B2B Content Performance on Social Media
As someone who has worked with B2B businesses for years, it’s a reality I long ago came to terms with: for maximum engagement, B2C type content outshines B2B content…by a huge margin.
One of the challenges B2B content marketers face is that few industries are the same in terms of how content will perform on social media. What works for a marketing company isn’t effective for pharmaceutical companies. What audiences find engaging for a travel site is very different from say, a Dutch engineering firm’s content.
Social Media Anxiety of Pharmaceutical Companies
The pharmaceutical social space – from contract research & manufacturing to analytical instrumentation, oncology, diagnostics, lab disposables, medical devices, research, and related fields, products and services is a bit of a strange beast. I think Tracy Staton summed up pharma’s relationship with social quite well at FiercePharma:
“Chatting with the public is not in pharma’s comfort zone. …Put your average, everyday drug company in the middle of a public conversation and it freezes up. Worried it will say the wrong thing, sensitive to criticism, mindful of unintended consequences, drugmakers usually prefer to stand by the punch bowl and check their iPhones for messages. You could say pharma has social anxiety.”
She goes on to suggest what I’ve also found to be true: regulated drug companies tend to stick to a single product or – more likely – a disease state, such as breast cancer or Alzheimer’s. It’s a sensible solution, since it reduces the risk of running into problems with regulators.
But many life sciences-related companies do understand the value of content marketing – and how social media can increase awareness of their brand as well as start conversations with their potential customers.
So how does the pharma industry stack up against other segments, in social media world?
Recently I attended the Technology for Marketing (TfM) conference, and I’m finally working through materials and notes from various sessions.
One session in particular I found extremely interesting – The Science of Content – especially since it speaks to something that is always top-of-mind to me as a content writer.
Here’s how BuzzSumo and TfM – who collaborated on the research and ran the session – described it:
“The problem with following the latest trends is that what works in other markets may be entirely the wrong thing for your industry. …the key challenge is creating something that resonates strongly with your audience, and that ‘thing’ can vary significantly from market to market.”
The session shared the findings of BuzzSumo and TfM, taken from 150,000 articles from across 10 industries. Among the industries studied were several in which we work: pharma, marketing, financial, IT and travel. (Others in the study included: non-profits, news, fashion, automotive and electronics.)
Average Numbers for Social Sharing
TfM looked at 15,000 posts from each industry segment and it was interesting to see the differences in average shares per post. News items, for instance, received an average of 17,747 shares, while pharma posts saw just 34 shares on average.
Understanding the response level benchmarks for your industry helps provide a realistic expectation of your social program’s performance.
Best Social Channels for Life Sciences
Pinterest, as expected, played a role in Fashion, and Google+ … well, here’s their finding: “It has little relevance as a content distribution [channel] in any market.” Ouch.
Most Successful Length for Pharma Content
It turns out that content length varies by industry. The automotive industry, for example, prefers shorter content (0-1,000 words), while the I.T., financial, pharma and travel industries tend to consume more long-form material (1,000-10,000 words). Pharma’s two most successful content lengths were 1,000 – 2,000 words and between 3,000 – 10,000 words – the segments coming in at 29% and 30% respectively.
Word count for marketing was similarly high – we have a lot to say. The general rule for most industries? Longer, in-depth content tends to get more shares and links – especially in B2B.
Best Types of Social Content for Pharma
Among the key findings: video works particularly well in news media, but underperforms in pharma and IT. How-to articles were by far the most-shared financial content, while lists were popular in the pharma sector. Overall, list posts and general news-style headlines performed best for pharma.
When to Post on Social Media
There weren’t too many surprises about when to publish content during the week. In the B2B industries, content didn’t perform well generally on weekends. For pharma, posts published on Wednesday and Thursday received the most shares.
It Isn’t Just About the Numbers
Overall, the report was valuable in highlighting the vast differences that exist engagement-wise between B2C and B2B segments. It also reinforces something I find myself frequently explaining to life science and pharma B2B clients: they will not experience Kardashian-level engagement, and that’s not a bad thing.
When 50 people in the life sciences industry (people who are actually invested in the client’s pharma-related subject matter) share or engage with their content, it’s going to be more valuable – and impactful on the Company’s bottom line – than thousands of likes or shares by the general public.
That’s the key takeaway of B2B social: accurately identifying, finding and targeting your audience, and tailoring the message to your audience.