Why Followers Don't Matter, But These Social Media Stats Do

By Liz Froment •  Updated: 09/22/14 •  9 min read

This is a guest post by my good friend and community manager Liz Froment. 

She’s completely helped me rethink the way I approach social media with a couple of my brands, so I’m really excited to have her share this post today. When she isn’t working on her own freelance writing business, working on marketing automation or helping me out, she’s tweeting away at @lfroment.

With that, I’ll let her get to it! Take it away, Liz…

There are plenty of numbers you should be paying attention to when it comes to tracking the success of your social media campaigns. Just not the ones you think.

Why Followers Don’t Matter

Yup, I said it.

The biggest numbers most people look to when judging the success of any one of their social media platforms are typically the number of followers. Sure, having a ton of followers or likes on Twitter and Facebook are always good for social proof, but that doesn’t really prove too much when it actually comes to converting those fans.

After all, that’s what most brands (including yours) want to do on social media, right?

But, we look at our accounts and wonder what’s the deal: “I have 2,000 Twitter followers but no one ever clicks to my site?” or “I bought 500 Facebook fans on Fiverr and but no one ever responds to my posts, why?”

Because, you’re caring about the wrong numbers.

So what does matter?

Engagement.

Where the old familiar phrase “Content is King” has been shouted from the rooftops of the blogging word for the better part of a decade, “Engagement is King” is what works for social media.

Engagement is interaction. It’s getting people to click on your links, like your posts, start up a conversation, share something you posted. It’s getting people to feel like you are providing them value, that you’ve got a hint of personality and aren’t just there to sell your stuff and #humblebrag.

It’s all that.

And, it’s really important.

Big marketers, the people who know their stuff like Ramit Sethi and Gary Vaynerchuk and Laura Roeder all spend a ton of time focused specifically on engagement.

You want to follow them because you’re going to learn something, or have a laugh, or jump in and ask a question. I can pretty much promise you that it’s those numbers they care most about.

So what does that mean for your business?

It gives us a really great place to get started.

Which Numbers DO Matter

We live in a world of big data now, there are metrics and numbers behind everything.

This data can tell you Facebook gets the most engagement on Fridays, Saturdays are the best days to post about travel on Pinterest if you want pins, or the most Twitter re-tweets come between 9pm and 1am every day.

Once you start understanding how much really valuable information the numbers can tell you, we have to start using those to our advantage.

Let’s look at three simple stats you can start keeping tabs on today that will help improve your brand’s engagement in the future.

Shares

This one is pretty simple and can be applied directly to both Facebook and Twitter. Put simply, shares (or re-tweets) are the juice that helps improve your brand’s reach and viralability (is that a word?).

In basic terms, the more people who see your stuff the better chance you have to get them to engage, and eventually click on your stuff. From there, once you have them on your landing page, product page or newsletter page, you have a much better chance of getting them to convert.

What shares can also tell us is if we’ve hit on something that works. I’m the first to admit that a lot of social media, especially at first, is throwing a bunch of stuff up against the wall and seeing what sticks.

Sometimes, things stick and it makes me want to pay attention.

fb shares likes

Check out the photo above. This is a graph from the Breaking Eighty Facebook account via Buffer for Business. Here we can see how shares and followers work in action.

The blue line indicates the number of shares on a particular day. The lavender line represents the number of followers on the account.

Notice anything in particular?

How about how after a couple of days in a row of a lot of shares there was a noticeable jump in the number of followers on the Facebook page.

Because posts were shared, new people were exposed to them, liked what they were about and in turn, liked the site. That gives more exposure to Breaking Eighty in the long run.

Clicks

Probably obvious at this point, but clearly you are going to want to understand what posts you are putting out that are actually attracting clicks. This serves a couple of purposes.

First, it can give you a good idea of how your content is performing. If no one is actually clicking why? Could be your lead in content on Facebook and Twitter aren’t making people want to click. Could be your title is sort of boring. Could be the content just doesn’t interest a ton of people.

This gives you a lot of things to look at, and work on improving.

Sometimes it’s as simple as just tweaking a sentence or a couple of words. Play around and experiment with the same posts over and over just substituting different introductory content. Are you suddenly seeing a spike in clicks?

Congrats! That means you are doing something right. So figure out what it is and copy it!

b80 clicks

Here’s another graph from Buffer for Business for the Breaking Eighty Twitter account. The line we want to focus in on here is the red one.

See what I see? A couple of big spikes.

That means something was happening that made people click. When I checked after the first spike, I saw the clicks were to a post Sean had written reviewing a new high tech piece of golf equipment.

To see if it was a one time thing or if the post had some juice, I scheduled it again about a week later. Hello, second spike. And this time even more people checked it out.

Then, since you can never get too much of a good thing, I posted the same review post yet again, and boom. The third spike.

This is a great example of being able to see that certain content is more clickable than others. Once you see the data for yourself and note those spikes use that content again, and figure out how you can convert the content that isn’t as successful to posts that get more clicks.

Reach

Tying in with shares and clicks is reach.

Reach is how many people actually see your social content.

You want this number to be high, it helps expose you to new customers and industry leaders for one. But the key with reach in conversion. Convert a few of those who are newly exposed to your content, and suddenly your sales numbers could be looking a lot better.

In a typical day, if no one clicks, likes, comments, re-tweets or shares your content (why doesn’t anyone like us?!?) then your reach is going to be equal to the number of followers you have.

So, if you’ve got 500 Twitter followers and no one shows you any love on Tuesday, your reach at the end of the day is going to be 500.

Facebook Insights does a great job of showing reach tied in with engagement (clicks, shares and likes) in one handy graphic.

fb post engagement

Notice anything special here?

That last column, what Facebook calls the engagement column really helps to drive reach. The posts hat have higher levels of clicks, comments and shares has a dramatic effect on reach.

We all know that Facebook has cut down on organic reach in the last year, which means a site with 5,000 fans that used to reach 2,500 on a consistent basis might now only reach 500.

Those are a lot of potential customers not seeing your awesome content.

arccos 1 arccos 2

Here is a perfect example of how reach and clicks need to tie together. We have two posts that share the exact same link to a review post Sean wrote on the golf technology we covered above.

The number that is probably going to pop out is the near 45,000 reach on the first post.

Awesome, right?

Yes, and no.

Yes, having an extra 45k people see the post is a great thing. As you can see it got a couple of re-tweets, favorites and mentions. But, it only got two clicks back to the post. Bummer.

So, we tried it again. This time, we made some tweaks by changing the lead in about the content and actually telling people what to do, “check out my review here” we asked them to click.

Guess what, they did!

Yes the reach was dramatically less, but clicks went from 2 to 38, a massive improvement.

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Bringing it all Together

Hopefully, by now, you can see that there is a lot more to social media than just the number of followers you have.

Realize that small changes can make big differences. Try tweaking your titles, content, lead ins, even hashtags, and after a while you’re going to start seeing some results.

There are plenty of other stats that you can look at to really tweak and hone in on, but to get started, work with these three. The numbers might seem daunting, but you can glean so much from them, it’s time to get in the game and give them a shot.

It won’t be long before you start noticing a few patterns and changes that you’re going to be able to capitalize on and take your social media to the next level.

Liz Froment

Liz Froment is a full-time freelance writer and the one who keeps Location Rebel running like a well-oiled machine. If she's not writing something informative or witty for her clients, she can most likely be found reading a good book.
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6 comments on "Why Followers Don't Matter, But These Social Media Stats Do"

  1. Tate says:

    A while back I followed the advice of a previous article on how to start a facebook page and found some very interesting insights. At the time, they were starting to monkey around with the algorithm and were changing what people would see on their news feed from you.

    I built up a pretty big following on my page and discovered that the reach was pitiful for the amount of followers I had. I was writing blog posts that solved problems in my niche and they weren’t getting that much traction.

    I decided to test a bunch of stuff to see what got the most traction. At around the same time sites like viralnova, upworthy, and buzz feed were huge on facebook. So I decided to try what they were doing on a smaller scale and within my niche and it worked to a certain degree.

    The point I’m making is that if you want to get your content more engagement, try putting something up that you know will get a lot of engagement followed by something like a blog post.

    Hope this helps.

    1. Liz says:

      Absolutely Tate, great advice. Those sites are getting a ton of hits so it’s a really smart idea to test on a smaller scale to see what works. Oftentimes if you read a bit into the numbers you can find some good tips 🙂

  2. Halona Black says:

    This is such an important article. Yes, content is king in the blogging world, however blogging doesn’t really work without social media. So yes, engagement is everything — which makes being a blogger so much harder these days as there is so much noise out there in social media.

  3. You are right that engagement is everything. I am not the biggest fan of Facebook anymore and hardly go on it. I have a decent amount of fans for a new site, but the amount of engagement is ridiculously low at times for Facebook since the Reach is low.

    Twitter I can get a small amount of traffic from my followers and from using tools like just retweet me and easy retweet. I’m not the biggest fan of it though.

    I love pinterest though. Pins have a long shelf life and I actually enjoy it for enjoyment’s sake. I hate that people can change the source url of your pin though. I had a pin start to go viral and then someone changed the source url and fucked everything up.

    Thanks for the reminder that follower count isn’t that important.

  4. Yeah Jeets!

    Now that we have that out of the way, I’m glad you dropped this value bomb on the readers.

    The people that obsess over their number of followers or size of “their audience” are missing the mark.

    If you have 10,000 followers on social media or on your email list, but NOBODY ever responds when you put something out there – you’re doing it wrong.

    The goal ain’t a big fancy number you can humblebrag about at conferences. The goal is to get people to care. To care about you, what you’re doing and WHY you’re doing it.

    Once you’ve gotten people to care, and invest their time in reading and hearing about what you’re up to, THEN you’re getting somewhere. Those same peeps are the ones that will make up the 80/20 of your business.

    You gotta speak to them. Build stuff for them. Nurture that relationship, and give em killer value in your niche right outta the gate. Trust marketing at it’s finest.

    Engage!

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