Only those included in the annual Inc. 500 listing of American's fastest-growing companie.
In recent report by the Center for Marketing Research at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth social media use among America's largest companies is losing steam.
Specifically, less than a quarter of the nation's top 500 companies as ranked by Fortune magazine now have a public-facing blog -- the same percentage reported in last year's study. When UMass Dartmouth began counting blogs within the Fortune 500 in 2008, that figure was 16 percent, growing to 22 percent in 2009.
The use of Twitter and Facebook among Fortune 500 companies was similarly stunted. This year, 62 percent of those corporations took advantage of the Twittersphere, up just 2 percentage points over 2010. Also this year, 58 percent of firms manage Facebook pages as compared to 56 percent last year.
However the same study indicates that smaller corporations -- specifically, those included in the annual Inc. 500 listing of American's fastest-growing companies -- host twice as many blogs than their bigger, better-known brethren. And 71 percent of Inc. 500-listed companies have Facebook pages, while 59 percent use Twitter on a regular basis.
You decide why that is, what that means for the future.
Me? Those who talk with their customers keep their customers. Those who keep their customers engaged and inspired, see more word-of-mouth testimonials and more referrals.
Those are very cash-flow friendly marketing programs, by the way.
Eventually, the customers of those companies who are too busy to engage with them, will hear or see or read the blogs or tweets or FB posts, from those customers of companies who do choose to engage, every day and every way.Their customers, soon to be former customers, will choose to be part of that party.
This ain't rocket-science. It's just human nature.
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