A big part of my job involves going to new client meetings and pitching ParkerWhite. I am selling our agency, explaining why we’re the best and often laying out 2 or 3 potential campaigns for the client that we think would be successful. I have been preparing this same pitch (or a variation of it) for about the past 8 years and inevitably the same questions always come up.
- How much will it cost?
- How will you measure the success?
- What is my ROI?
The answers to these questions have always been fairly cut and dry. It will cost you x amount, we’ll incorporate <insert your favorite analytics tool> into your website and your ROI is going to be <ROI formula>. Simple.
Now that social media has entered the picture and become an integral part of most campaigns, I’m being asked the same questions but finding them more difficult to answer. I can still use my favorite analytics tool to gauge visitors to some degree and using my ROI formula I can derive a number, but does that number really capture the success of social media?
How do I place a dollar value on a new twitter follower, or on 6 new posts to my facebook fan page? More importantly, how does the marketing director (my client) take these numbers back to his boss and convince him/her that it was a success?
In my eternal quest to answer this question, not only for myself but for my clients, I stumbled across this amazing presentation from the Social Fresh Conference. Olivier Blanchard (@thebrandbuilder) from Brand Builder Marketing does an excellent job of outlining the basics of Social Media ROI in his presentation:
Is there anything you would add?