Most technology companies are still confused by Social Business
Wildfire PR recently released the results of research they performed with the top 50 companies in the 2009 Deloitte Fast Tech; a list of the fastest growing technology companies in the UK. The research, focused on the use of social media by these companies, highlight the fact that most companies are leveraging social media for one-way, push-style, communications.
While I would urge you to read the report yourself, time permitting, here are some of the highlights, or lowlights, of the report:
- 74% of the companies were on Twitter.
- 72% of the companies were on LinkedIn.
- 48% of the companies have a corporate blog.
- Only 20% of the companies have a Facebook page.
The report notes that most communications, as I have already noted, are just for one way push. Comments are mostly left unanswered. Most of the value of being on social channels is lost. If you are purely using social networks and social communities because you feel you have to, and have no desire or time to engage, you are wasting your time and money. Worse, you are wasting the time of your customers, losing valuable social currency.
Are you just pushing out information and not listening, not replying? What is holding you back?
John
2 comments »
Bob Thompson
business value of engaging on social media
John, thanks for sharing highlights from the study. Not at all surprising since it takes time to learn how to use new tools effectively.
First phase is always using new tool on old strategy.
Then as maturity grows, strategies may change and companies will engage more frequently and not just push messages.
But I suspect even if this study were done 2 years from now, it will still be rare to have companies engaging on social media. Because that requires a change in culture, practices and investment in new skills. Not just adopting a new tool..
I do wonder abut your point that "most of the value of being on social channels is lost." So long as marketing is viewed as "telling" instead of a conversation, I suspect marketing/PR professionals will say that social media is plenty valuable. It's a free channel to get the message out.
That said, have you seen any studies that support the notion that engagement (which takes additional effort and real resources, after all) adds real business value? In other words, brands are made stronger, customers buy more, etc. -- to justify the work involved in having better conversations via social media?




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