Analysis – was Wetherspoon’s right to ditch social media?
I thought this would do nicely for an end of year post, back in April, J.D. Wetherspoon’s announced that it would be closing down its social accounts with immediate effect. But looking back nine months on, was this really the right business decision? I take a look and perfom some social listening to find out. Wetherspoon’s 44,000 Twitter followers and 100,000 Facebook fans were relatively small for a large and relatively successful FTSE250 company. With around 900 social media accounts for its pubs, it would certainly be a mammoth task to even try to manage all of those – no doubt extremely time-consuming and costly, no matter which shiny social tools you were using to manage the brand. Managers and staff were given the reigns to post on social, which sadly often resulted in mixed messages and wasn’t exactly the fun, engaging and inspiring content you would now expect to see in this more mature social media age. With no clever or clear social strategy being implemented correctly, it seemed they were treading through muddy waters and not really cutting through with what they are all about. I mean their beer selection is sometimes something to behold – I particularly like the one in Camden which I frequented recently which overlooks Camden lock.
- Reason 1: Tim Martin, the Chairman, told the BBC that he believed ‘society would be better off if people cut the amount of social media use’. As he makes a conscious effort to visit his pubs and get to know his staff and customers, it may be that Martin identified an air of distrust and cynicism surrounding social media among Wetherspoon’s customers. With ever-increasing insights into the damaging effects of social, could it be that Wetherspoon’s are paving a future without social – are they the actual trendsetters? Unlikely. It seems social is part of everyday life and still experiencing unprecedented growth despite privacy scandals and concerns over user addiction to the big four.
- Reason 2: Bloggers and critics seem to think that there is more to this story than they’re letting on. Martin is a vocal supporter of the Vote Leave campaign (we will forget politics today as I am pretty sick of it) and has allegedly recently introduced some lovely Brexit propaganda into his pubs across the country. Necessary? Probably not. Cambridge Analytica has been scrutinised this year amid their misuse of Facebook users’ personal data and suggestions that they may have used data collected to sway the Brexit result. Although there is no direct link between Wetherspoon’s and Cambridge Analytica, could Wetherspoon’s have shared their Facebook audience with Vote Leave? Is this decision to delete part of a big cover-up? I do love a conspiracy but I am not so sure.
- Reason 3: Many others seem to think that perhaps this was all just one big publicity stunt with Martin famously known for going against the grain. The reasoning behind the name J.D. Wetherspoon illustrates that he’s not afraid to make a statement.
- Reason 4: And then there’s the cost. Social media for Wetherspoon’s 900 accounts would require heavy investment and maintenance, which was perhaps just not at the top of the agenda for the budget-conscious pub that felt it had better things to do. Everyone knows Wetherspoons’, who they are and what they offer. So why bother with social media when you can pass on a lower cost to the customer instead?
- Reason 5: But perhaps most notably of all and the reason I think is the winner – Wetherspoon’s received a lot of complaints on social. As we know Facebook prominently displays user reviews on company pages, which won’t help with its image. What do you do when you can’t respond to every criticism? For Wetherspoon’s, right or wrong, they delete.
Was it the right thing to do? Wetherspoon’s is an established brand, and arguably doesn’t need social to increase brand awareness or attract new customers. I know every brand should be marketing itself properly but do they need to if it’s more hassle than it’s worth? When Martin consulted the pub managers, 90-95% of them felt that social media was not worthwhile. Those who want to go to Wetherspoon’s will go, and those who don’t won’t. Price-sensitive students will continue to make Wetherspoon’s their place of choice irrespective of a bit of fun and creative social media marketing. Cutting out social also gives time to focus on other endeavours within the company. Despite no longer having an official presence, Wetherspoon’s is still very much talked about on social media. The popularity of their app has soared, and they are receiving good PR from people asking the social media community for free food and drinks gifts via the app. However, just because Wetherspoon’s don’t have an official presence, it doesn’t stop parody accounts emerging. @Wetherspoon__UK has almost as many followers as Wetherspoon’s original account and people are just directing their complaints here instead. But angry customers aren’t exactly getting the response they’d hoped for… It’s much easier to start a conversation on social and so without an official account, Wetherspoon’s doesn’t have the opportunity to respond to feedback, good or bad. Yet as the feedback is likely to have a low organic reach, does it really truly matter? At a local level, Wetherspoon’s may find it difficult to spread the word of local deals and events without social media. Perhaps they have missed a valuable opportunity? So I set up a profile and ran through the social media mentions of Weatherspoons through a rather well-known social media listening tool to see what we could find out now in December 2018. Before ditching social media marketing, the brand received (Nov 2017-April 2018) 106,871 mentions in the UK. It broke down as follows: 34% positive chatter across all social platforms, 36% neutral conversation and 30% negative chatter.