WordSmiths

Living on the edge in a CPG world.

Tag Archives: Twitter

Archives for Tag: Twitter

In Advertising Age’s annual digital issue published last month, Simon Dumenco, media columnist and new-media pundit, talked about “why most consumers will never engage with brands or content, and why it doesn’t matter.” In his article, The brutal truth about social media: It’s OK to be a little antisocial, Simon cites his colleague Matt Creamer’s report that “slightly more than 1% of fans of the biggest brands on Facebook are actually engaging brands.” He goes on to argue that while social media has certainly made it easier to engage a brand, consumers always “had plenty of ways of engaging with brands and content” prior to Twitter and Facebook. These included “toll-free numbers on the back of cake boxes, letters to the editor at print publications, and call-in shows on TV & radio,” but only a minority of consumers embraced such dialogue. We agree with Dumenco that “passively consuming content is just the way that most people choose to engage.” In fact, over the last two months Amie Ley, our Director of Public Relations & Social Media, and I have been using a sports analogy to explain this truth to our clients. We tell them that most of their fans are not Face Painters.

Last week on its developers blog, Twitter announced that it has stepped up its analytics offerings and will soon make available a very interesting set of capabilities. While arguably overdue, this is still exciting.

According to the blog post, the new platform will provide three key benefits:

  • Understand how much your website content is being shared across the Twitter network
  • See the amount of traffic Twitter sends to your site
  • Measure the effectiveness of your Tweet Button integration

Ever wonder what people are really saying about your brand? I don’t mean the generic answers consumers provide on brand surveys or a circled number on a rating scale. I’m talking about the good, the bad, and the sometimes shocking things people write in their Twitter feeds, Facebook posts or blogs. With an estimated 61.2% of US residents utilizing social networks in 2011, daily social media monitoring plays an integral role in understanding CPG consumers and what they have to say.  Yet, today this is one of the first line items to be cut from the marketing/communications budget.