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Social Media Ventures Inc

When you are using content to influence consumer behavior, the context that the content is delivered in has a big influence on how consumers respond to the messaging. This maxim is an important factor in designing content marketing and social media programs. Experience suggests that consumers impute authority to two types of content: content that is considered and structured; and content that is personal and authentic.

Take recent research from SheSpeaks and iVillage that was reported on in eMarketer this week.

The survey examined how women interact with brands on digital platforms. The big headline was that while women follow brands on different social platforms, brand content delivered on those platforms has relatively lower impact on purchasing decisions.women digital shopping path

I was struck by the relative weighting of different kinds of online content in influencing shopping behavior, and the degree to which context appears to have an impact on influence.

For instance, three categories of content had consistent impact on female consumers: reviews on message boards; articles on general interest websites; and content about products on brand websites.

Each of these three venues has assumptions built into the context that the content is delivered in. Messages boards and review sites have a self-policing nature, where reviewers gain credibility by their relative weight in the social group. General-interest websites present the same kind of editorial independence that traditional magazines have long benefited from. And brand sites have an underlying regulatory framework, since consumers understand that brands are required by law to make supportable claims about their products and services.

Each of the three categories has an foundation of trust that creates a positive context for the content.

The survey suggests that social platforms like Facebook and Twitter are less credible sources of information to women shoppers.

This assertion assumes, however, that the primary purpose of the social platforms is to communicate information about the brand.

Within a well-structured social media marketing program, social platforms serve two important purposes: content distribution and consumer engagement. In each case, the purpose of the program is to create awareness and to give the consumer easy access to points of contact and information.

The brand web site — and by extension, a brand blog — are the appropriate distribution points for brand content. Consumers are more inclined to trust content that lives within a trusted context.

Social media marketing is the integrated execution of two different marketing activities that are supported by content and engagement. Consumers will respond to authentic content, but not when they encounter it out of context.

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Nielsen has released a study today that looks at the effectiveness of different kinds of Facebook advertising. The goal was to determine whether ads that leveraged a brand’s social network — which Nielsen is calling “earned media” — performed differently than traditional ad formats.

The big headline: Socially-enhanced advertising has higher recall and higher purchase intent than traditional advertising.

In a blog post on Nielsen’s site, Jon Gibs, Vice President, Media Analytics, The Nielsen Company and Sean Bruich, Measurement Research, Facebook, explain the overall methodology.

Our joint report: Advertising Effectiveness: Understanding the Value of a Social Media Impression provides early insights from Nielsen’s BrandLift product which analyzed survey data from more than 800,000 Facebook users in response to more than 125 Facebook ad campaigns from 70 brand advertisers.

The study has a clear bias towards paid advertising on Facebook, and doesn’t measure the impact of a content-marketing program versus a display ad program. The study also doesn’t touch on the relative value of fan bases of different sizes, which will have an impact on ad performance and marketing expense.

I’ll spend more time in a later post delving into the entire report, but first let’s look at the two money charts that will spread across the blogs of social media mavens today.

The first shows the impact that socially-enabled ads (read “earned media”) had on response versus a controlled group: 10% more recall, 4% more awareness and 2% higher our chase intent.

The second compelling chart shows the impact that the social components of an ad has on consumer response. Ad recall more than tripled; purchase intent moved to 8%.


The social features of the ads were pretty simple: including the slug “xxx and yyy are fans of this page” in the ad unit. Organic ads, which were a proxy for sharing about a brand by users, were considered for this study to be the simple instance of a status update appearing in your stream that says one or more of your friends have become a fan of a page.

The Nielsen study is compelling and supports common sense.

When you see that someone you know has done something with a brand, particularly a brand you recognize, then your attentiveness increases.
That’s the benefit of building a fan base on Facebook. You raise your awareness in all of your fans’ social networks.

A good content marketing program, where you use your fan page as a way to distribute content and engage with your community of interest, will have the same or greater impact on your brand presence and your business results as the ad units included in the study, I believe. As the Nielsen research demonstrates, the most powerful impact is achieved when people recognize the attachment of their peers to a specific brand.

The other thing that the study isn’t meant to address  is what a brand needs to do to get and keep fans. Clearly, a deep and active fan base can benefit a brand. The steps to attracting and maintaining that fan base require a specific set of skills and focus, and have a real cost against them.

The study is a great support for the power of social networks to drive brands, but is focused narrowly on one implementation that doesn’t take full advantage of the richness of a social media marketing program.

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A media tip for home buyers focuses on using the social web for search

February 22, 2010

Here’s a good example of how people are shifting the way they think about looking for information given the power of the social web.
The information about homes for sale is incredibly well-organized and ubiquitous.  Still, this story over the weekend from the Chicago Tribune offers a how-to for consumers to shift their search onto the [...]

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Two good social media questions from my presentation at the Denver Design Center

December 4, 2009

Over the past few months, I’ve been traveling around the country giving a presentation on how small and mid-sized local businesses can leverage social media tools to improve the effectiveness of their Internet marketing efforts.
This past week I spoke to a group of about 100 home design professionals at the Denver Design Center. The [...]

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