Social media reach

Social media reach is a media analytics metric that refers to the number of users who have come across a particular content on a social platform such as Facebook, Instagram or Twitter.[1]

In comparison, an impression is the total number of circumstances where your content has been shown on a social timeline,[1] meanwhile, engagement looks at how people interact with the content that they see on a social platform such as like, share or retweet.[2]

Social media platforms including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram and many more have their own individual ways of tracking, analyzing and reporting the traffic on each of the individual platforms. Each platform allows their users, from your everyday citizen to public figures and companies, to create posts and content, to be active on the platform and to interact with other users. These platforms are also a main source of communication between companies and their target audiences. By conducting research, companies are able to utilize analytical information, such as the reach of their posts, to better understand the interactions between the users and their content.

There are multiple underlying factors that will determine what shows up on a newsfeed or timeline. Algorithms for example, are a type of factor that can alter the reach of a post due to the way the algorithm is coded which can affect who sees your post and when.[1] Other examples of factors that can impede the reach can include the time of which posts are made as well as how frequent the posts are between one another.[1]

Reach on Facebook

Example of an analytic dashboard on Facebook that looks at the reach of a post.

Facebook has their own analytic platform which allows the user to see how other users are interacting with their posts, with the use of multiple metrics.[3] This is not something the average user uses, but rather a tool that is used by pages or public figures for example. For example, Facebook pages that represent a business often look at the activity their posts have generated. There are three types of reach that can be looked at on the Facebook analytic platform.

Types of reach

Organic Reach

This type of reach regards the number of distinct users that have seen a specific post on their feed.[3] Organic reach in other words is the number of people who have seen the post being analyzed on their Facebook newsfeed. Data gathered from this type of reach can give intel to those doing the analysis such as the demographics of those who have seen the post.

This type of reach regards the number of times that distinct users have come across sponsored posts, ads or content.[3] In other words, paid reach is the number of times Facebook users have seen a post that has been paid for by a company. Data collected can give insight, to advertisers or marketers for example, on the activity based around the reach of their post.

Viral Reach

This type of reach regards the number of views by distinct users on posts that have been commented on or shared by their friends on Facebook.[3] In other words, viral reach looks at the number of people who have seen a post after a friend of theirs commented or shared the original post, therefore it showed on their timeline. Viral reach can be looked at in terms of a collective number of times that the post has been on individual user's timelines. Data collected from viral reach can be used in multiple ways, for example it can be used to analyze the type of content that gets shared or commented on and can be further used to compare to other posts.

Engaged users

This refers to the number of individual users whom have clicked and interacted with a post on Facebook.[3]

Reach on Twitter

Twitter gives access to any of their users to analytics of their tweets as well as their followers.[4] Their dashboard is user friendly, which allows anyone to take a look at the analytics behind their Twitter account.[5] This open access is useful for both the average user as well as companies as it can provide a quick glance or general outlook of who has seen their tweets. The way that Twitter works is slightly different than the way Facebook in terms of the reach. On Twitter, especially for users with a higher profile, they are not only engaging with the people who follow them, but also with the followers of their own followers.[6] The reach metric on Twitter looks at the quantity of Twitter users who have been engaged but also the number of users that follow them as well.[6] This metric is useful to see the if the tweets/content being shared on Twitter are contributing to the growth of audience on this platform.

Uses of reach

The reach can be a useful metric to analyze for marketers and advertisers. Social media is a platform that is used by marketers to directly target their intended audience with ease.[7] These platforms not only allow marketers to get a better understanding of their audience, but also allow advertisers to insert their ads onto the timelines of specific users to later be able to conduct research to see the reach of their posts/content.[7]

Analytics and reach

Social analytics looks at the data collected based on the interactions of users on social media platforms.[8] A lot of information can be gathered which can provide intel based on user activities on social media.[8] When looking into analytics in regards to social media, each company or group has a different goal in mind to engage their audience. At a glance, the three might seem as if they are very similar, however the differences between them are significant.[3] There are many aspects that can be analyzed from the data gathered from social media platforms, depending what is being observed, the correct metric would then be selected to further analyze.

One example of the many metrics that can be used through social analytics is the reach.

gollark: deltaspace seems perfectly good.
gollark: Just come up with some reasonably memorable name and stick `.net` on the end or something.
gollark: I don't think it matters much as long as people here can access it.
gollark: Yes.
gollark: Probably. But really nice mountains.

See also

References

  1. "Social Media Engagement: Reach vs. Impressions - Taylor Digital". Taylor Digital. 2017-06-14. Retrieved 2017-12-14.
  2. "Reach and Engagement: Making the Most of Social Media Marketing - TFM Insights". TFM Insights. 2015-03-26. Retrieved 2017-12-14.
  3. Vucovich, Lee A.; Gordon, Valerie S.; Mitchell, Nicole; Ennis, Lisa A. (2013). "Is the Time and Effort Worth It? One Library's Evaluation of Using Social Networking Tools for Outreach". Medical Reference Services Quarterly. 32 (1): 12–25. doi:10.1080/02763869.2013.749107. PMID 23394417.
  4. "Twitter Analytics Are Now Available to Everyone (And Here's the Top Metric You Should Watch)". Retrieved 2017-12-15.
  5. "About your activity dashboard". Retrieved 2017-12-15.
  6. "Twitter Metrics Defined: Reach | Simply Measured". Simply Measured. 2013-07-09. Retrieved 2017-12-15.
  7. Han, Youngsub; Hong, Beomseok; Lee, Hyeoncheol; Kim, Kwangmi (2017-05-30). "How do we Tweet? The Comparative Analysis of Twitter Usage by Message Types, Devices, and Sources". The Journal of Social Media in Society. 6 (1): 189–219. ISSN 2325-503X.
  8. "Social Analytics - Gartner IT Glossary". Gartner IT Glossary. 2012-06-29. Retrieved 2017-12-15.
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