Measuring social media savvy
Use socialgraphics to learn more about your customers
By Gahlord Dewald, Tuesday, April 20, 2010.
Flickr image by webtreats.Last week I had the good fortune of seeing Jeremiah Owyang of Altimeter Group at the SugarCon social customer relationship management conference. Owyang delivered a presentation on how customer behavior is changing as a result of social media.
One of the concepts presented was "socialgraphics," which appears to be a further refinement of Altimeter founding partner Charlene Li's work published in the book she co-authored with Josh Bernoff when she was still at Forrester.
Socialgraphics -- an understanding of how people are using social technologies -- may be poorly named given that there's already something out there called the "social graph" and the two are only tangentially related. But socialgraphics has direct applicability to the things you're making right now for your real estate customers. This includes blog posts, widgets, apps -- whatever. I'll go over some of it in this week's column.
Measuring your customer, from demographics to socialgraphics
You're probably already familiar with demographics: understanding that customers of differing ages may have differing needs when it comes to buying or selling real estate, for example.
You probably already gear some of your marketing activities accordingly. Perhaps you have some campaigns geared toward first-time buyers and sellers, and other campaigns geared towards empty-nesters or vacation-home buyers.
Widespread use of demographics, since it's heavily used in traditional print/radio/TV as well as by the government, is a pretty widespread practice. Other ways of segmenting and understanding your customers include geographic profiles (local vs. relocation, for example), psychographic profiles (lifestyle marketing) and behavioral targeting.
Socialgraphic profiling is another of these ways of segmenting and understanding your customers.
Socialgraphics, despite the name, isn't about the social graph. It's about how your customers use social technologies. In this way, it's a little bit like a subset of behavioral targeting that's focused just on how people use social tech.
But it's a little more as well; including getting an understanding of who your online audience relies on and who relies on them.
Making a socialgraphic profile
If you can gather enough observations about what your customers are doing online then you can develop a socialgraphic profile. Using a socialgraphic profile to help you decide what sorts of things to make should increase the likelihood that your customers will actually use and enjoy the things you make for them. ...CONTINUED
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Submitted by Abel Solano on April 20, 2010 - 10:26am.
I am very social media savvy but when I am bombarded with new tools, widgets, apps and the latest gadgets I become less productive in the short run. I'm starting to see a trend with the development of past and new products which only 20 percent of them are beneficial to the bottom line. What is sad is the other 80 percent are all fluff, junk, waist of time to agents.
The King has no clothes! With more junk RE social media tools coming out I am ready to revert back to pencil and paper.
Abel
Abel Solano (SFR) REALTOR®
ARG Abbott Realty Group
"Downtown San Diego's Largest Independent Residential Brokerage"
435 4th Avenue
San Diego, CA 92101
Direct / Voice / Fax: 619-398-3873
http://www.ARGSD.com
Submitted by Bill Lublin on April 25, 2010 - 11:39am.
Gahlord - Well done - really thoughtful and interesting - in 2008 Gartner published a similar graph which purported to divide participant sin social media into 4 levels of community engagement Contributors (3-10%), Creators (0-3%), Lurkers (80%+), and Opportunists (10%-20%).
as you point out though, we move from position to position as we go from site to site and our position in relaion to the site (and our network) changes -
Thanks for making me think on a Sunday ;-)
Bill
Bill Lublin CRB,CRS,GRI
CEO CENTURY 21 Advantage Gold
Visit me at MovePhilly & REreflections Click Here to
Find Homes in PA & NJ
Submitted by Gahlord Dewald | Thoughtfaucet on April 26, 2010 - 3:44pm.
Abel: I feel your pain. Hopefully articles like this one can help you separate what you need from what you don't need.
Bill: The Gartner graph is a good one as well. Pretty much anything that gets us thinking about how the audience is doing things instead of what we wish they would be doing is helpful.
Remembering that people change from moment to moment, site to site, day to day is one of those things that many of don't do enough. One day they're just passing time reading a little stuff to procrastinate, another day they're serious about getting info or doing their thing and moving on.
G. Dewald | Thoughtfaucet
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