Measuring Social Media ROI is a pipe dream
The hype around Social Media ROI measurement has finally gotten to me: I’m growing tired of 140 characters promises, conference invitations, or free trials to the latest tool solving social media ROI measurement and help brands get on the social media bandwagon.
The promise of a silver bullet to approach this really complex issue is slowing down the development and adoption of social media by businesses, not accelerating it.
So let me call it as it is: measuring the ROI of social media can’t be done. I’m actually quoting here the father of ROI measurement, Bob Kaplan (ref. #SMB10), inventor of the balanced scorecard.
Trying to calculate the ROI of social media is the same as trying to calculate the ROI of email or the road you drive to work on. The costs can be approximated but the benefits can’t. Their reach is too broad and too many other factors are at play to even to list them all, let alone attempt to measure profits.
Maybe even more importantly than one’s inability to measure ROI for social media, the main problem of this ROI hype is that it fuels the idea that social media for businesses is an end in itself and can have its own P&L. It’s not, it’s a capability (or rather a very broad set of capabilities) that serves other business objectives and of course one should measure success associated to these business objectives.
I can’t tell you the number of clients of Traackr who asked me whether they should be on Facebook or Twitter. My answer is invariably the same: what are you trying to achieve?
There is no ROI associated to social media. There is an ROI associated to business objectives and social media can help achieve some (many?) of them.
The decision whether to invest in social media doesn’t lie in an excel spreadsheet, rather it’s a leap of faith and a belief by some business leaders that they are better off with it than without it. The tipping point for companies is based on risk tolerance, peer pressure and critical mass, not on a dubious ROI calculation.
Tags: facebook, pr, roi, smb, social media, traackr, twitter
July 11th, 2009 at 3:03 am
Your analysis makes me think of my own analysis of having a web site or not (I am thinking here only of the websites where you cannot buy) …
I think there is no ROI of having a website, but there is a cost of not having one!!
July 11th, 2009 at 10:06 am
Thanks Pierre, great post!
I agree with the idea that measuring the effectiveness of social media only makes sense in context of specific business objectives to achieve, not in absolute.