Agoracom Blog

The Rise Of Social Media IR “Experts” a.k.a. Pretenders

Posted by AGORACOM at 12:56 PM on Friday, October 8th, 2010

Suddenly, Everyone Is A Social Media Expert In IR (Courtesy Of BrianSolis.com)

As you all know, I simply love online investor relations.  I believe it is the ultimate equalizer for small-cap companies that need affordable and efficient ways to both communicate with current shareholders and find new prospective investors.

I’m proud to say that AGORACOM pioneered online investor relations for small-cap companies by creating a platform that ties both communications and marketing together into one great package.  More than just lip service, AGORACOM ranked #57 in the Profit 100 of Canada’s fastest growing companies in 2009.  This isn’t meant to show off our success but, rather, to demonstrate how big online investor relations has become – and how big it is going to be.

GREAT ONLINE IR COLLEAGUES

I’m also happy to say that we don’t own the online investor relations space.  Otherwise how valuable could the services be if others didn’t find it worthy to participate in? For example, Q4 Websystems, Meet The Street and IR Web Report have done some great things in the space, keep me on my toes and teach me new tactics along the way.

I respect my colleagues for the work they do and for making the space better for everyone.

GREAT ONLINE IR PRETENDERS – A Twitter/Facebook/YouTube Account Is Not An Online IR Program

Unfortunately, we are now starting to see the rise of Online IR Pretenders.  They claim to be “leaders” in social media and will set up a Twitter/Facebook/YouTube account to prove it.

If it were only that easy.

Setting up some social media accounts mean nothing unless they come with traffic and visibility.  Any 16-year old kid can create flashy looking social media accounts for you in under an hour and bolt on some basic advertising to it.  This is why social media pretenders are so cheap. Unfortunately, social media pages do not make an online investor relations program, no matter how cheap the pitch.

Said another way, you’re better off saving the $10,000 you’d spend on a Yugo and putting it towards a $30,000 Maxima.

Without a real vehicle, all you have is a puttering online IR program.

A REAL AUDIENCE VS. A PRETENDERS AUDIENCE

Social Media IR Pretenders don’t have an audience  – they simply talk about the blue sky audience.  Hell, if a traditional IR firm pitched you by saying “there are 6 Billion people on this planet”, would you get excited and hire them?  Think about it.

Here Is What A Pretender Audience Looks Like

  • Facebook Has 500 Million Members
  • Twitter Has 165 Million Users
  • YouTube Has 1 Zillion people watching 10 Zillion videos every day
  • Everybody in the world has a mobile phone
  • …. etc., etc.

This may all be true – but it doesn’t mean any of them are going to run to your social media pages.  Getting their attention is hard. Very hard.  It takes time … years even …. to build credibility and content that drives a small fraction of these people to you.

Here Is What A Real Audience Looks Like:

  • 1,114,000 Investors Hit AGORACOM In 2009.
  • 547,000 Investors Hit AGORACOM in First Half of 2010
  • AGORACOM Reports 17,792 Investors From 77 Countries Participated In Online Gold and Commodities Conference
  • Mobile Devices Drive 16,000 Small-Cap Visits To AGORACOM In August
  • AGORACOM Videos Viewed Over 250,000 Times
  • …. you get the idea

CONCLUSION

Next time a Social Media IR “Expert” comes knocking on your door – ask them how much traffic they’re actually pulling into their sites.  If they start talking about blue sky, show them the door.

11 Responses to “The Rise Of Social Media IR “Experts” a.k.a. Pretenders”

  1. […] what all the “Johnny Come Lately IR Experts“ have been telling you as of late, AGORACOM has been proving to small-cap […]

  2. […] In October of 2010, I posted the story The Rise of Social Media IR “Experts” a.k.a. Pretenders and I used the image below.  It was humorous poke at a very serious subject – Pretenders […]

  3. […] what all the “Johnny Come Lately IR Experts“ have been telling you as of late, AGORACOM has been proving to small-cap […]

  4. […] what all the “Johnny Come Lately IR Experts” have been telling you as of late, AGORACOM has been proving to small-cap CEO’s […]

  5. […] as your primary online investor relations destination is a recipe for disaster.  Contrary to what Social Media IR Experts (aka “Pretenders”) will tell you, Facebook IR will fail […]

  6. […] you are able to deliver.  This is especially true in the small-cap space, which is full of investor relations pretenders that throw around all the right jargon but offer little to no […]

  7. […] Furthermore, we’ve worked hard at cross-promoting our social media channels AND providing different content on each. If you’re a small-cap company that is simply creating Twitter and Facebook accounts to post duplicate press releases across each, you are simply wasting your time (Beware Of ….  The Rise Of Social Media IR “Experts” a.k.a Pretenders) […]

  8. AGORACOM says:

    Greg, thanks for chiming in. Fully agree with your statements:

    “Social media should augment a strategic IR program, not be the sole source of information”

    AND

    “the self proclaimed SM experts rarely have the in depth IR knowledge required to improve shareholder value.”

    Thanks and have a great weekend.

    George

  9. Greg Bewsh says:

    Social media should augment a strategic IR program, not be the sole source of information. Institutional and savvy investors do use Twitter, Facebook, etc. In fact, Google uses advisory press releases and social media to guide investors to its Website for corporate information and updates. I agree, the self proclaimed SM experts rarely have the in depth IR knowledge required to improve shareholder value.

  10. AGORACOM says:

    Hi, Rob. Exactly. We use YouTube, Facebook, etc. for our clients programs. I’m just seeing too many social media IR “experts” popping up whose only foundation for their expertise is the ability to create a Twitter/Facebook account.

    Best,
    George

  11. Rob Berick says:

    Just to be clear, you aren’t saying that these other SM channels aren’t viable options; rather it’s not just enough to launch a company-centric vehicle on Twitter/FB/etc.? Correct?