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Dave Taylor
Dave Taylor has been involved with the online world since 1980 and is recognized globally as an expert on both technical and business issues. He has been published over a thousand times, launched four Internet-related startup companies, has written twenty business and technical books and holds both an MBA and MS Ed. He's a columnist for the Boulder Daily Camera and Linux Journal and frequently appears in other publications both online and in print. Additionally, Dave maintains four weblogs: The Business Blog at Intuitive.com, Ask Dave Taylor, Dave On Film, and GoFatherhood. Based in beautiful Boulder, Colorado, Dave is an award-winning speaker, sought after conference and workshop participant and frequent guest on radio and podcast programs, as well as active member of his community and busy single father to three children.

What's the impact of social media on business growth?

A reader writes to me:

"As an empirically-based economist, I would like to know whether there are studies that show the impact of twitter, Facebook and other social networking sites on business growth. I have a client (I do a small bit of consulting) that is pushing hard to get "into" social networking to grow the business. I am a bit reluctant, because there is no way to "control" the message. If there's even one former customer that is unhappy with my client, the negative effects can be explosive. I also wonderwhether paying Google for per-click exclusive use of specific words can really grow a business. Your thoughts would be most welcome!"
I'm so intrigued by this question and its implications that I thought I'd offer up my answer here and also ask you, dear readers, for your two cents too.

First though, are there non-empirical economists? What would that mean? That they follow economic theories even when actual real-life data proves them wrong? Hmmm...

More seriously, the first comment I have about this question is that the writer is already out of step with modern reality. As merchant after merchant has demonstrated, there is no controlling "the message" any more and the sooner marketing and PR people accept that, the sooner they can start helping their clients in this brave new world. Control always was an illusion anyway.

Given that fact, it also means that your customers, your competitors and your marketplace are already having discussions about your products, services and employees, and they're having it in online forums, whether it's a protest group on Facebook ("United Airlines Sucks!"), a persistent hashtag on Twitter (#attfail) or just a meme that travels from blogger to blogger.

The question then isn't whether it makes sense to delve into social networks even though you can't control the message, the question is whether you're paying attention to a medium where the message has long since escaped and has a life of its own. This means that your customer defines your brand. It's not about expensive TV spots, it's not about the right Pantone color in the logo when printed, it's not about the company at all.

This is both terrifying and exhilarating because it means that good companies with good products -- like Apple with its insanely popular iPod line -- can benefit even without any branding or marketing efforts, and bad companies -- like United Airlines -- are going to suffer from a bad reputation even as they spend money advertising and trying to position themselves as a market leader.

My take is that it's "step zero" to monitor what's going on in the social media space. Even if you don't want to participate, which is a mistake, you should at the very minimum be paying attention to what people are talking about. You can use individual services like search.twitter.com, but far smarter is to use a more sophisticated monitoring tool like Filtrbox or Radian 6.

There are many studies, some apocryphal, others actual more rigorous scientific research, on the topic of social media on business growth, and a quick search of Google will reveal quite a collection of data on the topic. Intuitively, though, if your customers are already talking about your product, service or competitor, how can that discussion not have an impact on your business, for better or worse?

My take away is this: if you are truly going to help your clients succeed in the brave new world of 21st Century business, you need to enthusiastically embrace social media, jumping in and learning best practices from such books as Trust Agents, The New Community Rules, The Tipping Point and Groundswell, along with by participating in the communities. The key is to remember to engage with your customer base, not just join these social media sites to create new bully pulpits for your marketing and sales messages.

Posted by Dave Taylor at November 23, 2009 8:05 PM

Comments

Nice info, thank you for posting.

Posted by: Andrew Coral on November 24, 2009 4:23 AM

Dave,

Beautifully stated. Why am I still surprised to see questions like this? I shouldn't be - I know there's a steep adoption curve here - but I am, nonetheless. I loved this:

"the question is whether you're paying attention to a medium where the message has long since escaped and has a life of its own".

It's not that we don't control how we put our company out there, but we don't (and never have) control the reaction and response to that.

Thanks also for emphasizing "step zero" in listening. If you're not ready to jump into the fray, that's okay, but there is a wealth of business intelligence in raw form out on the social web that CAN and should make an impact on how you work.

Best and thanks,
Amber Naslund
Director of Community, Radian6
@ambercadabra

Posted by: Amber Naslund on November 24, 2009 10:21 AM

Well said. As you had stated one of most important (and difficult) concepts is purposefully losing control - which is really an illusion anyway. A negative comment or discussion here or there actually enhances credibility - besides it's impossible to make everyone happy. The monitoring of trends is the most important.

Posted by: John R. Sedivy on December 1, 2009 11:35 PM

Yeah, the question of company's reputation is very serious. Due to that I think it's necessary to be close to your clients, for example to talk to them on Facebook or twitter, but not just give advertisements here and there. If you keep in close contact with your clients, they'll trust you.

Posted by: Fran McNally on January 14, 2010 7:34 AM

Hi Dave,

I definitely agree with you that companies need to get a social media strategy, but social media is still very much in its infancy, that it's hard for companies to know how to embrace it.

I think alot of thought needs to go into which avenues a company should pursue rather than diving sraight in and wasting time and resources.

Posted by: Jonny on January 23, 2010 11:36 PM

great post --find it very true

Posted by: danny on March 3, 2010 1:01 PM

Truly, social media play a vital part of businesses nowadays. This is now the modern way in which we communicate with them instead of poster ads, tv commercial, and other ads which still work but, this is my point. through social medias, we can reach our potential clients as well as those who does not need our services. but, through this kind of setup. Imagine, by means of facebook, twitter, delicious, jaiko, friendfeed, etc which is widely used by most of people. its like your showing your services right infront of their door without them looking for it. the word is "social media increases awareness" that may or not be fruitful in the end.

Posted by: singaporerikvin on August 30, 2010 1:59 AM

I am a student and seriously thinking about doing a dissertation on social media as a competitive advantage for businesses or probably social marketing a branding tool to gain market share. But Iam not to sure on how to proceed.

Posted by: garren on March 25, 2011 8:11 AM
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