Monitoring & Analyzing Social Media

With over 1.5 billion conversations stored, can you afford not to listen?

Mar 4, 2009

Knowledge, Power & Social Media

Power is the ability to act or capacity to perform or act effectively. Power is most often used to control or influence. Without a doubt, Social Media has a great deal of power! Social Media is exerting a great deal of influence over traditional marketing, advertising, and communication channels. Social Media has also given a great deal of power to the average consumer as has been demonstrated time and time again. One single individual with a single post or tweet can change an entire company’s product offering, policy, or strategy. Consumers and individuals clearly understand the power of social media and they are not afraid to use it. On the other hand businesses have not gained power from Social Media as quickly as individuals have. Why is that? It is because of knowledge.

Knowledge is defined as awareness or understanding gained through experience, observation, or study. The average consumer doesn’t need to have a great deal of knowledge to take advantage of the power of social media over businesses. All they need to know is ‘I state my case (whether it is valid or not) and if enough people hear or see it then businesses react and I win.’ This Power of Social Media is many voices (consumers) and the influence of one (business).

This formula works for consumers because it does not take much for a consumer to know what triggers a business to act. However, businesses on the other hand have to know the many triggers for the many individual consumers in order to influence them to act. For businesses there are many, many, many more data points to be collected and analyzed.

Knowledge is acquired through analyzing data. When it comes to Social Media this is called “listening”. In words that Marketing Execs and CEOs will understand, this is called Market Research, better put: Market Research on steroids. Instead of surveys or focus groups this is raw, uncensored potentially unsolicited viewpoints of real people. As you listen, you learn how to use Social Media to your advantage. Gaining power when you use what you have learned from listening.

What can you learn through listening to Social Media? Businesses can learn how to select profitable new markets to enter, create a “Blue Ocean.” Through Social Media, businesses can learn how to select and attract the customers who best match their organization. Businesses can also reduce the risk and severity of bad customer service claims. These are just a few of the many things that businesses can learn from listening to Social media. The next step is to put these learnings to use.

So to harness the power of Social Media you need to understand that many voices to become the influencer. For businesses this means that you have to get many voices to influence others that you feel are worth doing business with. To do this you must listen, learn and act. Contrary to popular belief, knowledge is not power. Power is the wise use of knowledge!

Techrigy + ManoByte = Power

Byte or get bitten!

Kevin Dean

kdean

Kevin’s company ManoByte is a Social Media Analytics consultancy. The company was established in 2007 specifically with the mission of helping businesses understand how to use Social Media data effectively to make better business decision when it comes to attracting and retaining customers. The Name ManoByte was inspired by Kevin’s love of diving, “Mano” being the Hawaiian word for Shark.

Twitter: @manobyte

  1. Kevin,
    Very well written post. As you mentioned, Social Media has given great power to the average consumer, and this trend is going nowhere. If people, businesses do not recognize this, they will most likely become extinct.

    Twitter Me: TyDowning

  1. While it’s true that measuring is important (I measure relentlessly!), businesses need to consider the soft side of social media analytics.

    Left-brain corporate executives often focus on a linear process of measurement: process, ROI, etc. While these metrics are key, it’s also important to look at new, right-brain metrics (i.e., Return on Interaction. Return on Engagement. Degree of Innovation.)

    The quality of the “soft” non-linear measurements an organization performs can give them the insights they need to be more creative, interactive, and innovative. It lets them see, feel, and hear the value of creativity in business.

    These new kinds of measurements can indeed be a sensory, right-brain experience — new territory for many struggling companies who are accustomed to an almost totally left-brain approach!

    I applaud your efforts to bring a new kind of thinking to measuring worthwhile business analytics!

    (If ever the global economy needed new, more creative thinking — this would be the time!)

  1. [...] Reply · View jimmyrey: Great article by @manobyte - Knowledge, Power & Social Media - http://blog.techrigy.com/?p=361 2009-03-05 15:11:50 · Reply · View knowncitizen: Also, I mean no offense but if [...]

  1. The faster business’ large & small understand the value of Social Media the better. There is a huge difference between having knowledge of Social Media and having insight! Having the insight requires you to “take action” & apply the knowledge.

  1. [...] out the article Knowledge, Power, Social Media and enjoy! addthis_url = [...]

  1. You are so right about power being the wise use of knowledge. Listen, learn and act is so important. Great article!

  1. [...] pointed out the power of knowledge in his Techrigy post, Knowledge, Power & Social Media . As strategists, we’re still spending a significant amount of each day continuing to learn about [...]

Leave a reply