Social Media: Anyone actually making money with it?

PerryMarketing Blog75 Comments

Share This Post

I’ve got a serious question for you today.

Are you *making money* (and not merely making Friends / Fans / Followers) Twittering, Facebooking and Bookmarking?

Is anybody you know making money Twittering, Facebooking and Bookmarking stuff?

Is anybody you know reliably or predictably making sales, using Social Media in any kind of systematic fashion?

I seriously want to know.

What are you actually doing? How well is it actually, measurably working?

Post your response in the comment form below. I’d like to hear from you.

Thanks-

Perry Marshall

Share This Post

About the Author

Perry Marshall has launched two revolutions in sales and marketing. In Pay-Per-Click advertising, he pioneered best practices and wrote the world's best selling book on Google advertising. And he's driven the 80/20 Principle deeper than any other author, creating a new movement in business.

He is referenced across the Internet and by Harvard Business Review, The New York Times, INC and Forbes Magazine.

75 Comments on “Social Media: Anyone actually making money with it?”

  1. We’ve had three good sales directly attributable to Twitter and LinkedIn. Those were for web design and seo work.

    Other than that, I’ve had no luck at all selling hard goods, or even information products, and I’ve tried.

    I think people don’t want to know that social networking may not be all it’s touted to be.

  2. I thought about it more and here’s the problems I see with Twitter:

    1). Although my theoretical example of creating a free report and tweeting it COULD work, (and does work when promoting a site via SEO, PPC, etc.) the barrier to entry is so low with Twitter, it’s easy for any idiot to spam articles. This happens to me a lot so I’ve almost stopped using Twitter completely. At least with SEO and PPC the marketer has to work hard to promote their content. Twitter makes it easy to promote crap.

    2). I use Twitter on my Blackberry only. There’s no way I’d go to Twitter and watch the tweets roll in. If I see a useful article, I’ll click it, but the site won’t be able to get my email and build a list cuz I ain’t filling out a form on my Blackberry. The best bet for the marketer is to send out lots of informative tweets and build trust with me so that I naturally want to visit their site the next time I’m at a computer.

    I don’t want to sound too skeptical, because I’m sure there were lots of people doubting that the internet would ever make anyone money. Twitter specifically seems useful when you already have a tribe, but not the best way to build a tribe.

    Thoughts?

    Raza

  3. Great question. I was asking the same thing here: http://SocialMediaAltitude.com/contest (we have a lot of video responses coming in saying THANK YOU SOCIAL MEDIA)

    I was looking for a way to create more results for my real estate business. Started leveraging social media and ended up consulting other small businesses. Brought in several thousand with that. I think the best part would be the connections and business partnerships I have made. As a young entrepreneur, getting to connect with Stephen Covey, John Assaraf, Spencer Johnson, Bob Burg and Guy Kawasaki and have them as guests on our teleseminar was extremely rewarding.

    Perry I hear you are in the burbs…I am just west of you. Love your work and have your book. Cheers to your success!

    Bradley Will
    @BradleyWill

  4. In my opinion, this is much simpler in theory than many people think. However, the technical difficulties and the legal implications may prevent anybody from implementing it.
    First we have to hook some kind of monitoring software to the social media sites where people post messages on their walls, in other words, where they are having a conversation in real time. Thus, our software would be capable of reading every single one of the social media posts in real time. Then we have to analyze these posts and find what people are having a conversations about. The analysis would happen based on figuring out which keywords are being used most often. We already know our most important keyword on our product or service that we want to sell and the most closely related keywords as well. Once we identified a positive match among the conversations taking place, then a virtual agent (another piece of our software) representing us would join the conversation and pull the participants to our site. We already know what keywords trigger a positive match, and we can track down which user eventually came to our site based on the positive keywords identification that we previously made so we would be able to measure conversion rate, cost of acquiring a new customer and profit/cost per action, thus ROI.
    However, there are many issues with this solution:
    – Monitoring millions of conversations in real time is no easy task and would require some significant server power.
    – There are privacy issues that may prevent us implementing such solution. Google successfully weathered the privacy fearmongerers so far, but we are not Google.
    – I have not seen a truly intelligent artificial agent software yet that is capable of recognizing what the real intentions of people are. Technically we can be reported for spamming if the virtual agent is seen as a bot (virtual machine) that tries to spam people.
    Now of course we do not have to monitor the conversations in real time. Maybe it is enough to read a feed and try to identify the prospects based on the feed by including the posts only that has our keywords describing our product our service and send them a message based on the identifications, but we still have to be very careful not to be seen as a spammer. I am just thinking loud here.
    In my opinion it is best to catch the prospects on the spot when they are having the conversation and get into that conversation. To automate all this and do this on a large scale and to measure the results is no easy task.
    I am sure that anybody who would crack the problem of measuring conversions and ROI on social media will make a lot of money.

  5. Deb and I still have a lot to learn whether social media works or not. Really can’t comment with any authority yet, still too early to tell… it all depends if the follower has any interest in the offer or unique selling proposition. Deb will mention or tweet about our line of “nutrition and weight loss” products from time to time, along with our current campaign,(i.e., the “Body By Vi” 90 Day Challenge), etc. Some distributors have done well with it as social media marketers while we get a lot of viewership but no takers so to speak. Obviously we are still doing something that is missing the mark when we point them to check out…http://peter.myvi.net

  6. I WAS making money from Twitter. I’m a clinician nearing retirement and I set up a free self-help video series for people with depression, with books and consultation available if required.

    Twitter somehow read me as a scammer or spammer and suspended my account, and steadfastly refuses to respond to my inquiries, via their web form or via email. They simply tag my inquiries “closed”.

    So I spent hours learning how to use Twitter correctly, building relationships with my followers (well over 1000) and delivering quality tweets and information.

    Hits to my site increased 4300% (from almost nothing) and I made a few hundred dollars.

    But it’s all gone down the drain and it’s not something I’d ever let an external site control again.

  7. What a coincidence…

    I just got off the phone with a guy named Nick who is very into all of this “social media stuff” for his beekeeping business.

    I recommended him to you your site for your white paper guide and email series without knowing this post was here, how perfect is that?

    -Trevor

  8. Simple… never done it but it makes sense:

    1). Create a free report with a clever, keyword rich title. “How I Cured Impotence with a Raw Food Diet” or “7 Ways to Sleep Better with Raw Food” or “How to Sell Your House if You’re Underwater”

    2). Send out Tweets to these articles/reports/blog posts

    3). Have the link point to a squeeze page like Eben Pagan and Frank Kern are making. Throw up a video further hyping up your report and have your visitors give you their name and email.

    Pick a good enough niche and this could work really well.

      1. Perry,

        Haven’t done it myself and I’m not convinced that it works for every niche. I have a few things in mind though.

        Concept seem straight forward enough, but that’s like everything in life. Execution is key. I’ll let you know my results if you’re interested.

        Raza

  9. Living Streams’ heavier use of social media grew out of a desire to get more subscribers to our free news article service (about 5 per week) on internet developments – targeted for business owners/managers. It’s costing quite a bit per month for a team of independent journalists to write the articles – and I just wanted to see more people get value from reading them.

    Micro-blogs on the articles in Twitter, Facebook, Ecademy and LinkedIn are now supplemented with snippets of other news.

    All this effort has doubled the monthly website visitors but also significantly increased the bounce rate. I can detect no ongoing increase from people subscribing to any of the news RSS feeds.

    Living Streams is a digital business consultancy, so I’m looking for potential consultancy clients rather then online sales. The only contacts it has stimulated so far are from companies wanting to extract as much free consultancy as they can from us on the phone and then disappearing.

    The expenditure on the news articles may well stop soon if publicising it in the social media doesn’t significantly increase the ongoing readership.

    Regards
    Tony

  10. Also, these comments have been very enlightening. The consensus seems to be, NOBODY is making any real direct sales using social media. In fact, the only person who even claims to be making serious money from it is Perry Belcher. I find his claims to be a little suspect considering as he is a convicted felon and has an aggressive style of salesmanship.

    Dan

  11. No, not really. I have about 2000 twitter followers and have made a grand total of zero tracked sales.

    However, I did meet a few contacts that later turned out to be valuable for twitter (one content expert who interview for my membership site, and also one of our bigger affiliates).

    IMO social media is over-hyped as a sales device, but still has some value for networking purposes. My goal now is to meet some type of partner or person to work with on twitter, rather than to make sales.

    By the way Perry, your newsletter is amazing and IMO the most content-rich, valuable internet marketing newsletter out there.

    -Dan

  12. Yes, I have made about $3,000 from using Facebook and Twitter, mostly facebook. How? Add friends in my niche, occasionally put up links to my big product and updates for new blog posts.

    Most people spend way too much time on social sites, don’t track their results, and try to justify their wasted time by calling it “work”.

  13. It was fascinating watching the Perry Belcher/Ryan Deiss launch of their how to make money with social media product a few weeks ago. The lesson that I took out of it is that, yes, they’ve built huge following on social media sites like Twitter, FB, etc. but when it came to selling the course on social media, they still relied heavily on autoresponders, long sales copy (in the form of videos, autoresponders, etc.) to actually close the deal. Social media can get an enormous number of people in your sales funnel, but to actually get them to open up their wallets you still need to turn to the tried and true methods that copywriters and marketers have been using for decades.

  14. Perry,

    We have been using Facebook advertising as well as groups on Facebook to get people on teleseminars (where they buy) and to get to actual real seminars in the “real world” not online.

    To us it is still about building a list and getting them in our “loop” just like planet Perry.

    Social media is just another means for us to bring people into our loop.

    Joey

  15. Not really. But..

    At my company, Boost eLearning, we “train knowledge workers to effectively find high value information,” and we just did a webinar on how to use Google to search sites like Facebook and Twitter to find information that you could not otherwise find using the search features on those sites. So we are not making money from facebook and twitter in terms of leads, but we can show how to find information to help make money from those sites.

    Thanks for the conversation Perry.

    Jeff Alhadef

  16. Social Media is just another “tool” like any other media tool. It will work when the right offer is presented to the right audience at the right time. On the advertising side these tools (i.e. Facebook ads or Twitter Tweets which are offers) are much akin to the Content Network in that you are interrupting a conversation that is social in nature versus presenting a motivated buyer a relevant result when they are searching for something on Adwords. However, the social nature of these tools allow you to get people to “know, like, and trust you” if you don’t spam them with constant offers and instead provide content (whether it be social or professional) – see Perry’s 70/30 rule.

  17. Hi Perry – me and a marketing buddy have been experimenting with several different strategies to get free/low cost advertising via twitter and discovered that with a bit of effort and a bit of automation you can achieve just that on Twitter at least. We have found it’s a matter of getting your quality content/recommendations ratio correct for your niche. Keeping your reputation intact and having a clear vision about what you are trying to achieve is important too.
    Social media is also a great way to get your message out to the people you want to reach too – have you compared the facebook advertising system and compared it to googles? – it’s very useful for certain items as you can target by a defined personal profiles, location, age, gender etc. So you are only spending to reach your target audience.
    If I get a few free hours over the next few weeks I’ll put a quick guide to tweet automation together.
    Anyways, love your e-mails and loved your book/audios – one of the best investments I ever made – it’s paid for its self at least a thousand times now!

  18. And I love the “measurably” stuff as much as you do, Perry. But some things are valuable and difficult to measure…love peace joy ;)

  19. The quality of Perry’s audience is astounding. It is like a pre-filtered discussion group here.

    A lot will be based on “realness” and “your branding” in the future. Soon, people will be able to get a profile of you in seconds…and will do so before every purchase if they feel they are buying from you (i.e., a person).

    It gives you the opportunity to put “you” out there–really out there in a virtual way.

    How you use that, well that is your call.

  20. Perry, ran some sales tweets on specials and such. Not advertising the same thing elsewhere and picked up a couple of sales.

    You know we’re more of traditional brick and morter website with established product line and not informational sales.

    I did see that Best Buy had set up a twitter account and staffed it with customer service people to answer techie questions “pre-sale”. I sure this immediate short response technique converted sales with no-wait one-on-one responses. We get a lot of phone call with specific product questions, but most of those folks also call because they want to really talk with someone, not type with someone. I’m interested to see how this customer service tweeting plays out.

    t

  21. I’ve focused my blogging/social media efforts on building relationships with prospects instead of selling directly and it’s been working extremely well.

    In the past 12 months since attending Perry’s 4 Man Intensive and leveraging social media, I’ve tripled my client base and my social media classes sell out every time without spending a dime on marketing. Not bad in the worst economy of our lifetime!

    Perry taught me that having the right mindset is the key to succeeding, whether its online or offline. I left Perry’s house with a fresh perspective and I’ve never looked back. Opportunities keep popping up, many of them from the connections I’ve made through social media.

    I highly recommend attending Perry’s 4 Man Intensive if you want to take your business to the next level. It’s 2 days that will change your business and life forever.

    Thank you Perry!

  22. Some quotes extracted from the posts so far:

    “Regardless of its success, his ideas are very good.”

    “Our company has been using social media to supplement our sales efforts and as “reputation building.”

    “I’ve gotten a few people to some of my blog posts using Twitter where they have actually bought software that I recommended through my affiliate links.”

    ‘This is a great question, but one that is tough to answer fully.”

    “I’ve seen this stuff work occasionally as a re-inforcement to sales activity”

    “I’ve heard of a local restaurant using twitter to build a local following and then tweeting specials…. I think this is brilliant.”

    “No. But I think the value of social media is in the contacts that you make.”

    “Reading this article will help your readers what they can achieve thru social media…. Honestly so for we have not made any money directly from social media.”

    “I have used Twitter in the past but only for communicating with current clients, I wasn’t getting new clients that way. I’ve since stopped and am focusing more on FaceBook – I can see my friends and family there AS WELL AS clients …”

    “Me – yes… **But not buckets of money. Just gained a couple of paid accounts and a lot of great contacts.”

    It sounds like an equally important questions is: Regardless of if you’re making money with it right now, would be screwing around with anything several hours a day that made you the amount of money you can track back to twitter or facebook?

    I’m not against it, but this has been eye-opening. So far the most specific answer has been – It gave me $30K on a furniture promotion once and $6K the next time and I have no idea why on either account.

    BTW – No offense to Perry Belcher and his course, but extrapolating success from an “I’m going to teach you how to make money on twitter by showing you how I made money on twitter by showing other people how to make money on twitter” angle isn’t exactly universally transferable.

    Who knows where it will head in the future, but for know it reminds me of Dan Kennedy talking about the sales guy who has a few yes’s, no No’s, and a whole bunch of maybe’s.

  23. Hi Perry,

    Yes, I am making money via social networking.
    I primarily focus on Twitter (although I do blog and use facebook and linkedin.com as well) and have been using it to find and meet other people in the technology, web design, and web marketing industries here in Vancouver.

    I’m not as aggressive with it as I could be but would estimate it’s been worth at least $10,000 in new business for me this summer. I provide consulting services and am meeting people and being followed by people who either refer me business or contact me directly.

    My focus is investing a little bit of time daily in talking about things I am doing that might be of interest to others, thing relevant to the services I provide.

    As an aside, I wanted to say thanks for your book, for the emails you send every week and just about everything I’ve ever read of yours. You have taught me a lot (right now I am busy buying up old direct mail/copywriting books to help me write better ads, emails and landing pages) and I continue to enjoy your material.

  24. social media is great to build a community of like minded people. I think the actual money meking opportunities are down the road after you establish a group of followers.

  25. @Phillip, I also attended Perry Belcher’s webinar. I have to say, although his insights were valuable I was completely underwhelmed by the amount of hype. That and his background isn’t as polished as you might like (just do a search on Perry Belcher and you’ll see what I mean)

    Making money through social media begins with building relationships. Not based on sales pitches, but just like in the blogosphere, with good value content. The way I see it, it’s just another avenue to attract people to your blog.

  26. No, haven’t made any money yet. Twitter seems like a bunch of SPAM all day long and facebook ads keep not approving my ads for some reason that I can’t figure out. Don’t have a clue what the answer is, just know it isn’t making me any money.

  27. Facebook – we are making money off it. We are doing PPC ads – tough balancing act, gradually reducing bids a cent a day, problem being is, when you go 1 cent too low, you drop off the face of the planet and just adding back the one cent, doesn’t get you back on their radar. Anyhow – our hook is we give away a FREE building once a year. Our ad drives people to register to win the free building, once on our site, we are getting them asking for building quotes, which sells buildings. All of the extra traffic from Facebook, is also improving our website rankings in general. We find those who are entering our website from Facebook are spending (on average) a greater amount of time browsing the information on our site.

  28. Perry,

    This blogging is an excellent way to get correct information from your news letters subscribers and from actual users of social media.

    We do posting on Twitter, Face book, Linked in, Squidoo on a daily basis. We have multiple registrations in all of them. Our posting is more associated with our key phrases related to our business. Some of the examples are 1. How to create, edit and publish landing Pages in minutes. 2. How to get Google quality score 10/10 for your entire ad words etc.

    We add daily 5 to 10 followers in each of the social media. This builds our followers base. As of now we have more than 20,000 contacts in 4 to 5 weeks.

    You may have read an article in Wall Street journal July 20th about How you can increase the number of visitors instantly by giving some free gifts etc. The URL link is given here for interested readers of this blog.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124805161394863097.html

    The 1st paragraph of this Article is given below:

    “On July 1, Moonfruit was a below-the-radar Web-site building company with 400 followers on Twitter. Just a few days later, the London-based company had acquired 47,000 followers on the micro-blogging site, traffic to its home page had increased by 1,300% and the word “moonfruit” was popping up all over the Internet”

    Reading this article will help your readers what they can achieve thru social media.

    Honestly so for we have not made any money directly from social media. We get very good natural search ranking in Google, Yahoo, MSN etc. for our web sites http://www.Landingpagemaker.net and http://www.cbssys.com. We monitor who is visiting our web site from which social media web sites. We have complete statistics of all our visitors using our web tracking software http://www.viztracker.com.

    There is definitely a good value over a period of time.

    Best Regards

    Peri

  29. Like Tom says, we have been using Twitter to recruit staff and found it to be great for that. If only more people realised the potential of Twitter for jobhunting…

  30. Up to this point I have ignored my Twitter account. Based upon the comments I’ve read here, I’ll continue to do so for now. “Social” media is just that, it is not directly associated with “sales,” like Adwords.

    Yes, it appears that there are businesses that benefit from the trust building, but a serious strategy and implementation program need to be in place to make the social aspect work.

    Once your Adwords, landing pages, offline advertising, and internal marketing (customer service, call handling, faxing, incoming voice and voice broadcast) systems are in place and effective, THEN I think it would make sense to go after Social Media. If those factors are ignored, then your “buzz” will be bad.

  31. I’ve been on the fence with the whole social media idea, that is, until I was on a webinar with Perry Belcher and Ryan Deiss. Perry made a lucid, logical and insightful presentation on social media and why it works today and why it will become more important in the future. His analysis of social media and the reasons it has grown so rapidly hit me hard. I didn’t buy his multi thousand dollar product but I did learn a lot and am now thinking about how to integrate it into what I am doing.

    As some of the earlier comments said, it really is about relationship building with both new and old friends, clients or customers and then takes advantage of the viral nature social media. Building trust, value and authority is key.

    Phil

  32. Restaurants – yes. Using promo tweets like “reverse happy hour tonight” or “2 for 1 entrees tonight.

    Problem – Restaurant administration/staff/management unwilling to learn concept of Twitter (or spend more time) so they only use it to post promos and will not engage in conversations.

    Me – yes. Monitoring specific keywords and then having a conversation with people based on their tweets around certain topics. **But not buckets of money. Just gained a couple of paid accounts and a lot of great contacts.

    Problem – I don’t have time to monitor it like I should and spammers are posting for their products from 10 different profiles and clogging up my alert software.

  33. Hi Perry !

    I personnally use it a lot to grow my network and to add value around me. I’m using it the way you’re using it with emails follow up.

    It’s kind of a catalist to me, i’ve integrated these tools in my communication strategies. I’ve a blog with around 100k subscribers, each post is automacally synchronised on my twitter account (3122 followers) and on my facebook account (3845 friends). I treat my followers differently on twitter & facebook and on my blog. I have a group on facebook too that i use like a list to push email to my core network.

    As my group trust me, when i ask them for something, invite them to my events for example, they’re responding. Recently i’ve used it for an event i’ll do on october 10 and closed 10K sales for 100 seats in less then 24 hours using twitter only. Today we’re at 166 confirmed participants and i haven’t revealed the content of the event yet !

    It’s all about value and trust in the end.

    1. Did your Twitter followers come from your blog followers, or did the Blog followers come from Twitter?

      1. @Staff : It’s a 2 way working relationship between the blog and twitter. The blog have generated qualified followers on twitter and twitter generate qualified readers on the blog.

  34. I have used Twitter in the past but only for communicating with current clients, I wasn’t getting new clients that way. I’ve since stopped and am focusing more on FaceBook – I can see my friends and family there AS WELL AS clients … I like FaceBook because it’s visual – easy to post pictures, and everyone loves a photo :) I’m on vacation in Paris and my clients love seeing those pictures, too, even if they’re not strictly work related. It’s relationship building, and photos really help with that.

    ~ Shelley

  35. Hey Perry,

    If you are in the Internet marketing scene at all (which I sure that you are), another Perry (Perry Belcher) has just launched a mega-course about monetizing social media. You might want to check out his free stuff. It is pretty good.

    He says he is making 50 grand a month after 9 months of work on it…

    Yanik and Frank Kern and the crew all promoted his stuff.

    So, he says it can be done and he is doing it. Regardless of its success, his ideas are very good.

    Bests,
    Ryan

  36. Our company has been using social media to supplement our sales efforts and as “reputation building” We had a salesmen who was monitoring twitter catch a tweet where a customer was complaining about our boring trainer. We immediately reached out via twitter and turned a detractor into a supporter.

  37. Hi,Perry. I have no results yet.It takes lots of time. There is a lot of buzz about how great it works,especially from some new “gurus”.But for most of people it seems like a game: “Buy from me a course how to make money on …..”. If somebody buys they probably make few bucks. I personally delete those messages- it is not attractive.

  38. I’ve gotten a few people to some of my blog posts using Twitter where they have actually bought software that I recommended through my affiliate links. And, I did gain one new client with FaceBook, but that was when FB was new on the scene. I have found that as time has gone on, these work less and less as far as being a productive use of my time. But as far as meeting contacts, it has value as other commenters have noted. Twitter is nice as far as giving opinions and somewhat creating a buzz although, good old email can create a greater buzz.

  39. Perry, I’m so glad you asked this question, I’m dying to see the answers from the sort of serious people that follow you. I signed up a fake twitter account to get past a sales page once and now I have a dozen people following me even though I never “tweet”. If I was to participate in this whole social media craze I’d feel like a twit. :-)

    So far you’re looking like making me feel better about my aversion. I’ll be watching this page as closely as the Adwords Guide!

    -Matt

  40. This is a great question, but one that is tough to answer fully.

    Here’s what we are doing. Genoo was launched a year and a half ago, and I read David Meerman Scott’s book, The New Rules of Marketing and PR, and decided that we were going to see what we could do to get the word out about Genoo using those sorts of methods.

    Not long after that, i think I found you through exploring Google Adwords and one of your books I bought at Barnes & Noble. Anyway, I digress.

    In March of 2008, we founded the B2B Online Marketing Group at LinkedIn. Preceeding that, I started really exploring LinkedIn, and started participating in the Questions & Answers area for Sales & Marketing related questions, since that is our target audience. I learned that when you get marked as “Best Answer”, you will have a star next to your name for all the questions you answer from then on, letting people know that your answer has been selected as a best answer – and I think since kindergarten, we’ve paid attention to those with stars by their names.

    Anyway, I saw that people were joining groups, and so I started to do that too, but all the conversation (delivered via email) centered around B2C — so I created the B2B Online Marketing Group. Back then when you defined a group, you added a URL. You could also upload a graphic logo for your group, but there was NOTHING else available for group members. You couldn’t post a question, but have it be viewed only by your group, etc. So we created the B2B Online Marketing Pros website and hooked it to the Group. It aggregates topics of interest for B2B Online Marketers, and then we’d send out monthly or quarterly emails letting the people in the group know that we’d got a new subject up.

    Response to these emails was always in the 20% clickthrough range, which we thought was pretty good, and we were adding value. Genoo sponsored the microsite we created, and so we were getting some awareness going.

    The group now grows by about 200 members a month, and has 2300+ members now, a little over a year later, and LinkedIn has augmented their group functionality to include discussions, etc. which is also good.

    We spend about 5 hours a month updating topics on the website, vetting users who request to join the group, and monitoring the discussion posts to try to keep the area “clean” from blatant advertisers.

    In Feb. of this year, I was on vacation in Mexico, checking Twitter, and I saw a tweet about Genoo. I thanked the person who had tweeted it, and asked how she had found Genoo.

    She told me that she was in my B2B Online Marketing Group at LinkedIn, and had checked out Genoo. She’s a Marketing Consultant that works to help organizations with their marketing implementations, and knew that a bunch of her contacts need Marketing Automation, lead nurturing, etc. so she tweeted about us — she had 700+ followers.

    Subsequent to that, I got a request for a live demo, and when we got on the phone I asked how they found me. The answer was, they were following a Twitter stream of one of our competitors, and someone said people should check out Genoo (wasn’t us). Later he was doing a Google search for Marketing Automation, and he saw our Text Ad, and clicked through – watched our online demos and then requested a live demo.

    I’ve also gotten people contacting me directly from LinkedIn, who have become Genoo customers.

    So, I spend a few hours a week on different stuff specifically focused on social media. That’s all. I’ve got your marketing system, and spend more time working to get those concepts implemented with my team at Genoo — and that is also starting to work!

    Thanks for the question. I think it’s merky, but you can create a sort of “web effect” or “net effect” but it’s a long-tail sort of thing, like SEO.

  41. Hey Perry,

    Yes, I am making money from social media – especially Twitter. I am not yet a Facebook expert.

    I send all my autoresponders out via Twitter. People tell me that they heard of me on Twitter.

    I have done VERY well during Internet launches via Twitter. In fact during one large launch, nearly all my sales – in the tens of thousands of dollars, was via Twitter.

    When I have run a sale on my own products, I have done well via Twitter.

    I have brought lots of people to my blog via Twitter.

    These people turn into subscribers.

    So is Twitter making me money? Yes.

    But Twitter takes a lot of work. And it’s important that you do it right.

    Before questioning how much money you make ON Twitter, the more important question is how much value you bring TO Twitter.

  42. Twitter:
    May 1st. 2000 followers. Special store wide 3 hour sale from large retailer.
    Direct links to retailer focusing on one specific item. $30,000 in sales.

    June 1st. Retailer changed TOS so that we have to link through a personally owned site.

    July 1st. 7000 followers. Again special 3 hour sale from same retailer. This time did a broad campaign for 25 items.

    Linked through my site. $6,000 in sales.
    Too many variables changed to see EXACTLY why the sales dropped so dramatically, but I have a feeling that asking the Twitter follower to click that extra time greatly affected the total sales.

    FaceBook.

    Works well for touchy, feely items but I have had no luck yet for hard goods. (there are a LOT of women on Facebook)

  43. Hi Perry! love your info!

    Not sure if this counts, but I am a recrutier, specializing in a very niche area – I’ve used social media ( facebook, blogging, etc) to “give value” where pertinent, and that’s not only brought me pertinent candidates I’ve placed, other recruiters I connect with approach me to work split comission deals.

    so, to me, SM is more about building profitable relationships.

    Tom

  44. I’ve seen this stuff work occasionally as a re-inforcement to sales activity (people like opinion leaders who seek to make sense). But I have just watched one of our clients develop over 2,000 Twitter contacts over 6 weeks and we are all dead keen to see all these wonderful new enquiries coming in…

    So maybe it is all about opinion development, rather than sales development.

  45. I’ve heard of a local restaurant using twitter to build a local following and then tweeting specials.

    I think this is brilliant and fulfills Paul Zane Pilzner’s predication.

    Have not seen proof of this personally.

    Chris.

  46. Perry,

    Down here in Brazil, where I am, and in Latam, we still have few results, specially concentrated in big companies, such as the Real Estate sector, which reports some successful cases.

    Small businesses continue testing this media and up to the moment they say that it is a lot of time invested for such small results.

    I am speaking for myself and also from my customers’ feelings. As you say, I think that we are all making a huge effort to keep updated, but we don’t have a critical mass yet.

    A symptom of the doubts is that yesterday when FB and Twitter were off-line, many people felt that the day turned out to be more productive.

    Finally, trying to draw some juice from the theme (tentando tirar suco do tijolo), Saturday, August 22, online in Clube 14-Bis, I invited 4 small businessmen to discuss exactly those issues, to tell us what they have discovered and how they use SM.

    best regards,

    Jorge

  47. No.

    But I think the value of social media is in the contacts that you make. The who-do-you-know game.

    For example a customer might feel better about spending money if I have Perry Marshall, Dr Glen Livingston and Sunny Hill following me on Twitter.

  48. We have posted some sales promotions to twitter and seen new customers sign up using those promo codes. I also think our basic efforts of participating on twitter have helped because we’ve seen customers posting positive reviews for our service.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *