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TheStateofSocialMedia Marketing
1
The StateofSocialMediaMarketing Report:
7 MajorFindings & In-Depth Analysis
September 2012
2
Letter from the CEO
3
Foreward
5
The StateofSocialMedia Marketing
7
Major Findings
19
Detailed Findings
41
About Awareness
19
Top Business Objectives for Social Marketing
24
Greatest SocialMarketing Challenges in Second Half 2012
30
Adoption ofSocial CRM
32
Social Media Monitoring and Management Practices
35
Social Marketing Resources
36
Top SocialMedia Platforms
39
Survey Participant Demographics
Table of Contents
7
Key Finding #1
9
Key Finding #2
10
Key Finding #3
12
Key Finding #4
15
Key Finding #5
16
Key Finding #6
18
Key Finding #7
3
The StateofSocialMedia Marketing
Letter from the CEO…
Hello, Fellow Marketers!
In the nine months since we launched our rst StateofSocialMediaMarketing survey, we have seen more
focus and action around socialmedia and social technologies. ere is no doubt that social technologies have
profoundly impacted businesses and consumers across the globe. Based on the July 2012 McKinsey report,
“e Social Economy: Unlocking Value and Productivity through Social Technologies”, there are now a
staggering 1.5 billion members ofsocial communities globally, with 80% of them regularly interacting with
social networks – one in ve hours spent online is now spent on social networks, increasingly on mobile
devices.
ere is no question that the value-creation potential ofsocial is huge. According to the same report from
McKinsey Global Institute, use ofsocial technologies can contribute $900 billion to $1.3 trillion in value
(based on estimates across four industry sectors), with $500 billion attributed to marketing, sales and aer-
sales support activities. McKinsey estimates that for consumer goods companies, the use ofsocialmedia and
technologies can increase margins by as much as 60%. But not so fast.
Although 70% of companies report using social technologies, only 3% say they derive substantial benet
from them across all stakeholders – customers, employees, and business partners. One ofthe main reasons
why benets ofsocial technologies are still elusive is because we continue to apply traditional thinking and
approaches to a fundamentally dierent world. We agree - simply shiing advertising and market research
budgets to socialmedia will not suce. Businesses need to transform their organizational structures, processes,
and cultures to reap the benets ofthesocial potential. So do marketing leaders and their departments.
It is time we apply a new way of thinking to themarketing potential – one that transforms the way we
approach, plan and conduct marketing – and not just marketing on social networks. Companies now have
the unprecedented ability to monitor what consumers do and say to one another on social platforms, which,
as McKinsey points out, provides unltered feedback and behavioral data. is insight can and should turn
marketing on its head.
Up to this point, marketers did not have scalable ways to identify, segment and prioritize their social followers.
Today’s social segmentation is largely rudimentary – there are your fans and followers and then there’s everyone
else. But what if there was a better way?
Enter socialMarketing Automation and social CRM – new social technologies that are changing the way we
identify prospective buyers and customers for increased share of wallet and sustained loyalty. New capabilities
such as Social Prospecting allow marketers to mine thesocial web, identify new likely buyers, collect and store
their social data (demographic and social activity), and then segment and prioritize those people according to
criteria marketers dene.
The StateofSocialMedia Marketing
4
Letter from the CEO…
From among the 450+ marketers across a wide variety of industries and levels ofsocialmarketing experience who
participated in our mid-year survey, only 16% report the use ofsocial CRM – hope springs eternal from those
marketers with years ofsocial experience, businesses who understand the need to invest in social to gain from it.
44% of those with socialmarketing budgets of over $100,000 report already using social CRM, with an additional
26% planning to adopt such technologies by the end ofthe year.
Across the board, brands still struggle to address the question of ROI in social marketing. Brands are not equipped
to tie their socialmarketing initiatives to business results. While mature brands are on the right track, a new
structure must be applied to evaluating business value. is is the Awareness promise to you – in an addendum to
this survey report, we share a new framework to equip you, the marketers, to measure ROI and prove the value of
social marketing.
You will notice some not-so-new underlying themes in our StateofSocialMediaMarketing September 2012
report: Executives and senior managers are looking for traction in three key areas – addressing socialmarketing
ROI, continued expansion ofsocial presence and reach, and increased frequency of content creation and
publishing.
You will see clear maturity patterns, with companies experienced in socialmarketing moving beyond growing
social presence and reach. ose companies focus on more robust socialmedia monitoring and better integration
with marketing initiatives. We applaud that trend.
So it is not surprising that although interest in socialmarketing has not abated, our industry has made little
progress to standardize the thinking and reap more business benets from social – as our report will show, brands
are still focused on supercial metrics such as numbers of fans and followers but have done little to monetize their
presence.
Enjoy this report and let us know what you think – we encourage you to share it within your organization and
with your peers – let’s bring the collective conversation to a new level where we can learn from each other and
realize the promise of engaging with thesocial customer.
Warm regards,
Brian Zanghi
CEO of Awareness, Inc.
RETWEET THIS
The StateofSocialMedia Marketing
5
FOREWARD
As we begin to prepare for the last quarter of 2012 and look forward to 2013, the team at Awareness surveyed
469 marketers from wide varieties of industries, company sizes and levels ofsocialmarketing expertise.
Respondents came from a cross-section of executives, managers and those who support thesocial
marketing functions within their organizations.
Executive or Senior Management
Mid-level management
Marketing support
Other
Survey Respondent Role Within Company
45%
28%
15%
12%
The level of responses from executives and senior management is clear evidence that socialmarketing is
slated to become a strategic component of all marketing initiatives, receiving attention from the highest level
of the organization. We specically asked marketers to dene their department; over half report to marketing,
17% report to corporate communications and a full 15% report to a dedicated socialmarketing team.
n = 413
Foreward
The StateofSocialMedia Marketing
6
This report also contains responses from organizations at different stages ofsocialmedia adoption and
experience – from those who consider themselves (self-reported) novices or dabblers all the way through
social media leaders. Similar to the January 2012 report, we reect on the bell curve distribution of responses,
which we believe supports the validity ofthe ndings across company expertise levels.
Foreward
The StateofSocialMedia Marketing
7
Major Findings
MAJOR FINDINGS
We present themajor ndings and key takeaways from theStateofSocialMediaMarketing Survey,
conducted by Awareness Inc., in early July 2012:
Key Finding #1: Misalignment Between Business Objectives, Measurement
Methodologies and SocialMarketing Investment:
Although marketers agree that they need to drive higher customer engagement and revenues with social
marketing, only 47% of them actually measure what they do and invest in what matters. The majority of
social marketers (66%) are still spending time and effort to grow social fans and followers or create and
publish content, while only 39% are thinking about how to integrate socialmarketing with the rest ofthe
organization.
Top Business Objective for Social Marketing: Customer Engagement and Revenue Generation
• Better customer engagement tops the business objective charts, cited by 78% of respondents
• Revenue generation is next at 51%
• Better customer experience follows at 47%, and
• Increased thought leadership at 41%
Over 50% of Marketers Do Not Measure their SocialMedia Marketing:
• 47% measure success today
• 38% plan to measure by the end ofthe year
Percentage
The StateofSocialMedia Marketing
8
Top SocialMarketing Challenges: ROI, Management and Growth ofSocial Presence
Marketers continue to struggle with ROI measurement:
• 57% of respondents cite measuring ROI as their lead challenge
• The other top challenge cited at 44% is the growth and management ofsocial presence
Percentage
Percentage
Major Findings
The StateofSocialMedia Marketing
9
Key Finding #2: Tighter Integration between Social and Rest of
Marketing and Business Overall
Although the majority ofsocial marketers are still concerned with growing their
social footprint, over 50% see the need for tighter integration between social
and the rest ofmarketing and 35% - the need for better integration between
marketing and the rest ofthe business.
Top Areas ofSocialMarketing Investment: Presence, Content Publishing,
and Integration
The top areas of investment cited include:
• Increased presence across all socialmedia platforms, reported by
66% of survey respondents
• Increased frequency of content publishing by 56%
• Better socialmarketing integration with other marketing initiatives, as
reported by 50% of survey respondents
50%
of respondents
are looking for
tighter
integration
Percentage
Major Findings
The StateofSocialMedia Marketing
10
Key Findings #3: Social Marketers Are Starting to Measure
What Matters
Social marketers are starting to track different aspects ofthe value they are
driving – such as the brand’s effectiveness in social, customer engagement,
and revenue generation, and here’s how:
When measuring a brand’s effectiveness on Social Media, Organizations
Measure:
• Social Presence (number of fans and followers) by 96%
• Trafc to website in 89% of cases
• Social mentions across platforms in 84% of cases
• Understanding that social efforts are never done in a vacuum, some
social marketers are starting to track share of voice (55%) and
sentiment (51%)
Percentage
Major Findings
[...]... determine what level of transformation social networking and social software will have on business How to Audit Your SocialMarketing Efforts Learn how to evaluate the effectiveness of your current socialmarketing strategy Identify new ways to improve the return on your socialmarketing investment 23 TheStateofSocialMediaMarketing Detailed Findings 57% s a y MEASURING socialmedia ROI is their top CHALLENGE... to socialmarketing as they mature We also expect to see mature brands outsource greater portions of their socialmarketing efforts to outside agencies and consultancies 35 TheStateofSocialMediaMarketing Detailed Findings Top SocialMedia Platforms The Big Three socialmedia platforms, Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn, continue to dominate thesocialmedia landscape, used by 90%, 84% and 78 % of. .. than $10,000 for socialmarketing • 81% of marketers have a 1-3 person team responsible for socialmediamarketing in their organizations Mature companies with a budget over $100,000 for socialmarketing have a fairly even distribution of their people resources 15 TheStateof Social MediaMarketing Percentage MajorFindings Number of people Key Findings #6: Top Social Platforms: The Big 3: Facebook,... engagement 29 TheStateofSocialMediaMarketing Detailed Findings Adoption ofSocial CRM Social CRM systems will be increasingly used to integrate social data with traditional marketing and sales data Marketers need to close the loop on their socialmarketing efforts, and with all the data available through social channels, a social CRM enhances the understanding marketers have of their customers... Greatest SocialMarketing Challenges in Second Half 2012 Marketers are forthcoming about the challenges they face with their socialmarketing programs The top challenge identified by marketers is measuring ROI, cited by 57% of respondents, followed by managing and growing their social presence (44%), and monitoring socialmedia (34%) 24% 22% Percentage 24 TheStateof Social MediaMarketing Detailed Findings. .. Facebook The top socialmarketing platforms for marketers in 2012: • Facebook at 89% • Twitter at 84% • LinkedIn at 77 % • YouTube at 71 % • Blogs at 61% Percentage 16 TheStateof Social MediaMarketing Major FindingsSocial Targeting Socialmedia leaders are adding additional social channels to address and engage niche target audiences more effectively As businesses mature their presence on social networks,... respectively), their less experienced peers are not focused on these areas yet It’s an investment priority for 37% , 39% and 51% respectively Top Areas ofSocialMedia Investment by Level ofSocialMarketing Experience n = 402 Percentage 20 TheStateof Social MediaMarketing Detailed Findings Role Influence Alignment across the organization is present when we analyze who drives thesocialmarketing investment... respectively report they plan to by end of 2012 14 TheStateofSocialMediaMarketingMajorFindingsOf those who monitor social media, most are cobbling together paid and free tools: 54% $ 86% n = 306 Percentage $$$ Key Finding #5: SocialMarketing Budgets and Resources Quite Insufficient to Drive Value Most social marketers are not equipped to succeed from the get-go: 54% of marketers who shared their insights... Brands Percentage 17 TheStateofSocialMediaMarketingMajorFindings 22% of respondents are looking to OUTSOURCE socialmedia measurement Key Findings #7: Limited Outsourcing Businesses look to outsource a limited amount of their socialmarketing Those aspects ofsocialmarketing that are slated for growth by outsourcing in the next 12 months include: • Socialmedia measurement by 22% • Industry and... monitoring and content creation at 20% 12% n = 4 17 Percentage 18 TheStateof Social MediaMarketing Detailed Findings DETAILED FINDINGS Top Business Objectives for SocialMarketing Marketers chimed in on their leading socialmarketing objectives Ofthe 462 responses, 78 % aim to drive better customer engagement, 51% want to drive revenue generation, 47% use social to create a better customer experience . The State of Social Media Marketing
1
The State of Social Media Marketing Report:
7 Major Findings & In-Depth Analysis
September. #7
3
The State of Social Media Marketing
Letter from the CEO…
Hello, Fellow Marketers!
In the nine months since we launched our rst State of Social Media