Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Only 37% of Marketers believe Their Facebook Advertising is successful [Study]

Social Media Examiner has released the 2013 Social Media Marketing Industry statement. Of all the questions they posed to marketers this year, the thing that stands out the most is not how many businesses are using social media, but how many aren't actually tracking how effective their social media marketing actually is.

Of those who participated in the survey, 97 percent said they were using social media for their businesses and 86 percent considered it to be an significant part of their marketing efforts.

Moving onto Facebook specially, it isn't surprising that 92 percent were using Facebook as part of their social media efforts and that 49 percent considered Facebook to be their most essential social media platform.

But what is surprising is the actuality that only 37 percent of marketers think their Facebook advertising is successful. That is a pretty astonishing number. Is this a metric that shows Facebook marketing isn't efficient, or is it really to do with the fact marketers aren't properly tracking those Facebook efforts into ROI?

facebook advertising


The report also reveals that larger businesses were much more likely to agree that Facebook was effective, but this might also be from a number of factors, such as higher brand awareness overall and targeted traffic from their company brand site to their Facebook page. For smaller businesses and lesser-known brands, Facebook marketing might definitely seem to have a lesser impact without a well-known and familiar brand behind it.


Another interesting factor is the relationship among the amount of experience using social media and the amount of time spent marketers spend on their social media efforts. Fifty percent of those with less than 12 months experience with social media are spending 5 or fewer hours on social media, while for those who have been doing social media for at least two years, 70 percent of those are spending 6 or more hours on their social media efforts each week.


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