Is Social Media Marketing Poaching Direct Marketing Results?

For the marketing community, social media is the newest, shiniest toy we’ve had in a while, and most of us are rushing to learn how to utilize each new social platform to our advantage.
Marketing budgets have begun shifting as well. Of the participants in the 2009 PRWeek/MS&L Social Media Survey 31% reported shifting in marketing and communications budgets to add social media to their mix, with 48% of their social budgets being pulled from past advertising budgets, 41% from direct marketing, 29% from media buying, and 18% from PR.
Despite these budget shifts, marketing executives surveyed in the study still say they believe each of the more traditional direct marketing, advertising and PR channels have a greater impact on the success of their company or brand.
So even though marketers believe that direct marketing and other traditional tactics are more effective, they’re willing to divert budget to social media. Is this a rational decision to test new marketing tactics, or are marketers just succumbing to peer pressure and a search for “the next big thing?”
So does social media marketing actually work?
According to the study, 39% of respondents reported that “they are not convinced of the value or ROI” of social media. This may be due to the notorious difficultly of tracking and calculating conversions influenced by social media.
There are many commonly accepted case studies that have shown effective use of social media for business initiatives, including:
- B2C brand building through viral campaigns.
- Brand reference monitoring and proactive customer service/complaint response.
- B2B thought leadership (using outlets such as a blog or social network).
- B2C customer loyalty programs communicated through social media and mobile marketing.
With all of these business uses of social media, questions still remain about their actual revenue generation. As social marketing practices are honed and social tracking tools improve, this may change. However, it may not. Which leads us to…

Ready to test social media marketing for your organization? It's time to create a focused social marketing plan of attack.
The Marketer’s Dilemma, and a Plan of Action
So budgets are limited, and it’s time to start dividing your resources and time. Social marketing may be a winner for your audience and business model, and should probably be tested. So what percentages should you allocate to social marketing initiatives? Here are some suggestions:
1) Keep doing what’s working
If you’re achieving good ROIs for your direct marketing, PR or advertising, don’t reduce your budgets for these channels for something untested.
2) Allocate a test budget for social media
Is social marketing right for your business model and audience? There’s only one way to be sure. Start by allocating a portion of your budget, just as you would any test initiative.
3) Plan and focus your efforts
Before you start, make sure you have clearly identified your objectives and success metrics. Then, instead of trying to engage in every social media platform, choose one or two specific actions, and focus your efforts. Some examples:
- Start a blog, and update it frequently with relevant topics for your audience.
- Set up a free Google Alerts on a specific topic, and monitor and engage in online discussions on the topic.
- Join or start a LinkedIn group on a topic of interest to potential customers.
- Create a simple series of YouTube videos answering common questions of your audience.
- Create a Facebook Fan Page or mobile site and distribute special offers to subscribers (location-specific restaurants and retailer should check out www.ruxter.com).
4) Analyze your results.
Can you attribute new customers to your online interactions? Did traffic and conversion for your website increase? Have you increased foot traffic to your locations? If so, congratulations, it’s time to allocate more budget and increase your social marketing efforts. If not, it’s either time to test other social marketing tactics, or funnel your budget and efforts back to the marketing channels you know work for your business.
So now I want to know, what social media tactics have you tested for your business, and what type of results have you seen?


about 2 months ago
It’s hard to keep your spend on DM the same, but also spend a little on social media, because the two are often thrown together in the same bucket. After all, what is more direct than social media.
I agree wholeheartedly that you shouldn’t venture into social media waters until you have a plan of attack, especially on the tracking side as David suggests.
We’re run direct marketing programs for our clients that commingle snail mail and social media/microsites to bring an element of web tracking to direct mail. It is possible to do both with great success.
Nice post, David.
about 2 months ago
Thanks for the insights Michael. I agree, it’s hard to carve out a budget for something new, especially if you’re seeing returns from your current tactics.
But in order to stay with, or hopefully ahead, of competition, it’s key to keep testing new tactics to see if they’re right for your business and audience. Even if it means a temporary cut back on some proven tactics.
I like your approach to social+offline, and maybe that’s a good perspective for testing new tactics. Instead of pitting a new tactic against a proven tactic, the approach should probably be to integrate the new tactic with the proven, and measure the resulting lift or decrease in response/revenue.
Thoughts?