Spending on word-of-mouth (WoM) marketing jumped 35.9% in 2006 to $981.0 million and is expected to top $1 billion in 2007, making it one of the fastest growing alternative media segments. Driving the growth is the continued consumer shift to alternative media and the marketers' need for increased brand engagement and ROI. These are some of the findings of the first in-depth analysis of the emerging word-of-mouth (WoM) marketing industry released today by PQ Media, the leading provider of alternative media econometrics (http://www.pqmedia.com/word-of-mouth-marketing-forecast-2007.html). Helping to fuel this growth are a projected 3.5 billion brand-related conversations per day in the U.S., according to Keller Fay Group, with nearly 80% of consumers trusting recommendations from family, friends and "influential" persons over all other forms of advertising and marketing.
Among the key trends driving growth, the Internet has enhanced the ability of consumers to exchange ideas about brands through social networks like Facebook and MySpace and
consumer-generated media like blogs. While Keller Fay Group research indicates 90% of WoM marketing still takes place offline, brand marketers have become actively involved in online WoM
marketing via new media, metrics and WoM specialists. "The new media industry axiom, 'only what gets measured gets bought,' has led to a discernible shift in media spending from
traditional to alternative advertising and marketing strategies," said Quinn. "The word-of-mouth marketing industry is capitalizing on this trend though its ability to provide ROI to
brand marketers in a highly cost-effective platform."
Spending on WoM marketing is forecast to grow 37.7% in 2007 to $1.35 billion, as brand marketers continue to shift more dollars to WoM marketing tactics as part of their cross-platform
marketing campaigns, according to PQ Media's Word-of-Mouth Marketing Forecast 2007-11. The growth of WoM marketing is expected to continue to outpace that of the overall advertising and
marketing sectors, as well as the growth of the U.S. economy, in 2007.
"Major brand marketers are moving from just testing word-of-mouth marketing to including it as a growing component of fully-integrated marketing campaigns," Quinn added. "The continued
advancement of new word-of-mouth technologies is creating crosscurrents among alternative media strategies, as evidenced by Facebook's recent attempt to bridge the gap between social
networking and WoM marketing.
While no breakout is currently available on spending by product categories, data from various sources on the number of conversations held by category suggest that food and beverage, media
and entertainment, and sports and recreation are among the heaviest users of WoM strategies. For example, CPG giant, Proctor & Gamble, owns one of the leading WoM Media companies,
Tremors/VocalPoint, which targets the youth (Tremors) and female (VocalPoint) audiences.
Methodology
While WoM marketing has exhibited strong growth and upside potential, the industry has not been clearly defined until now, and there has been a dearth of reliable data, analytics and
forecasts tracking its direction. To address this challenge, PQ Media used its proprietary econometric methodology, known as Medianomics, which employs data collection and algorithmic
methods synthesized with research-based analytic approaches to determine geometric prediction-oriented models for media spending and usage.
Analysis was limited to U.S. spending and outsourced WoM marketing expenditures, not including brand spending on salaries or internal WoM marketing initiatives. To avoid double-counting
with spending on other advertising and marketing services, PQ Media didn't include the following categories: in-store product sampling; event marketing & sponsorships; public
relations not associated with WoM marketing; and social network and consumer-generated media advertising.
About PQ Media
PQ Media (