To develop the report, Expion leveraged its social media and marketing insights software to analyze the Facebook pages of the 50 retailers, including over 16,000 posts and their subsequent performance and, as a result, unearthed key social trends in the retail industry. The analysis identifies winners and losers across brands, posts and post types in terms of both engagement and volume. Walmart, Victoria’s Secret and Tiffany & Co. were the big winners.
This 24-page report is broken out into seven in-depth sections: Engagement Ranking, Trends, Volume Ranking, Post Type, Retail Sector Comparisons, Brand Comparisons, Post Breakdown, and Timing. There’s a lot of great Facebook fodder in this chronicle, but for this post let’s take a look at Expion’s top five F.A.V.E 50 Social Retail Report findings:
2013 Is Slow Going
In H1 2013, the retail industry had its slowest growth period since 2011, with an actual decline in engagement and volume, despite an increase in the number of posts that were published.
Content Strategies: Quality Versus Quantity
The report shows that brands publishing fewer highly effective posts are creating nearly as much volume as brands relying on a quantity-driven approach. We expect to see a greater dichotomy between these two strategies, and as Facebook becomes more saturated, the quality-driven approach should overtake the quantity-driven approach.
Growth Regression
While there was an even split across the 50 retailers in social volume growth – 25 saw positive growth and 25 saw a decline – eight of the top 10 brands experienced a decline, showing that the top retailers took a step backward during H1 2013.
Video Did Not Kill The Image Star…Yet
Despite video popularity across social media platforms like Vine and Instagram, posts with images still dominated Facebook. Images represented 80 percent of posts while video posts accounted for a meager 3 percent.
It’s A Luxe Life For Retail Fans
When looking at industry sectors, luxury brands were the highest performing in terms of total fan engagement, driven by captivating product images that were often tied to pop culture. Retail sectors such as drug stores, supermarkets and small-format value, which depend on mass appeal, fell to the bottom of the list.
This 24-page resource will be helpful for any B2C social business leader, brand strategist, or content marketing creator. Interested in reading Expion’s full F.A.V.E 50 Social Retail Report? Download the complete report for free.
Social Retail Report: Top Five Facebook Findings is a post from: V3 Kansas City Integrated Marketing and Social Media Agency