Social media is crap.


Apparently!

But is it?

One thing is for sure, it would seem that there is a lot of debate on the web and it would also appear that the term "Marketing" and "Social Media" are being used in the same sentence.

Question: Should they?

I would argue that if they are, then it is crap. I can say this because most of the "marketeers" that I know would wish that it did or still see it as an opportunity to do so.

I'm not a marketeer, never have been, but from what I can see Marketing stands for this: See a "channel" (an opportunity to be exposed to great numbers of people), go with a budget and create a "campaign", then calculate the "ROI", take the profit and do it again.

There is nothing wrong with this.

But what is wrong is trying to use this method in a social environment. Surely.

Yesterday it was announced that social networks have overtaken search engines in the UK!  Marketing using an indexing site such as Google will deliver a quantifiable ROI, we know this to be true. 

 

UK+social+networks+and+search+engines-300x241
 
Most+popular+websites+-+social+networking

Pics courtesy of TechCrunch Europe 
 

But this form of marketing is no different than having a shop on the High street – fuelled by intent, and this word "intent" is important. We go shopping with the intent to buy something, but we don't go to a social activity with the same intent. Social activities, by default, can influence the intent, but the subtleties of this are a far reach of what traditional marketing will bring to "intent".

Robin Goad from Hitwise says this: “although social networks and search engines perform different functions, they both act as gateways to the wider Internet. This data perfectly illustrates the key role that social media now plays in so much online behavior.”

So it would appear that "Marketing" is a method of captivating intent. Good. But it only works when there is intent.

The intent in a social activity is exactly that – social.

So it would appear that SM is a force that, without a doubt and bias, needs to be reckoned with – but the subtleties of method and use need to be dealt with as well.

And these subtleties mean that "Marketing" (in the traditional sense) to the social streams is crap, because you will find it very hard to calculate an ROI. It's costly and, moreover, in the long term could spell disaster as what ever you put up there today stays there in perpetuity and being perceived as a spammer will only damage your brand and mind-share.

Marketing to a social stream will "pigeon hole" the perpetrator as being "stuck on broadcast mode" and what is social about that?

Social media is not crap – marketing to it is.

N

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  • nicktadd

    OK well I'll go with your description - but then that brings to bear the question "if it's pre meditated, then it's not social".

    In which case we will have to re-think the pipe and re-invent the piping of intent.

    What do you think?

    N

  • Sorry Nick, I have to disagree - what you describe as marketing (See a "channel", go with a budget and create a "campaign", then calculate the "ROI", take the profit and do it again.) isn't marketing at all, it's advertising.

    I am in total agreement with you that the social web is absolutely not about broadcasting a message at potential customers - that is doomed to fail every time and, as you rightly say, the evidence of that failure will remain there for ever.

    Marketing in its truest sense is about satisfying customer needs profitably. Marketing always begins and ends with the customer; it means listening to what customers say, finding out what they need, designing a product or service to meet that need, delivering it to them through an appropriate channel at the right price and then ensuring that the customer is satisfied. That's marketing.

    What social media offers the real marketer, as opposed to the advertiser, is that ability to top and tail the process - to listen to customers and engage in conversation with the to determine the needs and just as importantly to get feedback on whether whatever it is you produced meets those needs.

    That's my two penn'orth anyway.

    Cheers,

    Martyn Stead

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