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CEO Series
November 18, 2015
Topic Data, a product/service from Facebook, allows marketers to see what users are saying about brands, products, events and activities.
By Doug Pruden and Terry Vavra,
As more and more organizations are ‘following’ their brands in Facebook posts to gain insights about their products and customers, the social media giant has recently announced a new service to help marketers learn even more. Topic Data, a new product/service from Facebook, offers marketers access to what users are saying about brands, products, events and activities. A likely impetus for the introduction was Twitter’s reported revenues of $47 million in the fourth quarter of 2014 from similar “data licensing and other information services”.
The Allure of the Social Media
So what value is Facebook offering? We’ve always believed ‘observational data collection’ was underutilized in marketing practice. Too often companies rush to conduct an opinion survey when answers to their questions may already be available through observation of behaviors, their customer database, comments, or posts. Attractive potential, but some pitfalls as well. As with any new research tool, users should gain a sound understanding of the technique’s limitations and have a plan on how to best capitalize on its exclusive strengths.
Some Unique Opportunities
Here are some suggestions on possible uses for research implemented by the social media. We draw on a Social Media Today article by Ray Nelson.
Strong Potential, But for Specific Uses
In our previous discussion of the current fascination with pull research, we warned against the unconventionality of using social media as a primary research tool. We’re not reversing our position. We firmly believe that any process that allows research participants to ‘self select’ violates the discipline of good sampling and therefore produces findings that aren’t projectable to any extended group of customers. However, we’re also about using the most powerful and penetrating methods available to complement our current repertoire of techniques. It appears to us that social media offers a unique approach to matters like: issue discovery; exploration of terms and language pertinent to a product category; and as a tracking tool – to name just a few. Social media based ‘research’ shouldn’t be touted as a replacement for current methods. But, we encourage you to consider some of these possible uses as adjuncts to your current marketing research processes.
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