Friday, November 25, 2011

How important is the Internet to your business growth or getting a job?

The internet is now the most prominent marketing tool and videos are the most effective method of advertising!


90% of all online customers say watching an online video influences a buying decision!
Angus Reed Forum - 2010


64% have taken action after seeing an online video!
TNS 2007, AOL/Google Online Video Survey


A minute of video is worth 1,8 million words!
Dr. James McQuivey, Forrester Research, January 2009


####


Sampling of Best Social Media Stats and Market Research of 2010 

In SEO, how important is a page one ranking? This post tells you: according to a recent study from iCrossing, across the three major search engines, 95% of the clicks came from page one. While Rob Garner notes that this figure is higher than in other studies, the clear implication is that doing some extra optimization to move your site to page one from page two or three can pay off in dramatic traffic gains.


In a study asking consumers to rate the most influential sources of information for their purchase decisions, 59% said "personal advice from friends or family members," followed by 39% search engines, 36% articles in newspapers or magazines, online articles 28%, email 20% and social media 19%.


"70% of social media users between the ages of 18-34 regularly use Facebook more than other sites such as MySpace, Twitter, and Classmates.com," and women use Facebook more than men.


In a recent study of high-level marketing executives, 70% plan new social media initiatives in 2010. 92% said they personally use LinkedIn, versus 56% on Facebook. While 28% planned to use internal resources to launch new initiatives, 25% turn to social media consultants. The two most important criteria when hiring a social media consultant are examples of previous work and recommendations; number of Twitter followers is the 12th-most important factor


Social media stats in video form. Some of the numbers shown here lend themselves to the skepticism recommended in the post above, but all are documented so take `em for what they're worth. There are more Gen Y'ers than Baby Boomers, and 96% of them have joined a social network. 80% of companies are using LinkedIn as their primary tool to find employees. 80% of Twitter use is on mobile devices. YouTube now hosts more than 100 million videos and is the second largest search engine. 78% of consumers trust peer recommendations when making purchase decisions; just 14% trust advertising. More than 1.5 million pieces of content (videos, photos, blog posts, links etc.) are shared on Facebook daily.


If it were a country, Facebook would the third-largest on earth, up from fourth-largest in 2009. 80% of companies use social media in some manner for recruiting; of those, 95% use LinkedIn. 50% of mobile Internet traffic in the U.K goes to Facebook




At the other end of the scale, for small to midsized businesses, marketing budget allocations are changing. Traditionally, small business marketers have favored email and search, and spent the majority of their marketing dollars offline. In 2009, only one-third of SMB marketers viewed Faebook as "very" or "somewhat" beneficial. But for 2010, 74% planned to increase their use of email marketing and 68% planned larger expenditures for social media. Over the next five years, social media budgets are expected to grow at a 34% annual rate — twice as fast as all other forms of online marketing. By 2014, Forrester predicts that social media spending will be higher than that for both email and mobile, though still much smaller than search and online display advertising


The prolific Brian Solis reports on recent research showing that social media adoption by small business doubled from 2009 to 2010. 61% of small business owners now use social media to helpf identify and attract new customers, 75% have a company page on a social networking site, and 45% expect their social media activities to be profitable within the next 12 months. 58% say that social media has met their expectations to date, and only 9% expect to lose money on social media efforts for the next year


Diving deeper into the iCrossing study referenced above, Google accounts for 74% of non-branded search traffic, with Bing and Yahoo tied at 13%.


The average small business spent $2,149 on search engine advertising in the fourth quarter of 2009, up 30% from 3Q09 and 111% from the final quarter of 2008. Also, video is taking off in this segment: at the end of last year, 19% of small businesses were using video on their websites, up from just 5% the previous quarter.



Cell phone use increased from one of out of 10 people in 1999 to two out of three in 2009


Knock yourself out with this extensive collection of videos, infographics and presentations compiled by HubSpot with still more social media stats and figures





Online Directories We Use to Increase Search Rank for Listed Businesses
*include video on your directory profile to increase your  product/service appeal

No comments:

Followers

Locate funding for your agency program or event.

Blog Archive

Email Subscriptions powered by FeedBlitz

Your email address:


Powered by FeedBlitz