Report: Fewer Than 1% Of Sales Can Be Tracked Back To Social Media

Wicked Ice

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Nov 11, 2007
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A new Forrester report titled “The Purchase Path of Online Buyers In 2012″ analyzes conversion paths on 77,000 orders to determine what sources returned the most revenue. While the report found a handful of high revenue sources (paid search, organic search, email) one clear cut source fell behind the rest: social media. The data showed that fewer than 1% of transactions could be traced back to social links.

Forrester suggests that the low numbers could be due to measurement periods required (a 30-day attribution model was used in this report) and company sizes. It should be noted that the research was performed in conjunction with GSI Commerce, a company who handles large scale e-commerce solutions. Social media has been known to have more dramatic results on SMB sales and this report lacks data from a small to midsize e-commerce site.

The top performing sources from the report were direct visits, organic search, paid search and email campaigns. From a new customer standpoint direct visits, organic search and paid search helped with each making up 20%, 16% and 11% of transactions respectively. For existing customers (an area where many think social would shine) direct, email and organic search comprised of 20%, 13% and 6% of all transactions respectively.

Overall customers viewed social media favorably, but use the medium as more of a discovery method. Based on a survey from 2011, 48% of respondents think social media is a great way to discover products & brands, while only 17% have bought something based on a friend’s post. Additionally, 40% of respondents think that social media is a great way to discover sales and promotions. earch finds that fewer than 1% of all transactions can be traced back to a social media link.

For the full report, see Forrester Research : Research : The Purchase Path Of Online Buyers In 2012
 


I think social media for small LOCAL businesses is great.

Local businesses, especially restaurants are always posting their specials of the day, etc... and I have to believe it has some great benefit, it certainly appears to with the comments by others on their walls, seems like it would be more than 1% of their business....or maybe I just eat out more than others...
 
You're the 1%, bro :p

I think social media for small LOCAL businesses is great.

Local businesses, especially restaurants are always posting their specials of the day, etc... and I have to believe it has some great benefit, it certainly appears to with the comments by others on their walls, seems like it would be more than 1% of their business....or maybe I just eat out more than others...
 
Now what will I do with my $80,000/year social media consultants? Shall I send them back to working the register at burger king?
 
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Social Media is about branding... so when the time comes for someone to buy, they remember you...

Of course they're not going to follow a link to buy your fucking trinket... they're too busy fapping to some highscool sweethearts facebook page!
 
I don't know what % of total business it has brought in, but interacting with leaders in certain niches has yielded hundreds of sales for me. This, like everything else, is entirely dependent on niche and execution.
My competitors likely snicker at the idea of social media bringing in sales too; that's fine, more social media traffic and conversions for me.
 
I don't know what % of total business it has brought in, but interacting with leaders in certain niches has yielded hundreds of sales for me. This, like everything else, is entirely dependent on niche and execution.
My competitors likely snicker at the idea of social media bringing in sales too; that's fine, more social media traffic and conversions for me.

Of course... but those sales can't be attributed to SM via your analytics package... That's my point...

It's like TV ads... nobody attributes a Big Mac sale to a TV ad, but you may have seen one an hour ago and now you want one!
 
if you believe that the aim of all advertising is to create marginal differences in the consumer's opinions about similar products, then a proper social media campaign is probably more effective than many types of traditional placements...

...if your idea of advertising revolves around direct response methods, social is not for you.
 
Social Media is about branding... so when the time comes for someone to buy, they remember you...

That's exactly what it is. Brand awareness sounds like Chinese to most people, but real marketers (who build businesses, not MFA sites) know what it is.

I'm not ashamed to say that some clients pay me good money to improve their social presence. I set them up on Facebook Ads, launch/manage social contests and get them laser targeted fans/followers on a monthly basis. I have all the stats to prove that I'm getting them more traffic and improving their overall visibility in the social sphere, and they're very happy with that. I tell them right from the get go that if they hope their sales will increase by XX% through social media, I'm not their guy. Social media is not meant to [directly] increase sales.