Posts Tagged ‘audience’

My Almost Free Twitter-based Corporate Social Media Strategy

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

What if you could reach a few million people, improve customer support, tap into an incredible wealth of customer satisfaction data, protect and enhance your brand, and obtain some positive coverage, all for under $500? But wait, there’s more! Web Service´s 2.0Sounds like a late-night infomercial, but in fact, a minimal investment (mostly time) can help you establish a highly visible and rewarding social media outpost on Twitter.

If you’re trying to figure out how social media can be integrated into your corporate communications strategy, follow this simple program. Don’t hire expensive consultants, don’t spend millions of dollars on viral marketing programs, and don’t wait to be shown proven ROI for social media initiatives. Just roll up your sleeves, get on Twitter, be genuine, and actually respond to and assist consumers.

Of course there are other social networks and opportunities to use social media in your corporate communications initiatives, and Twitter hosts a relatively small audience, perhaps two million people. But online, two million people who are extremely well-versed in the use of social media tools can be a very influential audience. Their comments on your company, its willingness to engage with customers, and the quality of its customer support not only reach a potentially much larger audience, but once published, are on the web almost forever to be retrieved via a search on your company name. If those comments are negative, wouldn’t you like the opportunity to respond? And if they’re positive, wouldn’t you like to know that as well?

I’m sure you’ve heard it said hundreds of times, that there’s an online conversation going on about your company. And as much as this is a metaphorical conversation, it is also, in many social networks, forums and chat rooms, an actual conversation in which real people are sharing their experiences with your company.

I was inspired to write this piece as I watched this morning as a well known vehicle rental company come under attack on Twitter. A Twitter user with more than 1500 “friends” commented on a bad experience involving the company. Perhaps feeling that the company didn’t care about his plight, he invited other Twitter users to share their negative experiences with the company, and thus was born a groundswell of negativity. The company in question had no clear presence on Twitter, and did not get involved in the conversation. Here are a few of the comments:

“horrendous service…fails on many levels…poorly maintained trucks too.”
“I’m going to need a moving truck soon…maybe I should try another company this time around”
“abysmal customer service”
“I have had way too many problems with them – bad equipment, oversold equipment, etc.”
To get an idea whether your company is being talked about on Twitter, go to http://www.search.twitter.com, and enter your company name. You will be able to scan, in chronological order, user comments about your company. Whether these are largely negative, positive or neutral, each is an opportunity for you to weigh in, which is perfectly legitimate to do on Twitter. And you would be remiss not to.

It’s difficult for me to say that they “should” have been on Twitter, but I have to ask, why not? One company after another has been in the news as they have established a presence on Twitter and started engaging one-on-one with consumers. I am not exaggerating when I say the cost of being on Twitter is under $500. Twitter membership, even for corporations, is free, but I was allowing $500 to pay for the time to have someone in corporate communications sign up, create a simple graphics backdrop for the page, complete the very brief profile, and begin the conversation.

It’s not that hard to do. I recently wrote on my blog about the Seven Rules for Establishing a Corporate Presence on Twitter. These are very simple guidelines for branding your Twitter account and making it clear to consumers that it is an authorized company communications vehicle.
There are no barriers to Twitter entry. As I said, it costs nothing, and you do not need to create any content, but you do need to identify one or more company spokespeople who can be online periodically to respond to consumer inquiries, questions and concerns. Home Depot’s account is staffed by Sarah, a PR person who has agreed to “moonlight” on Twitter to respond to customer comments and issues. Comcast’s account is staffed by its “digital care” group, and jetBlue’s is managed by the company’s corporate communications team. Surely there are one or two people in your company who are social media savvy, and connected either to your communications or customer support organizations, who can spend 30-60 minutes a day engaging with consumers, solving problems, and improving the company’s reputation. Not doing so doesn’t seem very smart.

Read more articles by Joel at TalentZoo.com under Very Public Relations.

Social media is a topic that no business owner or marketing professional can afford to ignore!

Monday, March 29th, 2010

Social media is a topic that no business owner or marketing professional can afford to ignore. Just about everyone knows what social media is, and that their company should be using it. While no one will tell you to replace all of your traditional marketing efforts with social media marketing, it has become fairly clear that social media should factor into your overall marketing plan in some way.

Why?

HubSpot, an inbound marketing company in Boston, recently surveyed 1,500 consumers and found that:

  • Sixty-seven percent are more likely to purchase products from brands they follow on Twitter.
  • Fifty-one percent are more likely to purchase products from brands they follow on Facebook.
  • Sixty percent are more likely to recommend a brand once they become a fan of it on Facebook.
  • Seventy-nine percent are more likely to recommend a brand once they become a follower of it on Twitter.

A recent Rice University study showed that fans of its test brand, a popular Houston-based bakery and café chain, made 36 percent more visits to the brick and mortar stores than non-fans. Hitwise, a Web analytics firm announced on March 13 that Facebook surpassed Google to become the most visited Web site in the U.S.

Now that we know why social media marketing is important, we also need to know how to do it right. Many of the common mistakes being made by companies new to social media include:

  • Jumping right in without a plan.
  • Not listening to what their audience wants.
  • Forgetting about their brand.
  • Using the same strategy on every site.
  • Abuse of self-promotion or spamming.
  • Starting, stopping, starting, stopping.
  • Not measuring results or reach.

How can you make sure that your company is using the power of social media correctly?

First, companies must designate someone to manage the social media marketing efforts. Secondly, that person (or persons) needs to be trained on how to integrate social media into their marketing plan. While social media marketing may come naturally to some, we find that many struggle with getting started and keeping up the momentum. Getting trained by a professional who is experienced in creating successful social media marketing plans can help those that are new to get over these common hurdles.

Author: Patti Fousek

Don’t build a website that is a static brochure! Your website should be your most valuable marketing system!

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Your website is your online center of operations, but if you use social media as part of your advertising, market positioning and promotional efforts, your presence is scattered across the web.Your website is your online center of operations, but if you use social media as part of your advertising, market positioning and promotional efforts, your presence is scattered across the web.

While establishing a business presence in popular social venues like Facebook and Twitter may be crucial to your online community building initiatives, maintaining that presence can test your endurance and ability to maximize the impact of your efforts. Fortunately, several tools and techniques are available to help you meet these challenges.

Streamline Your Efforts With Feeds

Posting to your company’s blog, your Facebook Fan Page, Twitter, and other social media sites can become quite a burden, especially if you post fresh content at least three to four times a week as I recommend. By implementing an effective feed strategy, you post only once, and you can outsource the distribution to your various social media accounts:

Cross-Promote Your Fan Page and Website With Facebook Connect

On Facebook, you have two business goals–turning Facebook members into Fans and Fans into customers. You do this by using your Fan Page to engage with your audience and steer traffic to your company’s website. At the same time, you should be encouraging website visitors to become Facebook Fans and distribute your content to their Facebook Friends. Facebook offers several basic solutions to accomplish this feat, all of which are accessible from http://www.facebook.com/facebook-widgets:

Fan Box: A Fan Box includes the title of your Fan Page and, optionally, a sample of the most recent posts and a list of Fans.
Page Badge: A Badge is a scaled-down version of a Fan Box. The bare-bones version includes only the name of your Fan Page. You can edit the Badge to include the Fan Page status (a few words of the most recent post), picture and number of fans.
Share: With the Share feature, visitors can share content on your site with their Facebook Friends by simply clicking a button.
Twitter link: With Twitter link, you can have Facebook tweet for you whenever you post Status Updates, Links, Photos, Notes or Events to your Facebook
Page.
Tip: You can find plugins for most blogging platforms that enable visitors to share your posts via their social media accounts. For example, Add to Any for WordPress allows visitors to share posts through Facebook, Twitter, Digg, Reddit, StumbleUpon, and via e-mail.

Facebook also offers some higher-end tools for developers. Implementing these features on your site requires a more advanced skill set:

Publishing to Facebook: This enables Facebook members to publish Status Updates directly from your site, notifying their Facebook Friends of your content.
Comments Box: Facebook members can post a comment about something on your site that appears both on your site and on Facebook.
Live Stream: Facebook Friends can view live video on your site while chatting in real time about what they are watching.
For more about these and other Facebook Connect features, visit developers.facebook.com/connect.php.

Enlist Twitter Users to Spread the Word

You tweet to drive traffic to your site, but what are you doing to recruit brand evangelists to tweet about your business, products and services for you? If the answer is “Nothing,” you have work to do. Twitter offers free widgets and buttons you can add to your site simply by inserting a line of code.

Login to your Twitter account, scroll to the bottom of the page, click Goodies, click Widgets or Buttons, follow the on-screen instructions to obtain the code, and then paste it into your website or blog code where you want the item to appear.

With so many social media venues to attend to, you may feel as though your community-building initiatives are becoming fragmented beyond your control. By coordinating your efforts with a few readily available tools, you regain control, focus and save time, too.

20 Goals for Business Social Media Use

Tuesday, December 15th, 2009

Here are some sample goals a business owner or manager might set for social media use. Once the goal is considered, then you can look at the tools that are out there and evaluate which ones will give you the best shot of achieving those goals.

20 Possible Goals

1. I’m a content provider, and I want to expand my reach.20 Goals for Business Social Media Use

2. I want my customers to be able to stay updated with news about my company.

3. I want to get to know my customers.

4. I want to promote my product.

5. I want to stay abreast of current news and trends.

6. I want to share my ideas with likeminded individuals.

7. I want to increase brand awareness.

8. I want to provide customer service and support easily.

9. I want to find a job.

10. I want to recruit.

11. I want people to like my brand.

12. I want to collaborate on business projects.

13. I want to directly sell a product.

14. I want to earn respect within my industry.

15. I am getting information overload, and I want to get organized.

16. I want to drive traffic to my site.

17. I want to attract advertisers and make money.

18. I want to get more involved with local prospects.

19. I want to get more involved with people on an international and global level.

20. I want to keep up with my competitors.

There are certainly more possible goals for business social media use out there. I’ve not even scratched the surface. What goals do you set for your social media efforts?

Let’s take a look at some of the goals you can strive towards:

Increased Brand Awareness. Content can be created and spread through social media to improve public perception of your brand by evoking specific qualities which make it distinct from others. For new websites or businesses, this pervasive visibility generates brand familiarity. Social media channels can rapidly generate word of mouth and buzz for most brands.
Reputation Management. The goal here is to positively influence the way a potential and existing customer/audience perceives your brand. Work of this nature is less push-orientated and may involve the creation of social media profiles and wikis that rank well on search engines for your brand name.
This also includes monitoring public forums and feedback channels to track and address what is said about your site. Some view this as social media optimization, although I would classify it as pull-marketing.

Improved Search Engine Rankings. When considered within a larger SEO and link building framework, content can be creatively developed and promoted for the purpose of obtaining links from the members of the social news websites.
This means you should primarily target social sites with the highest potential to give you links, instead of smaller-sized communities which only offer interested traffic. While important, your site’s profile need not be entirely relevant to the social media website in question; content can be created specifically to appeal to different audiences.

Increased Relevant Visitor Traffic. If you are only interested in getting interested visitors or users for your website, you should invest more time on social communities which have a high topical relevance.
The social site’s topical focus should be inline with what your site covers/offers. For example, instead of promoting your internet marketing articles through wide platform like Digg, try pushing it on more appropriate communities like Sphinn, because it will get you people who are more likely to follow your site.

Improve Sales for a Product or Service. To effectively increase your product sales, you should release your offer through an influencer who is respected in the community or work through a sponsorship model (contests etc.). Hard selling a social media audience through an overtly commercial profile is not advisable because it will come across as marketing spam.
One solution is to segment the market and focus on being the number one solution for specific user problems. Naturally, you should mostly target communities which are highly relevant to your niche focus because this increases the likelihood for traffic to convert.

Having distinctive goals allows you to embark on mini-campaigns which target specific communities to fulfill individual goals. For instance, you can run a link building campaign through Digg while simultaneously building brand awareness by leveraging social video communities like Youtube or Daily Motion.

Spitting up your campaigns will allow you to more easily examine the general ROI (returns on investment) for each community. Plotting and analyzing your achievements over time will allow you understand which social media channel fulfills your goals the best. This allows you to plan for future marketing initiatives.

New Website Launched: Credit Talk Online

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Credit Talk Online

Credit Talk Online has just launched a new website. The Credit Talk mission is to Inform, Educate and Inspire our audience to learn how to better manage their credit and finances.