Why Jim Sterne's Book on "Social Media Metrics" Deserves a Spot on Your Shelf...er, Kindle
The book's title is "Social Media Metrics," but it should really be "How to Unequivocally Link Social Media to the Bottom Line."
Don't be fooled by it's svelte 234 pages. This gem by Jim Sterne contains so many excerpts from -- and links to -- the best things that other experts have said on the subject that you can consider it more of a really long blog post. David Berkowitz's "100 Ways to Measure Social Media" right up front is a great primer for those that don't do social as a regular part of their jobs. But then things get more advanced. Jeremiah Owyang's "Eight Stages of Listening" added a lot to my own understanding of something I'd figured was pretty one dimensional. And I never knew there were eight -- count `em -- eight ways to measure the success of a widget. KDAPAine & Partners' list of business outcomes and measurement methods would keep the most experienced pros busy for a while. And there are so many tools, vendors and calculators mentioned that it would take a year to understand them all. (2011's going to be fun.)
But what's really special about this book is that this ton of information is laid out in a logical, holistic way. Imagine you'd learned to navigate the streets of Brooklyn over five years. Then one day someone shows you a map. Sure, you recognized the stores and parks and intersections. But to see it laid out so completely...it lets you see connections between what you know. And it's simply a pleasure. In order, the book's core covers:
* Identifying goals
* Reaching your audience
* Identifying influence
* Recognizing sentiment (a.k.a. "why computerized sentiment will be terrible for a long time to come)
* Triggering action
* Hearing the conversation
* Driving business outcomes
After the metrics lessons are done, Sterne puts some nice bonus material at the end. Recognizing that the successful application of social media metrics in a company is about a lot more than numbers, he points out that "First and foremost, humans do not like being measured."
So he gives you talking points for how to sell social in to people based on their position and personality. There's an inspiring case study about a company called Tektronix where poor metrics aren't viewed as indications of failure, but "rather as indicators of future growth." Sterne makes a valuable point that metrics are better put to work measuring customers, not levels of blame for marketers. These principles are as important to social media success as any graph from Google Analytics.
Why Jim Sterne's Book on "Social Media Metrics" Deserves a Spot on Your Shelf...er, Kindle
Finally, a round of applause for good taste and restraint with the network diagrams. Usually they're either too simple to deserve attention (you know, one box linked to two others) or overwrought to the point of being show off art (look how complex it all is!). Here, a nice balance is struck and the pictures help you turn over the concepts in your mind.
The one criticism I'd offer up is that the many links in the book are full URLs, making it laborious to manually type into a browser. How about bit.lys in future editions? Easier for the reader to type and there would be metrics to see what readers went and visited.
I don't know why Brad Hamilton's popping into my head right now, but I'll let him have the last word on "Social Media Metrics." "Learn it. Know it. Live it."