Tag Archives: statistics

Small Businesses Change Social Media Expectations – eMarketer

The study of US small business found that those that do market via social media primarily use Facebook (82%), and that the most common activities are maintaining a company page on a social network and posting status updates or links to interesting content. About half of businesses that used social media also monitored brand chatter on social networks.

As small businesses have gained experience with social media, some have realized their expectations for the channel did not line up with the reality of the social web. As the wider marketing world begins to look at social as more of a loyalty channel than one for acquisition, small businesses are also finding that their hopes for spreading brand awareness and attracting new customers have not been fully met. By contrast, somewhat fewer small businesses had expected to use social media as an engagement channel, but nearly two-thirds have had success in that area.

Performance of Social Media Tactics, June 2010 (% of US small businesses)

The most common business objectives small businesses have achieved through social media marketing tell a similar story: Customers are connecting with companies through sites like Facebook and LinkedIn, but relatively few sales leads have been received through the sites.

Business Objectives Achieved via Social Media, June 2010 (% of US small businesses*)

Small businesses have found other frustrations as well. Many say their efforts take up more time than they had expected, although that percentage dropped from 50% to 43% between December 2009 and June 2010, suggesting companies are being more realistic about what’s involved in social campaigns. At the same time, however, the percentage saying their business had been criticized online nearly doubled, reaching 29%. Still, just a tiny 1% of small businesses said their image was hurt more than it was helped by social media—a number that’s also down, from 6% in December

Online lead generation continues to grow | Econsultancy

More companies are seeing the benefits of online lead generation (OLG), with budgets rising, and a greater proportion of offline sales coming from online activity. 

The proportion of companies who are generating leads online with the intention of converting them offline has increased from 70% last year to 81% this year, while on average OLG is responsible for 42% of total sales, up from 40% last year. 

These are some of the findings from Econsultancy’s Online Lead Generation Report 2010 (B2C), produced in association with Clash Media. More highlights from the report after the jump…

Online lead generation methods used

Search engine optimisation (SEO) is still the most widely used channel for generating leads online, and this has continued to grow, with the percentage using search engine optimisation up by 13% to 90% this year.

Email marketing (to in-house lists) is the second most widely used online lead generation method, up from 74% last year to 83% this year, followed by PPC on 73%. 

olg5

Naturally, given the ubiquity of the subject, there has been a big increase in the use of social media for OLG. 66% of companies surveyed are using this channel to generate consumer leads, compared to 40% last year.

There has also been an increase in the use of rich media and video, while RSS is the only method on the wane, down 2% on 2009. 

OLG3

Lead generation budgets

The increasing importance of OLG is reflected in the allocation of budgets. The number of companies who say that OLG budgets have gone up in the last year has increased from 59% last year to 65% this year. This compares to 31% of respondents who say that offline lead generation budgets have increased.

38% of companies surveyed are now spending at least £100,000 annually on online lead generation. Last year, only 21% of companies surveyed said they were spending this amount or more.

The proportion of lead generation budgets targeted online has dropped slightly from last year’s survey, though still roughly the same:

OLG4

Measurement

Measuring the effectiveness of online lead generation is an on-going problem, with only 32% saying they are either “excellent” (8%) or “good” (24%) at this. There are still significant numbers of advertisers who say they are only “average” (22%), “poor” (17%) or “very poor” (3%). There has not been any significant improvement since 2009.

How online leads are converted 

Advertisers are most likely to convert online leads through email and online transactions (85%) and telephone calls (67%), followed by social media (23%) and stores (16%). 

olg6

Since last year there has been a significant increase in the proportion of respondents using these email and telephone for lead conversion, by 10% and 9% respectively

CHART OF THE DAY: Twitter’s Path To 33 Billion Tweets Per Year

Last night, Twitter said users send out 90 million tweets on a daily basis, up 450% compared to the year before. Annualized, that’s almost 33 billion tweets.

Below, we’ve annotated Twitter’s tweet growth. For all you techsters out there, take note. Oprah is a much bigger deal than South by Southwest.

chart of the day twitter tweets

 

Graph of top 1000 websites captures ‘long tail’ of the internet

Pingdom graph shows you need at least 22m visitors per month to break into Top 100 websites

Pingdom graph and the remarkable ‘long tail’ of the top 100 websites

Using data from Google’s top 1000 sites list, Royal Pingdom have put together this fascinating graphic showing just what it takes to make it to the top of the internet pile.

The graphic above shows that to break into the totemic top 100, your website needs to be pulling in a not inconsiderable 22m unique visitors a month. Take those 22m visitors, add at least another 78m and your website will sit pretty in the top 13.

Pingdom graph shows you need at least 22m visitors per month to break into Top 1000 websites

At least 3.8m unique visitors per month will currently see your website into the top 1000 – a couple million more could see you jump 250 places

Altogether, the top 10 websites attract 2.78bn visitors per month – that’s 42% of all visitors to the top 100. See the full list on Royal Pingdom .

Top 1000 websites by monthly unique visitors

1. Facebook.com – 540m
10. Mozilla.com – 110m
25. Hotmail.com – 60m
50. Sogou.com – 37m
100. Thepiratebay.com – 21m
200. Typepad.com – 13m
300. Ourtoolbar.com – 9.8m
400. Zhaopin.com – 8.1m
500. The2009.cn – 6.8m
750. Marriott.com – 5m
1000. Trialpay.com – 3.8m