ClickZ has an analysis of a new study released by market research firm Compete, which looks at the convergence of traditional e-commerce and social media. The report which coins the phrase "social commerce" or "s-commerce" for short, finds consumer visits to social networking sites such as MySpace, Facebook and YouTube, have increased 109% since January 2004 and page views per visitor have grown by 414% in the same time frame. So how can marketers obtain success in this new medium of social commerce?

According to Compete, marketers experiencing the most success are those that are using a combination of branded micro-sites, customer reviews, forums, peer-to-peer transactions, product blogs and user-generated content projects.

As for actually advertising on social sites, the report states that the return on investment isn’t going to be any better than traditional customer acquisition campaigns. In fact Stephen DiMarco, VP of marketing at Compete and author of the report states, "It’s stupid to just advertise on MySpace and assume you are a social marketer. The better thing to do is get your customers associated with your brand."

The means by which one accomplishes this has to be unique and clever because it can be difficult to grab the attention in the social space because the consumer is already fixed on so many other things. "Consumers have limited social bandwidth. People only want so many friends, so the bar is high for marketers to create that bond that social networks have. Already people are starting to become social-saturated. For marketers, there are not going to be as many opportunities as they think there are. So they need to be more creative," says DiMarco.

He goes on to say, "Companies would be better served to build online forums on their sites, micro sites that support their brand, or explore other ways to get consumers to participate with them versus going to social networks to find more consumers." We already see music artists and entertainment products such as television shows and movies using online social venues to draw consumers and build brand loyalty. It will be interesting to see what traditional e-commerce site will do to tap into this new medium.






About the Author

David Wallace is CEO and founder of SearchRank, an original search engine optimization and marketing firm based in Phoenix, Arizona. He is experienced in search engine optimization and marketing, pay per click and pay for inclusion management, directory submissions and web site design usability. David is a frequent contributor to various search engine related forums, an active editor of popular directories such as GoGuides.org, Joe Ant and Zeal and has had several articles published on industry related sites. Since 1997, David along with his company have helped hundreds of businesses both large and small increase their search engine visibility and customer acquisitions.

David Wallace is CEO and founder of SearchRank, an original search engine optimization and marketing firm based in Phoenix, Arizona. He is experienced in search engine optimization and marketing, pay per click and pay for inclusion management, directory submissions and web site design usability. David is a frequent contributor to various search engine related forums, an active editor of popular directories such as GoGuides.org, Joe Ant and Zeal and has had several articles published on industry related sites. Since 1997, David along with his company have helped hundreds of businesses both large and small increase their search engine visibility and customer acquisitions.