1. Do Short Term Incentives Lead to Long Term Engagement?

    According to a recent Poynter article, A TV news team in Connecticut is running a contest this month on its Facebook page, where visitors who click the page’s “like” button can enter a drawing to win a new Nissan Maxima. This is becoming common practice for bigger brands, they explain. 

    But does this kind of like-gating gimmick actually work?

    “Running promotions that bought ‘likes’ through incentivized campaigns offered short-lived gains,” said Noah Echols of the Kennesaw State University Center for Sustainable Journalism.

     “It may have increased our page’s fan base, but a month after the contest, engagement levels were down again. And that is what matters – the active users, not just the fan count.”

    Moral of the story - listen, engage, and communicate.

     “A thousand highly engaged people online can accomplish much more for a brand than a million loose ties that were bought with an iPad giveaway.”

    6 months ago  /  12 notes

    1. brain reblogged this from contentwithcontently and added:
      (near Atlanta) having an individual quoted!...great topic like this.
    2. contentwithcontently posted this