Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact

Librarian at University of Missouri Libraries, Special Collections and Rare Books em University of Missouri
2 de Jun de 2015
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact
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Measuring Social Media: Assessing Your Impact

Notas do Editor

  1. Social media is not a broadcast medium or a platform for pushing the library’s agenda. It’s another venue where we can participate in conversations with our users. Social cues for conversations in person – this is how we can think about using analytics in social media.
  2. Using social media effectively has to relate to goals, otherwise it’s aimless and can be a real time sink with few outcomes to show for your time investment.
  3. It helps to start with an over-arching goal, maybe part of your organization’s mission statement or a goal that your library has set for the coming year, and then rewrite it as a SMART goal.
  4. What you will measure and pull out of your analytics data depends on your goals – because out of context the numbers don’t mean anything.
  5. Before we start talking about data, though, it is helpful to figure out what all these terms mean. A lot of analytics terminology comes out of marketing language and web development language, and it’s not intuitive to those of us who aren’t trained in those areas.
  6. So, going back to the goals and measurements we looked at earlier, there are several things you’d probably want to track to make sure you’re working effectively, but can you tell what your KPI is for each goal?
  7. These are the measurements I thought were the KPIs for each of the goals we looked at. What do you think?
  8. One word of caution about things you don’t want to measure. Marketers have a term for these too – they call them vanity metrics. These are raw, unadjusted numbers. Often they look like big, impressive numbers, but what do they mean? You can’t really tell out of context.
  9. A good rule of thumb is that if you can’t tell whether a number is good or bad, it’s probably a vanity metric.
  10. Analytics in the aggregate can also tell you a lot about the various platforms and the differences among them.
  11. This is mostly a joke, but there’s actually some truth here too. We’ll go back to this concept of adapting your message later, but for now I just wanted to point out that they’re not all the same and you can’t treat them all the same. You can be consistent across all channels, but not the same everywhere. Let’s look at some reasons for that.
  12. Facebook: 73% of the internet, very high percentage of the traditional student demographic, seems like a no-brainer. Right? Maybe… We’ll talk about that more in a bit. Twitter: about a quarter of the internet, less young people – but heavily used by professionals, academics and journalists. For us, since we’re kind of a niche area, we researched and found that there are lots of historians on Twitter and they even have their own hash tag. Research and find whether there are communities of interest already in place for you on Twitter.
  13. Instagram – I’m not on Instagram, but it is definitely worth a look if you consider the demographics. It’s a little more than a quarter of the Internet, but look how many young people are there. And then there’s Tumblr, which is my favorite of the three platforms we’re on. It’s a tiny percentage of the Internet, but it’s been great for us because Tumblr staff are very friendly to libraries, and because the posts show up well in Google search results.
  14. In my opinion, Tumblr and Instagram are the two platforms to watch, especially if you are interested in outreach to students. Pinterest is also interesting for visual content, but I am more reserved about it because you can’t see the content unless you’re logged in, and it’s very retail-driven – people seem to use it mainly to share products and marketing images they’re interested in, not to generate and share original content.
  15. Market research can also inform your posting schedule. Social Bakers study on use of these platforms among major brands found that these post frequencies are most effective.
  16. Market research can also inform your posting schedule. BUT you have to consider when your particular audience is online, so the best times for you can be very different from the best times according to the market research.
  17. You can find information about page likes, reach, engagement and information about your followers, and you can also export data from here.
  18. All accounts now have free Twitter analytics – log in and get to it from this url. You get a summary for each month, detailed information about individual tweets, and ability to download your data.
  19. One of my favorite tools – this offers so much for free to help with Twitter. I will show more in-depth in a few moments, but this has the ability to help you understand your users quite a bit, and most of the tools are free.
  20. Sumall is a third-party service that can pull data from a number of different streams. There’s a free version, and for the most part it gives you the same data as you get from Facebook and Twitter analytics. I am including it here because it’s also one of the few services I’ve found that will pull relatively detailed Tumblr analytics for free.
  21. Cyfe is relatively new to me, and I haven’t used it much, but I liked it because you can get up to 5 widgets on the free plan, and you’re not limited to social here – you can also set up Google alerts, web analytics, and email inboxes in the widgets to monitor everything in one place.
  22. Iconosquare is for Instagram analytics. We’re not on Instagram, but we do have an account because I reserved the name just in case. So I’m showing you the dashboard with nothing on it, but it gives you an idea of what types of analytics you would see.
  23. Some scheduling apps also give you analytics. I like to use Buffer, which gives you stats for specific posts you schedule through their service.
  24. And finally, Google analytics is really important because it tells you how many people are coming back to your site from social media. This is a screen shot from the analytics I have hooked up to our blog, I think for a full year, and you can see that a good chunk is coming from Twitter. More than Google, in fact.
  25. Going over some ways you can use analytics in practice. The most important I think is tracking growth and engagement.
  26. Facebook and Twitter analytics give you lots of numbers out of context, and they don’t really mean anything.
  27. Track only the analytics that you actually need and look for changes over a longer period of time.
  28. Remember how I presented that market research about the best times to post? Facebook will also give you an idea of the best time to post, tailored for your specific audience – your followers. This is our graph and you can see that the peak is at 11:00 am. Not during the time window when the market researchers said was the best time. You can also see where your fans are, which can be important if you are concerned with an on-campus community.
  29. Facebook also gives you some really good information about demographics. The gray on this graph represents Facebook as a whole and the blue are our fans. You can see that our audience skews older and more female than the average on Facebook. So my conclusion when looking at this is that we’re not reaching students on Facebook – we are reaching faculty. And that really informs how I post and what I post on the Facebook page.
  30. For understanding your audience on Twitter, I think Followerwonk is the best tool. The first thing you want to do is figure out whether you have an audience on Twitter – so I searched for people with Mizzou in their profiles and turned up over 13,000 results. I think that’s a pretty good audience there.
  31. Followerwonk can also help you understand the best times to post for your particular audience, just like on Facebook. You can even connect your account to Buffer and import the best 3 or 4 times into your posting schedule automatically.
  32. Followerwonk gives you a map of where your followers are located, which I find really useful. You can see that we have a big chunk right in the middle of the country, where you would expect to see them, but we also have a couple of pockets on the east coast and the UK, which I find interesting.
  33. Followerwonk also gives you a word cloud of the words in your followers’ bios – so you can get a clear sense of what they are interested in. A lot of our followers are historians and grad students, and you can really tell here.
  34. Twitter analytics gives you a different version of the location and interests, but I think it’s helpful to see again what topics your followers are interested in and what other accounts they follow.
  35. And finally, social media analytics can help you do social media better. This quote from Samuel Beckett is one of my favorites and it is usually applied to the process of writing, but I think it’s really a useful philosophy for approaching social media. There’s no silver bullet. The 80/20 rule applies here: 20% of your content will provide 80% of your engagement. Which means 80% of your content might flop. It’s important not to get discouraged.
  36. One way you can use Twitter analytics is to look at your high engagement tweets and figure out what they have in common. Engagement rates are going to be really low numbers because they are total engagements divided by the number of impressions. For us, I consider anything over 2% to be a high engagement rate. This is our recipe for success – yours may be a little different.
  37. You can do the same thing in Facebook insights by looking at the posts that get the most reach. If the Facebook detects that there’s some interest in your post, it will start to show it to more people – so reach can be a good indicator of how “good” a post was. These, again, are the recipes I use for what I think will do well on Facebook.
  38. That said, there is not a lot you can do to influence reach on Facebook without paying for it. Before the last algorithm change, posting a photo was a surefire way to reach more people. Now it’s not. I’ve seen various suggestions for how to improve your reach on Facebook, but I have yet to see results.
  39. That has led me to change my priorities and spend less time and effort on Facebook. Even though our local audience is there. Even though I know I’m reaching faculty there. If I can’t reach them reliably, if Facebook is going to position itself as a filter between me and the library’s users, then I’m not going to spend as much time trying to interact with them there. I can’t make a blanket recommendation to walk away from Facebook, but I am finding that it works better for us to concentrate our efforts in other areas. And that’s what I recommend – to use analytics as a guide for decision making in this area. If it’s not helping you meet your overall goals, then find another way to do it. Because social media is a tool – not a goal in itself.