Fail
- How To Get Free Press
- The Power of a Tiny URL
- Social Marketing: Not Nearly As Awful As I Feared





Thanks friend. Good article. Thank you.