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Marketers take note: a new study from research firm Gartner has discovered that a majority of today's consumers rely to some extent on social networks to help guide them in purchase decisions. Despite this fact, social networks such as Facebook, Twitter, and others, while critical, are currently an underutilized aspect to the marketing process, the report says.

But not everyone using social networks is worth targeting equally, as it turns out. Instead, there are three types of online personalities that make up just one-fifth of the consumer population but are the key influencers in the purchasing activities of 74% of the population. Gartner calls them Salesmen, Connectors and Mavens.

Key Influencers: Salesmen, Connectors, Mavens

The Salesmen, Connectors and Mavens are the three key influencer roles in today's social networks, just as they are offline. Salesmen, as you may guess, are defined by their ability to persuade people to purchase or act in certain ways. Salesmen aren't commercial entities, though; they just have the ability to encourage others to action.

Connectors can be split into two sub-groups - "Heavy" and "Light," and are defined by their status as a bridging function between disparate groups of people. Connectors have contacts in a multitude of different social groups and enjoy introducing people to one another.

Mavens are essentially information brokers. They are experts in a particular area and typically field questions from friends and family in need of advice. Often this advice influences purchasing decisions. Mavens, however, aren't necessarily trying to persuade people to purchase; they're just informing them.

Targeting the Key Influencers is Critical

These three roles play part in the purchasing activities of 74% of the population, says Gartner. The survey, taking place in the fourth quarter of 2009, studied nearly 4,000 consumers in 10 key markets and identified six different roles of user behavior. In addition to those mentioned above, there are also Seekers, who are the ones asking others for information, the Self-sufficient, who prefer to find the answers themselves and the Unclassified, who didn't fit into any defined role.

Gartner said it expected that some wouldn't easily fit into these prescribed roles because they may take on different roles when in different social contexts. You may be heralded as the IT expert (aka Maven) among your family, for example, but among your IT colleagues you're more of a Seeker of information. Two-thirds of the population ended up as Unclassified, however, which makes this report's findings and the staggering percentages regarding influence somewhat moot .

What marketers can take away from the study is that there are specific personality types that can be (and should be) targeted when using social networks to promote a brand, company, product or service. Salesmen, Seekers and Connectors are the most effective social network segments to target. This can be done by focusing on both the shopping experience and making information easily available to them. Mavens aren't as useful, because they don't do anything with the information they know unless specifically asked. For these folks (as well as the Self-sufficients), the focus should be primarily on improving the shopping experience.

At the end of the day, none of this is really new information - it just reinforces the fact that when online, consumers behave pretty much as they did prior to the Internet age. Word-of-mouth is still the best way to attract new business, and businesses should target those who like to influence others.



Comments

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  1. So true. The internet and especially social media, is extremly important for advertising, and will continue to be even more in the future.

    Posted by: Dino | July 26, 2010 8:22 AM



  2. This is extremely true! how something is represented on social media becomes amajor factor in what draws people to it more and more. And it definitely shapes how much advertising, as well as other industries are set to utilize it over time.

     Posted by: 4 Walls Author Profile Page | July 26, 2010 9:17 AM



  3. Great post on a great topic. I believe marketers need to almost flip the funnel and focus not on getting new leads, rather on the current customers that love them. Take steps to delight and reward these so called "mavens" etc, and marketers will reap the benefits 10 fold. A great step to getting there is an appropriate Facebook presence: Which is why it's super important for those fans to "like" your page: http://bit.ly/9TV0TP

    Posted by: Chris Dessi | July 26, 2010 9:53 AM



  4. Let's just keep social media away from the business of selling. Enough advertising already.

    Posted by: techoba | July 26, 2010 12:16 PM



  5. How does this jive with the report last week that said most people don't trust product information they get from social networks?

     Posted by: tmadel Author Profile Page | July 26, 2010 12:33 PM



  6. Heck, they've already got lots of ad platforms hitting up the social networks. You can't even tweet anymore without getting ads!

    Posted by: South Jersey Web Design | July 26, 2010 4:53 PM



  7. Thanks for sharing the research in this concise form.
    Agree to the conclusions (yawn), except one:

    At the end of the day, none of this is really new information - it just reinforces the fact that when online, consumers behave pretty much as they did prior to the Internet age. Word-of-mouth is still the best way to attract new business, and businesses should target those who like to influence others.

    "Target". Are we - still? What is marketing about to learn?

     Posted by: Bernd Nurnberger Author Profile Page | July 26, 2010 5:14 PM



  8. I believe that increased social media marketing activity, increased manipulation of people within our social graphs by marketers, and overall increased commercialization of social networking platforms are causing us to trust our social networks less and less. We need less infiltration into casual congregation platforms like Facebook; more valuable/educational information is okay. Marketing directly at any social media community is highly frowned upon and only reduces the quality of our social media experiences.

    Posted by: Alvin Tan | July 27, 2010 12:22 AM



  9. This is extremely true!Social media becomes amajor factor in what draws people to it more and more. And it definitely shapes how much advertising, important for advertising.Thanks for sharing such wonderful post here in this site. I really liked these post.

    Posted by: link building | July 30, 2010 1:05 PM



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