Your social media ROI shock treatment
Jul 21st
Today, let’s do a very simple calculation to determine how much cash your social media strategy should be generating to justify its existence. I think this might just blow your mind.
I’ll have to make some broad assumptions because every company is different, but you can insert your own numbers and do the math for your own organization.
Let’s assume you are a medium-sized company, and have one person working full-time on social media marketing. We’ll assign that person a salary of $60,000.
In a typical company, health, 401(k) and other benefit costs equal another 50% of the base salary, or in this case, an additional $30,000.
We’ll assign another 20% of base salary for overhead such as office space, shared services support and technology. That’s $12,000. We’re on a tight budget so we will forbid our new employee to do any travel, training, or company entertaining. And forget about bonuses this year. No whining, either!
So, our full-up cost for one social media professional is $102,000.
Let’s assume your company has a moderate profit margin of 15%. So, to break even and just cover the incremental costs of your new social media initiative, this professional would have to produce quantifiable new sales of $680,000. In other words, you would have to make that amount of money to have an ROI of 0.0% on a year’s worth of social media expense and effort.
That’s a lot of money for a lot of nothing, isn’t it? There are two reasons why I needed to shock you into social media de-tox.
First, I wanted to bring home the point that social media is not “free.” Even a modest effort at a small company takes a lot of time, which must be funded through the sweat of your manufacturing and sales efforts.
The second reason is this: For now, some companies may be willing to experiment with social media, but at some point the big boss is going to sharpen her pencil. If you can’t accurately and logically measure what you do, your marketing initiative will be in peril, as it should be.
The other day, I heard an “A-List” blogger tell his audience, “If your company is not expecting you to account for your efforts with financial measures, well, that’s just great — do whatever you want!”
And for a short period of time, you might get away with it. But to gain credibility as a company leader in a B2B environment, you must hold your activities accountable to the same standards as an engineer trying to get funds approved for a new production facility. You should be able to demonstrate a business case and that business case must be built on hard dollars … eventually.
In the mean time, the softer side of metrics may be the only thing available. Tomorrow we’ll start taking a look at the importance of “non-financial indicators” that can influence brand equity.
This is part 2 in a series addressing social media marketing measurement issues.
Part 2: Social media ROI shock treatment
Part 3: Irresponsible social media measurement research
Part 4: Social media impact on brand equity
Part 5: The most important question to ask in social media marketing
Part 6: A double standard for social media marketing?
Part 7: Yes, it IS about the money!
Part 8: Creating a measurement plan
Part 9: Measurement is like a bartender
Is this any way to sell a mansion?
Jun 10th
Amid the signs for house painters, tree trimmers and other day laborers I noticed the most ridiculous use of these signs — Jefferson Park, a waterfront development that is so upscale it recently hosted 5,000 visitors to a charity tour of homes. There are signs pointing the way to Jefferson Park on every street corner within a five mile radius of the development. I wondered, if I followed them, would it actually lead me there? I wound around town like a mouse in a maze and yes, I found it.
I spoke to the real estate representative for the community and asked her if the yard signs actually worked. “Well, they’re part of a larger branding program,” she said. “I don’t think it will sell a house, but when they see our ads in the newspaper and television and then see these signs, it helps their remembrance.”
In my humble estimation, this advertising technique demeans the brand and only creates visual pollution. Let’s find the lesson in this. Remember — everything you do and say communicates about your brand. What does this say about the Jefferson Park developers? These signs communicate: “I’m low-class and desperate.”
Google Wave changes the game for small business
May 29th
There were a couple important new technology releases this week but the most significant for the small business owner is Google Wave. Why? This platform provides a powerful communication and collaboration tool you can use with internal and external stakeholders for FREE.
- Google Wave is about bringing together the Web 2.0 lifestyle to become a workstyle.
Google’s apporach is significant because it will enter the workforce without having to go through IT management. This undercuts players like Microsoft, IBM, Oracle, and SAP as it grows from the groundup –another groundswell like google docs and yammer. - This also impacts Cisco, Webex and Webex connect who is also trying to try new delivery models to the enterprise.
- Existing smaller collaboration vendors and community platform vendors with enterprise focus will be part of the developer ecosystem and can extend their features to the Wave platform.
- Google is pushing real time collaboration, and traditional email is asynchronous, yet don’t expect everyone to be interacting in real time, all the time.
- This is a missed opportunity for LinkedIn who launched their platform but has not exploited as they’ve only hand selected a few partners.








You’re in marketing for one reason: Grow.
Grow your company, reputation, customers, impact, profits. Grow yourself. This is a community that will help. It will stretch your mind, connect you to fascinating people, and provide some fun along the way. I am so glad you’re here.
-Mark Schaefer

