It’s getting ugly out there. Brands and fellow agencies will often ask me the same question: how often should we be on _____________ (insert your favorite social media channel here)? In the past, research be damned, my response would typically be: so long as it’s quality and your audience cares, shares and keeps on about it, don’t listen to the research reports or what any pundit has to tell you. The unique pulse between and a brand and its consumers is highly personal and unique on a case-by-case basis.
This morning, I was reading the Marketing Charts news item, Majority of Top Brands Tweeting At Least 30 Times Per Week, which offered up these interesting pieces of data:
Do me a favor. Stop reading this blog post. Set your timer for 60 seconds and start listing off all of the brands in your life that you would like to hear from about 30 times a week on Twitter. I’ll wait….
…And, we’re back!
So, how does your list look? Now, before you think about the answer, please remember that if you’re reading this, you’re already a convert. You’re already (somewhat) in love with marketing. You’re interested in how brands are doing what they do. You believe that new and amazing channels offer up all kinds of opportunities for brands to better engage with their consumers. All of this is true. But, what about the average consumer? These people are connected to but a few people. Some of them are acquaintances, while some of them are celebrities. Are brands that interesting? What brand does a consumer really need to hear from on Twitter (or see in their feed) upwards of 30 times per week?
One of advertising strongest metrics is frequency and/or repetition. We bring that same traditional advertising ethos to social media, where the distribution is free (or, somewhat free) and this is what happens. Brands go crazy. So yes, consumers will experience fatigue and brands will react as they always have: with more. They did it with their TV spots, they did it with email blasts and they’re doing it in social media. The problem with social media and scale in social media marketing is that frequency and repetition does not equal quality. It becomes noise, no matter how high the level of quality.
There’s also something bigger and scarier happening here. In this instance, we’re just taking about Twitter. What about Facebook, Pinterest, YouTube, blogs, podcasts and beyond? If brands are pumping 30 tweets into the system at a consumer just on Twitter, what do you think their cumulative content push is like when you bring all of the social media channels together? I’m an unabashed fan of social media marketing and the ability for brands to have these amazing direct relationships with consumers, but it is data points like this one from Marketing Charts that makes me wonder how sustainable this model is in a world where these channels are so personal. It just doesn’t make sense. No matter how much love an individual has for a brand, these numbers feel alarmingly large.
Even if the 30 tweets are quality, at what point does the quality not matter because of the sheer volume of output?
photo credit: mkhmarketing via photopin cc
At what point do you think a brand should cut back on the amount of social media sharing? Is it different for each social network? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!
.
Mitch Joel: President, Twist Image & author of Six Pixels of Separation – an award-winning Digital Marketing and Communications agency. In 2008, Mitch was named Canada’s Most Influential Male in Social Media, one of the top 100 online marketers in the world, and was awarded the highly-prestigious Canada’s Top 40 Under 40. His first book, Six Pixels of Separation (published by Grand Central Publishing – Hachette Book Group), named after his successful Blog and Podcast is a business and marketing best-seller.
Website: www.twistimage.com | Twitter: @mitchjoel
3 Comments