4 Social Media Reports That Will Boost Your Audience Engagement
In the early days of social media marketing, the number one goal for businesses
was to amass huge followings, and for good reason. It was a time when
there was no limit to organic post reach, and the companies with the
largest social audiences benefited the most with totally free
advertising.
Unfortunately for those early adopters, the networks have matured,
the business models have grown and nowadays brands are lucky if even a
fraction of their social following see their posts. That’s why marketers
need to completely rethink the way they approach social as an organic
channel.
Where before social marketing was all about building a giant
audience, today social marketing is about providing quality, relevant
content to your audience so that you can engage with them as individuals
and attract them as a customer. But in order to really provide your
social audience with engaging content, you need to figure out who they
are. This can be done with some of the reports available online.
This post will cover how to use data to find your perfect social
audience, and how to look at reports on past performance to find out
which content resonates with your audience.
Who are the people that are interacting with you on social media?
There’s a chance that you or your community managers can name some of
the top influencers within your social following, but who is your
average reader? One way to get a tremendous increase in social
engagement is to answer this question, and create content that resonates
with those individuals. Here are some of the reports available to you
that can be used to figure out just who your average social engager is.
Let’s start with Facebook. Facebook has a plethora of information
on your fans and followers. One way to access that information is
through the Facebook Insights tab found on your brand’s homepage.
If this is your first time using this tool, take a look around at
some of the great data at hand. Otherwise, navigate over to the People
tab to start pulling data on your fans and followers.
The above screenshot is looking more specifically at the People
Engaged section. It’s better to look at People Engaged since this shows
the demographics of the people who are more inclined to actually engage
with your social posts.
The first data you’ll see breaks down the various ages and genders
of the people who are engaging with your Facebook posts. For example,
the graph below shows that of all the people interacting with Sprout
Social, 21% are women ages 25-34.
Various age groups and genders are likely to interact with content
differently. That’s why it’s a key advantage to figure out your main
audience and create posts catered to their interests.
Similar to Facebook, Twitter offers audience insights within its
analytics dashboard. After you access your analytics page, navigate to
the tab addressing your Followers.
Assuming you have enough followers, this tab has information on
their gender, income, education and more, which will help you create
content on Twitter that this audience is more likely to interact with.
However, the tab doesn’t include age data. One option is to use Sprout’s
Twitter Analytics.
Followerwonk is a Twitter tool created by the software company Moz.
If you have access to the tool, choose the Analyze tab from your
dashboard.
From here you can enter any Twitter handle and scan their
followers. The data provided is similar to Twitter’s, but the one we’re
most interested in for creating demographic-driven content is the gender
section.
followerwonk-analyze-data
Most of the networks don’t provide as robust data as Facebook and
Twitter, but never fear: Google always has your back. Access your
account and navigate to Audience > Demographics > Overview.
After that, you need to +Add Segment, that looks at the Traffic
Sources you’re interested in finding demographics for, like Pinterest.
add-segment-traffic-sources-google-analytics
Location-based geo–targeting is a very powerful tool for social
media marketers. It’s possible for you to pull reports to find some of
your most engaged cities, states or countries, and then write and
distribute topical content to those locations for better response. For
instance, creating a post for a specific city could call out the
hometown sports team.
Back on the Facebook Page Insights report, just a little below the
age and gender information, you’ll find data on where the people engaged
with your page are located.
So the company in the example above could see some increased
engagement if they targeted a post to their Chicago audience that called
out The Cubs (or the White Sox if that’s what you’re into…).
You’ll find location information when you access your Twitter
Analytics the same way as in the previous report, but this time you’ll
need to navigate over to the second tab.
In the right column you’ll find information provided by Twitter on both the country and region your followers are in.
Followerwonk preserves your reports for 60 days, so you should be
able to find the same presentation you used when looking at the
Demographics report. Followerwonk actually puts your followers’ location
data in an interactive map.
followerwonk-demographics
Similar to the Demographics Reports, if you can’t find location
data for the other networks look to Google Analytics. Access your
account and navigate through
Audience > Geo > Location.
After you create the custom segment looking at the social source,
Google provides data on users by country, city, continent and
subcontinent.
Now that we know who our audience is, it’s a good idea to think
about the content that they like. One way to do that is to look at your
past social media performance to see which of your posts received good
engagement, then use that information to dictate your strategy moving
forward. A few of the platforms that we’ve mentioned so far have the
ability to analyze old posts for performance, but I want to focus on two
that do a great job.
Just like with the other reports, you’ll need to navigate to the
Analyze tab of your dashboard. The difference this time is that instead
of choosing to “analyze their followers’ you want to choose ‘analyze
their tweets’.
Followerwonk uses Retweets as the main metric for deciding what
makes the most important Tweet. In the example above I chose to look at
Social Media Examiner. Followerwonk shows that this is their most
important Tweet over the time period.
Social Media Examiner can look at this and decide that if they
create more fun content that resonates with social media managers,
they’ll see more engagement.
Sprout Social is a social media management platform that also gives you analytics on your past social media performance.
Sprout has a number of key performance indicators (KPIs) that you
can look at to find out which of your pieces of content perform well.
You can then study those posts so that they can inform your content
strategy moving forward.
Once you’ve figured out who to target and what to post, the next
question on your mind should be “when to post.” And you wouldn’t be the
only one, either. This Google Trends graph shows just how fascinated
people are with finding the perfect time for posting.
However, the best time to post for one brand may not be the best
time for another. That’s why you should look at these reports to find
your unique perfect post time.
Access your Facebook Page Insights again, and go to the Posts tab.
This is where you’ll find additional information on your fans, such as
when they’re online.
Although this doesn’t say when you get the most engagement, it does
have information on the days of the week and hours of the day when your
fans are most likely to be online. Posting content at these peak days
and hours should lead to an increase in your engagement.
Unfortunately, Facebook is one of the only networks out there that
provides data on when your users are accessing the site. However, you
can always pull data manually to look at which days are performing best.
Or try talking to your community manager; most of them have a good idea
of which days and times get great response. If all else fails, try a
tool like Sprout Social that automatically post your social messages at
the time that will yield the most audience engagement.
No two brands have an identical social media following, so it
really doesn’t make much sense to use a one-size-fits-all content
strategy. Taking the time to analyze your unique social media audience
allows you to develop a content strategy that caters to them, which will
set you leagues above the competition.
0 comments: