5 Social Media Best Practices You Should Have Been Implementing Yesterday
Get a free consultationWith the arrival of social media marketing, a new paradigm of online marketing was thus established. Within this new inbound marketing format, advertisements began to dwindle and companies were forced to produce value added content to compete.
Social media marketing remains the linchpin of all other inbound marketing strategies, including email marketing and content marketing. Creating a social media presence for your business can open up new growth opportunities by expanding your brand’s exposure and affinity.
Every business should have established objectives before tinkering with their social media presence. Set goals early and monitor them throughout. Simply having a Facebook account is meaningless without creating value for your customers.
Are your social media posts getting very little interactions? Uncertain about what strategies to use to improve your presence? We’ve got 5 easy and free tips to help you boost your social shares and improve that referral marketing campaign.
Build Relationships not Traffic
Fostering an online community provides a higher ROI than acquiring new customers- it’s also cheaper. This follows the 80/20 rule of marketing, which states 80% of your sales will be generated by 20% of your consumer base who is loyal to your brand.
Social media marketing allows you to keep your brand up-to-date with your existing customer base and should not be confused with an outbound marketing campaign. According to Ambassador, 71% of customers who had a positive social media experience with a brand are more likely to recommend it to others.
Brand advocacy markets your products for you- it’s also free!
Growing your audience and building relationships with industry thought leaders positions your brand to become a leading voice and an influencer. Before acquiring this status, it’s key to partner with influencers early on who will endorse and market your brand for you. This could be accomplished through a sponsorship, engaging with them directly and sharing their content.
These strategies should be standard practice. Stamp your name on every relevant piece of content that you’d want your brand name attached to.
Engage with your audience by honoring any feedback you receive, encouraging user-generated content submissions, and engaging in community groups/forums. Follow your followers and listen to any industry buzz relevant to your business or your competitors.
Social media is also the ultimate user-review resource so it’s important to immediately respond to any feedback or criticism to mitigate any negative exposure. Through strong social engagement you can be proactive, rather than reactive, in curating a positive social media presence.
*Once you’ve established your brand’s identity and have your customers resting in the palm of your hand, drop a promotion or sale directly in front of them for an easy sale.
Provide Value
Content quality always trumps quantity. Examples of highly shareable content include, tutorials, infographics, videos, and long form blog posts.
One strategy that many brands take advantage of is a behind-the-scenes story about the company itself. According to OneSpot, of the 100,000+ words online users encounter in a day, 92% of users want to consume a brand story at some point in this procession.
Share content, self-produced or not, that provides utility for your customers. This could even include a funny meme or a how-to guide from an industry publication.
You’re essentially establishing your own syndicated content platform. Make your customers turn to you for news and information. Provide value that will entice users to engage with your brand in the first place.
More importantly, the content you share will provide valuable backlinks for your website and help to improve its search engine rankings. This will align perfectly with your multi-channel marketing campaign.
Your highest shared and compounding posts could also be featured on your website homepage and in a company e-newsletter.
Create a Post Calendar
Did you know that overposting can actually harm your brand’s image and reduce the amount of shares you get on a post? It’s important to create a post calendar and brainstorm topics for posts throughout the week. Your social media calendar should probably conform to your content marketing calendar in some way.
Ideally, you should only post to Facebook 3 times a day for maximum engagement. Research what times of day each channel receives the highest engagement. For example, businesses receive the highest engagement over Facebook between Thursday through Sunday. On the other hand, Wednesday at noon is Twitter’s peak engagement period for the week.
More importantly, you’ll want to know which social media channels to post to based on your audience’s psychographic data. Expanding on this notion, specific categories of content will receive higher engagement on certain days and over certain channels.
Light and interactive content over Facebook will receive higher engagement during the workday on Friday than Monday. LinkedIn is the ideal platform to produce long form and industry niche content for a professional based audience. Consider what types of engagement you wish to receive with each post and strategically plan and place each post for maximum engagement.
Brands generally follow the seven-in-one rule of posting, which states that out of every seven posts, one should be focused on self-promotion. Every other post should be about value-added content. Factor this into your content calendar and add columns for the date and social media channels you’ll share each piece of content on.
*Be sure to brand each post you create and use this opportunity to create your author’s voice.
Interactive and Seasonal Content
Seek audience engagement by providing interactive content with value. Interactive content, such as quizzes, contests, and giveaways are great choices to entice user clicks and consumer brand engagement. This will promote a positive branded experience.
Some experts suggest focusing on your local market, as you will have the easiest time fostering brand recognition and a community immediately at your reach. One of the best forms of interactive content is hosting an event that draws people to your physical offline location.
In the midst of sharing your blog posts, you could simply ask your followers a provocative or interesting question that encourages debate and discussion. You could host Q/As or live streams that encourages users to post questions to the feed.
This will show the human side of your brand.
Speaking of which, studies show that customers demand brands to tell more stores. Whether it’s advertising your corporate wellness programs or local community sponsorships, brand storytelling reaches customers on a personal level and is authentic.
Seasonal content or sharing trending content shows your audience you have your finger on the pulse. If conducted at the right time, some seasonal content has the potential to compound and draw a mass audience to your site for a short period of time. Seasonal content can also be reposted one year later.
Analytics
Finally, assess how well your social media strategy is aligning with your bottom line. Actively track key performance indicators, such as the amount of referral traffic generated from social media channels and the social signals each piece of content is acquiring.
There are many analytics tools your business could use, such as Hootsuite and Buffer. Webmasters can use this track the amount of email subscribers or website subscribers that they collect from each post and channel.
If you have Google Analytics activated on your website you can insert a tracking code that will actively the amount of times somebody shares a blog post from your website.
The important thing to remember is patience. Results will develop slowly over time and abandoning your strategies early on will plague your inbound marketing strategy.
Final Thoughts
Social media is a community platform, not a marketplace for your brand. The focus of any inbound marketing strategy is to pull customers closer to you and this requires consistent engagement and value added content.
Align your content marketing strategies with your social media outreach to retain customers and create demand for your products. In an interconnected world, brand affinity remains the most formidable weapon in a business’s arsenal to separate itself from the crowd.