Archive for social media performance
5 Social Media Monitoring Tools to Simplify Your Marketing
3 Analytic Tools to Improve Your Social Media Performance
Do you want to improve the results of your social media marketing?
Measuring your social media performance is key to getting great results.
You need the right tools to measure those results.
In this article, we’ll go through 3 analytic tools to help improve your results on social media.
#1: Mention – Monitor Your Brand Anywhere on the Web
Mention is an excellent social media and web monitoring tool. You set up alerts based on keywords, and content related to those keywords is displayed through the Mention application or sent to you via email or social media.
When you monitor and track keywords, you can find potential business, build relationships with new people and respond quickly to situations that could damage your brand.
There are many monitoring tools available, but many either are very expensive or have limitations.
For example, you may use Google Alerts to track keywords mentioned on the web. However, I’ve found these alerts are not nearly as comprehensive as Mention. Google Alerts also does not provide the functionality that’s essential to manage and proactively respond to these alerts. Mention provides this functionality.
Mention is a very cost-effective and comprehensive solution that monitors your alerts across a variety of sites.
Mention provides a free version to get you started, as well as a very affordable Pro Plan, with a free trial for a month. If you decide not to go ahead after the trial, your account just reverts to the free plan, so there’s no need to remember to cancel it.
Mention has a clean user interface that makes it extremely easy for you to manage your alerts and track all activity.

Mention provides a very user-friendly interface to track alerts.
Features of Mention
Here are the key features:
- Set up alerts for your brand, keywords and competitors and view these within the application, social media or via email or text-based alerts.
- You can track mentions of your keywords on blogs, websites, social media sites and forums.
- Displays the source of each mention within the user interface so you don’t have to click off to other sites and open additional windows.
- A nice feature is the ability to interact with alerts that are displayed directly within the application. For example, if an alert was related to a blog post, you can respond to the blog post within the application. Similarly, for tweets you can see not only the tweet, but also the bio of the person so you have context before you respond to the tweet.

Details of the alert are displayed to the right of the alert.
- The application adjusts the results displayed based on your interaction. For example, if you consistently remove alerts from specific applications or websites, it will not display results from these sites.
- There’s a priority queue, which attempts to identify the important alerts. Priority is set because your name is mentioned or it’s from a site with a lot of traffic. There is also a new feature not released yet which will prioritize based on someone’s Klout score.

View mentions that are flagged as "priority" based on certain criteria, so that you can take action immediately.
- Share your alerts with other team members and assign tasks to them. When you first share an alert with someone, an account is automatically created for them.

Assign tasks to other team members to spread the workload.
- Perform actions on your alerts such as share positive mentions on your Facebook Page or Twitter, or just send an email to someone.
- Mention takes information from a broad range of resources (not just social media) and shows you the breakdown of where your mentions come from. You can also filter the list to display only mentions from a particular source.

Mention gathers information from a wide variety of sources and shows you the breakdown of where the mentions come from, so you can filter the list to a specific source.
- The application is available as a mobile app so you can monitor your alerts when you are out of the office.

Mention is also available as a mobile app.
- Examine stats for a particular alert to see the trend of mentions over a period of time so you can identify peaks and dips in activity.
How to Set Up
For registration, provide your basic details or sign up via one of your social media accounts.

Registration with Mention can be completed if you use your email address or register through your social media profiles.
After registration, you need to create your first alert. Enter in a name to identify an alert and the keywords you want to monitor. For example, you could enter your company name.

Specify the keywords you want to be alerted about and even the ones you don't.
If you want to monitor multiple keywords, you can input additional ones and also specify keywords not to include as part of the alert. You can also specify the languages you are interested in.
In the next step, specify the sources you want to monitor. For example, you may only be interested in monitoring blogs or websites.

Indicate the sources you want to keep an eye on, block sites from your search and finally choose if you want to make use of some of the more advanced technology features.
There are some optional configuration features:
- Block sites – This is where you list any website you do not want Mention to monitor. For example, maybe you want to exclude your own blog as you might have someone else tracking this internally.
- Technologies – Mention has a priority inbox. Based on the results found, it attempts to separate priority mentions in a separate priority queue. For example, if there’s a mention of keywords in a tweet and your name is also mentioned, the alert can be placed in a priority queue. It’s best to leave this switched on.
- Anti-Noise Technology – Mention has some smart technology that tracks what you do with any results found. For example, if you repeatedly delete results from a particular site, then Mention will not show you results from that site. It’s useful to have this feature switched on.
Once you select Create My Alert, you are then given the option to connect your Twitter or Facebook account to the alert so you get notified of activity through these accounts. You can also specify to share this alert with other people so they also are notified when there are any mentions of the keywords.

Be alerted to mentions via your Facebook and Twitter accounts and choose to share these alerts with colleagues or team members.
You are now ready to monitor and manage your alert:

Track all of the mentions of your keywords across a range of websites and social channels.
For the free version of Mention, you get up to 500 mentions a month and up to 3 alerts. That means if you have only set up one alert for your company name, then it has to be mentioned over 500 times on the Internet before you have to pay. The next level up is $19.99 per month and you get up to 50,000 mentions and unlimited alerts.
The price is very competitive, taking into account the level of functionality that Mention provides and what other competitors charge for this type of service.
Benefits of Mention
There are some great benefits to Mention:
- You can monitor alerts close to real time and use the mobile app to monitor alerts while you are out and about.
- You can create tasks based around alerts, email alerts to other team members and get alerts sent to your Twitter or Facebook account.
- Mention can be your only monitoring tool, as it finds content from a variety of sources that include social media, websites and blogs.
- There’s a management component to it, which allows you to manage the alerts as they happen.
In Summary
Mention is a powerful monitoring application that provides comprehensive functionality at an affordable price. There’s a good free option so it’s certainly worthwhile to test it for your business.
#2: LikeAlyzer – Improve Performance of Your Facebook Page
LikeAlyzer is a very simple (and free) tool to assess your Facebook Page and provides suggestions to improve it.
The analytics for your Facebook Page provided by Facebook can be very useful, but also can be confusing.
LikeAlyzer is not complicated to use and provides some simple but valuable insights.
Features of LikeAlyzer
- It analyzes your Page to assess how well it performed in relation to other Pages.
- Your Page is graded from 0 to 100. The higher the score, the better.
- Suggestions for improvements on your Page are provided based on the analysis. You can see at a glance what you do well, but it also draws your attention to the areas you need to focus on.

Report highlights what you do well, but more importantly, what you need to focus on.
- Details of the top-performing Pages according to LikeAlyzer are provided. Learn from other Pages that get a high score.
How to Set Up
What’s great about this tool is that there’s no setup or registration required. Just put in your Page name and an online report is produced.
Be aware, however, that the report you run is not private. Other people can see reports run in LikeAlyzer.

Just enter your Facebook Page name and the report is produced.
Underneath the option to analyze your Page, you should check out other options:
- Recent– This displays a list of the most recent Pages that were analyzed.
- Popular – This displays the most popular Pages analyzed. These are listed in the order of number of fans.
- Toplist – This is a list in the order of the Pages that achieved the highest score. This can be very useful to analyze why some Pages performed better than others.

This shows the highest-ranked Pages that completed the LikeAlyzer assessment.
From the example above, VMS 4×4 is ranked at 98 out of 100. If you take a look at their Facebook Page, you will notice:
- There are lots of posts from users, so there’s a good community.
- This Page keeps up with important updates to Facebook. On a recent post, it asked fans to add the Page to their Interests list. This means fans will be more likely to see posts.
- They use questions and try to show personality on the Page. One of the posts asks what their fans are doing over the weekend.
- There are lots of engaging posts and pictures of interest on the Page and they try to get feedback from their fans for the pictures.

A good question related to a interesting and relevant picture.
LikeAlyzer in Action
WeForest is an international non-profit organization set up to counter global warming by planting lots of trees.
We ran the report on the WeForest Page, which currently has close to 4,000 fans.
The overall score for the Page was 70 out of 100, which is good but there’s room for improvement.

Recommendations on what you need to focus on to get more from your Facebook Page.
There were recommendations made on how to improve the Page, such as responding to fans’ comments and questions more frequently.
Recommendations are based on an analysis done on specific areas of the Page, such as the frequency of posts, whether fans post on the Page and so on.

Analysis of the WeForest Page.
The analysis shows:
- Posts per day: WeForest does not post fewer than once per day. It’s important to post frequently.
- Posts per type: There is a good variety of posts. There are 16.0% of posts with text updates, 40% with links included, 4.0% with videos and currently 0% questions.
- Average length of posts: Posts are quite short, which is good. Longer posts don’t tend to do well.
- Curiosity: There are not enough questions. Facebook rewards interaction, so with more questions you’re more likely to get interaction.
- Encourage to like: This is listed as poor. One way to get interaction is to encourage people to like content. Brian Carter (author of The Like Economy) had a great tip to use “Click Like if…” on posts. This can be used in so many ways and really does help with acquiring likes.
- Comments: There’s also a suggestion to post photographs around 4:00 pm. The time of posts can really affect interaction rates.
- Posts by others: While fans of the Page can post on the timeline, it does not happen regularly enough. Also, when they do post, the Page does not respond to their post in a timely fashion.
WeForest is currently working on the suggestions outlined above to improve their score.
Benefits of LikeAlyzer
The key benefits of using LikeAlyzer are:
- Get immediate practical tips on how to get better results from your Facebook Page.
- Review your competitors’ Pages to get some additional ideas.
- Implement the tips and get more of your fans to see your updates.
In Summary
On average, only about 16% of your fans see updates from your business Page.
Facebook rewards Pages that get more interaction on their updates. If you want to be successful on Facebook, you need to analyze your results to improve performance.
LikeAlyzer provides a very simple and free way to do this.
#3: Social Crawlytics – Identify Your Competitors’ Most Shared Content
Social Crawlytics is a free tool that analyzes how popular or unpopular content is on a website. It’s very useful to assess the performance of your or your competitor’s blog.
It analyzes the content and produces detailed information on where content is shared and how often it’s shared.

Sample report on SocialMediaExaminer.com.
If you understand what content is popular and gets shared the most, this can be very helpful to determine the type of content you should produce.
Finding out what is not popular is also useful, so you can understand what type of content does not resonate with your audience or your competitors.
“Social Crawlytics is the first of its kind. A fast and flexible web-based crawler, geared for social. Now marketers can maintain ongoing reports of social share history across all pages of any website.” Joe Griffin, CEO of iAcquire.
If your competitor has a small number of pages you can do this manually, but what happens if your competitors have hundreds or thousands of pages?
Social Crawlytics makes this process easy.
Features of Social Crawlytics
- You can find out what content is shared most on social media on a competitor’s website.
- You can find out the authors on a blog who get the most shares. This will only work correctly if the website has implemented Google Author Tags.
- You can set up a scheduled report, which automatically sends you an updated report on a website at a time you choose.
When Social Crawlytics goes through a website, it picks out all of the blog posts and displays these posts in order of popularity on social media channels.

The table indicates the amount of social media shares each post gets.
It displays Google+, Twitter and Facebook, StumbleUpon, Pinterest, LinkedIn and Delicious.
In the example above, the post related to 30 social media experts making predictions had 5332 shares on Twitter. Could you do a post that performs similar to or better than this?
Tip: While this is not currently a feature of Social Crawlytics, you should also try to discover the influencers who helped share this content. These are the people you may approach in relation to your post. You could use a tool called Topsy to identify the key influencers who share the most popular content.

Mari Smith is identified (using Topsy) as a key influencer who shared this post.
This report shows where most information on this website is shared:

This report indicates which platforms get the most shares for posts.
If you are a competitor of this business, do you consider Twitter as an area to focus on or is this where most shares happen? Or do you consider Google+ and Pinterest, as there’s less competition there?
The following is referred to as the sunburst wheel. The center of the wheel is your website and the sections outside of it are the most popular areas and posts in your site in relation to shares. This is another great indicator of popular content.

The Sunburst wheel gives a graphic display of the most popular content from the search engines' point of view.
- This is the Twitter tag on Social Media Examiner. This is a very popular area, as it takes up a large section of the circle, and is related to articles written that were tagged with “twitter.”
- This is the Getting Started area of Social Media Examiner. This contains a lot of posts for social media marketers who would like to know more of the basics. Still quite a popular area.
- This is for the author Andrea Vahl who is obviously very popular. Andrea guest posts on Social Media Examiner. So maybe this is an opportunity for you to identify authors who could potentially guest post on your site?
- This gives a breakdown of the most popular posts by Andrea. The one highlighted had over 10,000 shares and was related to Facebook changes that would impact businesses.
How to Set Up
Go to Social Crawlytics and register with your Twitter account.

Sign up with your Twitter account.
You’re then brought to your dashboard where you enter the website address of the company you want to analyze. This could be your website or your competitor’s.
We have highlighted credits in the image below. Although the tool is free, there is a restriction on how much you can use it within any one week. When you run out of credits you have to wait until the next week when your credits are refreshed. Unless you complete a lot of analyses on large sites, this should not be an issue.

Specify the website address you want to scan and the depth to which you want to go.
On the first screen you enter these details:
- Website Address – This is the address of your website or your competitor’s website.
- Traverse Subdomains – A subdomain would be something like podcast.socialmediaexaminer.com. It’s on the same domain, but separated under a different section. By default Social Crawlytics will go through subdomains.
- Crawl Depth – This indicates how much of the website is analyzed. If you have a web page that links to another subpage, this is a crawl depth of 1. If the subpage links to another page, this is a crawl depth of 2. By default this is set to 2, which is good.
Next you can set up a schedule so that the analysis of this website is done on a regular basis and a report is automatically sent to you. This is an optional step. If you want just one report immediately, then skip this step. Otherwise enter this information:

Schedule how frequently you want this report produced (optional).
- Name this schedule – assign a name so you can easily identify the report when you get it.
- Date of first run – you may want the report to run immediately or at a later date/time.
- Repeat every – indicate here if you want the report to be repeated at a later stage. For example, you may want a similar report once a week.
- Times to repeat – indicate how often you want the report repeated. If you indicate that the report is to be produced weekly and you say that it repeats twice, then you will get two reports and the schedule will finish after this.
Finally, you must enter the email address where you want the report to be sent.

Enter the email address where you want to be notified when the report is finished.
If you choose to run the report immediately, you’ll see a semi-completed report screen while the data is collated.
The amount of time it takes to complete the report depends on the number of pages on the website and the depth you want to go. For example, the report on Social Media Examiner’s website at a crawl depth of 2 took about 10 minutes.
Benefits of Social Crawlytics
Social Crawlytics could be beneficial to your business for these reasons:
- Your competitors may have delivered great content that was very popular but you can deliver better content or content in a different form (e.g., an infographic) that could do even better.
- You may identify content that is not popular, which you can then decide not to waste your time to write about.
- You could analyze your own content to get an overview of what works or does not work. This will help with your content strategy.
- If you consider guest bloggers to write on your site, you could analyze your competitor’s site to find out the most popular guest bloggers.
In Summary
Social Crawlytics is a great tool to analyze your content or your competitor’s content and it’s completely free.
Use it to help you improve the content you deliver to your target audience.
It’s very easy to set up and you can have a report completed in less than a minute. Try it out now and let us know how it has benefited your business.
Final Thoughts
It’s important to analyze your social media efforts and try to improve your results.
The 3 analytic tools in this article can help you do this.
What do you think? We would love to hear your feedback. What are your favorite analytics tools? Have you tried any of these? Please share your comments below.
6 Ways to Measure Your Social Media Results
How much time are you spending on social media? Can you tell if it’s helping sales?
Wouldn’t it be nice to have a framework for measuring the impact of your social media efforts?
That’s where Susan Etlinger’s new research for the Altimeter Group comes into play. Susan did qualitative research with 60 social media marketers and vendors to understand how businesses currently measure their social media performance.
Her goal: to develop a framework for tying social media performance to business goals.
NOTE: Because Susan’s original research targeted enterprise-level companies, I interviewed her to add some small business insights. The following comments combine results of the research and that interview.
Start with your strategic goals
Business owners who see great social media success tie their technology choices to their strategic goals. The following graphic shows the importance of a thoughtful process when designing your social media plan.

Make sure to start with your business goals when choosing your tools and measures.
Etlinger advises all businesses follow this process, but particularly small businesses that have limited resources and less tolerance for missteps.
Spend ample time thinking through your vision of success so you can select the right metrics. This means getting specific about your business objectives and strategies before thinking through social objectives. Then you can organize your staff (or your personal time if you’re a solopreneur) around those metrics. Only then are you ready to select the best technologies (including which social platforms and measurement tools to use).
Once you’ve established your goals, then you’re ready to consider Altimeter’s Social Media Measurement Compass. The points of this compass identify six major business goals that social media can help influence.
Your challenge: determine your goal and then think deeply about how you will measure whether you’re achieving that goal.

These six categories will help you think through the business objectives of your measurements.
The Six Points of the Compass
#1: Brand Health
Do you know how people are talking about your service, your products or customer experience? Big brands spend lots of money managing their brand image, but small businesses also need to be aware of customers’ perceptions.
How are people talking about your service, products and selections?
Etlinger noted that people have no problem complaining directly to big brands, but might feel more reserved about criticizing a small business owner to his or her face.
Social media monitoring can help you hear what people are telling their friends, but might not be willing to tell you directly.
Beware that you can never hear the whole social media conversation about your brand. There are at least two reasons: 1) Twitter is capturing such large volumes that you can only hear about 5% of the conversation; 2) Privacy settings on Facebook prohibit non-friends from hearing many conversations.
These two factors make it critical to find ways to validate what people are saying. Small business owners may find it challenging to hear critiques, but put on your tough skin and ask some customers (in person and online).
To unveil how social media listening can help you understand your brand health, Etlinger’s research discovered the following themes (in the graphic below) as critical for your social media listening.
Notice the insights to be gained and how to measure your listening results to find these indicators of health. (I will not reproduce each matrix for the following measures, but you can see them in her article here.)

Allow these questions and thoughts to force you deeper into your measurement practices.
#2: Marketing Optimization
Social media listening can help you fine-tune your marketing efforts to better find your target audience. For many businesses, Google Analytics might be the best tool.
Your goal is to determine what terms people are searching and from what sites they are coming to your site. Some of the things to optimize are campaigns, content, channels, timing and influencers.
It’s important to realize that people share differently on different social channels. While not strictly a social media platform, Yelp provides a good example. People wanting to position themselves as food critics are likely to be far more critical on Yelp than they might be on Twitter or Facebook.
#3: Revenue Generation
This measure may be less relevant if you don’t have an online store; however, all businesses want to know if social media is driving sales.
Generally, social media shouldn’t be expected to directly lead to increased sales. Instead, it can generate leads and conversions. If you think about revenue as a relationship and not just a transaction, as suggested by Richard Binhammer of Dell, then you’ll see that social media can have a tremendous influence on the long-term relationship.
Some important things to understand are the impact of social media on: 1) purchase behavior, 2) search results and 3) customer loyalty.
If you have a physical store, make sure you have tracking systems in place for each channel.
You might try campaigns on Facebook, Twitter and Groupon and see what drives repeat business the best. Groupon is likely to attract deal-seekers who might become new customers, whereas your fans on Facebook and Twitter might find themselves more deeply connected after experiencing one of your “Facebook only” deals.
Test the hypothesis and run your own numbers. Results will vary widely based on your business type and fan base.
#4: Operational Savings
Social media can provide opportunities for hard and soft savings to your business. As customers become brand advocates, your brand reach will extend without significant expenses.
Additionally, social platforms can become far less expensive places for handling customer service. That depends on whether you have someone who can be dedicated to listening to online conversations in real time.
One smart practice is to forge relationships with fans who have strong social media influence. These people can become your advocates and even help with customer service. If they’ve already shown a willingness to speak on your behalf, find ways to feed them information.
#5: Customer Experience
Etlinger’s research discovered a direct correlation between social media and customer experience that translated into improved brand health, increased revenue and cost savings.
An example not cited in the report comes from Kraft Foods. The social media listening team discovered a trend on words like “cut,” “blood” and “salad dressing.” Those aren’t words you want associated with food, so the team dug deeper to discover that customers were cutting themselves when opening a newly designed salad dressing bottle.
The problem was easily solved, but wouldn’t have been discovered without social media. The injuries weren’t serious enough to require emergency room treatment. It was merely an inconvenience, so customers didn’t call the 1-800 number. Instead they told their friends on social media and forgot about it. Because you don’t usually buy salad dressing very often, this problem could’ve gone undetected for months.
#6: Innovation
As highlighted by Etlinger, Starbucks and Proctor & Gamble have found ways to crowdsource ideas through their innovative sites MyStarbucksIdeas.com and pgconnect.com. Not everyone can resource their own social media innovation site, but all businesses can find ways to listen to their customers for insights into product and service improvements.
For example, Twitter can give you insights into what people want. Follow statements such as, “I like,” “I wish” or “I hate.” If you heard, “I wish Charlie’s hadn’t discontinued the chicken cordon bleu,” you would have some great intelligence.
Alternatively, you could even start a conversation on Facebook asking your customers for ideas on new products, services or promotions. Maybe you could even host an “Idea Wednesday” where you spend an hour on your Facebook page looking for creative ideas.
Finding the Right Tools
There are many measurement tools available, and quite a few are free or very inexpensive. In addition to Google Analytics, here are some worth checking out:
Simply Measured has created two tools that work well together.
- Export.ly helps you analyze your Facebook fan page, Twitter audience and more through downloading customizable Excel spreadsheets.

With Export.ly, you can export data from Twitter, Facebook and email into an Excel spreadsheet or CSV file.
- RowFeeder is an inexpensive way to monitor what people are saying about your brand.

With RowFeeder, you can track your brand name; Twitter handle; the hashtag for a specific campaign, event or promotion; or general topics of interest.
If you want to figure out how often your tweets are being shared and by whom, check out TweetReach.

TweetReach analyzes the tweets that match your search.
Edelman has developed two tools called TweetLevel and BlogLevel that measure the level of influence, popularity, engagement and trust on your Twitter account and blog. These can be good indicators of the health of your social media efforts. Edelman also provides helpful tips on how to improve in each of these areas.

You can use TweetLevel to find "important" people within a specific context and start conversations with them.

BlogLevel is a purpose-built tool for PR and marketing to help ensure brands use blogs effectively.
To Learn More
Susan Etlinger has shared more detailed information about the report in the following webinar created for CoreMetrics.
Key takeaways:
- Tie your measurement program to key business objectives.
- Understand the key terms to follow for your business.
- Find tools that will give you the results you seek without breaking your budget.
- Understand that revenue is not a transaction, but a relationship. Treat your customers like people and understand how your online actions are affecting those relationships.
- Find ways to get your customers involved through customer service, brand advocacy and idea generation.
What are your thoughts? How do you measure your social media efforts? How do these ideas help you align your business goals with your social measures? Leave your comments and questions in the box below.
6 Ways to Measure Your Social Media Results
How much time are you spending on social media? Can you tell if it’s helping sales?
Wouldn’t it be nice to have a framework for measuring the impact of your social media efforts?
That’s where Susan Etlinger’s new research for the Altimeter Group comes into play. Susan did qualitative research with 60 social media marketers and vendors to understand how businesses currently measure their social media performance.
Her goal: to develop a framework for tying social media performance to business goals.
NOTE: Because Susan’s original research targeted enterprise-level companies, I interviewed her to add some small business insights. The following comments combine results of the research and that interview.
Start with your strategic goals
Business owners who see great social media success tie their technology choices to their strategic goals. The following graphic shows the importance of a thoughtful process when designing your social media plan.

Make sure to start with your business goals when choosing your tools and measures.
Etlinger advises all businesses follow this process, but particularly small businesses that have limited resources and less tolerance for missteps.
Spend ample time thinking through your vision of success so you can select the right metrics. This means getting specific about your business objectives and strategies before thinking through social objectives. Then you can organize your staff (or your personal time if you’re a solopreneur) around those metrics. Only then are you ready to select the best technologies (including which social platforms and measurement tools to use).
Once you’ve established your goals, then you’re ready to consider Altimeter’s Social Media Measurement Compass. The points of this compass identify six major business goals that social media can help influence.
Your challenge: determine your goal and then think deeply about how you will measure whether you’re achieving that goal.

These six categories will help you think through the business objectives of your measurements.
The Six Points of the Compass
#1: Brand Health
Do you know how people are talking about your service, your products or customer experience? Big brands spend lots of money managing their brand image, but small businesses also need to be aware of customers’ perceptions.
How are people talking about your service, products and selections?
Etlinger noted that people have no problem complaining directly to big brands, but might feel more reserved about criticizing a small business owner to his or her face.
Social media monitoring can help you hear what people are telling their friends, but might not be willing to tell you directly.
Beware that you can never hear the whole social media conversation about your brand. There are at least two reasons: 1) Twitter is capturing such large volumes that you can only hear about 5% of the conversation; 2) Privacy settings on Facebook prohibit non-friends from hearing many conversations.
These two factors make it critical to find ways to validate what people are saying. Small business owners may find it challenging to hear critiques, but put on your tough skin and ask some customers (in person and online).
To unveil how social media listening can help you understand your brand health, Etlinger’s research discovered the following themes (in the graphic below) as critical for your social media listening.
Notice the insights to be gained and how to measure your listening results to find these indicators of health. (I will not reproduce each matrix for the following measures, but you can see them in her article here.)

Allow these questions and thoughts to force you deeper into your measurement practices.
#2: Marketing Optimization
Social media listening can help you fine-tune your marketing efforts to better find your target audience. For many businesses, Google Analytics might be the best tool.
Your goal is to determine what terms people are searching and from what sites they are coming to your site. Some of the things to optimize are campaigns, content, channels, timing and influencers.
It’s important to realize that people share differently on different social channels. While not strictly a social media platform, Yelp provides a good example. People wanting to position themselves as food critics are likely to be far more critical on Yelp than they might be on Twitter or Facebook.
#3: Revenue Generation
This measure may be less relevant if you don’t have an online store; however, all businesses want to know if social media is driving sales.
Generally, social media shouldn’t be expected to directly lead to increased sales. Instead, it can generate leads and conversions. If you think about revenue as a relationship and not just a transaction, as suggested by Richard Binhammer of Dell, then you’ll see that social media can have a tremendous influence on the long-term relationship.
Some important things to understand are the impact of social media on: 1) purchase behavior, 2) search results and 3) customer loyalty.
If you have a physical store, make sure you have tracking systems in place for each channel.
You might try campaigns on Facebook, Twitter and Groupon and see what drives repeat business the best. Groupon is likely to attract deal-seekers who might become new customers, whereas your fans on Facebook and Twitter might find themselves more deeply connected after experiencing one of your “Facebook only” deals.
Test the hypothesis and run your own numbers. Results will vary widely based on your business type and fan base.
#4: Operational Savings
Social media can provide opportunities for hard and soft savings to your business. As customers become brand advocates, your brand reach will extend without significant expenses.
Additionally, social platforms can become far less expensive places for handling customer service. That depends on whether you have someone who can be dedicated to listening to online conversations in real time.
One smart practice is to forge relationships with fans who have strong social media influence. These people can become your advocates and even help with customer service. If they’ve already shown a willingness to speak on your behalf, find ways to feed them information.
#5: Customer Experience
Etlinger’s research discovered a direct correlation between social media and customer experience that translated into improved brand health, increased revenue and cost savings.
An example not cited in the report comes from Kraft Foods. The social media listening team discovered a trend on words like “cut,” “blood” and “salad dressing.” Those aren’t words you want associated with food, so the team dug deeper to discover that customers were cutting themselves when opening a newly designed salad dressing bottle.
The problem was easily solved, but wouldn’t have been discovered without social media. The injuries weren’t serious enough to require emergency room treatment. It was merely an inconvenience, so customers didn’t call the 1-800 number. Instead they told their friends on social media and forgot about it. Because you don’t usually buy salad dressing very often, this problem could’ve gone undetected for months.
#6: Innovation
As highlighted by Etlinger, Starbucks and Proctor & Gamble have found ways to crowdsource ideas through their innovative sites MyStarbucksIdeas.com and pgconnect.com. Not everyone can resource their own social media innovation site, but all businesses can find ways to listen to their customers for insights into product and service improvements.
For example, Twitter can give you insights into what people want. Follow statements such as, “I like,” “I wish” or “I hate.” If you heard, “I wish Charlie’s hadn’t discontinued the chicken cordon bleu,” you would have some great intelligence.
Alternatively, you could even start a conversation on Facebook asking your customers for ideas on new products, services or promotions. Maybe you could even host an “Idea Wednesday” where you spend an hour on your Facebook page looking for creative ideas.
Finding the Right Tools
There are many measurement tools available, and quite a few are free or very inexpensive. In addition to Google Analytics, here are some worth checking out:
Simply Measured has created two tools that work well together.
- Export.ly helps you analyze your Facebook fan page, Twitter audience and more through downloading customizable Excel spreadsheets.

With Export.ly, you can export data from Twitter, Facebook and email into an Excel spreadsheet or CSV file.
- RowFeeder is an inexpensive way to monitor what people are saying about your brand.

With RowFeeder, you can track your brand name; Twitter handle; the hashtag for a specific campaign, event or promotion; or general topics of interest.
If you want to figure out how often your tweets are being shared and by whom, check out TweetReach.

TweetReach analyzes the tweets that match your search.
Edelman has developed two tools called TweetLevel and BlogLevel that measure the level of influence, popularity, engagement and trust on your Twitter account and blog. These can be good indicators of the health of your social media efforts. Edelman also provides helpful tips on how to improve in each of these areas.

You can use TweetLevel to find "important" people within a specific context and start conversations with them.

BlogLevel is a purpose-built tool for PR and marketing to help ensure brands use blogs effectively.
To Learn More
Susan Etlinger has shared more detailed information about the report in the following webinar created for CoreMetrics.
Key takeaways:
- Tie your measurement program to key business objectives.
- Understand the key terms to follow for your business.
- Find tools that will give you the results you seek without breaking your budget.
- Understand that revenue is not a transaction, but a relationship. Treat your customers like people and understand how your online actions are affecting those relationships.
- Find ways to get your customers involved through customer service, brand advocacy and idea generation.
What are your thoughts? How do you measure your social media efforts? How do these ideas help you align your business goals with your social measures? Leave your comments and questions in the box below.




