Inbound Internet Marketing Blog

SEO, Blogging, Social Media, Landing Pages, Lead Generation and Analytics

SUBSCRIBE

The HubSpot Inbound Internet Marketing blog covers all of inbound marketing - SEO, blogging, social media, lead generation, email marketing, lead nurturing & management, and analytics. Join 57,702 others and subscribe now!

Subscribe to RSS feed Add us on Facebook! Follow us on Twitter

Get Free Marketing Info!

Get the world's best marketing resources right to your inbox! Join more than 817,000 inbound marketers!

Subscribe by email

Your email:

HubSpot's Inbound Internet Marketing Blog

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Business Executives Integrating Social Media into Email "Don't Know Where to Start"

 

.

Business executives have big plans on where they'll be putting their budget dollars in 2010. According to a new survey by StrongMail, business executives plan to push their new budgets toward email marketing (69% respondents), social media (59% respondents), and SEO (42% respondents). 

Marketing-Tactics-2010

Even though email and social media integration is a trend that has been growing for some time now, the chart below absolutely confirms the vast room for improvement and growth.

While nearly half of respondents have formulated (or integrated) a strategy that incorporates social media into their company’s email campaigns already, 18% of respondents who have yet to implement an integrated email & social media strategy say they’d like to, but have no idea where to start.

social-media-email-campaign-integration

Interestingly, out of the 27% of respondents who claim to have already integrated social media into their email marketing strategy, thirty-five percent are reporting no improvement in their campaign performance. Even more shocking is that 23% of companies currently using social media in their email campaigns still do not know how to measure their results.

Some of the data above conflicts with our own experience here at HubSpot. Back in June, when our Convert guru Ellie Mirman blogged about Why Your Email Needs Social Media (and How to Do It Right), she reported that  “since integrating social media more into our email campaigns, we've seen an uptick in the (1) number of mentions in social media (specifically for our webinars or other email content), (2) number of subscribers to our social media profiles, and (3) amount of traffic and leads from social media sites (for this lead generation type of content) due to that buzz on these sites."

I suspect that the reason many companies are not seeing improvement is a lack of knowledge about how to measure their integrated social media and email marketing campaigns effectively.

Quick Tips on How to Measure Integrated Email & Social Media Campaigns

The data that I find most disturbing is the number of worldwide companies who are implementing social media campaigns without clear ideas on how to measure their results.

Use a "Tweet It" Button and Measure the Clicks and Distance Your Tweet Travels

One way  you can track qualitative results is by using a “Tweet It” button in your emails. You can set your “Tweet It” button’s pre-prepared text. This is the lazy-tweet that your twitterers can share with their network.  By searching for the text of this pre-prepared text on Twitter Search or other tools, you can see how far your text has traveled. You can also measure the success of this button using quantitative metrics (supplied by your email provider) that report how many people have clicked on the “Tweet It” button.  

Monitor Shared Links with a Bit.ly Account 

You can also measure the success of your social media campaign by creating a Bit.ly account. Bit.ly is a free link shortener that can help you track how many times people have shared your link via Twitter and other social networks. Place your Bit.ly links in the pre-prepared text of your “Tweet It” Button.

Use Analytics Provided By Your Email Provider

Any email service provider will track clicks for you, too – so you can see how many people click on your social media buttons on your email. This way you’ll be able to discover which Social Media sites you want to incorporate into your emails and where they most like to share your information online.

One bit of warning however when choosing your email provider. Many of them now offer the built in social media share links on their ESP. While helpful, these buttons can prevent you from accessing important analytics that may be important to articulating the value of social media in your campaigns.

Video: How to Use Social Media for Lead Generation

Learn how to use social media for lead generation.

Download the free video to leverage Twitter, Facebook and other social media sites to generate leads and customers.

Posted by Shannon Sweetser on Thu, Dec 10, 2009 @ 01:43 PM

COMMENTS

I find it very surprising that most of these larger, more successful companies cannot keep up with the changing times. They can allocate all the marketing budget towards internet marketing, but it's a waste if they don't know how to optimize it.  
Great post, definitely enlightening material! It motivates me to work harder, here at WebitMD where we specialize in internet marketing.  
Check out the company's site at:www.WebitMD.com

posted on Thursday, December 10, 2009 at 3:45 PM by Samantha Stephan


Are there any free email services that monitor statistics?

posted on Thursday, December 10, 2009 at 4:47 PM by Rachael Lord


Interesting marketing blog! 
Agree with Samantha's comments, waste of money if you don't know how to see the results.

posted on Thursday, December 10, 2009 at 4:59 PM by Richard Peirce


I think a lot of companies would fair better by at minimum having a content management system that will empower them. Without the right web design or CMS the rest of online marketing/inbound marketing is going to be handicapped. Check this out: http://bit.ly/5lJxBB

posted on Thursday, December 10, 2009 at 5:37 PM by Kimberly McCabe


It's so important to keep up with the trends when you are in business! And the nice thing about social marketing is that many of the tools are free to use - you just have to put in the time. Great post!

posted on Thursday, December 10, 2009 at 8:10 PM by Expanding Creations


Should we be surprised that HubSpot's own experience is measurably more successful than the StrongMail survey's participants?  
 
 
 
Firstly, surveying two populations almost assuredly yields different results.  
 
 
 
Secondly, could it be that HubSpot's own experience reflects an enlightened clientele that "gets" how to integrate and measure social media ROI, possibly because they are HubSpot clients?  
 
 
 
I read and re-read the article, and was unable to determine that. Could the survey authors perhaps speak to us about that?  
 
 
 
Thanks ahead for this great forum. Looking forward to continued commentary!  
 
 
 
Ed  
 
fanfoundry.com  
 

posted on Friday, December 11, 2009 at 8:51 AM by Ed Alexander


I think the main stumbling block when coming to measure social media initiatives - is the fact that the results are all 'soft', i.e. hits and mentions - not hard saels. The link from these to actual 'hard' results is a little long, and hard to stomach for more traditional businesses.

posted on Saturday, December 12, 2009 at 12:19 AM by Dalit Boutboul


Although the survey indicates that a higher number of executives plan to increase their email campaigns vs their social media efforts is this not backward? If any metrics are done (that are quantifiable) I am sure social media would out perform email campaigns (our observations).

posted on Wednesday, December 16, 2009 at 9:51 AM by 24Seven


I would invite everyone to recognize that the "soft" side of business-relating to people is what has taken "Big Business" down by their short drawers. 
 
One of the reasons that small business is able to shift and move quickly is that they remember two things: 
 
It is about the people and their experience 
 
People buy from People not "brands" 
 
Until more companies DO and participate in social media without waiting for someone to "prove it" to them they will have their own examples of what works and does not. 
 
Having helped several small businesses use Internet Marketing and Social Media to build a stronger local presence has shown me that each client is as different as their customers.  
 
So what works for one does not always work for the other. 
 
Thanks for sharing data. There will always be good and bad in any measure. Can we afford to keep looking for the bad in social media? I prefer to view it as-how can this work for me or my client and move forward. 
 
Like any massively successful person they always were willing to keep tweaking and testing until they found their own success. Edison, Einstein, Ford....

posted on Wednesday, December 23, 2009 at 9:04 AM by Michele Price


Comments have been closed for this article.