How to Achieve B2B Social Media Marketing Success March 2011
How to Achieve B2B Social Media Marketing Success
March 2011
Agenda
• Introduction – Three Phases of Social Media Adoption
• Observation (Exploring and Listening)
• Preparation (Getting Your Ducks in a Row)
• Participation (Publishing, Responding and Mingling)
But First - Why Social Media Matters to B2B
Companies• Companies active in social media report a
59% higher lead conversion rate for organic search traffic
• 85% of B2B buyers say they want B2B vendors to engage and interact with them online
• 93% of B2B buyers believe that all companies should have a social media presence
Why Social Media Matters (2)
• 9 out of 10 b2b buyers start a purchase process with search (and social media increasingly affects search results)
• Three-quarters of B2B technology buyers say they use social media at some point during a buying cycle to gather information or communicate with colleagues about a purchase; 58% use LinkedIn for this purpose
• YouTube reaches 36% of all business decision-makers - more than 10X the figure for Forbes.com
Why Social Media Matters (3)
• 43% of employees in Fortune 1000 companies say they use LinkedIn for professional purposes
• 100% of the Fortune 500 have at least some of their executives listed on LinkedIn. 50% of LinkedIn users are business decision makers
• 65% of journalists use social media to conduct research for stories
Why Social Media Matters (4)
• 59% of C-level executives report using social media for business purposes at least weekly
• 90% of B2B technology decision makers watch online videos
• 80% of B2B technology decision makers read blogs; 69% are active on social networks
(Really?)
Yes, really – sources for the preceding statistics can be found here:
http://webbiquity.com/social-media-marketing/best-social-media-stats-facts-and-marketing-research-of-2010/
Phase 1: Observation
Establish Your Baseline
• Before you start – create a dashboard
• A snapshot of all measures that may be affected by social media activities
Example Metrics
Total website traffic
Unique visitors
Web traffic by source (e.g. Google Advanced Segments)
Subscribers (email, RSS)
Web traffic quality (bounce rate, time per visit, pages per visit)
Search traffic – generic and branded
Email open rate
Email pass along (if possible)
Email CTR
Facebook fans
Twitter followers
Blog traffic
YouTube subscribers
YouTube video views
LinkedIn group members
“Mentions” – total and by social network
Lead conversions by source
Lead conversion rate – total and by source
Net new customers
Revenue from new customers
Marketing spend reduction
Number / share of sales interactions involving social media
Selecting a Monitoring Tool
• Social media monitoring is critical for baseline and progress measures
• Free tools – you get what you pay for
• Some key considerations:– Extent of coverage– Realtime (or near realtime) alerts– Workflow capabilities
Popular Monitoring Tools
What to Look For
• Who is talking about your company / products?
• Where are they talking?
• What are they saying?• Who needs to know /
respond?• Ditto the above for
your competitors.
• Who is talking about issues / trends in your industry?
• Who are the key influencers to connect with (analysts, journalists, bloggers, customers)?
• Who are the competitors to monitor?
Phase 2: Preparation
Social Media Policy
• Your employees want to help – but need guidance and guidelines
• Involve all stakeholders: marketing/PR, development, customer service, HR, legal
• Be a concierge – not a dictator
Sample Social Media Policy Outline
• Define “social media”
• Explain company objectives
• Shoulds and Shouldn’ts
• Musts and Mustn’ts
• Who to ask when questions arise
Develop a Social Media Plan
• Establish metrics (from your baseline)
• Identify your tools / venues• Allocate responsibility / time /
resources• Set reasonable measurement
intervals and goals• Plan for contingencies
B
Mistakes to Avoid• Using social media as a direct response
vehicle• Trying to automate interaction• Expecting instant results• Not allocating (enough) time / resources• Treating social media as a silo• Failing to plan• Sending mixed signals / messages• Being dishonest / misrepresenting• Failing to train employees• Not providing fresh / relevant / valued
content• Failing to LISTEN• Being negative• Assigning it to an intern
B2B Social Media Success Stories: ShipServ
• ShipServ: international shipping software• Objectives:
– Awareness– Leads– Engagement– 50% increase in website traffic
• Tactics: – redesigned website– Blog– tracking through CRM system– content development/promotion– LinkedIn group– SEO
• Results: – web traffic up 59%; 1,000+ white paper downloads– 600 views of company videos– Landing page conversion rate up 150%– Sales-ready leads up 400%– Measurable increase in brand awareness– Estimated cost was 20% of traditional media campaign
B2B Social Media Success Stories: Ernest Agency
• Ernest – a UK-based b2b marketing agency• Objectives:
– Increase brand awareness– Demonstrate industry knowledge and social media marketing capabilities– Increase search traffic– Generate new business
• Tactics:– Create B2B marketing statistics video– Post video on branded YouTube channel– Promoted video through:
• Twitter• LinkedIn groups and profiles• Facebook• PR• Email• Comments on industry blogs
• Results:– 6,500 video views– 42% increase in Twitter followers– 77% traffic increase to blog; 30% increase to corporate website– 20+ blog posts written about or featuring the video– Measurable improvement in organic search traffic– Two significant new customers
Phase 3: Participation
The Four C’s of Social Media
Proactive Monitoring
Monitor
- Brand mentions
- Key influencers
- Industry developments
Respond
- Who needs to know?
- Do we need to respond? How?
- What else do we need to do? (e.g. capture information about a service problem, market opportunity or new product feature)
Measure
- What’s the impact?
- How do we capture / report this?
- How does this change what we are doing (if at all)?
Measuring Success• Ultimately this is based on your goals and
objectives.• Direct ROI measures can be challenging.• Typical success metrics include:
– Increased brand awareness (e.g. branded search, direct visits)
– Enhanced brand image (important – and real – but hard to quantify)
– Increased brand / product mentions in social media– Increased website traffic, Twitter followers, blog readers,
etc.– Increased lead conversion rate– New opportunities identified– Increased customer engagement / lower churn rate