Blog Archives

100 awesome social media marketing stats, charts and graphs

Posted by on February 6, 2012

This excellent collection of social media marketing stats, graphs and charts is brought to you by the great folks at Hubspot.

Highlights from the collection broken down by categories are:

Inbound Marketing

  • In 2011, 61% of marketers invested more in earned media compared to 58% in paid digital media and only 14% in paid traditional media
  • B2B marketers are shifting their budgets towards inbound marketing with 69% investing in social media
  • More than half of marketers increased their inbound marketing budgets in 2011
  • The average budget spent on company blogs and social media has nearly doubled in the past 2 years
  • Inbound marketing is a lot more cost effective than traditional outbound marketing with a cost per lead  62% less on inbound than outbound lead

Search engines and SEO

  • Google is the new yellow pages. 20% of the monthly Google searches are for local businesses
  • 75% of users never scroll past the first page! If you are not on first page of Google for your keywords, you need to improve your SEO
Social Networking
  • 2/3 of Internet users regularly use social network
  • The world and business is becoming more and more social
  • Social media conversations actually influence purchases
  • More than 1/2 of small business owners say social media sites play an important role in active sales
Blogging
  • 2/3 of marketers say their blog is critical or important to their business
  • Blog articles influence purchase decisions
  • Companies that blog have 55% more website visitors
  • B2C companies that blog generate 88% more leads per month than those who do not and B2B companies generate 67% more leads
Facebook
  • Facebook has become the preferred method for sharing content second only to email
  • 51% of B2B marketers agree that Facebook is an effective marketing tool
  • Both B2C and B2B acquire customers on Facebook
Twitter
  • More than 1/2 of active Twitter users follow brands and companies on social networks
  • 79% of US Twitter users are more likely to recommend brands they follow
  • B2C companies with over 100 followers have 146% more leads/month than those with less than 100

To see the charts and graphs of these and many more stats as collected by Hubspot, check out the PDF document below. Enjoy!

 

 

Is social media marketing paying off for your business?

Posted by on January 30, 2012

I love the conversation of return on investment from your social media marketing. Don’t you?

Businesses are starting to realize that social media goes deeper than getting a Facebook page up, linking it to your Twitter profile (more on this in another post) and telling the intern to update Facebook every day.

Businesses that are successful with their social media marketing are the ones that have prepared a plan that includes monitoring, content and measurements.

In November, WildFire in cooperation with Column Five executed an ROI social media survey with over 700 marketers from around the world.

Some important key facts:

  • 97% of the surveyed marketers believe that social media marketing benefits their business;
  • 75% intend to increase media spending this year;
  • EVERYONE wants to grow their fan base.

The interesting part is, that there’s currently no standardized method how to measure ROI of social media success. For all the details, have a look.

Source: WildFire

 

How about you? What do you currently measure with your social media marketing?

Out&About Marketing predicts 2 major areas in 2012 to keep an eye on

Posted by on December 18, 2011

Another year has gone by us fast. As we approach a brand new year, I like to stop and think of what the immediate future holds for us as social media marketers and CMOs. In my opinion, we are going to continue to see social media, mobile, video and augmented reality take more of our time as consumers and marketers. Yet, the two most important areas to pay attention to in 2012 in my opinion are social media measurements and mobile web and marketing:

Facebook measurement1. Social media marketing requires measurements. Social media continues to evolve, dominate time and demand budget increases. Although many marketers are still not sure of how to measure their social media marketing efforts, they continue to put more time and money into growing their online community. In 2012, marketers will demand more accurate measurements for social media marketing efforts and hope to start proving return on investment from spending time and energy on places like Facebook and Twitter. Rightly so, a marketer’s job is to measure how their activities move the needle and without proof of why this works, social media quickly turns into a waste of time. How are marketers currently measuring their social media marketing? This recent survey from eMarketer shows that fans and followers or size of network is still the number one measurement with 60% of marketers depending on fans and followers to prove their success.  Personally, I’m a lot more interested in the qualified leads from social media, time spent interacting with the brand and the potential increase in sales attributed to social media.

social media marketing measurements

The Econsultancy report “The State of Social Media 2011” noted that 41% of marketers surveyed had no return on investment figure for any of the money they had spent on social channels as of October 2011. This seems to me incredibly high for the time investment it takes to commit to social media. Start measuring your social media marketing efforts today and if you are not sure what or how to measure them, please, give us a call so we can help.

2. Mobile will continue to grow as smart phones are becoming more popular, apps are becoming more available and marketers are realizing that websites need to be mobile friendly for smartphones and tablets. The statistics are staggering when it comes to mobile marketing. A snapshot of important statistics from 2011 from Mobile Marketer shows the incredible rise in mobile and a trend that will continue to go up:

Applications
- 1 billion app downloads
Mobile social media
- 166 percent increase in Facebook Mobile users in the first half of 2011
- 1 billion foursquare check-ins
Data traffic
- 1,800 percent increase in traffic on networks in the United States in next four years
More mobile
- More smartphones bought in the U.S. than PCs
- More wireless subscriptions in the U.S. than people
Mobile commerce
- Mobile commerce sales will reach $6.7 billion this year in the U.S. – a tiny fraction of overall retail sales, to be sure, but a 91.4 percent increase over 2010
- Next year, sales will rise another 73.1 percent to $11.6 billion
Mobile advertising
- Mobile advertising will generate $1.23 billion in the United States in 2011
- Mobile advertising in the U.S. to reach $4.4 billion by 2015
Mobile email
- Mobile email open rates increased 34 percent in the past six months
- In particular, email opens from iPad devices skyrocketed by increasing 73 percent
Bar codes
- 20 million bar code scans in third quarter 2011
- 40 percent increase in scans year-over-year from the third quarter of 2010
Mobile video
- Consumers are spending 29 percent more time watching videos on their mobile devices
Tablets
- 77 percent of tablet owners use their devices everyday
- 53 percent of users depend on tablets for daily news
For more stats on mobile marketing and other relevant mobile information, visit Mobile Marketer.
Marketers will need to adapt and adjust their plans and strategies with these two trends in mind if they want to stay relevant, be accessible to people and engage with consumers in places that are already popular with their users.
As a marketer and business owner, ask yourself two questions:
1. Can I prove that social media marketing works for my brand? and
2. Can people access my website on any device they are on?
Depending on your answers you may have some work to do in the beginning of the year.
What are your thoughts? What trends and areas do you think will demand marketers’ attention in 2012?

Out&About Marketing turns 1 year old- 10 Lessons Learned

Posted by on July 6, 2010

Happy Birthday Out&About Marketing! It turned one year old today! Yipee!

A year ago I embarked on a new journey with Out&About Marketing. The results have been very,very positive. I accomplished many of the goals I set for myself and learned a few lessons along the way. Overall, I have no regrets and I’m proud of the accomplishments.

Thank you to all of my clients who keep me on my toes, open my horizons and challenge me to learn more. You are all the best!

Thank you to all of my readers who visit my website, read and comment on my blog. Let’s keep the conversation going.

I learned so much throughout the year thanks to all of you – my clients, my readers, my social and real life friends and the hundreds of new friends I met online.  It’s been an absolutely incredible and motivating journey. Here are 10 lessons on starting a business, marketing for small businesses and social media marketing a year later:

1. The busier you are, the more you learn how to prioritize and optimize. I learned how to filter and aggregate content and how to go from spending hours online to only a few minutes a day. Social media can be a huge time investment. Learn how to manage your time and balance your day. And the most important skill of all is to learn to balance work with life. I have to say I managed to stay sane and have sufficient time to play and enjoy my life outside of ” computer time”.

2. Learn to elliminate 80% of the time you spent on unnecessary and non-important tasks and concentrate your effort on 20% of the things that are truly important for your business and for your life. It’s hard some days but you can do it. Limit your time to what’s truly important and get rid of everything else.

3. Social networking is great and really works when done correctly. One of my biggest appeal to social networking is the opportunity to make friends in real life. It’s rewarding to know you met someone on Twitter first and eventually you got to shake their hand in person. Introduce people to each other. Never forget that the Internet just opens the door for real relationships and true networking.

4. Never stop learning. Pick a tool each month and learn it. Maybe it’s WordPress, FourSquare, Evernote, Dropbox or Groupon. Whatever it’s the latest and greatest tool, invest time in learning it and seeing how it applies to your digital life or business. Don’t jump at all tools at once.

5. Every 6 months revisit your business plan/social media/marketing strategy and adjust as necessary. It’s one thing to have a plan. It’s different to actually follow it, measure your goals and adjust your strategy. Don’t be afraid to make a mistake. Learn from it and keep moving. Don’t waste too much time on worrying about being perfect. No one is.

6. Celebrate. Small things matter. Set monthly and weekly goals that you can measure and when you achieve them, congratulate yourself. Set the bar higher for the following month.

7. Create a compelling story. People don’t care about your product. They will identify with a good story and if they believe it they will consider purchasing your product. Don’t just sell them your stuff. Provide interesting and engaging content. Ask yourself not what you are going to gain from social networks but rather what are you going to contribute. What’s your story? How do you fit it?

8. Find your niche. Find your niche and your voice. What are you knowledgeable about and have an expert opinion on? What do you know that people want to know? What can you be the “google” of? Without a very targeted niche approach your marketing will get lost. Start small and think big.

9. Before jumping in social media – educate yourself. Read blogs, learn new tools, develop a strategy and adapt it. After a few months revisit your measurements and adjust as necessary. Start small and grow your efforts as you become more proficient with each network. Social networking works. Period. But don’t expect to see overnight success in terms of sales. Be patient. You didn’t wake up one day to a full house of kids. Or maybe you did. Most likely you went through the dating stage, the wedding, and eventually the kids. It’s the same with social networking.

10. What are you passionate about? Do you have passion for what you do? Can you carry your passion online in your blog, tweets, Facebook updates? They say Content is King. If you don’t have passion, content will be a chore. If you have passion, get yourself a Flip camera, start a blog and start producing quality content. You will start building an audience. Just remember #8. Find your niche.

What would you like to get from Out&About Marketing? How are you using the site? What advice do you have for the blog and for me? What is your biggest marketing and social media challenge?

Thank you for your feedback and for your time. Now I’m going to celebrate being one year old!!!

Free E-kit to help you understand Web Marketing for Tourism

Posted by on July 5, 2009

Tourism EKit

Leave it to my Australian friends to create a useful and practical free resource for tourism web marketing. Funded by the Australian State and Territory Tourism offices and created by the National Online Strategy Committee in Australia this comprehensive online marketing ekit is for the tourism industry and covers off a variety of basic and advanced topics. The free web marketing for tourism eKit covers fundamentals and advanced topics to get your tourism business off the ground or refine your existing strategy. As the Australian Tourism Data Warehouse  says on their website, this e-kit was “Written by experts but understood by everyone”. Continue reading Free E-kit to help you understand Web Marketing for Tourism