Social Marketers Focus on Influencers: Are They Missing Half the Equation?
By Karla Robinson
July 27, 2012
July 27, 2012
- When it comes to social media marketing, it’s not enough to use someone who is influential. The person must also have a network of influential friends, not just susceptible followers, says a new study from Sinan Aral and Dylan Walker of New York University.
- “The biggest takeaway for marketers and others trying to spread messages through social media may be that influential Facebook users are less susceptible to influence than non-influential ones, and influencers tend to cluster in the network,” notes ReadWriteWeb.
- Also, people are most influential on others within their own age group, and “the older a person is, the more influential and less susceptible he or she is on Facebook.”
- “For now, the best marketing strategy is to target influencers who have already adopted a product, the researchers said,” according to the post. “Individuals who already use a product can be given incentives to influence their peers, as opposed to giving individuals with susceptible peers incentives to adopt a product.”
- The study had some other interesting findings: “younger users are more susceptible to influence than older users”; “men are more influential than woman”; “women influence men more than they influence other women”; and, “married people are the least susceptible to influence in the decision to adopt products.”
- For marketers, this means advertising specifically women-oriented may be ineffective. And more importantly, “the key is finding the clusters of influential users within a social network to get a message disseminated as quickly as possible.”
No Comments Yet
You can be the first to comment!
Leave a comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.