RELEASE DATE: 01 September 2011
SOURCE: http://gmj.gallup.com
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Gallup Management Journal
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01
September 2011
Social Media: The Three Big Myths
Customers and marketers alike are enthralled by social
media. But can companies capitalize on it to acquire new customers?
by Blaise James
and Jim Asplund
Today, Facebook has more than half a billion active
users; Twitter users send more than 140 million tweets per day; and other
social media outlets boast millions more logging in every day. That's an
enormous marketing forum, and organizations of all types have invested a
fortune into using social media to acquire customers. But does that approach
actually work?
Not in the way you might think. Recently, Gallup
conducted research with more than 17,000 social media users -- evaluating
everything from the latest mobile social media apps to old-school
word-of-mouth. We discovered groundbreaking new insights into how people interact
with social media and into its effectiveness as a marketing tool.
These findings debunk three big myths regarding social
media: that it effectively drives customer acquisition, that social networkers
are all the same, and that social networking is an online-only phenomenon. But
more important to companies spending tons of money on social media initiatives,
Gallup's research also suggests practical actions that can make these efforts
more effective.
Myth: Social media initiatives drive customer loyalty
and acquisition.
Fact: Engagement with a brand drives social
engagement.
This first myth cuts to the core of what organizations
want social media initiatives to accomplish: getting new customers and keeping
existing customers. Yet according to Gallup research, brand-sponsored social
media initiatives have very little impact on consumer decision making. Nor do
they drive prospective customers to consider trying a brand or recommending a
brand to others in their social network. (See
graphic "Key Influences on Customer Decisions.")
Brand-sponsored social media initiatives don't have
much influence on a customer's deep rational and emotional attachment, which we
call customer engagement. Gallup analysis shows that it works the other
way around: Customer engagement with a brand drives social engagement,
the degree to which customers will work for or against your company or brand
within their social networks.
And
customer engagement can't be won solely with an app. Gallup research has found
that customer engagement is the result of the fulfillment of four psychological
needs and three rational needs. For a company to benefit from social
engagement, it usually must create customer engagement first. (See graphic
"The Customer Engagement Hierarchy.")
The more emotionally attached customers are to your
organization, the more likely they are to resolve tension between their
positive and negative beliefs -- what psychologists call cognitive
dissonance -- about your organization in your favor. That's because as your
most engaged customers use your product, service, or brand, it becomes part of
their own identity -- something psychologists call symbolic self-completion.
When this happens, criticizing that product is tantamount to criticizing
themselves.
The most frequent type of social networking is still
analog -- face-to-face or over the phone.
That's why you need to go beyond measurements of
rational satisfaction or recommendation-based metrics like Net Promoter to
understand the rational and emotional factors that bond customers to
your brand. Building on this understanding, our analysis revealed these key
points about customer behavior:
§
Customers are more predisposed to be positive about
your organization and more willing to work on your behalf with their social
networks than are prospects, who are less engaged with your organization.
§
Customers are more likely to give you a pass when they
have something negative to say, particularly if they are highly engaged. About
three-fourths (74%) of fully engaged customers had positive social engagement
(engaging their social networks in a complimentary way) and no negative social
engagement (engaging in a derogatory way) about a brand, product, or service.
In contrast, only 1% of actively disengaged customers had positive social
engagement with a brand, product, or service, while 14% had negative social
engagement.
§ Prospective
customers are much more likely to try your product or service or advocate on
your behalf if they hear good things about you from an engaged customer in
their social network. Prospects are most likely to rely on people they have
close relationships with or trust, such as a spouse or family member or an
expert. They are much less likely to trust online or TV advertising or
corporate-sponsored Facebook pages or Twitter feeds. (See graphic "Key Influences on
Customer Decisions.")
If your organization is considering whom to target with
its social media initiatives, keep these key points in mind:
§
You're less likely to engage prospects directly
through social media. Encourage or guide your current customers to advocate on
your behalf instead.
§
Focus your efforts on your most engaged customers
because they are the most likely to advocate on your behalf and the least
likely to criticize you.
Myth: Social networking is an online-only phenomenon.
Fact: Social networking predominantly happens offline.
Ten years ago, customer advocacy circles talked about
creating "buzz," finding your "hubs" or "worker
bees," and relying on "herd instinct" to distribute favorable
word-of-mouth for your organization. Then, just as marketers were trying to
dollarize these efforts, shiny, fast, and trackable digital social networking
platforms emerged and appeared to provide the solution. Yet we're still talking
about the same thing: how to dollarize word-of-mouth efforts within social
networks, albeit through digital social media channels.
It's important to note the difference between what we
mean by social networking and social media. Social networking is the act
of engaging a social network; social media comprises the channels
through which people network. This leads us to some bad news for the digerati:
Digital-only social media initiatives are leaving far too many prospects and
customers untapped. Our analysis suggests that the most frequent type of social
networking is still analog -- face-to-face or over the phone. This holds true
among all types of social networkers, even younger social networkers (which
we'll cover in part 2 of this article).
When organizations plan their social networking
initiatives, too many of them mistake the media for the message. They seek to
drive specific business outcomes by managing infinitesimal online response
metrics like followership, app downloads, hashtags, or click-throughs rather
than creating content or ideas that resonate with their prospects or customers
and fostering engagement regardless of the method or channel.
What then is the key to effective social networking?
Don't confuse the channel for the desired outcome. Social engagement can and
must be measured and managed across all channels -- online and offline.
Myth: All social networkers are the same.
Fact: People use social networks in very different
ways -- and for very different reasons.
Marketers have customer segmentation down to a
science. Today, they can target and approach prospects based on small clusters
of highly focused similarities. Some organizations even talk about full
customization -- segmenting and targeting down to the individual consumer.
Yet this same methodology isn't typically used in the
social media space. Instead -- bowing to the argument that "everyone is
doing it, so we should too" -- many organizations approach social media as
a tactic in search of a strategy.
But using mass tactics to reach consumers implies that
all social networkers are the same. They're not. Gallup research shows that
social networkers have different intrinsic reasons why and how
they use their networks. They won't change those to fit your organization, so
the key is to understand these differences and align your initiatives to them.
In part two of this article, James and Asplund will
address how social networkers are different and provide practical actions
companies can take to drive social engagement.
Survey Methods
Results are based on a Gallup Panel study consisting
of web surveys completed by 17,254 national adults, aged 18 and older.
Respondents were deemed proficient internet users based on their ability to
complete the survey via the web. The study was conducted in September and
October 2010. Gallup Panel members are recruited through random selection
methods. The panel is weighted so that it is demographically representative of
the U.S. adult population. For results based on this sample, one can say with
95% confidence that the maximum margin of sampling error is ±1.43 percentage
points. Margins of sampling errors vary for individual subsamples. In addition
to sampling error, question wording and practical difficulties in conducting
surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of public opinion polls.
Jim
Asplund is Chief Scientist, Strengths-Based Development and Performance Impact
Consulting, with Gallup. He is coauthor of Human Sigma: Managing the Employee-Customer
Encounter.
Blaise
James is Senior Practice Expert for Gallup.
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