The PMN Blog

How Engaged Are Your Customers?

Michael Della Penna - Thursday, July 23, 2009
In a new report, social media guru Charlene Li, in partnership with wetpaint, reviews and charts Interbrand’s top 100 brands based on their social media presence and the level of engagement they have with their customers. It’s an innovative and important report for a number of reasons. First and foremost, the report attempts to actually measure the depth of engagement and provides additional insights on trends by industry and the number of social media channels used by each brand. Next, the report goes on to correlate financial performance of these brands with level of engagement.

Not surprisingly, “Mavens,” (those brands engaged in seven or more social media channels with an above-average engagement score), enjoyed double-digit revenue and margin growth (as a category) in spite of the current economy compared to “Walflowers” (those engaged in six or fewer channels and had a below-average engagement score) who had negative financial performance on those same metrics.

Additional insights from the report include:

  • Being there is important: having a presence on social networks and micro-blogging outlets is important. The report goes on to say “social media reach alone may have a positive impact” as the more touchpoints used can cause a “ripple effect”, by increasing or “boosting” brand recognition and driving sales volume.”
  • Depth is critical: In some respects focusing on depth over breadth may be an effective strategy as depth gives brands the opportunity to understand customer needs and to react quickly – “which in turn generates pricing power” and drives success.
  • Scalability is key: Make the customer and a commitment to social media a part of the culture. “A few minutes each day spent by every employee adds up to a wealth of customer touchpoints.”
  • Doing nothing is not an option – but doing it all may not be appropriate: Building a social media strategy depends on many factors including who your target is (remember Forrester’s POST methodology), your industry, etc. However, being where your customers are and a part of their online experience is critical.
  • Find your sweet spot: Understand what resonates with your customers and engage with them in the channels they use and prefer. If resources are an issue – start small, lobby for more assets and engage fully.

The report goes on to highlight some very compelling case studies including profiles on Starbucks (ranked #1), Dell (#2), SAP (#9), Toyota (#21) and also includes a complementary website that allows brands to engage further and even complete their own brand’s profile. Another great report from Charlene! However, with the focus being so heavily placed on measurement these days it would be great to better understand the “engagement attributes” used to rank these brands (but I guess that is the secret sauce). Furthermore, I would have liked to see how much of a lift these brands experienced on a series of other metrics. Specifically, in a world where people are turning to other people for a things they need rather than the brands themselves, it would have been great to see if these brands experienced any lift in metrics like satisfaction, likelihood to recommend, likelihood to purchase.

To download the report click here.

‘Til Next Time


Recent Posts


Tags

TWTRCON Cause Marketing facebook Fiesta American Express Newsletters eMarketer Altimeter SAP wetpaint Webinars Brickfish AMG blog Bed Bath & Beyond Youth Noise Pepsi Nielsen Steve Rubel, TNS Cymfony ThreadMarketing Martha Stewart Zappos Virgin America Frank Eliason social shopping DMA Aite Research Virgin Mobile MySpace youtube Online contests email American Airlines Delicious Michael Jordan eM+C Microsoft Social Networks Lifecycle communications Semantic Boeing Microsoft Edelman Comcast Cares @DellOutlet The Blog Council Paul Allen, Jim Louderback Social Media Marketing NBA Neiman Marcus Saturn Holiday Season BMC Edison Nation Ron Shevlin BusinessWeek Micro Persuasion The Limited Time Magazine Super Bowl Telemarketing Wyndam Worldwide CAN SPAM 15th Annual Gen Art Film Festival StrongMail Social graph HP Conversa Marketing Corporate IP Vizio Do Not Call Facebook Generation Y TV Denny's NCL Sweepstakes Fresh Gear Travel Conversations Agencies Nike Magnetik MTV Politics Ford Pace University marketing Audi Undercurrent Stefanie Nelson CVS Extreme Home Makeover Compete Twitter Photosynth 1-800-Flowers Prius Oracle Withoutabox @comcastcares What Would Google Do? Social media TV Cisco social CRM Brandweek 3M WashingtonPost Apple econsultancy Toyota People Real Simple Internet Retailer Conference & Exhibition RuleThirteen Charlene Li Amazon Print Newsvine Google Westin Steve Rubel social internet AOL WiFi email marketing Forrester JetBlue IBM Best Buy Jeff Jarvis CRM NBC Ernst & Young Starbucks Mint.com Ad Age Vitrue Brocade Revision3 Hill Holliday CNN George LeBrun participatory marketing Advertising Texting Upromise Dell

Archive






JOIN THE PARTICIPATORY MARKETING NETWORK:
Marketing is in the midst of a paradigm shift. The rise of a semantic and "social" internet is ushering in a new era in marketing defined by consumer participation and control. The PMN was established to give marketers the knowledge and know-how necessary to start marketing with customers rather than at customers. Join Today.
SEARCH THE PMN:

The PMN Conversations
Are you between the ages of 18-22 years old? Do you want to help shape the future of marketing? Join our Panel!
  • Participate as often as you want
  • Win cool prizes
Ready to find out more? Sign up now!


Featured Sponsors







Copyright © 2009 the Participatory Marketing Network (PMN), is a division of Conversa Marketing LLC. All Rights Reserved. The trademarks, service marks and logos of the PMN and others used in this Website (“Trademarks”) are the property of Conversa Marketing LLC and their respective owners.