Should your business be on foursquare? Let’s get some PERSPECTIVE…

Awareness Networks
2010  is the year of geo-location, and now the name “foursquare” (the business leader in this space) is creeping across the desks of CMO’s and marketing types around the world. They’re now asking themselves the question, “Should my business be on foursquare?”

Well, maybe. So read on..

Argument for foursquare
- 1.8 million users to date, one of the fastest growing social media technologies out there
- Big brands are doing it, (Starbucks, NYTimes, Zagat, CNN, WSJ) we should follow along.
- We’re a retail establishment. We have a local presence in XYZ city and should engage with customers

Argument against foursquare
- We’re NOT a retail establishment (duh)
- It’s just another flashy social media play, we don’t have time for yet another social media thing
- How do we know it’s worth it? Are people actually “checking in” to (insert name of your business here)?

We could spend days debating the pros and cons here, so let’s not debate. Let’s educate ourselves and try and answer the last two points above. To help, I’ve just tried out Awareness’, “foursquare Perspectives” a brand new tool that helps enterprise marketers:

a. take inventory of their existing (customer-generated) presence on foursquare
b: deliver comprehensive reports to uncover trends across multiple foursquare venues.

Testing out foursquare Perspectives
So, let’s pretend that I’m a marketing person at Massachusetts General Hospital here in Boston. I chose MGH because, well, they aren’t necessarily a “retail” establishment per se, but they do have a physical presence, and actually, multiple locations, right?  I tested it out by doing a quick search here for Massachusetts General Hospital. Here are some screen shots of what came up.

Screen shot 2010-07-13 at 3.08.23 PMScreen shot 2010-07-13 at 3.08.34 PMScreen shot 2010-07-13 at 3.08.15 PMQuick Reactions:
Well, if I’m a marketing person at MGH, I have just learned the following things…
-There are three MGH “campuses” that my customers are checking in to on foursquare.  Should I, as an administrator/marketer set up other official MGH sites for the many campuses/offices I have?
-The main campus is the most popular one by far, I should focus all of my effort on marketing there…
-Looks like my “customers” -patients, employees and volunteers, are checking in pretty regularly (repeats ratio of 3.6)  how could/should I engage them?
-I have roughly 300 customers that I can engage with using foursquare. What should I/could I do. (interesting conundrum here…as a hospital, do you want regular “customers” – i.e. patients checking in often??!)

Next Steps for You as a Marketer
- By using this tool, you’ve just tapped into the magic of foursquare and been given a quick, visible snapshot of the value of foursquare to share with your team. Maybe you’ll act on it right away, or maybe you’ll wait and see, but at least you have a snapshot in time for where your company stands
- Spend some more time on foursquare. See if you can identify, interact with, or somehow connect with your “mayor”. What works, what doesn’t?
- Take a look at Awareness’s new Social Marketing Hub. This answers your question of the “I don’t have time to do all of this social media work” If you’re convinced of the power of social media, and want to be publish, manage, measure and engage with your customers across all the major social platforms, maybe this is for you?

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  • christinemajor
    Thanks for the great post Tyson! Love your analysis of the foursquare Perspectives results and point about using the tool to find out if businesses should even bother engaging on foursquare.

    To respond to Eric's question, foursquare Perspectives is really for the enterprise organization with multiple locations such as those you listed. For the businesses with one venue, the foursquare venue page should suffice.

    And since I am thinking of burritos at the moment, I took a peek at the foursquare Perspectives report for Boloco and from that report we are able to review and then compare the number of check-ins and also unique check-ins and repeat visitors for all of the 20 venues they have listed in foursquare. see report here: http://perspectives.awarenessnetworks.com/foursquare/brand.asp?SearchTerm1=Boloco

    From this data, Boloco can decide which of their stores is more active and attracts the most repeat visitors on foursquare and cater their marketing initiatives accordingly. They could also target those stores that aren't as active and try to bolster activity with some special offers or by publishing tips to nearby locations to drive traffic to those stores.

    Does this help? You know where to reach me and we definitely want feedback.

    Thanks!
    Christine

    Christine Major
    Awareness, Inc.


  • Great post, Tyson! Very interesting to use MGH as an example - though I'd like to hear more about retail brands, too, since even they are wondering whether or not to engage via Foursquare, especially given all the recent discussion on the difficulties with working with Foursquare to come up with ideas, set up specials, etc. For example, does Foursquare Perspectives give you much more than the venue page itself if you only have a single venue? If a retailer has multiple venues (e.g. JP Licks, Boloco, Anton's or Zoots Cleaners), how do I compare my venues - based on # check-ins, # repeat visits, etc? And how to use this information? Just some thoughts...
  • Great question and comment Eric. Actually talked to Dennis (foursquare co-founder) a few weeks back, and your point is well taken- their hardest task now is verifying all of the businesses that want to set up specials and start harnessing the power of foursquare...that is their biggest hurdle right now, and a friend and I are trying to help them "unlock" businesses on foursquare. As to your second question, I'll ping Awareness and let them comment..
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