- Knowledge Base
- Charities and Social Media
- External Insight
- Categories and Classifications
- Facebook Techniques
- Marketing Techniques
- Mobile
- Social Media Ethics
- Social Media Legal Issues
- Social Media Strategy
- Social Media Techniques
- 20 Essential Social Media Resources You May Have Missed
- 5 Easy Ways to Recycle Your Content (While Still Staying Sane)
- 5 Personal Branding Tips to Help You Gate Jump
- 5 Simple Ways SMB’s Can Adopt Social Media
- 5 Ways to Market with Social Bookmarketing
- Build Your Brand a Social Content Ladder in 5 Steps
- Debunking Five Social Media Myths
- Don't read this you'll hate it
- Drilling Down on the US Army's Social Media Matrix-- Is Too Much Not Enough?
- Essential reading for online community managers
- Give someone a social hand and write a review
- HOW TO: Deal With Negative Feedback in Social Media
- How to Create a Killer Company Blog
- How to Generate Leads on SlideShare
- Improving Website and Wordpress Performance with Hard-Coded Share Buttons
- Legitimizing Your Lackluster LinkedIn
- Social Media Contests – Participation is Not Always Easy to Come By
- Social Media Techniques
- Social Media vs Social Communication: 6 Ways To Spread Thought Leadership Content Without Blogging
- The 10 Social Media Metrics Your Company Should Monitor
- The Roles of Facebook and Twitter in Social Media Marketing
- Social Media Technology
- Social Media Time Management
- Social Media Traps and Risks
- Social Media and Blogs
- Social Media and IFAs
- Social Media and ROI
- Social Media and Search
- Transforming Your Organisation for Social Media
- Trends and Statistics
- Twitter Techniques
- Membership Organisations and Social media
- Social Media Tools Defined
Social Media marketing is rapidly earning a role in the integrated marketing mix of small and enterprise businesses and as such, it’s transforming every division from the inside out. What starts with one champion in any given division, be it customer service, marketing, public relations, advertising, interactive, et al, eventually inspires an entire organization to socialize. What starts with one, a domino effect usually ensues toppling each department, gaining momentum, and triggering a sense of urgency through its path. And, it also marks the beginning of our journey through theten stages of social media integration. But where do we start? This is a recurring theme here as businesses typically jump into Social Media without crafting a strategic plan rooted in goals and objectives. Nor do companies weigh the impact of engagement on the brand itself as social media champions, depending on the department in which they reside, typically monitor and engage in conversations that typically would lie outside of its domain. MarketingProfs conducted a survey of business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) marketers and the results are worth revisiting as they typify a basic view of the opportunities rife within the social Web. Examining these numbers and more importantly, the social media programs currently employed, will help us innovate and evolve. Successful Facebook Marketing TacticsCreated a survey of fans B2B – 37.1% Surveys are an effective way to garner feedback to continue to earn ongoing relevance. Surveys can range from satisfaction levels, behavior around the prospect or act of referrals, votes towards new policies and services or simply used for entertainment. At the very least, surveys inject variety into the Facebook stream to foster new opportunities for engagement and communication. “Friending” recent customers with corporate Facebook profile B2B – 34.4% It should not go unsaid that this activity goes against Facebook’s Terms of Service. But with limited and hierarchical functionality of Fan Pages, creating a branded profile is one worthy of consideration. The interaction that fosters in profiles is radically different that those within Fan Pages. It’s the difference between peer-to-peer conversations and top-down broadcasting. Until Facebook realizes the value of commercial accounts, you must tread carefully. Facebook arbitrarily flags and deletes the branded profile accounts as they’re discovered. Used Facebook user data to profile customers demographics or interests B2B – 33.5% In social media marketers experiment with programs that balance demographics, the categorization of people by age group, gender, education, income, etc, and psychographics, the grouping of people by interests, passions, and connections. Believe it or not, there are services that exist today that can mine data on Facebook to help marketers profile prospects. Outside of those services, many marketers also manually examine the individuals within their social graphs to garner insight into new initiatives and potential trends. Created a Facebook application around the brand B2B – 33.1% Facebook applications are not guaranteed to earn an audience simply because they’re created. Users are overwhelmed with options for applications and their adoption of new apps are related more to the activity of their friends than to their allegiance to any particular brand. However, they are not ineffective either. According to the survey, MarketingProfs learned that applications were among the most “successful” tactic used by B2B and B2C companies. Driving traffic to corporate materials through status updates B2B – 29% I’m a big believer in defining the experience. Eventually users engaged in social networks will click through to something, whether it’s something you shared or a social object they discovered. Where are we sending them? Chances are that they are landing on a message-rich, usually lifeless and generic web page or even worse, the company home page. Essentially we captivate people in a highly interactive and social environment and direct them to a static dead-end where they are left to define their next clicks without a renewed sense of creativity. This tactic, I should mention, was reported as the most common tactic. Buying targeted CPC ads B2B – 24.5% Targeted CPC (cost-per-click) ads on Facebook are only as effective as the intention and experience to which they’re tied. Many businesses use these ads to increase the number of fans on a fan page or also to promote corporate material. In my work, they have offered a minimum impact on increasing fans and delivered notable results in driving traffic to pre-defined experiences. Marketers claimed that buying ads is among the least effective of the mix. Successful Twitter Marketing TacticsWhen we think of social media marketing, Facebook and Twitter usually go hand-in-hand. Fan us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Like Facebook, marketers viewed Twitter as a primary source for generating traffic. As such, most marketers reported using Twitter to send users to marketing Web pages and they seemed to be pleased with the results. Monitor Twitter for PR problems in real-time B2B – 40.7% 1/2 of all B2C marketers polled reported using Twitter to unearth potential PR problems. As we saw with the now epic Motrin Moms example, a PR problem can materialize at any moment, with little warning. B2B marketers also reported monitoring twitter as part of a proactive crises communications program. Created an in-person event using only Twitter invites B2B – 37.4% I smirked when I read this. The wording is a very specific and perhaps it doesn’t capture the true story behind the opportunity. Suddenly every brand wants to host a Tweetup. While businesses use Twitter-only invite services such as TWTVITE to promote a brand-related Tweetup, hitting only users on Twitter limits the scope of the potential audience. In my experience, I’ve learned that by extending the visibility of the event beyond Twitter to Facebook Events and also services such as Upcoming.org and Eventful, we can appeal to not only a wider audience, but also trigger highly productive and effective social graphs in the process – perhaps more so than possible in Twitter. A question for you though, if a Tweetup is promoted on any other social network, is it still a Tweetup? Contacting Twitter users tweeting negatively about the brand B2B – 36.7% While this is a shared tactic between PR and customer service, this is a program that requires some form of workflow and process tied to it. It’s very easy to confuse who should respond to which tweets and who already did versus which tweets require response. As you venture deeper into the world of monitoring and responding to negative or hostile tweets, you should note that consumers are learning that taking to Twitter begets a response. And, with every response they earn from brands, they along with others, are encouraged, and as such, conditioned to increase their activity of voicing complaints in a public spotlight. Driving traffic by linking to Web pages B2B – 35.7% Again, similar to Facebook, we need to redefine the experience. Sending prospects, customers, and influencers to Web 1.0 pages is not an extension of the Twitter culture nor the expectations that define it. Provocative text to drive link clicks B2B – 34.8% I found this to be an interesting survey question. I suppose that if businesses are sharing content in a compelling wrapper that doesn’t employ sensationalism or the equivalent of marketing parlor tricks, then these numbers represent effectiveness. However, if Tweets are rich with gimmicks, then these numbers dictate an alarming trend. As the saying goes, “Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me.” To earn attention nowadays requires a level of creativity that mirrors the methodologies of creative advertising and marketing fused with the grounding of strategic communications and marketing. Attention only continues to thin and therefore requires planning and editorial programming to ensure relevance and appeal. Invite Twitter users who tweet positively about a brand to do… B2B – 34% There are many programs that are led by marketing, PR, and customer service that attempt to transform positive tweets into the basis for an advocacy or official ambassador program. As this tactic increases in ubiquity, consumers are getting wise to the power in social media. Like in the aspect of negative tweets, consumers are also learning that while money doesn’t grow on trees, it does grow on tweets. Meaning, consumers expect something for their loyalty. Consider this prior to engaging. Increased Twitter followers using traditional media mention B2B – 30.7% Timing Tweets to maximize views B2B – 26.9% As attention spans thin, we realize that there’s an art and science to what we tweet and when. As documented by Dan Zarrella, there are various times and days that reveal when the attention aperture is open and people are amenable to hearing messages and clicking through to shared links.
This, my friends, is the true opportunity and challenge within Twitter. We become media programmers, and as such, our content as well as timing and promotion dictate the size of the audience and the resulting activity. Driving sales by linking to promotional Web pages B2B – 22.4% Dell paved the way for this category and continues to do so. If you were to read the report, you might believe that they are the exception however. Most respondents claimed that this tactic was among the least effective. Perhaps that’s because many of the respondents didn’t anticipate the needs and drivers of their followers. Dell, among other companies, has learned that there are indeed triggers that engender responses in the form of commerce. What’s more important, consumers are reporting that they follow brands to learn of deals and special offers. And, 64% of consumers reported that they make a purchase from a brand because of a digital experience via a Website, microsite, mobile coupon, or e-mail. In 2010, we are inspiring a new era of socialized marketing and engagement. Link to original post: The Roles of Facebook and Twitter in Social Media Marketing
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