Demystifying
social media 
Roxane Divol, David Edelman, and Hugo Sarrazin
As the marketing power of social media grows,  
it no longer makes sense to treat it as an 
experiment. Heres how senior leaders can harness  
social media to shape consumer decision  
making in predictable ways.
The problem
Companies invest millions of dollars in social media, 
with little understanding of how it influences consumers 
to favor their brands or buy their products.
Why it matters
Without knowing how social media affects consumer 
behavior, companies run the risk of aiming it at the 
wrong targets, wasting time and money on ineffective 
efforts, and generally failing to harness its potential. 
What to do about it
Understand social medias core functions: to monitor, 
respond, amplify, and lead consumer behavior. Then  
look for the best opportunities to carry out those 
functions along the journey that consumers embark 
upon when they make purchasing decisions.
A P R I L   2 0 12
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2
Executives certainly know what social media is. After all,  
if Facebook users constituted a country, it would be the worlds third 
largest, behind China and India. Executives can even claim to  
know what makes social media so potent: its ability to amplify word-
of-mouth effects. Yet the vast majority of executives have no idea  
how to harness social medias power. Companies diligently establish 
Twitter feeds and branded Facebook pages, but few have a deep 
understanding of exactly how social media interacts with consumers 
to expand product and brand recognition, drive sales and profitability, 
and engender loyalty.
We believe there are two interrelated reasons why social media remains 
an enigma wrapped in a riddle for many executives, particularly 
nonmarketers. The first is its seemingly nebulous nature. Its no secret 
that consumers increasingly go online to discuss products and  
brands, seek advice, and offer guidance. Yet its often difficult to see 
where and how to influence these conversations, which take place 
across an ever-growing variety of platforms, among diverse and 
dispersed communities, and may occur either with lightning speed or 
over the course of months. Second, theres no single measure of  
social medias financial impact, and many companies find that its 
difficult to justify devoting significant resourcesfinancial  
or humanto an activity whose precise effect remains unclear.
What we hope to do here is to demystify social media. We have identified  
its four primary functionsto monitor, respond, amplify, and lead 
consumer behaviorand linked them to the journey consumers under- 
take when making purchasing decisions. Being able to identify  
exactly how, when, and where social media influences consumers helps  
executives to craft marketing strategies that take advantage of social 
medias unique ability to engage with customers. It should also help 
leaders develop, launch, and demonstrate the financial impact of social- 
media campaigns (for insight into the worlds biggest social-media 
market, see Understanding social media in China, forthcoming on 
mckinseyquarterly.com).
In short, todays chief executive can no longer treat social media as  
a side activity run solely by managers in marketing or public relations. 
Its much more than simply another form of paid marketing, and  
it demands more too: a clear framework to help CEOs and other top 
executives evaluate investments in it, a plan for building support 
infrastructure, and performance-management systems to help leaders 
smartly scale their social presence. Companies that have these three 
elements in place can create critical new brand assets (such as content 
from customers or insights from their feedback), open up new  
3
channels for interactions (Twitter-based customer service,  
Facebook news feeds), and completely reposition a brand through the 
way its employees interact with customers or other parties. 
The social consumer decision journey
Companies have quickly learned that social media works: 39 percent of  
companies weve surveyed already use social-media services as their  
primary digital tool to reach customers, and that percentage is expected  
to rise to 47 percent within the next four years.
1
 Fueling this growth  
is a growing list of success stories from mainstream companies:
Creating buzz: Eighteen months before Ford reentered the US 
subcompact-car market with its Fiesta model, it began a broad 
marketing campaign called the Fiesta Movement. A major element 
involved giving 100 social-media influencers a European model  
of the car, having them complete missions, and asking them to docu-
ment their experiences on various social channels. Videos related to 
the Fiesta campaign generated 6.5 million views on YouTube, and Ford 
received 50,000 requests for information about the vehicle, primarily 
from non-Ford drivers. When it finally became available to the public, 
in late 2010, some 10,000 cars sold in the first six days.
Learning from customers: PepsiCo has used social networks  
to gather customer insights via its DEWmocracy promotions, which have 
led to the creation of new varieties of its Mountain Dew brand.  
Since 2008, the company has sold more than 36 million cases of them.
Targeting customers: Levi Strauss has used social media to offer 
location-specific deals. In one instance, direct interactions with  
just 400 consumers led 1,600 people to turn up at the companys stores 
an example of social medias word-of-mouth effect. 
Yet countless others have failed to match these successes: knowing  
that something works and understanding how it works are very 
different things. As the number of companies with Facebook pages, 
Twitter feeds, or online communities continues to grow, we think  
its time for leaders to remind themselves how social media connects 
with an organizations broader marketing mission.
1  
See What marketers say about working online: McKinsey Global Survey results, 
mckinseyquarterly.com, November 2011.
4
Marketings primary goal is to reach consumers at the moments, or 
touch points, that influence their purchasing behavior. Almost three 
years ago, our colleagues proposed a frameworkthe consumer 
decision journeyfor understanding how consumers interact with 
companies during purchase decisions.
2
 Expressing consumer behavior 
as a winding journey with multiple feedback loops, this new frame-
work was different from the traditional description of consumer 
purchasing behavior as a linear march through a funnel. Social media 
is a unique component of the consumer decision journey: its the only 
form of marketing that can touch consumers at each and every stage, 
from when theyre pondering brands and products right through the 
period after a purchase, as their experience influences the brands they 
prefer and their potential advocacy influences others (Exhibit 1).
The fact that social media can influence customers at every stage  
of the journey doesnt mean that it should. Depending on the company 
and industry, some touch points are more important to competitive 
Q2 2012
Social media (CDJ)
Exhibit 1 of 2
Marketers can tailor their use of social media for each stage of the
consumer decision journey. 
Consider
Evaluate
Experience Advocate
Bond
Buy
Consumer evaluates brand
Watches YouTube video posted 
by enthusiastic owner showing the 
products innovative uses
Consumer buys 
product
Photographs the product 
in store, posts it for 
others to comment on, 
and receives personal 
message with coupon 
from the brand
  Consumer interacts 
  with brand after purchase
Follows your expert on  
  Twitter to receive product  
  updates; retweets to friends
Consumer advocates 
for brand 
Comments on your 
representatives helpful advice 
in a user forum, then likes 
your Facebook page
  Consumer bonds
Tips friends on foursquare    
  after revisiting your store 
  to purchase again
Consumer considers 
purchase
Views your brand 
on retailer site and is 
impressed by 
enthusiastic user 
reviews
1
2
4 5
3
6
2 
 See David Court, Dave Elzinga, Susan Mulder, and Ole Jrgen Vetvik, The consumer 
decision journey, mckinseyquarterly.com, June 2009.
For more on 
social medias 
relationship to 
the consumer 
decision journey, 
see the interactive 
exhibit, narrated 
by coauthor 
David Edelman, 
in this article on 
mckinseyquarterly 
.com.
Exhibit 1
5
advantage than others.
3
 Whats more, our work with dozens of 
companies adapting to the new marketing environment strongly 
suggests that the most powerful social-media strategies focus on a 
limited number of marketing responses closely related to individual 
touch points along the consumer decision journey. Exhibit 2 depicts  
the ten most important responses, range from providing customer 
service to fostering online communities. One of those tenmonitoring 
what people say about your brandis so important that we see it  
as a core function of social media, relevant across the entire consumer 
decision journey. The remaining nine responses, organized in three 
clusters in the exhibit, underpin efforts to use social media to respond 
to consumer comments, to amplify positive sentiment and activity,  
and to lead changes in the behavior and mind-sets of consumers.
1. Monitor
Gatorade, a sports drink manufactured by PepsiCo, has been diligently 
working toward its goal of becoming the largest participatory  
brand in the world.
4
 It has created a Chicago-based war room within 
its marketing department to monitor the brand in real time across  
social media. There are seats where team members can track custom-
built data visualizations and dashboards (including terms related  
to the brand, sponsored athletes, and competitors) and run sentiment 
analyses around product and campaign launches. Every day, all of 
this feedback is integrated into products and marketingfor example, 
by helping to optimize the landing page on the companys Web site. 
Since the war rooms creation, the average traffic to Gatorades online 
properties, the length of visitor interactions, and viral sharing from 
campaigns have all more than doubled. 
Such brand monitoringsimply knowing whats said online about 
your products and servicesshould be a default social-media function, 
taking place constantly. Even without engaging consumers directly, 
companies can glean insights from an effective monitoring program that 
informs everything from product design to marketing and provides 
advance warning of potentially negative publicity. Its also critical to 
communicate such feedback within the business quickly: whoever  
is charged with brand monitoring must ensure that information reaches  
relevant functions, such as communications, design, marketing,  
public relations, or risk.
3 
Readers interested in a detailed approach for understanding which touch points matterbased 
on research techniques that reveal what consumers are seeing, saying, and doingshould  
read David Edelman, Branding in the digital age: Youre spending your money in all the wrong 
places, Harvard Business Review, December 2010, Volume 88, Number 12, pp. 6269. 
4
 Comment by Carla Hassan, Gatorades senior marketing director, consumer and shopper 
engagement. For more, see Adam Ostrow, Inside Gatorades social media command center, 
mashable.com, June 15, 2010. 
6
2. Respond
Valuable though it is to learn how you are doing and what to improve, 
broad and passive monitoring is only a start. Pinpointing conversations 
for responding at a personal level is another form of social-media 
engagement. This kind of response can certainly be positive if its done  
to provide customer service or to uncover sales leads. Most often, 
though, responding is a part of crisis management. 
Last year, for example, a hoax photograph posted online claimed that 
McDonalds was charging African-Americans an additional service  
fee. The hoax first appeared on Twitter, where the image rapidly went  
viral just before the weekend as was retweeted with the hashtag 
#seriouslymcdonalds. It turned out to be a working weekend for the 
McDonalds social-media team. On Saturday, the companys director 
of social media released a statement through Twitter declaring the 
photograph to be a hoax and asking key influencers to please let your 
Q2 2012
Social media (CDJ)
Exhibit 2 of 2
Social media enables targeted marketing responses at individual 
touch points along the consumer decision journey.
  Source: Expert interviews; McKinsey analysis
Consider
Evaluate
Experience
Advocate
Bond
Buy
S
t
e
p
s
 
i
n
 
t
h
e
 
c
o
n
s
u
m
e
r
 
d
e
c
i
s
i
o
n
 
j
o
u
r
n
e
y
3. Amplify 
  current positive 
  activity/tone
4. Lead 
  changes in sentiment  
  or behavior
2. Respond 
  to consumers 
  comments
1. Monitor 
  social channels for 
  trends, insights
Crisis 
management
Brand monitoring
Customer service
Brand content 
awareness
Product launches
Referrals and 
recommendations
Customer input
Brand advocacy
Fostering 
communities
Targeted deals, 
offers
Exhibit 2
7
followers know. The company continued to reinforce that message 
throughout the weekend, even responding personally to concerned 
Tweeters. By Sunday, the number of people who believed the image  
to be authentic had dwindled, and McDonalds stock price rose 5 per-
cent the following day.
Responding in order to counter negative comments and reinforce 
positive ones will only increase in importance. The responsibility for  
taking action may fall on functions outside marketing, and the 
message will differ depending on the situation. No response can be 
quick enough, and the ability to act rapidly requires the constant, 
proactive monitoring of social mediaon weekends too. By responding 
rapidly, transparently, and honestly, companies can positively  
influence consumer sentiment and behavior.
3. Amplify
Amplification involves designing your marketing activities to have an 
inherently social motivator that spurs broader engagement and sharing. 
This approach means more than merely reaching the end of planning  
a marketing campaign and then thinking that we should do something 
socialsay, uploading a television commercial to YouTube. It means 
that the core concepts for campaigns must invite customers into an 
experience that they can choose to extend by joining a conversation  
with the brand, product, fellow users, and other enthusiasts. It means 
having ongoing programs that share new content with customers and 
provide opportunities for sharing back. It means offering experiences 
that customers will feel great about sharing, because they gain a  
badge of honor by publicizing content that piques the interest of others. 
In the initial phases of the consumer decision journey, when consumers 
sift through brands and products to determine their preferred options, 
referrals and recommendations are powerful social-media tools. A 
simple example is the way online deal sites such as Groupon and Gilt 
Groupe provide consumers with credit for each first-time purchaser 
they refer. Our research shows that such direct recommendations from 
peers generate engagement rates some 30 times higher than tradi-
tional online advertising does.
Once a consumer has decided which product to buy and makes a 
purchase, companies can use social media to amplify their engagement 
and foster loyalty. When Starbucks wanted to increase awareness of its 
brand, for example, it launched a competition challenging users to  
be the first to tweet a photograph of one of the new advertising posters 
8
that the company had placed in six major US cities, providing winners 
with a $20 gift card. This social-media brand advocacy effort  
delivered a marketing punch that significantly outweighed its budget. 
Starbucks said that the effort was the difference between launching 
with millions of dollars versus millions of fans.
5
 
Marketers also can foster communities around their brands and 
products, both to reinforce the belief of consumers that they made a 
smart decision and to provide guidance for getting the most from  
a purchase. Software company Intuit, for example, launched customer 
service forums for its Quicken and QuickBooks personal-finance 
software so users could help one another with product issues. The result?  
Users rather than Intuit employees answer about 80 percent of  
the questions, and the company has employed user comments to make 
dozens of significant changes to its software.
4. Lead
Social media can be used most proactively to lead consumers toward 
long-term behavioral changes. In the early stages of the consumer 
decision journey, this may involve boosting brand awareness by driving 
Web traffic to content about existing products and services. When 
grooming-products group Old Spice introduced its Old Spice Man 
character to viewers, during the US National Football Leagues 2010 
Super Bowl, for example, the companys ambition was to increase its 
reach and relevance to both men and women. The commercial became 
a phenomenon: starring former player Isaiah Mustafa, it got more 
than 19 million hits across all platforms, and year-on-year sales for the 
companys products jumped by 27 percent within six months.
Marketers also can use social media to generate buzz through product 
launches, as Ford did in launching its Fiesta vehicle in the United 
States. For example, social media played an integral role in the success  
of Small Business Saturday, the US shopping promotion created  
by American Express for the weekend immediately following Thanks-
giving (for American Express CMO John Hayess perspective on  
that launch, see How we see it: Three senior executives on the future 
of marketing, on mckinseyquarterly.com). In addition, when  
consumers are ready to buy, companies can promote time-sensitive 
targeted deals and offers through social media to generate traffic and 
sales. Online menswear company Bonobos, for example, provided  
an incentive for its Twitter followers by unlocking a discount code after  
its messages were resent a certain number of times. As a result of  
5 
 See Claire Cain Miller, New Starbucks ads seek to recruit online fans, nytimes.com,  
May 18, 2009.
9
this effort, almost 100 consumers bought products from the site  
for the first time. The campaign delivered a 1,200 percent return on 
investment in just 24 hours. 
Finally, social media can solicit consumer input after the purchase. 
This ability to gain product-development insights from customers in a  
relatively inexpensive way is emerging as one of social medias most 
significant advantages. Intuit, for example, has its community forums. 
Starbucks uses MyStarbucksIdea.com to collect its customers  
views about improving the companys products and services and then  
aggregates submitted ideas and prominently displays them on a 
dedicated Web site. That site groups ideas by product, experience, and 
involvement; ranks user participation; and shows ideas actively under 
consideration by the company and those that have been implemented.
Converting knowledge to action
Despite offering numerous opportunities to inf luence consumers, 
social media still accounts for less than 1 percent of an average 
marketing budget, in our experience. Many chief marketing officers 
say that they want to increase that share to 5 percent. One problem  
is that a lot of senior executives know little about social media. But the 
main obstacle is the perception that the return on investment (ROI) 
from such initiatives is uncertain.
Without a clear sense of the value social media creates, its perhaps 
not surprising that so many CEOs and other senior executives dont  
feel comfortable when their companies go beyond mere experiments  
with social-media strategy. Yet we can measure the impact of social 
media well beyond straight volume and consumer-sentiment metrics;  
in fact, we can precisely determine the buzz surrounding a product  
or brand and then calculate how social media drives purchasing 
behavior. To do soand then ensure that social media complements 
broader marketing strategiescompanies must obviously coordinate 
data, tools, technology, and talent across multiple functions. In  
many cases, senior business leaders must open up their agendas and  
recognize the importance of supporting and even undertaking 
initiatives that may traditionally have been left to the chief marketing 
officer. As our colleagues noted last year, were all marketers now.
6
6 
 See Tom French, Laura LaBerge, and Paul Magill, Were all marketers now, 
mckinseyquarterly.com, July 2011.
10
Consider the experience of a telecommunications company that pro- 
actively adopted social media but had no idea if its efforts were 
working. The company had launched Twitter-based customer service 
capabilities, several promotional campaigns built around social 
contests, a fan page with discounts and tech tips, and an active response  
program to engage with people speaking about the brand. In social-
media terms, the investment was relatively large, and the companys 
senior executives wanted more than anecdotal evidence that the 
strategy was paying off. As a starting point, to ensure that the company 
was doing a quality job designing and executing its social presence,  
it benchmarked its efforts against approaches used by other companies 
known to be successful in social media. It then advanced the  
following hypotheses:
   If aII of lhese sociaI-media aclivilies imrove generaI service er-
ceptions about the brand, that improvement should be reflected in a 
higher volume of positive online posts.
7
   If sociaI sharing is effeclive, added cIicks and lraffic shouId resuIl  
in higher search placements.
   If bolh of lhese assumlions hoId lrue, sociaI-media aclivily shouId 
help drive salesideally, at a rate even higher than the company 
could achieve with its average gross rating point (GRP) of advertising 
expenditures.
8
 
The company then tested its options. At various times, it spent less  
money on conventional advertising, especially as social-media activity  
ramped up, and it modeled the rising positive sentiment and higher 
search positions just as it would using traditional metrics. The company 
concluded that social-media activity not only boosted sales but also  
had higher ROIs than traditional marketing did. Thus, while the company  
took a risk by shifting emphasis toward social-media efforts before it  
had data confirming that this was the correct course, the bet paid off. 
Whats more, the analytic baseline now in place has given the company  
confidence to continue exploring a growing role for social media. 
In other cases, social media may have a more specific role, such as 
helping to launch a new product or to mitigate negative word of mouth. 
Similar types of analyses can focus on mixing the impact of buzz, 
search, and traffic; correlating that with sales or renewals (or whatever 
7 
 Theres no shortage of methods purporting to measure social medias presence and impact. 
The company in this example used BuzzMetrics, a suite of tools developed by NM Incite  
(a joint venture between Nielsen and McKinsey).
8 
 Gross rating points measure the size of the audience a specic media vehicle reaches. To 
calculate them, multiply the percentage of the target audience an advertisement reaches by 
the number of times it airs.
11
the key metric may be); and then gauging the result against total  
costs. This approach can give executives the confidence and focus they 
need to invest more money, time, and resources in social media. 
As these social-media activities gain scale, the challenges center less 
around justifying funding and more around organizational issues  
such as developing the right processes and governance structure, iden- 
tifying clear rolesfor all involved in social-media strategy, from 
marketing to customer service to product developmentand bolstering  
the talent base, and improving performance standards. New 
capabilities abound, and social-media best practices are barely starting 
to emerge. We do know this: because social-media influences every 
element of the consumer decision journey, communication must take 
place between as well as within functions. That complicates lines  
of reporting and decision-making authority. 
If insights from monitoring social media are relevant to nonmarketing 
functions such as product development, for instance, how will you 
identify and disseminate that information efficiently and effectively
and then ensure that it gets used? If you spot an opportunity to have  
a meaningful conversation with a key influencer, how will you quickly 
engage the right senior executive to follow through? If you recog- 
nize a fast-moving service concern, how will you respond rapidly and 
openlyand when should you do so outside the traditional service 
organization? Senior executives across the company must recognize 
and begin to answer such questions.
Social media is extending the disruptive impact of the digital era 
across a broad range of functions. Meanwhile, the perceived lack of 
metrics, the fear, and the limited sense of whats possible are  
eroding. Executives can identify the functions, touch points, and goals 
of social-media activities, as well as craft approaches to measure 
their impact and manage their risks. The time is ripe for executive-
suite discussions on how to lead and to learn from people within your 
company, marketers outside it, and, most of all, your customers.
The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions of Sirish 
Chandrasekaran, Dianne Esber, Rebecca Millman, and Dan Singer to the 
development of this article.
Roxane Divol is a principal in McKinseys San Francisco office,  
David Edelman is a principal in the Boston office, and Hugo Sarrazin is 
a director in the Silicon Valley office.