Marketing & Strategy Innovation

The Most Engaged Brands on the Web

by Matt Rhodes on 23 July, 2009 - 23:35

There are some great examples of brands using social media that we use a lot at FreshNetworks. Not because they necessarily get everything right, but because they show what works for them and why, and they help to give ideas and inspiration to others. We’ve looked at some such examples before with how organisations can use Twitter. The cases of Dell, Starbucks, Nike and others are great stories and there is much that we can learn.

That was why it was good to see these brands, among others, performing well in the Wetpaint and Altimeter Group report ranking the worlds Top 100 global brands based on how they engage people online.

The study gives each of these Top 100 brands a score based on their engagement across more than ten social media channels, including blogs, Facebook, Twitter, wikis, and discussion forums. The highest score (127 points) went to Starbucks, and the top ten brands are:

  1. Starbucks (127)
  2. Dell (123)
  3. eBay (115)
  4. Google (105)
  5. Microsoft (103)
  6. Thomson Reuters (101)
  7. Nike (100)
  8. Amazon (88)
  9. SAP (86)
  10. Yahoo! and Intel tied (85)

The report analyses the different companies and groups them into four types of brands that engage online. But for me the most interesting aspect of the report is the observation that engagement increases at an ever faster rate as brands engage in more social media channels. There is a clear and measurable benefit to brands engaging in an increasing number of places online, and through an increasing number of channels.

This supports a need for brands to have a presence in a large number of social networks – interacting there and engaging with people where they are. But whilst engaging in this ever increasing number of social media channels, it is important to provide a space where these engaged people, these brand loyalists, can be brought together. Whilst you may engage them in a photo-sharing site or a mobile social network, you benefit most when you then provide a place for them to go to. Do you build your own community or go where people are? Do both.

This is what the brands at the top of this list do best. They may have very successful engagement strategies in social media sites and channels, but they also provide their own online community. From MyStarbucksIdea, through the Dell Community and eBay Discussion Boards. It’s about both engaging where people are and providing a place for them to come to. And the most engage brands online do just this.

ENGAGEMENTdb: Most Engaged Brands On Social Media

Image by communista_unicorn via Flickr

Some more reading

Original Post: http://blog.freshnetworks.com/2009/07/the-most-engaged-brands-on-the-web/

Share this
 

No comments

Add your comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
Mollom CAPTCHA (play audio CAPTCHA)
Type the characters you see in the picture above; if you can't read them, submit the form and a new image will be generated. Not case sensitive.

Author

Click here to view more information about the author.

 

Recent content

  • Tip to cinema advertisers that hold me hostage b4 the main feature . If the movie and trailers are in 3D, 2D ads look kind of dated.
    10 hours 31 min ago
  • Watch&learn: my pizza guy just saw he's #2 in our village on tripadvisor yet refuses to ask customers to vote. He wants feedback straight
    1 day 2 hours ago
  • RT @polinchock: i'm amazed @ how often we talk @ authenticity today like it's a new thing
    1 day 4 hours ago
  • Out of the blue a customer calls me 2 say thx for #NPS / customer journey consultancy I did 2 years ago + show me the progress #feelsgreat
    1 day 5 hours ago
  • Facebook Privacy Settings: Who Cares? via Marketing &Strategy Innovation Blog - Eszter Hargittai and I just ... http://tinyurl.com/2wuablx
    1 day 10 hours ago

This blog reflects the personal opinions of individual contributors and does not represent the views of Futurelab, Futurelab's clients, or the contributors' respective employers or clients.

Subscribe



Follow us on

Archive