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India Social Media Survey Edition 2 3India Social Media Survey Edition 2Log on to: www.rocketalk.com or wap.rocketalk.com
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India Social Media Survey Edition 2 5India Social Media Survey Edition 2
CONTENTS
Foreword by Rajesh Lalwani 5
Foreword by Karthik Nagarajan 7
India Social Media Report, Edition 2 9
itimes.com case studies 46
Guest article: N Madhavan 48
Guest article: Anurag Batra 50
Guest article: Ashwani Singla 52
Guest article: Rajika Talwar 55
Guest article: Hassan Mirza 57
Guest article: Mohit Gundecha 59
#24 Adchini, Lower Ground(Enter from Sarvodaya Enclave), New Delhi 110 017Landline: +91 11 41829475M: +91 9910034330Email: [email protected]
India Social Media Survey Edition 2 - December 2010Price Rs.10,000/-
Even as Blogworks India Social Media Report,Edition 2 , implemented this year in associationwith NM Incite (a Nielsen/ McKinsey company) ,draws fresh insights from your responses, itvalidates many previous assessments. You willread them in the subsequent pages.
However, let me talk about changes I have seen,over the last year, in how social media is being approached by organisations.
Reputation has never been more ckle. As
recent examples in corporate and mediacircles have shown, social media has playedan important role in amplifying importantissues - sometimes using parody, sometimes
through inane looking memes, sometimes through serious discussions that only ‘appear’disintegrated but are actually bound in threads -social media is playing the new watchdog.
Controlling the medium, or the message,is clearly out of the question. The need forpreparedness and participation in advance;
Rajesh LalwaniPrincipal and Founder, Blogworksand Principal Coordinator, IndiaSocial
to listen, identify key topics, nodes; to transparently acknowledge, participate andengage multiple stakeholders, if, forbid, anorganisation was to nd itself in midst of a crisis,are being acknowledged as the new reputationmanagement concepts.
This growing impact on reputation andmarketing has brought interest and interventionat the highest level. The number of CEOs driving
the need has seen a dramatic rise over the last6-9 months. This does three important things,a, it energizes the team into action; b, it bringsgreater rigour - the approach becomes far morestrategic; and c, the chances of departments
thinking and working together improve.
On the brand side, an important change,particularly in some of the high impactcategories (typically high involvement productssuch as automobiles, consumer electronics,mobile etc.) has been the depth of engagement.From mere presence on social media channels,marketers are beginning to map, and intervene,at all stages of the purchase cycle.
There is a much greater emphasis on trying to understand how social media is in uencing purchase, to how the customer voices feedback
post purchase. An understanding that all socialmedia channels are not the same; that blogsand forums have a different role than touchpoints like, Facebook or Twitter; or that buzz is
the mere surface, that the magic of social mediamay, in fact, lie in mapping conversations,identifying evangelists and co-creating communication and products.
As social media impact is understood, and moremarketing outlay directed in its direction, theemphasis is on scaling up, trying to gain critical
Get Set! Go!
© 2010 Blogworks.in
Design: [email protected]: +91 9810558881
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India Social Media Survey Edition 2 7India Social Media Survey Edition 2
mass. This has brought an acknowledgement that the key to scaling social media marketing interventions could be through use of
technology and community generated content.
The understanding that creating content isgoing to be the key to success in engaging stakeholders; and that creating this content isnot easy – enter technology and the community.
Over the last 6 months, ‘lead gen’ is the wordI have heard most often in sales meetings.It’s a new word in social media circles. As B2Bmarketers jump in, lead generation has becomea key objective.
Driven by marketing leaders, B2B programmesare typically, focused and result driven, only theroute in social media interventions is through
thought leadership and content – reports,white papers, articles, expert and practicecommunities and Q&As.
Another important shift is the realization that the future of social is mobile. I have beenreading more news on my mobile device, thanon the notebook; spending more time on myphone, accessing Twitter and Facebook, thanmaking voice calls. Marketers are beginning torealize this.
Clearly organisations and brands have caughtup and the survey report corroborates that.
For me the most interesting insights from thisyear’s report include:
Market in transition, moving towards1.strategic interventions.
Sharp focus on the customer – 90 percent2. brands are using social media to engagecustomers, vis-à-vis 79 percent in theprevious edition.
Only 23 percent of the social media3.engagement is being outsourced – couldbe a sign of early usage; interestinglyprogrammes deployed by agencies showbetter width.
Notice the arrival of the sales department in4.social media programmes; and emergenceof concepts like Social CRM.
Mobile adoption for marketing likely to5.shoot up next year – 46 percent intend touse mobile social networking in the future.
Clear need and focus on deeper6.measurement and analysis.
3 out of 4 companies/ brands feel the need7.for a stated policy; and either have one inplace or are working on one.
11 percent marketers are already spending 8.more than 30 percent of their digital spendson ‘social’.
Budgets have increased in sync with last9.reports assessment, likely to go up overnext 2 years.
Sharp focus on ‘number of fans’ re ects10.attempt to gain critical mass before RoIon engagement could be achieved – it isa good sign and shows understanding of social media impact and more emphasis onit from marketers.
Next stops: E-commerce and monetisation.
2011 promises to be an exciting year forall of us.
When Blogworks approached Nielsen to partneron their India Social Media Report research,I was personally very excited about the exercise.Reason? The Indian market today is looking for empirical evidence that the ‘Social Mediaopportunity’ is real and that there is a realmomentum building up for it. This book thatyou are holding is that evidence, in my opinion.
This has been the fruit of an exciting periodof research, during which the ndings have
oscillated between pleasant surprises and
reaf rmation of our beliefs in this medium.
We believe that the world of marketing in Indiais undergoing a permanent transformationand social media is at the centre of it. Byfundamentally changing the way brandscommunicate with consumers, social media isall set to overhaul the marketing food chain.This is not a futuristic concept or something that
Karthik NagarajanDirector, Online Division, The Nielsen Company.
is happening in a distant foreign land. This ishappening in India as I write and Indian brandshave already started realising and reacting to
this.
I want to highlight two interesting stories that this research revealed to us.
Getting strategic aboutsocial mediaThe term ‘social media’ by itself is something
that seems to have multiple de nitions
within Indian marketing circles. Many brandsand sections of the media assume it to besynonymous to social networking and micro-blogging. The impact of discussion forums,message boards, review sites, video sharing sites and blogs are often overlooked, primarilybecause they are seldom talked about in
mainstream news. As a result of this, manybrands have been quite content with just
creating a Facebook page and a Twitter accountand calling it quits, with a belief that they havedone enough to have a ‘social media’ existence.This has seldom worked for them.
For this mind-set to change, social medianeeds the attention and the commitment of
the top management. There needs to be aclear understanding of the relevance of thismedium to the brand in question and a process
to leverage it. This can come about only if there
Turning a corner
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India Social Media Survey Edition 2 9India Social Media Survey Edition 2
is a plan and resources available within theorganisation to support it. When we posed hisquestion to brands, 27 percent of them said
that they already have a stated social mediapolicy and 46 percent said that they are working on one.
Why is this important? It is not that socialmedia is a structured medium where processes
and policies de ne how you react to andleverage market situations. The truth is quite
the opposite – it is such a dynamic forum that
brands sometimes have to react in hours, if
not days. However, the fact that almost 3 out of 4 brands are serious about having a strategicsocial media policy, tells me that they recognise
the importance of this medium, right up to the top management and that is a paradigm shift inperception, compared to a year or so back.
What de nes success?When we asked brands about the top vemetrics on which they evaluate their socialmedia success, we got an interesting set of
responses. The volume of interaction (fans,followers, etc) expectedly and rightfully took the
top spot. However, the surprising element herefor me was that ‘lead generation’ featured in
the top three. This worries me a bit because itreminds me of a similar trend that has plagued
the Indian display advertising market (and
continues to do so) – over-obsessing about‘performance’.
Simply because online is a more ‘measurable’medium, Indian marketers tend to over-measure
it sometimes and bring in impractical ROI angles to their advertising decisions. This has led tolarge scale domination of performance-basedadvertising that assumes incorrectly that a
display ad (banner) is only as ef fective as thenumber of people who click on it. While thismight be actually true and even effective insome product categories, it is not by any means
the best way to leverage the digital medium. Theabove-mentioned response on ‘lead generation’makes me wonder if we will end up making asimilar mistake with social media as well.
The audience you end up having for your brandon social media is ‘earned’. It is like a party thatyou need to be invited to as a brand. You cannot
always gate-crash it by asking your customer
to click on an ad or sign up for something thatis not in his / her mind space. This medium isabout engaging and contextual advertising – orin other words, this medium is all about theconsumer. This is why historically and even inother countries, social media sites have had thelowest click-through rates for advertising. So itworries me a bit that ‘lead generation’ is one of
the key reasons brands are here.
Having said that, ‘Sentiment of the
conversations’ and ‘brand awareness’ alsofeatured in this top ve list. So I hope my worries
are unfounded and we as a market leverage this medium by playing to its stren gths. Weneed to remember that social media in India,is a relatively new trend and the Indian onlineconsumer is just about warming up to it (70% of social networking users in India started in the
last 1-2 years). So if there is inertia and teething problems, those are understandable and insome cases even inevitable.
India Social Media Survey2010 ReportInsights from Organisations and Marketers
The NeedMuch has changed since we released ourlast report in March 2009. From an emerging
tool, social media has gone on to become amainstream phenomenon, deeply impacting reputation management, marketing,communication and enterprise collaboration.
For the India Social Media Survey Edition 2,Blogworks has partnered with NM Incite(A Nielsen/McKinsey Company) to collaborateand draw the best insights from your inputs.The survey attempts to understand the nature,and level, of social media usage by businessesand brands in India; channels and impact;objectives and measurement.
Results and analysis will enable businesses andbrands in India to make educated decisionsregarding trends and spends on the medium.
MethodologyThe survey was jointly conducted by Blogworks– strategic social media solutions and NM Incite(A Nielsen/ McKinsey Company) in November2010.
A detailed questionnaire was hosted online tocollect responses from the desired audience –brands/organisations and agencies/consulting
rms.
Different, relevant, set of questionnaireswere hosted, basis categories of respondentsrelevance to participants, so as to draw themost accurate inputs.
E-mailers, advertising and word-of-mouth wereused to reach participants.
Survey forms lled in by participants who did notmeet the audience criteria were removed.
Research analysis has been done on an sampleof 499 respondents coming from 3 segments
Brands/Organisations - 236•
Agencies/Con• sultants (Agencies) - 208Others (Primarily students) - 55•
73% of the respondents from brands/organisations state that they have beendirectly involved in managing their socialmedia programme; another 18% are indirectlyinvolved.Responses from those not involvedwere not considered.
Respondents could give multiple responses insome cases and in these questions the totalnumbers won’t add up to 100.
Responses by brands/organisations, agenciesand combined results are distinguished using separate colour schemes.
Statistical analysis of each question only takesinto account valid responses to that speci cquestion and not the total number of entries,
thus allowing for a more precise evaluation.
Trends are captured graphically; comments fromparticipants are highlighted with names whereparticipants gave us explicit permission to quote
them; and without giving away identities of participants, and organisations they represent,where participants did not wish to be quoted.We have also tried to draw t rends, establishlinkages: these are highlighted.Note: Multiple terminologies associated with the space, including
social media, SMM, social technologies, digital marketing, amongstothers, can sometimes confuse participants. Hence we will stick tousing the term ‘social media’ to describe the broad phenomenon of conversational marketing and collaborative technologies.
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India Social Media Survey Edition 20 11India Social Media Survey Edition 2
Industry verticals of respondents belonging to a brand/organisation
Media Publicity& Entertainment
29%
Internet IT/ ITES25%
Others23%
Retail2%
Lifestyle3%
Consumer
Products3%
Telecom9%
BFSI3%
FMCG3%
3539
52
47 49
2126
30
40
48
37
54
19
34
12
31
61
42
19
43
51
21
Client verticals of respondents belonging to an agency
Q. Client Verticals ? (choose whichever relevant)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 232 respondents
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 156 respondents
Brands and organisations are currently in a• transition phase, on their journey towardsstrategic engagement
Customers form the largest stakeholder•group being targeted using social media.In uencers and Media form the other twokey stakeholders
Facebook and Twitter dominate as preferred•channels among marketers
Most brands and organisations have•focused on creating presence on third partychannels than building own community/channels
Mobile is emerging as an area of strong •interest among marketers
Social media is still a numbers game, where•growth of participants/members/fansde ne success than impact on sentimentand opinion and relevance of conversation
B2B is more evolved and also currently•spends more than B2C on social media
Most social media programmes are•driven by a centralised function in theorganisation (led by marketing, corporatecommunications and sales departments)
There is a stated need for having a•social media policy among brands andorganisations
Budgets are on the rise with marketers•planning to spend more on social media in
the next two years
Automotive Aviation BFSI Biotech Construction&
Infrastructure
Consumer Product
Consumer Services
En er gy/ Uti lities Fash ion FMCG Go vernment
Healthcare Hospitality Internet Lifestyle MediaPublicity
&Entertainment
InfrastructureManufacturing
&Equipment
Pharmaceutical Real Estate Retail Teleco m Travel
Executive summary
Brand/organisation
Agency
Combined/comparison
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India Social Media Survey Edition 22 13India Social Media Survey Edition 2
Validating socialmedia usage
90%
10%
Yes No
Q. Has your organisation engaged in any social media initiatives?
Social media adoption ismainstream
90% say• that their brands and organisationshave engaged in social media initiatives incomparison to 54% in 2009
Only 9% non social media users have also•no intention to use, in the future, as against36% in 2009
- This re ects the growing social media.impact and adoption
Don't Know,56%
SeriouslyConsidering,
35%
Not Considering,9%
Social media is becoming an importantpart of a brand’s marketing plan.
In near future?
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.com
Fig. in %Base: 23 respondents
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 228 respondents
Nature of involvementand management
Social media adoption is a recentphenomenon; last 2 years havecontributed signi cantly
More than 70% have engaged in social•media initiatives only in past 2 years
As expected Agencies spend more time•on social media programmes with 33%agencies spending over 20 hours per week.On the other hand, only 12% clients spendmore than 20 hours per week
78% social media programmes are B2C in•orientation; B2B adoption at 41% is veryencouraging
Marketing, ORM and Lead Generation are• the top 3 purposes for which companies areusing social media in India
Nearly 80% of social media programmes are•led by the marketing department of brands/organisations; sales departments also
taking a keen interest
92% brands/ organisation are addressing •
customers using social media; othernotable stakeholders being addressed areIn uencers, Media, Current & Prospectiveemployees
57% brands/organisations have a team•of more than 3 members involved in theresocial media programme
Majority of brands manage their social•media programmes in-house; only 23% areoutsourced
Q. Since when has your brand/organisation been engaged in social media activities?
36
38
14 13
Less than ayear
1-2 Years 2-3 Years 3 Years+
74% in past 2 years
Social media adoption among brands/organisations a recent phenomenon;74% have engaged in social media initiatives only in past 2 years
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 177 respondents
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India Social Media Survey Edition 24 15India Social Media Survey Edition 2
Q. How much time is spent by your team/organisation on its social media programme per week?
27%
31%
23%
12%
7%
Under 5 hours
5-10 hours
10-20 hours
20-40 hours
More than 40 hours
42% brands/organisations spend more than 10 hours per week on theirsocial media programmes
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 156 respondents
33% Agencies spend over 20 hours per week on social media programmes;13% spend more than 40 hours
13%
35%
19%
20%
1 %
Under 5 hours
5-10 hours
10-20 hours
20-40 hours
More than 40 hours
Strong focus on social media
16%
45%
13%
18%
8%
Time spent on social media bybrands that outsource
Agencies are spending more number of hours on socialmedia as compared to the clients. It could be becauseclients tend to spend time on supervision and direction,whereas the Agency spends time in planning and execution.
Q. How much is the average time spent by you/ your team on a client programme, per week?
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 145 respondents
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comBase: 38 respondents
78% social media programmes are B2C focused; B2B adoption at 41%is encouraging
Q. What’s the nature of your brand/ organisation’s social media engagement programme?
78
41
26
Business-to-Consumer
Business-to-business
Partners andemployees
Cross TabB2C B2B Partners &
employees
B2C 100% 30% 25%
B2B 58% 100% 38%
Partners &employees
74% 59% 100%
B2B focused programmes havea strong focus (58%) on B2Cengagement too
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.com
Fig. in %Base: 174 respondents
4144
1813
4844
7871
30
2428
43
C m t i t ii n t l l i n c
C u t m rr i c
E - C m m r c E n t r r ic l l r t i n
LG n r t i n
L i t n i n nn l t i c
r k t i n n l i nr u t t i n
m n m n t /n l i n
r u c t in
l m n t
c r u i t m n t c i l C T h u h tl r h i
Marketing, ORM and Lead Generation are the top 3 purposes for whichbrands/organisations are using social media in India
Q. Which of the following purposes do you use social media for ? (Choose all that apply)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 160 respondents
Competitiveintelligence
Customer service
E-Commerce Enterprisecollaboration
LeadGeneration
Listening andanalytics
M ar ke ti ng O nli nereputation
management/Online PR
Productideasand
development
R ec ru it me nt S oc ia l CR M T ho ug htleadership
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India Social Media Survey Edition 26 17India Social Media Survey Edition 2
8
10 10
8
43
2
4
9
11
9 9
1614 14 14
7
6
5 56
5
8
10
C m t i t ii n t l l i n c
C u t m rr i c
E - C m m r c E n t r r ic l l r t i n
LG n r t i n
L i t n i n nn l t i c
r k t i n n l i nr u t t i n
m n m n t /n l i n
r u c t in
l m n t
c r u i t m n t c i l C T h u h tl r h i
Agencies are using social media for Marketing, ORM, Listening & Analyticsand Lead Generation
Q. Which of the following purposes do you use social media for ? (Choose all that apply)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 141 respondents
Thought leadership
SocialCRM
Recruitment
Product ideasand decelopment
Online reputationmanagement/Online PR
Marketing
Listening andanalytics
LeadGeneration
Enterprise collaboration
E-Commerce
Customer service
Competitive intelligence 58
63
33
12
59
59
78
72
36
23
42
47
41
44
18
13
48
44
78
71
30
24
28
43
Brand
Agency
Agencies showcase betterwidth in terms of usage
B2B has a higher emphasis on lead generation, competitive intelligence,enterprise collaboration and thought leadership; E-commerce is gettinghigher emphasis among B2C programmes
Q. Which of the following purposes do you use social media for ? (Choose all that apply)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 160 respondents
79
49
10 9
1710 10
Nearly 80% of social media programmes are led by the marketingdepartment of brands/organisations; sales departments are also showing akeen interest
Q. Which of the following department/s is/are responsible for the planning and execution of the socialmedia programme in your organisation?
Corporate Communication is another keydepartment instrumental in social mediaplanning and execution
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 173 respondents
B2B
B2C
Competitiveintelligence
Customer service
E-Commerce Enterprisecollaboration
LeadGeneration
Listening andanalytics
Ma rke tin g O nl in ereputation
management/Online PR
Productideasand
development
Recruitment S oc ia l CR M T ho ug htleadership
Marketing CorporateCommunication
Huma nResou rces Cust om er Ser vec e Sales IT Outsourcedto anagency
43 3825 26
4 5 5 5 810
5 7 5 6
B2C B2B
Marketing & Corporate Communication departments lead in B2Cprogrammes; Sales & IT departments in B2B programmes
Q. Which of the following department/s is/are responsible for the planning and execution of the socialmedia programme in your organisation?
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 173 respondents
Marketing CorporateCommunication
Human Resour ces Customer Ser vece Sales IT Outsourcedto anagency
Emergence of lead generation isan important trend
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India Social Media Survey Edition 28 19India Social Media Survey Edition 2
92% brands/ organisation are addressing customers using social media;other notable stakeholders being addressed are In uencers, Media, Current& prospective employees
Q. Which stakeholder groups have you addressed using social media ? (choose whichever relevant)
79
66 65
41
79
47
35
r l l c r r r i l l i c r
Notice the higher emphasis onengaging customers over anyother stakeholder group, evenwhen compared to the lastreport (March 2009)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %
Survey Report Edition 1 (2009)
Customers Employees Infuencers Partners Media Analysts Policymakers
90 92
38 31
3731
61
53
28
33
54 54
21 19
9 10
Customers ProspectiveEmployees
Employees Inf luence rs Par tner s Med ia Analyst s Pol i cy maker s
Key stakeholders that agencies address, using social media, arecustomers – 90%, in uencers – 61% and media – 54%
Q. Which stakeholder groups have you addressed using social media (choose whichever relevant)?
Survey Report Edition 2 (2010)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.com
Fig. in %Base: 141 respondents
Brand
Agency
44
39
7
11
1 to 2 3 to 5 6 to 9 More than 10
No social mediainitiatives at the
moment30%
In-sourced55%
Outsourced15%
Majority of brands manage their social media engagements in-house; only23% are outsourced
Over 57% brands/organisations state that their social media programme ishandled by a team of more than 3 members
Outsourcing of social media engagement has increasedfrom 15% in 2009 to 23 % in 2010. Adoption of socialmedia has likely resulted in in creation of in-sourcedpositions within the brand/ organisation
Q. Your social media engagements, are mostly in-sourced or outsourced?
In-sourced77%
Outsourced23%
Survey Report – Edition 1 (2009)
Q. How many people are deployed (including internal team and external agencies) with key responsibility to manage the social media programme for your organisation?
Strong interest is building up in the space
56% agencies deploy a team of 3+ to manage the social media programme for their clientportfolio.
57% - Team over 3+
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.com
Fig. in %Base: 172 respondents
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 168 respondents
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India Social Media Survey Edition 20 21India Social Media Survey Edition 2
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R e a
l e s t a t e
R e
t a i l
T e l e c o m
T r a v e
l
1 - 2
-
3 3 %
5 %
3 1 %
-
-
-
-
7 %
-
3 - 5
-
3 2 %
-
3 3 %
2 %
-
2 %
3 %
1 3 %
3 %
6 - 9
-
2 7 %
-
3 6 %
-
-
-
-
9 %
-
M o r e
t h a n
1 0
6 %
2 4 %
-
4 1 %
-
-
-
6 %
1 2 %
-
Choice of channels
Company blog, Microblogging (Twitter) and Social Networking are key socialmedia initiatives used/ intended, by brands/organisations. Advertising onsocial media and lead generation programmes are gaining importance
Q. Which of the following social media initiatives have been used in the past, currently employed, or being planned for implementation in near future by you?
Maintaininga
Companyblog or
community
Maintaining aCompany
relatedaccounts onsocial media
sites
Monitoringcompany,
competitors, industry
on SM sites
Participationin discussionon 3 rd party
and Q&A
Microblogging
Advertisingon social
media sites
Leadgeneration
programmes
Presenceon mobilenetworks/leveragemobile
platforms
ECommerce
& Socialbuying
7375
7175
67
74
43
52
7374
50
60
3835
33 35
16
28
The emergence of lead generationand ecommerce showcase increasedfocus on monetisation
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 193 respondents
Brand
Agency
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India Social Media Survey Edition 22 23India Social Media Survey Edition 2
60
26
9083
62
17
56
16
5
1915
Companyblog
Owncommunity
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Slideshare YouTube Flickr Yahoo Orkut Wikipedia
Facebook (90%) and Twitter (83%) are the most popular social mediachannels being used by brands/organisations
Q. On which of the following social media channels do you currently maintain one or more brand/companyaccounts/ presence ? (Choose all that apply)
A comparison between how brands and agencies are usingsocial media channels
LinkedIn, company blogs and YouTube are otherprominent channels
More attention being paid to 3rd party interfaces rather than company owned properties
Orkut appears tohave lost out in
the game
60
26
90
83
62
17
56
16
5
19
15
63
39
91
77
68
34
64
37
16
18
29
27
Companyblog
Own community
Slideshare
YouTube
Flickr
Scribd
Yahoo
Orkut
Wikipedia
Brand
Agency
Q. On which of the following social media channels do you currently maintain one or more brand/companyaccounts/presence ? (choose all that apply)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 153 respondents
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 134 respondents
‘LinkedIn Answers’ is the most preferred channel to answer brand/businessquestions in the social media space
Q. On which of the following do you/ your team/ agency ask/ answer business/related questions ?(Choose all that apply)
40
56
15
25
11 137 10
LinkedIn Answers Yahoo! Answers Wiki Answers Answers.com
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 283 respondents
26%
46%
12%
16%Present
Considering
Not Considering
Not Aware
Mobile social media networks/platforms are likely to become popular toolsamong brands/organisations
Q. Is your brand/ organisation currently present on any mobile social networking/ blogging sites/platforms?
Currently 26% brands/organisationsare present mobile social mediaplatform.
Another 46% brands/organisationsintend to use mobile socialnetworking in the future
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 148 respondents
Brands
Agency
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India Social Media Survey Edition 24 25India Social Media Survey Edition 2
36% agencies say their clients are currently present on mobile socialnetworking platform and 34% are considering it for future use
2422
19
10
52
9
2
10
4 42
5
12
2
9
2
10
63
1214
2625
R oc ke Ta lk H iB ud dy m ig 33 M yg am ma S MS Gu pS hu p B ub bl y Wap sp el l Fr e nz o Q ee p M ob il uc k C el lu fu n
Agency Client
SMS GupShup enjoys highest awareness level among brands followed byRockeTalk and HiBuddy
Q. Which of the following mobile social networking sites/ channels/platforms are you familiar with ?(choose all that apply)
36%
34%
11%
19%Present
Considering
Not Considering
Not Aware
Q. Is your brand/ organisation currently present on any mobile social networking/ blogging sites/platforms?
Higher salience for SMS GupShupand Mobiluck among agencies
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 132 respondents
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 89 respondents
7 8.6
10
2.9
5
8.6
2
5.7
27
17.1
2
5.7
2 2.9
5
2.9
RockeTalk HiBuddy mig33 Mygamma SMS GupShup Bubbly Qeep Mobiluck
Among those ‘presently using’ mobile social networks/platform, SMSGupShup is the most popular
Q. Which of the following mobile social networking sites/ channels/platforms have you used for your client ?(choose all that apply)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 41 respondents
Brand
Agency
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India Social Media Survey Edition 26 27India Social Media Survey Edition 2
48%
25%
12%
15%
A centralised function in theorganisation - all socialmedia deployment comesfrom a single organisedgroup
Brands/ departments/businesses/ divisions
working on independentprogrammes
Brands/ departments/businesses/ divisionsworking together oncollaborative programmes
It's all outsourced
Social Media lifecycle
29% of brands/organisations have a strategic approach to social media40% are in the transition phase
Q. In your opinion, how mature is your brand/ organisation’s social media programme?
31%
40%
29%
26%
40%
34%
Both brands/organisationsand agencies have asynchronised view onmaturity of social mediausage
Trial (an experimental approach with a series of tactical deployments)
Transition (an informal process is used and changes made as per need)
Strategic (a formal process is used and reviewed routinely)
Brands/Organisations
Agencies
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 148 respondents
32%
14%
50%
4%
A centralised function in the organisationLassez FaireCross functional teamOthers
When asked in edition 1 (2009),brands advocated a cross functional
team to best manage social mediaprogrammes. However in reality,centralised teams, lead planning andexecution as revealed in this edition
Most social media programme are being managed by a centralised functionin organisations, contrary to what was felt ‘it should be’ in edition 1 of thereport (2009)
Q. Your social media programme is managed by:
Survey Report Edition 1 (2009)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 271 respondents
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India Social Media Survey Edition 28 29India Social Media Survey Edition 2
27%
46%
18%
5%4%
Yes, we have a social mediapolicy.
No, we do not have one butare working on one.
No, we do not have one anddon't know what our policyshould be.
No, and our 'policy' is to 'nothave' a stated policy.
Don't know.Around 46% brands/ organisations arecurrently working on a social mediapolicy showing impact and need forpreparedness
3 out of 4 brands/ organisations have felt the need for a s tated social mediapolicy and currently have one, or are in process of putting one in place
Q. Does your organisation have a stated social media policy?
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 147 respondents
22
42
48
35
1915
68
B2CB2B
Higher incidence of social media policy in B2B re ects emphasis on aplanned approach; B2C moving fast to catch up
Q. Does your organisation have a stated social media policy?
Yes, we havea SM policy
No, we areworking on
one
No, wedon't know
No, weDon’t want
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 147 respondents
8%
16%
14%
40%
18%
4%
Yes, my client (all of myclients) have a social mediapolicy.Yes, most of my clientshave a social media policy.
No, most do not have onebut are working on it.
No, most do not have oneand don't know what thepolicy should be.No, and their 'policy' is t o'not have' a stated policy.
Don't know.
Two thirds agencies say their clients have a social media policy or areworking on one
Q. Do most your clients have a stated social media policy ? (please share if you know the status)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 125 respondents
8/6/2019 Blogworks India Social Media Report Edition 2 in Association With NM Incite Light Version
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India Social Media Survey Edition 20 31India Social Media Survey Edition 2
43%
17%
14%
10%
11%
4%
1%
0 to 5
5 to 10
10 to 15
15 to 20
20 to 30
30 and above
Don’t know
Budgets
26% brands/organisations are spending more than 10% of their marketingand communication budget on digital media
Q. What percent of your marketing and communication budget is presently spent on Digital Media ?
3 8
5 1
18
2 0
18
13
6
4
2
2
18
10
0 to 5 5 to 101 0 t o 1 5 15 t o 202 0 t o 3 0 3 0 a nd a bo ve
B2B focused programmes have higher spends on digital media
Heavy focus ondigital media
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 143 respondents
36%
11%
22%
11%
8%
8%
4%
0 to 5
5 to 10
10 to 15
15 to 20
20 to 30
30 and above
Can't say
31% marketers are spending 10% of digital spends on social media; 11% areheavy spenders with more than 30% digital budgets going to social media
Q. What is the percentage share of ‘social media’ in the digital marketing spends ?
0 to 5
5 to 10
10 to 15
15 to 20
20 to 30
30 and above
Can't say
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 141 respondents
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India Social Media Survey Edition 22 33India Social Media Survey Edition 2
V e r t i c a l s s p e n d i n g m o r e t h a n 3 0 % o f d i g i t a l s p e n d o n S o c i a l M e d i a a r e t e l e c o m
, m e d i a a n d I T / I T E S
Q . W
h a t i s t h e p e r c e n t a g e s h a r e o f ‘ S o c i a l M e d i a ’ i n t h e d i g i t a l m a r k e t i n g s p e n d s ( Y o u r a n s w e r s w i l l b e k e p t c o n d e n t i a l a n d o n l y u
s e d i n
a g g r e g a t e
f o r o
u r r e p o r t ) ?
A u
t o m o
t i v e
A v i a t i o n a n d
A e r o s p a c e
B F S I
B i o t e c h
C o n s t r u c t i o
n a n
d
I n f r a s t r u c t u r
e
C o n s u m e r
P r o
d u c t s
C o n s u m e r
S e r v i c e s
E n e r g y / U
t i l i t i
e s
F a s h
i o n
F M C G
H e a l t h
C a r e
0 - 5 %
-
-
9 %
-
2 %
-
-
-
2 %
5 %
-
5 - 1 0 %
-
-
-
-
-
7 %
7 %
-
-
-
1 3 %
1 0 - 1 5 %
1 0 %
-
-
1 0 %
-
1 0 %
1 0 %
-
-
1 0 %
-
1 5 - 2 0 %
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
8 %
-
8 %
2 0 - 3 0 %
1 3 %
-
-
-
-
2 5 %
-
-
-
1 3 %
-
3 0 % a n
d
a b o v e
-
8 %
8 %
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
H o s p
i t a l i t y
I n t e r n e
t / I T /
I T E S
L i f e s t y l e
M e
d i a
,
P u b
l i c i t y
a n d
E n
t e r t a
i n m e
n t
I n f r a s t r u c
t u r
e ,
m a n u f a c
t u r i
n g a n
d
e q u
i p m e n t
P h a r m a c e u t i
c a l
R e a
l e s t a t e
R e t a
i l
T e
l e c o m
T r a v e
l
0 - 5
%
-
3 5 %
-
4 4 %
-
-
-
-
2 %
-
5 - 1
0 %
-
4 7 %
-
2 0 %
-
-
7 %
-
-
-
1 0 - 1 5
%
-
2 0 %
-
2 0 %
-
-
-
-
1 0 %
-
1 5 - 2 0
%
-
5 0 %
-
8 %
-
-
-
-
2 5 %
-
2 0 - 3 0
%
-
1 3 %
-
2 5 %
1 3 %
-
-
-
-
-
3 0 %
a n d
a b o v e
-
1 5 %
-
2 3 %
-
-
-
8 %
3 1 %
8 %
40%
20%
24%
11%
5%
0-10%
11-20%
20-30%
30-50%
More than 50%
Spends looking bullish over next two years
Q. Please share what percent of your marketing/ communication budget would you likely be spending onsocial media in the next 1-2 years.
39%
17%
26%
18%
0-10% 11-20% 20-30% Confident i al
Survey Report Edition 1 (2009)
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 111 respondents
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India Social Media Survey Edition 24 35India Social Media Survey Edition 2
Brands Agencies
Very s at is f ied Very s at i sf i ed+somewhat satisfied
Very s at is f ied Very s at i sf i ed+somewhatsatisfied
Maintaining a company blog or community/ communities 20 65 23 71
Maintaining company related accounts on soci al mediasites 30 72 32 67
Monitoring company, competitors, industry relatedmentions on social media sites 22 71 29 67
Participation in discussion on 3 rd party and Q&A sites 13 43 16 44
Micro-blogging 29 57 22 62
Advertising on social media sites 17 51 28 61
Lead generation programmes 14 45 13 47
Presence on mobile networks/ leverage mobile platforms 4 21 3 18
E-commerce & social buying etc. 8 25 5 22
In terms of ROI, brand/organisation related presence on social networks,owned blogs and microblogging get a thumbs up
Q. How do the following social media activities score in terms of ROI achieved?
In terms of ROI, brands have a higher satisfaction level from micro-blogging,while agencies have better satisfaction from advertising
Q. How do the following social media activities score in terms of ROI achieved?
4 1 0 2 3 1 4 5 563 6
8 9 11 8
12 821
26 23
27 28 1625
2118
4542 49
30
28 3431
1717
2030
22 1329
17 144
8
M a i n t a i n i n g a c o m p a n y
b l o g o r
c o m m u n i t y / c o m m u n i
t i e s
M a i n t a i n i n g c o m p a n y -
r e l a t e d a c c o u n t s o n
s o c i a l m e d i a s i t e s
M o n i t o r i n g c o m p a n y ,
c o m p e t i t o r s ,
i n d u s t r y
r e l a t e d m e n t i o n s o n
s o c i a l m e d i a s i t e s
P a r t i c i p a t i o n
i n
d i s c u s s i o n o n
3 r d p a r t y
a n d Q & A s i t e s
( e . g .
f o r u m s , c o n s u m e r
r e v i e w s i t e s )
M i c r o - b l o g g i n g ( e
. g .
T w i t t e r )
A d v e r t i s i n g o n s o c
i a l
m e d i a s i t e s
L e a d g e n e r a t
i o n
p r o g r a m m e s
P r e s e n c e o n m o b
i l e
n e t w o r k s / l e v e r a g e
m o b i l e p l a t f o r m s
E - c o m m e r c e
& s o c
i a l
b u y i n g e t c .
Very Dissatisfied Somewhat Dissatisfied Neither Satisfied nor Dissatisfied Somewhat Satisfied Very Satisfied
Top 2 Box 65 72 71 43 57 51 45 21 25
Bottom 2 Box 10 4 6 10 12 12 12 17 13
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comBase: 120 respondents
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comBase: 120 respondents
Brands have a high satisfaction level from internal staff managing thesocial media programme
Q. What is your level of satisfaction on the following, basis results on the different types of investments undertaken.
According to Agencies, strategy, maintaining a company blog/ communityand monitoring competition score high in terms of ROI achieved
Q. How do the following social media activities, undertaken for your client/s, score in terms of ROI achieved?
4 2 1 4 4 3 2 2 3 3 13 6 11 5 8 3 5 5 2 1 5
19 15
2325
1821 19
21 2218 18
4237
15 19
24 33 20
18 12
13 22
1520
8 714 11
15
2 26 6
S t r a t e g y
I n t e r n a l s t a f f t o m a n a g e
s o c i a l m e d i a p r o g r a m m e
E x t e r n a l a g e n c y
f e e
d e p l o y i n g s o c i a l m e d i a
i n i t i a t i v e s
B l o g g e r e v e n t s &
i n f l u e n c e r p r o g r a m m e s
A d v e r t i s i n g o n s o c i a l
m e d i a c h a n n e l s
( F B a d s ,
L i n k e d I n a d s e t c )
A p p l i c a t i o n s / D e v e l o p m e n t
c o s t ( w e b s i t e e t c )
G i f t s a n d g i v e a w a y s
( p r o m o t i o n s , c o n t e s t s )
M o n i t o r i n g a n d
M e a s u r e m e n t ( R a d i a n 6 ,
N i e l s e n , S c o u t L a b s e t c .
)
M o b i l e
S o c i a l N e t w o r k i n g
S o c i a l C
R M
T r a i n i n g & W o r k s h o p s
Very Dis sat is fi ed Somewha t D is sat i sf ied Nei the r Sat is fi ed no r Dis sat i sf ied Somewha t Sat i sf ied Very Sat i sf ied
Top 2 Box 57 57 23 26 38 44 35 20 14 19 28
Bottom 2 Box 7 8 12 9 12 6 7 7 5 4 6
3 1 1 1 1 2 1 3 4 10 4 5 9 8 6 4 35
51319 13
1831
25 2526
29 2554
48
45
38
2840
33
34
1517
30 2332 29
16 22 2813
3 5
S t r a t e g y
M a i n t a i n i n g a c o m p a n y
b l o g o r
c o m m u n i t y / c o m m u n i t i e s
M a i n t a i n i n g c o m p a n y -
r e l a t e d a c c o u n t s o n
s o c i a l m e d i a s i t e s
M o n i t o r i n g c o m p a n y ,
c o m p e t i t o r s ,
i n d u s t r y
r e l a t e d m e n t i o n s o n
s o c i a l m e d i a s i t e s
P a r t i c i p a t i o n
i n
d i s c u s s i o n o n
3 r d p a r t y
a n d Q & A s i t e s
( e . g .
f o r u m s , c o n s u m e r
r e v i e w s i t e s )
M i c r o - b l o g g i n g ( e . g .
T w i t t e r )
A d v e r t i s i n g o n s o c i a l
m e d i a s i t e s
L e a d g e n e r a t i o n
p r o g r a m m e s
P r e s e n c e o n m o b i l e
n e t w o r k s / l e v e r a g e
m o b i l e p l a t f o r m s
E - c o m m e r c e
& s o c i a l
b u y i n g e t c .
Very Dissatisfied Somewhat Dissatisfied Neither Satisfied nor Dissatisfied Somewhat Satisfied Very Satisfied
Top 2 Box 84 71 67 67 44 62 61 47 18 22
Bottom 2Box
3 5 6 10 9 8 5 6 9 6
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comBase: 101 respondents
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comBase: 115 respondents
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Driving critical mass?Social media is still appears a numbers game where participants/members/fansseem more important than awareness or impact on sentiment and opinion
Growth in number of participants (users, fans, friends,followers etc on web/mobile touch points and community)
Impact on sentiment and opinion
Volume, quality and cost of leads generated/conversions
E-commerce revenues
Brand awareness
Insights – customer, competition, market
Impact on sales
Support during crisis
Share of voice vis-à-vis agreed competition
Search engine ranking/web traf c
Customer satisfaction score (including net promoter score/ recommendations)
Co-creation of products and services
Mention and prominence in relevant conversations
Increased engagement scores (retweets, likes, comments)
Q. Which of the following are the ‘top 5’ metrics that your brand/ organisation deploy to evaluate success
of your social media programme?
Measurement and analysis
39
35
35
31
30
29
29
25
22
21
16
14
13
12
Most important
Source: www.blogworks.in and www.nmincite.comFig. in %Base: 78 respondents
Q. Which of the following are the ‘top 5’ metrics that your brand/ organisation deploy to evaluate successof your social media programme?
Change in evaluation metrics (top 5)
Survey Report Edition 2 (2010)
1. Growth in number of participants
2. Impact on sentiment and opinion
3. Volume, quality and cost of leads generated
4. E-commerce revenues
5. Brand awareness
Survey Report Edition 1 (2009)
1. Impact on brand awareness
2. Volume of user generated content
3. Number of touch points with consumers
4. Better search engine ranking & increase in over all website traf c
5. Positive tone of comments, feedbacks, links etc.
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Clean & Clear TM Freshface 2010Mr. & Ms. Freshface – a talent hunt for rst year
college students across six metro cities in India.
The six month long event invited freshersfrom Delhi, Kolkata, Mumbai, Chennai, Pune,Bangalore to nominate themselves or theirfriends online and seek votes by creating aportfolio and pro le.
The social media engagement activity entailedselection and voting for contestants, inadditional to customised wall based activityand other networking utilities.
The platform also included social plugins from
Facebook and Twitter.Target Group : Young adults from Indian metrocities, undergraduate / professional degreecollege students age group 18-22
This age group of site visitors are most proactivein contributing content and interacting on thesite, inviting friends and other viral activities.
Freshface makes use of Itimes interactive tools to get users to vote for their favorite contestants.
Voting on pro les, to build online popularity of a contestant; voting widget replicated as anapplication on Facebook and activity sharedacross other leading social media sites.
Itimes groups of over 50 colleges in each cityenable users to interact amongst each otherand vote for their college contestants.
Con dence Meter – A intuitive application tomeasure visitors’ con dence score.
Teach India 2010Teach India 2010, a Times Group initiativefocuses on teaching spoken English to youthin the age group of 18-32 and through theprogram increase their employability. The
training program is held in partnership with theBritish Council in India.
The TG participating in this initiative onItimes is between 25 to 40 English speaking
Advertorial
professionals from across India, most likelyassociated with education institutes or peopleassociated with social causes.
Itimes offers interest groups on Teach India, analumni community of recent years, NGO pro lesand groups.
Itimes offers a custom created form to collectvolunteer applications.
Users registered for the initiative connect basisinterest.
Shareable rich media content like TVcommercials, celebrity pro les of stars associated with the cause,photos and videos related to theevent.
Interactive map to help sitevisitors choose a venue of choiceand convenience at the time of registering.
“Once Upon a Time….” –Networking around moviesNetworking enabled site created
to promote the movie and cast of ‘Once Upon a Time in Mumbaai’
Custom look built social media tools themed around ‘Once upon a time
in Mumbaai”.
Landing page customized to the OUATIM themewith a menu to lead the user to exclusive moviecontent.
http://itimes.com/onceuponatimeinmumbaaihosts of cal blogs and fan club pro les of alllead actors of the movie
The fan club pro les ride on the existing celebrity fan club section on itimes which hostsclose to 150 celebrity pro les with around ftycelebrities actively blogging on the platform.
Exclusive chats with the stars of the movie :Ajay Devgan, Kangna Ranaut, Prachi Desai andEmraan Hashmi
Users can personally interact with their favouritestars by posting on the celeb’s wall andcontribute to their fan albums etc.
Groups and Communities to showcase the plotof the movie, exclusive pictures, movie trailersand latest songs.
Exclusive Shobhaa De Blogs on the Movie
Fan Club pages for all the stars
Itimes also hosts the of cial movie trailers,movie synopsis, online community for sitevisitors to discuss the movie
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Seven lessons from the Social Mediarevolution
Fact 1: A minister called Shashi Tharoor loseshis job in India because of a tussle with acricket entrepreneur called Lalit Modi. Both of
them are on Twitter, and exchange their v iewsand facts in full public view on the Internet.Where are the editors?
Fact 2: Diplomatic missions across the worldare alerted by the government of the US, theworld’s most powerful nation, and they await adenouement: the leak of con dential cables byWikiLeaks, a Social Media entity with no realof ce or incorporation. What follows after thatis not news for day or two, or for one or twonations, but for the entire planet.
These two incidents in 2010 should be enoughfor anyone to realise that news and SocialMedia have been intermeshed in a manner that
N. Madhavan Technology Columnist/Associate Editor,
Hindustan Times
make them almost seamless extensions of eachother.
Online publications such as GigaOm.com andTechCrunch.com have converted the once-humble but spunky free Web diaries – orblogs, if you will -- into regular media entities.Huf ngton Post is now a phenomenon for“social news” while startups such as BlogAdda.com and InstaBlogs.com (which has beenventure funded already) are trying to break newpaths in journalism and media.
When 26/11 attacks were happening inMumbai, I was eagerly following one young manfrom a house close to the site describing thescene, even as mainstream television anchorscamped outside the Taj hotel in the nancialcapital of India.
It is almost routine for those who follow showbusiness, celebrity lifestyles or movie stars
to track the gures on Twitter or on Facebookfan pages. India is not there yet in terms of broadband penetration or widespread use of
the Internet, but we may be months away fromit all, as smartphones get cheaper and Indian-language content proliferates on the Net. I
tweet not just in English, but also occasionallyin Tamil, Hindi and French. It is a question of
time before the Internet, powered by growing economies of Asia, become a Tower of Babelin which conversations, news, comments andshared links ow back and forth.
A decade ago, a Website called Naked Newscreated a utter by hosting news in which the
News is naked:Are you still clothed?
newsreader does a striptease. Now, it seemsnews itself has become naked, as it faces alargely un ltered online world.
And I now call WikiLeaks the Al Qaeda of journalism.
So, what has changed in all these?
Here are my takeaway points on how newsmedia and Social Media are intersecting eachother.
Social Media is now mainstream:1.Newsbreaks are routine on Twitter orFacebook as companies, individuals andeven political parties share information on
the Net. All leading news organisations offernews on tweets, which when combined, have
the shape of a news wire.
Social Media are a countervailer:2. Newsnot just breaks on Social Media,but alsogets discussed there. This is what I call the“countervailing’ power of the Social Media onmainstream media, much like the consumermovement. Recently, when tapes of con dential conversations between lobbyistNiira Radia and journalists/industrialistswere published, the mainstream medialargely played down tapes involving themedia itself. A vir tual revolution on Twitterand Facebook gave way to prime-timeprogrammes in which TV channels turned
their oodlights on themselves.
One man’s editing is another man’s3.censorship: While mainsteam media“packages” news after “selecting” it, thereare those – especially celebrities, whoconsider that as unnecessary interference.Social Media enables them to cut through
the layer.
The Source is the News!:4. This is the21 st Century equivalent of the old saying
by Marshall McLuhan, “The mediumis the message” Celebrities, politicalspokespersons, industrialists, companies– they all have Twitter accounts or blogs
that enable them to publish directly. Formainstream media, this becomes a classiccase of “disintermediation” – somewhatlike what online commerce did to old shops.Mainstream media has to engage in the newreality.
Deal with it:5. You cannot ignore SocialMedia anymore whether you are a reader/viewer/surfer, a journalist, an advertiser, acorporate or a mainstream media publisheror broadcaster.
Don’t forget the hyperlink:6. News is not just being generated or discussed in SocialMedia. It is being shared. The intrinsicallyshared nature of online information, news,audio or video les dramatically alters socialbehaviour. This has huge implications fornearly all.
Business models will change:7. The emerging scenario is one in which mainstream andSocial Media will court each other in amanner that will change business models.How? That is the big question.
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Do you remember that advertisement you sawon Facebook, really liked it and fancied winning
the competition? Do you remember the numberof windows that you opened after that to nallyreach a place where it asked you to register forsomething and then claim? Are you a part of
those 760,002 people who really say “thumbsup” to a brand, like it and then forget about it?
I am sure you remember all this and are indeeda part of the Social Media revolution…in INDIA!
How many competitions did you eventuallywin? Or if I may ask, how much of shopping you recently did was inspired by the ads on thefavourite social network you visit every day?Well, I leave out the answer to you, as I am alsoone of all of you and a part of these networks,but as you would rightly guess, only to connectwith my friends who are either sitting far awayfrom me or whom I haven’t been able to get in
touch for long or share our upcoming events .
Anurag BatraChairman and Editor-in-Chief for
the exchange4media group
While doing all that does anything else attractmy attention? Well not sure about anything else,but the photographs of my friends attending parties….de nitely does!!!
The Social network(s) that you call social mediafrom the advertisers and marketer’s point of view is the buzz of the town today and everyoneseems to be trying to either teach this mediumor understand this medium or leverage thismedium or eventually making some senseout of this medium. Whatever the purpose,
the medium de nitely has caught attention of people! But how many people are these outof the total population of India? What is the
total reach of these mediums to an averageconsumer? What is the retention of the brandvalues this media creates? If I had the numbers,I would have de nitely revealed them to you, butfact is I don’t and thus my point on how effectivesocial media is as a media?
First thing that de nitely ring bells in my mindand raises a question mark to me, on theeffectiveness of social media as a tool foradvertising and marketing is the reach of thesemediums as a whole. While the numbers of
internet users as a whole is far less than othercountries in India, the social media users arede nitely quite a small lot. Now, many peoplewould counter argue my point saying that theseare the people who matter to the brands whoare advertising on these mediums and they are
their target TG’s. I agree to this point and take anote that India’s youth is quite hooked to thesemedia, but who is tracking how many of theseyouth are leaving these media after joining
Are Indian audiencesreally social?
them once? There is a signi cant fall off fromsocial media and burnout. Are we factoring theburnout numbers?
I remember the phenomenon that started3-4 years ago when not having an accounton “Orkut” was quite an unusual thing for anyurban youth. Orkut became the most popularsite with a huge member base especially inIndia. Advertising on Orkut had just star ted
owing in and the platform was just being made more viable for ads when it got a severeblow to its reputation following innumerablefake ids, misuse of its content and a gamut of other issues. While Orkut was just recovering
from the debacle, Facebook arrived, spreadand conquered. The question of “What’s yourOrkut ID soon became what’s your FB accountcalled?” Indian users still make just 3 millionof the existing 500 million plus subscribersof Facebook. And no one knows those whoare right now there, will be for how long? Whoknows how close we are to the next socialnetworking phenomenon. Twitter, as we allknow has been struggling to devise its nancialstrategies itself and a puzzle still to be solvedeven for marketers!
While social media takes you directly to your target TG, it doesn’t guarantee you attention,even though you are in front of them. Negativegoes viral but dedicated to the point campaign
takes time to even get noticed. Creativity doeshave a pull factor but there are no statistics onhow many people actually get off from these
things after getting involved at a certain point of time…..
“So… When was the last time you saw yourFriendster, Hi5, MySpace, LinkedIn, Jhoos,ibibo, apnacircle, Badoo, Xing, Mixi, Multiply,Ning…forgot amidst all…Orkut account?”
Now, what surprises me all the more is thegrowth in number of social media evangelistsavailable in this country, increasing exponentially every day. It looks like everyone
today has mastered the art of social mediaoptimization, web strategies and internetadvertising. Solutions to increase brandeffectiveness are available on zillions of websites and you have a promise to get the bestservices. In fact I would like to believe that thesocial media specialists are like the guys whoroam in your locality promising to clean your earwith archaic and dangerous tools. There are toomany promising too much and knowing it all. Iwould like to ask them what they know aboutbrand, audiences and messaging. Just because
they are 27 year old and spend a lot of timeon social media does not make them a socialmedia marketing expert. How are they using theinsights?
Talking about social media consultants I amreminded of a Scott Adams saying that seems
to mock at us all “Consultants have credibilitybecause they are not dumb enough to work atyour company”
But the question remains the same…has itreally caught the attention of the consumer inIndia? Is it turning the leads into sales? Well Ibelieve India still has a long time to go wheninternet especially social networks becomea great tool of attracting consumers towardsadvertisers. Also, the number of playersoperating in the system is unimaginable and itbecomes dif cult to nd the best.
My view is that India still needs to evolve alot in its online Social Media market to gain amomentum among its far reached, wide spreadconsumers. From a marketer point of view, untiland unless I see strong numbers as ROI, I wouldreally be wary to put my money where its worthis!
Time to “like” another brand, as my friendshas just suggested one to me…let me checkout, If I am eligible to win a Mercedes now…
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Measurement is de ned by dictionary.com as the act or process of ascertaining the extent,dimensions, or quantity of something.
Therefore, measurement of a Public Relationsprogramme would simply mean the act of ascertaining the extent, dimensions or quantityof what Public Relations programme hasachieved – the magical something.
So what is the magical something that a PublicRelations programme is expected to achieve?
Why is it considered the holy grail of PublicRelations – everyone knows about its existencebut not able to nd it? Why it is that only a fewuse it to their bene t? Is it because the role of Public Relations itself is not well understood orappreciated?
I believe that Public Relations if often seenmerely as the act of gaining favourable presscoverage and hence the measurement of its
Ashwani Singla Chief Executive Of cer, Penn Schoen Berland
impact is limited to the extent of the favourablepress coverage it was able to garner. This is
the beginning of the long journey of measuring public relations.
Given that, the measure of its successpredominantly became “Advertising ValueEquivalent” or AVE, which translates into theadvertising value of the editorial exposurereceived by a company. Many continue to use
this benchmark to measure the success of theirpublicity programme under the garb of a PublicRelations campaign.
The rst cousin of AVE is often “Number of Press Impressions” meaning the number of people who might have had the opportunity
to be exposed to a story that has appeared in the media; usually refers to the total auditedcirculation of a publication or the audiencereach of a broadcast vehicle. I call it the ‘thudfactor’ or the success of the programme being measured by whose ‘coverage dossier’ washeavier! Though, at the point of extinction, somestill continue to use this archaic methodology tobenchmark their Public Relations programmes!
Time/space measures or variations of itcontinue to be the predominant way to measureof the impact of public relations programmeand this will continue to be the case as long asPublic Relations is narrowly used for mere pressrelations.
So is there more to it than press relations?Instead of elaborating the virtues of public
Measurement – Is it the holygrail of public relations?
relations, I want to focus on the establishing a common understanding of it that helps usunderstand what and how to measure theimpact of a public relations campaign.
Public Relations is described in many ways butin the essence it remains “ the act of generating
goodwill or mutual understanding between acompany and its various publics/stakeholders.”
In the early 1900s Edward Louis Bernays ,considered the founding father of modern PublicRelations along with Ivy Lee , de ned PublicRelations as “ a management function whichtabulates public attitudes, de nes the policies,
procedures and interest of an organisationfollowed by executing a program of action toearn public understanding and acceptance ”
Robert L. Heath describes Public Relations in the Encyclopedia of Public Relations as a “ setof management, supervisory, and technicalfunctions that foster an organisation’s ability to strategically listen to, appreciate, andrespond to those persons whose mutually bene cial relationships with the organisationare necessary if it is to achieve its missions andvalues .”
Essentially it is a management function thatfocuses on two-way communication andfostering of mutually bene cial relationshipsbetween an organisation and its publics.According to the Public Relations Societyof America (PRSA), the functions of PublicRelations include research, planning,
communications dialogue and evaluation.
It would seem that Public relations isabout changing attitudes to gain public’sunderstanding and acceptance. Publicsmeaning stakeholders whose understanding and acceptance is material to the success of the company. This achieved through a two-way communication .
I had earlier described measurement as theact or process of ascertaining the extent,dimensions, or quantity of something. So, if wewere to put together Bernays, Lee and Heath’sde nition with that of measurement, what canwe conclude about measuring the impact of Public Relations?
As I understand, measuring the effectivenessof the Public Relations programme should beabout the change in attitude, understanding gained and acceptance received from
the stakeholders of a company whilst the measurement of the ef ciency of thecommunication process would be about therelevance of the medium and the message usedbetween the sender and the recipient.
Shouldn’t we use our knowledge of the true value of public relations to measureboth effectiveness and ef ciency of thecommunication process or continue to follow
the age-old practice of time and share in thepress alone?
The answer stares us in the face. Indian publicrelations professionals can learn from the
journey that their western colleagues havemade and make a leap that brings the role andimpact of public relations into the C Suite.
As Bernays and Lee explain in their de nition itis “a management function that tabulates publicattitude…”
Effectiveness of public relations has to be about
identifying the public, mapping and tabulating their ‘current attitude’ to seek insights into theircurrent beliefs and sources of information thatdrive their understanding and acceptance of thecompany.
Then, to de ne the policies, procedures andinterest of an organisation followed by executing a program of action and closing the loop bymeasuring the changes in the beliefs, attitudes,
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understanding and acceptance that theprogramme has been able to generate. This is
the continuous process of gaining trust of thestakeholders.
Penn Schoen Berland has several wellestablished methodologies available for useand our few other market research rms havedeveloped some tools too. Public Relationsprofessional need to embrace this and need toacquire knowledge, skills and attitude to read,understand and in uence the human mind in apositive way!
Lest, you think that I am underestimating oreliminating the role of third party endorsementgenerated through the several mediumsincluding the press. I am not. I am merelysuggesting that we have the opportunity to do
things differently in making a difference to thebusiness of our clients.
However, if the focus of your measurement is tomeasure the ‘ef ciency’ of the communicationprocess or the media effort, we can thenmeasure the ef ciency of the communicationeffort through ‘content analysis’ across a rangeof parameters like share of voice, prominence,
tone, focus of message, etc. within thebackdrop of the most relevant medium for aset of stakeholders. There are several ‘contentanalysis’ service providers today. ImpactResearch and Measurement is one of thepioneers in this space and has developed someinnovative tools such as ImpactIndex to helpcompanies make sense of news and establishsome co-relation between public perception andpublic image.
Media measurement is like a milestone on theroad, it is more a barometer of the progress weare making in our journey. It has its use andundertaken strategically and not merely withAVE or share of ink, it can help interpret theexpected impact of the communication process.As the internet starts to play a larger role in the
lives of people, content analysis helps not onlydeal with the information overload but makesense of it. This helps direct the resources of an organisation into the right mediums andmessage, thereby making the conversationsmore engaging.
Whatever your measure, public relations needs to focus on what to measure and the answer to the how will emerge. In the world that demandsRoI on everything, we can no longer afford toquestion whether to measure or not.
As they say “what cannot be measured, cannotbe managed”
Measurement in public relations does not need to be our Holy Grail and we do not need to solve the Da Vinci code to nd it! Its right here uponus; all we need to do is to have the courage toembrace it.
[email protected] I have been a keen participant in the journeyof social media in India over the past threeyears. One of the key trends that I have seenemerging in the last few months has been thegrowing need for a policy framework aroundsocial media among clients. We have beenapproached by two large corporations in thepast few months with requests to help themdevelop a framework.
It’s interesting how the need has been validatedin the edition 2 of the Blogworks India SocialMedia Report Edition 2 where 46% brands andorganisations have expressed the need for asocial media policy.
With corporate social media policy becoming agrowing hot topic, I thought it might be a goodidea to delve into this a little further and seewhat’s happening globally on this front.
Infosys became one of the rst organisations inIndia to roll out a set of guidelines few months
Rajika Talwar Senior Knowledge Manager, Blogworks
back for employees who participate on socialmedia sites like Facebook and Twitter. The ideais to make employees accountable for theircomments on social media and ensure thatno con dential content and details are being
leaked out on public forums.
As much as some organisations might want toignore this, social media is something whichis pervasive both at work and at home. ManyIndian companies have taken the route bybanning social media sites on their network.
You really can’t blame them given the concernsaround security but banning these sites isnot a solution either. It is becoming criticalfor organisations to set the foundation forsocial media interaction and engagement foremployees by –
Training employees on when to engage, how•
to start conversations, what to share, whatnot to say, tonality, etc.
Training employees on the effect of social•
media on their brands
At the same time empowering employees to•
tweet, update and blog
Some of the big global brands have alreadypaved the way and published policies that wecould learn from. A few examples include Intel,Kodak, IBM, Zappo, Walmart and CNN.
Intel, has their social media guidelinespublished online. The guidelines clearlyoutline what an employee should keep in mind
Does your company have asocial media policy yet?
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while engaging on social forums and socialnetworking sites and how to handle contentmoderation. However the most important aspectof this document boils down to employeesfollowing the Intel Code of Conduct and theIntel Privacy Policy, something all employeesare expected to adhere when they join theorganisation in of ine mode.
IBM is another brand which shares its socialcomputing guidelines online. They mention
that the document is work in progress and willkeep evolving as new technologies and socialnetworking tools become available. In 2009Kodak developed a social media policy forKodak employees that is now available onlinefor people to download and refer too. Their teamfrom marketing, information systems, legal, andcorporate communications put these ‘rules’
together. A must read for people on how theycould get started with their company socialmedia policy.
The pertinent question that remains is how willorganisations like Infosys monitor employeeinteractions and conversations online? Of course taking this step, is the way forward but
there is no perfect framework.
Like global brands which have social mediapolicies for their employees, Indian brands
too will have to cross many hurdles, learnfrom mistakes to be able to create a robustframework which again will always be work inprogress.
Over the past several years, the use of socialnetworks and mobile devices has becomeomnipresent. Possibly more than any otherdevelopments, these two trends epitomize how
technology has impacted everyday consumerlifestyles. This has broad implications, not justin terms of how people stay connected withfriends and family, but in how they interactwith companies, and purchase products andservices. Therefore, practically every industry isstruggling to keep pace.
We should not ignore the impact thatsmartphones and Social Media are having on our lives. I use my phone more for webbrowsing, social networking, blogging and emailbeyond the workplace than I use my laptop.
This could well be early-adopters territory I’mspeaking about but realistically I’m just oneof the 650 million people globally – source:eMarketer 2010 – who are now using theirsmartphones more and more for tasks such
Hassan Mirza Director - Intl. Sales, July Systems
as email and social networking. This number isset to grow due to the penetration of affordablesmartphones within the market – source:Comscore - it also found out that 70% of smartphone users have accessed email and
45% have accessed social networks using theirdevices.
What is interesting is that email usage is up due to the social network usage on these devices.Research has also discovered that Social Mediaand social networking have helped increase theuse of email. The reason for this increase is thatsmartphone users still want to keep in touchwith social network when the social networking sites use email and messaging to encourageusers to return.
It is not only important that we understand hownew technologies affect our customers. At thesame time we need to understand how they canbe used to open up communication channelswith them. This helps us to build strongerrelationships, to attract new customers and toretain existing ones too.
Furthermore these technologies cancomplement one another, as the value of SocialMedia, mobile and indeed email combined canamount to a more successful campaign thanwhen they are all executed individually.
Here are a few key steps to take in order tooptimise the success of integrated digitalcampaigns, which include both mobile andsocial elements:
Social media and mobile
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Make content accessible via mobile: First of all we should ensure that anydigital content produced is accessible by allmainstream mobile devices. Many businessdecisions are made away from the of ce andas a result business persons use smartphonedevices such as BlackBerrys, iPhones andAndroid phones to access information.
Networks and Newsletters: It is also advisable to add in the functionality toshare content through LinkedIn groups, Twitterand your community sites, wherever possible.If customers receive emails via smartphonedevices they can immediately carry out anaction to share your content with their ownsocial network, thereby helping to increaseword-of-mouth marketing. They can also be
taken directly to your forum or group where theycan comment instantly on a particular topic orseek peer reviews and support.
Interactivity: At events, look to offer SMS short codes inviting prospects to text for more information on aproduct or service, or even quick response. Anexample would be to offer a prospect the option
to text to receive the latest video of a productdemonstration. When the prospect texts it thenautomatically prompts them to enter an emailaddress to receive digital content, thus building data within your CRM. This digital content againshould be optimised to be shared immediatelyamongst social networks.
Mobile app: Banks now offer smartphone applications tomanage business account information. Why notlook into developing a mobile application foryour customers so that they can manage theirown accounts and orders? Furthermore youcan look to run offers, promotional or discountcodes for products and services through thisapplication to your loyal customers.
In the various ways outlined above, marketerscan develop their knowledge of the use of smartphones, social networks and emails. Bycombining this with a greater understanding of how we can apply these tools and technologies
to our businesses, hopefully we can all aim to develop more successful, integrated andpro table business processes and digitalcampaigns.
Silicon Valley has always been intrigued aboutopportunities in India’s Internet and mobilemarkets, especially the growth of MobileInternet. Through my research at StanfordUniversity and now at mig33, I have learntwhy people in smaller towns in India are morehooked on to Mobile Social networks than thepeople in metros. It’s hard for companies in
the valley (and even in India) to comprehend that mobile social networking in India is drivenby people in smaller towns. Through this
article, I would attempt to share my learning of behavioural traits of people, adaptationand adoption of Mobile Social networks and
the movement beyond Facebook or Twitterin smaller towns of developing countries,especially India.
My learnings are derived from my meetingswith mig33 users across 20 small towns of India – Bhagalpur, Patna in Bihar to Bharuch,
Mohit Gundecha Head - India and Director,
Business Development, mig33
Vapi, Valsad in Gujarat to Rohtak in Haryana – Imet these users as part of mig33’s process todecide our expansion strategy in India.
With the keen objective of nding out the driving factors for growing demand for social mobileentertainment, I discovered that many peoplein smaller towns of India are not comfortablesharing their real life on social networks. But,
they all enjoy connecting with new people andfeeling special in their own way, by maintaining a virtual identity. They are more mobile savvy
than we think they are, and they spend money.They are people in their late twenties as well(not just high school kids). They all use mobileinternet to have fun. Period!
Social Media in these regions is Mobile, Virtualand Real-time conversations. I am sharing fewmore observations about these people and whysocial mobile entertainment clicks with them.
Mobile Savvy: Mobile phones are theirbest friends – during the day and even whilesleeping. I know of several people who have toldme that to avoid their parent’s attention theycover themselves with the blanket pretending to
sleep and chat with their friends on mig33. The‘twenty-somethings’ crowd, of tier II towns, isvery comfortable with the device, they downloadand install apps and are willing to experiment,dig deeper and engage even further.
Social Taboos and Virtual World: Youth in these cities like to enjoy socialising in a virtual world. They are not so comfortablesharing their real lives on Facebook or Twitter -
Media in small towns is notFacebook and Twitter
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many have inferiority complex, some have socialinhibitions (especially girls) and for others it’sa social taboo. A quintessential tendency, theyseek entertainment in the virtual world with avirtual life, getting away from the pressures andhardships of real life. Therefore, a mobile socialnetwork, gives them the avenue to express
themselves, from a device that they have handy,all the time.
They like to create virtual identities, login to chatrooms, make new friends, exchange virtual gifts,play social real-time games etc. Youngsters
today have a free mind and want to share,communicate with people across the globe.They like discussing cricket, Bollywood and theopposite sex. They seek real time engagement,with people beyond their families, friends andrelatives, with people of similar interests and itgives them a feeling of instant connectivity.
Status Hungry: As I said, they want tofeel special in their own way. To gain or retainstatus among their friends online, people go to
the extent of paying for virtual gifts like a hug,a teddy bear on Valentine’s day to Jewelleryon Diwali, Kohinoor diamonds, an expensivemodern dress (which they will never even dream
to wear otherwise) for their avatar or a ShahRukh Khan hair-style, among other things.Their de nition of status is different. Even aphotograph with a mig33 employee is a big dealfor them.
Viral Factor: In tier II towns, thecommunities are usually close knit. If they
like a service, word spreads easily. They haveenough time to kill and chat among theirfriends. Even today more than half of the
thousands of registrations on mig33 are viareferrals, a testimony to the network effects in
tier II towns. Therefore their usage of mobilechat, mobile social games and participation inmobile communities is far higher as compared
to metros.
Lack of Social EntertainmentOptions: In metros, we have several activities
that we could pursue - In India, in small towncities there are fewer options for entertainmentand people have lot of spare time. Mobile, being a personal device gets an advantage there.Mobile is therefore treated as a gaming device,browsing device, socialising device and muchmore.
My personal interaction with these peoplehas excited me to actually relocate to Asia togrow mig33’s penetration in these markets.This audience is easy to please and viral. Theycan spread your services to several others.One needs to understand their feelings andintroduce services or marketing campaignsaccordingly.
If marketers have to reach to this audience,Facebook and Twitter can’t be the only medium!
About Blogworks- strategic social media solutions
Founded in 2006, Blogworks™ helps global brands and organisations engage
stakeholders in conversations to share, build communities, draw insights and co-
create offerings for business impact.
Amongst the most respected social media consulting rms in India, we have been
associated with some of the most successful social media programmes for consumer
brands, media companies, for-pro t, and, not-for-pro t organisations.
More about us at http://blogworks.in
About NM Incite, a Nielsen McKinsey company
NM Incite, a Nielsen McKinsey company, helps businesses harness the full potential
of social media intelligence to drive superior business performance across their
organisations. NM Incite equips companies with the capabilities to better understand,
value and take advantage of rich consumer insights derived from social media. Using
proven tools and new processes to drive organisational transformation in line with
strategic objectives, we make it possible for senior executives to extract new value
from these insights to deliver value to their product development, marketing, and
customer service operations. In essence, with our help they can better embrace
social media insights across the very fabric of their organisations. The result?
Unprecedented, measurable business impact, new opportunities, ef ciencies and
competitive advantage.
8/6/2019 Blogworks India Social Media Report Edition 2 in Association With NM Incite Light Version
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/blogworks-india-social-media-report-edition-2-in-association-with-nm-incite 30/31
India Social Media Survey Edition 28 59India Social Media Survey Edition 2
While we have made all efforts to keep thereport error free, we cannot guarantee the
same. Please do point out any errors that youmay notice and we will incorporate your insightsfor future editions. Please write to us at [email protected] with subject line ‘corrections’.
In your assessments and usage, do accountfor the fact that the nature of this study isqualitative and not quantitative. The publisherstake no responsibility for any results which youmay, or may not, achieve based on applicationof the survey results.
We urge you to you use your discretion indeciding its correctness/ ef cacy and make
your own judgments.
Views of authors of the respective guest articlesare personal, and do not represent views of Blogworks and NM Incite or their partners.
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