Archive for the ‘measurement’ Category

4 Tips for Measuring Social Media: It’s Not All About The Numbers

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

In 2006 the responsibility of Southwest Airlines’ social media efforts fell into my lap.  I knew nothing about social media at the time – I didn’t read blogs, Twitter didn’t even exist, and I playfully mocked a couple of ex-boyfriends who were on MySpace.  But, with my new assignment, I had no choice but to make it part of my life.  So I did the only reasonable thing.  I locked myself in my office every night with a bottle of wine and tried to figure it out.  And, like my first Phish concert, I discovered an amazing world that I hadn’t previously known existed.

Everyday provided a new lesson and a new challenge.  And, my experiences forced me to completely rethink corporate communications.  More than blogging, Tweeting, or Facebooking, my role, as I saw it, was to slash through red tape and revolutionize the business of communication; to tear down old infrastructure to meet the needs of the changing environment.

It was clear that in order to do social media successfully, we needed more…well…everything.  We needed more information.  And, we needed to receive it faster.  We needed more eyes and ears.  And, we needed people who knew our company inside and out.  We needed new reporting structures, approval processes and more agile response teams.  We needed people to push the envelope and take risks.  And, we needed to invest money where there was no proven ROI.

Measurement and reporting were among our most powerful tools in justifying our needs – but even for a company that completely bought  in to social media, changing minds wasn’t always that easy.  Consider this:

In July 2007, Southwest Airlines joined Twitter.  Shortly thereafter we began sourcecoding all of our links.  Then, sometime in 2008, something amazing happened.  My colleague Christi Day (who now leads Southwest’s social media efforts) came into my office to tell me that seven people had clicked from Twitter to southwest.com and made a purchase that week.  A whopping SEVEN!  We went completely nuts.  I started spinning around in my chair while Christi did high kicks in the doorway.

We were completely deflated, however, when one of our colleagues suggested we not report our findings because the number “was so small.”  Technically, she was right.  Relative to the millions of people that book their travel on southwest.com each year, seven didn’t sound very impressive.  But where she saw something small, we saw something huge… potential.

Less than a year later, Southwest launched a 48-hour fare sale using nothing more than social media and public relations to promote it – no paid advertising – and achieved its top two sales and web site traffic days in the airlines’ 38 year history.  If anyone thought it was an anomaly, three months later, they did it again.

The challenge

Anyone who works in social media sees its power and possibility every day.  The ultimate challenge is finding ways to convince our peers and leaders that some things are going to have to change if we want our organizations to evolve and adapt to the new environment.

During my time at Southwest Airlines, we had a number of measurement tools at our disposal; but charts, graphs, and numbers alone weren’t going to inspire the change.  So when measuring and preparing our social media reports, we always tried to answer the following questions:

1. What are the numbers trying to tell us?

When we began our social media efforts, the numbers really weren’t that impressive.  We didn’t yet have much traffic to our blog.  Our Twitter and Facebook followings were still relatively small.  So we tried to read between the numbers to spot trends and “ah-ha moments.”   For us, reporting social media was like reporting the weather.  The question wasn’t “what were the numbers yesterday?” but rather “what are they going to be tomorrow?”

2. What are we trying to prove?

The answer to this question changed over time, and our reports had to change with it.  For example, when we began using social media there was still this myth that bloggers were all 17-year-olds in their mothers’ basements.  Our challenge, at that time, was simply to prove that these folks were credible journalists worthy of our time and attention.  Our early social media reports read like biographies.

3. What should we be doing differently?

Our biggest failures were always our biggest learning experiences, but in order to inspire organizational change, we had to make sure that everyone else was learning from them as well.  With each misstep, we would document exactly what had happened:  what went wrong, how it could have been prevented, what infrastructure changes were needed, and how we planned to address similar situations in the future.

4. Who cares?

Ultimately, our reports were more for us than anyone else.  And, we quickly learned that if we weren’t dazzled by them, no one else was going to be dazzled either.  Our challenge was not just to tell the story, but to sell the story by bringing the information to life and presenting it in a way that made jaws drop.

Old habits die hard.  And slashing through corporate red tape takes time and resolve.  Four years in, and I still find myself trying to convince people of things that seem so obvious to those of us who live and breathe social media every day.  Sometimes I win.  Sometimes I lose.  But it’s worth the fight.  And, those occasional victories are among my proudest accomplishments.

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Our Net Promoter Score: No hope for the satisfied

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

sharon-linhartThe Linhart PR team is fun and easy to work with, respectful, accessible and responsive! We also know that our clients feel comfortable sharing confidential information and having us interact with senior management.  We have learned that we have great opportunities to demonstrate the value of our services through measurement and sharing results in meaningful ways so our clients can “sell” their achievements to their stakeholders.

We know these facts, because we survey our clients to learn how satisfied they are and what we can do to serve them better. In our most recent survey, Linhart PR received an outstanding average score of 3.6 out of a possible 4.0 and showed a 2.7% improvement over the previous survey.

 In this latest assessment, 100% of the respondents said they would recommend us to others.  This 100% Net Promoter Score was the third consecutive time we achieved this remarkable vote of confidence. Widely accepted, corporations ranging from AT&T to General Electric and American Express use this metric to chart their customer satisfaction. 

One of the hallmarks of Linhart Public Relations is our track record of long-term client relationships.  Aside from choosing to invest in our service year after year, our clients also tell us in measurable, quantifiable terms that they are more than satisfied with our service. We couldn’t be more gratified!

While our clients are satisfied, we are not.  We’ll continue to try to provide smart and valuable public relations services and seek to raise the bar and earn even higher marks on our client satisfaction survey in 2010.

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Opening Doors for a New Player in a Competitive Space

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Paul RaabI was reminded recently of the business-building power of PR in a meeting with Sue Allon, founder and CEO of Linhart PR client Allonhill.  Sue is a mortgage industry veteran and founded Allonhill in 2008 to provide due diligence and credit risk management services for mortgage investors.  We began working with them last fall to help build a profile in this highly competitive market.

 In our meeting, Sue said “I really think the media attention has been instrumental in building our credibility and getting us in the door” with prospective private and public sector clients.  We obviously love getting this kind of qualitative feedback.

 Quantitative feedback is nice, too.  This chart …

allonhill-march-web-hits-cropped

 

… shows web traffic to the Allonhill site in six-hour increments during the first two weeks of March 2009.  The spike at about 6 p.m. on March 3 coincides with Sue’s appearance on the CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, where she provided correspondent Anthony Mason with perspective on why some investors are purchasing troubled mortgages.

Unless you’re a Web-based business (like www.patheos.com, another Linhart PR client), Web traffic spikes obviously don’t translate directly into revenue.  But when web traffic quadruples and doors open for your client because prospects have seen her on the CBS Evening News, that’s a good indication of marketplace impact.

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