Mar
5th

Rice University Professor, Alum Conduct Facebook Page Experiment

Posted by Leah Singer on March 5, 2010 at 11:30 am

Facebook Insights can tell marketers how many fans their Facebook business page has, how engaging their posts are, how many unique page views it has, and more. But Insights doesn’t tell you what’s happening between your Facebook presence and your customers offline.

Utpal Dholakia and Emily Durham wanted to explore this void and to find out if businesses really influence consumers when they launch Facebook pages. Dholakia is an associate professor of management at Rice University’s Jones Graduate School of Business, and Durham is a Jones School alumna and founder of Restaurant Connections, a Houston‐based restaurant consultancy.

The duo decided to conduct a little experiment to see if one Houston-based company could influence its customers offline using Facebook. The company, Dessert Gallery, is a popular bakery and cafe chain.

The team surveyed Dessert Gallery’s 13,000+ mailing list customers, asking their opinions about the bakery and their shopping habits – nearly 700 responded. They then launched the bakery’s Facebook page and invited all mailing list customers to become fans. The chain then updated its page several times per week with contests, promotions, photos, etc.

After three months, the researchers resurveyed the mailing list customers – this time over 1,000 responded. Dholakia and Durham reported their research in Harvard Business Review. Here’s what they found:

> Dessert Galleries Facebook fans increased their store visits per month after becoming fans and generated more positive word of mouth than nonfans.

> Facebook fans went to Dessert Gallery 20% more often than nonfans and gave the store the highest share of their overall dining-out dollars.

> Facebook fans were the most likely to recommend Dessert Gallery to friends and had the highest average Net Promoter Score* — 75, compared with 53 for Facebook users who were not fans and 66 for customers not on Facebook.

> Dessert Gallery Facebook fans also reported significantly greater emotional attachment to the chain — 3.4 on a four-point scale, compared with 3.0 for other customers.

> And lastly, Facebook fans were the most likely to say they chose Dessert Gallery over other establishments whenever possible.

Dholakia and Durham noted that the “results suggest intriguing possible correlations rather than definitive causalities.”

Dholakia stated in a Rice University press release that “we must be cautious in interpreting the study’s results. The fact that only about 5 percent of the firm’s 13,000 customers became Facebook fans within three months indicates that Facebook fan pages may work best as niche marketing programs targeted to customers who regularly use Facebook. Social-media marketing must be employed judiciously with other types of marketing programs.”

Interestingly, Dholakia and Durham’s Harvard Business Review article states that only  2.1% of the customers on Dessert Gallery’s mailing list became fans within three months. I’m unclear as to why there is a discrepancy.

Either way, there is a strong correlation between Facebook business page fans and their loyalty to the business. It seems clear that businesses need a Facebook presence to develop deeper bonds with their clientele, which company websites can certainly lack.

Has your business seen this type of response after launching your Facebook page?

* “The Net Promoter Score, or NPS®, is a straightforward metric that holds companies and employees accountable for how they treat customers,” according to NetPromoter.com.


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Apr
2nd

What Are You Doing? Low-Tech Twitter

Posted by Keirsun on April 2, 2009 at 11:03 am

There’s something to be said for the simplicity of Twitter – it’s like an old-school, daily to-do list that you can easily share.

But now designer Burak Kaynak has taken the idea behind Twitter back to its roots.

Behold the Status Calendar.

status calendar by burak kaynak

[via BuzzFeed]


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Nov
14th

YouTube Sponsored Videos – An Easier Path to Fame?

Posted by Natalie on November 14, 2008 at 3:10 pm

So perhaps you’ve dreamt of one day becoming famous. (Admit it, you have!) Well, good news! While the emerging technology of the 21st century is making it easier and easier, so is YouTube.

Take Adam Bahner, aka: Tay Zonday, for example. Does the song “Chocolate Rain” ring a bell? He went from being an average grad-student with a baritone voice to being “a People’s Voice Award-Nominated, YouTube Award-Winning, Webby Award-Winning singer-songwriter with more than 50 million video views on YouTube.”

hollywood walk of fameIt may have been luck for Tay, but now, YouTube has announced a new opportunity for people to promote their videos online through a bidding process called YouTube Sponsored Videos.

The program allows people to connect interested audience members directly to their content, putting them above the competition through the use of keywords. You simply write a quick blurb, referred to as “promotion text” by YouTube, on why people should choose to watch your video, and then you pick the keywords that you want to generate your video.

For example, if you have video footage of your dog doing cartwheels that you feel the world needs to see, the keywords you may want to choose would be “dog”, “tricks”, or if you really want to get specific, “canine cartwheels”.

Lastly, the advertiser must choose a daily budget. It can be as low as a few pennies per view, or as high as you would like it to go. Just remember, the higher you pay per view, the closer to the top your video will be when someone types in the keywords you chose to promote your video. Additionally, you only have to pay when someone actually clicks on your video to watch it!

So while the road to fame may not be free, you can set your budget at something that’s affordable for you! Best of luck, future walk-o’-famers!


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Aug
16th

Find Garage Sale Deals on Facebook

Posted by Keirsun on August 16, 2007 at 3:31 pm

Buy.com is hoping to generate sales from the Facebook crowd. The online retailer has introduced Garage Sale, a web widget currently available to Facebook users.

garage sale signUsing Garage Sale, Facebookers can sell their stuff right from the comfort of their own Facebook profile page. The entire transaction takes place on Facebook, without the buyer being forced to jump to another site to complete the sale. Buy.com charges a 5% commission on items sold.

The Garage Sale widget is available through Facebook’s application suite. According to the company press release, Buy.com plans to roll out the Garage Sale service to other online social networks.

There are also plans to add a Garage Sale tab to the Buy.com site later this year. Probably best to wait until the widget works on more social network platforms before doing this. Although, it would be nice to provide some basic Garage Sale info on the Buy.com homepage right now. It may even inspire a few new Facebook sign ups.

If the widget ultimately becomes a cross-platform, retail success, the term “Garage Sale” may take on an entirely new meaning. Just don’t tell my grandmother she can’t go “salin’” on Saturday mornings anymore.


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Aug
10th

Nike Pounds the Social Pavement

Posted by Keirsun on August 10, 2007 at 8:09 pm

In a marketing blitz to promote its Nike+ running shoe, the shoe manufacturer is tying the laces on the online social running scene.

With more than 24 million miles logged by Nike+ customers, Nikeplus.com offers runners a place to share running stats and more.

nike ipod sport kitThe running stats are easily recorded thanks to the Nike+ iPod Sport Kit. Used in conjunction with a pair of Nike+ running shoes and an iPod nano, the sport kit transmits running stats, such as time, distance, pace, and calories burned, to the iPod. Runners can even get audio updates on these stats as they pound the pavement.

There’s a nice visual explanation on Apple’s website.

Following your run, have a rest at your computer while transferring stats from your iPod to Nikeplus.com. The website enables you to track running performance, set goals for yourself, share your stats, and challenge runners from around the globe to a race.

To get more runners using the site (and purchasing iPods), Nike and Apple have teamed with Finish Line athletic footwear stores. In-store customers get demonstrations of how the technologies work together and a coupon card for a free iTunes download.

To pump up the pace a little, the entire promotion is being supported by an ad campaign on TV and YouTube.

My running (by choice) days have come and gone, but I would love to see this technology promoted to downhill skiers. Maybe Rossignol could make an effort to befriend Apple.

With the social marketing race already in motion, sports equipment manufacturers of all genres should start thinking about the possibilities.


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