Social media has been an albatross for most companies. People have become accustomed to receiving discounts and deals on social networks, but discounts rarely create loyal customers and adversely impact the value of those customers.
A recent study
by Custora measured the purchasing habits of 72 million online shoppers
and found that customers who discovered an online retailer via organic search
spent more money and shopped more frequently than customers who
originated from other channels, like Facebook or Twitter. Surprisingly,
in 2013, Facebook and Twitter were collectively responsible for less
than one percent of customer acquisitions.
Does this mean you should give up on social media?
Of course not. Your best customers are far more valuable than your
average customers and they might originate from channels like social
media.
If you're already investing time and money in social media, you
should consider rebalancing your activities to maximize returns. For
example, you may want to focus more of your social media efforts on
Facebook rather than Twitter since, according to Custora, each Twitter
lead produces only 75 percent of the value of a Facebook lead, and only
half the value of an organic search lead.
While there's great insight in the Custora report, the findings about
social are incomplete because they measure the customer's last-touch
before a purchase. Social is rarely the last touch. A customer will
often hear about a brand on a social network and then search for that
brand online. It's not surprising, then, that search would nearly always
be misleadingly credited for finding that customer.
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