Article:

Interview With An Expert: Rolf Olsen on Social Media Listening

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research
 

Social conversation may offer marketers a constant stream of real-time data on trends, unmet customer needs, and campaign and new product performance, but there’s a whole host of questions that marketers still have to answer when it comes to using and applying information gathered via social listening to marketing decisions.
 

  • How do you separate the truly valuable information from the rest of the chatter? 
  • How do you integrate the data gathered from social media sources with traditional marketing research? 
  • How do you figure out the best ways to apply the insights? 

To get some answers, we sat down with Rolf Olsen, Marketing Sciences Director at our sister firm Carat North America, a market-leader in digital solutions. As a follow-up to the webcast he gave for us a few weeks ago,"Key Questions to Ask and Answer About Social Media Listening,", we asked him for more of his front-line experiences and observations of how companies approach social listening.


Marketing Fray: What are the right questions to ask when you are doing an audit to determine if you should be doing more social listening?

Rolf:
 It’s a really good question. First and foremost, I think it’s understanding three things:

1. The volume of conversation that’s going on
2. The make-up of the sites where the conversation is happening
3. What is the general tonality of that information 

I think that once you really get through those things, you’ll have more of a sense of how important it [social listening] is to your business. 

Typically, what you find is you have some sort of PR incident and that will pop up, but it [high conversation volume] might not be an on-going thing. So volume is a big determinant.

Also thinking about whether you should into the area of social media. Is it an area that might really compliment what you do as a business and how can social then be integrated with other communications? 

I really think using social for customer service is an area that most companies should have a look at. I think it does offer an opportunity to deal with greeting consumers in a publicly positive way.

 

Marketing Fray: Social listening seems like it would offer much more in the way of insight to consumer companies. How could a B2B firm use or benefit from social listening?

Rolf: Social for B2B is clearly a different beast, mainly because most companies are not really willing to talk openly to each other in the same way as consumers and probably don’t air complaints or praise in open forums.

That being said, I think there are some instances where social activity in this sector can be beneficial. 

Social media offers a way of creating a dialogue with potential and existing clients that’s less pressurized than traditional communications channels. It gives B2B companies an opportunity carry on conversation and gather insights in an environment which is not driven by a sales team.

 

Marketing Fray: Have you come across some good example of how companies are integrating data coming from social media with more traditional sources? Are there some trends you seem emerging the way the integration seems to be happening?

Rolf: It’s quite rare in fairness. You often see the development of standard stand-alone social teams who just live and breathe social for that business and only report as such. 

Some companies have integrated it as part of their PR team and there will be some level of integration with the traditional PR metrics.

Beyond that I still see companies struggling to integrate digital with traditional media, with social data just adding an additional layer of metrics--or as I like to call it, confusion.

Ultimately, they are all different metrics with different key performance indicators associated with them. Companies could really win this battle by just applying relevant metrics to each channel instead of trying to unify metrics for ease of interpretation.

 

Marketing Fray: How are you finding companies are integrating information from social listening into the “bigger picture” in general.

Rolf:
 My favorite example of a company firmly putting social insights into the heart of their business is Starbucks and their “my Starbucks” rewards initiative. 

As a business, Starbucks spent millions of dollars every year on new product development and customer relationship management initiatives. 

Some bright spark who works in or on their business came up with a brilliant strategy to use their most valued assets--customers--to help decide what they should do in terms of new product development and customer relationship management. As a result, Starbucks was able to slash millions from their new product development budget and grew a more loyal customer base as consumers came up with, and voted for the best ideas. 

Involving customers in your business like this is just brilliant and the value spans across multiple areas.

 

Marketing Fray: Do you find its mostly bigger companies and brands doing social media listening?

Rolf: It probably is but I don’t believe it should be solely for the “big boys”. Smaller companies are often more agile and can react better to consumer feedback across all social tracking spectrums. Small companies who adopt a more socially focused development strategy are essentially tapping directly into the consumer. As Charlie Sheen would say = winning.
 


Marketing Fray: What would your definition of a “productive social listening” program be? 

Rolf: Accept that it could influence all part of your business and embrace it. Seeing the results of an integrated social strategy will create advocates who sing your praises. Think of it as an unpaid work force, driven by passion for your product.

AND, one that does not just cost you money by just drinking the kool-aid sold by listening companies…

 

Marketing Fray: If you had the ear of every CMO in the world for five minutes, what would you say to them about developing a social listening program?

Rolf:
 Think about what your company stands for and then see what people actually say… it can be eye-opening. 

Remember, the social “channel” is not an extension of your traditional marketing machine, this is your opportunity to make a personal connection and hear what your consumers actually want, beyond what your normal market research tells you.

This content was provided by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research. Visit their website at www.copernicusmarketing.com.

 

 

Other content shared by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research



Article
Get More From Advertising Tracking Research

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

Get More From Advertising Tracking ResearchAdvertising tracking research often returns results that don't help marketers: it can take months for tracking numbers to change significantly and even when they do, they provide little insight into why they went up or down. Here are three things you can do today to get more from advertising tracking research tomorrow. Read Article »

Article
Psychographic Profile: What Your Position on the Legalization of Marijuana Might Say About You

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

Psychographics include variables related to attitudes, interests, personality characteristics, and values. This psychographic profile looks at a side-by-side comparison of the attitudes, behaviors and demographics of the opposite sides of a hotly debated topic: the legalization of marijuana. Read Article »

Article
Good Versus Bad Market Segmentation

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

Good Versus Bad Market SegmentationThe qualities of good market segmentation include the results - does the research yield distinct, proprietary, highly profitable market segments? Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research shares their 5 steps toward good market segmentation. Read Article »

Article
Marketing Myth: Positioning Is No Longer Relevant

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

Marketers have lost control of certain aspects of brand communication - it is no longer enough to identify and communicate one brand position. Brands now target specific groups of consumers to ensure their message is relevant, compelling and motivating. One of the most important steps is using customer input, as described in this article. Read Article »

Article
Innovation Needn't Be Such a Scary Proposition For Marketers

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

Innovation Needn't Be Such a Scary Proposition For MarketersMarketers view innovation as key to combating hard economic times, yet less than half have expressed satisfaction with innovation efforts. Creating a new product includes finding the perfect price: market research helps pin down this element and in turn helps produce a market winner. Read Article »

Article
The Real Mystery of Political Polls

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

The Real Mystery of Political PollsAhead of the 2008 U.S. presidential election, Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research looked at the phenomenon of "polling failure" and response bias based on social desirability. Read Article »

Article
Attitudinal and Behavioral Profile of People Who Are In Excellent Health

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

Attitudinal and Behavioral Profile of People Who Are In Excellent HealthDo you start every conversation with litany of what ails you? A behavioral and attitudinal comparison of people who say they are NOT in excellent health vs. those who say they are. Read Article »

Article
You Can Get Marketers To Eat Their Spinach

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

You Can Get Marketers To Eat Their SpinachMarketers tend to distrust research and data, even though in principle they agree research is good for decision-making. This article shares tips for getting marketers to bring together principle and practice. Read Article »

Article
Study Shows Emotional Connection Currently More Pipe (or Hype) Dream Than Reality

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

Brands strive to build an emotional connection with consumers, but how many consumers actually respond to these efforts? This article reveals findings from a study of U.S. consumers about emotional connection to brands. Read Article »

Article
Marketing Decisions Still Made With More Guts Than Brains

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

This article shares findings from a survey of marketing executives and their decision-making approaches - intuitive judgment versus data and research-based. Read Article »

Article
Interview: Adapting Marketing Research Tools for the Digital Age

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

Interview: Adapting Marketing Research Tools for the Digital AgeMarketing Fray sat down with Copernicus' Eric Paquette, a senior vice president at the firm who's leading the digital charge, and posed three questions about how and what marketers can do to make good digital marketing decisions. Read Article »

Article
3 Tools to Get a Read on Marketing Performance in 30 Days

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

- Read Article »

Article
Why Doesn't My Market Segmentation Work?

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

This article shares scenarios where you might run into problems with market segmentation. Read Article »

Article
Psychographic Profile: East Coast vs. West Coast Stereotypes

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting & Research

Psychographic Profile: East Coast vs. West Coast StereotypesPsychographics include variables related to attitudes, interests, personality characteristics, and values. This article shares insights on East Coast vs West Coast stereotypes. Read Article »

Article
Top 10 Reasons for New Product Failure

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

Top 10 Reasons for New Product FailureThis article presents reasons why only 10-20% of new products and services succeed. Read Article »

Article
Rolling Out a New Product? Take 3 Steps to Nail Execution

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

While finding the right new product or service is a pretty high hurdle in and of itself, there’s also the marketing plan and the often overlooked execution plan to consider. Here are three steps you can take to keep all the parts of the marketing plan heading in the same direction as you roll it out into market. Read Article »

Article
How to Identify the Most Profitable Targets

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

How to Identify the Most Profitable TargetsA top ten list of criteria used to identify financially-optimal targets. Read Article »

Article
Simulated Test Marketing Gets Your New Products/Services Off on the Right Foot

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

Simulated test marketing research enables you to experiment and hone in on the best marketing plan. Learn more about this method and its application in this article. Read Article »

Article
"Actionable Insights": Watchword or Buzzword?

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

This article discusses the measurement of the return on marketing research investments and what to with all the “insights” into customers and prospects. Read Article »

Article
Customer Satisfaction in a Slump: Even the Net Promoters Agree

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

This article discusses the the latest statistics from the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ASCI). Read Article »

Article
10 Need-to-Knows to Find Good Customer Targets in the Digital Age

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

10 Need-to-Knows to Find Good Customer Targets in the Digital AgeIn addition to revenue measures, there are other characteristics that make one customer more valuable than another because they’re easier to get and keep, as well as engage as co-marketers. Here are 10 need-to-knows about current and prospective customers that will clearly and definitively guide marketers to good customer targets in the digital age. Read Article »

Article
5 Ways to Eliminate Advertising ROI Anxiety in 2012

by Copernicus Marketing Consulting and Research

5 Ways to Eliminate Advertising ROI Anxiety in 2012Sticking with tried-and-true media vehicles that have performed reliably may be one way marketers can alleviate advertising ROI anxiety. We have five more solutions to knock it out all together in 2012. Read Article »