Archives for September 2013

Consistency Builds Social Media Communities

Community Leadership

Consistency may be the most powerful quality that small businesses can implement to build an active online community.

Be honest: Could your social marketing be described as randomly jumping from one social network to another to get your message out? That approach simply doesn’t work in a digital world where precision is possible, and therefore, should be leveraged.

Consistency happens to be a rare quality, which is why it is so powerful for differentiating your business. Use it to build and sustain your online business communities.

Repetition is Memorable

Marketing should be memorable. This can be accomplished in a number of ways, such as being funny, creative, or provocative. Yet, even though the best minds are hired to create memorable Super Bowl commercials, why is it that only a few are later remembered?

You need to consistently repeat your message for it to be memorable.

Even if you have huge budgets and lots of talent, building a memorable brand can be challenging. In contrast, being consistent with your marketing is a simple as building systems that ensure everything is implemented well, and on time.

When your newsletter, blog post, or other online content is delivered on a consistent basis, you set the expectation of “being there” for your community, thereby encouraging everyone to tune in.

In addition to that, even if you audience does not show up when you publish, the mental association of your digital channel with that particular time will serve as a reminder to tune in the next time.

Consistency Honors the Community

Consistency speaks to your professionalism, commitment, and quality. We all have unforeseen events and circumstances in our businesses that work against this. However, the nature of digital gives you a means for managing it all.

Start building an inventory of content so that you can get and stay up to a month ahead of schedule. This allows you to take time off when you need to, while never letting your community down. This is what I plan to do leading up to the launch of my small business podcast in November. I’ll have at least 25 shows under my belt before we go live.

Attracting an audience is just part of the online marketing equation. You have to continue to earn their attention by engaging with them on a regular basis.

Need a good model to follow? 

In an earlier article I shared 9 tips that help to keep my social media marketing organized. Maybe some of them will work for you.

Another idea is to build a structure that in some way mirrors your life habits. For example, I get my deep thinking done on weekends. This is when I flesh out at a rough draft for my articles, newsletter, etc.

This gets the heavy lifting out of the way, leaving the balance of the week for commenting and sharing in short bursts whenever there is a few idle moments between projects.

How about you? How do you make consistency work to advantage your business marketing?

Leave a comment below?

About the Author:  Jeff Korhan, MBA, helps mainstream small businesses create exceptional customer experiences that accelerate business growth. Get more from Jeff on LinkedInTwitter and Google+.

Jeff is also the author of Built-In Social: Essential Social Marketing Practices for Every Small Business – (Wiley 2013)

Organizing Your Social Media Marketing

www.builtinsocial.com

You can take the stress out of your social media marketing process by organizing it into written plan that is consistently implemented. That organized and written plan can then be refined as you grow with it.

The key to an effective social media marketing plan is following specific rules that are organized into a process. Following that allows you and your team to capably respond to unforeseen challenges and opportunities, thereby avoiding social media overwhelm.

Organization is not an activity, but rather the design and implementation of proven practices that are Built-in — a planned structure that gives everyone confidence for the accomplishment of practical objectives that sustain the growth of the organization.

Social Marketing is a Process

While earning my college degree in the sciences I learned an important lesson about managing change. Put systems in place to control what is controllable, so that you can better respond to what you cannot control, which for social media could be changes in the networks, or simply the actions of other people.

As you know, the various social media networks do seem to change like the weather. So, instead of stressing about the inevitable changes to LinkedIn, YouTube, or Facebook, expect and plan for them by getting and keeping everything else organized to run like a well-oiled machine.

Your social media marketing process should include, but not be limited to the following best practices.

1. Actions you will take daily, weekly, and monthly. This is simply building a schedule to which your business is prepared to commit, such as a weekly newsletter, daily Facebook page updates, checking your blog or Twitter for comments, Facebook for birthdays, and so on.

2. Specific topics that your content marketing will address. This will keep you on topic and more aware of balancing the type of content you create and share across multiple channels. Limit this to as few as one, and preferably no more than seven topics.

3. Keywords and hashtags that you will use. Having a handy list of hashtags and keywords that relate to your topics will streamline your work.

4. Tools that you rely on. There are thousands of social media tools and many of them work quite well. Choose and limit your use to just a few, but do your homework to learn about newer and better ones as they come along.

5. Allocating time for research and education. All of us have to do research to learn. So, make a list of blogs and other resources to subscribe to, while also attending educational events online, or in person where you can make new connections.

6. Making lists of like-minded friends and colleagues that can help you. Try to organize your friends into categories of expertise. A quick email to a colleague can save hours of research.

7. Methods for batching your work to build in flexibility. Some of the more prolific marketers do all of their content creation in one focused period every week, rather than pushing it all to a deadline.

8. Allocating time for making progress with what you have been putting off. You can dramatically reduce your stress by committing to periodically fixing or updating one channel you have been ignoring. For many of us this is Pinterest, and for others it is your blog.

9. Write down your process steps. That alone will give you more confidence.

Refine Your Process

At this point you have practices that got you here. Applying even a few new practices on a regular basis will serve to refine your process into a valued resource. You’ll also discover it helps with recruiting good people who will recognize your business has a process in place to help them succeed.

The process of organizing social media marketing comes down to understanding not just what to do, but also why. After years of working with thousands of small businesses as a social media coach and trainer I discovered the primary source of poor implementation, and often giving up altogether, could be reduced to simply not understanding why.

You absolutely have to believe your work will produce results, and that comes from knowing both why and how it works. This is the primary reason I wrote the book Built-In Social: Essential Social Marketing Practices for Every Small Business.

Do yourself a favor and get the Introduction and 1st Chapter for free by clicking here. Reading just those 30 or so pages will teach you more than most small business will ever know about social marketing. Then take a look at the Table of Contents and you’ll get a sense of how the rest of the book builds on that essential foundation.

Everything in business is a process. What should be exciting is knowing that refining your social media marketing process will make your work easier, better, more readily managed as a team, or outsourced to skilled professionals.

Organize your social media marketing process; and have a plan for implementing it well.

About the Author: Jeff Korhan, MBA, is the author of Built-In Social: Essential Social Marketing Practices for Every Small Business and host of This Old New Business podcast.

He helps mainstream businesses adapt their traditional growth practices to a digital world. Connect with Jeff on LinkedInTwitterFacebook, and Google+

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