Five Pillars of Social Media Marketing

by | Apr 15, 2017 | Marketing, Promotion

It’s easy to get whipped up into the hype of social media marketing. Maybe you’re just getting started with a new brand account, or maybe you’ve just been put in charge of all the company’s existing followers. Either way, here are some basic principles that’ll help you move forward.

1. Focus on quality, not quantity.

When engaged in an endeavor as complicated and subtle as social media, it’s hard to know how you’re doing, since there aren’t really any useful ways to measure effectiveness.

Unfortunately, this means people have reverted to relatively useless ways of measuring their effectiveness, such as the number of friends on Facebook, followers on Twitter, blog visitors, etc.

Social media isn’t a numbers game; it’s about building real relationships. You’re better off with ten people who actually understand you and care about what you’re doing than 10,000 people who can’t remember your name or why they’re connected to you.

2. Make it a two-way conversation

It’s tempting to try to apply traditional advertising and marketing techniques to social media, and to use it as a vehicle for one-way communication with an audience.

Those who take this route usually don’t last long, though, since people don’t respond well to someone talking at them rather than communicating with them.

Instead, focus on engaging with your connections. Talk to them. Ask them questions. Give them answers. Find out what makes them tick. Find out what value you can provide to them. And don’t just do this at a superficial level (occasionally replying to one of your thousands of followers), but really dig in and get to know the people you’re connected to.

As with almost everything else, the more you give, the more you’ll get back.

3. You don’t need to be viral to be successful

Popular discussion of social media tends to focus on the wildly-popular sensations that get a million views on YouTube in a matter of days. The stories you don’t hear, though, the success stories that have taken months or even years to develop, which are far more common.

Get the notions of sudden stardom out of your mind, and focus on moving forward at a steady pace, methodically and intentionally building a community around your company. Don’t give up a week or two in, when you’re wondering why you’re not famous yet. Just keep moving forward.

4. Come to people on their own turf

Instead of trying to bring people to your content, focus on bringing your content to the people.

For example, instead of only posting a video on YouTube and then trying to get everyone to visit that page, post it on YouTube, Vimeo, and other major video sharing sites. That way people can see it on the site where they already have an active account (and friends), and are more likely to comment, share, and engage with your content in other ways.

Spread your content around. Decentralize. (If you do this right, you may not even need your own website at all.)

5. Be original (even when it’s difficult)

One of the most difficult things about social media is that you’re often expected to generate a lot of content. Normal, average people are suddenly expected to be writers, photographers, videographers, designers, etc.

It can be hard, and it’s tempting to slip into the habit of just reposting other people’s work. “Hey, check out this video” becomes a substitute for actually creating relevant content.

Unfortunately, reposting other people’s content provides very little value (compared to original content), and you wind up watering down your social media sauce. Nobody’s going to link to you for linking to someone else.

You may not be able to post as frequently when you focus on original content, but people will notice when you do (and they’ll appreciate it).

Tags:
The Product Design Pyramid

The Product Design Pyramid

If you make it to the top, you'll have one of the best and most delightful products in your market The product design and user experience design industries are full of vague phrases like "delightful experiences" without a lot of specifics about how to get there. Many...

Smart People Always Want to Mess This Up

Smart People Always Want to Mess This Up

Several weeks ago, my company released a new product: a tool that helps small service businesses with client follow-up. We did it very quietly, late one night after most of the department had gone home. A few of the product leaders made the decision, flipped the...

Purpose-Driven Companies Make More Money

Purpose-Driven Companies Make More Money

“A real purpose can’t just be words on paper. It has to get under the skin of every member of your organization…. If you get it right, people will feel great about what they’re doing, clear about their goals, and excited to get to work every morning.”— Roy SpenceWhen...

What’s Your Company’s Internal Compass?

What’s Your Company’s Internal Compass?

One of the hardest questions we ask in our discovery workshops is also one of the simplest and most fundamental: “Why does your company exist?”You’d think most CEOs would have a ready (and passionate) response to that question, but most don’t. When asked that...

The 5 Key Customer Motivators

The 5 Key Customer Motivators

Far too many experiences are designed around the assumption that people want to be engaging with them. It’s an easy mistake to make. If you’re designing, say, an ecommerce site, it would be natural to assume your customers have an internal drive to find a product they...

Why Business Owners Fear Customer Research

Why Business Owners Fear Customer Research

Customer research is fundamental to the design process. It’s been well established that relying on assumptions alone leads us to make biased decisions that often fail to reflect the reality of the customer’s needs and wants, leading to poor results (including reduced...