Posts Tagged ‘linkedin’

Social Buzz Monitoring

Friday, May 20th, 2011

Whether you like it or not, your industry, your products and most likely your business itself is being talked about online. Today’s consumers constantly share opinions, reviews, questions and ideas about what they spend their money on, and its up to you whether to see that as an opportunity or a threat.

Social buzz monitoring

This online chatter around a topic or a brand is called the social buzz.

What is Social Buzz Monitoring?

Put simply, Social buzz monitoring is the process of identifying where your brand is being discussed online, and by whom.

Like focus groups and surveys, social buzz monitoring allows you to canvas opinions and collect data from consumers and influencers that may be useful to your business. The trends and conversations that buzz monitoring uncovers may have an influence on your approach and the way you plan your strategy for the future.

Some experts will tell you that social buzz monitoring is far superior to traditional survey exercises, as people will usually tend to be more candid when sharing thoughts online with their friends and peers (although not always!).

As well as being great for listening, buzz monitoring also offers opportunities to reach out and engage with consumers, meaning you can respond with help and advice, and hopefully drive sales.

Monitoring Tools

Many of you will be familiar with Google Alerts. This is an example of a free monitoring tool, and though useful for beginners, it is a very basic option compared to some of the other more sophisticated tools out there.

If you want to take a step up from what Google Alerts can offer you, there are paid monitoring tools which are offered by companies like Brandwatch, Attentio and Radian6, who will normally charge you a large monthly fee for use of their monitoring dashboard.

Our own service lies somewhere in between these two options - we are capable of far more sophisticated monitoring than you can get from a free service such as Google Alerts, but without the premium price charged by the paid monitoring dashboards.

So how do monitoring tools work? Basically, monitoring tools allow you to monitor select keywords such as the name of your business, meaning that whenever your brand is mentioned in blogs, news, discussion forums, social networks etc you will get a notification.

You can also take it a step further, and look at other key words and phrases that are related to your business or your industry.

Most newcomers to buzz monitoring will find the data they are given overwhelming and often largely irrelevant, like a fisherman who casts his net and keeps pulling out old boots and bits of junk instead of tasty fish.

The key to successful buzz monitoring is being able to hone your results so your net is not cast too wide, and you are only pulling in the stuff that is of genuine use to you. It is also all about being current and being able to spot buzz as it happens, so you can react and respond instantly.

Benefits of Social Buzz Monitoring

Used effectively, social buzz monitoring should help you to answer some of the following questions:

Are people talking about your brand?

Buzz monitoring gives you a sense of how much people are talking about your brand. Even if you are a small business and there may not be that much buzz around you, there almost certainly will be chatter about your industry that could be very useful to tap into. What are the needs and problems of customers in your industry? What are they looking for?

Who is talking about you?

Buzz monitoring is a great way to locate your market – for example, are your customers mostly Facebook users, or are they more often to be found on Twitter and LinkedIn? Pinpointing your customers in this way will allow you to target your marketing (both online and offline) more effectively.

You may also be able to identify key influencers in your industry – those bloggers, tweeters and others whose opinions are influential to other people. Identifying and engaging with these influencers could assist you greatly in spreading message about your brand.

What are they saying – is it positive/negative?

Even negative comments about your brand can be useful, as it may allow you to spot problems you might not otherwise have identified or been told about. You can even engage with your unhappy customers who are complaining about a disappointing product or service and offer to put things right, or at least put across your own side of the story.

Are online consumers looking for your products/services?

One of the huge benefits of social buzz monitoring is its ability to generate ‘hot leads’, by notifying you when someone is asking about or looking for a product or service that you can provide. You can then reach out to this individual and offer your advice and assistance, and perhaps generate a sale. Even if you don’t get a sale, you have benefitted your brand image tremendously by listening and offering to help a consumer.

How to Start Monitoring

Used properly, social buzz monitoring can be extremely valuable, whether for gauging consumer opinion, providing customer service or pushing sales.

As a business, you have the option of choosing an online marketing agency to do your social buzz monitoring for you, or you can have a go at doing it yourself by purchasing your own dashboard from the likes of Radian6.

However, as is the case with many things, having the expertise to know what to do is equally important as having the best tools to do it with. Just as a chef can have everything he needs for a delicious roast lamb dinner but can still end up with a soggy undercooked kebab if he doesn’t know what he’s doing, effective social buzz monitoring relies on more than just having the best, most expensive dashboard – it requires the knowledge of how use it and respond to the data it produces.

If you would like to know more about how social buzz monitoring could help your business, why not give us a call on 01305 755609, or drop us an email at info@keymultimedia.co.uk

 

Chris Redhead

The Rise and Rise of Social Media

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Facebook Baby

Another day, another story about the growth of social media. We are constantly being told about the increasing influence of social media in the world – last month there was the story of the Egyptian man who named his child ‘Facebook’ in gratitude to the role that social networking played in his country’s recent democratic revolution - what better example of how ubiquitous these sites are becoming in our lives?

However, amidst all the hype it can be hard to get the facts and work out just how big social media really is. I was therefore interested to see this week Econsultancy.com putting together a set of statistics on user numbers of various social media platforms, and comparing them with the same figures from a year ago. The results are absolutely astonishing.

 

Social Media Usage Stats

According to their statistics, twelve months ago Twitter had 75m user accounts. It now claims to have 175m users worldwide. The average number of tweets written per day is now 95m, up 250% from the 27m a year ago.

Professional-orientated networking site LinkedIn has also seen its user numbers increase greatly in the last year. It is now up to 100m users, up 100% from the 50m who were using the site a year ago.

Meanwhile, Facebook’s membership has grown from 350m to an unbelievable 640m in the space of just one year. Given that the world’s population is thought to be around 7 billion, that’s not far off 10% of the entire world using Facebook!

When you read these kinds of statistics, it’s incredible to think there are many people out there who still think of sites like Facebook and Twitter as “just another passing fad” that everyone will get fed up with before too long.

It’s clear from the stats that social media is here to stay. When you look at Facebook’s over half a billion strong membership, it seems beyond doubt that it is now far too big to disappear any time soon.

The example always cited by the social media naysayers is Myspace, once the biggest, most active social network on the web, now the online equivalent of a ghost town. However, the important thing to remember with Myspace is that the reason its millions of users (myself included) abandoned the site was not because they had lost interest in social networking, but because there were other sites (namely Facebook and Twitter) ready to migrate to which did the same kind of thing, but better.

So if you accept that social media is with us for the foreseeable future, the question for businesses is how do you take advantage of it?

 

Putting the ‘Social’ in Social Media

As well as the huge numbers of users, one of the great things about social media from a business perspective is that people who use these sites (particularly Facebook) give away a great deal of insight into their personal behaviours, likes, dislikes etc. This provides businesses with a unique opportunity to target their marketing towards certain types of customers in a much more effective way than is possible with traditional forms of advertising.

However, the caveat here is that social media users don’t always respond well to direct advertising, so if you just blunder in firing off ads in all directions, you are likely to simply be ignored.
Instead, probably the best way to approach marketing on social media sites is to use them as they are intended – by engaging with people, and building relationships and communities around your brand.

It’s not just about selling – social media gives you the opportunity to put a personal face on your company, and show your fun and interesting side. Building a community takes time, but if done properly, it can improve your brand image, increase awareness and hopefully give a boost to your sales.

So if you’re not already making use of social media, there has never been a better time to start. We don’t recommend you name your child after Facebook, but we do encourage you to take full advantage of it as a tool to really reach out to your customers and show them what you’re all about!

If you’re interested in finding out how social media could benefit your business, why not give us a call on 01305 755609


Chris Redhead

Guerrilla e-Marketing seminar in Verwood

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

The Guerrilla e-Marketing seminar in Verwood is all put to bed. Powerpoint presentation is finished, all that is needed now is an early night and hope that the forecast for snow doesn’t come to fruition and we get a good attendance.

Quite by surprise I have taken quite a few calls this week from people who had attended the last Guerrilla e-Marketing seminar in Dorchester. A couple of people phoned to check a few details on running an ffective email marketing campaign.

After coming along to the Kingston Maurward event, one Poole based company used the bad weather theme and created a specific e-marketing campaign to target those that had damaged their cars during the wintry weather.

Neat little idea that by all accounts worked a treat!

Take a look at the example from Ooops.net

OOOPS Email Marketing

OOOPS Email Marketing

Twitter and Facebook Tip Sheets

Twitter and Facebook also seem to be on a lot of people’s agenda this month - even if it is just finding enough about it to make a decison whether to write them off for now.

If you are thinking of using Twitter or Facebook to promote your business we have put together a couple of tip sheets to get you started. They are easy to follow and in PDF format so no problems printing them out either.

Guerrilla e-Marketing in Verwood Dorset

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

The first Guerrilla e-Marketing seminar at Kingston Maurward in October went down a storm with nearly 100 people packed in to the seminar room.

Slight panic to begin with as we didn’t have Internet access - so unfortunately, we couldn’t do any live demos. But the sheer number of local businesses present proved that owner managers are waking up to the fact that Social Media networks like Facebook, Linked In and Twitter are tools that need to be understood - and if they are appropriate, embraced within the business.

I am just putting the finishing touches to the second date of the Guerrilla e-Marketing seminars for Business Link that is due to take place in Verwood, near Bournemouth.

Will try and make it slightly different to the material we used at Kingston Maurward so I make it more relevant to the local area and businesses attending.

 

Guerrilla e-Marketing for 2010

If you missed the introduction to the first seminar - Guerilla emarketing is:-

"An unconventional system of promotions that relies on time, energy and imagination rather than a big marketing budget.
Guerrilla marketing campaigns are unexpected and unconventional; potentially interactive; and consumers are targeted in unexpected places.
The objective of guerrilla marketing is to create a unique, engaging and thought-provoking concept to generate buzz, and consequently turn viral."

The fact that Google and the other search engines have recently integrated real-time search within their search engines - picking up feeds from the likes of Twitter - it makes it even more important for businesses to be aware of the changing search engine landscape if they want to keep ahead of the game when it come to search engine optimisation.

Hopefully, there will be plenty of material for you to start thinking how to start to exploit the likes of Facebook, Linked In and Twitter.

Look forward to seeing you on the 20th January.

If you can’t make it - I will post a copy of the Guerrilla e-Marketing slides after the event, plus some tip sheets for creating Twitter and LinkedIn profiles as well as building a Facebook Business Fan Page.

I know there are still places left on the seminar - so to make a booking follow this link - Guerrilla eMarketing Verwood Booking or contact the Business Link Events team on 0845 0707 747 or via events@businesslinksw.co.uk

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