Posts Tagged ‘advocates’

AgentBzz: Meet Liesl

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

Tell us a little about yourself and your family

I have been married to a wonderful man, John, for 14 years. He’s a TERRIFIC cook and Dad to our adopted daugher, Kadence. Kady came home with us from China almost 3 years ago and is the love of our lives. She has 3 sets of grandparents and family across the country (New Mexico, Alaska, Florida, Ohio, Michigan, Colorado…) who adore her.

Why do you like being a BzzAgent?

I love testing out the products! I’ve always been a “feedback” kind of person, happy to call a company and let them know a) their product is awesome or, b) there was an issue. Companies won’t know what we think unless they hear from us directly. BzzAgent is a great service for both companies AND consumers. I’ve raved about so many of the items I’ve tried that many of my friends are now loyal consumers.

What have been some of your favorite BzzCampaigns and why?

I’ve loved the cosmetic campaigns, specifically the eye cream and makeup campaigns. As I’m getting older I’m always looking for products to help me age more “gracefully,” but I loathe spending a lot of money if I don’t even know if the product works. Via the BzzAgent campaigns, I’ve become a big fan of the Covergirl Age Defying products!

What makes you want to talk about a product? How do you Bzz?

If I love or loathe a product, I’ll shout it to the world because personal experience is the BEST unbiased information out there.  I Bzz: Face-to-Face over coffee, email, via my Blog & Facebook.

If you were stranded on a deserted island, what 3 CDs would you bring? 

“Love Stinks” by J Giles Band; “The Meditative Chopin” by Roy Eaton and “Very Best of Daryl Hall & John Oates” by Hall & Oates. “Love Stinks” is outstanding! Not a bad song on it and good for a laugh (which you’d need alone on a deserted island!). I’ve been a fan of Hall & Oates for alomst 30 years and wouldn’t want to be without them…ever. And “The Meditative Chopin” is my FAVORITE classical music album of all time. Really helps calm you down when things are stressful.

If you could have dinner with any 3 people living or dead, who would they be?

Stephen King – The guy writes some amazing books (where does he come up with this stuff?!) AND plays in a band. Seems to me to be the ideal guest for a lively dinner!

Angelina Jolie – She seems to be well read and charming, which makes for an excellent dinner guest. Plus. we could swap adoption stories AND my daughter would have some kids to play with!

Martin Luther- The guy took on the Pope & the Catholic Church, was excommunicated, married a former nun, translated the Bible into the language of the people (instead of just Latin), founded a church and was a prolific writer of hymns. I know tradition says to avoid discussion of religion in social situations but this guy would be a fascinating, educated guest!

Thanks for the chance to do some hard thinking, BzzAgent! Looking forward to more campaigns!!

AgentBzz: Meet Agent ErinE193

Tuesday, January 17th, 2012

Tell us a little about yourself and your family

I am currently a stay at home Mom to a beautiful 9 month old baby girl, Bella. My husband and I recently moved to Nashville, TN where he works from home. We love it here, but miss our family in Charleston, SC. With my staying home and my husband working from home our quality of life is wonderful, so we decided that it was worth it to be here. We are enjoying being around each other as much as possible!

Why do you love being a BzzAgent?

I love being a BzzAgent because not only does it let me try out new and exciting products, but I am able to keep in touch with other moms in the area through bzzing about products and sparking up conversations I may not have had otherwise.

What have been some of your favorite BzzCampaigns?

My favorite BzzCampaigns so far have been the Maybelline Lots of Lashes and Baby Lips campaign and the Private selection campaign.

Maybelline was so fun for me to share with my girlfriends and they loved getting the products to try. Private Selection was amazing and we were able to have two nights of friends over to enjoy it as well. The products are so great-I will truly continue to buy both products!

What makes you want to Bzz about a product?

Why wouldn’t I want to talk about them!? I get excited every time I get a box in the mail and I can’t wait to Bzz about it! My friends think it’s great and we all enjoy trying the products out. I love Bzzing about products.

How do you Bzz?

I first start bzzing through facebook and twitter. I also meet with a group of moms once a week. Everyone is always asking me what’s next to try and everyone gets excited!!!

If you could have dinner with any 3 people, who would they be?

John Adams because he was such a stand up guy, so intriguing, and a crucial part of our American history

Carrie Underwood because I just adore her and her beautiful voice. I would like to grasp how it feels to be a superstar with an amazing voice :)

Steve Jobs. Oh how I would love to get in that head of his and hear some of his ideas and views. He has transformed technology as our world knows it.

The Motivation Behind A Product Review

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

Consumers are spending more time than ever on social networking websites. But as they spend more time connecting with their peers, a peculiar shift has happened. They are not just talking to each other, but leaving reviews and opinions about brands to guide each other as well. According to a study by Nielsen and NM Incite, consumers are far more likely to trust the ratings and reviews of their fellow consumers than any form of direct brand communication, and consumers know it. They are leading the way with recommendations and sharing personal experiences for anyone looking for them.

When consumers research products online, 60% rely on social networking sites to learn about brands. Only 50% look to the company’s website for information.

Consumers trust reviews and ratings written by fellow consumers, and as a result, have developed a tendency to rate and review products themselves. They post the types of comments and reviews they would seek themselves. 3/5 of active social media users write reviews of products, brands and services (this ratio is even higher with women).

Social Media users are highly engaged with discussing brand experiences online, which may be contributing to the fact that more than half of active social networkers follow brands. Consumer-generated reviews and product ratings are the most preferred sources of product information among social media users.

Sharing Experiences

So what’s the reasoning behind writing reviews, sharing experiences, and following brands on social media sites? The study identified three clear motivating factors: positive brand recognition, consumer protection, and feedback.

Many consumers are advocates on their on accords- they just like to show their loyalty. This doesn’t mean they don’t still liked to get recognized. 61% of consumers leave reviews and ratings on social media sites to praise brand experiences and 41% do so to receive discounts.

58% are on the look out for others. They do not want other consumers to make the same mistakes they made. A number of consumers share company experiences in order to protect friends and family from bad experiences.

In the 18-34 demographic, there’s another factor compelling them to share. 42% register complaints in order to receive support, and they expect that support within 12 hours of posting. If they don’t get the response they seek, or any feedback at all, you can expect there will be more complaints to come. It’s important not to let that 42% of complaints spread- especially when most comments are easily resolved with a simple response- to let the consumer know you heard them- and appreciate them. After all, these are your consumers, and your potential advocates.

[Infographic] The Long-Term Impact of Brand Advocates

Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

Social marketing is great at getting advocates excited about a product so they’ll want to share their opinions and recommendations with many others. The lifts they generate in product opinion, likelihood to recommend and purchase intent will make any brand manager smile, but how long does the love last? What’s the long term impact of these brand advocates?

It’s the question everyone involved in marketing wants to know. If we knew the long-term benefits on an investment in advocacy marketing, it would be easier to justify expanding programs to include more of the loyalty enriching activities used in the offline world.

To answer this question, BzzAgent studied brand advocates participating in programs for several consumer products over the course of a year. We found that brand advocates remain amazingly enthusiastic about the product. After a full year,  94% of the lift in product opinion, 91% of the lift in likelihood to recommend and 88% of the lift in purchase intent was maintained. That’s remarkable stamina for any marketing campaign.  Here’s a summary of what we saw:


Are You Playing Coupon-oply?

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

This is a cross-post with iMediaConnection blog.

Your customers sure are.  Coupon redemption is at an all-time high and the hunting and sharing of coupons has become a social media game.

You might say that coupons have become cutting edge. Last year was record-breaking for CPG coupons distribution. Valassis reports that over $485 billion in CPG coupons were distributed in 2010. That’s up 13.9% from the previous year and up 47.4% from just 5 years ago. That trend is continuing. CPG coupon redemption volume in the first half of 2011 is up 3% over the same time last year. (as reported by NCG Resource Center)

The recession changed a lot of shopping behavior – cutting back and saving money became a necessity. Even as the economy improves (it really is, just don’t look at the stock market today) this behavior will be here to stay.  Besides, saving money is fun and consumers enjoy talking about finding the best deals. Social media is the perfect place for this to flourish.

For many it’s become a game.  Yahoo called it the “Gamesmanship of Shopping” in a report this spring.  They found that social media has led to as new shopping mindset that is analogous to playing a game.  It’s cool to find a great deal and finding one makes people feel like a winner.  Consumers feel a solidary with other shoppers and they are actively collaborating and competing with each other.

That’s what we see here at BzzAgent. The widespread distribution of coupons by advocates to their friends/followers is highly influential. On average, distribution by advocates generates a 16% redemption rate, but rates can reach as high as 25% for beverages and quick serve restaurants.  To put that in reference, typical redemption rates for coupons through traditional FSI and direct mail channels are just in the 2% range.

It’s also what consumers are looking for when they follow a brand on Facebook and Twitter.  Studies from AdWeek/Ipsos and Exact Target both asked that question, and the answers are the same. People want value. They are looking for discounts, promotions and coupons. This is what will help them buy and this is what they want to share with their friends and followers.  Smart brands recognize this and make coupons an integral part of their social media experience.

Firestarters on Facebook

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

If you are looking to get people talking about you on Facebook, a new study from Pew Internet provides some interesting details about the people who call Facebook their home every day.  The report, “Social Networking Sites and Our Lives”, makes as strong a case as you can find for connecting with customers on Facebook to build your brand, but only if you are working with the right people.

Here are three takeaways from the study:

Facebook Makes Us More Social

There is a widespread belief that social media use is making us a bunch of hermits.  That couldn’t be farther from the truth. According to Pew, Facebook doesn’t undermine intimacy, it supports it.  Facebook users have an average of 9% more close personal ties than other people and they rely on the site to maintain close contact with them.  40% of Facebook users have friended all of their closest confidants on Facebook – which is up from 29% just 2 years ago.

Facebook Builds Trust

Pew’s research finds that Internet users as a whole are more trusting of other people than the typical person. Facebook users have even more faith in each other.  A person using Facebook each day is 43% more likely that other internet users to feel that people can be trusted. We’ve always knows that Facebook users turn to each other often for assistance, emotional support and companionship.  But did you realize that it compares to almost as much support as you’d get from your spouse?  Pew estimates that Facebook users get a boost of support equivalent to half of what you get from being married.

Facebook Builds Conversation

People love to communicate with each other on Facebook, but they are much more likely to comment on another user’s status than to update their own.  The study finds that only 15% of Facebook users update their status every day.  But half of them (53%) add comments to other people’s posts a couple times a week. The same is true for photos. 49% comment on photos other people’s photos at least 1-2 times per week.  Commenting on posts and photos is heavily slanted towards the female persuasion. 25% of female Facebook users comment daily, compared to 17% of males.

What it Means for Marketers

The lesson to marketers is clear. Facebook is a great place to focus your marketing – users have bigger social circles and they surround themselves with people they trust. But if you want word about your products to spread across Facebook, you have to find the firestarters.  Those who’ve earned a following and the propensity to post content people respond to.   The typical user is not likely to start a conversation, but they’ll join in with enthusiasm if their friends are talking about something interesting.

Brand advocates are those firestarters. They use these tools with a purpose – to share their expertise to help others. They work hard building a network and providing meaningful contributions that get people talking.

Creating credible Brand Advocates and other Buzz

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

This is a cross post of an article appearing here on the Better Business Banter blog.

I recently spoke with Dave Balter, serial entrepreneur, CEO of BzzAgent, and radical agent of change in loyalty marketing. We focused on the characteristics of loyalty based marketing, the Net Promoter Score, and how to establish trust with customers.

For those who dont know, BzzAgent is a social marketing company that accelerates word of mouth to drive sales. Powered by a network of over 800,000 people, BzzAgent creates measurable business results for marketers through an influential advocate network, a powerful engagement platform, and a proven analytics approach. BzzAgent has been at the vanguard of word of mouth marketing since 2001, running more than 1,500 programs for global companies including Unilever, Wrigley, L’Oreal, and Michelin. They were recently aquired by Dunhumby, a division of Tesco, for close to $60MM to reinforce their social media marketing and analytics.

Here are some highlights of our conversation:

1.a BzzAgent focuses on a set of BzzAgents who are opinion makers and brand advocates in almost every social demographic. What are the characteristics and behaviors that you believe make a successful BzzAgent that best encourage product trial?

Dave: Our network has expanded to north of 800,000 individuals across the US, UK and Canada, and over the course of 2,500 programs, we’ve noticed some interesting trends.

We tend to find advocates aren’t classified by demographic data (or geographic!) but rather by personality type and what I’d call “product consciousness”. On the personality type front, we’ve done a number of studies on the subject, and we’ve found that advocates tend to be people who communicate for fun or altruism. One interesting data point is that advocates tend to share opinions about products and services as a way to relax (think of sharing with friends at a book club or over drinks). [Check out BzzAgent’s whitepaper on the characteristics of Brand Advocates]

On the “product consciousness” front, an advocate is someone who will pro-actively speak or share their opinion about a brand. In order for that to be authentic, the individual needs to have recognized their relationship with the product or service. In essence, they need to be aware of how much they like the product, which is often through very specific experiences that creates the willingness to share. Often an advocates will share their experience, not general information about a product or service!

1.b. Do these characteristics change depending on what type of product or social group you are targeting?

Dave: There are products that are likely to generate proactive sharing, and others that are reactive. For example, you might feel comfortable just telling a friend out-of-the-blue about a great new soda or a fragrance or even a cool digital service, which is an example of proactive sharing. It wouldn’t feel abnormal to the recipient of their friend talked with them about these products.

Reactive sharing often has to do with products or services that we don’t talk about as openly. That might be what credit card you use and why, or your insurance or highly personal products like feminine hygiene or an anti-anxiety drug. Sharing in these cases tends to happen once someone has sought out an opinion, but it may feel awkward to share about these products without being asked about first.

2. BzzAgent focuses a lot on measuring ROI of the campaigns it manages, especially around the # of conversations, new trials, and coupon usage. Do you ever go back and look at long term behavior and brand “stickiness” long after the campaign has finished?

Dave: We’ve focused on the ROI of social marketing for many years, and in the past few years we’ve seen some major breakthroughs. Specifically, we’ve been measuring programs using third-party Market Mix Models from companies like Nielsen and SymphonyIRI, which uses regression analysis to prove which marketing vehicles are driving what return – as well as Matched Market Panels, which compares return across an active market vs. a market without a program running. We’re proud to say the results are really dramatic – social marketing can be measured all the way to sales.

The future of measurement for social marketing will be to tie social to shopper marketing – in essence, measuring results via in-store purchase behavior. We recently were acquired by dunnhumby and you’ll see some significant evolutions of our models based on our ability to measure individual shopper behavior.

With all that said, yes we do go back to look at overall long-term brand behavior. This is valuable information about the value of an advocate over time, which can be immensely beneficial to a brand. That said, we really focus on more direct ROI as the key measurement for our programs. [Check out more whitepapers on how BzzAgent calculates the value of word of mouth, traditional advertising communications, and social media ROI]

3. A lot of companies focused on customer loyalty leverage the Net Promoter Score (NPS) in addition to customer satisfaction. What are your thoughts on NPS as a reliable measure of customer loyalty and what other measures do you look at to determine the health of a brand among consumers?

Dave: Truthfully, we think that NPS is an interesting metric, but is often misused and rarely provides enough deep insight to help companies engage and activate brand advocates. I’m a big fan of the concept, but think it’s best served as a way to evaluate whether your employees are happy or what your clients think of you than a measurement of brand advocacy.

4. One of the Principles of BzzAgent that you and your team established is “Making marketing a better place for marketers and consumers”. Where do you think the concepts of customer relevance, value and integrity break down in today’s more traditional marketing process?

Dave: We do see a landscape shift here, in most cases for the better, but there are still some abusive tactics going on. To the better, I think companies have started to really invest in their consumers by talking with them more directly via social media and engaging more quickly and efficiently. The days of the complaint letter are long over. Companies are recognizing the need to listen more often and more closely. Think Best Buy’s Twelpforce as a good example of the benefit to the consumer (better customer service) and to the company (solving problems more efficiently).

I still see quite a bit of abuse though – I’m particularly concerned with the continued attempts to place ads in every single place possible. We’ve got ads on taxi tops and at urinals and laser-displayed on the sides of buildings. Recently I noticed a company that was trying to embed ads into your apparel. For consumers, there just isn’t anything valuable about this – I don’t really believe the argument that this helps each of us become more informed. We’re now in a marketplace where the consumer gets informed by using the tools at their disposal (google, review sites, asking peers!, etc.). Marketers need choices that allow them to market in ways that the customer respects.

5. Are there any brands that you believe are doing a great job in engaging their customer and driving loyalty? What do you think they do that is so successful?

Dave: Well, any BzzAgent clients, of course!

Seriously, I’m a big fan of brands that embed loyalty right into their product. For my daughter’s 6th Birthday, I took her to the American Girl Doll Store, which could be one of the most impressive cases of creation of loyalty I’ve seen. These folks make the process of buying a doll an event to be remembered from the way they display the choices, to the way the staff is trained to share in the joy of the event (they gave my daughter a birthday sticker and the everyone on the staff went out of their way to wish her a happy birthday). Each doll comes with a special tag that allows you to create a digital version of your doll – a wonderful tactic to engage beyond the first experience…and maybe help parents spend just a little bit more with them! With a reservation, you can have a meal in the store, where they provide mini seats for the newly purchased doll, complete with mini teacup and saucer, crown and all sorts of other knick-knacks.

I think the code American Girl has cracked is the idea that it’s not just about the product, but about everything you do around it that counts.

6. Twitter seems to be the last big social media platform to arrive on the scene that filled an unmet need for a significant audience, coupling short content with the opportunity for celebrity or anonymity as followed and followee. What are some new or undiscovered social media approaches and companies that you think promise to be disruptors in the years ahead?

Dave: I’m paying a lot of attention to the reputation management space right now. I’m involved with a company called Smarterer (http://www.smarterer.com) which allows people to get scores on their digital, social and technical skills. Of course, people can then put their scores in places that matter. About.me is another in a similar vein where you can create your online bio in a way that really represents who you are. My sense is that part of the future will be people’s ability to really articulate who they are more effectively across any of the social media or digital platforms that comes along.

The Ancient Scrolls of Social Marketing

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

Social marketing may be the most important trend in marketing, but did you know the principles were first detailed way back when Super Bowls were single digits and the ARPANET was nothing more than a cool idea?

A recent Harvard Business Review article dug up the research published in the magazine back in 1966 by Ernest Dichter. Dichter was a prominent psychologist best known for his work applying Freudian psychoanalysis to business and consumer motivation. His research back in the 60’s shows us that although the tools we use to we gather and share information on products has changed dramatically, what gets us talking them hasn’t changed at all.

Dichter identified 4 motivations that cause people to communicate about brands:

1. Product involvement – The biggest reason people discuss products is because they had an experience so good they couldn’t keep it to themselves. This is something we all do naturally and that’s why it’s been a guiding principle for BzzAgent for many years. We focus on delivering product samples with every program because people can have much more meaningful dialogs about products when they’ve been able to apply it to their own skin, spray it in their own kitchen or serve it to their family for dinner.

2. Self involvement – Dichter explains that the second most popular reason is that people want to show their connoisseurship and assert superiority. Maybe it is showing off, but in today’s social media world we call it building your personal brand. If you want to be seen as an expert at something, you can’t keep all your insights and knowledge to yourself.

3. Other involvement – Next on the list is altruism. People naturally want to help others solve problems and make better purchase decisions. This was one of try key findings from our advocate study last month. (http://u.bzz.com/fieldguide) The great thing about social media is that by helping someone publicly in social media you help many others indirectly and you build a great brand for yourself.

4. Message involvement – The last reason has to do with ads that are so funny they have to be shared. Everyone wants their ads to go viral and marketers are creating videos just for YouTube. Some, the like Old Spice videos, work (it also helps when you can launch the theme with a Super Bowl ad) but the problem is too many ads trying too hard to be too funny just isn’t that funny. There is nothing wrong with creating word or mouth through ads, it’s just that there is a reason this is last on the list. Marketers should start at the top of the list and work down, not from the bottom up.

The next part of the study reinforces that point. Dichter stated that credibility was a significant concern for those exposed to product conversations. Consumers have to trust the source and know the person isn’t just trying to sell them something. People are skeptical of brands telling them why they are great. The message has to be authentic, and it has to come from the mouths of other consumers.

[AdAge] How Marketers Can Court Brand Advocates

Tuesday, June 21st, 2011

This is a cross-post from an article appearing here on AdAdge.com

Do You Have What It Takes to Turn On Marketing’s Most Wanted?

In-N-Out Burger, Apple, Dunkin Donuts, Burt’s Bees, Harley Davidson. We all know brands that people will go out of their way to talk about and recommend. The idea is appealing to marketers: Why spend millions on advertising, promotions and product placements when the most effective marketing can come from consumers themselves through word of mouth?

But even for the most buzz-worthy brands, not all word of mouth is created equal — because not all consumers are created equal. While most consumers recommend brands occasionally, and reach a small group of immediate family and friends, there is a select group of people who talk about brands habitually, reaching large groups of peers. They debate product benefits on blog posts, write elaborate reviews on Amazon, tweet with brands day and night, and post YouTube “haul videos” that can attract a larger audience than some cable TV shows. With a few candid words, the right highly connected consumer can get people all over the web stampeding to buy products.

These are brand advocates. It’s what they love to do and they are very good at it. Others seek out their opinions, and their recommendations have a direct influence on purchases.

To some people this behavior may seem strange, but if you understand how they think and what motivates them, you’ll know how you can help them become your most effective salespeople. My company, BzzAgent, recently conducted an in-depth study of brand advocates, and I wanted to share five tips for effectively marketing to this powerful breed of consumer.

1. Get the products in their hands

Comments about your viral videos and TV spots may be fun, but they get old and tired fast. Most important, they do nothing to help others learn why they should consider your product. Distribute free samples to give advocates experience with the product so their reviews will be personal and much more meaningful. Advocates are optimistic people; they are 75% more likely to share a great experience about a product.

2. Navigate the Amazon

The product reviews on e-commerce sites such as Amazon are one of the most important places to influence the influencers. Even though advocates prefer to share their opinions on social media sites, when it’s time for them to learn about new products they go to Amazon.com. It’s a one-stop shop for them. Amazon has easily searchable reviews on every variation of every consumer product imaginable. As soon as your product ships, encourage your early customers and fans to visit Amazon to post their initial opinions and experiences.

3. Turn them into insiders

Advocates are always looking for something new and interesting to share with peers. They love this stuff. This how they unwind — they are three times more likely to write a product review just to relax. Use it to your advantage. Feed them a steady stream of fun stuff to engage with and share, but make it meaningful. You’ll turn them off with a copy of your latest sales brochure, but they’ll respond to insider access to events, samples, exclusive offers, or sneak peeks at what you have coming around the corner. Anything that feels exclusive is compelling, and compelling gets talked about. Since advocates are three times more likely to share product information with someone they don’t know, your offers are likely to gain viral momentum quickly.

4. Engage with them on their own turf

Advocates thrive on the social-media frontier. They are drawn to anything social online — they are two-and-a-half times more likely that typical web users to use social networks to meet new people, four times more likely to use discussion boards and three times more likely to blog. Engaging with advocates requires that you have active and meaningful participation with them on these places. This is where those “in the know” connect with each other, so be yourself and let your passion come through. Act like a marketer hiding behind your brand and you’ll just help your competitor gain some vocal supporters.

5. Help them expand their influence

Advocates work hard to build their following and their reputation means a lot to them — they are 150% more likely to value their perception as a good source of information. Sharing the latest product information to help others make better shopping decisions is how they build their brand. Recognize them and celebrate their contributions. These people are driving sales for you — advocates are 50% more likely to create a post that influences a purchase. Re-tweet their messages, feature their comments on your Facebook page, your blog and across your site. CoverGirl uses advocates comments in their print ads and Kmart uses them on product sign in their retail stores. Mtn Dew is now thanking them by name in an ad campaign.

Turn Your Brand’s Social Media Fans Into A Sales Force

Wednesday, May 11th, 2011

This is a cross-post of an article appearing here on Forbes.com

Every marketer hopes fans of their brands will talk up their products among friends, but few realize how chatty and effective such people can be. New research shows that brand advocates–consumers who habitually talk about brands they love–are 83% more likely than typical Web users to share information about products and 50% more likely to persuade their friends to make purchases.

It is more important than ever for marketing executives to identify these social broadcasters and understand their online behavior.

Here are eight tips for managing this powerful volunteer salesforce:

1. Scoring is more important than monitoring. Knowing where people are conversing and what they’re saying is essential, but knowing each individual’s effect on his or her peers is critical. The smartest marketers use scoring systems to identify and rank their customers on an advocacy scale. Frequency and sentiment of communications, whether one’s social connections reply or comment, and what type of content they like to share are all vital elements to track. Most important, marketers have to score in a way that penalizes those who oversell. Overzealous brand fans annoy more often than they persuade. (And make sure your programs comply with Federal Trade Commission guidelines on consumer endorsements.)

2. Remember that advocacy is a fluid state. Advocacy is far from a stable equation, especially among the most influential advocates. It’s something more like a love affair: There’s the euphoric honeymoon phase (Wow, you’re new!), moments of realization (I like your advertising a ton), troubling times (You’ve discontinued my favorite product) and, ideally, a finely balanced marriage (I like you even though you’re not perfect). People fall in and out of states of advocacy with every interaction they have with a product or marketer. To keep things fresh, you should see every consumer interaction as a moment when fans might break up with your brand or product–or might fall more deeply in love.

3. Individualize the conversation. Once you start scoring and tracking advocates, you can start analyzing how your engagement tactics perform. The first rule is to treat people as individuals and avoid group interactions. If as a marketer you post a status update on Facebook, your company should be prepared to have one-on-one conversations with as many responders as possible. The best way to foster advocacy is by creating individual relationships that break down the walls of the typical customer-to-vendor relationship.

4. Fish where the fish are. Engage advocates where they hang out. Some consumers like to Tweet. Others flit around Facebook. Still others blog or text, and many still (gasp!) have face-to-face conversations. Trying to move someone from one medium to another is futile. You must communicate with brand advocates in the stream where they’re already swimming.

5. Respond rapidly. Monitoring social channels and responding to conversations is important, but to best inspire advocacy you must behave as if each conversation is your only one. Forget the 24-hour-response rule. Respond within seconds. Also: Scrap the script. Real conversation between humans inspires advocates.

6. Advocates hunt for the easy-to-share. The social Web has made each consumer his or her own curator and editor. Advocates constantly seek out things they can share with others, and the easier you make sharing, the better. Turn a coupon into a Foursquare offer, or add a bit.ly link to make it easy to share (and track). Create a video of a cat licking the camera (hello Skittles), and keep it under 30 seconds so the time-pinched can watch it in their Facebook stream. Create great content, and then make it infinitely shareable.

7. Make mistakes, and then rectify them. Few things make people quite as vocal as uncovering a mistake or problem. The only thing that makes them more vocal: believing they’ve helped fix it. That doesn’t mean you should go around busting things, but whether you’ve got customer service issues or a malfunctioning product, don’t run away from your mistakes. Highlight them and then be open about how you’re working with your advocates to solve them.

8. Treat people unequally. People who are already outspoken are likely to continue to be that way. Pay more attention to your squeaky wheels and those who already generate superhuman acts of advocacy. Give them more attention than the rest of your customers. With those most vocal, practice random acts of reward and delight that will serve as fodder for their next outspoken outburst.

Managing advocacy is now a critical part of marketing. It was once merely an art form but is now a science, with quantifiable returns when you implement the right structures and system. You’ve got to break out your ruler, become an extrovert, and help along the conversation that your brand advocates are already having. Your business will only benefit.