New research: B2B buyers have very high social participation
Popularity Report
![]() |
|||
![]() |
|||
![]() |
|||
![]() |
|||
![]() |
|||
![]() |
URL Tag Cloud
Bookmark History
Saved by 13 people (-2 private), first by anonymouse user on 2009-02-23
- Tacanderson on 2009-05-18 - Tags B2B , social , Forrester , networking , IT , research
- M1rich on 2009-04-30 - Tags B2B , social , Forrester , research , networking
- Traukainehm on 2009-03-24 - Tags no_tag
- Flokane on 2009-03-09 - Tags social , media , marketing , b2b , zahlen , daten , fakten , statistik , statistics , analyse , analytics , corporate , blog , artikel , study , studie
- Bobpotter on 2009-03-08 - Tags trends , research , corporate , business , demographics , b2b , for:matrudi , social media
Public Sticky notes
Highlighted by m1rich
Some highlights from this research (start by looking at the right two columns):
- 91% of these technology decision-makers were Spectators -- the highest number I've ever seen in a Social Technographics Profile. This means you can count on the fact that your buyers are reading blogs, watching user generated video, and participating in other social media. Note that 69% of them said they were using this technology for business purposes.
- Only 5% are non-participants (Inactives).
- 55% of these decision-makers were in social networks (Joiners) -- despite as mature businesspeople and not college students, you'd think they'd be participating a lot less.
- 43% are creating media (blogs, uploading videos or articles, etc.) and 58% are Critics, reacting to content they see in social formats. Again the numbers are very high compared to other groups we've surveyed, and again the level of participation for business purposes is also very high.
What does this mean for you? If you're a B2B marketer and you're not using social technologies in your marketing, it means you're late. We've seen a lot of excellent activity here from the likes of Dell and National Instruments (both won Forrester Groundswell awards) but a lot of the blogs, communities, and other social outreach from business to business companies is less than mature, to say the least. This is your chance to stand out. Take this report and show it to your boss to convince her that it's time to get started.
The report includes some good recommendations for B2B buyers, including the following:
- Note that buyers use social technology but don't rate it highly in terms of its influence on their buying decisions. This, despite the fact that count on peers' opinions to make decisions. I think this reflects that people haven't gotten used to this sort of information as a key input in buying decisions. This will change, especially as better applications come on line.
- Social applications should be integrated into other marketing. For example, National Instruments makes technical content from its customer community central in its marketing activity -- this is a model other B2B sellers should follow.
- Reach out to people by role -- people with the same job description form natural communities. This is a technique IBM SOA marketer Sandy Carter has described in her book "The Language of Marketing 2.0"
Highlighted by m1rich
Some highlights from this research (start by looking at the right two columns):
- 91% of these technology decision-makers were Spectators -- the highest number I've ever seen in a Social Technographics Profile. This means you can count on the fact that your buyers are reading blogs, watching user generated video, and participating in other social media. Note that 69% of them said they were using this technology for business purposes.
- Only 5% are non-participants (Inactives).
- 55% of these decision-makers were in social networks (Joiners) -- despite as mature businesspeople and not college students, you'd think they'd be participating a lot less.
- 43% are creating media (blogs, uploading videos or articles, etc.) and 58% are Critics, reacting to content they see in social formats. Again the numbers are very high compared to other groups we've surveyed, and again the level of participation for business purposes is also very high.
Highlighted by whertha
Highlighted by whertha
Highlighted by whertha
Highlighted by whertha


Public Comment