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« The age of Banner Ad Innovation - what you should be doing
EconAffinity: Online Advertising (Video) »

Missing the Mark on Social Media

A recent study came out by Knowledge Networks titled: “Internet users turn to social media to seek one another, not brands or products.” Without even looking at the numbers, I think it’s safe to bet that it is in fact true that “Internet users turn to social media to seek one another, not brands or products.” There are two parts to every statistical experiment: 1) The design and 2) the analysis. In the case of this study, it is a bit troubling to see how biased the experiment is without even reading past the title. What do you think the results would be if I put out a report titled: “Music lovers turn to radio to seek music, not brands or products”, or “Movie lovers turn to movie theaters to seek great new movies, not brands or products.”

The reason marketers are so concerned with “Social Media” is because they realize that this is where users spend most of their time. This is where they “seek one another” to connect, engage, and share (in many cases about brands and products). According to a report from The Nielsen company, which, was distributed at San Francisco Ad tech:

“The Internet remains a place of continuing innovation, with users finding new ways to integrate online usage into their daily lives,” said Charles Buchwalter, SVP, Research and Analytics, Nielsen Online. “In recent years the Internet has changed dramatically as people seek more personalized relationships online. In particular, time spent on social networks and video sites has increased astronomically. Advertisers are starting to positively re-assess the value of the online experience and create more meaningful relationships with consumers.”

And this data cannot be ignored.

Some major highlights from the Global Online Media Landscape report (pdf) regarding online video and social networks:

  • The number of American users frequenting online video destinations has climbed 339% since 2003. The unique audience for online video surpassed that of email in November 2007.

  • Time spent on video sites has shot up almost 2,000% over the same period.
  • In the past year, unique viewers of online video grew 10%, the number of streams grew 41%, the streams per user grew 27% and the total minutes engaged with online video grew 71%.
  • There are 87% more online social media users now than in 2003, with 883% more time devoted to those sites.
  • In the past year, time spent on social networking sites has surged 73%.
  • In February 2009, social network usage exceeded web-based e-mail usage for the first time:

It is a marketer’s job to penetrate the most popular mediums, and make their brands or products visible in the most efficient fashion. In today’s world, Social Media is the most popular medium and it is stillgrowing. So indeed, while users go to Social Media to “seek more personalized relationships“, it will still be a marketer’s job to try and penetrate this medium in efficient and meaningful ways. If a marketer can be successful in creating brand affinities with products in social media (which Lotame has had much success in doing - one example), then everyone wins as the consumer is able to find relevancy and the marketers are able to reach their target audience.

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This entry was posted on Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009 at 3:55 pm and is filed under Advertising, Opinion. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

  • Tom Hespos
    My biggest problem with this study was that it was stuck in the old media world, where researchers can't learn to de-couple the medium from the message. It used to be that media vehicles were often rated on their trustworthiness, and you'd hear sweeping statements to the effect of "people believe more of what they read in special interest magazines than they see on network television" and such. Curiously, the interactive media of the day never made it into the consideration set, so you'd not hear things like "people trust more of what they hear on the telephone than what they see on TV."

    Of course, such a statement is ridiculous, because we're talking about people learning not from information disseminated one-way via a medium, but from information delivered interactively (one-to-one) facilitated by the medium. The trust doesn't come from the medium, but from the person you're connecting with.

    If I'm looking for advice from my friends on a lawnmower purchase, to suggest there's a significant difference in the trust factor, depending on whether I connect in person, on the phone or via a social network is just ludicrous. The Knowledge Networks thing seemed to suggest that, but it's just an old research paradigm crammed into a new medium. It doesn't quite translate.
  • greghills
    It seems logical that people visit social networks mainly to connect with friends. But that doesn't limit the marketing potential of social networks. After all, people watch television for programming, not for the sake of ads, and it still receives the most spend of any channel.

    Social networks offer the opportunity to integrate brand interactions with peer to peer interactions. Facebook's Engagement Ads insert the brand into the same peer to peer conversations that draw people to Facebook in the first place. If this advertising model can scale, so that social networks' share of advertising budget are in line with the amount of time consumer spend there, it will be a win for advertisers and consumers alike.
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