Social Media marketers get absolutely obsessed with engagement figures, whether it’s the retweet count on Twitter or the number of +1’s your brand gets. However, likes and other engagement metrics are only half of the story.
Let’s study some real data for a moment here to justify what I mean. The company in question (who will remain anonymous) have under a thousand Twitter followers, around 8,000 Facebook fans, less than 300 YouTube subscribers, a small Google Plus audience, and an even smaller Pinterest following. Whilst they are active across all of these channels, their engagement across them all is very varied:
As you can see they’re performing best on Facebook at the moment, however what does this actually mean for the company in real terms?
Well, we’ve taken it upon ourselves to find out, and after a few tweaks to Google Analytics reports we’ve revealed that Facebook is actually their fourth highest revenue generating source, with a higher average order value than from Google traffic.
Interestingly, the other social media channels feature much lower down the list, with YouTube at 26, Twitter at 81, and Pinterest and GooglePlus not generating any revenue at all for the page over the period studied.
So, great news on their Facebook page which is showing a very positive ROI, however how can they take it a step further?
With a Google AdWords campaign you would measure ROI by keyword and by adgroup at a macro level, however this practice very rarely transfers over to the thinking on social. We think you should be measuring ROI in granular detail for all of your social channels with your content as your key focus.
One way to solve this problem is to create unique URL’s for each of your social media posts so that you track back the ROI literally by post to see what’s working for your page. An example below for a smaller client shows where we’ve done this by giving each Facebook post a parameter for the date it was posted, allowing us to track back the impact this had on site.
The Google URL builder is a really useful tool for doing this quickly, and as long as you set up a standardised naming convention for your parameters then the data will be easily read. If for example we as Zazzle Media were posting onto our Facebook page about our latest blog on the 1st March, we may set the URL up like this:
For example, this would allow us to see if tweeting or posting about our blog on that date was more effective than the product related content we had put out the day before in driving people to the key areas of our site.
The ultimate goal here is to analyse your social posts across all platforms by engagement and ROI. So for example, you should be able to see which posts are getting the highest engagement and ROI, and be able to break it down by day, time, campaign, and channel to give you a fully sliced and diced view of your key info.
There’s a number of tools you can use to help you with this process. Unmetric for instance can help you organise your content across channels by theme/type, whilst Sprout Social and other off the shelf tools can help provide you with engagement by dates/times. They key though is pulling it all together and using it to inform your social media plan, across all of the relevant platforms.
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