“The proper method for inquiring after the properties of things is to deduce them from experiments.”
Isaac Newton
Newton, arguably the greatest scientist the world has ever known, had very firm beliefs when it came to experiments and the scientific method.
Instead of guessing about why a thing is the way it is, the correct approach is to devise an experiment and allow data to mold your opinions.
Those of you familiar with my blog know that this is an approach I take frequently, leading to my manufactured title of Content Marketing Practitioner.
I thoroughly enjoy creating hypotheses and tests, analyzing and documenting, and implementing new strategies and tactics based on the results.
Therefore, it should come as no surprise that when I first learned about the Social Media Lab, I was immediately intrigued and wanted to dive in.
Constructing The Lab
“If the experiments which I urge be defective, it cannot be difficult to show the defects; but if valid, then by proving the theory, they must render all objections invalid.”
Isaac Newton
Emeric Ernoult, CEO of the highly recommended social media management tool Agorapulse, noticed that no one in the industry had been bold enough (or crazy enough) to significantly invest in the kind of social media experiments needed to draw significant conclusions.
Questions like, “Can I post to Facebook using 3rd Party Apps?” or “Should I use hashtags on Facebook?”
Questions that most bloggers and businesses simply cannot answer definitively on their own.
Questions like that require time, resources, scientific analysis, and the weight of an authoritative source to lend them credence.
On a mission to find answers, and provide the kind of resource no one else could, Ernoult hired two experienced bloggers and invested nearly $100,000 in salary, ad spend and other resources to get the lab started.
With burners and beakers, flasks and funnels, the Social Media Lab scientists set out to conduct experiments and get answers – even if those answers challenged their preconceptions.
The Social Media Lab Experiments
“It is the weight, not numbers of experiments that is to be regarded.”
Isaac Newton
The beauty of these experiments is that the Agorapulse lab team is taking their time. Rather than try to churn out as many as they could, as fast as they could, they’re being deliberate and exact in their process.
This is a critical point to appreciate.
If you’ve ever ran a test of your own on social media, you know that nothing of significance can be determined in a day. Techniques need to be tested at different times with different audiences and so on, which means that, at best, you’d need a week to run a test that considers each day.
Two weeks if you want to reduce some of the noise and variables.
Which is why the Social Media Lab tends to spend two weeks on every experiment!
So far, they’ve run tests to address the following questions:
They’ve also also launched the social media lab podcast on iTunes, Google Play and Stitcher.
The answers often surprised even me.
Take the question of whether or not to tweet an image or tweet a link, for example.
Initially one might not think it of import, unless you knew that on Facebook, if you post an image with a link in the text instead of just a link with a link preview, you can multiply your post reach by TEN TIMES.
What if the same were true on Twitter? Would that change how you set up your tweets and shares?
Would it shock you to learn that it’s actually not the case – that it’s actually better to use the link preview rather than tweet an image?
Read the full experiment to get all the details, and be sure to check out all the rest!
Have a pressing question you wish they’d answer? Let me know in the comments below, and be sure to share the lab’s experiments with your audience. (If you’re interested, here’s my full Agorapulse Review.)
Want to save time with your social media activity and yet get even more results? Use the #1 rated social media management tool, Agorapulse, and as a friend of Mike Allton, you’re eligible to receive your first two months free after trial! Go to https://www.Agorapulse.com/Allton to learn more and get started.