Social media is a powerful tool you can leverage to build your brand, but it can also leave you vulnerable to the the cruel contempt of the masses who think nothing of trashing your brand equity one “Like” at a time. That’s the thrust of this article in AdWeek, which details any number of social media “fails.” One misstep by a marketer—a poorly posed model, or too much enthusiasm for milkshakes—and suddenly, there’s a tornado in the Twitterverse.
No one, we’re to understand, is safe. Henry Copeland of Blogads was quoted as saying, “The hundreds of thousands, or millions, of people out there are going to take your idea, and they’re going to try to shred it or tear it apart and find what’s weak or stupid in it.”
Obviously, this is bad news. Nobody wants the backlash. The situation gets worse when there’s no positive traction as a result of the campaign. An offensive marketing message is bad; an offensive marketing message that doesn’t resonate with your existing and likely potential customer base is worse.
Social media is starting to sound pretty precarious.
Are we faced with a Quixotic quest? Is communicating with our customers in an effective, compelling fashion while simultaneously avoiding starting Facebook firestorms even possible?
These are good questions. Answering them becomes easier when we have access to superior customer knowledge and the objective, analytic tools provided by Brand Modeling.
Social Media: The Challenge of Uncertainty
The biggest problem marketers are facing today is the biggest problem they’ve been facing for a long time. Well before Jack Dorsey sent his first tweet, business owners and entrepreneurs have been longing for a way to predict customer response to marketing messaging—preferably before the campaign is even launched.
Without the ability to predict customer response, we are in an undesirable state of uncertainty.
If we knew that a given campaign would be hugely, overwhelmingly popular and effective with our target audience, would that outweigh the impact of any potential controversy? That’s a legitimate decision, and one that leading brands have often made. What if the same campaign would only be moderately popular? What if the same campaign seemed to elicit no positive response at all? Dodging the controversy becomes much more appealing if there’s no identifiable benefit to be gained.
Without the ability to predict customer response, we can’t make intelligent, strategic decisions to secure and enhance our organization’s standing. It’s impossible. You can guess, of course, and lots and lots of companies are—but as the AdWeek article points out, there’s a better than good chance you’ll guess wrong at least once.
In Customers First: Dominate Your Market by Winning Them Over Where It Counts the Most we discuss the process of Brand Modeling, and how combining insights about the unconscious psychological drivers that motivate customer behavior with targeted statistical analysis makes it possible to predict, with a high degree of certainty, how customers will respond to your efforts to connect with them.
Yes, social media has been a game changer. It’s translated the cultural environment we were used to into a fast paced, dynamic and sometimes dangerous space. There’s no guarantee of safety here, but by making smart, strategic choices it is possible for your organization to consistently make the right choices, reaping benefits that far outweigh even the hottest Facebook firestorm.
We think Don Quixote would approve this message.