Blanchard makes some great points throughout the book, beginning with the title. Even if measurement of ROI is difficult, that’s no excuse not to set up basic measurements for a Social Media Marketing campaign. Before / after is an obvious split – do we have more Twitter followers today, or more tomorrow after we honestly and eagerly create a Twitter marketing plan?

By Jason McDonald
Senior SEO Instructor – JM Internet Group
Posted: June 17, 2011

ROI – Doesn’t Mean Return on Ignorance – it means Social Media Marketing Return on Investment (ROI)

Less ROI, and More How to Embed Social Media Marketing in Your Organization

Social Media ROII eagerly awaited the UPS man with her delivery of a book claiming to help us measure the Return on Investment of Social Media Marketing. I wondered, would the measurement by an increase in free instagram followers Twitter followers, Facebook likes, LinkedIn connections, YouTube views, or perhaps the Holy Grail of marketing – actual conversions to a sales action, like purchasing our product? Many are engaged in Social Media Marketing, I thought, but few are engaged in the actual measurement of their Social Media Marketing ROI.

Blanchard makes some great points throughout the book, beginning with the title. Even if the measurement of ROI is difficult, that’s no excuse not to set up basic measurements for a Social Media Marketing campaign. Before/after is an obvious split – do we have more Twitter followers today, or more tomorrow after we honestly and eagerly create a Twitter marketing plan? A goal for some people is to have a certain number of followers on their social platforms. This can take some time, but as long as people are consistent with the sort of content they post, this is one way to gain a following. Even if it means taking a look at the Tweeteev website to buy followers, having a social following can be important for both personal and business use.

URL click thru’s is another – if we Tweet a URL, blog it, post it to our Facebook page – do people actually click thru. Bit.ly is a great free service for quick URL tracking. And, finally, if our ultimate goal is to sell something or drive registrations for a free consultation, webinar, or download – is our Social Media Marketing driving those conversions? Blanchard touches on all these topics, but doesn’t provide a great framework for setting up measurement.

Ultimately, the book – despite its title – isn’t really about ROI. It’s more about weaving Social Media Marketing into your organization. That’s really pre-ROI, if you think about it. And that, dear reader, brings us to the year of our Ford.

Social Media Marketing in the Year of Our Ford

In Huxley’s famous dystopian novel, Brave New World, the future society is organized around principles of mass production, modeled very much after Henry Ford and the factory metaphor. Ford is so worshiped in the future society, that people speak of “our Ford” much as people today speak of “our Lord” or say “Jesus” when they just missed a close call in an automobile.

Blanchard, like so many in Social Media Marketing, worships at the feet of our Ford. Many of his examples connections, reviews come from major companies – companies such as Ford. For example, on page 23, Blanchard discusses the head of Ford’s Social Media strategy (Scott Monty) and how Ford reacted to the negative PR about the auto industry bail-out’s. Ford wasn’t a recipient, yet its brand was damaged, so Monty went into social media overdrive to address brand damage during the financial crisis. Is this important? Yes? Is it relevant to a small business? Not so much. Few of us have a brand as big and powerful as Ford, and few of us are ever even close to receiving Tarp money.

Why is this relevant? The issue is that the examples drawn in this book, plus in many others, draw on high profile names and brands (names and brands that help authors sell books, give books credibility by name-dropping…) but ultimately are not very relevant to small businesses.

Small businesses need social media advice on issues such as how to respond to a negative review on Yelp, how to get to the page 1 of a Google search using Google Places, how to get your products into Google Merchant Center, or the tricks and tips to success of review marketing on Amazon.com. In this, the book disappoints because it worships at the feet of our Ford.

Furthermore, much of the book is really addressed to large companies, with large teams, and large brand issues. Many chapters read at a very high level, executive discussion – when most small businesses need hands-on, direct advice on how to implement social media marketing. Is this bad? Not particularly. But if you are a small business struggling with social media marketing, much of this book is clearly not written for you. It’s written for executives at multinational corporations such as Ford, not the mom-and-pop watch shop in New York City that needs to encourage Yelp reviews.

Back to ROI Measurement

Leaving aside the middle chapters, focused on more abstract, big company issues, Blanchard returns to the topic that best propels his book to your attention: ROI, and the measurement of social media marketing ROI. His high-level advice is very good for companies, big and small –

  • Keep an eye on objectives and targets
  • Monitor, measure, report.
  • Maintain a list of everything you can measure.
  • Maintain a list of everything you must measure.
  • Test, measure, learn, adapt, repeat.

The final measurement chapters have great food-for-thought examples, such as connecting changes in sales performance with social media mentions. They lack a clear list of tools for measurement (especially free social media marketing tools), as well as a clear “to do” list that connects abstract concepts to practical measurement. That said, the ROI discussion is one of the first I have seen in a book, and therefore this book will stay on my Social Media Marketing bookshelf – as a remember to a) not worship at the feet of Ford, and b) measure everything!