As redes sociais deixaram de ser um potencial aliado para uma
posição em que são parte da estratégia dos marketeers. Mas como medir os
resultados? Quais os critérios?
Social media has won over marketers with the promise of connecting brands
with consumers on a deeper, wider level. But now that many companies have gone
beyond the experimental stages of social marketing, they are focusing on
justifying the dollar and time expenditures involved.
According to a survey by
Mzinga and Babson
Executive Education, less than one in five marketers measured their social
media ROI in 2009.
“Marketers believe that measuring true ROI for social media is difficult,”
said Geoff Ramsey, eMarketer CEO and author of the Insight Brief “Seven
Guidelines for Achieving ROI from Social Media.” “There are so many metrics
available that it is difficult to choose which ones are the most important. In
addition, marketers do not start with clear objectives for using social media.”
There is a widespread tendency for social media marketers to focus on Website
traffic as their default measurement tool. In several independent surveys and
studies, Website traffic was deemed the most popular way of measuring social
media marketing efforts.
But there is much more to measurement than simply watching Website visits.
Marketers ready to go beyond the toe-dipping stage should define their marketing
goals and connect them to social media objectives.
Marketers should consider soft metrics as well as hard ones and try to tie a
dollar value to them, if possible. And they should not overlook other sources of
ROI—such as market research and the customer service value of brand monitoring.
“Importantly, marketers should strive to systematically monitor social media
interactions and use this valuable ‘listening/learning’ data to inform their
online and offline media and creative messages,” said Mr. Ramsey.