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Earlier this week I wrote a post discussing the question that so many marketers are asking: How do you monetize social networking?  Well, in this month’s Harvard Business Review, Utpal M. Dholakia, an associate professor of marketing at Rice University’s Jones Graduate School of Business, describes an experiment he did with local Houston-based bakery Dessert Gallery on Facebook.  Yummmmm!!  (Ok, it wasn’t a taste test.)

Professor Dholakia discusses how he used Dessert Gallery customer survey responses to determine whether or not promoting the bakery chain on Facebook caused great interaction with customers and, ultimately, greater income.  According to the article, people who replied to the survey and who had also become Facebook fans with the bakery wound up being Dessert Gallery’s best customers.  “Though they spent the same amount of money per visit, they increased their store visits per month after becoming Facebook fans and generated more positive word of mouth than nonfans. They went to DG 20% more often than nonfans and gave the store the highest share of their overall dining-out dollars. They were the most likely to recommend DG to friends.”

Using a net promoter score, Professor Dholakia was able to identify Dessert Gallery’s most valuable customers.  This gives the bakery the information it needs to know which customers will be the greatest return on their marketing investment.  While the article points out that further surveying is needed to determine whether this response continues and can lead to long-term decision making, it does show how connecting with customers where they can be talking about your product can absolutely lead to greater business success. 

Sure, being on Facebook and any other social network is an investment of time, but it’s also free.  That tastes good to me!

 

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Social Media ClubAn article in today’s Advertising Age discusses how Toyota is turning to its most loyal fans for support during this very tumultuous public relations period.  According to the article, the car manufacturer has been able to grow its Facebook fan base by more than 10 percent since January.  Toyota has dedicated six to eight employees to monitoring social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter and the blogosphere for anyone talking, positively or negatively, about the company and its cars.  Despite a highly criticized public relations response using traditional advertising and communications techniques, Toyota is being highlighted for its social networking efforts.  But, what does this mean for the bottom line?

That’s exactly the question that was posed at last week’s Social Media Club – Chicago event entitled “How Social Media Makes Financial Cents.”   Speakers including Leslie Banks and Drew Methard of Morningstar and uberblogger Shannon Paul discussed how social media is necessary in building relationships with consumers, fans and followers.  While all three panelists admitted that keeping track of what is being said about a brand takes time and money, being there is necessary and the return on investment can be significant. 

Of course, the powers that be will always ask how having tens of thousands of Twitter followers is converting to good old dollars and cents.  However, what the panel and this article on Toyota both show is that no matter what the situation, there will always be someone talking about a brand.  Marketing and communications professionals just need to know where they are and help turn them into a valued partner.

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Jib Jab Watch my video: The McCabe’s Monster Mash

 To celebrate Halloween, the creative geniuses at Jib Jab have created a customizeable “Monster Mash” video where users can upload their own photos, become stars of an internet video and then share the end product with their friends. 

This concept has been around for years as Office Max has had their annual “Elf Yourself” videos and Burger King had the “Simpsonize Me” creator to help promote the 2007 Simpson’s movie.  But this is the first time I’ve seen the technology actively collaborate with Facebook to be a part of the creative process. 

Users can connect to their Facebook accounts to upload photos to be used in the video and once the video is complete, can post it to their profile page, their friends’ pages and email it to everyone they know.  For Jib Jab and Facebook, it’s a great way to create buzz and celebrate a fun holiday.  I just hope my brother doesn’t mind that I turned him into a hairy wolfman!

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