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Hi there. Today I just want to talk briefly about three common mistakes in
social media strategy. Lots of companies these days have social media
profiles in one form or another, be it Twitter, Facebook, Google+, and
many, many more. They don't necessarily know why they've got it. They've
just been told they probably should.
So the first place to start is by actually having a strategy. What is it
that you're trying to achieve? What are you using your social media for? So
have a proper think about that. You're probably using it to get more
conversions. Everybody wants more business from any source possible, and
social media can be a really big way of achieving that, if done correctly.
You may also be raising brand awareness. You may have a new canteen with
the best penne a la arrabiata in the town, but nobody knows about it.
Social media is a great way to spread the word and get people into your
business.
You may also be using it for customer service. Social media is used more
and more widely now as a great way to get in touch with your customers and
have them get in touch with you, as well. If they have a problem, if
there's any issues with a delivery they've had, anything like that, they
can contact you quickly and easily and in real time. Obviously, everybody's
really busy and it's quite a popular method.
The second thing is who is going to be in charge of it? This is another
place where many companies seem to fall down, whereby they tag social media
onto somebody else's job, who's already got a full day's work. It doesn't
really work, especially if you're going down the customer service channel.
If you're looking for conversions, people are going to want to be able to
interact with you, to deal with you in relatively real time, certainly
within 24 hours. So if you give social media as a task to somebody who
already has a full workload, chances are they are not going to get back to
people within 24 hours.
You also need to make sure it's the right person. Don't get the intern to
do it because they're 19 and they have a social media profile. It doesn't
mean they know how to use social media. You need someone with a customer
service background if you're going to use it for that, who knows how to
speak to people, who knows how to handle it, and also hopefully should have
had a bit of training on how to handle it when problems come up.
The third thing is how will users find it? If you have a social media
profile, you need to tell people that you have a social media profile. I
would advise putting buttons on every page of your website with links. You
want to be emailing your clients, you want to be
doing offline promotion, anything you can to make people aware that you are
present on Facebook, on Twitter, [that] you are contactable. This is where they'll
find the office. This is where they can get in touch with you. Without
doing that you're going to have a really small base, and it's not going to
achieve its full potential.
The second thing is content. Companies that don't yet know why they have
social media tend to do a lot of this, just saying, "Like my page. Like my
page. Like my page." But they're not actually giving anybody any reason to.
What you end up with there is a lot of Likes, but nothing else. People
aren't going to engage with you. They're probably not your target audience.
They might by your friends, your family, people who kind of like the thing
that you're doing, but probably are never going to use you. Things like
that.
So just going, "Like me. Like me. Like me," isn't going to get you
anywhere, and it's not really good credibility for your company either. You
need to provide quality content. Give people things to read, things to
share, things they're going to want to talk to their friends about, things
that they're going to want to buy, services they're going to want to use.
Keep them excited. If you just keep going, "I've got this product for sale.
I've got this product for sale," nobody's really going to be listening to
you anymore.
It can help, again, with the "me, me, me," thing. Same thing. Don't just
talk about yourself all the time. If you go to a broader
perspective, share stories that are about the industry that you're in.
Engage with you clients. Maybe something interesting has happened with them
that's related to your business. Share that. Engage people. Don't just give
them the same boring thing, because they will stop listening.
The third thing is metrics. Again people seem to think, for example, with
Twitter, it's all about how many followers you've got, or with Facebook,
it's about how many Likes you've got. It's really not. If they're not
targeted, it doesn't matter if you've got a hundred Likes or a thousand
Likes. If 900 of them are never going to use your service, then there's no
real point in having them. It's what we call a vanity metric. You feel
better because you've got a big number, but it needs to be more targeted
than that. You need to aim at people who are going to use your business.
What you should measure is, firstly, things like engagement. So you've got
re-tweets, shares on Facebook, comments on Facebook. People are engaging
with you in any form of social media, sharing your Google+ stuff. Anything
like that can be a real help, and it gets the word out there.
What that does is it helps to increase reach, which is the next thing you
probably want to measure. How many people are you reaching through social
media? Is it growing? Is it shrinking? Is something wrong? Obviously, you
want to keep growing as much as possible, but there will be times that it
might get stagnant. But ideally you want to be pushing to grow the business
all the time, grow the reach, grow awareness all the time.
Do your goals match your strategy? This is the other thing. By the time
that you get down to this level, a lot of people have forgotten what they
started off with. So it's always a good idea to go back to your first plan
and make sure that you are measuring the relevant metrics, compared to what
you started off wanting to. You need to be measuring directly attributable
conversions, directly attributable traffic. Anything else, depending on
what business you're in, it's going to vary, but make sure that your goals
match your original strategy.
Now a lot of the social media stuff, you can find in Google Analytics. If
you look down the left-hand side, you will see a social profile area, where
you can have a look, and it will tell you how many people converted and how
much traffic you had via Google+, Twitter, Facebook, and all those sorts of
things. So it's quite easy to measure. I would definitely suggest you keep
an eye on that once a month or so at least, the very least, and keep
updated, and see if things start to go wrong, maybe start looking at why.
To put this all together. Plan a strategy. Give it to a responsible person.
Create good quality content. Make it shareable, make it likable. Make sure
your timing is right. Don't tweet every day. Don't tweet once a month. Sort
out your metrics and keep an eye on them. That will help you pinpoint
problems. And all together, you should have a relatively good social media
strategy.
I hope that helps . If you want to find out any more, you can check out the
blog, or you can have a look at the Twitter profiles at the end of this
video.