For the most part, these social media costs fall into the following general buckets:
- Internal Resource Costs - specifically the personnel costs required to initiate, monitor and respond to social media conversations; and the personnel costs required to create the content that is used. We are starting to see both new roles being created to focus on this area (e.g. social media coordinator, community managers, engagement specialists, etc.), and additional responsibilities being added to existing resource's plates (leading to a reduction of focus elsewhere).
- External Resource Costs - agency costs associated with supporting and advising social media activities, and the creation of content.
- Technology Costs - the tools needed to Monitor, Contribute and Measure social media conversations. Many basic tools are free, but premium and integrated suites like Radian6 or Hubspot have fees associated. (Shameless plug: to get up-to-date info on social media technologies, follow my daily Twitter feed for the "Social Marketing Apps - Clutter Buster Daily Tweet" @ www.twitter.com/grahamlubie or do a search on #socmktgapps)
2 comments:
Graham,
Good on you for bringing up this topic. You're right that social media is NOT free, mostly because of the human resource costs.
Listening and engagement efforts in social media should be considered with the same care as other communication initiatives, and resources need to be allocated to do it well (and for the long term).
Where it lives and how the budget is allocated often depend on what the goals are for social media participation in the first place. Instead of a one-size-fits-all answer, companies need to be seeking discussions with their internal teams to talk about whether and how social media initiatives fit into *their* overall picture, and where.
Thanks for the discussion.
Best,
Amber Naslund
Director of Community, Radian6
@ambercadabra
Amber,
I agree with your observations that the majority of social media's costs come from human resource costs (both internal and agency). Given that efficiency of those resources is critical, the investment in a powerful tool like Radian6, versus free alternatives, makes sense.
Graham
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