Nov17
ROI from Social Media
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There is a lot of debates online about the measurability of social media. I personally believe that social media is much easier to measure than traditional media. There is a large amount of qualitative data gained from online metrics but there is also quantitative data that is easy to measure. For instance. Since I started my own blog I’ve kept track of my hard costs over the past ten months. It amounts to $904, primarily paying for an email management service.
This is what I’ve been able to measure:
- Blog traffic = 27,907
- Number of comments = 164
- Number of RSS subscribers = 190
- Number of email newsletter subscribers = 1,142
- Number of inbound links =
- New clients generated = 7
There are quite a few things that can be measured from the use of social media, far more than can be measured from traditional media campaigns. I’m not taking into account my time and I admit, social media is time intensive. But if you want to capture time it is easy to do. If you are developing and initiating social media campaigns on behalf of your clients, you will primarily be billing for your agency’s time. Most of the social media tools are very inexpensive if not free. It is just labor intensive.
I currently have 188 blog posts published, six scheduled and 49 drafts that I’m working on. I have a lot of my time invested. There was a discussion on Twitter the other day about a blog that sold for $96,000. I was asked if I would sell my blog for that kind of money. The more I thought about it the more I realized that I wouldn’t. The business my blog has generated this past year exceeds that figure and the potential to do better is even greater. The ROI from social media is beyond any media I have ever used in my entire advertising career. It doesn’t even begin to touch on the personal enrichment that I have gained from it. No single thing has enhanced my professional life more than social media. Plus it is the best marketing tool I have ever used.
Michael Gass – Guest Blogger
Birmingham, Al – Michael Gass has worked with marketing communications firms for over a decade. He helps them to create a more clearly defined focus and differentiating business strategy that will give them a competitive advantage for new business, a higher-profile reputation, and an improved ability to attract and win the clients they really want. Michael is a social media evangelist. He believes that there has been a major shift in the way agencies acquire new business. Instead of pursuing new business, it is more important to properly position an agency online for it to be found by its best prospects by enlarging an agency’s online footprint. Prospective clients will even initiate the contact and when they do they are ready to do business.











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