6 Tips For Traditional Marketers With No Social Media Marketing Game
ABOUT KARI DEPHILLIPS
Kari DePhillips is the owner of The Content Factory and
co-founder of Workationing. She's been featured everywhere from Fast Company to
Forbes to NBC News for her management style and digital marketing expertise,
and Thrive calls her a "limit‑breaking female founder." See
all posts by Kari DePhillips.
Let’s be honest, no one starts social media marketing just
to stick with the same 50 friends or interact only with their original 100
followers. As much as you love your Aunt Mildred’s enthusiasm for your new
business or your old co-worker’s dedication to your new venture, at some point
you’re going to want to branch out to new customers. You want as many people to
know about your business as possible, but sometimes you may feel like you are
grinding your wheels in the mud of the same-old-same.
Online PR is a little different than traditional public
relations. It’s still important to reach out to your customers (they’re paying
the bills, after all), but the ability to connect and interact with customers
on a personal level is what sets the social media marketing apart from
traditional marketing. It may seem a little complicated at first, but these six
tips will keep you on the right track:
Avoid the sales pitch. Successful social media marketing is
not about flashy salesperson gimmicks. Instead of focusing on the sales, zero
in on the person – you. By being honest with your company’s intention and how
your products/services can benefit customers, they’ll appreciate seeing the
person behind the title.
Be indispensable. Another common misconception about online
PR is that it must be utilized at all times. Updating on the hour, every hour,
is a good idea – but only if you have something valuable to say. Post links to
interesting and relevant articles with thoughtful commentary, and you’ll start
to be viewed as a resource instead of a vendor. 140 characters can go a long
way!
Stay visible. Many companies have multiple social media
accounts, but unless you’re telling people about them, they probably have no
idea. Don’t wait for your clients to find you. Use online PR to its fullest and
feature the links on your website, e-mails and blog – you’ll get much more
attention when you’re easily visible. While basking in your popularity, take
the time to make sure your spelling, punctuation and grammar are on point. Web
content writing is about communicating clearly and effectively (and you won’t
do either if you’re distracting people with your lack of attention to detail).
Reply to people who comment on your posts. You have
interested, vocal customers and you are…not saying anything. This is the
quickest way to lose their interest (or develop a bad reputation, if you don’t
respond quickly to negative comments). Social media marketing is about
connecting in ways that were once impossible. Answer their questions and jump
in discussions about your company on blog, and do so on a regular basis.
Updating once a week or checking for blog comments every few days doesn’t allow
for the real-time interaction people have come to expect.
Update often. Letting the cobwebs grow on your accounts will
make your customers looks elsewhere. After determining your content
prerogative, don’t be shy. Keep the content fresh like a Summer’s Eve
commercial – this includes your blog, too.
But don’t update too often. An easy mistake is to flood your
social media accounts with updates every few minutes. Space them out
(especially for Facebook, think every couple of days instead of every couple of
hours), unless you want to specialize in serving spam to your network.
With social media marketing, questions are answered faster,
problems are fixed sooner and new ideas are created. This means that you need
to respond quickly, or risk falling behind. Keep on top of new trends, and try
to be among the first to break important industry news whenever you can –
eventually, your online PR efforts will pay off with an increase in fans,
followers and site traffic. You’ll also get more backlinks than you’ve ever had
before, all without having to pay an Indian company to spam random blogs.

 
 
 
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