Making Your Social Debut
Like any form of marketing, social media takes some thought. It can become an enormous siphon of your time, and short-term profits are rare. Social media marketing is a long-term commitment.
So, should you or shouldn’t you invest time and effort in this marketing avenue? If you answer in the affirmative, you immediately confront another decision: What form should that investment take? The number of options is overwhelming; you can never use every technique and certainly can’t do them all at once. In fact, if you’re on social platforms that aren’t appropriate for your brand, you could be doing more harm than good. Don’t worry, though, we discuss how to determine the appropriate places to be online in Chapter 3 of this book. If you take our advice, chances are you won’t run into that problem.
Figure 1-1 shows that most small businesses involved in social media use Facebook, with Instagram and Twitter coming in second and third place.
Adapted from eMarketer
FIGURE 1-1: Facebook still reigns supreme as the top social media platform that marketers use.
Defining Social Media Marketing
The bewildering array of social media (which seem to breed new services faster than rabbits can reproduce) makes it hard to discern what they have in common: shared information, often on a peer-to-peer basis. Although many social media messages look like traditional broadcasts from one business to many consumers, their interactive component offers an enticing illusion of one-to-one communication that invites individual readers to respond.
The phrase social media marketing generally refers to using these online services for relationship selling — selling based on developing rapport with customers. Social media services make innovative use of new online technologies to accomplish the familiar communication and marketing goals of this form of selling.
The tried-and-true strategies of marketing (such as solving customers’ problems and answering the question, “What’s in it for me?”) are still valid. Social media marketing is simply a technique, not an entire marketing strategy.
This book covers a variety of social media services (sometimes called social media channels or platforms). We use the phrase social media site to refer to a specific named online service or product.
You can categorize social media services, but they have fuzzy boundaries that can overlap. Some social media sites fall into multiple categories. For example, some social networks and online communities allow participants to share photos and include a blog.
Here are the different types of social media services:
Social content-sharing services: These services facilitate posting and commenting on text, videos, photos, and podcasts.Blogs and content-posting sites: Websites designed to let you easily update or change content and to allow readers to post their own opinions or reactions.Examples of blog tools are WordPress, Typepad, Blogger, Medium, and Tumblr. Blogs may be hosted on third-party sites (apps) or integrated into your own website using software.Video: Examples are YouTube, Vimeo, Periscope, and TikTok.Images: Flickr, Photobucket, Instagram, Snapchat, LinkedIn SlideShare, Pinterest, and Picasa. Figure 1-2 shows how Blue Rain Gallery attracts followers on Instagram by highlighting some of the beautiful works of art it sells.Audio: Buzzsprout, Transistor, or BlogTalkRadio.Courtesy of Blue Rain GalleryFIGURE 1-2: The Instagram page for Blue Rain Gallery uses strong images to grab viewers’ attention.
Social-networking services: Originally developed to facilitate the exchange of personal information (messages, photos, video, and audio) to groups of friends and family, these full-featured services offer multiple functions. From a business point of view, many social-networking services support subgroups that offer the potential for more targeted marketing. Common types of social-networking services includeFull networks, such as Facebook and Pinterest. Figure 1-3 shows how SVN/Walt Arnold Commercial Brokerage, Inc. uses its Facebook page to build its brand and enhance community relations.Courtesy of SVN/Walt Arnold Commercial Brokerage, Inc.FIGURE 1-3: As part of its community-branding activities, Walt Arnold Commercial Brokerage describes its donation of filled backpacks and diaper bags to foster children.Short message networks such as Twitter are often used for news, announcements, events, sales notices, and promotions. In Figure 1-4, Albuquerque Economic Development uses its Twitter account at https://twitter.com/abqecondev
to assist new and expanding businesses in the Albuquerque, NM area.Courtesy of Albuquerque Economic DevelopmentFIGURE 1-4: Twitter is an excellent way for Albuquerque Economic Development to announce news about local industry.Professional networks, such as LinkedIn and small profession-specific networks. Figure 1-5 shows how Array Technologies uses its LinkedIn Page to make announcements, impart company news, and attract employees.Courtesy of Array Technologies, Inc.FIGURE 1-5: Array Technologies uses its LinkedIn presence to provide company updates.Specialty networks with unique content, such as the Q&A network Quora, or that operate within a vertical industry, demographic, or activity segment, as opposed to by profession or job title.
Social-bookmarking services: Similar to private bookmarks for your favorite sites on your computer, social bookmarks are publicly viewable lists of sites that others have recommended. Some areRecommendation services, such as Mix and DiggSocial-shopping services, such as Wanelo and ThisNextOther bookmarking services organized by topic or application, such as sites where readers recommend books to others using bookmarking techniques
Social news services: On these peer-based lists of recommended articles from news sites, blogs, or web pages, users often vote on the value of the postings. Social news services includeDiggRedditOther news sites
Social geolocation and meeting services: These services bring people together in real space rather than in cyberspace:FoursquareMeetupOther GPS (Global Positioning System) applications, many of which operate on mobile phonesOther sites for organizing meet-ups
Community-building services: Many comment- and content-sharing sites have been around for a long time, such as forums, message boards, and Yahoo! and Google groups.Other examples areCommunity-building sites with multiple sharing features, such as NingWikis, such as Wikipedia, for group-sourced contentReview sites, such as TripAdvisor, Yelp, and Trustpilot to solicit consumer views
As you surf the web, you can find dozens, if not hundreds, of social tools, apps (freestanding online applications), and widgets (small applications placed on other sites, services, or desktops). These features monitor, distribute, search, analyze, and rank content. Many are specific to a particular social network, especially Twitter. Others are designed to aggregate information across the social media landscape, including such monitoring tools as Google Alerts, Mention.net, or Social Mention, or such distribution tools as RSS (really simple syndication), which allows frequently updated data to be posted automatically to locations requested by subscribers.
Book 2 offers a survey of many more of these tools; specific social media services are covered in their respective books.