Social
media can be an invaluable tool for companies to gain new business and to
maintain existing clients as well as to search for information and to
communicate with other operators. Primarily, its function is to engage in
two-way dialogue with customers and other contacts but different social media
perform better at different tasks and not all social media are useful for all
organisations. For example, Facebook and Twitter, the two main social media channels, are not necessarily that useful for businesses that mainly survive on
pass-through trade, such as cafés and local shops. On the other hand, I would recommend Linked
In to anyone who has an interest in an industrial or professional career.
It is also now worth noting that a web page can be very useful for directing different sections of your contact base to the appropriate sections of your social media network, as well as for more traditional purposes, such as marketing, or getting in contact. However, an increasing number of organisations, particularly those on a low budget, find it sufficient to establish a web presence, ie. having a site exclusive to them as part of an existing social media portal, such as a Facebook page or YouTube channel. This can be a very cost-effective strategy for many organisations, especially those with a strong marketing component or niche product and service providers.
It is also now worth noting that a web page can be very useful for directing different sections of your contact base to the appropriate sections of your social media network, as well as for more traditional purposes, such as marketing, or getting in contact. However, an increasing number of organisations, particularly those on a low budget, find it sufficient to establish a web presence, ie. having a site exclusive to them as part of an existing social media portal, such as a Facebook page or YouTube channel. This can be a very cost-effective strategy for many organisations, especially those with a strong marketing component or niche product and service providers.
The
following is a bare-bones, step-by-step guide to establishing a broad-based
social media presence, based off the strategy I have evolved for my own use.
·
Create a site
on Facebook, Twitter and Linked In as a general minimum. Observe the
distinctions between a Facebook group and page but a page is probably better in
most cases. I will talk about the background to this elsewhere. Do not use a
Facebook profile for your business. Apart from the many other reasons why this
is a bad idea, it is specifically against Facebook's own terms and conditions.
·
Consider
establishing a business presence on Pinterest, YouTube, Wordpress, Blogspot,
Digg, Reddit, EventBrite, Skype etc., depending on the nature of your business
and how many hours you have available to invest in a social media strategy. It may be worth establishing your brand on these channels, regardless of whether you intend to use them initially. You may change your mind later and it's a good idea to prevent others from doing so and potentially damaging your brand.
·
Choose a
primary social medium and at least partly focus your efforts on directing
traffic here. Your website may well be a good choice for this as you have
greater content control and can thus target attention more appropriately.
·
Leverage your existing Facebook contacts, personal or otherwise, to get thirty likes. This will gain you your 'vanity'
address and Facebook analytics.
·
In the first
instance, curate content. That is to say, find articles that others have posted
and link to them with a (short) introduction of your own. I find Linked In
groups to be a good source of these. Remember that you are adding value here,
so only link to articles that are of genuine interest to your potential clients
or that illustrate your own expertise. Build up to producing your own content
and blogging. Consistency is a key element to all parts of your social media
plan and once you choose a strategy, you must commit to it. Therefore, start
off with what you know you can manage. If you feel confident in consistently
producing your own content from the start, then feel free to skip this stage.
·
Schedule posts.
Most people don't recommend this but, as a sole trader, I find it invaluable. Scheduling my posts allows me to to manage the bulk of my social media strategy on a weekly rather than a daily basis. I
schedule posts to Twitter which are then cross-posted to Facebook. This leads
us to:
· Be wary of cross posting.
It is also not generally recommended. I recognise that it is fairly bad
practice so I would advise using it sparingly (two or three media at most) and
formatting your posts so that they look professional on all the sites they
appear on. This means short posts for Twitter and no tags appearing on
Facebook. Links are good, as they function on Twitter and bring back images for
Facebook, but test them before scheduling. If you have one or more staff who
have social media as a major part of their job, you can move away from cross
posting and build up a separate identity for each medium you are using.
·
If blogging,
choose a single blog host carefully and stick with it. Consider how you will
integrate this with your website or if the blog itself will be your main site.
· Build up a database of contacts from business cards and your existing CRM and contact them on social media. Like and follow them on at least one medium, preferably your medium of choice.
·
Find 'like'
exchange groups on Linked In and elsewhere. Be generous and honest with your
follows.
·
Check, follow,
like, join and, very importantly, delete your targets' and contacts' relevant
interests on at least a monthly basis. If you don't regularly cull your low
value groups and follows you will very quickly find your inbox inundated with
more rubbish than you can manage. Your web presence will also be diluted as
no-one wants to follow someone whose
second-hand content is indiscriminate nonsense. This strategy is
particularly useful for Linked In as the content here will be general business
contacts, not just those with an interest in social media. You can also make
distinctions on Linked In between your leads, contacts and fellow group
members.
As
I say, not all of this advice will be useful or relevant for all professionals
but it is a plan that I evolved in the course of using social media for my own
business and one that I hope other business or non-private sector operators can
benefit from.
[Edit 29/03/2013]
You can now download the Skeleton Social Media Strategy article as a printable PDF file.
[Edit 29/03/2013]
You can now download the Skeleton Social Media Strategy article as a printable PDF file.