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Top Social Media Resources for Business Information In this study, we provided respondents with a list of different types of social media resources and asked them to indicate which, if any, they currently use to get the information and resources they need to do their jobs. The figure below shows the percentage of small business decision maker respondents by the total number of social media resources for business information they indicated using.
Citation preview
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media How Small Business Decision Makers Utilize Social Media as a Resource for Business Information with Implications for Improving Marketing to Small Business
A 2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Report By Ben Hanna PhD VP Marketing RH Donnelley Interactive December 7 2009
Share this Report
1
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media
Contents List of Figures 2 Introduction 3
Results Summary 3
A Request when Referencing or Sharing this Study 4
Top Social Media Resources for Business Information 5 Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry 9
Advertising amp Marketing Industry 10
Automotive Industry 11
Computers amp Software Industry 12
Financial Services Industry 13
Food amp Beverage Industry 14
Healthcare Industry 15
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry 16
Internet amp Online Industry 17
Legal Industry 18
Media amp Entertainment Industry 19
Real Estate amp Construction Industry 20
Retail Industry 21
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size 22 Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level 24 Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role 26 Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies 26 Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future 29 Additional Reports Based on this Research 34
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study 34
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study 34
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media 34
Upcoming Reports 34
About the Study 35 Contact 39 More Resources from Businesscomhellip 40
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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List of Figures Figure 1 Number of Social Media Resources Used for Business Information 5 Figure 2 Top Business Social Media Resources for Small Business Decision Makers 6 Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry 9 Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry 10 Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry 11 Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry 12 Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry 13 Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry 14 Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry 15 Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry 16 Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry 17 Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry 18 Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry 19 Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry 20 Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry 21 Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size 22 Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size 23 Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level 24 Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level 25 Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type 27 Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type 28 Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience 30 Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media 31 Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media 32 Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives 33 Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size 35 Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry 36 Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role 36 Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level 37 Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type 37 Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus 38 Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location 38
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Introduction What are the most effective social media channels through which to reach small business decision makers This is the key question we address in this companion report to Businesscomrsquos 2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Based on our sample of 1711 small business decision makers currently using one or more social media resources to find business-relevant information this report provides solid benchmark data to help improve marketing to small business while addressing the following questions
bull According to small business decision makers what are the most popular and most useful social media resources for business information
bull Are there significant differences in business social media usage across industries job roles andor company type (B2C vs B2B)
As with other reports in this series it is important to clarify at the outset that all study participants already use social media for business Given mounting evidence that social media usage is quickly becoming mainstream ndash for example 46 of US adults now participate in social networks and a quarter do so weekly1
Results Summary
ndash the most important questions revolve around how social media is being used for business not if it is being used
The following provide a brief overview of some of the key findings and insights in this report
bull The report is based on survey results from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies
bull All respondents currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job (ie all results should be interpreted as ldquoamong those using social media for businesshelliprdquo rather than ldquoacross all businesseshelliprdquo)
bull The most popular social media resources small business decision makers turn to for business are webinars and podcasts user ratings and reviews of business products and services and business profiles (accounts fan pages channels etc) on social networking sites such as Facebook LinkedIn Twitter and other sites
bull The convenience and speed with which small business decision makers can find business-relevant information is what attracts them to social media resources For example webinars save the time and expense of travel for professional education
bull Small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use significantly more social media resources for business than study respondents from other industries
1Lenhart Amanda The Democratization of Online Social Networks Pew Internet amp American Life Project October 8 2009 httpwwwpewinternetorgPresentations200941--The-Democratization-of-Online-Social-Networksaspx
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bull Small business decision makers in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries use significantly fewer social media resources for business than study respondents from other industries
bull Across sole proprietors micro businesses (1-9 employees) and small businesses (10-99 employees) company size has little meaningful impact on the use of social media resources for business information
bull Looking specifically at small businesses with 10-99 employees members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
bull Job roledepartment is not strongly related to the use of social media for business among small business decision makers
bull Small business decision makers at business-to-business (B2B) companies use both significantly more social media resources for business than their business-to-consumer (B2C) colleagues and with a single exception (reading ratings and reviews of business products and services) are significantly more likely to use each of the business social media resources investigated in this study
bull A cross-sectional look at business social media usage by small business decision makers with different degrees of experience using social media provides insights into how social media usage is likely to evolve in the future
A Request when Referencing or Sharing this Study A good benchmarking study should generate significant discussion and debate and we hope that many of you will discuss one or more insights from this study in your own blog web site publication conference presentation andor in other forums Since this research took considerable time and effort to produce ndash it is after all the largest study of business social media use within North American companies to date ndash we have two simple requests
1 Please use the following when referencing this report
Source Engaging Small Business Decision Makers through Social Media A 2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Report Businesscom December 7 2009 httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
2 Provide your readers with a link to httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-
business-through-social-media where they can download their own copy of the report Do not link to your own copy of the PDF stored on your own web site or other content sharing sites like SlideShare While we understand the spirit of open content the brief registration required to access the study is not particularly onerous or invasive and also provides people interested in the study with the opportunity to indicate their interest in participating in future Businesscom studies about other online marketing topics Help us continue to offer top quality research at no cost by linking to the report download page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Social Media Resources for Business Information
In this study we provided respondents with a list of different types of social media resources and asked them to indicate which if any they currently use to get the information and resources they need to do their jobs The figure below shows the percentage of small business decision maker respondents by the total number of social media resources for business information they indicated using Here and throughout the rest of this report it is important to keep in mind that there is no ldquo0rdquo on the scale below ndash the 1711 small business decision makers we profile here all use at least one social media resource for business-relevant information The overall average number of social media resources used by participants in this study is 59 This does not mean that the average North American small business decision maker uses nearly six different social media resources to get the information they need to do their jobs on a day-to-day basis It does however suggest that small business decision makers who DO turn to social media resources for business information use on average nearly six different sources Figure 1 Number of Social Media Resources Used for Business Information
Among small business decision makers using social media for business information the most frequently used resources were webinars or podcasts (67) followed by ratingsreviews of business products or services (63) and visiting companyproduct profile pages on social media sites such as Facebook Twitter and LinkedIn (61)
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Figure 2 Top Business Social Media Resources for Small Business Decision Makers
Small business decision makers find webinars and podcasts to be valuable resources for learning new skills andor researching industries products and services without the downsides of attending in-person seminars (travel time and expense reluctance to walk-out of a seminar once the speaker has started) For example
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ldquoThe most useful social media resource is the webinars I feel that they offer the most dont demand that I travel spend a lot of money or even make a huge commitment of time They are usually well focused on a topic and therefore dont waste my time with a lot of unrelated topics If I dont find them useful or on point I can quit and dont have to walk out on a speakerrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 10-19 Employee Company
Agriculture Industry Webinars are also very convenient for professionals in rapidly changing or evolving industries where ongoing training is essential A C-level executive from a Financial Services company explained why webinars are the most useful social media resource for business
ldquoTax law is ever changing so we rely on webinars and other instant media to update us on the latest changes in tax accounting Social media is critical to our industryrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry
The second most popular social media resource small business decision makers turn to is ratings and reviews of productsservices they may need for their business Mentioned by 63 of respondents From reading business book reviews on Amazoncom to qualifying potential products to resell through user ratings online ratings and reviews provide valuable input into the business buying process as long as these ldquosound honest and not like someone just put them up there to make the company sound goodrdquo (Owner 1-4 employee retail business) On the other hand small business decision makers seeking business-relevant information through social media channels were least likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information (27 although 53 search social media sites more generally) save business-related links on social bookmarking sites like Digg Delicious StumbleUpon or other (27) and participate in discussions on 3rd party web sites (29) Although Twitter fell to the bottom of the list of most used social media resources for business those actually using Twitter in this way are very positive about the business value We asked study participants to tell us about the MOST useful social media resource theyrsquove found for business and Twitter topped this write-in list with small business decision makers praising the ability to get quick feedback and access relevant business information For example
ldquoOn Twitter the people I follow provide me with more relevant links and information than any other tool It saves me time and helps me learn about new technologies or innovative ideas as they are happeningrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 1-4 Employee Company
Internet Industry
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Or the following from a member of the senior management team at a company in the financial services industry
ldquoTwitter provides a quick connection to relevant businesses and individuals who often provide helpful links to pertinent resources articles and blog postsrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry In general companies interested in using social media to engage small business customers and prospects would be wise to
bull Develop educational webinars andor podcasts which address specific small business needs in the process of introducing company products or services
bull Encourage and carefully tend online reviews of company products or services
bull Establish a presence on one or more major social networking sites and use this as a hub for corporate social media initiatives
bull Participate in more focused online discussions where it is easy to find and respond to
questions specifically related to company products or services ndash such answering questions on QampA sites like LinkedIn Answers or Businesscom Answers or in online business forums ndash rather than trying to work a promotional mention into discussions on 3rd party web sites and blogs
bull Further investigate how their target audience is using Twitter for business today and begin developing a Twitter strategy
This is far from the end of the story however In the following sections we explore differences in the use of social media for business information by company size industry job level and job role to help companies targeting small business decision makers improve their social media strategies
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry The small business decision makers in this study differ across industries in their use of social media as a resource for business information In this section we explore these differences to provide the business social media usage benchmark information necessary to effectively customize social media strategies to the unique preferences of small business decision makers in twelve different industries To begin with small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use a significantly greater number of social media web sitesresources than the average of those in other industries Study participants in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries however use significantly fewer social media sitesresources for business information Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry
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Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
1
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media
Contents List of Figures 2 Introduction 3
Results Summary 3
A Request when Referencing or Sharing this Study 4
Top Social Media Resources for Business Information 5 Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry 9
Advertising amp Marketing Industry 10
Automotive Industry 11
Computers amp Software Industry 12
Financial Services Industry 13
Food amp Beverage Industry 14
Healthcare Industry 15
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry 16
Internet amp Online Industry 17
Legal Industry 18
Media amp Entertainment Industry 19
Real Estate amp Construction Industry 20
Retail Industry 21
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size 22 Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level 24 Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role 26 Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies 26 Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future 29 Additional Reports Based on this Research 34
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study 34
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study 34
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media 34
Upcoming Reports 34
About the Study 35 Contact 39 More Resources from Businesscomhellip 40
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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List of Figures Figure 1 Number of Social Media Resources Used for Business Information 5 Figure 2 Top Business Social Media Resources for Small Business Decision Makers 6 Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry 9 Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry 10 Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry 11 Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry 12 Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry 13 Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry 14 Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry 15 Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry 16 Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry 17 Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry 18 Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry 19 Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry 20 Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry 21 Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size 22 Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size 23 Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level 24 Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level 25 Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type 27 Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type 28 Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience 30 Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media 31 Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media 32 Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives 33 Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size 35 Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry 36 Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role 36 Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level 37 Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type 37 Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus 38 Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location 38
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Introduction What are the most effective social media channels through which to reach small business decision makers This is the key question we address in this companion report to Businesscomrsquos 2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Based on our sample of 1711 small business decision makers currently using one or more social media resources to find business-relevant information this report provides solid benchmark data to help improve marketing to small business while addressing the following questions
bull According to small business decision makers what are the most popular and most useful social media resources for business information
bull Are there significant differences in business social media usage across industries job roles andor company type (B2C vs B2B)
As with other reports in this series it is important to clarify at the outset that all study participants already use social media for business Given mounting evidence that social media usage is quickly becoming mainstream ndash for example 46 of US adults now participate in social networks and a quarter do so weekly1
Results Summary
ndash the most important questions revolve around how social media is being used for business not if it is being used
The following provide a brief overview of some of the key findings and insights in this report
bull The report is based on survey results from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies
bull All respondents currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job (ie all results should be interpreted as ldquoamong those using social media for businesshelliprdquo rather than ldquoacross all businesseshelliprdquo)
bull The most popular social media resources small business decision makers turn to for business are webinars and podcasts user ratings and reviews of business products and services and business profiles (accounts fan pages channels etc) on social networking sites such as Facebook LinkedIn Twitter and other sites
bull The convenience and speed with which small business decision makers can find business-relevant information is what attracts them to social media resources For example webinars save the time and expense of travel for professional education
bull Small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use significantly more social media resources for business than study respondents from other industries
1Lenhart Amanda The Democratization of Online Social Networks Pew Internet amp American Life Project October 8 2009 httpwwwpewinternetorgPresentations200941--The-Democratization-of-Online-Social-Networksaspx
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bull Small business decision makers in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries use significantly fewer social media resources for business than study respondents from other industries
bull Across sole proprietors micro businesses (1-9 employees) and small businesses (10-99 employees) company size has little meaningful impact on the use of social media resources for business information
bull Looking specifically at small businesses with 10-99 employees members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
bull Job roledepartment is not strongly related to the use of social media for business among small business decision makers
bull Small business decision makers at business-to-business (B2B) companies use both significantly more social media resources for business than their business-to-consumer (B2C) colleagues and with a single exception (reading ratings and reviews of business products and services) are significantly more likely to use each of the business social media resources investigated in this study
bull A cross-sectional look at business social media usage by small business decision makers with different degrees of experience using social media provides insights into how social media usage is likely to evolve in the future
A Request when Referencing or Sharing this Study A good benchmarking study should generate significant discussion and debate and we hope that many of you will discuss one or more insights from this study in your own blog web site publication conference presentation andor in other forums Since this research took considerable time and effort to produce ndash it is after all the largest study of business social media use within North American companies to date ndash we have two simple requests
1 Please use the following when referencing this report
Source Engaging Small Business Decision Makers through Social Media A 2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Report Businesscom December 7 2009 httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
2 Provide your readers with a link to httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-
business-through-social-media where they can download their own copy of the report Do not link to your own copy of the PDF stored on your own web site or other content sharing sites like SlideShare While we understand the spirit of open content the brief registration required to access the study is not particularly onerous or invasive and also provides people interested in the study with the opportunity to indicate their interest in participating in future Businesscom studies about other online marketing topics Help us continue to offer top quality research at no cost by linking to the report download page
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Top Social Media Resources for Business Information
In this study we provided respondents with a list of different types of social media resources and asked them to indicate which if any they currently use to get the information and resources they need to do their jobs The figure below shows the percentage of small business decision maker respondents by the total number of social media resources for business information they indicated using Here and throughout the rest of this report it is important to keep in mind that there is no ldquo0rdquo on the scale below ndash the 1711 small business decision makers we profile here all use at least one social media resource for business-relevant information The overall average number of social media resources used by participants in this study is 59 This does not mean that the average North American small business decision maker uses nearly six different social media resources to get the information they need to do their jobs on a day-to-day basis It does however suggest that small business decision makers who DO turn to social media resources for business information use on average nearly six different sources Figure 1 Number of Social Media Resources Used for Business Information
Among small business decision makers using social media for business information the most frequently used resources were webinars or podcasts (67) followed by ratingsreviews of business products or services (63) and visiting companyproduct profile pages on social media sites such as Facebook Twitter and LinkedIn (61)
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Figure 2 Top Business Social Media Resources for Small Business Decision Makers
Small business decision makers find webinars and podcasts to be valuable resources for learning new skills andor researching industries products and services without the downsides of attending in-person seminars (travel time and expense reluctance to walk-out of a seminar once the speaker has started) For example
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ldquoThe most useful social media resource is the webinars I feel that they offer the most dont demand that I travel spend a lot of money or even make a huge commitment of time They are usually well focused on a topic and therefore dont waste my time with a lot of unrelated topics If I dont find them useful or on point I can quit and dont have to walk out on a speakerrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 10-19 Employee Company
Agriculture Industry Webinars are also very convenient for professionals in rapidly changing or evolving industries where ongoing training is essential A C-level executive from a Financial Services company explained why webinars are the most useful social media resource for business
ldquoTax law is ever changing so we rely on webinars and other instant media to update us on the latest changes in tax accounting Social media is critical to our industryrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry
The second most popular social media resource small business decision makers turn to is ratings and reviews of productsservices they may need for their business Mentioned by 63 of respondents From reading business book reviews on Amazoncom to qualifying potential products to resell through user ratings online ratings and reviews provide valuable input into the business buying process as long as these ldquosound honest and not like someone just put them up there to make the company sound goodrdquo (Owner 1-4 employee retail business) On the other hand small business decision makers seeking business-relevant information through social media channels were least likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information (27 although 53 search social media sites more generally) save business-related links on social bookmarking sites like Digg Delicious StumbleUpon or other (27) and participate in discussions on 3rd party web sites (29) Although Twitter fell to the bottom of the list of most used social media resources for business those actually using Twitter in this way are very positive about the business value We asked study participants to tell us about the MOST useful social media resource theyrsquove found for business and Twitter topped this write-in list with small business decision makers praising the ability to get quick feedback and access relevant business information For example
ldquoOn Twitter the people I follow provide me with more relevant links and information than any other tool It saves me time and helps me learn about new technologies or innovative ideas as they are happeningrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 1-4 Employee Company
Internet Industry
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Or the following from a member of the senior management team at a company in the financial services industry
ldquoTwitter provides a quick connection to relevant businesses and individuals who often provide helpful links to pertinent resources articles and blog postsrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry In general companies interested in using social media to engage small business customers and prospects would be wise to
bull Develop educational webinars andor podcasts which address specific small business needs in the process of introducing company products or services
bull Encourage and carefully tend online reviews of company products or services
bull Establish a presence on one or more major social networking sites and use this as a hub for corporate social media initiatives
bull Participate in more focused online discussions where it is easy to find and respond to
questions specifically related to company products or services ndash such answering questions on QampA sites like LinkedIn Answers or Businesscom Answers or in online business forums ndash rather than trying to work a promotional mention into discussions on 3rd party web sites and blogs
bull Further investigate how their target audience is using Twitter for business today and begin developing a Twitter strategy
This is far from the end of the story however In the following sections we explore differences in the use of social media for business information by company size industry job level and job role to help companies targeting small business decision makers improve their social media strategies
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry The small business decision makers in this study differ across industries in their use of social media as a resource for business information In this section we explore these differences to provide the business social media usage benchmark information necessary to effectively customize social media strategies to the unique preferences of small business decision makers in twelve different industries To begin with small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use a significantly greater number of social media web sitesresources than the average of those in other industries Study participants in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries however use significantly fewer social media sitesresources for business information Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry
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Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
2
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
List of Figures Figure 1 Number of Social Media Resources Used for Business Information 5 Figure 2 Top Business Social Media Resources for Small Business Decision Makers 6 Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry 9 Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry 10 Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry 11 Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry 12 Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry 13 Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry 14 Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry 15 Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry 16 Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry 17 Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry 18 Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry 19 Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry 20 Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry 21 Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size 22 Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size 23 Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level 24 Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level 25 Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type 27 Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type 28 Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience 30 Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media 31 Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media 32 Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives 33 Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size 35 Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry 36 Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role 36 Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level 37 Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type 37 Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus 38 Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location 38
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Introduction What are the most effective social media channels through which to reach small business decision makers This is the key question we address in this companion report to Businesscomrsquos 2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Based on our sample of 1711 small business decision makers currently using one or more social media resources to find business-relevant information this report provides solid benchmark data to help improve marketing to small business while addressing the following questions
bull According to small business decision makers what are the most popular and most useful social media resources for business information
bull Are there significant differences in business social media usage across industries job roles andor company type (B2C vs B2B)
As with other reports in this series it is important to clarify at the outset that all study participants already use social media for business Given mounting evidence that social media usage is quickly becoming mainstream ndash for example 46 of US adults now participate in social networks and a quarter do so weekly1
Results Summary
ndash the most important questions revolve around how social media is being used for business not if it is being used
The following provide a brief overview of some of the key findings and insights in this report
bull The report is based on survey results from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies
bull All respondents currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job (ie all results should be interpreted as ldquoamong those using social media for businesshelliprdquo rather than ldquoacross all businesseshelliprdquo)
bull The most popular social media resources small business decision makers turn to for business are webinars and podcasts user ratings and reviews of business products and services and business profiles (accounts fan pages channels etc) on social networking sites such as Facebook LinkedIn Twitter and other sites
bull The convenience and speed with which small business decision makers can find business-relevant information is what attracts them to social media resources For example webinars save the time and expense of travel for professional education
bull Small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use significantly more social media resources for business than study respondents from other industries
1Lenhart Amanda The Democratization of Online Social Networks Pew Internet amp American Life Project October 8 2009 httpwwwpewinternetorgPresentations200941--The-Democratization-of-Online-Social-Networksaspx
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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bull Small business decision makers in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries use significantly fewer social media resources for business than study respondents from other industries
bull Across sole proprietors micro businesses (1-9 employees) and small businesses (10-99 employees) company size has little meaningful impact on the use of social media resources for business information
bull Looking specifically at small businesses with 10-99 employees members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
bull Job roledepartment is not strongly related to the use of social media for business among small business decision makers
bull Small business decision makers at business-to-business (B2B) companies use both significantly more social media resources for business than their business-to-consumer (B2C) colleagues and with a single exception (reading ratings and reviews of business products and services) are significantly more likely to use each of the business social media resources investigated in this study
bull A cross-sectional look at business social media usage by small business decision makers with different degrees of experience using social media provides insights into how social media usage is likely to evolve in the future
A Request when Referencing or Sharing this Study A good benchmarking study should generate significant discussion and debate and we hope that many of you will discuss one or more insights from this study in your own blog web site publication conference presentation andor in other forums Since this research took considerable time and effort to produce ndash it is after all the largest study of business social media use within North American companies to date ndash we have two simple requests
1 Please use the following when referencing this report
Source Engaging Small Business Decision Makers through Social Media A 2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Report Businesscom December 7 2009 httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
2 Provide your readers with a link to httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-
business-through-social-media where they can download their own copy of the report Do not link to your own copy of the PDF stored on your own web site or other content sharing sites like SlideShare While we understand the spirit of open content the brief registration required to access the study is not particularly onerous or invasive and also provides people interested in the study with the opportunity to indicate their interest in participating in future Businesscom studies about other online marketing topics Help us continue to offer top quality research at no cost by linking to the report download page
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Top Social Media Resources for Business Information
In this study we provided respondents with a list of different types of social media resources and asked them to indicate which if any they currently use to get the information and resources they need to do their jobs The figure below shows the percentage of small business decision maker respondents by the total number of social media resources for business information they indicated using Here and throughout the rest of this report it is important to keep in mind that there is no ldquo0rdquo on the scale below ndash the 1711 small business decision makers we profile here all use at least one social media resource for business-relevant information The overall average number of social media resources used by participants in this study is 59 This does not mean that the average North American small business decision maker uses nearly six different social media resources to get the information they need to do their jobs on a day-to-day basis It does however suggest that small business decision makers who DO turn to social media resources for business information use on average nearly six different sources Figure 1 Number of Social Media Resources Used for Business Information
Among small business decision makers using social media for business information the most frequently used resources were webinars or podcasts (67) followed by ratingsreviews of business products or services (63) and visiting companyproduct profile pages on social media sites such as Facebook Twitter and LinkedIn (61)
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Figure 2 Top Business Social Media Resources for Small Business Decision Makers
Small business decision makers find webinars and podcasts to be valuable resources for learning new skills andor researching industries products and services without the downsides of attending in-person seminars (travel time and expense reluctance to walk-out of a seminar once the speaker has started) For example
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ldquoThe most useful social media resource is the webinars I feel that they offer the most dont demand that I travel spend a lot of money or even make a huge commitment of time They are usually well focused on a topic and therefore dont waste my time with a lot of unrelated topics If I dont find them useful or on point I can quit and dont have to walk out on a speakerrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 10-19 Employee Company
Agriculture Industry Webinars are also very convenient for professionals in rapidly changing or evolving industries where ongoing training is essential A C-level executive from a Financial Services company explained why webinars are the most useful social media resource for business
ldquoTax law is ever changing so we rely on webinars and other instant media to update us on the latest changes in tax accounting Social media is critical to our industryrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry
The second most popular social media resource small business decision makers turn to is ratings and reviews of productsservices they may need for their business Mentioned by 63 of respondents From reading business book reviews on Amazoncom to qualifying potential products to resell through user ratings online ratings and reviews provide valuable input into the business buying process as long as these ldquosound honest and not like someone just put them up there to make the company sound goodrdquo (Owner 1-4 employee retail business) On the other hand small business decision makers seeking business-relevant information through social media channels were least likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information (27 although 53 search social media sites more generally) save business-related links on social bookmarking sites like Digg Delicious StumbleUpon or other (27) and participate in discussions on 3rd party web sites (29) Although Twitter fell to the bottom of the list of most used social media resources for business those actually using Twitter in this way are very positive about the business value We asked study participants to tell us about the MOST useful social media resource theyrsquove found for business and Twitter topped this write-in list with small business decision makers praising the ability to get quick feedback and access relevant business information For example
ldquoOn Twitter the people I follow provide me with more relevant links and information than any other tool It saves me time and helps me learn about new technologies or innovative ideas as they are happeningrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 1-4 Employee Company
Internet Industry
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Or the following from a member of the senior management team at a company in the financial services industry
ldquoTwitter provides a quick connection to relevant businesses and individuals who often provide helpful links to pertinent resources articles and blog postsrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry In general companies interested in using social media to engage small business customers and prospects would be wise to
bull Develop educational webinars andor podcasts which address specific small business needs in the process of introducing company products or services
bull Encourage and carefully tend online reviews of company products or services
bull Establish a presence on one or more major social networking sites and use this as a hub for corporate social media initiatives
bull Participate in more focused online discussions where it is easy to find and respond to
questions specifically related to company products or services ndash such answering questions on QampA sites like LinkedIn Answers or Businesscom Answers or in online business forums ndash rather than trying to work a promotional mention into discussions on 3rd party web sites and blogs
bull Further investigate how their target audience is using Twitter for business today and begin developing a Twitter strategy
This is far from the end of the story however In the following sections we explore differences in the use of social media for business information by company size industry job level and job role to help companies targeting small business decision makers improve their social media strategies
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry The small business decision makers in this study differ across industries in their use of social media as a resource for business information In this section we explore these differences to provide the business social media usage benchmark information necessary to effectively customize social media strategies to the unique preferences of small business decision makers in twelve different industries To begin with small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use a significantly greater number of social media web sitesresources than the average of those in other industries Study participants in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries however use significantly fewer social media sitesresources for business information Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
3
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Introduction What are the most effective social media channels through which to reach small business decision makers This is the key question we address in this companion report to Businesscomrsquos 2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Based on our sample of 1711 small business decision makers currently using one or more social media resources to find business-relevant information this report provides solid benchmark data to help improve marketing to small business while addressing the following questions
bull According to small business decision makers what are the most popular and most useful social media resources for business information
bull Are there significant differences in business social media usage across industries job roles andor company type (B2C vs B2B)
As with other reports in this series it is important to clarify at the outset that all study participants already use social media for business Given mounting evidence that social media usage is quickly becoming mainstream ndash for example 46 of US adults now participate in social networks and a quarter do so weekly1
Results Summary
ndash the most important questions revolve around how social media is being used for business not if it is being used
The following provide a brief overview of some of the key findings and insights in this report
bull The report is based on survey results from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies
bull All respondents currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job (ie all results should be interpreted as ldquoamong those using social media for businesshelliprdquo rather than ldquoacross all businesseshelliprdquo)
bull The most popular social media resources small business decision makers turn to for business are webinars and podcasts user ratings and reviews of business products and services and business profiles (accounts fan pages channels etc) on social networking sites such as Facebook LinkedIn Twitter and other sites
bull The convenience and speed with which small business decision makers can find business-relevant information is what attracts them to social media resources For example webinars save the time and expense of travel for professional education
bull Small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use significantly more social media resources for business than study respondents from other industries
1Lenhart Amanda The Democratization of Online Social Networks Pew Internet amp American Life Project October 8 2009 httpwwwpewinternetorgPresentations200941--The-Democratization-of-Online-Social-Networksaspx
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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bull Small business decision makers in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries use significantly fewer social media resources for business than study respondents from other industries
bull Across sole proprietors micro businesses (1-9 employees) and small businesses (10-99 employees) company size has little meaningful impact on the use of social media resources for business information
bull Looking specifically at small businesses with 10-99 employees members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
bull Job roledepartment is not strongly related to the use of social media for business among small business decision makers
bull Small business decision makers at business-to-business (B2B) companies use both significantly more social media resources for business than their business-to-consumer (B2C) colleagues and with a single exception (reading ratings and reviews of business products and services) are significantly more likely to use each of the business social media resources investigated in this study
bull A cross-sectional look at business social media usage by small business decision makers with different degrees of experience using social media provides insights into how social media usage is likely to evolve in the future
A Request when Referencing or Sharing this Study A good benchmarking study should generate significant discussion and debate and we hope that many of you will discuss one or more insights from this study in your own blog web site publication conference presentation andor in other forums Since this research took considerable time and effort to produce ndash it is after all the largest study of business social media use within North American companies to date ndash we have two simple requests
1 Please use the following when referencing this report
Source Engaging Small Business Decision Makers through Social Media A 2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Report Businesscom December 7 2009 httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
2 Provide your readers with a link to httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-
business-through-social-media where they can download their own copy of the report Do not link to your own copy of the PDF stored on your own web site or other content sharing sites like SlideShare While we understand the spirit of open content the brief registration required to access the study is not particularly onerous or invasive and also provides people interested in the study with the opportunity to indicate their interest in participating in future Businesscom studies about other online marketing topics Help us continue to offer top quality research at no cost by linking to the report download page
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copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Social Media Resources for Business Information
In this study we provided respondents with a list of different types of social media resources and asked them to indicate which if any they currently use to get the information and resources they need to do their jobs The figure below shows the percentage of small business decision maker respondents by the total number of social media resources for business information they indicated using Here and throughout the rest of this report it is important to keep in mind that there is no ldquo0rdquo on the scale below ndash the 1711 small business decision makers we profile here all use at least one social media resource for business-relevant information The overall average number of social media resources used by participants in this study is 59 This does not mean that the average North American small business decision maker uses nearly six different social media resources to get the information they need to do their jobs on a day-to-day basis It does however suggest that small business decision makers who DO turn to social media resources for business information use on average nearly six different sources Figure 1 Number of Social Media Resources Used for Business Information
Among small business decision makers using social media for business information the most frequently used resources were webinars or podcasts (67) followed by ratingsreviews of business products or services (63) and visiting companyproduct profile pages on social media sites such as Facebook Twitter and LinkedIn (61)
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Figure 2 Top Business Social Media Resources for Small Business Decision Makers
Small business decision makers find webinars and podcasts to be valuable resources for learning new skills andor researching industries products and services without the downsides of attending in-person seminars (travel time and expense reluctance to walk-out of a seminar once the speaker has started) For example
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ldquoThe most useful social media resource is the webinars I feel that they offer the most dont demand that I travel spend a lot of money or even make a huge commitment of time They are usually well focused on a topic and therefore dont waste my time with a lot of unrelated topics If I dont find them useful or on point I can quit and dont have to walk out on a speakerrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 10-19 Employee Company
Agriculture Industry Webinars are also very convenient for professionals in rapidly changing or evolving industries where ongoing training is essential A C-level executive from a Financial Services company explained why webinars are the most useful social media resource for business
ldquoTax law is ever changing so we rely on webinars and other instant media to update us on the latest changes in tax accounting Social media is critical to our industryrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry
The second most popular social media resource small business decision makers turn to is ratings and reviews of productsservices they may need for their business Mentioned by 63 of respondents From reading business book reviews on Amazoncom to qualifying potential products to resell through user ratings online ratings and reviews provide valuable input into the business buying process as long as these ldquosound honest and not like someone just put them up there to make the company sound goodrdquo (Owner 1-4 employee retail business) On the other hand small business decision makers seeking business-relevant information through social media channels were least likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information (27 although 53 search social media sites more generally) save business-related links on social bookmarking sites like Digg Delicious StumbleUpon or other (27) and participate in discussions on 3rd party web sites (29) Although Twitter fell to the bottom of the list of most used social media resources for business those actually using Twitter in this way are very positive about the business value We asked study participants to tell us about the MOST useful social media resource theyrsquove found for business and Twitter topped this write-in list with small business decision makers praising the ability to get quick feedback and access relevant business information For example
ldquoOn Twitter the people I follow provide me with more relevant links and information than any other tool It saves me time and helps me learn about new technologies or innovative ideas as they are happeningrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 1-4 Employee Company
Internet Industry
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Or the following from a member of the senior management team at a company in the financial services industry
ldquoTwitter provides a quick connection to relevant businesses and individuals who often provide helpful links to pertinent resources articles and blog postsrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry In general companies interested in using social media to engage small business customers and prospects would be wise to
bull Develop educational webinars andor podcasts which address specific small business needs in the process of introducing company products or services
bull Encourage and carefully tend online reviews of company products or services
bull Establish a presence on one or more major social networking sites and use this as a hub for corporate social media initiatives
bull Participate in more focused online discussions where it is easy to find and respond to
questions specifically related to company products or services ndash such answering questions on QampA sites like LinkedIn Answers or Businesscom Answers or in online business forums ndash rather than trying to work a promotional mention into discussions on 3rd party web sites and blogs
bull Further investigate how their target audience is using Twitter for business today and begin developing a Twitter strategy
This is far from the end of the story however In the following sections we explore differences in the use of social media for business information by company size industry job level and job role to help companies targeting small business decision makers improve their social media strategies
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry The small business decision makers in this study differ across industries in their use of social media as a resource for business information In this section we explore these differences to provide the business social media usage benchmark information necessary to effectively customize social media strategies to the unique preferences of small business decision makers in twelve different industries To begin with small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use a significantly greater number of social media web sitesresources than the average of those in other industries Study participants in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries however use significantly fewer social media sitesresources for business information Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
4
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
bull Small business decision makers in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries use significantly fewer social media resources for business than study respondents from other industries
bull Across sole proprietors micro businesses (1-9 employees) and small businesses (10-99 employees) company size has little meaningful impact on the use of social media resources for business information
bull Looking specifically at small businesses with 10-99 employees members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
bull Job roledepartment is not strongly related to the use of social media for business among small business decision makers
bull Small business decision makers at business-to-business (B2B) companies use both significantly more social media resources for business than their business-to-consumer (B2C) colleagues and with a single exception (reading ratings and reviews of business products and services) are significantly more likely to use each of the business social media resources investigated in this study
bull A cross-sectional look at business social media usage by small business decision makers with different degrees of experience using social media provides insights into how social media usage is likely to evolve in the future
A Request when Referencing or Sharing this Study A good benchmarking study should generate significant discussion and debate and we hope that many of you will discuss one or more insights from this study in your own blog web site publication conference presentation andor in other forums Since this research took considerable time and effort to produce ndash it is after all the largest study of business social media use within North American companies to date ndash we have two simple requests
1 Please use the following when referencing this report
Source Engaging Small Business Decision Makers through Social Media A 2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Report Businesscom December 7 2009 httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
2 Provide your readers with a link to httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-
business-through-social-media where they can download their own copy of the report Do not link to your own copy of the PDF stored on your own web site or other content sharing sites like SlideShare While we understand the spirit of open content the brief registration required to access the study is not particularly onerous or invasive and also provides people interested in the study with the opportunity to indicate their interest in participating in future Businesscom studies about other online marketing topics Help us continue to offer top quality research at no cost by linking to the report download page
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Top Social Media Resources for Business Information
In this study we provided respondents with a list of different types of social media resources and asked them to indicate which if any they currently use to get the information and resources they need to do their jobs The figure below shows the percentage of small business decision maker respondents by the total number of social media resources for business information they indicated using Here and throughout the rest of this report it is important to keep in mind that there is no ldquo0rdquo on the scale below ndash the 1711 small business decision makers we profile here all use at least one social media resource for business-relevant information The overall average number of social media resources used by participants in this study is 59 This does not mean that the average North American small business decision maker uses nearly six different social media resources to get the information they need to do their jobs on a day-to-day basis It does however suggest that small business decision makers who DO turn to social media resources for business information use on average nearly six different sources Figure 1 Number of Social Media Resources Used for Business Information
Among small business decision makers using social media for business information the most frequently used resources were webinars or podcasts (67) followed by ratingsreviews of business products or services (63) and visiting companyproduct profile pages on social media sites such as Facebook Twitter and LinkedIn (61)
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Figure 2 Top Business Social Media Resources for Small Business Decision Makers
Small business decision makers find webinars and podcasts to be valuable resources for learning new skills andor researching industries products and services without the downsides of attending in-person seminars (travel time and expense reluctance to walk-out of a seminar once the speaker has started) For example
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ldquoThe most useful social media resource is the webinars I feel that they offer the most dont demand that I travel spend a lot of money or even make a huge commitment of time They are usually well focused on a topic and therefore dont waste my time with a lot of unrelated topics If I dont find them useful or on point I can quit and dont have to walk out on a speakerrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 10-19 Employee Company
Agriculture Industry Webinars are also very convenient for professionals in rapidly changing or evolving industries where ongoing training is essential A C-level executive from a Financial Services company explained why webinars are the most useful social media resource for business
ldquoTax law is ever changing so we rely on webinars and other instant media to update us on the latest changes in tax accounting Social media is critical to our industryrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry
The second most popular social media resource small business decision makers turn to is ratings and reviews of productsservices they may need for their business Mentioned by 63 of respondents From reading business book reviews on Amazoncom to qualifying potential products to resell through user ratings online ratings and reviews provide valuable input into the business buying process as long as these ldquosound honest and not like someone just put them up there to make the company sound goodrdquo (Owner 1-4 employee retail business) On the other hand small business decision makers seeking business-relevant information through social media channels were least likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information (27 although 53 search social media sites more generally) save business-related links on social bookmarking sites like Digg Delicious StumbleUpon or other (27) and participate in discussions on 3rd party web sites (29) Although Twitter fell to the bottom of the list of most used social media resources for business those actually using Twitter in this way are very positive about the business value We asked study participants to tell us about the MOST useful social media resource theyrsquove found for business and Twitter topped this write-in list with small business decision makers praising the ability to get quick feedback and access relevant business information For example
ldquoOn Twitter the people I follow provide me with more relevant links and information than any other tool It saves me time and helps me learn about new technologies or innovative ideas as they are happeningrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 1-4 Employee Company
Internet Industry
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Or the following from a member of the senior management team at a company in the financial services industry
ldquoTwitter provides a quick connection to relevant businesses and individuals who often provide helpful links to pertinent resources articles and blog postsrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry In general companies interested in using social media to engage small business customers and prospects would be wise to
bull Develop educational webinars andor podcasts which address specific small business needs in the process of introducing company products or services
bull Encourage and carefully tend online reviews of company products or services
bull Establish a presence on one or more major social networking sites and use this as a hub for corporate social media initiatives
bull Participate in more focused online discussions where it is easy to find and respond to
questions specifically related to company products or services ndash such answering questions on QampA sites like LinkedIn Answers or Businesscom Answers or in online business forums ndash rather than trying to work a promotional mention into discussions on 3rd party web sites and blogs
bull Further investigate how their target audience is using Twitter for business today and begin developing a Twitter strategy
This is far from the end of the story however In the following sections we explore differences in the use of social media for business information by company size industry job level and job role to help companies targeting small business decision makers improve their social media strategies
R
ES
EA
RC
H R
EP
OR
T
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry The small business decision makers in this study differ across industries in their use of social media as a resource for business information In this section we explore these differences to provide the business social media usage benchmark information necessary to effectively customize social media strategies to the unique preferences of small business decision makers in twelve different industries To begin with small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use a significantly greater number of social media web sitesresources than the average of those in other industries Study participants in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries however use significantly fewer social media sitesresources for business information Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
5
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Social Media Resources for Business Information
In this study we provided respondents with a list of different types of social media resources and asked them to indicate which if any they currently use to get the information and resources they need to do their jobs The figure below shows the percentage of small business decision maker respondents by the total number of social media resources for business information they indicated using Here and throughout the rest of this report it is important to keep in mind that there is no ldquo0rdquo on the scale below ndash the 1711 small business decision makers we profile here all use at least one social media resource for business-relevant information The overall average number of social media resources used by participants in this study is 59 This does not mean that the average North American small business decision maker uses nearly six different social media resources to get the information they need to do their jobs on a day-to-day basis It does however suggest that small business decision makers who DO turn to social media resources for business information use on average nearly six different sources Figure 1 Number of Social Media Resources Used for Business Information
Among small business decision makers using social media for business information the most frequently used resources were webinars or podcasts (67) followed by ratingsreviews of business products or services (63) and visiting companyproduct profile pages on social media sites such as Facebook Twitter and LinkedIn (61)
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Figure 2 Top Business Social Media Resources for Small Business Decision Makers
Small business decision makers find webinars and podcasts to be valuable resources for learning new skills andor researching industries products and services without the downsides of attending in-person seminars (travel time and expense reluctance to walk-out of a seminar once the speaker has started) For example
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ldquoThe most useful social media resource is the webinars I feel that they offer the most dont demand that I travel spend a lot of money or even make a huge commitment of time They are usually well focused on a topic and therefore dont waste my time with a lot of unrelated topics If I dont find them useful or on point I can quit and dont have to walk out on a speakerrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 10-19 Employee Company
Agriculture Industry Webinars are also very convenient for professionals in rapidly changing or evolving industries where ongoing training is essential A C-level executive from a Financial Services company explained why webinars are the most useful social media resource for business
ldquoTax law is ever changing so we rely on webinars and other instant media to update us on the latest changes in tax accounting Social media is critical to our industryrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry
The second most popular social media resource small business decision makers turn to is ratings and reviews of productsservices they may need for their business Mentioned by 63 of respondents From reading business book reviews on Amazoncom to qualifying potential products to resell through user ratings online ratings and reviews provide valuable input into the business buying process as long as these ldquosound honest and not like someone just put them up there to make the company sound goodrdquo (Owner 1-4 employee retail business) On the other hand small business decision makers seeking business-relevant information through social media channels were least likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information (27 although 53 search social media sites more generally) save business-related links on social bookmarking sites like Digg Delicious StumbleUpon or other (27) and participate in discussions on 3rd party web sites (29) Although Twitter fell to the bottom of the list of most used social media resources for business those actually using Twitter in this way are very positive about the business value We asked study participants to tell us about the MOST useful social media resource theyrsquove found for business and Twitter topped this write-in list with small business decision makers praising the ability to get quick feedback and access relevant business information For example
ldquoOn Twitter the people I follow provide me with more relevant links and information than any other tool It saves me time and helps me learn about new technologies or innovative ideas as they are happeningrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 1-4 Employee Company
Internet Industry
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Or the following from a member of the senior management team at a company in the financial services industry
ldquoTwitter provides a quick connection to relevant businesses and individuals who often provide helpful links to pertinent resources articles and blog postsrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry In general companies interested in using social media to engage small business customers and prospects would be wise to
bull Develop educational webinars andor podcasts which address specific small business needs in the process of introducing company products or services
bull Encourage and carefully tend online reviews of company products or services
bull Establish a presence on one or more major social networking sites and use this as a hub for corporate social media initiatives
bull Participate in more focused online discussions where it is easy to find and respond to
questions specifically related to company products or services ndash such answering questions on QampA sites like LinkedIn Answers or Businesscom Answers or in online business forums ndash rather than trying to work a promotional mention into discussions on 3rd party web sites and blogs
bull Further investigate how their target audience is using Twitter for business today and begin developing a Twitter strategy
This is far from the end of the story however In the following sections we explore differences in the use of social media for business information by company size industry job level and job role to help companies targeting small business decision makers improve their social media strategies
R
ES
EA
RC
H R
EP
OR
T
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry The small business decision makers in this study differ across industries in their use of social media as a resource for business information In this section we explore these differences to provide the business social media usage benchmark information necessary to effectively customize social media strategies to the unique preferences of small business decision makers in twelve different industries To begin with small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use a significantly greater number of social media web sitesresources than the average of those in other industries Study participants in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries however use significantly fewer social media sitesresources for business information Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry
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Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
6
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 2 Top Business Social Media Resources for Small Business Decision Makers
Small business decision makers find webinars and podcasts to be valuable resources for learning new skills andor researching industries products and services without the downsides of attending in-person seminars (travel time and expense reluctance to walk-out of a seminar once the speaker has started) For example
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ldquoThe most useful social media resource is the webinars I feel that they offer the most dont demand that I travel spend a lot of money or even make a huge commitment of time They are usually well focused on a topic and therefore dont waste my time with a lot of unrelated topics If I dont find them useful or on point I can quit and dont have to walk out on a speakerrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 10-19 Employee Company
Agriculture Industry Webinars are also very convenient for professionals in rapidly changing or evolving industries where ongoing training is essential A C-level executive from a Financial Services company explained why webinars are the most useful social media resource for business
ldquoTax law is ever changing so we rely on webinars and other instant media to update us on the latest changes in tax accounting Social media is critical to our industryrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry
The second most popular social media resource small business decision makers turn to is ratings and reviews of productsservices they may need for their business Mentioned by 63 of respondents From reading business book reviews on Amazoncom to qualifying potential products to resell through user ratings online ratings and reviews provide valuable input into the business buying process as long as these ldquosound honest and not like someone just put them up there to make the company sound goodrdquo (Owner 1-4 employee retail business) On the other hand small business decision makers seeking business-relevant information through social media channels were least likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information (27 although 53 search social media sites more generally) save business-related links on social bookmarking sites like Digg Delicious StumbleUpon or other (27) and participate in discussions on 3rd party web sites (29) Although Twitter fell to the bottom of the list of most used social media resources for business those actually using Twitter in this way are very positive about the business value We asked study participants to tell us about the MOST useful social media resource theyrsquove found for business and Twitter topped this write-in list with small business decision makers praising the ability to get quick feedback and access relevant business information For example
ldquoOn Twitter the people I follow provide me with more relevant links and information than any other tool It saves me time and helps me learn about new technologies or innovative ideas as they are happeningrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 1-4 Employee Company
Internet Industry
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Or the following from a member of the senior management team at a company in the financial services industry
ldquoTwitter provides a quick connection to relevant businesses and individuals who often provide helpful links to pertinent resources articles and blog postsrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry In general companies interested in using social media to engage small business customers and prospects would be wise to
bull Develop educational webinars andor podcasts which address specific small business needs in the process of introducing company products or services
bull Encourage and carefully tend online reviews of company products or services
bull Establish a presence on one or more major social networking sites and use this as a hub for corporate social media initiatives
bull Participate in more focused online discussions where it is easy to find and respond to
questions specifically related to company products or services ndash such answering questions on QampA sites like LinkedIn Answers or Businesscom Answers or in online business forums ndash rather than trying to work a promotional mention into discussions on 3rd party web sites and blogs
bull Further investigate how their target audience is using Twitter for business today and begin developing a Twitter strategy
This is far from the end of the story however In the following sections we explore differences in the use of social media for business information by company size industry job level and job role to help companies targeting small business decision makers improve their social media strategies
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry The small business decision makers in this study differ across industries in their use of social media as a resource for business information In this section we explore these differences to provide the business social media usage benchmark information necessary to effectively customize social media strategies to the unique preferences of small business decision makers in twelve different industries To begin with small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use a significantly greater number of social media web sitesresources than the average of those in other industries Study participants in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries however use significantly fewer social media sitesresources for business information Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry
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Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
7
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
ldquoThe most useful social media resource is the webinars I feel that they offer the most dont demand that I travel spend a lot of money or even make a huge commitment of time They are usually well focused on a topic and therefore dont waste my time with a lot of unrelated topics If I dont find them useful or on point I can quit and dont have to walk out on a speakerrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 10-19 Employee Company
Agriculture Industry Webinars are also very convenient for professionals in rapidly changing or evolving industries where ongoing training is essential A C-level executive from a Financial Services company explained why webinars are the most useful social media resource for business
ldquoTax law is ever changing so we rely on webinars and other instant media to update us on the latest changes in tax accounting Social media is critical to our industryrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry
The second most popular social media resource small business decision makers turn to is ratings and reviews of productsservices they may need for their business Mentioned by 63 of respondents From reading business book reviews on Amazoncom to qualifying potential products to resell through user ratings online ratings and reviews provide valuable input into the business buying process as long as these ldquosound honest and not like someone just put them up there to make the company sound goodrdquo (Owner 1-4 employee retail business) On the other hand small business decision makers seeking business-relevant information through social media channels were least likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information (27 although 53 search social media sites more generally) save business-related links on social bookmarking sites like Digg Delicious StumbleUpon or other (27) and participate in discussions on 3rd party web sites (29) Although Twitter fell to the bottom of the list of most used social media resources for business those actually using Twitter in this way are very positive about the business value We asked study participants to tell us about the MOST useful social media resource theyrsquove found for business and Twitter topped this write-in list with small business decision makers praising the ability to get quick feedback and access relevant business information For example
ldquoOn Twitter the people I follow provide me with more relevant links and information than any other tool It saves me time and helps me learn about new technologies or innovative ideas as they are happeningrdquo
C-Level (CEO CFO President) 1-4 Employee Company
Internet Industry
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Or the following from a member of the senior management team at a company in the financial services industry
ldquoTwitter provides a quick connection to relevant businesses and individuals who often provide helpful links to pertinent resources articles and blog postsrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry In general companies interested in using social media to engage small business customers and prospects would be wise to
bull Develop educational webinars andor podcasts which address specific small business needs in the process of introducing company products or services
bull Encourage and carefully tend online reviews of company products or services
bull Establish a presence on one or more major social networking sites and use this as a hub for corporate social media initiatives
bull Participate in more focused online discussions where it is easy to find and respond to
questions specifically related to company products or services ndash such answering questions on QampA sites like LinkedIn Answers or Businesscom Answers or in online business forums ndash rather than trying to work a promotional mention into discussions on 3rd party web sites and blogs
bull Further investigate how their target audience is using Twitter for business today and begin developing a Twitter strategy
This is far from the end of the story however In the following sections we explore differences in the use of social media for business information by company size industry job level and job role to help companies targeting small business decision makers improve their social media strategies
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry The small business decision makers in this study differ across industries in their use of social media as a resource for business information In this section we explore these differences to provide the business social media usage benchmark information necessary to effectively customize social media strategies to the unique preferences of small business decision makers in twelve different industries To begin with small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use a significantly greater number of social media web sitesresources than the average of those in other industries Study participants in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries however use significantly fewer social media sitesresources for business information Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry
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Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
8
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Or the following from a member of the senior management team at a company in the financial services industry
ldquoTwitter provides a quick connection to relevant businesses and individuals who often provide helpful links to pertinent resources articles and blog postsrdquo
Sr Management (EVP VP SVP GM) 20-49 Employee Company
Financial Services Industry In general companies interested in using social media to engage small business customers and prospects would be wise to
bull Develop educational webinars andor podcasts which address specific small business needs in the process of introducing company products or services
bull Encourage and carefully tend online reviews of company products or services
bull Establish a presence on one or more major social networking sites and use this as a hub for corporate social media initiatives
bull Participate in more focused online discussions where it is easy to find and respond to
questions specifically related to company products or services ndash such answering questions on QampA sites like LinkedIn Answers or Businesscom Answers or in online business forums ndash rather than trying to work a promotional mention into discussions on 3rd party web sites and blogs
bull Further investigate how their target audience is using Twitter for business today and begin developing a Twitter strategy
This is far from the end of the story however In the following sections we explore differences in the use of social media for business information by company size industry job level and job role to help companies targeting small business decision makers improve their social media strategies
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry The small business decision makers in this study differ across industries in their use of social media as a resource for business information In this section we explore these differences to provide the business social media usage benchmark information necessary to effectively customize social media strategies to the unique preferences of small business decision makers in twelve different industries To begin with small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use a significantly greater number of social media web sitesresources than the average of those in other industries Study participants in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries however use significantly fewer social media sitesresources for business information Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry
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Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
9
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Industry The small business decision makers in this study differ across industries in their use of social media as a resource for business information In this section we explore these differences to provide the business social media usage benchmark information necessary to effectively customize social media strategies to the unique preferences of small business decision makers in twelve different industries To begin with small business decision makers in the Internet amp Online Advertising amp Marketing and Computers amp Software industries use a significantly greater number of social media web sitesresources than the average of those in other industries Study participants in the Healthcare Retail and Legal industries however use significantly fewer social media sitesresources for business information Figure 3 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
10
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Advertising amp Marketing Industry As we saw in the chart above small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry draw on a broader array of social media resources for business information than the average of those in other industries The chart below showing the percentage of small business decision makers in the Advertising amp Marketing industry using each resource vs the percentage from other industries reinforces this point ndash with the exception of ratings and reviews respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use every one of the listed social media sitesresources than the combined average of other industries Figure 4 Social Media Use for Business ndash Advertising amp Marketing Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
11
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Automotive Industry Small business decision makers working in the Automotive industry show the greatest preference for reading online ratings amp reviews followed by downloading business-related content from content sharing sites In general however their use of different social media resources for business information is similar to the average of respondents working in other industries with one exception ndash Automotive industry respondents were significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts Figure 5 Social Media Use for Business ndash Automotive Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
12
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Computers amp Software Industry Small business decision makers from this industry are significantly more likely to visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds of business-related news or information sites and participate in online business-related discussions In fact visiting company blogs is the second most used business social media resource for those in the Computers amp Software industry up from the fourth ranked resource across all respondents Companies marketing to small business decision makers in this industry should focus on establishing an informative engaging company blog if they havenrsquot done so already Figure 6 Social Media Use for Business ndash Computers amp Software Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
13
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Financial Services Industry Small business decision makers in the Financial Services industry are much more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than the average of study participants from other industries As described in the opening section of this report the ongoing professional education requirements in this industry make webinarspodcasts very useful and cost-effective for this audience On the other hand respondents from this industry are significantly LESS likely to visit companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook or Twitter than respondents from other industries implying that a solid company presence on major social networking sites is less important for companies targeting small business decision makers in the Financial services industry Figure 7 Social Media Use for Business ndash Financial Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
14
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Food amp Beverage Industry Study participants working in the Food amp Beverage industry are average in the total number of social media resources they draw on for business information but do show several significant differences from those outside this industry Specifically small business decision makers in the Food amp Beverage industry are significantly more likely to read online user ratings and reviews of business products or services ndash the most used resource for those in this industry ndash and are also significantly more likely to search social media sites for business-relevant information Webinars and podcasts however are significantly less likely to be used by respondents from this industry Figure 8 Social Media Use for Business ndash Food amp Beverage Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
15
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Healthcare Industry Business decision makers from small companies in the Healthcare industry turn use fewer social media resources for business information than the average for other industries While respondents from this industry were significantly more likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts than those from other industries they are significantly less likely read or download business-related content from content sharing sites visit company blogs subscribe to RSS feeds save business-related links on social bookmarking sites and use Twitter to find or request business-related information The use of social media for business information is relatively nascent in this industry suggesting a basic social media strategy focused on webinars podcasts facilitating online product reviews and establishing a basic company presence on leading social networking sites will be sufficient for attracting the target Healthcare audience Figure 9 Social Media Use for Business ndash Healthcare Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
16
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Industrial Goods amp Services Industry When it comes to using social media as a resource for business information small business decision makers in the Industrial Goods amp Services industry are no different from the average across all other industries While a higher percentage of respondents from this industry reported reading user ratings and reviews for business products and services visiting companyproduct profiles on social networking sites and visiting company blogs than the overall top activity (attending webinars or listening to podcasts) these were not significant differences from the average respondent Figure 10 Social Media Use for Business ndash Industrial Goods amp Services Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
17
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Internet amp Online Industry Study participants working for companies primarily doing business online showed the highest average number of social media resources used for business information (85 out of a possible 13) ndash not all that surprising given that these respondents are likely to be highly experienced with a broad range of online activities and technologies While respondents from this industry are significantly more likely to use almost all of the social media resources for business information covered in this study the fact that theyrsquore much more likely to engage in more participatory social media activities for business (eg online business communities and forums using Twitter to find or request business information etc) is of particular interest Figure 11 Social Media Use for Business ndash Internet amp Online Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
18
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Legal Industry Small business decision makers in the Legal industry had the lowest average number of social media resources used for business across the industries studied In particular respondents in this industry were significantly less likely to seek-out business-relevant information from companyproduct profile pages on social media sites like Facebook LinkedIn or Twitter search for business-relevant information on social media sites ask questions on QampA sites and save business-related links on social bookmarking sites Figure 12 Social Media Use for Business ndash Legal Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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26
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
19
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Media amp Entertainment Industry When developing social media strategies to engage small business decision makers in the Media amp Entertainment industry using the general guidelines discussed in the first section of this report to prioritize initiatives is the best approach ndash respondents from this industry closely mirror average use of social media for business information with no significant differences from the norm Figure 13 Social Media Use for Business ndash Media amp Entertainment Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
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35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
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RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
20
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Real Estate amp Construction Industry Small business decision makers in the Real Estate amp Construction industry are largely similar to those from other industries in their use of social media resources for business information However they are significantly less likely to attend webinars or listen to podcasts and also less likely to use Twitter to find or request business-related information On the other hand they are significantly more likely to read or download business-related content from content sharing sites than their peers in other industries Figure 14 Social Media Use for Business ndash Real Estate amp Construction Industry
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21
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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22
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
RE
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23
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
RE
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25
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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26
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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27
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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28
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
RE
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29
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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30
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
RE
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32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
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34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
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35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
21
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Retail Industry The Retail industry small business decision makers in this study used the second lowest number of social media resources for business information significantly below the overall study average More specifically Retail industry respondents are significantly less likely to view webinars or listen to podcasts (although these are still the second most popular social media resource for this audience) read or download business-related content from content sharing sites search social media sites for business-related information use RSS feeds and participate in discussions on third-party web sites Figure 15 Social Media Use for Business ndash Retail Industry
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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23
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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24
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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26
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
RE
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27
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
RE
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30
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
RE
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31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
RE
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32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
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RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
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35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
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RE
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36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
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RT
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37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
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38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
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39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
22
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Company Size The small business decision makers in this study did not differ in the number of social media resources used for business as shown in the chart below Figure 16 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Company Size
As the chart on the following page shows however there were several significant differences in the use of individual social media resources Specifically a significantly higher proportion of decision makers from small companies (10-99 employees) view webinars or listen to podcasts visit company blogs and subscribe to RSS feeds of business-relevant information Respondents from this size company are also more likely to use Twitter to find business-relevant information than respondents from micro businesses (1-9 employees) but not more than sole proprietors
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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25
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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26
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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27
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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28
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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29
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
23
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 17 Significant Differences in Business Social Media Usage by Company Size
Despite these differences the relative order of the most popular business social media resources overall is unchanged suggesting company size has little meaningful impact on social media use across sole proprietors micro and small business decision makers
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24
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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26
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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27
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
RE
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29
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
RE
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31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
RE
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32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
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PO
RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
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35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
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37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
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RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
24
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Level In a prior report (the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study) we described some slight differences in business social media usage by senior management members in small vs mid- to large-sized companies ndash specifically that senior management members in mid- to large-sized companies are significantly more likely to use RSS feeds for business-relevant information and use Twitter to find or request business-related information than their small company peers For this report we looked specifically at respondents from companies with 10-99 employees where job levels exist in a more meaningful way than for micro-businesses and sole proprietors Unlike the results we saw earlier for industry there are no significant differences in the number of social media resources used by job level for this group of respondents Figure 18 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business (10-99 Employees) Job Level
Similar to the findings for company size significant differences did appear when looking at the use of specific social media resources for business across job levels as shown in the chart on the next page Members of the senior management team (EVP SVP VP GM) are significantly more likely to use webinars and podcasts and to ask questions on QampA sites than either middle managers or C-level execs On the other hand C-level execs are significantly less likely to visit company blogs and use Twitter to find or request business-relevant information than senior or middle managers
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25
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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26
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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27
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
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29
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
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32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
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34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
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35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
25
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 19 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash By Small Business (10-99 Employees) Decision Maker Job Level
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26
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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27
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
RE
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30
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
RE
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31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
RE
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32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
SE
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CH
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PO
RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
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RT
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
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CH
RE
PO
RT
36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
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RT
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
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39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
26
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Top Business Social Media Resources by Job Role Similar to job level job role is not always a clear-cut concept for sole proprietors and micro businesses For example in a four person marketing agency does the agency head consider themselves to be SeniorCorporate Management Consulting Marketing or Sales Restricting our analysis to the small business (10-99 employees) group where job role is somewhat more meaningful the only important difference worth highlighting is an obvious one at this point ndash those working in Marketing or Corporate Communications use significantly more social media resources for business than their colleagues in other roles (69 vs 58 for those in other roles) If you would like more details about the differences in business social media usage by job role across a broader range of company sizes than we cover in this report please download our 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study report from the Businesscom site at httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Business Social Media Usage at B2B vs B2C Companies We provided very extensive coverage of the differences in corporate social media initiatives between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) companies in the 2009 B2B Social Media Benchmark Study report mentioned in the prior section In that report we categorized a company as B2B if more than two-thirds of company revenue came from sales to other businesses The bottom line is that with some small exceptions B2B companies are much more active with corporate social media initiatives today than their B2C counterparts Given this we might expect B2B small business decision makers to have more experience managing business social media initiatives and perhaps be more likely themselves to turn to social media resources for business information they need The former is not true ndash B2B company participants in this study are no more experienced with participating in or managing business social media initiatives than respondents from B2C companies ndash but the latter is most definitely true as yoursquoll see in the next two charts B2B small business decision makers in this study used an average of 72 different social media resources for business versus an average of 55 for their B2C colleagues Respondents from companies with mixed revenue (no more than two-thirds of revenue from sales to either consumers or businesses) used an average of 61 different resources
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27
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
RE
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28
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
29
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
RE
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PO
RT
30
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
RE
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31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
RE
SE
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CH
RE
PO
RT
32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
RE
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33
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
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CH
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PO
RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
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36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
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39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
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CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
27
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 20 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
With a single exception reading ratings and reviews of business products and services small business decision makers at B2B companies have a higher percentage of respondents using each of the business social media resources than their B2C counterparts as you can see from the chart on the following page
RE
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PO
RT
28
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
29
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
30
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
RE
SE
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CH
RE
PO
RT
31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
RE
SE
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CH
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PO
RT
33
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
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CH
RE
PO
RT
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
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RT
38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
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CH
RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
28
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 21 Use of Social Media Resources for Business Information ndash Small Business Decision Makers by Company Type
Why are small business decision makers at B2B companies so much more active users of social media resources for business than B2C companies Itrsquos not clear at this point and wersquoll have to investigate this issue in more detail
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
29
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
30
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
33
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
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36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
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37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
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38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
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PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
29
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Predicting How Your Target Audience will Use Social Media for Business in the Future In this report wersquove shown that the number and types of social media resources used for business information by small business decision makers vary by industry company size job level and to some extent job role By looking at the number and types of social media resources used by small business decision makers with different levels of business social media experience (in the form of years of experience managing or working on company social media initiatives) we can also gain insight into how the use of social media as a business information resource is likely to evolve Understanding the types of social media resources most attractive to small business decision makers when they first dip a toe in the social media waters and the other types of resources they tend to start using over time is particularly important for companies targeting customers in industries where social media is relatively nascent such as the Legal Retail and Healthcare While relatively limited social media initiatives may capture the attention of potential customers in those industries at this point customers will evolve in their use of social media resources for business and companies will need to evolve their social media programs with their target audience or face the possibility of competitors dominating these ldquonewrdquo social media channels The chart below shows that the number of social media resources used for business information is
bull Significantly higher with 1-2 years of business social media experience than with less than one year of experience
bull Not significantly different between one and six years of experience bull Significantly lower with seven or more years of experience than with one to six years
but still significantly higher than those with under one year of experience Its very likely that the social media pros with seven or more years of experience with business social media initiatives found the social media resources that worked for them long ago and are more reticent than pure business social media ldquonewbiesrdquo or those with moderate experience to try andor participate in additional social media channels
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30
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
RE
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31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
RE
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33
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
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CH
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PO
RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
SE
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CH
RE
PO
RT
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
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38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
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RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
30
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 22 Average Number of Social Media Resources Used by Small Business Decision Makers by Business Social Media Experience
Digging into the use of specific social media resources for business ratings and reviews for business products and services is the only social media resource in this study where there is not a significant change in usage related to experience with business social media As yoursquoll see in the chart below the majority of business social media resources show significant increasing usage with experience While yoursquoll notice that in many cases usage drops in the group of small business decision makers with seven or more years of business social media experience this group still shows higher usage than the group of small business decision makers with less than one year of experience It may not be obvious at first glance but the overall trend is still linear
RE
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CH
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PO
RT
31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
RE
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CH
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33
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
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CH
RE
PO
RT
36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
RE
SE
AR
CH
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PO
RT
37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
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RT
38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
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CH
RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
31
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 23 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
On the other hand there are several social media resources for business information where the trend in usage with experience is not linear and is shaped more like an upside-down ldquoUrdquo The chart below shows that this is the case for attending webinars or listening to podcasts asking questions on business QampA sites and using Twitter to find or request business-relevant information
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
33
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
32
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 24 Social Media Resources where Usage Increases then Drops with Overall Experience with Business Social Media
The reason these trends matter becomes more obvious when we look at the chart below showing percentage of participants in this study with less than one year of experience managing or participating in business social media initiatives If a large portion of your target audience has little experience with business social media the charts above suggest where business social media usage is headed for that industry Conversely if your target customer industry is filled with business social media pros now is not the time to focus your corporate social media initiatives on webinars and podcasts as interest will be waning
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
33
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
33
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 25 Percentage of Small Business Decision Makers by Industry with lt1 Year of Experience with Business Social Media Initiatives
For example 45 of the small business decision maker respondents from the Retail industry have less than one year of experience with business social media initiatives Earlier in this report we saw that Retail industry respondents were significantly less likely to search for business-relevant information on social media sites (40 vs an average of 55 for respondents from other industries) We also see from the figure above that study participants with 1-2 years of experience with business social media initiatives conduct searches for business information on social media sites at a 31 higher rate than those with less than one year of experience (63 vs 48) Add this all together and guess what Wersquore likely to see a significant rise in Retail industry small business decision makers searching social media sites for business-relevant information in 2010 While there are too many industry by social media experience by business social media resource usage permutations to lay out in this report we encourage you to try this exercise for your own target audience to get a sense of the emerging trends
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
34
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Additional Reports Based on this Research The data set from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Survey is a very rich source of insights about a wide range of topics around the business use of social media The following reports based on this data set are available as of December 7 2009
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study Summarizes high-level findings from nearly 3000 North American study participants providing a very useful benchmark for where businesses and business people find value today in social media across different activities and sites This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfobusiness-social-media-benchmark-study
2009 B2B Social Media Benchmarking Study Unique insights from this research for business-to-business (B2B) companies including how business people use social media today most popular types of social media initiatives among B2B companies and the value B2B companies are finding in a variety of social media initiatives from maintaining company accountsprofiles on social media sites to participating in business QampA social media monitoring content sharing and social bookmarking This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfob2b-social-media-benchmark-study
Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media For B2B companies targeting small business customers this report provides key insights into how and why small business decision makers turn to social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day jobs The report is based on responses from 1711 small business decision makers currently using social media for business and is an essential benchmarking resource for planning social media initiatives targeting small businesses This report can be downloaded from httpwwwbusinesscominfoengaging-small-business-through-social-media
Upcoming Reports We plan to release additional reports every few weeks throughout the fourth quarter of 2009 and early 2010 on topics including the following
bull Business social media newbies vs pros bull Industry-specific insights bull Social media measurement bull Business profiles on social media sites bull Participating in question-and-answer (QampA) sites for business bull Social media monitoring bull Business content sharing on social media sites bull Business social bookmarking
Follow Businesscom on Twitter (httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg) or subscribe to the RSS feed for our B2B online marketing blog (httpfeedsfeedburnercomB2B-Online-Marketing-Businesscom) to be alerted when additional reports are released
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
35
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
About the Study
The data in this report comes from Businesscomrsquos Business Social Media Benchmarking Study an online survey conducted between August 11th and September 4th 20092
2009 Business Social Media Benchmarking Study
Overall 2948 respondents from the United States or Canada qualified to participate in the study providing a total of 2282 complete surveys (54) and 1943 partial responses Additional details about the complete set of survey participants are available in the
general report IMPORTANT NOTE This study focuses on benchmarking the activities and perspectives of people already involved with social media for business (eg of companies using social media what portion maintain profiles on social media sites) It is not intended as a benchmark of the adoption of different social media practices across the general business population (eg of all North American companies what percentage maintain profiles on social media sites) This specific report Engaging Small Business Decision Makers Through Social Media is based on responses from 1711 small company (lt100 employees) participants in a middle management (Director Department Head Supervisor) or above role in their companies who currently use one or more social media resources for business-relevant information in their day-to-day job Participant Profile for Small Business Decision Maker Respondents Results reported here reflect a wide range of company sizes industries and job roles Approximately 72 of respondents work at a ldquomicro-businessrdquo either as a sole proprietor or a company with less than 10 employees Figure 26 Study Participants by Company Size
2 As an incentive to complete this lengthy survey Businesscom held a drawing for a $2000 American Expressreg gift card among eligible respondents
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
36
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
The highest concentration of small business decision makers in this report work in the retail industry (15) followed by healthcare (11) real estate and construction (9) and advertising or marketing (8) Figure 27 Study Participants by Industry
Not surprisingly seniorcorporate managers (18) make up the highest percentage of participants followed by marketing (15) and sales (12) managers Figure 28 Study Participants by Job Role
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
37
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Over three-quarters of the small business decision makers in this study are C-level ndash CEO CFO CMO President or other Figure 29 Study Participants by Job Level
Nearly two-thirds of respondents work for companies where the majority of revenue (67+) comes from sales to consumers Figure 30 Study Participants by Company Type
Overall 92 of small business decision makers in this study work for a company selling either services only (46) or selling both products and services (46)
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
38
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Figure 31 Study Participants by Company Product Service Focus
Two-thirds of small business decision maker participants using social media as a business information resource work for companies where 67 or more of company revenue comes from sales to customers within their local area Figure 32 Study Participants by Primary Customer Location
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom
39
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
Contact
For media inquiries questions comments or suggestions related to this research please contact Dianne Molina Sr Manager Corporate Communications 310-586-4150 dmolinabusinesscom
RE
SE
AR
CH
RE
PO
RT
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Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
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More Resources from Businesscomhellip
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Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
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40
Engaging Small Business Through Social Media
copy 2009 Businesscom Inc All Rights Reserved wwwbusinesscom
More Resources from Businesscomhellip
Follow us on Twitter httptwittercomB2BOnlineMktg
Visit our B2B marketing blog httpblogsbusinesscomb2b-online-marketing
Sign-up for our B2B SEM e-newsletter httpoffersbusinesscomcontentnewsletter
And get high-quality answers to your business questions through our new QampA site Businesscom Answers httpanswersbusinesscom