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“Brandscape” – should the word be included in dictionaries?

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I wanted to share with you this great article that I found today while doing “#sm chores” online  that discusses the Four Pillars of Social Media Marketing. I couldn’t have said better myself -

Sometimes senior management wants things boiled down into easy-to-consume-and-understand packages. Because time is valuable, these executives want a high-level understanding of a concept or an idea. That can be pretty tough to do with social media marketing, especially when overnight successes have been touted on the latest business channels.

There is a way to break it down and explain that social media marketing is not quite as easy as starting an account on Facebook. It’s a way to make things easier for directors, vice presidents, managers, and even practitioners. I call it the “Four Pillars of Social Media.” Without any one of them in your strategy or planning, your foundation will be wobbly.

RESEARCH: Without the proper research into your audience and demographics and without thoroughly knowing your target audience, you’re going to be throwing darts at the dartboard. Research may take a lot of resources and at first might seem a bit overwhelming or maybe even frivolous. But it will save you from wasting efforts.By researching where, when, how, and why your audience and/or consumers are interacting the way that they do, your social media marketing efforts will be finely tuned and targeted for the right kind of engagement with them. This engagement will allow you to see better results and set the right kind of goals and measurement factors when putting your plans in place.

STRATEGY: Once you have the results from your research, you can use that insight to plan a social media marketing strategy. Strategy is a lot more than just signing up for a Twitter account or submitting an article to Digg. Strategy encompasses planning, setting goals, deciding what to measure to ensure those goals are met, determining how to engage with your audience, who engages, what conversations need to be had, and so much more.Don’t embrace a marketing tactic just because you heard about it on the news or your vendor tells you “they know how to implement it.” Ask you and your team: Does your research support actually implementing those tactics? Is your audience there? Will implementing this tactic as part of an overall strategy be beneficial? Planning a strategy is like a road map that anyone on your team can read and understand where you’re starting and where you want to end.

ENGAGEMENT: Let’s face it, if just lurking or posting content or signing up for an account in social media will lead to success, more companies would be putting social media marketing into their budgets as a line item. Right now, marketers have to convince senior management that social media marketing is worth the time and effort, and unless you are truly engaging with your audience, it’s likely not going to be worth the effort. Engaging isn’t just about talking with people in social media communities; it encompasses a whole lot of other activities.To be fully engaged with your audience or a community, you must actively listen (not just hear); you must offer advice as well as ask questions. You must say “thank you” as well as give value to your audience. By fully engaging with your audience and/or community, you can reap the benefits of the social media marketing strategy you wish to deploy.

MEASUREMENT: Measurement comes in a lot of different forms. No two companies will have the exact same type of measurements to see if they are hitting or missing their goals, not even if they are competitors. A lot of factors go into deciding what you need to measure, and it’s not always about counting.Seeing an increase in Twitter account followers may excite your team, but represents only a tiny view of social media results. Use that metric in conjunction with how many people are retweeting, how many lists you are on, and how many active conversations (relevant ones) you are having a week to get a better picture of whether you are truly hitting your goals. That’s just one example. Each social media community has different types of measurements; you have to decide which ones best help you define your success or failure.

  • Link to the original article
  • 1. Choose A Name

    If the Twitter account is going to be for company use, you should use your brand name as your account name. Otherwise it can be a nickname or your real name. Be creative!

    2. Create A Profile

    Write a business profile that includes a description of your company, products, and services. Keep it short, simple and still engaging. Otherwise write a profile that reflects your personal interests. This will help people with common interests to locate you.

    3. Add An Icon/Avatar

    Upload a customized avatar that will reinforce your company brand, such as a version of your company logo. Twitter icons that are eye-catching will draw more attention to your posts. If you are using Twitter for a personal use, you can use a photo of yourself, or another image that reflects your personality.

    4. Customize Background

    I find that I am more drawn to profiles that have one-of-the kind backgrounds or if it feels that a person invested times picking the background that reflects his/her personality and interest or represents the company, for example green.org Twitter page.

    5. Follow

    Follow friends or others with similar interests, media personalities, or just about anyone you are interested in. For example, if you are musician you can connect with other musicians worldwide or just from your area or with other green businesses if you are an organization that targets “green” customers.

    6. Engage

    Keep in mind that Twitter is not about shouting your message — it is about engaging in a two-way (or more) dialogue. Begin tweeting by interacting with those that you are following – thank them for re-tweeting you, connecting with you or ask something – just as you would do in real life.

    Happy tweeting!

    Let me guess: you have Facebook, Twitter, blog and maybe use SEO. You tweet, update your Facebook status and blog but nothing happens? No communication, no traffic and no new possible future clients…? Below are 5 possible reasons why. Ready?

    1. You have no framework

    Perhaps the largest reason small business owners fail to see Return Of Investment (ROI) with social media is because they jumped in without creating a social plan or framework for what they were trying to do. Develop a framework for your objectives, know how you’ll achieve them and determine the key performance indicators you’ll note along the way to make sure you’re on track.  Make sure you create your strategy BEFORE you try to implement one.

    2. You don’t have great content

    If you’re finding it difficult to engage people through social media, then it may be a sign that you’re not giving them enough to engage with. Content in social media incorporates everything from your tweets, to status updates, to the posts you publish on your blog.

    3. You’re targeting the wrong audience

    Finding customers in social media means finding the site where YOUR people are most apt to talk about you.

    4. You’re not listening

    While you can target your customers and sell to them using social media, you have to develop a relationship with them first.  You need to know who they are, understand their wants, and then give them something that actually has value to them. This is one of the biggest point of differences we see with Facebook Fan Pages that do well, compared to those that do not.

    5. You’re just ‘dabbling’ with it

    As simple as it is, you have to invest in order to get something. I noticed that many small businesses are “experimenting” rather than dedicating resources. Hire a social media expert, invest in online marketing campaigns and tools that will help you monitor and benchmark what you are doing.

    Hope this was helpful!


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