Search for content of interest

  • About
  • ServiceS
    • Branding
    • Innovation
    • Naming
    • Strategy
    • Research
    • Design
  • Work
  • Insights
  • News
  • LOCATIONS
    • Shanghai
    • Paris
    • New York
    • Singapore
    • Malaysia

CN FR
  • About
  • ServiceS
    • Branding
    • Innovation
    • Naming
    • Strategy
    • Research
    • Design
  • Work
  • Insights
  • News
  • LOCATIONS
    • Shanghai
    • Paris
    • New York
    • Singapore
    • Malaysia
CONTACT

EN

  • CN
  • FR

Home Insights Our Thinking Detail
Contact Us

Extract More Value out of Social Brand Equity Tracking

Besides sales revenue, positive word of mouth and brand associations are usually testaments of a strong brand well-liked by the consumers. Traditionally, brands have been conducting periodic customer satisfaction surveys or brand equity surveys to gather consumers’ feedback on the brand. What if, brands do not have to depend on surveys to hear customers’ feedback? 

Social Brand Equity Tracking: Social Listening – A New Way to Hear the Consumers

New media behavior has changed the way consumers search, shop, consume and communicate. Consumers are openly sharing their experience with the brand, without being prompted, in the digital space, 24/7. Other consumers are regarding this word-of-mouth sharing as more authentic and reliable than those from the brands, turning what used to be passive consumers into active influencers. As such, brands are increasingly placing more emphasis on driving positive conversation around the brand and turning to social listening for real-time monitoring. Social listening is the process of searching the web and social media channels for mentions of your brand, competitors and other topics of interest.

United Airlines’ passenger removal incident that happened in April earlier this year is a great example of the impact of voices in the social media space. Within 48 hours, United Airlines’ saga generated 2.9 million mentions and its social sentiment plummeted by 160%. Other than monitoring online discussion for immediate crisis management, brands are also able to monitor and assess mid to long term brand equity performance in the digital space.

United Airlines CEO Oscar Munoz

But what actually is “social brand equity”, and how can brands leverage it to lead their category?

Social Brand Equity Tracking: What is Social Brand Equity? Social Listening + Social Metrics

With the increased spending in digital marketing, it makes perfect sense for brands to take into account their brand performance in the social space when it comes to brand equity assessment. Social Brand Equity, sometimes referred to as Social Media Brand Equity, is a measure of brand equity value that your brand has accumulated over time in the Internet social space and it changes over time depending on the interactions and experiences with the brand. 

Looking solely at commonly tracked social media metrics like number of fans and number of shares can give you a faux indication of the ROI from your ad-hoc digital marketing efforts. With social listening, unprompted discussions on the brand, competitors and/or other topics of interest could be crawled, giving you access to huge pool of data for qualitative analysis of the possible reasons behind the numbers.

Integrating social listening and commonly known social media metrics, Social Brand Equity tracking provides a more comprehensive and integrated evaluation of the brand in the digital space.

Social Brand Equity Tracking: Not Just a Survey: Brand Management Beyond the Annual KPIs

With Social Brand Equity tracking, you can extract more value beyond the numbers and metrics. Due to the nature of the research method being different from that of a traditional brand equity assessment, social listening allows for deep-dive qualitative analysis of any big-picture statistical findings. This makes Social Brand Equity tracking not only a brand equity evaluation tool that tracks annual brand KPI changes, but also a brand management tool that would reveal the cause and effect, empowering the brand with insights for future brand implementations. 

Applying SBET: Making the Most out of Social Tools

We are going to share 3 usage scenarios on how a brand can extract more value out from the social listening intelligence.

A brand needs a foundation for what drives brand perceptions.
With traditional brand equity surveys, you get assessment of the brand images that your brand is more closely related to, the associations compared to competitors and how it changes from the last assessment. That is where it ends. There is a gap in terms of knowing what have led to the current brand perceptions and therefore does not empower the brand team to make informed decision for future improvement. With social listening, word cloud is able to give an overview of the key associations of the brand, as well as deep dive analysis into the mentions that contributed to a particular brand association. 

A brand needs detailed “real-time” insight directly from its audience to make an informed and actionable brand strategy
Like traditional brand equity surveys, Social Brand Equity tracking can also give insights on decision-making drivers with discussion volume as a proxy. With the assumption that people discuss more about the attributes that they have a stronger relevance and preference for, we are able to breakdown the importance of each attribute. Social listening allows you to take the analysis 1 step further to deeper analysis to exact discussion on any specific attributes, allowing you to make actionable changes to aspects of the brand that would bring the greatest impact to the brand. 

Case example: A travel luggage brand in China market

Case example: A travel luggage brand in China market
1. Importance ranking of product-related attributes

2. Deep-dive analysis into discussion about design

Analysis of the discussion revolving around design revealed that most netizens could not pinpoint distinctive design characteristics for brands with the exception for Rimowa and Samsonite’s Cosmo model. This insight could lead to product design implication for Brand A to develop distinctive, tangible design differences that consumers could distinguish. 

A brand seeks to continuously evaluate and iterate upon different channels and campaigns
Instead of taking social media metric changes at face value, analyze the reasons behind the numbers. Trace back to where and the reasons to the changes. If fluctuation for your brand is not drastic over time to give any indication, look at your competitors. Analyze the types of content that drove traffic and engagement and which channels were working better for them. From the example below, it revealed that generic travel destination posts are not appealing to consumers as compared to context-specific contest which not only reflects a closer relevance to consumers’ life but also engages them in 2-way communication.

Analysis into the content could also teach you on the language that you should be using when communicating with consumers on social media spaces. Besides having context relevant campaigns, Competitor B also attempted to build stronger relevance with the consumers by speaking their language – internet lingo widely used in social media communication. 

Extracts from Competitor B’s social media posts – use of internet lingo that netizens are familiar with

Conclusion

A research or brand performance tracking is only useful if it empowers and leads to actionable decisions that build the brand and business over time. Metrics and KPIs would give an indication of the brand in specific aspect, but one should note that these metrics should not be viewed in isolation. Analysis should be done from various angles to have an integrated and comprehensive evaluation of the brand.

Your brand faces questions not just about volume and sentiment, but also about brand fit, cultural context, and relation with competitors – to paint a complete picture of your brand.

Start evaluating your Social Brand Equity in the right way today. 

  • SHARE
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 
BACK

Related Article




What Are Signature Brand Experiences?

Brand success requires experience excellence.  In the traditional view, brand delivery was focused on communication activities and creative assets. Today, as communi…

How Did Perfect Diary Become a Top Cosmetic Brand in China?

Founded in 2016, Perfect Diary (完美日记) is one of the most popular beauty brands amongst millennials and Gen Z consumers in China. Being an innovative disruptor and a top c…

Semiotics vs. Semiology: What the Difference means to brands

In previous articles we have discussed semiotics as a powerful tool for product innovation and analyzing advertising. Using semiotics, brands can take advantage of codes …

Brand Experience: Meituan Dianping – The Transactional Super App

Discover the transformative power of Meituan Dianping, where innovation and convenience converge to redefine the brand experience. Through its merger with Dianping in 201…

Global Branding Localization: 5 Best and Worst Chinese Adaptations

Just as hiring an interpreter ensures eloquent communication with business partners, adapting your corporate communication is crucial for conveying brand values, position…

Art of Naming: Setting Your Brand Naming Process up for Success—The Diamond in the Rough

At Labbrand, we view brand naming as a combination of art and science. If name creation is the art, the process of applying and mixing paint on a blank canvas in search o…

AWA Wine Aims to Increase Brand Awareness

The Guangzhou Wine Company, AWA Wine Co. Ltd., strategically cultivates brand awareness through impactful marketing alliances with major entities including HSBC, Bank of …

The Year of China-Canada Tourism and What It Means for Brands

As an initiative to create closer ties between the two countries, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang announced 2018 as the Canada-China…

Ready to take your brand to new heights?

Let's start a conversation.
  • NEWSLETTER
  • CAREERS
  • PRIVACY POLICY

Sign up for our newsletter to get the latest insights, tips and trends in Branding, Naming and Innovation.

* Will be used in accordance with our Privacy Policy

  • Labbrand Group
  • Labbrand
  • Madjor
  • SpringPillar
  • Follow us:
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 

A Labbrand Group Company © 2005-2024 Labbrand All rights reserved

沪ICP备17001253号-3

Contact us to get the latest insights, tips, and trends in branding, naming, and innovation.

* Will be used in accordance with our Privacy Policy


  • Follow us:
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 
  • 

Cookie Notice

To improve your experience, we use cookies to provide social media features, offer you content that targets your particular interests, and analyse the performance of our advertising campaigns. By clicking on “Accept” you consent to all cookies. You also have the option to click “Reject” to limit the use of certain types of cookies. Please be aware that rejecting cookies may affect your website browsing experience and limit the use of some personalised features.

Accept Reject