Posts tagged as:

Mack Collier

Any small business looking at social media ultimately has to ask, What business benefit am I going to get from being active in this media? No matter how compelling the user statistics are, any commitment of time for a small business needs to be rewarded with results.

I thought it would be useful to share a detailed case study on how one small business has leveraged a content marketing and social networking strategy to drive measurable business results.

Situation:

tmgpr.png

TMG Brand Communications is a boutique public relations and marketing communications agency in New York City. Established in 1994, the agency has developed a particular expertise serving accounts in the financial services, lifestyle and media sectors. TMG is focused on creating broad-based communications programs that convey the distinctive attributes of brands and help drive business results. [Disclosure: The principal of TMG Brand Communications, Tami McCarthy, is my wife.]

The company’s purpose is summed up on its website.

The thrill of developing a brand’s personality, giving it a voice of authority in the market and having it resonate and drive a target audience to act or think differently inspires everything that we do at TMG Brand Communications.

Over the past several years, TMG has developed a suite of skills in internet and social media marketing. One of its most notable initiatives was the integration of social media with a live webcast to launch the Citi Forward card from client Citi Cards. (A description of the project from social media maven Mack Collier can be found here.)

Not surprisingly, TMG had not developed a plan to leverage its social media marketing expertise to elevate its own profile. Tami was an early adopter of social media platforms, with an active presence on Twitter and profiles on services like Facebook and LinkedIn, but had not developed an integrated strategy for using these tools to benefit the agency.

Like many of its peers, TMG did have an excellent web site which presented its capabilities and a sample of its work. However, the site was lightly trafficked. Most of the visitors came directly to the site, driven by TMG’s distribution of its URL on its business cards and stationary.

Tactics:

In the last quarter of 2009, TMG decided to develop an integrated strategy to use social media marketing to elevate its brand presence.

The strategy was designed to add a content marketing component to an already active social networking presence. In addition, the strategy linked personally-branded social networking activity on platforms like Twitter and Facebook with the digital identities of the overall agency.

digital footprint.png

In order to accomplish the strategy, TMG established a blog on a sub-domain of the tmg-media URL. This blog, buzzcloud.tmgpr.com, was set up using WordPress and the Cordobo Green Park theme. The agency also created a TMG Brand Communications fan page on Facebook, pointing the page to the primary TMG domain. The Networked Blogs application was used to distribute blog posts to the Facebook page, and a plug-in was used to distribute posts to Twitter.

A general content outline was developed in order to give focus to the blog posts. Tami is the sole author of the posts. The purpose of the posts is to share observations and suggestions about topical communications challenges. The content only peripherally touches on TMG clients. In addition, the content plan assumed that new posts would be created every two weeks or so, so that the burden of creating content didn’t weigh down an already highly-productive team.

Results:

Tami McCarthy’s BuzzCloud was launched in November 2009. Results for the subdomain buzzcloud.tmgpr.com were tracked separately from the results for the www.tmg-media.com domain so that the impact of the new content strategy could be accurately measured.

That impact was immediate.

In the six months following the launch of the blog, TMG increased web traffic to its TMGpr.com agency site and to its new blog, Buzzcloud, by 198%.

Hidden within this gain are a couple of data points that demonstrate the impact of a well-executed content marketing and social networking program.

  • Visits to TMGpr.com, the agency site, increased 32% in the six-month period following the blog launch;
  • Search engines drove 61% more traffic to the agency site in the six-month period;
  • The number of keywords that drove traffic to TMG’s agency site gained from 425 to 1,178 in the six-month period.


After launching Buzzcloud, TMG became much more visible on search engines, particularly Google. TMG became visible because it began to publish original content with more frequency. Each of those blog posts were distributed into TMG’s digital footprint, and as people clicked through to the site, or redistributed the content their own digital footprint, TMG began to develop a broader network of digital breadcrumbs, all of which led Google and other search engines back to the TMGpr.com web site.

Increased web traffic to the agency site was not the only indirect benefit of the social media marketing program. The digital footprint of both TMGpr and Tami McCarthy expanded dramatically, generating increased brand heft and awareness.

The easiest way to assess the heft of a brand’s digital footprint is to type the name into Google. The phrases “TMGpr” and “Tami McCarthy” both return relevant results that dominate the first page of Google.

Most people who are interested in you or your company are likely to search for you on the web. A Google search that returns a page filled with relevant links creates an aura of credibility and authority for your brand. It isn’t enough for those links to exist, however; behind them there needs to be useful and relevant information, the kind of search outcome that is Google’s brand promise.

This program has not required an incredible amount of time to execute. The most time-consuming aspect is creating the original posts. Maintaining the social networking presence is a matter of intermittent focus; TMG uses Facebook and Twitter to share interesting content, give personal updates and re-distribute content that other people have created.

What’s fascinating about this case study is how important the creation of content has been to driving overall web traffic.

During the six-months ending November 2009. TMG executed its social networking program actively. It did not, however, have an active blog. As a result, the social networking had virtually no effect on the company’s web traffic.

Launching the blog and publishing content drove a tremendous amount of traffic.

One lesson is that social networking without content marketing will not drive clearly measurable results for your business.

Of course, the big question is whether this activity has any impact on your business results.

For TMG, social media marketing has helped to drive increased visibility, more business inquiries and ultimately more account. Go take a look at the agency’s blog to see just how much.

  • Share/Bookmark

{ 3 comments }

Social media platforms — Facebook in particular — are passing through a network-generated inflection point: More people create more content, creating more engagement, attracting more people.Picture 4.png

Comparing Facebook’s activity between February 2009 and 2008 illustrates this effect starkly. (The charts come from a good summary article from eMarketer.)

A look at the last year of traffic shows just how strong Facebook’s growth has been: up 159% in traffic over the past year, and continuing to show steady month-over-month growth. The service has benefitted particularly from growth in usage among adult, making it a more alluring focus for marketers.

Overall activity on Facebook, in terms of usage, is remarkable. The key factor here is the content generation: the more content users place on Facebook, the richer and more textured the communities become. With 850 million photos uploaded in the course of a month, and another 24 million pieces of content shared, and 3 billion minutes of uses every day (up three-fold from the year before)…that’s an incredibly rich and active network.

(It also explains the groDEEC2167-076F-4662-8C9B-3C8D4C25D590.jpgup photo crouch. Noticed it? A small group — most often of girls — huddle together, hold up a camera, smile and crouch. They are skilled and synchronized. They have gotten a lot of practice. That’s a Facebook photo in the making…one of them will upload it, tag it and connect it to her network by the end of the day.)

High Usage Hasn’t Meant High Marketing Effectiveness

Despite the active and engaged energy of the audience, it has not turned out to be a very effective advertising medium. E-Marketer cites an IDC study that found that 43% of social network users never clicked on ads, compared to 80% of other Internet users, who did so at least once a year. Conversion of ad clicks to purchase were also low for social network users, at 11%.

A couple of days ago, Mack Collier, a social media/blogging expert, posed a simple question on Twitter: Do companies use Social Media for marketing or for communications?

Picture 5.pngPicture 6.png

One thread of the discussion explored the degree to which the two terms are beginning to blend and blur on the web.

I look at tools like Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter and think, Conversations between people. Those conversations will reflect all of the interests that the people who are linked together have — personal or professional.

The ultimate question for brand marketers isn’t really how to use the social media platform for traditional corporate brand strategies. That is a legacy hub-to-spoke strategy, where content emanates from one central point.

Today’s marketplace is most effectively a series of links and connections. For a brand marketer, the opportunity is to build thousands of interlinked networks, and to give all of your connections in the networks access to content and information that will be interesting and useful to the different conversations.

What does that mean? It means photos, links, articles, games, tools that people who like them can easily distribute among themselves.

picture-72Making Brand Evangelism Part of a Company Culture

The beginning of those networks are your brand evangelists. And, if you are building your company culture the right way, the foundation of brand evangelism should come from your own employees.

Thinking about this framework for social media marketing casts a different light on the responses garnered by The Aberdeen Group to a survey about marketing objectives for social media. The responses show the shift away from traditional brand marketing syllogisms to a new, conversation-centric form of marketing.

eMarketer’s CEO Geoff Ramsey gets at the essence of the issue with his commentary.

“If you’re going to build a community, don’t center it around your product, but rather on something deeply relevant to a particular consumer group,” said eMarketer CEO Geoff Ramsey. He also suggested keeping fans of your brand pages happy by giving them a lot of content and letting them share the love with others.

But there’s further to go. If you have a cohort that considers their participation with your brand part of their lifestyle, and you can help them integrate that aspect of their lifestyle into their social media content, then you can use these exploding platforms to enhance and enlarge the role of your brand in a series of inter-connected networks.

That’s powerful. And it has to start with you and your colleagues.

Related Posts with Thumbnails
  • Share/Bookmark

{ 7 comments }