Friday, 30 October 2015
CRM2Plus intro
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Thursday, 22 October 2015
4 Ways Brands Are Still Getting Social Networking Wrong (And What to Do About It)
By now everybody (unless you’ve been living under a rock for
the past 10 years) is aware of how relevant social media is to brand-building
and brand awareness. Not everyone has yet embraced its usefulness, but each
day, more and more people get onboard. Facebook alone now has 1.5 billion
users. Just think about the potential reach! If you’re not using social media
to generate brand awareness, you’re not doing yourself any favors.
That being said, if you are
using social media, but not using it effectively, you’re wasting your time. Here
are 4 ways that brands are doing it wrong – and how they/you can get it right…
1. Boasting & Hard-Selling Rather Than
Engaging
Stop being so narcissistic! People don’t
care about how wonderful your products or services are nearly as much as you
think they do. At least not if you’re shoving it down their throats at every
given opportunity. Take it down a notch. Engage with your social networking
audience. Post things that are relevant, interesting, fun, engaging and most of
all, useful. Not just things that tout your brand as being the best thing since
sliced bread. You know the old expression, “If you build it, they will come”?
Well, build your brand by engaging your audience and making them want to engage
with you – and customers will start rollin’ in. Remember, people don’t like to
be sold to – they like to be intrigued and informed and entertained.
2. Trying to Make Use of Every Social Platform
Known to Mankind
There’s such a thing as overkill. Are you
aware of just how many social platforms are in existence today? It’s not just
Facebook and Twitter anymore. Not by a long shot. Here’s
a list of just 21 of the most popular – and that’s just the tip of the
iceberg. No matter how large your staff is, you couldn’t possibly have the
resources to keep an engaging social media campaign going on each and every
platform. Sure, your brand would be represented on all of em’, but not well and
not effectively. So, focus on the sites where your most of your customers are –
Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn are good bets, but do your research – and limit
your social networking endeavors to the sites that will bring you the most
traffic.
3. Not Responding to Customer Comments – the
Good, the Bad and the Ugly
Ah – now this is a biggie! What’s the good
of being on social media if you’re not going to be social?? When a customer or
prospective customer comments on one of your posts, whether it be on Facebook,
Twitter, Google+ or your blog, whatever you do, RESPOND! And not just to the
positive and happy comments. And none of that automated bull that so many
brands like to make use of. Social networking is for being human – not for
being a brand stuck somewhere in the vast cyberspace. Remember the part about
engaging? Well, it’s a two-way street. If someone says something glowing about
your product or service, or even just makes a nice comment on one of your
posts, thank them and tell them that you appreciate their input/insight. And if
someone posts a comment that’s not quite so complimentary or that voices a
complaint or opposing view, thank them and tell them that you appreciate their
input/insight – and then (if it’s a complaint), let them know that you’re sorry
that their interaction with your brand wasn’t as positive as it could have been
and offer them something that will hopefully rectify the situation. But
whatever you do, don’t ignore people on social media. And double whatever you
do, don’t engage negatively on social media. Telling someone to take a flying
leap because they were less than satisfied with a service you provided isn’t
the way to make social media work for you.
4. Creating Boring, Useless Content Rather
than Helpful and Fresh Content On Facebook, you know the guy who
constantly posts what he had for breakfast or that his new baby just learned
her fifth word? Well, don’t be that guy. No one wants to engage with that guy.
No one, other than his mother, cares! What you want to post is useful content -
helpful content that’s relevant to your brand and to your industry. Can you
post the odd joke or general interest story? Of course. No one’s saying that
you have to be all business all the time, but for goodness sake,
don’t start boring the stuffing out of people, or you’re not only going to lose
your social networking audience, you’re going to lose your customers due to
lack of credibility – and boring people to death. Keep it fresh and upbeat and
engaging and useful. Answer questions, offer solutions and keep people coming
back to read your posts because they’re acquiring information there that
they’re not going to get elsewhere. If you’re not already blogging, consider
starting a blog – it’s one of the best ways there are of imparting relevant
information to an audience who’s going to appreciate it. Don’t know what to
blog about? Well, what questions are you asked by your customers? Most of those
will make for wonderful blog posts that will be read and enjoyed.
Social networking isn’t rocket
science, but it’s certainly something that requires attention, research, time,
thought and strategy. And when done right, the rewards to your brand can be
exponential.
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