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Tag: studies

  • Facebook Seeks To Be the World’s Largest Marketing Platform

    Facebook Seeks To Be the World’s Largest Marketing Platform

    Facebook sees a huge opportunity to become the marketing platform of record for businesses seeking to reach consumers and other businesses to promote cross-country sales. Facebook is uniquely positioned as both a social platform and a marketing platform that has an astounding 1.7 billion monthly active users, one-fifth of the entire world’s population. By 2018, according to eMarketer in an April report, overall internet users are predicted to grow 30% to 3.82 billion. If Facebook grows at the same rate which seems likely, they will have over 2.2 billion active users in less than 2 years!

    According to a February 2016 study by McKinsey Global Institute, 361 million people worldwide have participated in cross-border ecommerce. This is a growing and huge opportunity for Facebook, finding ways to make international ecommerce seamless and practical for businesses. Internal Facebook data shows that nearly 50 million businesses use Facebook to find customers, and 30 percent of their a businesses Facebook followers fans are in fact from other countries.

    Download Facebook’s Cross-Border Business Handbook for a full review of their international marketing opportunities.

    Australia

    Australia has a population of 24 million with over 21 million using the internet and of those one-third, or 14 million are active on Facebook. On average, people are checking their Facebook feed 14 times a day, making Australian’s an especially reachable target for cross-country businesses. They say that 92% of students below 25 years old access Facebook on a daily basis.

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    Brazil

    Brazil has over a 113 million internet users, 80 million digital shoppers and 49 million smartphone users. According to Facebook surveys, over 70% of users want to receive offers and information about brands and products.

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    Canada

    Nearly 30 million Canadian’s are on the internet and over 21 million of them are on Facebook. According to Comscore, 29% of all time spent on mobile properties in Canada happens on Facebook.

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    France

    Close to 50 million people in France are on the internet and 31 million of those are active on Facebook. One survey showed that 25% of internet users considered Facebook as one of their favorite platforms for discovering
    new content/ products or services.

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    Germany

    Germany has 29 million active Facebookers and 82% of all internet users in Germany say that Facebook is their favorite social platform. Over 32% of Germans say they use Facebook while watching TV. There are big marketing opportunities for sports related businesses in this country, with 10 million soccer fans using Facebook.

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    Malaysia

    Malaysia has a population of 30 million, 20 million of them are on the internet and nearly all internet users, 18 million, are active on Facebook. In Malaysia, the internet is Facebook!

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    Thailand

    Less than half of the 68 million people in Thailand are even on the internet, yet Facebook says that it has 40 million monthly active users there. It’s total ecommerce spending is around $1 billion, leaving substantial room to grow considering the population. Over 95% of people in Thailand use at least two devices and a third use three: a smartphone, a tablet and a desktop or laptop.

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    Philippines

    Almost all of the people on the internet in the Philippines are on Facebook, over 50 million with 1.2 more time spent on Facebook than TV, according to a Reach study commissioned by Facebook. Over 70% of internet users have seen or searched for product information on Facebook.

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    United Kingdom

    Most people in the UK are on Facebook, over 51 million of them, and 37 million of those use Facebook. With the UK’s ecommerce market expected to hit $132 billion by 2018, this is one of the world’s biggest marketing opportunities for businesses.

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    United States

    The US has over 200 million Facebook users, close to 77% of everybody on Facebook. The ecommerce opportunity for businesses will be nearing $500 billion by 2018 and Facebook is routinely used by US brands to promote their products.

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  • Facebook Study Looks At Technology’s Role in Personal Health

    Facebook Study Looks At Technology’s Role in Personal Health

    Facebook IQ, Facebook’s research wing, which uses Facebook Insights along with work from researchers, with the goal of helping marketers better understand people and their habits, has the results of a new study out looking at health in the digital age.

    Findings include data on how people are leveraging health-related technology, such as fitness trackers, and their views on how tech can help improve their health in general.

    Facebook IQ worked with Crowd DNA, surveying people in the United States, the United Kingdom, Nigeria, and South Korea. They looked at Facebook data to analyze how people are talking about their wellbeing.

    A Facebook spokesperson shared the key findings from the research in an email to WebProNews. These are as follows:

    • Tech helps inspire youthful feelings, especially among Boomers; people are feeling “old” a lot later in life thanks to products & services that help their mind and body stay healthy longer:
      • 71% of Boomers
      • 67% of parents
      • 66% of Gen Xers
      • 62% of Millennials
    • Using health-related tech helps people feel empowered:
      • 57% say it helps them keep track of their goals
      • 55% say it gives them a sense of control over their life and health
      • 52% say it tells them more about themselves
      • 40% say they like to try new gadgets
      • 37% say it makes them a better person
    • What does the future hold? Interest in leveraging tech for personal sustainability and future well-being will continue to grow:
      • 44% are interested in swallowing a pill-sized digestible sensor that can monitor and transmit health information to a mobile phone or computer
      • 53% are interested in wearing a device that can track their brain activity to make recommendations for improving their emotions and behavior
      • 63% are interested in finding out more about what their genetic makeup/DNA can tell them about how to live a healthy life
      • 67% say that everyone five years from now will continuously track their health and fitness using technology
      • In the future, health-related device adoption could grow by…
        • 3.5X for devices that monitor heart rate
        • 1.8X for devices that track steps
        • 2.7X for devices that track sporting activities
        • 5.5X for devices that monitor sleep
        • 5.2X for devices that track diets
        • 6.4X for devices that track medications/health supplements

    Facebook has a blog post about its findings available here. This includes a short video on the subject.

    Key takeaways for marketers (via the post) are to create memorable experiences, consider how your brand can contribute to the phenomenon of people feeling younger for longer, and keeping a pulse on consumer behavior while following people’s expectations when it comes to using technology.

    Image via Facebook

  • Customers Spend More When You Respond Faster on Twitter

    Customers Spend More When You Respond Faster on Twitter

    Wayne Huang is a researcher at Twitter. His role entails proving the value of the service through data, analytics, and experiments. He works on connecting the product teams and sales teams at Twitter by creating research strategies and implementing ad effectiveness measurement plans.

    One of Huang’s findings that businesses need to take note of is that being better at customer service on Twitter, even if it simply means acknowledging a customer’s tweet, directly correlates with these customers spending more money.

    If that doesn’t get your attention, I don’t know what will. And believe me, this is something a lot of businesses aren’t paying nearly enough attention to.

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    Just look at how bad these response times were across industries in Q4:

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    Huang recently appeared on the Focus on Customer service podcast talking about his findings that people pay more when responses are timely. SMT recaps some of his comments:

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    You can listen to the whole thing here:

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    So good Twitter customer service also means good word-of-mouth.

    A month ago, Twitter introduced a couple new features that should help businesses with their customer service efforts.

    One of the new tools is a new way to start a direct message. A business can now add a deep link to their tweets that automatically displays a call-to-action button, enabling a customer to send the business a direct message. This is even more helpful considering that Twitter recently expanded the character limit of DMs to 10,000. Twitter is also now letting users record and share videos in Direct Messages. This could probably help a great deal in customer service situations that require visual aid.

    The other new customer service tool is Customer Feedback, which lets people privately share their opinions with a business after a service interaction.

    According to Twitter, millions of customer service-related interactions happen on the platform every month and many advertisers report that over 80% of their inbound social media customer service requests happen on Twitter.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons

  • Study Dives Into Google’s Third Most Important Ranking Signal

    Study Dives Into Google’s Third Most Important Ranking Signal

    Google has been using one of its most important ranking signals for going on a year, and apparently it has so far helped improve search results on over half of queries.

    Have you noticed a marked improvement in Google search results over the past year? Let us know in the comments.

    Stone Temple Consulting, which has been publishing some of the most interesting research on Google search in recent memory, has some new findings out after a study on Google’s machine learning algorithm RankBrain. The data was gathered by comparing 500,000 search queries from both before and after RankBrain was implemented.

    According to the firm, and as far as we know, this is the only study of its kind on RankBrain.

    The study found that Google improved results on 54.6% of queries that it previously misunderstood. Examples of words and phrases RankBrain handles better, according to the firm, include: what is, who is, where is, without, not, and convert.

    RankBrain was revealed in October pretty much out of nowhere. It didn’t come in an official announcement, but from an interview Bloomberg Business ran with Greg Corrado, a senior research scientist at Google. He said that Google had introduced the algorithm on a wide scale earlier in the year and that it quickly became the third most important signal out of hundreds in Google’s ranking algorithm. Before we look more closely at Stone Temple’s findings, here’s a quick recqp of what we learned about RankBrain from that initial interview.

    1. RankBrain is the third most important ranking signal in Google Search.

    2. RankBrain was deployed several months before October.

    3. RankBrain uses artificial intelligence to put written language into mathematical entities (vectors) that computers can understand.

    4. If RankBrain sees a word/phrase it doesn’t know, the machine guesses what words/phrases might have similar meanings.

    5. RankBrain specifically helps with never-before-seen search queries.

    6. RankBrain is better than humans (even Googlers) at guessing which results Google would rank number one for various queries.

    7. RankBrain is the first Google search ranking signal that actually learns on its own.

    8. Turning RankBrain off is as damaging to users as turning off half of Wikipedia pages.

    9. RankBrain is so effective, Google engineers were surprised at how well it worked.

    10. Machine learning is a major focus of Google right now, which probably means we’ll see RankBrain itself and other endeavors in this area improve greatly in the future.

    Stone Temple’s Eric Enge suggests that Google may use RankBrain to impact selection of featured snippet results, trigger the delivery of a map where there wasn’t one shown before, and/or determine if the main impact of a given query would be an improved search results snippet.

    “Predictably, one of the most common questions I get asked is how RankBrain will impact SEO,” says Enge. “Truth be told, at the moment, there is not much impact at all. RankBrain will simply do a better job of matching user queries with your web pages, so you’d arguably be less dependent on having all the words from the user query on your page.”

    “In addition, you still need to do keyword research so that you can understand how to target a page to a major topic area (and what that major topic area is),” he adds. “Understanding the preferred language of most users will always make sense, whether or not search engines exist. If you haven’t already (hopefully you have!), you can increase your emphasis on using truly natural language on your web pages.”

    According to Enge, the real impacts of RankBrain are an increase in overall search quality and in Google’s confidence that they can use machine-leaning within the core search algorithm.

    Stone Temple put together this infographic highlighting its findings:


    On a related note, word out of SMX is that apparently Google doesn’t completely understand RankBrain and what it’s doing. Hmmm. Let’s hope the company has a better handle on what its nightmare-inducing robots are doing:

    Do you believe RankBrain is making Google a better search engine and helping users find what they’re looking for? Discuss.

    Infographic via Stone Temple Consulting

  • Yahoo Study Looks At Marketing To Generation X

    Yahoo Study Looks At Marketing To Generation X

    Yahoo has released some new findings from a study on marketing to Generation X. It aims to provide insight into how to better understand people from this generation, their interests and how brands can better engage with them.

    “Generation X, made up of 81 million adults between ages 35-54, has the highest spending power today, controlling 29% of estimated net worth dollars and 31% of total income dollars in the US,” a Yahoo spokesperson said in an email.

    According to the findings, Gen Xers are mobile-obsessed, multi-taskers, social butterflies, and brand lovers.

    “79% of Gen Xers are smartphone users, and this is expected to grow to reach 88% by 2018,” the spokesperson says. “During primetime hours (7pm and 11pm), 84% of Gen Xers are using 2+ devices and switching between them 9.2 times per hour. The most common combinations of device usage during primetime are TV and laptop or TV and phones.”

    “Nearly 80 million Gen X users visited a social media site last month. 75% of those users consumed content, including articles and videos, while 43% shared and reposted content created by others,” they say. “Nearly 1 in 3 Gen Xers consumed content posted by brands or companies on social media, and 30% are more likely to engage or click on an ad that is aimed specifically at their generation.”

    You can find the full study here.

    Image via Yahoo (Twitter)

  • New Report Looks At Email Engagement Across 3.5 Billion Commercial Messages

    New Report Looks At Email Engagement Across 3.5 Billion Commercial Messages

    Return Path released a new email engagement benchmark report called The Hidden Metrics of Email Deliverability, which gives readers sector-specific results for email metrics including read rate, forward reate, and complaint rate. These, the company says, collectively reveal a lot about subscriber engagement and play a role in determining which messages reach the inbox.

    “Of note, the study found that verticals with the highest read rate in 2015 were utilities (47%) and distribution/manufacturing (31%),” a spokesperson for Return Path says. “Business/marketing and social/dating companies had the lowest read rate (9%).”

    The study draws from over 3.5 billion commercial emails. It found that the amount of promotional emails delivered to the spam folder ranged from just 2% (utilities) to 28% (automotive/accessories).

    It also found that most industries saw a flat to slightly declining read rate in Q4. Only one industry – utilities – experienced a double-digit drop (-14%).

    The average deleted before reading rate across industries remained steady at 9% throughout 2015, according to the report. The Office Supplies, Pets, and Flowers/Gifts industries exceeded this significantly at 14%, 13%, and 13% respectively. Return Path calls this a sign of poor subscriber engagement and a possible indicator of over-mailing.

    Spam complaints increased by an average of 0.5% in the fourth quarter, which the firm sees as a sign that subscribers may not appreciate the increased volume of promotional emails around the holidays.

    “Major mailbox providers like Microsoft, Google, and Yahoo! rely on subscriber engagement signals in addition to sender reputation to filter out unwanted email and deliver more desired emails to the inbox,” said Scott Roth, General Manager, Email Optimization at Return Path. “These are metrics that many marketers are not yet tracking, and can have a major impact on deliverability. But there’s also opportunity for marketers to optimize consumer engagement and improve their marketing campaigns using this data.”

    You can find the full report here.

    Image via iStock

  • Businesses In Need of Engagement Overlooking Obvious Tool

    Businesses In Need of Engagement Overlooking Obvious Tool

    For a lot of businesses, getting, maintaining, and especially growing engagement on social media is an ongoing struggle. Throughout this struggle, however, many seem to have forgotten about how big of a part their blogs can play.

    Is your blog still a significant part of your marketing strategy? Let us know in the comments.

    TrackMaven released some interesting findings in its Content Marketing Paradox Revisited report, which analyzed 12 months worth of marketing activity from nearly 23,000 brands and 50 million pieces of content across all major industries on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, LinkedIn, and blogs.

    This amounted to a combined total of 75.7 billion interactions. In other words, it covers a pretty broad scope.

    Overall, it found that marketers are producing more content with less return. While output of content rends upward, engagement trends downward.

    “From the highest to lowest points, the output of content per brand increased 35 percent per channel across 2015, but content engagement decreased by 17 percent,” writes TrackMaven’s Kara Burney. “And most interestingly, when output per brand peaked in October 2015, engagement levels look the sharpest downturn.”

    “In short: This is content overload, quantified,” she adds. “As more content floods social networks, the slice of engagement for the average brand shrinks. With a limit to how much content can be consumed, liked, or shared, brands must create their own competitive advantages with distinguishing content.”

    The study found that content output per brand increased most on Twitter and Facebook (60% and 31% year-over-year, respectively). Engagement fell across most major social networks, and fell most drastically on Pinterest. Twitter was the exception with a slight increase in engagement over the past year.

    For those paying, the average engagement ratio for brand on Facebook is three times higher than on Twitter, the report says.

    Overall, Instagram has the highest average engagement ratio for brands, and it’s a great deal higher than all of the other networks. Still, engagement levels there are quickly sinking:

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    Here’s a look at how much content brands are creating for each network:

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    Perhaps the most important takeaway from the study is that brands are perhaps too caught up in social channels with diminishing returns while neglecting an important and effective platform – the trusty old blog.

    “In contrast to the results on social, the average number of blogs per brand per month actually decreased by 16 percent across the year to a low of 58. Engagement with brand blogs, however, held steady, even climbing slightly to a peak of 190.7 average social shares per post in July 2015,” the report says. “For marketers, this finding serves as a reminder not to neglect the basics in pursuit of that shiny social network. New digital platforms will come and go, but for now, the blog remains a reliable content hub from which to build your brand.”

    You can find the full report here. It gets into how a couple of brands are utilizing their blogs for maximum effectiveness, and taking a channel-specific approach to their social strategies.

    myFitnessPal, for example, posts recipes on Pinterest, fitness challenges on its blog, and motivational updates on Facebook.

    Dylan Kissane at Doz recently took a stab at the 5 most important trends in blogging in 2016, and he writes that for blogging, it’s the era of engagement. He says:

    The most important metric for bloggers in the year ahead will not be their traffic or their page views. It will be their engagement rates. Can the blogger attract readers – no matter the size of the audience – and keep them on the site? Can the blogger create a community, giving readers something to come back for other than just fresh writing and attractive images? Can a blogger press publish and be rewarded with Twitter shares, Facebook posts lauding the content, and the launch of dozens of discussions on social media? And can the blogger remain at the center of all of this?

    Whether a small but dedicated niche audience or a community of hundreds of thousands of committed devotees, what will matter for bloggers in 2016 is the engagement rate of that audience – the higher, the better.

    Creating blog content alone will not get engagement. You need the traffic to come from somewhere, and the social platforms are certainly a big part of that. As are search and email newsletters.

    But the study shows that blog content seems to have taken a backseat to social platforms, when that really shouldn’t be the case.

    Is your blogging strategy as much of a priority as it once was? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    Images via TrackMaven

  • Small Businesses On What Would Help Them Sell More Online

    Small Businesses On What Would Help Them Sell More Online

    A study recently released by Assurant Solutions finds that over 40% of small-to-midsize businesses say the reasons they have a hard time competing with larger e-tailers is a lack of product expansion opportunities and IT integration skillset.

    The survey polled 450 merchants across the United States in an effort to gauge the state of ecommerce for smaller businesses.

    “SMB merchants see great benefit in selling products and services through their web storefronts, but they readily admit to challenges that prevent them from selling more and competing with larger companies,” Assurant says. “In fact, roughly a third of those polled (34%) said that between 25% – 50% of their annual revenue comes from online sales. More than a third (35%) said their online sales have grown by 25% over the past five years.”

    56% are missing out on a chance to generate additional revenue by increasing their average order value, the survey finds. Less than 10% of online sales come from up-selling or cross-selling at the time of checkout for these merchants.

    Over 43% say they want to increase their up-sell and cross-sell opportunities, but can’t add organic products and services that fit the mold or they lack the internal IT skillset to integrate products into their ecommerce platform.

    “It’s clear that smaller merchants want to amplify their online sales potential, but many of them are unsure how to make it happen cost-effectively,” said Matthew Pufall, Director of Product for Assurant Product Protection.

    Over 26% of merchants said more complimentary product offerings would help them sell more products and services online. Another 26% said easier integration into partner platforms would do the trick.

    Over 15% said support services provided by partner providers would help, while over 27% said products and services that enable more revenue opportunities would. Nearly 5% said they’re not interested in selling more products online.

  • Facebook Sees Drastic Decline in People Posting Statuses, Photos, According to Study

    Facebook Sees Drastic Decline in People Posting Statuses, Photos, According to Study

    According to a report from GlobalWebIndex, Facebook users aren’t sharing as much as they used to.

    In the last month, 33% of users surveyed said they updated their status. A year ago, that number was 50%.

    And in the same time period, 37% said they shared photos, down from 59% a year ago.

    Facebook denies that its users are sharing less.

    “People continue to share a ton on Facebook and the overall level of sharing has remained not only strong, but similar to levels in prior years,” the company said in a statement.

    The good news from the GWI survey is that users are still highly engaged in other ways – watching videos, liking things, commenting, and messaging.

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    But a decline in sharing could be a problem for Facebook, as a site with less content is a more boring and less engaging site.

    Proof that Facebook is trying to get people to post more content on the site? This annoying as hell feature that prompts users to share the last link they copied to their iOS clipboard.

  • Google’s 65/100 Is The BEST Score on New Digital Rights Survey

    Google’s 65/100 Is The BEST Score on New Digital Rights Survey

    How are Google, Facebook, Twitter, and other major tech companies protecting your digital rights?

    No so well, according to a new study.

    Google scored a 65 out of 100 in the inaugural Ranking Digital rights Corporate Accountability Index, which you might think sounds pretty bad.

    But Google’s 65%, a ‘D’ on the grade scale with which you’re likely familiar, is the best of the bunch.

    The Ranking Digital Rights initiative’s first Corporate Accountability Index looked at 16 of the world’s most powerful tech companies – eight internet giants and eight telecommunications companies. The index evaluates each company on on 31 separate criteria in three main categories – commitment, freedom of expressions, and privacy.

    Questions companies were evaluated upon include:

    Does the company commit to provide meaningful notice and documentation to users when it changes its Terms of Service?

    Does the company explain the circumstances under which it may restrict or deny users from accessing the service?

    If the company restricts content or access, does it disclose how it notifies users?

    Does the company disclose what user information it collects, how it collects this information, and why?

    Does the company disclose if and how it shares user information with third parties?

    In aggregate scoring, Google performed the best with a 65. Yahoo, Microsoft, and Twitter followed that with scores of 58, 56, and 50, respectively. Facebook mustered at 41.

    But even the “winners” aren’t really winners.

    “When we put the rankings in perspective, it’s clear there are no winners,” said Rebecca MacKinnon, director of Ranking Digital Rights. “Our hope is that the Index will lead to greater corporate transparency, which can empower users to make more informed decisions about how they use technology.”

    On the bright side, every company researched was at least doing something, even if that something is not enough.

    “All of the companies assessed have at least some practices and/or policies in place that help to protect freedom of expression or privacy,” said Ranking Digital Rights. But “even the companies that ranked highest are missing the mark in some ways, and improvements are needed across the board to demonstrate a greater commitment to users’ freedom of expression and privacy.”

  • Over Half Of Retailers Struggle To Identify Most Valuable Customers Despite Data

    Over Half Of Retailers Struggle To Identify Most Valuable Customers Despite Data

    Yes Lifecycle Marketing has a new study out finding that half of retailers are struggling to identify and and engage their most valuable customers, even though they know information like full names, phone numbers, and purchase histories.

    It also found that 42% claim their store associates know nothing about in-store customers, which the company says indicates that a lack of consumer knowledge expands to the brick-and-mortar experience in addition to the online world.

    “In the retail industry, personalization proves powerful,” a spokesperson for Yes Lifecycle Marketing tells WebProNews. “Brands can take personalization efforts further using clienteling, which help retailers build strong relationships with customers using data that indicates their preferences, behaviors and purchases. To differentiate their brand among the rest, retailers must take a clienteling approach, but many fail to do so.”

    “Clienteling leverages omnichannel customer data to create personalized customer experiences,” says Yes Lifecycle Marketing President Michael Fisher. “By utilizing clienteling best practices, retailers can drive more in-store traffic, engagement, sales and loyalty.”

    Other findings from the study include:

    – 13 percent of store associates currently have access to customer data to ensure a successful in-store customer experience.

    – 43 percent of retailers leverage social media for customer service.

    – 36 percent of employees use past purchase history to personalize their interactions with customers.

    – 35 percent of retailers send personalized messages and recommendations across channels.

    The company polled about 200 retailers for the study showing that concerns about utilizing available customer data are quite legitimate.

    You can find the full study here. Yes Lifecycle Marketing also has an e-book about clienteling available here.

    Image via Thinkstock

  • Google Could Easily Rig an Election with Search Results, Says Study

    Google Could Easily Rig an Election with Search Results, Says Study

    Search results wield the power to color one’s view of any person, place, or thing. This is a given. And being the far-and-away biggest search engine in the world, Google wields most of that power. Of course, in order to sleep at night, we all have to assume that Google will, ultimately, restrain from using that power to nefarious ends. At least not too nefarious.

    Though it should be obvious that Google plays a huge role in most Americans’ perceptions, it’s certainly unnerving to think about the search giant swaying an election.

    But that’s exactly what Google has the power to do, according to researchers.

    Psychologist Robert Epstein says, unequivocally, that your next president could ascend to the oval office with the help of some Google search algorithm tweaks. And he has some data to prove it.

    Epstein set up a very basic experiment. Take a bunch of undecided voters, give them the choice between two candidates, set them loose to search said candidates for 15 minutes on a Google-like search engine, and see if it sways their opinions.

    And boy did it ever.

    From Epstein’s write-up at Politico:

    In our basic experiment, participants were randomly assigned to one of three groups in which search rankings favored either Candidate A, Candidate B or neither candidate. Participants were given brief descriptions of each candidate and then asked how much they liked and trusted each candidate and whom they would vote for. Then they were allowed up to 15 minutes to conduct online research on the candidates using a Google-like search engine we created called Kadoodle.

     

    Each group had access to the same 30 search results—all real search results linking to real web pages from a past election. Only the ordering of the results differed in the three groups. People could click freely on any result or shift between any of five different results pages, just as one can on Google’s search engine.

     

    When our participants were done searching, we asked them those questions again, and, voilà: On all measures, opinions shifted in the direction of the candidate who was favored in the rankings. Trust, liking and voting preferences all shifted predictably.

    How much of a shift? Epstein says favorability ratings for the candidates jumped anywhere from 37 to 63 percent which, given elections are often decided by small margins, is a pretty big deal.

    It’s not far-fetched when you think about it. if you searched for a candidate, and you mostly see negative headlines pop up on the first page of search results, it’s reasonable to think your opinion of said candidate may suffer. Flip that to positive results, and you could understand how Epstein thinks Google could easily promote certain candidates.

    Of course, one would have to believe that Google would want to influence an election. I mean, who knows? It’s not as if Google is a massive corporation with a multitude of vested interests.

    Would that be evil of them?

  • Apple Music Sees 48% of Trialers Stop Using the Service, Says Study

    There’s a new study out about Apple Music, and it suggests that a lot of people have given up on the company’s new streaming service.

    According to a MusicWatch survey of 5,000 US consumers, 48 percent of those who have tried Apple Music have stopped using the service.

    And only 11 percent of iOS users are using Apple Music.

    “In terms of benchmarking Apple Music, 40 percent of iOS users are buying digital downloads from iTunes, suggesting trial of Apple Music could be higher,” said Russ Crupnick, managing partner of MusicWatch. “That’s the disadvantage of not being the first mover in a market where very good services currently exist.”

    Also, 61 percent of those enjoying a free trial have already turned off the auto-renewal option. If you want to but haven’t done that yet, here’s how.

    That’s some of the bad news – now here’s a piece of meh news. According to the study, 64 percent of those currently using Apple Music said they were “very likely” to pay for it once their free trial ends.

    Now for a little bit of silver lining: 28 percent of Spotify Premium subscribers are also using Apple Music. But of course, Apple Music users are still in free trial mode – so whether or not that 28 percent will pay for both Apple Music and Spotify is still to be determined.

    MusicWatch found that only 77 percent of iOS users even knew about Apple Music – so Apple still has a bit of educating to do. Maybe once the entirety of the iOS community is made aware, those subscriber rates will jump.

    Apple did have quite a bit of success with a recent exclusive, however. Dr. Dre’s new Compton album saw 25 million streams in its first week of availability. It also had about a half a million iTunes downloads.

  • Important Email Marketing Findings To Consider Ahead of the Holidays

    Important Email Marketing Findings To Consider Ahead of the Holidays

    Email continues to be one of the best ways to reach consumers, and thankfully, many of them are happy to get it from businesses they’re interested in. This is good to know as the time for holiday marketing planning approaches.

    To you intend to make email a substantial part of your holiday marketing mix? Let us know in the comments.

    Recently, we looked at a study from Yesmail, which suggested that email marketers shouldn’t be afraid of high volumes for the holidays. It found average monthly email volume increased 46% quarter-over-quarter for Q3 and Q4 2014 while average open rates remained steady at 15%. Meanwhile, holiday-themed open rates jumped from 14.2% in 2013 to 15.1% in 2014.

    Digital River’s Bluehornet has now released the 2015 edition of its Consumer Views of Email Marketing study, which surveyed nearly 2,000 consumers to gather insights into how they interact with and perceive marketing emails.

    “So, what did we discover? Well, for starters, email is not only still alive, it’s kicking. Hard,” the report says in its executive summary. “Consumers readily acknowledge the impact that email marketing has on their purchasing behavior. With the proliferation of mobile devices they are more connected than ever – with more than a third now checking email continuously throughout the day. And our target audiences are savvier than ever… they know what they want, and their expectations are personal. According to our data, consumers now expect us to understand who they are, and what they do and don’t want. They expect us to give them control of how frequently we email them. They expect a seamless experience across, and informed by, all channels.”

    “When we say the email channel is ‘alive and kicking,’ we mean it,” Bluehornet says. “Our consumers acknowledge that they are impacted by what they receive every single day. They get daily emails from flash sale sites. They are connected 24/7 and receive personalized content from their favorite brands on most of those days. They are asked not only to convert, but to engage, interact, and share. Simply put, all this digital exposure means our audience is smarter than ever when it comes to digital communications. They’ve reduced the number of email addresses they use (who has time for all those accounts?), and use multiple devices to stay connected throughout the day. Today’s consumers expect personalized content and when they get it, appear to be happy with higher frequency.”

    The study found that the most common number of email addresses people have is two, while more people have three than have one.

    Screen Shot 2015-08-17 at 11.41.56 AM

    While many have multiple email addresses, most don’t use a separate one specifically for marketing emails. 28.6% do while 71.4% don’t. 39% check an email account where they receive marketing emails one to three times a day. 33.8% actively check their email throughout the day. Here’s what the device break-down looks like:

    Screen Shot 2015-08-17 at 11.45.25 AM

    Another recent study from Return Path suggested that the frequency that generates maximum response without excessive complaints differs among brands as well as based on account type. It maintains that marketers can send more messages without suppressing response, but not necessarily to users’ primary accounts.

    “As complaints increase, read rates decline with increased frequency, however the threshold at which more complaints offset the benefit of more reads is quite high,” a spokesperson for Return Path told WebProNews. “Among highly active email users, most tolerate up to an average of five messages per week before complaints offset increases in messages read.”

    “Primary users, whose accounts are most actively checked, are the key audience marketers should optimize their programs for, as they represent the majority of reads as well as complaints,” they added. “Primary accounts make up only 24% of all email accounts yet they represent 83% of all messages read. While primary users are highly engaged, they are also not shy in voicing their displeasure, accounting for half of total email complaints. Secondary accounts holder, whose accounts are less actively checked, are more tolerant; they are less than half as likely as primary account holders to complain.”

    The Bluehornet study found that most people prefer to hear from companies with marketing emails on a weekly basis, and by a wide margin. That’s the preference of 43.8% compared to 18.8% for monthly, 14% several times per week, and 13.9% for every couple of months.

    You can find the full 32-page report here (via MarketingCharts). There are a lot more interesting insights where these came from.

    In terms of volume, another study from Return Path released earlier this year looked at consumer email behavior in Q4 2014 finding that people did not experience “email fatigue” during the holiday season, but instead welcomed more messages from retailers – more evidence that volume shouldn’t be an issue for marketers.

    Experian Marketing Services, looking at Q3 2014, found that both mobile device usage and email engagement were up with 53% of emails being opened on a mobile or tablet device. That number is likely going to be larger this year.

    With that in mind, I’d urge you to take a look at this article: What Not To Do In Mobile Email Marketing.

    In its holiday recap, Custora fond that last year, email marketing and search were the dominant marketing channels for the holiday season.

    It’s time to start planning for this year. First, you’re going to need to get people to sign-up. Here are some tips for getting better at that.

    Here are some ways to improve your open rates. Here are some more.

    Do you expect to increase your email efforts for this holiday season? Keep them the same? Let us know in the comments.

    Images via Thinkstock, Bluehornet

  • If You Think There’s Nothing Left To Get Out Of Google+, You’re Wrong

    If You Think There’s Nothing Left To Get Out Of Google+, You’re Wrong

    So Google+ didn’t exactly turn out to be a Facebook killer, and the company has been backing off of its previous efforts to force it onto users of its other products. People are saying things like, “Google+ is dead,” as they have been for years, but it’s not. It’s just not what it used to be.

    Do you see any business value in Google+ these days? How are you using it? Let us know in the comments.

    A couple weeks ago, Google admitted that with Google+, it “got certain things right,” but “made a few choices that, in hindsight,” it has “needed to rethink”. Essentially, the company is recognizing that not all Google service users want to be part of Google+, so it is unburdening those users. It has already launched its new Photos app, which uses some elements of its previous Google+ Photos app, and it’s putting location sharing into Hangouts and other apps. It also announced the YouTube would be one of the first products to have the mandatory Google+ stripped from it. This pairing was hugely controversial with YouTube users right from the beginning.

    But that doesn’t mean Google+ is going away. Google isn’t ready to go that far yet. You may have noticed that any mention of it was completely absent from the company’s big Alphabet restructuring announcement earlier this week, but as others have pointed out, Page responded to just one comment on his post about the announcement. Someone asked if he and Brin still love Google+.

    “Yes, we still love g+!” he replied.

    Even as Google was talking about removing Google+ from its other services, it was positioning doing so as a way to improve Google+ itself by making it more focused (not entirely unlike what Google itself is doing with Alphabet). So what is Google+ good for?

    “Google+ is quickly becoming a place where people engage around their shared interests, with the content and people who inspire them,” said Bradley Horowitz, VP of Streams, Photos, and Sharing at Google. “In line with that focus, we’re continuing to add new features like Google+ Collections, where you can share and enjoy posts organized by the topics you care about.”

    You’d be forgiven if you don’t recall what Google+ Collections is. Frankly, we haven’t heard a whole lot about it since it was announced earlier this year. It’s basically Google+’s version of Pinterst’s boards or Flipboard’s Magazines. In other words, glorified, curated social bookmarking.

    Since then, we haven’t seen a whole lot in the way of feature additions to Google+. Just the reduction of its presence throughout the Google universe.

    New findings, however, seem to suggest it’s actually not only still kicking, but thriving among its core userbase, getting some pretty good engagement among them.

    Stone Temple Consulting conducted a new study of over 33,000 Google+ posts, and found that it’s very good at being a place for longer-form discussions among people with common interests.

    “As we look forward to a new era on Google+, we can now focus on what we need to do to maximize what we get out of it as a social network, and on what we need to do to maximize our engagement there,” says Stone Temple’s Eric Enge, who authored the report.

    Getting to that, it found photo inclusion to be one of the strongest factors in generating engagement.

    google-photos

    It also found that +mentions go a long way. Posts that include these get way more +1s, reshares, and replies.

    mentions

    Hashtags also help a lot in the +1s and reshares department, though they don’t have much of an impact on replies.

    hash

    Interestingly, however, videos are not helping much at all. In fact, they might even be hurting. Look at the numbers here:

    video

    BUT…that includes videos autoshared from YouTube. Videos shared natively on Google+ are six times more likely to get reshared. This suggests that untying Google+ from YouTube should indeed only be good for those looking for more out of Google+.

    you

    When it comes to post length, the study finds that the sweet spot is between 501 and 1,000 characters.

    characters

    That’s a far cry from the suggested 60 from this infographic recently released by Buffer and SumAll.

    “A post is .73 times as likely to get a +1 if it’s an event than if it’s not an event (i.e., it’s less likely),” writes Enge. “A post with a link placed in the text of the post is 1.97 times as likely to get reshared than if it does not have a link in the text of the post.”A post with a photo is 2.38 times as likely to get replies as a post without a photo.”

    The study even gets into some comparisons with Twitter, finding that the chances of getting a reply to a post on Google+ are way better than getting one on Twitter. It’s not even close. Google+ are 22 times more likely than tweets to get replies, if finds. Definitely check out Enge’s full report for more insights in that department as well as the rest.

    Are you seeing significant engagement from Google+ these days? Have you been putting in the effort and engaging yourself? Let us know if Google+ is still part of your strategy.

    Images via Google, Stone Temple Consulting

  • Salesforce Report Looks At Social Media Ad CPM Trends

    Salesforce Report Looks At Social Media Ad CPM Trends

    Salesforce released its Social.com Q1 2015 Advertising Benchmark Report, analyzing data from over a trillion ad impressions and hundreds of millions of dollars in ad spend across Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.

    According to the report, the overall CPM decreased by 11% globally to #3.30, which the company says reflects normal seasonal trends (with higher costs in Q4 due to the holidays). In the U.S., the overall CPM for Facebook decreased quarter-over-quarter to #3.72, while CTR increased to 0.86%, suggesting a “healthy engagement” level with Facebook ads.

    Here’s a look at global Facebook ad trends:

    Screen shot 2015-07-08 at 10.30.29 AM

    “Mobile apps are a critical component of how consumers spend their time; according to Yahoo, 88% of the time that consumers spend on mobile devices is spent in apps, totaling 37:28 hours per month, according to Neilsen,” writes Zachary Reiss-Davis on the Salesforce blog. “Overall, New Zealand and Sweden were the most expensive countries to run mobile app install campaigns in Q1, at $6.16 and $5.28 respectively. After that is Australia ($5.22), Canada ($4.72), and then a cluster of European countries ranging from Germany to Spain. The United States ($3.04), and Japan ($2.79) follow.”

    Here’s a look at how mobile app install ads, CPM & CPI vary by country:

    app-install

    The study found that in Q1, Desktop Feed CPM was significantly higher than Mobile Feed CPM in the U.S.

    “Consumers are increasingly spending time in Facebook on a mobile device, which increases the available inventory of impressions on mobile,” says Reiss-Davis. “Several types of advertisers still focus on desktop ads, including eCommerce companies which are still using traditional re-targeting solutions on Facebook that are desktop-only instead of the brand-new Dynamic Product Ads. At the same time, the percentage of Facebook users who only use the desktop app continued to drop, reaching a low of 14.7% in Q1, down from 16.2% in Q4 and 24.1% in Q1 2014.”

    newsfeed

    While still fairly new to the game, the Facebook Audience Network also gets a look in the report:

    fan

    You can find the full report here.

    Images via Salesforce

  • Study Slams Google For ‘Reducing Social Welfare’ With ‘Lower Quality Results’

    Study Slams Google For ‘Reducing Social Welfare’ With ‘Lower Quality Results’

    Columbia Law School professor Tim Wu and Yelp collaborated on a study of Google’s search results, and have declared that Google is hurting the consumer experience of search results by favoring is own content which in some cases may be inferior to organic results that would otherwise be surfaced.

    The paper was presented at Oxford University’s Antitrust Enforcement Symposium, and comes as Google is in the process of preparing its response to antitrust action from the European Commission. Yelp, a vocal critic of Google from way back, is a complainant in that.

    The study makes use of search results as demonstrated by a tool Yelp launched last year called “Focus on the User – Local“. This is a browser plugin, which claims to demonstrate how Google manipulates its results for the worse by removing the biased element.

    The study surveyed nearly 2,700 people utilizing the results.

    “While Google is known primarily as a search engine, it has increasingly developed and promoted its own content as an alternative to results from other websites,” the paper says. “By prominently displaying Google content in response to search queries, Google is able to leverage its dominance in search to gain customers for this content. This yields serious concerns if the internal content is inferior to organic search results. To investigate, we implement a randomized controlled trial in which we vary the search results that users are shown – comparing Google’s current policy of favorable treatment of Google content to results in which external content is displayed. We find that users are 45% more likely to engage with universal search results (i.e. prominently displayed map results on Google) when he results are organically determined. This suggests that by leveraging dominance in search to promote its internal content, Google is reducing social welfare – leaving consumers with lower quality results and worse matches.”

    Here’s the full report, uploaded by Yelp’s Luther Lowe:

    It shouldn’t surprise anyone to see Yelp putting out such a report, but Wu on the other hand, said in the past that “Google was pretty clean.” This was in the aftermath of an FTC settlement a couple years back.

    He wrote this in January of 2013: “What saved the company weren’t the millions Google wasted lobbying Senators or paying Republicans to be its friends. It was its engineers, who designed its services in a way that maximized effectiveness while avoiding rampant illegality.”

    “Google just didn’t have this kind of blood on its hands, at least at this point in its history,” he later wrote in the same column. “Yes, Google had made decisions that its competitors didn’t like, but ultimately American law favors an improved product over the protection of failed competitors; that is the standard that the FTC is obliged to adhere to. And with some exceptions mentioned above, Google’s engineers generally produced products that beat its competitors on the merits. Ultimately, it is not the job of the Federal Government to try and convince people to use Bing.”

    Wu has some significantly different things to day now, however. From Re/code:

    “When the facts change, your thinking should change,” Wu told Re/code about the evolution of his stance. “The main surprising and shocking realization is that Google is not presenting its best product. In fact, it’s presenting a version of the product that’s degraded and intentionally worse for consumers.”

    He added: “This is the closest I’ve seen Google come to [being] the Microsoft case.”

    Google isn’t commenting on the study’s findings.

    Image via YouTube

  • Do More Posts On Social Media Get You More Followers?

    In case you were thinking simply increasing the frequency of your social media posts would get you more followers, a study is out from Clickable to prove you wrong. Granted, the study looks at major brands as opposed or medium-sized small businesses.

    They looked at major brands across various industries and came to the same conclusion throughout: posting more often does not translate to more fans.

    Here’s what they found for major fast food restaurants on Instagram. Taco Bell and McDonald’s have way more followers than the rest, yet Pizza Hut posts way more often, and Taco Bell posted the fewest of all of them.

    Instagram posts

    Here’s what it looks like for the pre-owned car industry on Facebook, with AutoTrader having many more fans than CarMax, but CarMax having way more posts.

    auto industry on social

    They also looked at the food industry.

    “What we learned, was that user engagement, posts by users on a brand’s Facebook page, appears to have a high correlation to the number of fans that the brand has on Facebook,” the report says. “Food industry on socialFor example, by far, Coca-Cola has more user engagement based on Clickable data. And even though Pepsi has a lot more posts by the admin on their Facebook page, the number of posts by users and admins on the Coca-Cola page is higher than the number of Pepsi admin posts. Coca-Cola has almost 3 times the number of Facebook fans as Pepsi. So, user engagement appears to be key.”

    Food industry on social

    They found similar results for TV networks on Instagram. with MTV having the most followers by far and VH1 having the most posts by far. They saw similar outcomes for consumer brands and banks.

    “For consumer brands: When it comes to Facebook or Instagram, posting more often on these platforms doesn’t necessarily mean an uptick in fans,” the report says. “We looked at a lot of the posts that brands are posting, and while there are some good ones that get a lot of fan engagement, those posts didn’t necessarily lead to more fans on Facebook or Instagram.”

    There’s a good chance this study isn’t telling you anything you didn’t already know or at least suspect, but seeing such data is always helpful if for nothing else than for validating your beliefs. Post frequency is nothing compared to posting engaging content.

    H/T: Bill Hartzer

    Images via Clickable

  • Your Security Questions Aren’t Providing Much Security

    Everyone’s favorite food is pizza, so when a site asks you to provide an answer for the security question What’s your favorite food, don’t say pizza.

    Providing answers to security questions is something we’re all very familiar with, as it’s been a tool for account security and recovery for a long time. But are these security questions even that secure?

    Apparently not, according to a new Google study. The company looked at hundreds of millions of secret questions and answers used over the years and concluded that “secret questions are neither secure nor reliable enough to be used as a standalone account recovery mechanism.”

    The main problem is that easy answers are easy … to guess. And more specific, harder-to-guess answers are harder … for you to remember. Talk about a double-edged sword.

    Let’s take the “pizza” example. According to Google, anyone looking to break into someone else’s account has a 20% chance of getting in with the answer to the “what’s your favorite food” query – on the first try. That’s because everyone says “pizza”.

    Also, if you think lying is going to trip someone up, think again:

    “Many different users also had identical answers to secret questions that we’d normally expect to be highly secure, such as “What’s your phone number?” or “What’s your frequent flyer number?”. We dug into this further and found that 37% of people intentionally provide false answers to their questions thinking this will make them harder to guess. However, this ends up backfiring because people choose the same (false) answers, and actually increase the likelihood that an attacker can break in,” says Google.

    On the other side of the sword, you have the tougher security questions that merit more specific answers. For instance, What’s your frequent flyer number?

    From Google:

    Surprise, surprise: it’s not easy to remember where your mother went to elementary school, or what your library card number is! Difficult secret questions and answers are often hard to use. Here are some specific findings:

    – 40% of our English-speaking US users couldn’t recall their secret question answers when they needed to. These same users, meanwhile, could recall reset codes sent to them via SMS text message more than 80% of the time and via email nearly 75% of the time.
    – Some of the potentially safest questions—”What is your library card number?” and “What is your frequent flyer number?”—have only 22% and 9% recall rates, respectively.
    – For English-speaking users in the US the easier question, “What is your father’s middle name?” had a success rate of 76% while the potentially safer question “What is your first phone number?” had only a 55% success rate.

    Long story short, having a harder-to-crack security Q&A means nothing if you can’t remember it.

    Text and email code verification seems to be a much better way to protect and retrieve accounts. Maybe we can say good riddance to the security question. I sure hate having to think about my first dog whenever I forget my password.

    Infographic via Google, Image via Thinkstock

  • Facebook Status Update Engagement Down 72%

    Simply Measured has a new report out evaluating the performance of the Facebook efforts from the top brands. The findings may help businesses of all sizes plan their own strategies.

    What strategies have you found to work the best in recent months? Share your thoughts in the comments.

    The study looked at data from 11,522 posts by 96 brands, 1,172,091,468 total fans, and 13,849 brand responses to 55,773 community posts and 160,681 comments. It focused specifically on brands from the Interbrand 2014 Best 100 Global Brands. Data is from 1/1/15 – 3/31/15.

    The study found that Facebook’s recent update to Page Like counts led to a 3% decrease in fans from Q4. The brands analyzed posted 12% less in Q1 than in Q4, and remained relatively stable on engagement levels. Engagement increased significantly at 43.5% year-over-year however. On top of that, the brands observed received 28% more shares in Q1 than in Q4.

    “Brands don’t need to post more to increase engagement—they just need to post more strategically,” the report says. “Expect to see a minor drop in fan count as inactive or spammy fans are weeded out. Facebook photos and videos received the greatest share growth and greatest engagement generally, indicating that Facebook users interact with these posts most often and most deeply.”

    Here’s a look at engagement and fan count by vertical:

    It’s worth noting that the media vertical posted most often and saw the most total engagement. This is in line with Facebook’s recommendation to publishers to post more frequently. Media properties saw a 15% engagement increase per post over the quarter.

    Automotive brands also saw 37% more engagement in Q1 compared to Q4, including 37% more comments, 30% more likes, and 151% more shares.

    The business services vertical led the charge by far for fan growth. Aside from this vertical and the restaurant vertical, fan growth has been abysmal.

    We recently looked at how bad businesses have been at online customer service. According to the study, the retail and automotive verticals sent the most responses to fans during Q1. Electronics and media responded the most quickly.

    “Links and photos dominate when it comes to overall engagement, but video and photos are the post types to keep an eye on if you want your content to spread more widely on Facebook,” the report says. “Top brands are investing less in status updates and yielding less engagement from this type of post.”

    Engagement on videos was up 8% quarter over quarter with most of that coming from a 43% increase in shares. Videos were the only content type that the brands analyzed actually increased (2%). Engagement on photos also increased by 6% with most of that coming from a 53% increase in shares.

    Here’s the kicker. Engagement on status updates dropped 72%. The study attributes this to brands posting fewer of them (40% less than the previous quarter).

    Media brands were most successful with links as a content type.

    “Retail brands have experienced lower engagement quarter-over-quarter, but higher engagement year-over-year,” the report says. “Retail brands excel with links and videos, and eBay does especially well among its peers in this vertical. This vertical responds to fans the most.”

    There’s plenty more where all of this came from, especially on an vertical-by-vertical basis in the report, which you can find here.

    Have you found status updates to be less effective on your own Facebook page? Let us know in the comments.

    Images via Simply Measured

  • There’s a Good Chance Your Tinder Match Isn’t Single

    Not that anyone on Tinder would care, but a new report says that there’s a pretty good chance the person you just matched is already accounted for.

    The study, published by Global Web Index, says the 30% of Tinder users are married and another 12% are “in a relationship”. So it’s pretty much a coin flip on whether you swipe right on someone who’s truly available or someone’s who’s being a little devious.

    Of course, we must account for people with open marriages and those who might still identify as “married”, even though they’re separated. But any way you slice it, that’s a shockingly large chunk of the Tinder pool.

    The study is from a couple of weeks ago, but was unearthed by The Guardian. According to the publication, the survey looked at over 47,000 people – which is a decent sample size.

    The GWI study also found that 62% of Tinder users are male, which isn’t all the surprising. So, is Tinder full of married men?

    Tinder, for its part, says the study is bollocks. From Circa:

    Tinder quickly criticized the survey, saying the numbers “do not reflect Tinder’s userbase.” The company further claimed that the service is responsible for “hundreds of success stories” every week, with people meeting new partners. The company also claimed the service isn’t exclusively about dating, but also about networking and meeting new people.

    It appears that the Tinder spin machine is in full rotation. Not surprising, however, as Tinder has been looking to shed its reputation as a “hookup app” – trying to convince people and marketers that it’s more than that.

    I assume that these married Tinder users probably aren’t signing up for Tinder Plus. That’s an awkward credit charge to explain.

    Image via Tinder, Facebook