2015-11-04

Title of Post: Clicks, Tweets and Likes: What is a Small Business to Measure?

Organisation Name: Augies Gourmet Ice Pops

Industry: Speciality Food

Name of Contact : Janet Dimond, Owner

Web references: Forbes, Inc., The Small Business Expert Academy , Sound Cloud, Wikipedia, Buffer, Investopedia, Social Times,  Vimeo, YouTube, The Toronto Star, Hootesuite, Google images, CMO Survey, Wiktionary, Twitter, Business Dictionary,



The reason(s) entrepreneurial individuals create and run their own small business varies. According to an Inc. article reasons include: controlling their own destiny, finding work/life balance, following a passion, giving back to the community and feeling pride in building something they own to name just a few.

However creating and running small business is not for the faint at heart. It is a fact that small business entrepreneurs are spread thin, often doing all tasks within their company and time truly is their most valuable resource. The Small Business Expert Academy recently stated of small business owners:

35 percent would like to cut back on their roles and responsibilities.

26 percent want to take more time off.

20 percent feel they need to improve their work-life balance.

It seems reasonable then, that social media presents a potentially wonderful opportunity to aid these small business owners in their marketing efforts, increasing brand awareness, stimulating interest and conversion to sales.

Forbes likens social media usage for brand awareness to “…virtual flyers or the online equivalent of newspaper ads. They build name recognition and help your small business start to form a brand identity.” 

However, social media marketing can come at a cost. The cost is time, both to engage in social media and analyze the return on investment. Many small business owners buckle under the added social-media marketing workload and more often not there is only  a blurry vision of social media’s impact.

Spending and time investment on social media is soaring, but measuring its impact remains a challenge. Forbes reported via The CMO Survey how marketers show the impact of social media on their business.  The CMO Survey indicated that only 15% cited they have been able to prove the impact quantitatively. Clicks, Likes, tweets, re-tweets, mentions, website visits, shares, and comments. These are all wonderful vanity measures but do they mean anything to the bottom line? Especially in light of the fact that most small business owners report they want to trim back on their roles, take time off and improve their work/life balance, some of the very reasons the entrepreneur decided to go into business in the first place.

Sound Cloud Using Social Media to Build Business:

Can a small business owner effectively utilize social media, determine if their efforts are worth the time, not get pulled in every direction of the growing vast black hole of social media all while effectively managing their business and not burn out ? Yes, they can if they keep social media exactly as what it is intended to be: a tool to complement existing business objectives. That is the first step in any marketing plan and no different when including social media as part of the mix.

The next step is to audit the outcomes of the social media performance and continue to set goals for improvement. If only 15% of professional marketers cite they have been able to prove the impact of social media quantitatively, a small business owner truly needs to have a clear vision of what,why and how they will invest in social media from the get-go.   It all sounds so easy but remember it takes commitment of time, resources, and faith that utilizing social media in fact is worth it. Not to mention the learning curve required to understand the new media world that includes social media has developed with it’s own language, measures and completely on line.

Janet Dimond, creator and owner of Augie’s Gourmet Ice Pops has gotten it right when it comes to jumping into the small business social media ocean.

A grassroots entrepreneurial speciality Ice Pop business that developed from humble beginnings in Toronto May 2011. These ice pop’s use all varieties of fresh seasonal Ontario fruit as it comes available; whatever they can pick/buy from local farmers will be what you’ll find in their hand-crafted yummy popsicles.

Sweetened using Organic Cane Sugar, Ontario Honey, Ontario Maple Syrup—just enough to balance the citrus. In Janets words : ” I made a few hundred fresh-juice ice pops in yummy flavours to sell to neighbours and friends on our street corner during a Roncesvalles community yard sale.  They were a massive hit!!   Everyone asked where they could buy our fruit-bomb pops and I knew we had a sensation on our hands.  I began in earnest applying to farmers markets in and around the city–was accepted  +  began the journey of Augie’s Gourmet Ice Pops.”

Janet’s main social media business objectives for Augie’s Gourmet Ice Pops include: brand awareness and social engagement /feedback from her customers. As most social media pros’s will suggest, Janet started with the right small business social media strategy. Start with a few social media platforms and have specific objectives.  Augie’s Ice Pops social media journey began on only a few platforms. Facebook is the main platform for Augie’s social media presence with Augie’s Gourmet Ice Pops FB business page. Twitter’s @augies_gourmet and Instagram account augiesicepops  round out the 3 social media platforms currently in use. In my recent interview with Janet, she explains how Facebook has increased brand awareness, connected with customers and provided useful feedback for developing new products.

Video production credit: Jon Blacker

As the Augie’s Ice Pop entrepreneur mentioned during the interview, reviewing metrics such as likes, shares, re-tweets, URL clicks did  increase after particular FB and twitter posts. As with many of Augie’s media press, when  The Toronto Star showcased Augie’s Gourmet Pride Ice Pops in an online article and on Youtube, Janet saw an immediate increase in FB likes and website visits. Reviewing the platform based analytics Janet was able to determine that likes,shares, re-tweets and comments had indeed provided some of the outcomes she was looking for: Brand awareness, social engagement and feedback from her customers.

The Toronto Star YouTube channel: Pridepop, a cool treat just in time for Pride.

Social Times, part of The Adweek Blog Network, article stated: “Bottom line: used intelligently, social media can generate a significant return at a relatively low financial entry point. Moreover, it can be used in a variety of ways – 84 percent of SMBs use social media to reach customers, 42 percent use these channels for consumer support and 48 percent have generated business directly through Twitter.”

This is exactly what Janet has done with her social media tactics for Augie’s Gourmet Ice Pops. She started out with a grassroots venture, choose only a few platforms to engage, tried various types of post content and calls to action and has reviewed the analytics provided by each platform.

Janet’s social media strategy for 2016 is in the planning. With what she has learned so far in terms of increasing brand awareness, Janet will take the next step a small business owner with limited time and resources should take with social media. She may expand her content, trial different types of posts, perhaps test out a new platform and continue analysis and review of outcome  metrics to determine if they are in fact in line with her specific business objective(s).

It needs to be stated that relying solely on the metrics is a contradiction of the actual essence of social media, as social media itself is a tool for communication that inherently is suited to  create and strengthen relationships between people. This is where Janet and her social media strategy has quite simply really “gotten it right”. Most importantly because Janet has made her social media time investment and analytics realistic to date, she can can continue to do her passion of the actual business of making delicious Augie’s Gourmet Ice Pops without burning out. This of course allows all of us to enjoy the delicious fruits (no pun intended) of her labor.

While researching this blog post I discovered multitudes of social media metric measurement articles for small businesses. With so many articles and content to read on this topic combined with  the constraints of lack of time the small business owner should judicially look for a useful, simple yet thorough reference such as:  SMV-E-Marketing Solutions: How to Measure Social Media Marketing Success.

Other resources for small business owners include:

Hootesuite Blog : The Social Media Metrics that Should Matter to Small Businesses

Forbes article: Social Media for Small Business: How it’s Different from the Big Brands

Lessons for Others

Small business entrepreneurs require a clear, concise social media strategy including metrics that complement their business objectives to be successful and balance the heavy work of small business ownership.

Small controlled involvement in social media allows for effective and measurable outcomes verses a wide social media jump in without rationale.

Social media strategy is a moving, real time activity that requires the entrepreneur to monitor outcome metrics and make adjustments based on the business strategy of the company.

Growing a small business means growing your social media expertise. At some point more sophisticated social media and metrics will become more relevant.

Augie’s Ice Pops are truly a delicious experience.

Submitted by: LWarburton/ Student /Social Media for Business Performance/University of Waterloo

To contact the author of this entry please email: laura@laurawarburton.com

If you have any concerns as to the accuracy of anything posted on the is site please send your concerns to Peter Carr, Programme Director, Social Media for Business Performance/University of Waterloo

http://www.forbes.com/sites/steveolenski/2015/10/29/social-media-for-small-business-how-its-different-from-how-big-brands-do-it/

Increasing Traffic to Your Website

Making people aware of your small business is good. Enticing them to visit your website is even better. Share blog posts, promote your in-store and online sales, and share important news about your products. When you share links on social networks, Rowe suggests sharing either specific website pages or dedicated landing pages. Directing visitors to your homepage isn’t as effective as sending them to pages optimized for conversion.

Start tracking which social network posts drew people to click your URL and which, if any, posts led directly to lead generation or purchasing.

URL clicks. Within your social network dashboard, track which URLs attracted the most clicks and which posts drew the most attention to those URLs.

Conversions. Use Google Analytics to set up Goals to track visitors from different social networks. Goals might include clicking URLs in a social post, filling out a contact form, or subscribing to a blog. To focus your efforts, analyze how factors such as network, content shared, and time of day affect your conversion goals.

Forming a Community

Forming community creates a network of brand evangelists and potential repeat customers. Rowe suggests asking followers to fill out surveys, answer questions, or share photos or videos of themselves using your products. He also suggests hosting a Twitter Q&A, if you have enough followers, so people can ask questions about your company or products.

Additionally, encourage customers to reach out on social networks if they have a customer service question. Set up email or text message alerts for your team so they can respond immediately to customer concerns. If a customer question would benefit your community, turn your answer into a blog post, and invite other customers to share their experiences. When social media makes them feel like part of your small-business family, customers will return again and again.

Don’t Try to Beat the Big Guys

Rowe advises monitoring other small businesses and competitors to see how they’re engaging on social media. Note how they’re meeting their goals, and adapt their approaches for your business. Let the big guys do their own thing.

Activity on each social platform: Most small businesses have limited time and resources. If you know which social network is getting the most activity it helps you to focus your resources where they get the best results. You should also track how many website visits, leads and customers each social platform is generating, advises HubSpot.

Engagement: Every small business is focused on getting more sales. But before you can make the sale you have to engage with someone interested in your product or service. It’s very rare that you make a sale to a new customer without any interaction. Statistics show that they need to have, on average, seven “touches” before they buy. Social media is the perfect way to engage and lead the person through the sales funnel. Engagement could be a like, comment, share, retweet or mention. Remember that like a tango, it takes two be be engaged. Having your fans like and tweet is one thing – you have to enter the conversation for them to remain engaged. You have to respond.

Conversions: This could be a sale, but it could also be getting someone to download a white paper, watch a video or sign up for your newsletter. You can use tracking codes to see how people repsond to your social content and offers.

Google Analytics will help you track much of this activity. You could also use a social dashboard that keeps your stats automatically and prepares reports you can export and share with others.

Read more at http://www.business2community.com/small-business/social-media-metrics-small-business-0654157#yHjMz6CYArOWbR1h.99http://www.business2community.com/small-business/social-media-metrics-small-business-0654157#xbP8s4FQOCfvYGfC.97

small businesses is how to measure their social media activity.

tools

https://klout.com/corp/score

google analyics

If you use a social media management tool to keep on top of your marketing efforts, you may be familiar with the tool’s analytics features. We use Buffer for our social media management, and we get great value from the analytics, stats, and charts inside each of our profiles.

One of my favorite reports to run is the comparison of posting frequency to clicks, shares, and the like. You can even customize the date range to see how your stats look at different stages of your experiments. Here is a chart for Google+ posting frequency compared to clicks.

True Social Metrics

A complete dashboard of analytics for Twitter, Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn, Instagram, Pinterest, your blog, and even more, True Social Metrics tracks important metrics like updates, comments, reshares, and favorites and places them all onto a neatly-organized view. The way True Social tracks metrics is particularly unique as they follow a method designed to highlight the most relevant parts of social media marketing (more on this below).

Here’s a sample dashboard of the reporting you can get from True Social.

https://www.truesocialmetrics.com

https://blog.bufferapp.com/definitive-guide-social-media-metrics-stats

https://blog.bufferapp.com/definitive-guide-social-media-metrics-stats

http://sproutsocial.com

relying on these metrics is simply in absolute contradiction of the essence of social media – communication tools that create and strengthen relationships between people. It would be a gross mistake to think that social media ROI can be measured as any other communication channel, precisely because its nature is fundamentally different from that of other media channels.

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