Social Networks Trading in Trust

by

• Article
1–2 minutes

read

By now, skepticism about the revenue potential of today’s most popular social networking sites is a well known bromide. Sure, the doubters say, go ahead and push your membership and your traffic into the stratosphere, but, in the end, how does that make you money? Translating usage and eyeballs into dollars: it’s a problem facing the likes of Twitter, Facebook, and every other star in the social universe.

But a report from the most recent issue of the Economist argues otherwise, pointing out that social network advertising is not only growing in importance, but also effectiveness:

Why are the networks becoming more popular when their click-through rates are so low? One reason is that advertisers are being drawn to the leading sites by their sheer scale. ‘Facebook’s audience is bigger than any TV network that has ever existed on the face of the earth,’ says Randall Rothenberg, the head of the Interactive Advertising Bureau (IAB)…. The other reason more money is heading the networks’ way is that some advertisers are seeing a great return on their investment.


While the Economist article focuses mostly on the growth potential of advertising on social networks, it also includes a telling graph that speaks to the entire field of online reputation management. Take a look:

 

Consumer trust in advertising - The Economist


What jumps out there to me is the incredible relative strength of online sources as compared to traditional advertising. Clearly, “friends recommendations” dominates the chart, and that’s an indication of how important viral messaging can be. But brand websites, community forums, and editorial content are all also found online and subject to the rules of ORM.

The lesson I’m taking away from the Economist’s study is that everything we do in the world of ORM has a significant impact on people, and is essential in building trust with the consumer.

 

On the Radar: How Workato’s Hannah Peacock Turned a 10-Day Launch Into Millions in Pipeline

On the Radar: How Workato’s Hannah Peacock Turned a 10-Day Launch Into Millions in Pipeline

Let’s go back to October 2025. The one year anniversary of Anthropic’s Model Context Protocol (MCP) technology is fast approaching. The buzz on Reddit and developer forums is strong and growing louder.  At Workato, the marketing team’s wheels are spinning up ways to launch an MCP solution for SaaS-based businesses to coincide with the anniversary.…

On the Radar: How Julia Washburn Connects Global Strategy to Local Markets

On the Radar: How Julia Washburn Connects Global Strategy to Local Markets

As companies race to invest in AI, one challenge keeps surfacing: AI is only as good as the context behind it. That’s a message Julia Washburn has spent years helping bring to life for North American audiences. As Head of North America Field Marketing at Celonis, she translates the German-founded company’s vision into stories that…

How Reltio’s Karim Azar Turned Awareness into a Growth Engine and Made Marketing Fun Again

How Reltio’s Karim Azar Turned Awareness into a Growth Engine and Made Marketing Fun Again

For years, B2B marketers have been pushed toward bottom-of-funnel tactics that promise measurable, immediate results. Karim Azar went in the opposite direction. As Senior Director of Global Digital and Web Marketing at Reltio, Azar helped transform the company’s approach to demand generation by moving away from bottom-of-the-funnel marketing and investing more heavily in awareness and…

Why Anaconda’s Derek Weeks Thinks Marketers Need to Become Builders

Why Anaconda’s Derek Weeks Thinks Marketers Need to Become Builders

AI is forcing marketers to rethink how they work, but Derek Weeks believes the most important shifts are happening at the intersection of technology, creativity and execution. As SVP of Marketing at Anaconda, a company whose Python platform supports much of today’s AI development ecosystem, Weeks spends his days thinking about how AI is changing…

How Phone.com’s Amber Newman Turned Paid Search Into a Precision Marketing Engine

How Phone.com’s Amber Newman Turned Paid Search Into a Precision Marketing Engine

Phone.com offers customers a straightforward alternative to complex and costly VoIP systems. It allows them to set up custom business numbers and manage calls, texts, and videos directly from their personal phones, keeping work and personal communications separate. Amber Newman, Phone.com’s director of marketing, has built a strategy that reflects her company’s simple but powerful…

How Patrick Bradshaw Is Bringing Marketing Into the Deal

How Patrick Bradshaw Is Bringing Marketing Into the Deal

Sales enablement has traditionally focused on preparing reps with content, training, and playbooks before a deal begins. Patrick Bradshaw, Sr. Director of Acquisition and Growth Marketing at Highspot, says that the model is evolving as AI and better data make it possible to support teams up to the end of the sales process. We caught…

The CMO Who Gave Up Sales Pitches to Build Real Relationships

The CMO Who Gave Up Sales Pitches to Build Real Relationships

Chatting with Nathan Burke of 7AI on why relationship-building outperforms traditional B2B marketing Nathan Burke is intentionally doing less of what most B2B marketers are taught to do. As CMO of 7AI, he’s opting out of the usual B2B playbook, the awkward steak dinners with a pitch attached, the conference badge scanning arms race, and…

How UVEye’s Unicorn Drives Trade Show Excitement

How UVEye’s Unicorn Drives Trade Show Excitement

Trade shows are crowded. Competitive. Expensive. Every booth promises innovation. Every brand is trying to stand out to the sea of overwhelmed and tired attendees. For AI-driven vehicle inspection company UVEye, standing out meant not just thinking creatively. It meant creating a unicorn. UVEye calls its technology an “MRI for cars.” It provides AI-driven technology that…

How WalkMe’s Melanie Pasch Humanized the Enterprise AI Adoption Problem with “AI Shame”

How WalkMe’s Melanie Pasch Humanized the Enterprise AI Adoption Problem with “AI Shame”

Ask an executive how many software applications their company uses, and they’ll probably guess 30 or 40. The average organization, according to research by digital adoption platform (DAP) pioneer WalkMe, actually runs about 625 applications. This staggering digital ecosystem is where most tech investments stall, not because the technology is poor, but because employees can’t…

From $200M ARR to Pre-Seed: How Karina Lawrence Rewrites the Marketing Playbook for Early-Stage Startups

From $200M ARR to Pre-Seed: How Karina Lawrence Rewrites the Marketing Playbook for Early-Stage Startups

When you’ve helped scale a developer-focused company from roughly $200M to nearly $250M in ARR, you know what “grown-up” marketing looks like. Today, though, Karina Lawrence is back at the very beginning—leading marketing at Macrovo, a pre-seed, ~10-person startup that blends AI and human expertise to help financial institutions make faster, smarter decisions. It’s a…

CONTACT US
CONTACT US

WE HELP BRANDS OWN WHAT’S NEXT

Our integrated PR and digital campaigns build reputations, drive growth, and shape conversations that define markets. Let’s talk about how we can help you do the same.