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Brunswick
Review
Issue three
Winter 2010

Research: Digital media and the investment community

Face time rather than Facebook still drives investment decisions

Written by:
  • Amanda Duckworth, Brandon Borrman, Jason Golz, Brunswick, San Francisco
  • Andrew Gunn, Brunswick Research, London

  • This is the second annual Brunswick Digital Media Survey.
  • An online survey by Brunswick Research of 401 buy-side investors and sell-side analysts in Europe and the US.
  • Research conducted during July and August 2010.

In July 2008, eBay became one of the first examples of a publicly traded company using Twitter as a way to reach investors.

Led by Richard Brewer-Hay, the company’s lead blogger, and its IR team, eBay delivered a play-by-play account of the management’s second quarter 2008 conference call with analysts and investors via Twitter. The corporate blogger believed the value added would be found in his ability to extract key kernels of information from management’s prepared remarks and the live question and answer session with analysts.

Several months later, Brewer-Hay took part in a panel discussion with Brunswick, focusing on the value of social media as a tool for investor relations. Brunswick’s Digital Media Survey for 2009 had found information direct from companies was the most influential factor for institutional investors when making investment decisions. Participants discussed whether that category included company-sponsored blogs and Twitter feeds.

This conversation prompted our team to repeat the survey in 2010 to see what, if anything, had changed regarding investors’ use of digital media. Were investors and analysts tapping digital media more often to help make investment decisions?

The power of direct interaction

Consistent with our findings in 2009, in our latest survey a full 50 per cent of respondents said direct interaction with management is the most influential source of information from companies when making an investment decision or recommendation. Only 1 per cent said a company’s digital media presence was the most influential source, one percentage point fewer than those who pointed to the influence of a company’s website.

The picture did not radically change when participants were asked to name the top three most influential information sources. Digital media presence again remained at the bottom of the list, with 1 per cent of those surveyed placing it in the top three, while a company’s website was in the top three with 12 per cent of respondents.

In fact, traditional methods of investor communications dominated the response to our question. News releases, presentations and regulatory filings were in the top three of at least half of all survey participants. Conference calls and webcasts were picked by 62 per cent and, perhaps unsurprisingly given its frequent appearance in the top spot, management interaction was in the top three with 73 per cent of responses.

Consistency of influence

The answers to this question were consistent with the results of the overall survey, which saw little major change from the 2009 results. Information direct from companies remains the dominant source of influential information. If anything, it has increased in importance, with 52 per cent indicating it as the single most influential source against 44 per cent in 2009, and 84 per cent including it in their top three, up from 73 per cent the prior year. Real time subscription services, such as Bloomberg and Reuters, also saw a statistically significant increase, with 64 per cent placing them in the top three, up 5 per cent in 12 months.

On the other hand, the influence of print media on investment decisions continues to decrease, perhaps replaced, in part, by the growing influence of real-time subscription services. In 2010, print media saw an 8 per cent drop, with only 16 per cent of respondents naming it as a top three source of influential information. Digital media, too, saw a decrease in its apparent influence on investment decisions, appearing in the top three of only 6 per cent of those surveyed, down from 11 per cent in 2009.

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