"Total fans on Facebook" or "total followers on Twitter", for example, are some of the key performance yardsticks, when it comes to social media. Numbers are good but really, brands are still thinking of social media as mass media. In the mass media, size matters the most (hence, the word 'mass'). In the crudest sense, brands should assume its audience as smart transmitter in the social media space. In mass media world, there's only dumb receivers (most of the time).
In social web universe, you're a smart transmitter:
- frictionless access to social technologies;
- social media designed for engagement;
- social media is more able to deliver the right message to the right people at the right time (rightcast);
- size does matter but influence matters more;
- delivers both reach (audience) and richness (interactivity and content richness).
In mass media, you're a dumb receiver:
- mass media audience lack access to social technologies;
- designed for passive consumption, not active engagement.
- trying to deliver the one-size-fit-all message to many people at the same time (broadcast);
- size (audience) matters most;
- reach-richness trade-off.