The latest from Epolitics.com contributor Jeanette Russell of Attentive.ly, with some great ideas to help your organization understand and engage your supporters. Plus, read all the way to the end for free stuff! This piece first appeared on the Attentive.ly site.
You have your email list. You have your phone numbers, zips, and addresses. Heck, you even know how many actions each person has taken, their last donation or purchase, and if they open emails. But there’s something incredibly valuable missing here.
You’re missing social insight
This new view is more than understanding if a supporter is on Twitter, Facebook, etc. It’s about understanding the social behaviors and interests of your people – what they post, how many connections they have, if you follow each other, their demographics like age and location, what platforms they use, trending terms and more.
This article provides a deeper dive into why understanding the social side of your supporters is critical in helping you rise above the noise and drive engagement. For those who make it to the end, we’ll even provide a complimentary custom report that breaks down these audience insights in a beautiful infographic.
1. What percentage of your email file is on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc?
While you probably have a good idea what networks your people use, and probably assume “a lot†of your supporters are on Facebook for example, do you know if it’s half or more like 90%? Same with Twitter, LinkedIn or the major social networks. You could make an educated guess by reading one of Pew’s social networking reports or read on and find out next week who on your email file is on these key networks.
WHY IT MATTERS
- Focus on growth or engagement. Let’s say you’re working on a cyber bully campaign and have an email list of 70K. First, you need to know the age demographics of key groups in your email lists, in addition to the social networks they use. If the majority of your list is on one social network, you’ll want to gear your content to activate your audience there. However, if it turns out only 15% of your CRM list is on Twitter, consider pivoting your strategy to grow your followers.
- Know where to put resources. If only 15% of your email list is on a certain network, depending on your goals and current engagement levels, you may choose to not dedicate as many resources. By having intel about where your people hangout, you can better set goals and effectively allocate your limited resources. You’ll also feel confident about your multi-channel approach by having hard data about the right channels to use.
- Boss says “Why aren’t we using [insert shiny object]?!†It’s much easier to answer this type of fun question with actual data. For example, if someone says that you should really be using Periscope, you could look at the data to see how many of your current supporters use Twitter, in addition to evaluating if you have live stream content, enough followers, a hashtag strategy, etc.
2. What % of your emails follow you on Twitter? What % do you follow?
For all of your people in your CRM who use Twitter, you need to know who follows you and who you follow. The first steps are to create reports to see which supporters follow, or don’t follow you. Next, segment these folks into two groups in your CRM (i.e. non-Twitter followers and Twitter followers) to take these actions:
WHY IT MATTERS
- Follow influencers in your CRM. While you don’t need to follow every supporter who follows you, we recommend following those with Klout scores over 40 and with over 500 connections for starters. You’ll also want to further segment to follow your top VIP and Professional influencers.
- Grow your Twitter followers. Instead of blasting your entire list, segment based on people in your CRM who don’t follow you on Twitter and send a series of emails to entice them to follow you.
- Recruit via email for Twitter storms. Invite your Twitter followers via email to join you on your next Twitter event like a storm. This multi-channel approach reinforces your message and should increase engagement.
- DM the most engaged. Recognize your most active supporters who are also on Twitter with a DM like this – Hey Susan, we just wanted to reach out and thank you for not only following us, but for attending our last event. We really appreciate your support! Also, here’s our latest X which I thought you might like.†And yes, this is over 140 characters (thank you Twitter!).
- Grow your Email List. Here’s some sweet low hanging fruit for list growth (i.e. watermelon). Run a report to see which of your Twitter followers probably aren’t in your CRM because you don’t have their email. Then, put them in a group and create a Twitter campaign to DM and target via paid ads (if enough people) with an enticing opt-in opportunity.
3. Do you know your network reach?
This is huge and something you’ll be very excited to find out because your network reach is probably about 200x more than your CRM. When we talk about network reach, we mean the total reach you have on social media when you account for the number of followers your supporters also have on social. So think about this for a second: imagine an influencer with 100,000 followers on Twitter. One little push of a button and those 100k are exposed to your message.
Another reason knowing your network reach is huge, and why we call influencers game changers, is because in our research of 90 nonprofit clients, we found the top 5% reaches 85% of your extended social network. As such, it’s not that everyone on your list has about the same number of followers … it’s not even close. Influencers have massively disproportionate number of followers, so the goal is clear – find your influencers and tap into their networks.
WHY IT MATTERS
Once you determine your network reach by matching your email file to social data, you’ll have a better idea how much you could increase engagement with say a 1% or 10% response rate. For example, if you have the typical network reach of our clients, your extended network reach is around 40K. With just a 1% rate, you’d reach 400K with about 40 influencers. If you engaged the top 10%, you’d reach millions. Having data that shows your network reach in real numbers opens up a world of possibilities to incorporate influencers in your marketing mix.
4. What’s The Klout Score of Your Top 1%?
Influencers are your force multipliers and can make your job much easier. One of the best ways to find your influencers is to search by Klout score.To illustrate the disproportionate reach of influencers, you’ll want to find out the average score of the top 1% of influencers AND how much reach they have.
WHY IT MATTERS
Understanding the reach of your top 1% will help you evaluate the time you should spend cultivating influencers. For example, if the top 1% of your contacts only have a Klout score of 50, you’d want to put your energy into developing a program for your “everyday†influencers instead of a VIP type program for scores that are typically above 70. If your top influencers have sizable representation and are responsible for say more than 40% of your reach, you’d want to prioritize finding and engaging these folks (on the double!).
5. How Many Connections Per Supporter?
While influencers have the greatest reach, it’s also helpful to know how connected your average supporter is. We all understand the value of word-of-mouth marketing as it’s proven that reviews, recommendations and content are better received when it comes from someone like us. It’s worth mentioning that volume alone doesn’t show the strength of connections or content relevance, plenty of people buy low value followers which isn’t recommended.
WHY IT MATTERS
Get the pulse on how connected your list is. Better yet, run multiple Audience Reports on your high value groups like customers, donors, volunteers, employees, etc. to see how socially connected and influential they are as a group. Once you know the number of connections for your average supporter, let alone your influencers, you’ll think about your email list much differently.
6. Who are your top 10 influencers?
These are the people you should spend time researching and possibly cultivating to help you promote or or co-creating content. Our basic formula for identifying influencers is to look for those with reach (over 500 connections, 40+ Klout score), relevance and past history. Hopefully your top 10 influencers have more than 5,000 connections and Klout scores over 60. Next, take a look at what these folks are talking about on social and if it compliments your area of focus (it doesn’t need to be an exact match). In Attentive.ly you can also see the top hashtags and search terms for individuals and groups which makes this type of research quite easy.
WHY IT MATTERS
For influencers who have reach, relevance and past history with your organization, figure out your game plan then contact them by email ideally or DM thanking them for their past involvement and interest in future collaboration. See our guide, How to Identify and Engage Your Influencers for tips on how to approach influencers.
7. What are your CRM demographics on social?
The ability to import key social media data into your CRM pays dividends for smarter segmentation. Do you know the age breakdown for your email file as a whole and for the people who give you time or money? One of our latest features in Attentive.ly is the ability to create audience reports like this for key groups in your CRM like donors, activists and volunteers.
WHY IT MATTERS
- Inform event planning. Back to the cyber bully campaign. Let’s say you’re planning a new event and know many of your supporters live in California. Knowing the age, gender, network reach and location of the people you plan to invite could shape key logistics. If the goal of the event is to engage youth leaders 18-25, you’ll need to know where the majority lives and their gender. If you find out that 70% are male who live in SoCal, that’s a different event than an even gender split in the Bay Area.
- Content creation. We’ve seen hundreds of Audience Reports and the demographics for social media users are all over the map and often don’t match the findings from the top studies (i.e. Pew). For example, a recent report we ran for peace group showed the vast majority of their social media users were over 55. Understanding the age of your supporters on social allows you to personalize your content to increase engagement.
8. Connecting your email to social
Organizations have unprecedented insight the social side of CRM’s which can deliver an abundance of opportunities for personalization that reaches far beyond surveys, focus groups or feedback forms. The first step starts by matching your current email data with data collected from social media. By combining these two data sets, email lists can become real people with lives and jobs, families and friends, interests, and passions- in context of products and services. We now have the ability to analyze, in real time, what a supporter thinks, feels, cares about, by “listening†to their online conversations and then reacting with predetermined triggers through automation, or sending personalized marketing messages directly to that person, formally known as “Supporter X.â€
WHY IT MATTERS
Insight to your audience allows for greater personalization to radically increase audience engagement and expand reach of your campaigns
- Understand your audience better
- Identify engagement opportunities
- Find influencers hiding out in your CRM
- Send highly targeted multi-channel messages
- Expand your content reach and drive action
Match your emails to social with our free Audience Insights Report
You’re probably muttering to yourself, that this sounds cool and all, but finding my org’s supporters on social media seems like a lot of work – and I don’t even know where to start. Our free Audience Insights Report matches a subsection of your email list with over 100 social networks to help you to understand who your supporters are. Here’s a sample report so you can see exactly the type of infographic we’re able to create on the house.
This free resource is a great first step at deepen relationships with your existing base. And all of this knowledge is essential in how you segment out your lists, how you communicate to those lists, how you craft your Calls to Action (CTA) and most importantly, increase conversions.