I’ve written about being the “Cheerios Guy” of your organization; that is, running around talking up what you’ve learned as you’ve tested things on your Web site. Yes, it’s can be irritating, but it is VERY necessary.
The real question is, how do you equip your CMO to be the Cheerios Guy? You can’t show him or her the charts, spreadsheets and test results. When they get button-holed by the water cooler or broad-sided in the board room, they need a little swagger. You need to tell the story that lies in the data.
You need to give them a Book of Swagger.
Rose Holston takes us through the Book of Swagger, a device invented by digital communications guru Korye Logan in The Agile Marketer and the Book of Swagger.
The aim of the “Book of Swagger” is to be simple:
A prologue. A short narrative that sets the stage for the story. Statistics and web analytics define a baseline from whence we came (the past) and where we are today (the present).
Conflict and resolution. Talk about the drama of “wins” and “revelations” as the team completes scrum after scrum.
The future. Your communications toolkit becomes the basis for looking to the future. This is where your “Book of Swagger” illustrates the wins and losses that feed our mid-management and C-suite folks with information that helps to set the agenda.
The common wisdom among social media marketers is “put links to your social media everywhere.” The idea is that you should build as big a social media “tribe” as possible. As it turns out, this isn’t always a good plan.
If you’re paying for traffic to your Web site – and what traffic doesn’t require some cash, blood, sweat or tears to earn – then why would you send it off to Facebook or YouTube or LinkedIn to disappear forever?
You wouldn’t. But you might be.
In my Search Engine Land article How Mark Zuckerberg Stole Your Search Traffic & What To Do About It, I show you how your social media advertisements may be costing you conversions.
I also show you how to use social media in a conversion-safe way. Read the entire article
Brian Massey, The Conversion Scientist teaches businesses of all sizes how to get more leads and sales from the traffic coming to their Web site.
Readers may be involved in your content, like the chicken is involved in breakfast. How do you find the readers that are committed to your content, like the pig who is providing the bacon? Better yet, how do you get readers to take action?
The most common question I get from clients when I recommend a healthy diet of content is, “And how is giving away content going to increase sales?”
It can seem like content marketing finds a lot of chickens, those that are involved with a brand. But where are the committed pigs, the ones who will put some (pig) skin in the game?
If you see your content as a place to advertise, you can add some meat to your breakfast, generating traffic, leads and sales.
Conversion Beacons (or Bacon) and Calls to Action
To add some hickory-smoked goodness to your content breakfast, I recommend advertising in your own content.
I’m not talking about some namby-pamby “For more information on Company X…” message. I mean a meaty call to action, what Bryan and Jeffrey Eisenberg call a “Conversion Beacon.”
Press Button. Collect Bacon. Looking for committed readers.
If you were to spend hundreds or thousands of dollars to develop content or to advertise on someone else’s website, you wouldn’t create a call to action that said “For more information on our company call….” You’d create an ad that:
Gets the reader’s attention visually
Offers something of value (“learn more about our company” is not a valuable offer)
Includes a clear action for them to take: Call or click
Shows up in the part of the page that contains Grade “A” Choice cuts, the best placement that you can afford.
Since you’re probably spending hundreds or thousands of dollars creating reports, white papers, webinars, seminars, articles and videos, you should be using this same approach to point the reader/viewer/attendee to the next exciting thing on your content menu.
Better yet, ask them to buy or try something.
12 Ways to Get Readers to Take Action.
Ion Interactive offers content marketing with their content marketing. Their content offers a white paper on the side. The folks at Ion Interactive know that the conversion process answers a series of questions, and each delivered answer should anticipate the next question.
In this example, Ion Interactive provides five tips for lead generation. Those prospects who are studying the problem will want to learn more. The report offers more detail, but asks for contact information.
Those prospects who aren’t really studying the problem can select to join Ion Interactive’s Twitter stream.
Ion interactive uses some best practices here as well, including:
Showing the product
Using the magic word “free”
Underlining blue text which is the international standard for “click here.”
There is little room for confusion about the next step.
12 Ways to Get Readers to Take Action
Be bold. Be inline. Be shameless. Be frequent. Incentivize. Merchandize. Be mobile. Be creative. Be generous. Be miserly. Be a tease. Be exclusive.
If you are a content marketer and you’re doing the old palm-to-head routine right now, there is hope. Here are some tips for turning your content into sources for traffic, leads and sales through powerful calls to action:
Be bold. Catch the reader’s attention. Offer something of value, even if it’s more content.
Be inline. Put calls to action right in the copy.
Be shameless. Let the reader know this content is part of a promotion for your products and services. Readers should get used to having promotional messages included in the excellent content you provide.
Be frequent. Tease your “special offer” at the beginning. Include your pitch or insert an ad in the middle. Close with the “hard sell” even if it’s another piece of free content.
Incentivize. Put a coupon on your print and digital offerings.
Merchandize. Show the product.
Be mobile. Add QR codes so your readers can go on a little adventure to your next offering.
Be creative. Just like an ad in any medium, you want to create compelling calls to action for placement in your valuable marketing content.
Be generous. Have great content.
Be miserly. Hold something back that the reader or viewer has to click through to get. In the example above, Ion Interactive held back five of their ten tips.
Be a tease. Put it on the cover. If you let the reader know there is a special offer inside your content, you’re going to get more people to dive in. How many unread white papers are on your hard drive right now?
Be exclusive. Offer something exclusive to consumers in your content. In the example above, Hubspot doesn’t offer a free email and consultation to everyone. You have to be on the webinar.
Advertise Your Content in This Space
I’m going to give you a chance to advertise in this space.
Send me links to your content marketing and show me how you are advertising in your own content. Your content could be one of the examples I use in my next column when I talk about landing pages for in-content ads.
Present your content here or email me through my author page.
You check into a discount hotel only to find it bug-ridden and run-down, and the staff is indifferent to your discomfort. What do you do? You can ask the indifferent staff for help, call management, write a stern letter… or write a review.
This is the premise on which Jay Baer and Amber Naslund begin their presentation at MarketingProfs Digital Marketing Forum in Austin. The authors of The Now Revolution: 7 Shifts to Make Your Business Faster, Smarter and More Social take us through the promise and pitfalls of social media that most any business must consider… now.
The basic Conversion Rate equation is online sales or leads divided by traffic.
When you get a lot of bad traffic, your conversion rate drops, as would be expected. However, if you get traffic that is well qualified, you generate more sales, more leads for less effort.
Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of telling the search engines what your Web site is about, so that people who are looking for things you offer find you (and everyone else goes somewhere else). There are few online marketing strategies that deliver such highly qualified traffic over long periods of time with no advertising buy.
Carolyn Shelby took PubCon Masters Training attendees through the basics of SEO. She is one of the most respected speakers at PubCon, and if you get a chance to see her, I strongly recommend you sit in. She is the source for Chicago SEO.
Here are my notes from her presentation captured using Instagraph Infograph technology.
As a frequent speaker, I’m always impressed when anyone will pull out the old piano and treat the audience to a song.
David Pogue did in his PubCon Keynote after taking us on an energetic and entertaining tour of the technologies that have been and will be changing our lives.
And he finished it off with a live rendition of “I Want an iPhone.”
His topics spanned what he calls “app phones” (not Smartphones), Twitter, advertising and include plugs for the apps he loves best.
Here is what I learned captured using Conversion Sciences InstaGraph infograph technology.
Your conversion marketing practice is actually a “stack” of disciplines or online marketing strategy components each of which you will have to master or have some level of capability with.
Mastering all of these online marketing strategy components may sound like a tall order, and it is. However, if you are marketing online, you are involved with conversion issues by definition.
The Quintessential Guide to Online Marketing Strategy Components
You may be wondering if marketing automation is really worth the investment. But if you’re a performance-oriented marketer–focused on the science of turning prospects into future customers, always concerned about knowing exactly which of your marketing efforts worked and why – that’s like asking if you’re getting your money’s worth from Microsoft Word; it’s something you just can’t do your job without.
In this article, I’m going to walk you through the modern online marketing strategy components – a strategy that cannot be implemented without automation.
To automate something, we must first understand it. Performance marketers are focused on turning their online channels into lead generation engines or revenue streams. They focus on conversion.
“Conversion” is the term given to a series of magical events in the life of a customer,in which a stranger becomes a suspect, a suspect becomes a prospect and a prospect becomes a customer.
In online marketing, a marketer focused on converting visitors to prospects or sales must embrace a set of capabilities, each enabled by and depending on its predecessor. These steps create a capability “stack” (see Fig. 1) that is helpful in planning the implementation of the efforts that make conversion marketing possible.
Figure 1: The Conversion Marketing Components
The Online Marketing Strategy Components or Conversion Stack
Today, when one thinks of conversion marketing, one generally thinks of Website Optimization or Conversion Rate Optimization. These practices focus on measurement and optimization, and represent the top of the stack of capabilities that online marketers must master to outpace competitors online.
Before a business can begin measuring and optimizing a website or other online marketing strategy, the foundational issues of business goals, visitor profiles, content requirements, and delivery channels must be addressed.
Every business with a Web presence has invested at some level in the conversion stack. However, those companies that embrace these capabilities develop a momentum and velocity in their online strategy that allows them to accelerate past entrenched businesses.
These businesses use the conversion stack to leverage their marketing efforts, changing the math of marketing in their favor. The goal is to grow revenue while reducing real marketing costs.
Marketing automation helps marketers define and carry out each capability in the stack with a precision that would be difficult if not impossible to achieve otherwise, and therefore plays a crucial role in an organization committed to performance marketing.
Business Goals: The Base of the Marketing Strategy Components
Knowing exactly what you want your website to do for your business.
The digital space cannot meet all of the goals a business has for growth. However, your business can accomplish things online that are impossible or cost prohibitive through another channel, such as:
Improve the quality of leads, reducing sales costs and increasing close ratios.
Reduce inbound calls for information by moving interactions online.
Eliminate expensive marketing channels.
Reach prospects not found via other media.
Add online services that make your offering more valuable.
Increase cross-sells and up-sells.
Increase average sales price.
Steal market share and mind share from our competitors.
At this stage, we seek to define the integration points of our marketing automation system, and to establish our baselines performance metrics.
Defining Your Marketing Automation Integration Points
While we can measure many things with sophisticated marketing automation tools, it is critical that we focus on those capabilities that are necessary to our business goals, and ignore (or defer) those that are not.
If our business has a long sales cycle involving direct sales efforts, integration with a Customer Relationship Management (CRM) system is crucial; it is how we track our leads through the sales process.
If we are tasked with reducing the sales cycle, we will want a two-way integration between our CRM and our marketing automation system so that we can monitor our success over time. Otherwise, a simple one-way integration may be sufficient.
Likewise, if we seek to increase the average sales price of new customers, we will need to integrate with our financial system to retrieve and measure that goal.
Choosing Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
There is a metric that we can use to either define our success for each goal, or approximate it. For example, “reducing sales costs” means that the sales efforts are converting more leads into customers.
However, there is no off-the-shelf metric for “sales cost” reported by our marketing automation systems.
Instead, the close ratio – the number of leads converted divided by leads generated – would be a reasonable proxy for reducing sales costs.
Likewise, the success of cross-sells or up-sells may be measured by the frequency of repeat purchases or by the average lifetime value of existing customers.
There should be a small set of KPIs that define your top-level online business goals. All other metrics help you answer the question of “why.”
Don’t let the metrics drive your curiosity. Let the business goals drive the choice of metrics.
Defining Your Baselines
There are lies, damn lies and analytics, to paraphrase author Mark Twain. Analytics are rarely accurate.
You must instead measure changes in your KPIs. To measure changes, you must first establish baselines for each.
In most industries, a year’s worth of analytics data is necessary to fully account for seasonal changes in the marketplace, but don’t let this stop you. Implement your analytics tools and let them begin collecting data. In the mean time, estimate your KPIs manually, by gathering data wherever you can. Eventually, your analytics will determine your baselines.
The goal is for the current performance of any KPI to exceed its baseline. Proper reporting is done in terms of percentage increase or decrease. If a KPI consistently rests above its baseline, you have established a new baseline to beat in the coming weeks and months.
These baselined KPIs define your “dashboard.”
However, as you will soon find out, dashboards are unsatisfying because they don’t answer the question, “Why is this KPI changing.” We’ll talk about understanding “why” a little later.
Visitor Profiling: Aligning Your Business Goals with Visitor Buying Habits
Let’s review the second of the online marketing strategy components. Understanding the best visitors needs, the reason they are visiting today and the information they need to feel comfortable taking action. Traditionally, there has been a disconnect between the websites and the needs of visitors. Most business sites follow a “brochure” style approach, in which the site talks about the company and its products.
This is not what your visitors want.
They want you to talk about them and their problems.
Touchpoint Personas differ from traditional customer segments in one significant way: We are only interested in what they need at the moment they are interacting with our measurable online communications. This singular focus allows us to zero in on those things that a visitor needs. Touchpoint Personas are the important tool at this stage and you can click on the link to read my article on touchpoint personas and points of resolution.
These become the content that you will use on your website, in your outbound marketing and throughout your channels. As you will see, content allows us to answer the question “why” when our performance changes, for the better or worse.
Content Strategy: We are No Longer Marketers
What content will you create for these important visitors? Will it be articles, video, or audio? These are important considerations made easy from your touchpoint personas.
We are no longer marketers, but publishers. In almost any industry, any market, it is absolutely necessary that we provide information, guidance, education and entertainment to the marketplace. The Internet has turned our prospects into researchers, and we must provide them with the content that answers their questions.
Our personas give us a complete picture of those visitors that will move our business forward. We know why they are visiting and how they like to receive information. Their demographic profile will tell us which technologies they use and this helps us select the proper format for our content. The points of resolution tell us exactly what our content should cover.
At this point, our content strategy should unfold like the board game “Clue.” In the popular board game, we use a process of elimination to understand who committed a murder, which weapon was used, and where the deed was done.
In our game of “persona clue”, we create a list of similar actions. We deduce who we are targeting, which point of resolution we are addressing, and where this information will be delivered.
We might say, “Darla Decider will download ‘Ten Reasons Projects Fail’ as a white paper on our website.” What we have done with this step is change the conversation from, “Which landing pages do we need to develop?” to, “How can we make this important content available to our best prospects?” Content is the coal that will stoke the furnaces of your marketing automation system and one key ingredient of the online marketing strategy components you need to master.
Media and Channels: Mixing Media in the Right Proportions
How do your visitors want to hear from you? Where can your visitors be reached? Your choice of channels may include webinars, email, social media, blog posts and more.
If our content strategy is about giving prospects what they need, our media strategy is about placing content where our prospects can find it.
Touchpoint personas will be immensely helpful in identifying the right mix of channels through which to deliver and advertise content. Demographics will give you some idea of your prospects’ media preferences.
For example, prospects over 55 are still best reached through email.
Media selection is an evolving process, especially in a world in which so many new channels are appearing every year. In a few short years, we’ve moved from Web pages, email, and banner ads, to search marketing, social networks, RSS feeds, blogs, microblogs, and mobile applications.
It’s an exciting time to be a marketer.
This is where marketing automation becomes indispensable. It is your publishing and distribution system. It must help you manage a stream of content delivered through a variety of channels and track results along the way. Your investment in publishing automation will also allow you to test multiple versions of your content to see which affects your KPIs most positively.
Your System Should Be Easy to Use
You should be able to intuitively setup a variety of content campaigns and see the results. The days of the “launch and watch” website are over. In most industries changes must now come weekly or daily.
Your System Should Not Be a Silo
Producers will need appropriate access to create and stage new content. It should be easy for members of the team to check content and settings to ensure the campaign will launch successfully.
Your System Should Offer a Variety of Metrics
Each content format and channel will be measured differently. You must be able to track downloads of whitepapers. You must be able to track the conversion rates of email-based content. You must be aware of how often a link is shared on social networks.
Needless to say, you will need some help coordinating all of this activity and measuring the results. And this leads us to the another one of the online marketing strategy components. If you aren’t intimate with your marketing automation tool, you’re not doing performance marketing.
Online Marketing Strategy Components: Measuring and Optimizing
Putting the analytics and processes in place to measure the effectiveness of your efforts. This often means designing your online presence differently to enable tracking of visitor behavior. Testing your assumptions is the only way to achieve the high conversion rates that make you seem invincible to your competitors. This is how you reduce the cost of all online marketing efforts.
At the pinnacle of the online marketing strategy components is optimization.
Optimization involves making changes based on the metrics you’ve captured.
Every communication is a test.
Each time you send a communication, you are testing a set of assumptions – assumptions about what your prospects want and need in their buying process, about the format of the content, and about the places they want to consume it.
Every communication can tell us the “why” of our success or failure.
For each communication, you must devise a strategy to measure the effectiveness of the content. Each communication will have a set of primary KPIs.
An email newsletter may invite readers to purchase a new line of shoes, and to join your Facebook page as well. If the primary goal is to sell shoes, you must be able to measure the conversion rate of the email.
It isn’t sufficient to increase sales of the shoe. You must have a strategy to know how many sales were generated by this email.
Watch the Results
The final step of each communication – the step too often overlooked – is reviewing your results. When the communication has run its course, you simply look at the KPIs to learn the secrets desires of your audience.
Which articles are read most?
Which subject lines convert well?
Which discounts generate sales?
Which tweets draw the most visits?
Your marketing automation system should provide easy drill-down to the metrics that define the success of each effort.
The Online Marketing Strategy Components You Need to Master: Conclusions
You are sitting in the monthly executive meeting. You have created a slide deck with your top-level KPIs as reported by your marketing automation system. They are a summary of how your individual efforts have affected the bottom line.
When the questions come, you know the “why” and the “what’s next” for your marketing efforts. “Why did our conversion rates go down, but our revenue go up?” the VP of Sales asks.
You know the answer. You tick off the four or five programs that delivered solid results, and then list those that drew unqualified traffic to the site, stating that they will be modified or discontinued.
You’re a performance marketer.
The Business that Knows Grows
Each item of content you produce will have different versions, be available through multiple channels, and will be measured differently. Today’s online businesses won’t function without a useful marketing automation system, a tool that be used by many members of the team.
The Online Marketing Strategy Components aren’t linear, and businesses can expand their capabilities in any of these areas.
However, those businesses that dominate in their industry through online marketing will be proficient in all of the capabilities presented here.
To develop touchpoint personas, read “Waiting for Your Cat to Bark?: Persuading Customers When They Ignore Marketing” by Bryan Eisenberg, Jeffrey Eisenberg and Lisa T. Davis.
For designing measurable social media campaigns, read “Social Media Marketing: An Hour a Day” by Dave Evans
Online Marketing Strategy Components: Don’t Worry
The good news is that the folks at SiteTuners.com, lead by the always brilliant Tim Ash have put together the Conversion Conference.
The attendees will be leading the online charge in each of their industries.
I can think of no better way to get up the many learning curves that your conversion practice needs than this two day conference.
Topics at Conversion Conference include:
Using Headlines, Copy and Graphic Design to Lift Conversion
You’ve likely read books written by some of the Conversion Conference Speakers, like Landing Page Optimization and Web Design for ROI. There’s no question that the speakers at this conference are the folks you want to be learning from. Check it out. You can even save $250 if you use promo code CCE650 when you register on the Conversion Conference website.
If you won’t be there, I pray that your competitors won’t be either.
To my digital natives and online tribesman everywhere:
What would you tell the printing industry if you had one hour with them?
Think about it: The Printing Industry has been communicating with the world for centuries. While you could argue that they seem slow in adopting digital channels, I would argue that we’ve completely blocked print from our consciousness.
There is an ocean between our peoples.
I have an hour with the Printing Industries of America when I keynote their Converge Conference 2010. Attendees are the boldest of their members, the ones who are looking closely at cross-media business strategies.
What would you tell the owner of a printing company?
How do you admire them?
What do you see that they could be doing better?
Ultimately, I want to understand where the missed opportunities are. When we cross that ocean, what magical happens?
Colonizing the Digital New World
Here’s the setup I’m using for our printing-side brethren:
Welcome to the Digital New World! I am an ambassador for the people of this land. You have traveled far, across the mighty Sea of Apathy to arrive in this place. You have proven yourself as brave explorers. I am here to welcome you and show you around.
We have studied your strange ways and have seen the devices you have that display content without batteries or plugs. I’m sure we seem strange to you as well. Our customs are very different, but we have the same goals: understanding and prosperity.
During your visit, we will examine the differences between us, but more importantly, we will find new opportunities to work together; to combine your “old world” wisdom with our “new world” technology and to build great businesses.
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Developing a social media measurement plan could be a bit boring. But we think it’s OK to take a scientific approach to social media. Here’s why it’s OK to be the Rainman.
In my last Conversion Science column I introduced you to the social media landing page. This landing page has the power to bring social media conversations to a measurable, business-building conversion. Let me show you how to develop the perfect social media measurement plan.
Social media is very important to us at Conversion Sciences. We know that education is the key to changing the web into a place where people find what they are looking for and reward companies for being so darn helpful.
Social media is a great way for us to share our educational and (hopefully) helpful stories, posts, columns and presentations. But to know how our efforts are performing, we need to create a social media measurement plan.
Why It’s OK to be the Rainman of Social Media
However, we aren’t really that good at social media conversations. It may come as no surprise that, as scientists, we are like the Rainman of social media. Like Raymond from the move, we are capable of amazing feats of insight and intelligence, but we often miss important social cues, especially when interactions occur 140 characters at a time.
“I’m an excellent Tweeter”
“I’m an excellent dancer.”
Given the fact that people like us sometimes have awkward digital interactions, you may not invite us to your swanky party. However, you certainly want us to participate in your social graph.
People like us provide an important service to the social spheres. Our content-oriented social media strategy feeds those who rely on social media for education and elucidation.
If you spend the bulk of your social time interacting with individuals, you are probably using a conversation-oriented social media strategy.
Choose the right social strategy
A conversion is more than just a conversation without the T&A.
In our studies, we have observed two broad categories of social media behavior:
Conversation-oriented social behavior
Content-oriented social behavior
While the posts, pictures and pokes that make up an online conversation certainly qualify as “content,” we distinguish conversational content from content that is specifically designed to educate, entertain or inform on a particular subject area.
This article is “content.” The comments you will inevitably leave are “conversation.”
We have found that content-oriented social strategies lead to more measurable campaigns. Plus, many conversion scientists don’t have the social skills to implement a conversation-oriented strategy.
Conversation-oriented social media
This strategy centers around conversations. It typically involves one or more personalities that interact with individuals in the social graph. This strategy is ideal for improving customer support, building awareness, personal branding and image marketing.
Conversations may involve content, but it is the interactions that are front-and-center in this strategy.
Results are typically measured using predictive metrics, such as friends, followers, likes, bookmarks, retweets and reach. These soft metrics are often more satisfying to us than definitive metrics such as leads, sales, and conversion rate.
I admire people like Kate Buck Jr. who make this strategy really work for their business and their clients.
Content-oriented social media
Unlike conversation-oriented strategies, this approach focuses on content as we’ve defined it here: communication that is designed to educate, entertain or inform. This strategy is ideal for lead generation, thought-leadership and building targeted social channels.
Content-oriented conversations don’t focus on the authoring brand or individual. Instead, these conversations circle around the content itself. This content will spur conversations, and ideally will be passed around, expanding our reach.
Of greatest interest to conversion scientists is that content draws visitors to social landing pages, where conversion beacons can drive business-building conversions.
Develop the Perfect Social Media Measurement Plan
It’s possible to automate and centralize the measurement of social media marketing efforts, in part thanks to a wireless tracking device that we attach to each status update, tweet and email that ties conversions to specific social conversations. Here’s how.
Step 1: Create some content.
The catch with the content-oriented strategy is that you must create content. Frequency is up to you. In a sixty-plus day experiment conducted here in the labs, five articles and seven blog posts drove 145 status updates, tweets, emails, Flickr images, etc.
We focused on articles that I write at The Conversion Scientist blog, that I contribute here at Search Engine Land and that I contribute at other venues such as ClickZ and the Content Marketing Institute.
Step 2: Devise a way to measure results.
To measure results, traffic must arrive on one of our instrumented pages. However, some of the content we used lived on other sites.
Our strategy was to create a social media landing page for each of our “off-world” articles in the form of a blog post. These posts teased the article and linked to it.
While we announce each new article through our social networks, the bulk of our marketing drove friends and followers to the blog post.
Right now, Google Analytics is our favorite single point of collection because of its content filtering and segmented reports.
For click tracking, Bit.ly still can’t be beat for its flexibility and integration with so many tools.
Step 3: Market each content item as if each was its own product.
Each of these content items gets a multi-network, multi-touch treatment designed to expose the maximum number of our friends and followers to this content. We maintain small but targeted social graphs on Facebook (<1000), Twitter (<2000) and LinkedIn (>1000).
On Facebook we did a single status post to my profile as well as “The Conversion Scientist” and “Web Strategies for Business” pages.
On Twitter each content item got between two and four tweets. We tried simply repeating the tweets as well as composing a series of unique tweets.
We did one LinkedIn status update, but did not post discussions on LinkedIn groups because the process couldn’t be automated. We’re looking for tools to help with this.
Several items got supporting posts on our predecessor site, the Customer Chaos blog.
All of this may sound like a lot of work. That is why we need tools to automate the process. Right now, Austin-based Spredfast seems to have the best support of the social networks we use, as well as one great collection point for analytics from across our social graph. Hootsuite is an alternative for those focusing on Twitter.
Note: We turned off all of our cross-network services, such as Ping.fm to implement this strategy.
Step 4: Attach a wireless tracking device.
This is real Hollywood stuff.
The most important feature of our measurement strategy is a wireless tracking device that we attached to each post, tweet, email and image. This is the secret sauce that enables the report shown above.
The URL builder provided by Google is quite unsatisfying for us, so we’ve developed a special Google Analytics link tagging spreadsheet that you can use to create and track your micro-coded addresses.
Next time, I’ll show you the queries and reports that reveal which content, social networks and conversations generate the most email subscriptions for us.
In the mean time, let me know the social media distribution and tracking tools that you use and love in the comments section below.
Article originally published on my Search Engine Land column “The Perfect Social Media Measurement Strategy.”
Brian Massey
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