Mason Pelt, Author at Rocks Digital https://www.rocksdigital.com/author/mason-pelt/ We ROCK Digital Marketing Wed, 20 Mar 2024 18:56:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://www.rocksdigital.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/Fav-icon-150x150.png Mason Pelt, Author at Rocks Digital https://www.rocksdigital.com/author/mason-pelt/ 32 32 Finding ROI in Social Media Marketing https://www.rocksdigital.com/roi-social-media-marketing/ https://www.rocksdigital.com/roi-social-media-marketing/#comments Fri, 02 Jan 2015 23:11:07 +0000 http://rocksdigital.com/?p=4331 Saying that marketing on social media doesn’t work because you’re not seeing a return on your investment is like saying that the treadmill you faithfully use as a coat rack isn’t working because you haven’t lost any weight. If you’re not making money on Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, odds are that you’re not using them […]

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Mason Pelt at the Social Media Marketing Group Dallas.
Mason Pelt talking social media marketing / photo By Paula Dodd Barnes

Saying that marketing on social media doesn’t work because you’re not seeing a return on your investment is like saying that the treadmill you faithfully use as a coat rack isn’t working because you haven’t lost any weight. If you’re not making money on Facebook, YouTube and Twitter, odds are that you’re not using them correctly. Social media ROI is not a myth!

That said Bale on Twitter is a bit lack luster.
That said Bale on Twitter is a bit lack luster.

Think about these sites: Globally, Facebook is the second largest website. YouTube is the third largest. Poor little Twitter is only the eighth largest global website, which might make you think that it isn’t worth your time. That’s sort of like thinking that Christian Bale is a failure because he’s only the eighth highest paid actor in Hollywood.

These are not only large sites, but also they all offer robust targeting options to reach your desired audience, using optimizations on the platform and media buys. Saying that you don’t see any returns on social media means that something isn’t right and changes need to be made.

Here are the top four things to change if you want to see social marketing make you money:

Start Setting Meaningful Goals

This seems almost too obvious to point out, but a lot of people focus their marketing on vanity metrics. “Likes” and “Followers” mean nothing. At one point, I had a Klout score that was 15 points higher than Joe Biden’s. Now, as much as I would like to believe that I was more influential than the Vice President of the United States, I have a sneaking suspicion that I wasn’t. But the metrics told me so and numbers don’t lie! Well, numbers may not lie, but they don’t always tell the whole truth.

1/22/09. Official White House Photo by Pete Souza
1/22/09.
Official White House Photo by Pete Souza

Despite how big Klout.com claimed my social media megaphone was, no one cared about my ideas on foreign policy. (I think we should have one.) No one was asking for my input on economic problems. (I am staunchly opposed to them.) And no one was clamoring to know my views on law enforcement reform. (I’m not about to touch that here!)

When I begin working on an account, I require a tangible goal. Normally, it is to improve sales with direct marketing. Sometimes, it is to improve awareness for a ubiquitously available product like soda or makeup that can be picked up at any store. But, ultimately, I try to compare year over year trends, or run split tests in different cities to prove an increase in demand caused by social media. Wait a minute. This is beginning to sound like my next point.

Set Up Your Analytics and Sales Tracking Properly

Facebook and YouTube each have platform analytics data that blows my mind. But, seeing if someone clicked doesn’t show what that person did off of the site. You know your goals. You should track those.

Assuming that you sell a product using ecommerce, Google Analytics Goal and Event Tracking, along with UTM strings to track the links you share, will give you a very clear idea of what is and is not working to drive sales. If you’re running ads, something as simple as a conversion pixel in your website will at least give you last click attribution.

beanie baby on EbayTruth be told, I think last click attribution should be placed on the shelf with that $400 Beanie Baby, because it’s time has passed. I have seen analytics mangled in more ways than I can remember, but the worst thing is having nothing to show your results off of the platform.

In a perfect world, you should add every tracking pixel that makes sense (Try Google Tag Manager for this) and integrate your Google Analytics by using UTM strings tied to Goal Tracking. If you want to go the extra mile, try using dimension widening to add more data from your point of sale system, other any other data you like. Go nuts. I do, also in the name of Mat Cuts make your site HTTPS, you’ll thank me.

Take a look at Google Analytics Academy and Steve Hammer’s Leveling up Google Analytics slide share for more information on advanced Google Analytics functionality.

Spend Money When It Makes Sense

I had a large company tell me that buying ads would break their organic image. This company did pay for television, radio and billboard advertising. This Facebook fan page was posting multiple times a day to over 100,000 fans, yet was getting fewer than 30 weekly engagements and a weekly reach of fewer than 700 people. With stats like those, can you really say you have an organic presence on social media?

Low Organic Reach on Facebook

Sometimes you have to pay to reach your own audience. Think of it as a toll road. If you want to choose the path of least resistance to reach your destination, you need to be willing to spend money on tolls. If you wish to reach your target audience on social media in the most effective manner, you need to spend money on advertising.

Nearly every free social network makes money by selling its user data to advertisers. If you advertise, you get rich user data that can target exactly who you want to see your content. I’ve used this with great success for direct marketing, but ads targeting your own fans on Facebook or Twitter can drastically help improve your engagement. If you are a large consumer brand, you can track the engagement increase and see if it correlates to sales.

Estimated US retail and online spending compared to income based on purchase activity. Source: Epsilon This comes from Facebook
Estimated US retail and online spending compared to income based on purchase activity. Source: Epsilon This comes from Facebook

The moral of the story is that sometimes you have to pay to play. If you don’t want to cough up some cash, try email marketing. Remember it doesn’t matter who says you’re more influential than the Vice President of the United States. If you don’t own the platform, you don’t own your audience.

Post the Right Content

Since your goals should dictate how you approach everything else, when you focus on the wrong KPIs (key performance indicators), you lose before you’re even out of the starting gate. You can’t make money if you focus on building an audience of people who will never buy your products or services.

Keyboard Cat, Acrylic on Canvas by Bud Caddell
Keyboard Cat, Acrylic on Canvas by Bud Caddell

Yes, cat photos are engaging, but unless you operate a pet store or “I Can Has Cheezeburger,” it’s hard to make cats profitable. It is, however, possible to be creative and talk about cats without really talking about cats.

On the flipside, you can’t just sell. You’re on social media, not sitting in a kiosk in the middle of a mall. You need to balance engagement, while staying on brand. That can be tricky, but it is yet another reason to focus on meaningful goals and not vanity metrics.

Did I mention that, during the early days of Klout, I was more influential than Joe Biden on that platform? The heartbreaking truth is that it didn’t make me any money. None. Zippo. Zilch. Bupkis. Heck, it didn’t even get me a guest slot on “The Daily Show,” with Jon Stewart (who has always had a higher Klout score than I have).

The Recap

If you want a return on investment, act like it. It’s time to take your metaphorical coats off of your metaphorical treadmill and make some positive changes. Know what “return on investment” means. Don’t be penny smart and pound foolish, as my British friend, Mel Carson, would say. Spend money if it’s going to help you, but spend wisely. Be relevant. Don’t just sell, and don’t just share irrelevant things in order to be popular. You can go broke and lose your identity while sitting at that popular table.


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What do you consider Social Media ROI? How do you track it? Comment below and let’s discuss.

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The Guide to Google Tag Manager https://www.rocksdigital.com/google-tag-manager-set-up-guide/ https://www.rocksdigital.com/google-tag-manager-set-up-guide/#comments Thu, 06 Nov 2014 10:00:17 +0000 http://rocksdigital.com/?p=3656 What is tag management and Why you need it If you do SEO or SEM at a serious level you will, at some point, have a need to add a new tag or tracking code to a client’s website. Sadly, sometimes your priority list and the client’s developers aren’t exactly in alignment. The result is […]

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Use Google tag manager to update website tags.
Image Credit – bangoland/Shutterstock.com

What is tag management and Why you need it

If you do SEO or SEM at a serious level you will, at some point, have a need to add a new tag or tracking code to a client’s website. Sadly, sometimes your priority list and the client’s developers aren’t exactly in alignment.

The result is that, while the developer is putting out a fire in the server room, or just doesn’t feel a new piece of JavaScript is worth slowing down the site (because the server logs already say how much traffic you’re getting), you are sitting around unable to add that new Facebook retargeting pixel that has given great results for other clients.

Even if you have carte blanche access to the website to add or update any tags or code you want, all that code is cumbersome and hard to manage.

This is where Google Tag Manager comes into play. Google Tag Manager is a free tool that lets you add and update website tags like your conversion tracking, analytics, remarketing, or pretty much any other form of tracking you need as a marketer—all without having to update your site’s code every time.

Google Tag Manager works by letting you install a single snippet of code, called a container, on your website. From the Google Tag Manager interface, you are able to add tags and site rules that determine when those tags fire.

Setting up a container and installing it on a website takes about the same time as installing Google Analytics. Since almost anyone I work with will have at least nine tags installed on their website, I require a new client to set up and install Google Tag Manager before I start working.

How to set up Google Tag Manager in 10-20 minutes

 

Sign Up for Google Tag Manager

Signing up for Google Tag Manager is simple. Sign into your Google account, go to https://www.google.com/tagmanager and click, “Sign up now.”

Google Tag Manager New Container

Once you’re logged into your account you’ll need to make a container to hold your tags. Click, “New Container” and fill out your info.

Google Tag Manager Container

Google will now give you a magical code snippet to add to your website’s header or footer. If you’re using a CMS you can add it to almost any file that is loaded throughout your website. With many premium WordPress themes, you will have a place to add code without editing theme files. However, if I have to edit code, I tend to use the footer.php and place the code in the section.

Add a new user to google tag manager

Before you start adding tags let’s add a user. Click “New” and click, “User.” Even with all the great things about Google Tag Manager, my favorite is they way it handles users. I want my clients to own all their data, analytics, ad words, Facebook, etc… Anything I do as a consultant is using their accounts. They are giving me access–never the other way around. I would go so far as to say that any agency that is running your campaigns from their accounts, and sharing data with you, is not worth hiring. But that is a different post altogether.

Adding Tags to GTM

With your users added and the code in your site, you’re ready to add your tags. From inside the container click, “NEW->TAG”. From there, fill in the details. In the example below, I’m adding a Facebook conversion pixel to a client’s website.

Adding a facebook conversion pixal to Google Tag Manager

 

To add Facebook conversion tracking I’m choosing custom HTML as my tag type and copping and pasting the code from Facebook. On the right-hand side, there’s a box for, “FIRING RULES.” As mentioned at the top, these allow you to set where tags will appear and how they will fire.

Rules in Google tag manger

For Javadrop, since I’m using a Facebook conversion pixel, I’m adding it only to the signup page using a url contains rule. For something like Google Analytics, I would set the rule “all pages.”

Create Version GTM

After you’ve added your tags, click, “CREATE VERSION,” in the top right corner. This will store the last revision for you.

Changes and publish in GTM

From there, you can preview your changes, and publish the current container. You’ll have to publish your changes, so they appear live on your website.

Now that your container is published, your tags are live and firing on your site! If you manually added any of these tracking codes before, you have to remove them to keep them from firing twice and making your data unusable.


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(More about Google and Free Google Tools.)

So readers how are you using Google’s free tool for better tag management?

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