This document is the 2014 report on the state of corporate social media from Useful Social Media. It surveys over 500 corporate social media executives on topics like team size, budget, platform usage, and goals. Key findings include:
- Social media team sizes are decreasing, suggesting social may be maturing but also that resources are declining.
- Social teams still focus on execution over training others or measuring impact.
- Marketing and communications remain top uses, while customer service and commerce lag.
- Platform usage continues rising for Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and LinkedIn but growth is slowing overall.
1. THE STATE OF
CORPORATE
SOCIAL MEDIA
2014#STATEOFCSM
Written by
Nick Johnson,
Founder, Useful Social Media
@gnjohnson
Join the community on:
@usefulsocial
facebook.com/usefulsocialmedia
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newsletter at www.usefulsocialmedia.com
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CONTENTS
The State of Corporate Social Media 2014:
Is corporate social media maturing -
or stagnating? 3
1 A note on our respondents 4
2 Is the social media team shrinking? 5
3 What does a social team do? 8
4 What do you use social media for? 11
5 The Popularity of Social Platforms 16
6 Resources are constrained 18
7 Measuring social’s impact 19
8 Conclusions 23
9 24
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IS CORPORATE
SOCIAL MEDIA
MATURING -
OR STAGNATING?
WELCOME TO THE FOURTH ANNUAL STATE OF
CORPORATE SOCIAL MEDIA REPORT. EVERY YEAR,
WE REACH OUT TO THE SOCIAL MEDIA COMMUNITY
IN HOUSE AT LARGE CORPORATIONS AND TAKE
THE TEMPERATURE OF SOCIAL ADOPTION AND USE
AROUND THE WORLD.
We ask them about:
01. Budgets and resourcing for social: How are budgets changing? Are more
people working on social? Is social getting more clout in the boardroom
02. Social’s use: How do companies leverage social? Is social being
embedded across multiple departments - or is still a ‘wart’ on the side of
your business? How will that use change over the next year?
03. Measurement: Are we getting better at understanding the impact of
social media on business?
This year, we appear to have reached something of a fork in the road. Over
use was scaling up rapidly across businesses around the world.
This year, the picture is more nuanced:
01. Social media team size is reducing: Is this evidence that social is
maturing, and we’re moving towards a hub and spoke model where
social is embedded across many roles, and there’s no need for a large
central team to ‘do social’ for the whole business - or is it evidence that
02. Fewer budgets are increasing: Does this signify that the appetite to scale
up social use still further is reducing, or does it imply that the major
spends on ‘social infrastructure’ - tech adoption, hiring, development -
have been made?
03. Less KPIs are being measured: Does this mean that companies are less
interested in measurement, or simply that people are zoning in on the
metrics that matter most to them?
And we’ll conclude with our own takeaways from the data in chapter 8.
Of course, you’re free to draw your own conclusions - our full dataset is
available here
Happy reading!
Nick Johnson
Founder
Useful Social Media
@gnjohnson
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CHAPTER 1: A
NOTE ON OUR
RESPONDENTS
If we’re going to start making broad statements on the future of corporate social
media, we will of course have to prove we have the evidence to back it up. We’re
2014 - is a major source of feedback from the social media community. Over 1,000
executives shared their views with us via a complex and in-depth survey.
Straight from the horse’s mouth
below are drawn solely from those people (500+) who identify themselves as working
for ‘brands, end users and corporations’ - as opposed to the agency/consultancy
Of the 516 ‘corporate’ executives we have polled, 36% work for a B2B company, 23%
for a B2C, and 42% for a company with some B2B and B2C elements.
What regions are you responsible for?
16%
17%
17%
21%
28%
32%
47%
UNITED KINGDOM
MAINLAND EUROPE
ASIA
AUSTRALASIA
NORTH AMERICA
Geographically Diverse
To ensure our report would include a wide range of social media activity analysis
business operations in all major economic regions of the world.
Our focus on geographical areas of responsibility, not the location of the respondent,
senior level, with responsibilities for larger geographical swathes than one country.
corporate social media is managed as a global concern.
The vast majority of our respondents are located in the USA and Canada with a
breakdown of 43.9% responsible for the East coast, 39.8% for the West coast, and
39.6% for the rest of the country.
Mainland Europe contributed 25.9% of respondents, and the UK 20.3%. We were
In context - incorporating data back to 2011
Data means nothing in isolation. Some of our key points of context for the 2014 State
We’ll use this data to show you a more nuanced series of trends, as opposed to brief
snapshots. The goal is to provide you with the data to chart the evolution – and
possible future – of your role, and insight into the journey your company has embarked
on to embed social across all elements of business
Full Data Set
One can see the entire data set here
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CHAPTER 2: IS
THE SOCIAL MEDIA
TEAM SHRINKING?
One of the major barometers of social’s success within a business is how much
resource is being assigned to it. The following charts and analysis will attempt to
draw conclusions based on corporate responses to questions on team size and
organisational structure.
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0% 2012 2013 2014
YES
companies is becoming more common. We’ve had a growth of 16% in ‘social media
teams’ within businesses over the last two years - not major, but certainly statistically
their business.
Of course, it’s worth highlighting here the commonly accepted path to ‘social media
maturity’ within businesses - proposed most forcefully by Jeremiah Owyang.
Owyang argues that social media teams are changing, to recognise the potential
impact of social across “every single customer touchpoint both in and outside of the
enterprise”. Companies have moved away from social as an addition to the typical
This evolution means that “Most commonly, companies launch a centralized cross
functional group (often known as a Center of Excellence) in order to serve the various
business units…[where] strategic decisions are still often made in corporate in the hub,
with some guidance from the business units in the spokes”.
Owyang suggests hub and spoke models - including the centralized ‘social media team’
and that eventually we’ll move towards a ‘holistic’ model - that “over time, social media
will permeate all areas of the corporation and we should expect that the once centralized
groups will slowly fade into the background as an operational status quo”. Eventually,
‘using social media’ will be an expectation on anyone whose job involves customers (a
broad group!) - and the need for a large, centralised, social media team will decrease.
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THOSE DOING THE MINIMUM IS INCREASING
More and more companies (73%) have at least one person working exclusively on
social media within a business. That’s up from 59% in 2011 - a 24% increase.
Yet that increase does not follow at higher adoption rates - while the number of
companies with one social media executive is growing, the number with more than one
is not keeping pace - with only a 13% increase (from 38% to 43%) over the last four
years. Does this suggest that adoption is rather more cautious and shallow than has
otherwise been assumed?
How many people work exclusively on social for your company
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0% 2011 2012 2013 2014
0
1
6+
BUT TEAM SIZE OVERALL IS SHRINKING
Our next chart would suggest this may indeed be the case.
How many have some requirement to do social engagement as part of
their role?
40%
30%
20%
10%
0% 2011 2012 2013 2014
0
1
6+
Were we to see Owyang’s hypothesis made real, we’d assume that over time,
an increasing number of executives within business would have at least some
responsibility to use social media.
Actually, the opposite is the case. The number of companies with four or more people
using social as part of their role has shrunk year on year since 2011.
of the ‘Hub and Spoke’ model - but that, far more simply (and worryingly), the amount
of resource given over to social is decreasing.
businesses around the world.
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In this chapter, we’ll look in a little more detail at the role of the social media executive
within a business. Harking back to the model of social adoption proposed on the
previous page, one would assume that as social reaches maturity, fewer social media
the hub, for the spokes to execute.
Executing social media strategy
65%
1%
1%
6%
27%
STRONGLY AGREE
AGREE
NEUTRAL
DISAGREE
STRONGLY DISAGREE
feel strongly that the social media team’s role is to actually execute, not plan and co-
ordinate for others.
Training Employees to use Social
42%
2%
13%
8%
35%
STRONGLY AGREE
AGREE
NEUTRAL
DISAGREE
STRONGLY DISAGREE
social media team should be training others internally to use social, a full 25% actually
disagree with that.
CHAPTER 3: WHAT
DOES A SOCIAL
TEAM DO?
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42%
2%
15%
9%
32%
STRONGLY AGREE
AGREE
NEUTRAL
DISAGREE
STRONGLY DISAGREE
Running directly contrary to the hub and spoke hypothesis, 58% of respondents do
the context of the prevailing wisdom on social’s adoption across companies - and the
hope that we’re maturing, not stagnating, that’s deeply worrying.
It certainly lends more credence to the view that the hub and spoke organisational
evolution - at least to the extent Owyang would expect - isn’t happening. We think it’s
fair to say that the social media community would have assumed that we’re beyond
the point where we have a silo’d team of social media practitioners whose role is to
tweet about the work other people are doing by now.
Tracking social media impact and reporting internally
47%
11%
4%1%
36%
STRONGLY AGREE
AGREE
NEUTRAL
DISAGREE
STRONGLY DISAGREE
the impact and return of social. Less than half of respondents feel strongly that this is
a critical part of their role. As will become clear in later pages, this is perhaps evidence
of the social media executive shooting themselves in the foot.
In order to see social advance, we need to see measurable results. This somewhat
corporate social media.
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Has social changed your company internally?
YES
60%
70%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0% 2013 2014
72%
61%
This chart certainly seems to imply that social is fundamentally changing the way a
company works - as one would assume if, as Owyang argues, social will become a part
of pretty much every role in business.
An 18% increase - to 72% of corporate respondents - shows that social has had real,
new marketing channel’
This increase seems to lend strong weight to the argument that social has moved
company.
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CHAPTER 4: WHAT
DO YOU USE SOCIAL
MEDIA FOR?
Social media use 2012 - 2014
20142012 2013
EMPLOYMENTENGAGEMENT
CUSTOMERSERVICE
MARKETING
CUSTOMERINSIGHT
COMMERCE
PRODUCTDEVELOPMENT
COMMUNICATIONS10%
20%
30%
40%
60%
50%
70%
80%
0%
More than half of all companies now use social media for:
MARKETING COMMUNICATIONS CUSTOMER
SERVICE
REPUTATION
MANAGEMENT &
CRISIS CONTROL
CUSTOMER
INSIGHT
89% 86% 58% 59% 57%
That’s a big shift from 2012, when the majority of companies simply focused on social’s
‘additional channel’ potential - and thus marketing and communications. Companies
have begun to appreciate that social, used well, can impact on pretty much every area
of corporate operations.
At the same time, certain potential applications of social are still underutilised -
commerce being the most glaring missed opportunity (just 25% of respondents),
though product development (21%) and employee engagement (37%) are also worth
mentioning.
Taking the data holistically, one obvious point is that the level of change has reduced
dramatically. Between 2012 and 2013, there were huge jumps in the adoption rate of
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Getting more granular - what’s most important?
33%
28%
23%
38%
9%
32%
VERY IMPORTANT
IMPORTANT
SOMEWHAT
NOT IMPORTANT
Marketing
Customer Insight
Reputation
Preservation &
Crisis Response
Employment
Engagement
Product
Development
Commerce
Customer Service
Communications
and Brand
62%
74%
6% 4%
3% 2%
29%
20%
31%
35%
21%
31%
21%
23%
7% 11%
17%
42%
12%
29%
20%
39% 37%
37%
8%
19%
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CHAPTER 4: WHAT
DO YOU USE SOCIAL
MEDIA FOR?
The overwhelming response to this series of charts is...being underwhelmed.
We’re still seeing that major priorities are marketing and communications (to a
surprising extent with communications, which dominates), and the more ‘advanced’
social media applications (customer insights/service and commerce) are some way
functions.
important’, while a worrying 11% say the same about customer service.
product development isn’t important (there are only so many companies for which this
understanding, given the fact that ‘customer centricity’ is pretty much the hottest
buzzword out there at the moment.
More surprising still is the fact that a frankly enormous 29% of corporate executives
say that using social media for employee engagement is unimportant. While the
makeup of a company’s ‘customers’ - and thus the utility of social media in engaging
employees, and the potential for social to engage them, keep them updated, conduct
training, share company news, highlight positive stories and surface expertise is surely
undeniable.
On the positive side, the vast majority of respondents see the importance of applying
social to all of these functions. Even the somewhat specialised application of social for
product development has 63% of respondents calling it at least somewhat important.
with both the lack of organisational development to deliver social adoption detailed
potential rather more fully (we’ll discuss in chapter 6).
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CHAPTER 5: THE
POPULARITY OF
SOCIAL PLATFORMS
Unsurprisingly, usage of the ‘core four’ social platforms (Twitter, Facebook, YouTube
and LinkedIn) shows a constant upward curve.
Indeed, the vast majority of social platforms are seeing greater adoption within large
business. Of course, the barrier to entry for using Google+ is rather lower than the
barrier to entry for “Using social for product development”. Especially if you simply
The changing popularity of social platforms
FACEBOOK
GOOGLE+
YOUTUBE
TUMBLR
LINKEDIN
BLOG
FOURSQUARE
FLICKR
XING
PINTEREST
INSTAGRAM
VINE
TWITTER
GOWALLA
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0% 2012 2013 2014
01. Twitter has just overtaken Facebook in terms of usage by large brands
(92% versus 90%)
02.
over the last year - again backing up our observation that social adoption
is slowing
A few other issues:
01. Google will be heartened to note that Google+ has the strongest growth
rate amongst marketers
02. Pinterest and Instagram are rocketing up the list
03. Adoption of social platforms appears to be putting paid to corporate
blog use
04. Sympathy for the marketer - this is but a tiny selection of the social
platforms a company could choose to use, but in this short three year
three others. The pace of change is terrifying.
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What’s the most useful social network for marketing?
FACEBOOK
YOUTUBE
LINKEDIN
BLOg
TWITTER
40%
30%
20%
10%
0% 2012 2013 2014
honorable mentions should go to Google+ with 1% in 2013, and Pinterest and
Instagram with 1% in 2014).
Things to note:
01. Regardless of whether it has been ovetaken by Twitter in terms of
corporate usage, Facebook is still a clear number one in terms of utility
for business - with 39% of respondents calling it the most useful social
network
02. Twitter is growing fast though - improving 47% to 25% over the last two
years
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CHAPTER 6:
RESOURCES ARE
CONSTRAINED
Here’s some more fairly emphatic evidence that the ‘buzz’ around corporate
social is decreasing.
Will your social media budget increase next year?
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
0%
20142011 2012 2013
WON’T SAY
NO
YES
The number of companies who see their social media budget increasing
has dropped 47% over the last four years. In 2014, only 41% of enterprise
respondents can see their social media budget increasing over the next year.
That’s an alarming drop.
Indeed, when one looks more closely at that 41% who do see their budget
increasing, it only adds to the concern. Major increases are a thing of the
past - with 19% expecting an increase of less than 5%, and the majority of
respondents (53%) feeling their budgets will increase by less than 25%.
By what percentage will your social media budget grow this year?
5%
10%
15%
20% OVER100%
20142012 2013
Of course, there are caveats. First and most obvious, both charts relate to
growth. We’ve not asked whether budgets will actually shrink over the next
year.
Second, just because budget growth is slowing, it doesn’t necessarily mean
that social adoption is, too. Initial ‘infrastructure’ costs may have passed and
we’ve moved into a slower pace of spending.
However, it seems undeniable that the pace of change is slowing, and that
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CHAPTER 7:
MEASURING
SOCIAL’S IMPACT
First, it’s worth pointing out that social is still absolutely critical to marketers.
A full 94% of businesses say that social’s importance for marketing is
growing this year. That’s a faster pace of growth than ever before.
Are you fully leveraging social’s power?
YES
NO
83%
17%
And yet, it seems fairly clear that our respondents know there is far more to
which social is used in their company - and know there is more to do.
Is social media’s importance to marketing growing?
201420122011 2013
70%
80%
90%
SO WHAT DO COMPANIES EXPECT THEY’LL
NEED TO DO MORE OF?
While understanding that companies tend to be rather optimistic regarding
their future plans for social adoption, there are still some interesting trends
to draw from the chart heading this chapter:
01. The biggest jumps are with the smallest issues. Product development
still to only a minority of companies will use social for this
02. Marketing and communications are still unrivalled at the top of the list
03. Customer insight is growing fast - which chimes with the broader growth
of ‘customer-centric’ focus across large corporations
04. Surprisingly few companies are using social to deliver enhanced
employee engagement
This doesn’t sit well with a softening appetite for budget increases, and a
stagnation in terms of social media team growth.
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How will your use of social change this year?
10%
20%
30%
60%
40%
70%
50%
80%
Marketing
ReputationPreservation
andCrisisResponse
CustomerService
EmployeeEngagement
CommunicationsandBrand
ProductDevelopment
CustomerInsight
Commerce
START OF 2014
END OF 2014
MEASUREMENT: WHAT KPIS DO CORPORATIONS
TRACK?
What are the top three KPIs you track?
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
Followers/Fans/GroupSize
Conversiontoleads
Conversiontosales
Sentiment
Timespentonsite
%ofactivemembers/followers/fans
Reach
Klout
Sharing
Shareofconversationvscompetitors
Satisfaction
#ofevangelists/ambassadors
Revenueperfollower/lead/customer
20142012 2013
that corporates appear to be measuring less year on year. The vast majority
of KPIs we highlight above have experienced a drop in popularity over the
last few years.
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Of course, this could - as with so much - be taken in one of two ways. Is it the
case that executives are measuring less because social is stagnating - and
with less resource, there’s less time to measure impact? Or is it because as
the ones that matter?
A deeper dive certainly lends credence to the latter point of view. The
metrics experiencing growth tend to be the more ‘advanced’ versions. The
tracking of ‘engagement’ has jumped 32% - to 42% - in the last two years.
Sentiment tracking has grown even faster over the last year - jumping 38% -
though admittedly from a very low base.
However, we’re seeing big drops for previously very popular metrics.
Conversion to sales - echoing the paucity of focus on commerce in terms of
key goals for 2014 - has dropped by 38%. Brand ambassador tracking has
dropped by 58%.
from this table, two are so simplistic as to verge on useless. For 47% brands
still to say ‘number of followers’ is one of their top three metrics is deeply
to understand - but still surely misleading and simplistic in an age where
increasing amounts of content is hosted on platforms not owned by brands
themselves.
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0% 20122012 2013 2014
YES
CAN YOU MEASURE IMPACT ACCURATELY?
It’s unsurprising, therefore, that there’s been little or no change in a
company’s ability to track the impact of their social media use.
assess the impact of social media. There has been no real change. Only 34%
social media.
budgets, shrinking teams, and increasing talk of stagnation become rather
more explicable.
And when we look at social ROI tracking, the picture is no better. Only 50%
of companies even attempt to measure this fundamental metric.
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Do you measure social’s ROI?
2012 2013 2014
YES WE MEASURE
30%
40%
50%
40%
44%
50%
Unfortunately, the social media space is populated with twee job titles like
‘ninja’, ‘guru’ and ‘rock star’. This immature approach to job titles appears to
have spread to an equally immature approach to measurement. Social is full
of ‘alternatives’ to ROI - pushed by consultants with a need to convince their
clients they know what they’re talking about.
•
• Return on Engagement
• Return on Relationship
They’re very popular. And they’re almost reassuring for a social media
executive struggling to assign a dollar value to their work.
Unfortunately, they’re responsible for the slowing pace of evolution in social
- for shrinking teams, slowing budget growth, and inability to leverage the
full power of social across a business.
convinced about social media’s value.
Is your C-suite convinced of social’s value?
27%
23%
50%
NO
I DON’T KNOW
YES
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
There’s much wringing of hands about this in the social media community.
But given the failure to progress in terms of measurement, it’s not
altogether surprising.
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CONCLUSIONS There are two ways one could interpret the data we’ve shared in this report.
Either social media within companies is beginning to mature, and the drive
to leverage social to its full extent is undiminished. Or, social media within
companies is stagnating, and there’s an increasing lack of resources available
to those within business to move forward to full leverage social’s potential.
On the positive side:
• 72% of executives say that social media has impacted on their internal
organisation - that’s a deep level of impact, and would be impossible were
social simply an ‘addition’ to the normal way of doing business
• Social has already begun to deeply impact on customer service, customer
insights, employee engagement - and even product development.
• Importantly, our respondents say that this trend will continue over the
next 12 months - witness the increasing number of respondents saying
that social will impact on multiple customer departments over the next
year
• A huge 83% of respondents recognise we’re not fully leveraging social’s
potential yet
But on the negative side:
• There are fewer and fewer executives working on social - either exclusively
or as part of their job role
• Social’s not getting any higher up the organisation - having reached a glass
ceiling in reporting to the head of marketing
•
strategy
• More and more say social budgets will not increase
• There has been little to no progress in measuring social impact
• Only half of corporate boards buy in to social
Why?
Because executives can’t prove they’re making progress if they can’t track
impact accurately. And they can’t.
There’s the will, but not the resource. Social has hit a glass ceiling - it can’t
opportunities curtailed. All this talk about social being about ‘ROE’ and
‘ROR’ creates a series of tweetable soundbites, but gets short shrift in a
boardroom looking for real business impacts they can understand.
For social to fully leverage its potential across business, the social media
executive must begin to get a handle on measurement.
It is only with the successful tracking of impacts - using metrics the CFO and
CEO can understand - that the social media advocates within a business will
get the buy-in they need to succeed.
And that’s evidently the challenge for the coming year.
That’s why it’s worth talking to your
PEERS, who share the same challenges
and have ideas on how to convince the
boardroom of the true value of social.
unique opportunity to talk over all these
critical issues.
For more information on all of our
upcoming events visit:
www.usefulsocialmedia.com/events
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CORPORATE
FEEDBACK ON OUR
FINDINGS
If 2013 was the year of ramping up of social media, 2014 has been the year of
integration. Rather than social media being thought of separately it’s slowly
progressing to being a key component across multiple functions. Companies,
both B2C and B2B, are getting that it can no longer be in its own world or
being an afterthought. Social has to line up with what companies are doing
elsewhere as well as have the ability to escalate concerns internally across
even the most complex of organizations. If you can’t do that, you’re already
behind.
Now that the vast majority of companies are in social, and multiple platforms
at that, just having a presence isn’t enough. Organizations are appreciating
that social touches all key aspects of the business – attracting new talent,
retaining your customers, and celebrating your organization and its
employees for the little wins along the way.
At the end of the day, your customers don’t care how you’re organized –
metrics are in social based on senior mandates within your company. No.
Your customers care that you’re listening, responding, and preferably acting.
This is why the organizations that are standing out in social are learning that
a siloed approach just doesn’t work.
Is social stagnating? I dare say no. It’s hard for me to even put those two
words together in one sentence. Those massive spikes of changes though are
becoming less the norm, but I would not say that it is stagnating. Platforms
continue to evolve. With constant changes on these networks layered on
with paid media, there are too many variables for anything to become too
set in stone.
I’m of the mindset that social has not matured (past tense) but that it is
beginning to mature. Companies are no longer doing social for social’s sake.
a corporate imperative to be present in social. With increased requests for
and want more data to back up these requests. Now it’s understanding the
value, what’s working (and, more importantly, why) and how it’s driving
corporate business goals. It is no longer acceptable to simply track trend
lines on all social variables but instead understanding what really matters to
valuable insights to keep in mind – to see where your organization falls in the
mix and where, perhaps, some changes are in order or even in store in the
year ahead.
Lara Ruth
Vice President, Content and Social
Citibank North America