Earlier today, I was doing my daily routine of reading blogs in my Google Reader selection and I came found the following post titled “Social Media Listening is Not the Same as Research”, which appears to be a modified reprint of another article titled “Four Reasons Why Social Media Listening is not the same as Research”, written by Julie Schwartz who is Senior VP of Research and Thought Leadership at ITSMA.
The author’s point of view
In the later post, the author elaborates four points on why Social Media Listening cannot replace classic marketing research, based on customer panels and interviews.
Here are the four points, unedited and as present in the article:
1 – Doesn’t ask the questions you want to ask
2 – Doesn’t come up with a hypothesis and get the data to support (or refute!) your hypothesis
3 – Doesn’t comprise a representative sample
4 – Doesn’t tell you what might happen in the future; rather, it’s a window into the past
Later in the same article, the author agrees that Social Media Listening can still provide some benefits, and she mentions:
– Provide qualitative insights
– Reveal unmet needs
– Test ideas in real time
– Collect data
My point of view
While I tend to agree with most of the points listed as potential benefits, I don’t agree with the four points why social listening could not replace research. And here’s why.
1 – Doesn’t ask the questions you want to ask
This is wrong to think so.
Every day, hundreds of thousands of comments, conversations, and statuses are published on social networks, in online forums, in comments on websites, in product reviews. It’s up to you as a researcher to come up with the appropriate queries in the social listening tools in order to filter out noise and to only get the verbatim that are relevant for a given question, and to narrow down the result set to something that is at the same time not too big – so that each comment or status can be analyzed by a human, and not by some automatic sentiment analysis piece of software – and also not too small so that it still remains statistically correct.
2 – Doesn’t come up with a hypothesis and get the data to support (or refute!) your hypothesis
Wrong again, it’s exactly how we proceed: the process starts with some work sessions with the client where we scope the project, define the research areas and the questions to be answered. It’s also the moment where we get internal inputs, business and domain knowledge and specific terms and jargon, if needed. Then comes a phase of initial listening where the first hypothesis are either confirmed or refuted. If the later happens, we loop back and rescope the project, and go for another run.
3 – Doesn’t comprise a representative sample
Maybe. But maybe not. If you consider that the population of the internet users are a special part of the society, you may be right. But if you’re trying to figure out some effective online tactics, it’s likely that you’re not considering non-internet users in your research, and as a result, online conversations on social networks are a pretty representative sample, on the contrary :)
4 – Doesn’t tell you what might happen in the future; rather, it’s a window into the past
Honestly, I don’t buy into all this trends around “predictive analytics”. It’s too much of rocket science, and you never know what happens. What happens in the future depends on what WE do today, so yes I agree, you need to make your strategic decisions on something more scientific that your instinct and best guesses.
Benefits of Social Media Deep Listening
Now let me highlight some specific benefits of doing Social Media Listening for a business:
– Flexibility: you can ask as many questions as you like, come back after some initial findings, rescope and ask explore new directions. Ad lib. Databases and listening tools never get tired of answering.
– Short cycles: results can be obtained in days or weeks, not in months. These near real-time capabilities mean that you can detect early signals and take timely actions.
– You can expect the unexpected: because your queries will bring you a series of unfiltered verbatim, you can expect to find answers to questions which you would have never thought asking in the first place, even if you’re a very experimented researcher who has conducted hundred of panels and interviews.
– Authenticity: when consumers publish a status on a social network, they speak they voice, and they really say what they mean. They’re not influenced by the way the question is asked or they do not have to choose their answer from a made up list.
– Real language: also, as a consequence of the previous, consumers user their actual real language, which may differ from yours. If you study this carefully, this can give you interesting hints on some keywords that you could then use to create specific content, and also for SEO.
– No borders, no limits: You’re not bound to a given geography, and you can do the same listening for different regions or areas and observe the differences. You could then fine-tune your marketing to create location-based campaigns.
– Beyond just marketing: of course, the first departments who would benefit of social listening in a company would be marketing and sales, but not only: there are also findings that could be very valuable all along the conversion funnel: from sales, to customer support, product design & engineering, or innovation.
– Listen to the unreachable: also, this process of social listening are very convenient for those businesses who do not have a direct access to their end customers, either because they do not own their sales channel, or because there are B2B2C or because they are some kind of regulated industry. Being able to listen to unreachable customers is something of big value.
Final word
So, I’m sure you’re now convinced that Social Listening has definitely some unique business value. Some famous market research companies have also already got it, like for instance Ipsos who announced a similar offering one year ago, and I’m sure they would agree with me.
Social Media Listening is not the same as Research
On a final note, I would say that yes, I do agree with the title, but not for the same reasons :)
Curious to ear more? Convinced? Want to give it a try?
The good news is that “Social Media Listening” is something that we at Valtech do for our customers, and we have some pretty strong references and case studies in this domain. Contact us if you can to know more, and we’ll be happy to get in touch with you and to setup a meeting.
[Edit] : Corrected job title for blog most author mentioned.