- 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
- Reasons Every Business Needs to be on Twitter
- 10 Proven Applications For Social Media
- 10 Small Business Social Media Marketing Tips
- 10 Ways a Start-Up Can Use Social Media to Market Itself
- 5 Social Media Myths
- 5 Warning Signs of a Weak Social Media Strategy
- A Blog is a Better Social Media Hub Than Twitter
- Are You Taking Social Media Shortcuts?
- Are You ‘Living’ or ‘Existing’ in Social Media?
- Brands need to be careful about joining the social media bandwagon
- Business Development
- Creating a Social Networking Strategy
- Curating, not moderating, the flow of content and participation
- Don't Be Transparent, Be Authentic Instead
- Europe View: Coke, Unilever Drop Campaign Sites in Favour of Social Media
- Evolution: The Eight Stages Of Listening
- Financial Services: Branding and Trust
- Five Benefits of Social Media Marketing
- Free Tools for Social SEO
- Having A Punt On Social Media
- How To Increase Your Business By Relinquishing Control
- How to Use Article Marketing as Part of Your Social Media Strategy
- How to maximize revenue through social media
- How “Social” is Your Bank?
- How-To: Influence Influencers- Bloggers, Tweeters & Others
- Medical research and social media: Can wikis be used as a publishing platform in medicine?
- Opporunities and Risks with Twitter Advertising
- Optimizing Brands for Social Search
- PubCon 2009: How Major Vegas Hotels Are Using Social Media
- Should a Blog or Twitter be Your Social Media Hub?
- Social Media Checklist for Small and Medium Size Businesses
- Social Media Is Not a Condiment
- Social Media Success In 1 Step: Education
- Social Media: Engage and Change
- Social Media: The Science of Eavesdropping
- Social media: the best and worst of 2009
- Ten Things Social Media Can't Do
- The 10 Stages of Social Media Business Integration
- The Awareness Scale: How Social Media, PR & Advertising Now Work Together
- The Big Three Social Networks Have Emerged as Professional Networks: LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter
- The Brand Dashboard: A Window to Relevance
- The Four Spheres Of Social Media Strategy
- There’s an I in Twitter and a ME in Social Media
- Twitter hasn't hit the mainstream yet and won't for some time
- Use Social Media to spot issues before they hit the Contact Center!
- Where Brands Can Engage Customers On Twitter And Social Networks
- Why Social Media Is Vital to Corporate Social Responsibility
- Word of Mouth from non-loyal customers has the biggest impact on sales
- You May Monitor For Crises, But Do You Monitor For Opportunity?
- Social Media Techniques
- 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
The divine corporate blogging expert Debbie Weil recently asked this question on her blog, as part of a Kindle version refresh of her excellent book “The Corporate Blogging Book.” Debbie asked me to think about whether a blog should be the social media hub – your epicenter, the place where you’re trying to bring your customers and prospects. Based largely on the comment I left on her blog, here’s what I think. What about you?
It depends on the objectives the company has for its social media efforts. Maybe Facebook Is Your Hub?If the objective is to interact with current customers, keeping your product or service top -of-mind and building kinship with the brand, Facebook may in fact be the best hub, given its inherent sociability, ease-of-use, and large audience. However, I’m always troubled by companies putting too much emphasis on Facebook (New England Patriots, Vitamin Water and many others are favoring Facebook over their corporate Web sites/blogs). Do you really want to build your social media program on what amounts to rented land? One terms of service change and your social media program has to scramble. Maybe a Private Community is Your Hub?If your social media efforts tilt toward customer service and market research, a private brand community might be the true hub. Something like Communispace or My Starbucks Idea. This is where you might have the best engagement and insight flow. But, these are typically tip of the iceberg communities from a numbers standpoint, and may not have the breadth to really be considered the “hub”. Paul Gillin (whose blog is excellent) mentioned in the comments that he viewed Twitter as a satellite opportunity, not a hub per se. I agree. I see Twitter as a complementary tool for all the others – with the possible exception of a focused customer support program like @comcastcares or @twelpforce where Twitter is really a post-modern 800 number that has freestanding benefit to the company and its customers. Yeah, Probably Your BlogGenerally, I do believe a blog is the best hub for most social media efforts. First, because blogs can be significantly more social than most corporate Web sites. Second, because blogs are typically not burdened with all the product info, support info, background info and other semi-useful pages that corporate Web sites need to support that mostly just get in the way. Think of a Christmas tree that didn’t include the crappy ornaments that you got from your parents but feel obligated to hang, but only displays cool ornaments you bought from yourself, or that your kids made. That’s the navigational and information architecture advantage of a blog. Not to mention that blogs are far superior to corporate Web sites, Facebook pages, and Twitter accounts with regard to inbound marketing. If your social media objective is even tangentially about attracting new customers, the SEO value of the blog alone makes it a suitable hub. Lastly, the longer-form nature of blogging makes it ideal for developing connections between the company and customers. There is only so much humanization you can do in 140 characters – even in somewhat longer Facebook posts. Sure, you need to have a variety of social media presences to accommodate the usage patterns of your customers and fans. (Great interview here with Steve Rubel about that). But, unlike Rubel I believe you have to have a nucleus for your social media strategy that the other outposts orbit. All good companies are made up of great people. Social media lets you prove it, and blogs are still the best way to do so. Right? (photo by yumyumbubblegum) Link to original postConvince and Convert. Social media strategy and actionable ideas from Jason Baer.
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