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“What we are doing is more lively and accessible than developing an exhibit and providing a catalog.” - Michael Edson, NY Times “It’s not about getting more traffic, it’s about getting traffic that gives a $*!&.” – Jay Baer, Content Rules! “We are now broadcasters of knowledge. It’s invigorating and a real collaboration.” –Michael Edson, NY Times “Talk to anyone involved with museum technology and the conversation inevitably boils down to one universal work: engagement.” - Shelley Bernstein, NY Times “In the end we want people to feel ownership of this museum. We want to engage with our community.” – Shelley Bernstein, NY Times “Only the clueless are impressed by numbers.” – SEO Book “Unless we pay attention to external factors, we my be planning for the wrong future.” –Richard Pearce-Moses, The American Archivist “Internet users with the most influence among peers don’t just have followers, they have engaged followers.” – Evan Kraus, Social Informants

How To Measure Social Media Success

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Page 1: How To Measure Social Media Success

“What we are doing is more lively and accessible than developing an exhibit and providing a catalog.” -Michael Edson, NY Times

“It’s not about getting more traffic, it’s about getting traffic that gives a $*!&.” – Jay Baer, Content Rules!

“We are now broadcasters of knowledge. It’s invigorating and a real collaboration.” –Michael Edson, NY Times

“Talk to anyone involved with museum technology and the conversation inevitably boils down to one universal work: engagement.” - Shelley Bernstein, NY Times

“In the end we want people to feel ownership of this museum. We want to engage with our community.” – Shelley Bernstein, NY Times

“Only the clueless are impressed by numbers.” – SEO Book

“Unless we pay attention to external factors, we my be planning for the wrong future.” –Richard Pearce-Moses, The American Archivist

“Internet users with the most influence among peers don’t just have followers, they have engaged followers.” – Evan Kraus, Social Informants

Page 2: How To Measure Social Media Success

How to Measure Social Media Success: The Smithsonian

Collections Blog, a case study

Rachael Cristine Woody, Freer|Sackler Archivist

Research in Progress Talk

March 23rd, 2011

Page 3: How To Measure Social Media Success

Preface

• Mandate to get out there, and get online! Be accessible to the users! Generate content! Be Fun! Be Exciting! Be Popular!

• Lack of guidance on the logistics: who/what/where/when/why/how?

Page 4: How To Measure Social Media Success

Table of Contents

• Definition of Social Media

• Goal of Social Media

• Case Study Introduced

• Definition of Success

• What, How and Where do you Measure

• Google Analytics

• Case Study Success

• Conclusion

Page 5: How To Measure Social Media Success

Definition

• Social Media: is the process of improving the visibility of

a website or a web page in search engines via the "natural" or un-paid ("organic" or "algorithmic") search results using highly accessible and scalable communication techniques. Social media is the use of web-based and mobile technologies to turn communication into interactive dialogue.– Wikipedia

“If it’s not on the web, it doesn’t exist.”- 50 million hits on Google for this quote

Page 6: How To Measure Social Media Success

Social Media is not the goal, it’s the vehicle to reach your goal!

Goal: Exposure, Engagement, Influence, Action

Page 7: How To Measure Social Media Success

Case Study: The Smithsonian Collections Blog

Platforms

Goals

Questions

Mission

Set Up

http://si-siris.blogspot.com/

Page 8: How To Measure Social Media Success

Success

suc·cess Noun /səkses/Synonyms:noun: hit, prosperity, luck, achievement, triumph, speed,

accomplishment

• The accomplishment of an aim or purpose• The attainment of popularity or profit• A person or thing that achieves desired aims or attains

prosperity• The outcome of an undertaking, specified as achieving

or failing to achieve its aims

Page 9: How To Measure Social Media Success

What do you Measure?

Exposure, Engagement, Influence, Action

Page 10: How To Measure Social Media Success

How do you Measure?Numbers Trends Relationships Sharing

Google Analytics Google Analytics, Twitter Trends

Google Analytics, Interactions on site

Google Analytics, Google Alerts, Twitter/Hootsuite

Ernst Herzfeld’s drafting tools.

Page 11: How To Measure Social Media Success

Where and How Often do you Measure?

• Visitors: unique and loyal

• Content: popularity and diffusion

• Traffic: direct and referral

• Geography: target communities with identified interests

“Only the clueless are impressed by numbers.”- SEO Book “Social Media: the need for measurement”

Page 12: How To Measure Social Media Success

Google Analytics

Page 13: How To Measure Social Media Success

Visitors

Page 14: How To Measure Social Media Success

Content

Page 15: How To Measure Social Media Success

Traffic

Page 16: How To Measure Social Media Success

Geography

Page 17: How To Measure Social Media Success

Smithsonian Collections Blog Success?

GOALS

Exposure for collections, projects and professions

Host a place for interaction with visitors

Outreach to and beyond our existing visitors Increase SEO numbers for our collections

Provide a creative outlet for staff

Page 18: How To Measure Social Media Success

Conclusion

“We don’t really measure it, it’s just another relationship building tool.”

-Zappos CEO, Tony Hsieth

Page 19: How To Measure Social Media Success

Apple’s only Twitter account (through VP Scott Forstall), has 37,000 followers and 0 tweets. Apple’s twitter account is popular, but it’s not an effective social media endeavor because it’s not exposing, engaging, influencing or inspiring action.

Compare that to Google who has almost 3 million followers and over 2,000 tweets which provide updates on new products, related and helpful links and actively engage with user commentary.

Google is both popular and effective, and I don’t think that’s a coincidence.

Popularity v. Effectiveness