Social Media – It’s Your Business

Marketing | StrategyEffective marketing campaigns these days must include social media. Your competitors are gaining a competitive advantage over you if you aren’t embracing social media methods of connecting with your customers. It’s where your customers are.

Social media is an octopus. It invades everything on the Internet and will create a huge mess if you don’t take it seriously. Those tools are fast becoming the single most important way to attract new business customers and sustain old ones.

Actually, social media marketing tools bring us within reach of the ultimate marketer’s dream: reaching the right audience with the right offer at exactly the right time. They reveal who is using your social media content, what they are doing with it and what they want. Social media tools allow you to focus on smaller, more meaningful targets instead of a broad, undefined audience. You gain open collaboration, constructive conversations with your customers. Customers now have the ability to talk to brands: directly interacting with them online socially.

Lots of people – your prospects and customers – are using Facebook™, Twitter™, YouTube™ and others. You can’t afford NOT to participate. People talk to each other using these channels. They talk about what they do, what they like, what they buy. Customers trust their online friends’ recommendations almost as much as they trust their real-life friends’ advice. You can’t buy better advertising for any amount of money.

When customers want to gather information about a product or service, they Google™. Utilizing social media will help your company’s product or service appear near the top of their search results.

Using social media also gives you an advantage of being able to monitor the buzz about your business. A dissatisfied customer can easily tell their online network almost immediately. If you use social media and monitor your reputation, you’ll be alerted to such a complaint and be able to respond quickly to address the issue before it gets out of hand. This is an important and powerful tool.

Before you start, don’t forget to develop a solid social media strategy, stick to it and engage your followers. If you do, you are well on your way to becoming an online collaborator and influencer.

Here are a few suggestions to get you started. Start with one of these. Then, as you get more comfortable in the social media space, expand out to another.

  1. Facebook: Engage your followers with a Fan Page. Keep them aware of new products or features, weekly specials, events, promotions, contests and place content that will drive traffic to your Website or blog.
  2.  Twitter: Follow your followers and those tweeting about what interests you and your business.
  3. Blog: Start blogging and add content frequently based on what your customers are looking for. Post informative content and your customers will more likely to give you repeat business.
  4.  YouTube Channel: Do you ever wish you had a YouTube video that went viral? I can’t assure you that yours will, but I can guarantee it won’t if you never post a video.
  5. Linking Tools: I use Hootsuite.com, but there are many others. You can use them on your computer or cellphone, schedule tweets, reply to tweets, track trends, keywords and see who is talking about your business. You can easily integrate your text message or “ping” to broadcast to all of your social media networks when you choose.

By using these five tools, you will be well on your way to gaining valuable mind share with your customers.

Social media is not an end in itself. It is not the silver bullet for business success. Yet, it is a hugely important tool to include in your marketing strategy. The days of simply ‘broadcasting’ your product, your service, your image, are gone.

Your image is what the customers say it is. To be successful, a business needs to be engaged in open collaboration online with customers via social media.

The Skinny on … Your Unique Value

The Skinny On...

Why is your company different? What sets you apart? How are you different from your competition? Once stated, can your claim be backed up?

You need to be able to answer these questions to have a powerful positioning statement that will entice a prospect or customer to deal with your company.

You need to excite your prospects and customers with a distinctive statement that is the real benefit value of your company, services or products.

Clearly work out why you are different and demonstrate this value to your customers in as few words as possible. You need to consistently use this unique value proposition in your marketing and networking.

The Power of Public Relations Versus Advertising

Good public relations is a carefully planned, sustained effort to establish your company identity, maintain credibility and promote communications between your company and its public. It means getting the word about your company to the media so that they, in turn, will keep your name and good deeds in front of their audience—your potential customers.

Many PR professionals don’t like to say that PR is marketing. But, it is one of the most effective ways to successfully market your company’s information.

You can make PR pay off for you if you tailor (market) your messages directly to your customer’s current situations. This will help create trust between your company
and its stakeholders.

PR means getting stories written or broadcast about your company in the local press, business media, trade publications, radio, television and other media outlets depending on the audience you want to reach. PR is an information message about your company.

The public can be cynical. They have lots of advertising messages directed to them on a daily basis. But, when people read media articles, hear or see something about your company in the press, they’re going to take them more seriously than they do ads, especially, if you get a third party – a customer or expert of some kind – to comment positively in an article about your company. That lends you enormous credibility, it’s good content that’s not coming from you.

Editorial contributions have a much longer shelf life and greater pass-through value than ads. This becomes especially true if you order reprints from a publisher or a DVD of your television or radio appearance and circulate them further to your employees, customers and others, and put them on your Website.

PR placements build relationships between companies and publishers, and editors covering specific markets, thus opening the door for your continued contribution as an information resource when they need an opinion or quote for an article.

A strategic approach to PR will build recognition for your company. A few ways to do this is to: employ different methods and channels of communication to achieve the most effective structuring and delivery of your company message; showcase executives as experts in your industry by using newspapers, magazines, radio, television and the Web as a very visible way to build consistent, broad scale recognition of executives as an authoritative source of information, which would consequently lead to a higher profile and elevate their role within the industry; and position executives as key industry spokespeople for the purpose of increasing visibility, and through that expertise educate the public about the vital role of your company within its industry.

PR is much more than just press releases. It’s about branding, internal and external communications, media relations, story development, writing and much more.

And, don’t forget to spread your news much further using social media venues such as Facebook, Twitter and your Blog.