by Debra Ellis
Capturing information to confirm point of origin for sales is challenging. The most accurate method is asking customers to enter a keycode or embedding one in the URL.
When all else fails (and even if it doesn’t) look at your direct marketing segments before and after your social media campaign. Usually there is a consistency in average order, response rate , and ratios from one campaign to the next. The numbers in the following chart are the results from one test.

In this example, X, Y, and Z represent the top three segments for a business to consumer company. The before and after numbers and ratios are consistent for these groups. The average order is slightly higher in the after column, but it was expected. The retail offering was higher for the second campaign, which accounts for the variance.
The Unknown segment is orders placed without a keycode. They could come from anywhere. The average order is higher on a larger scale. The percent of the total sales for this segment has a jump of 22%. While it isn’t conclusive, it implies that social media is pulling new customers in.
This is when your benchmarks pay off. Update your key metrics every month for a social media before and after comparison. Overlay the analysis with your social media activity. Did your email subscriptions increase when you promoted the sign up online? Is there an increase in sales without an increase in direct marketing promotion?
If you are promoting specific items via social media, monitor the sales curve around the same time. Extend it out two to four weeks after the promotion. Our tests have shown that tweets are clicked up to a month after they were posted. (We found that very surprising.)
Compare your web analytics, too. Social media increases traffic. If you are seeing a bump in sales from natural search, track it back to the source. You may just find that it was from a conversation! (Reminder: It will only happen if you include links in your tweets.)
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by Debra Ellis
Once or twice a week, I sort through hundreds of emails from companies I love, like, or need. Every time, I wonder what the marketers are thinking when they press send. I suspect that there is a prayer on their lips, “please, please, let people respond so I get to keep my job.”
I’m looking for personal and interesting. They send promotional and unimaginative. Email marketing has become a numbers game. It begins with acquiring a list of addresses, continues with sending offer after offer, and ends with a pat on the back. [click to continue…]
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by Debra Ellis
About ten years ago, there was a movement in the catalog industry to reduce mail volume. It seemed like a good idea. Customers were increasingly migrating to websites to place their orders. Segmented sales were down. Order processing costs were significantly lower for web orders when compared to the call center. Why spend the money to mail catalogs when people were ordering online? [click to continue…]
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by Debra Ellis
Visiting a crocs store is always an adventure in mayhem for me. It isn’t the store’s fault. The challenge comes from the 11 and 14 year old children who accompany me. There’s always something new for them to see. It turns out that the new items are EXACTLY what they desperately need. The step across the threshold begins the “let’s negotiate with mom” session.
Saturday’s visit was different. Oh, there were the cool new items and desperate need, but I was distracted by the signage all over the store. Attempts to negotiate didn’t break through my focus.
The signs encouraged me to text crocs098 to 63103 for a 15% discount. [click to continue…]
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by Debra Ellis
There’s something more than coffee brewing in our office. I’m so excited that I’m on pins and needles, dying to tell you about it, but I can’t until next week. There are those in my office that say that the pins and needle feeling come from the coffee I’ve been mainlining this week, but they’re wrong! I need the coffee to keep me warm because some people think sunshine means you have to turn the AC on even when it’s 30 degrees outside.
Thank you to my faithful readers who noticed that I haven’t posted in over a week. My project is consuming all of my writing time (hint, hint) so blogging is on the back burner. If you would like to be the first to hear about it, please send me an email to dellis@wilsonellisconsulting.com. I’ll send you an email as soon as I can share.
Have a great weekend!
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