Don’t Spend on Social Media Until You Follow These 4 Steps

Don’t Spend on Social Media Until You Follow These 4 Steps

effective social media strategy

If your social media strategy doesn’t align with your business objectives and target audience, your marketing budget is probably better spent elsewhere.

Almost half of CMOs report they do not feel prepared to manage the challenges that accompany the rise of social media. Regardless marketers report that they plan to double social media spending in the next five years.

Pouring money into increasingly complex and expansive social marketing campaigns will not guarantee success, however. Instead, Keith Quesenberry, author of Social Media Strategy: Marketing and Advertising in the Consumer Revolution, suggests that marketers need to boil their social strategies down to the basics to improve results.

“They must use fundamental marketing concepts and modify them for this new two-way, consumer-empowered medium of social media,” says Quesenberry in a Harvard Business Review article. He offers these four steps for developing a basic social strategy.

1) Identify your business objectives.

Any strategy your business adopts should carefully align with your goals. Are you hoping to grow brand awareness? Generate more leads? Rebrand your business? Your social strategy should serve those objectives.

2) Listen to your target audience.

Yyou should have a thorough understanding of who your target audience is and how they use social media. After all, millennials use different platforms at different times than, say, Fortune 500 CEOs. Quesenberry suggests using analytics tools within social networks and secondary research, such as the Pew Research Internet Project, Nielsen, or Edison Research, to identify larger trends in social media use.

3) Produce engaging content.

Create the kinds of content your target audience seeks, and distribute it through the platforms on which they seek it. How-to videos on YouTube? Thought leadership on LinkedIn? Optimize the material you distribute for each channel. Use the social channels that best suit your brand message, type of content, and target audience.

4) Link marketing goals to social media KPIs.

Measure key performance indicators such as social media click-throughs to purchase (if the goal is online sales), social impressions (for brand awareness), or number of campaign-specific forms completed (for lead generation).

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How to Use the LinkedIn Mobile App to Grow Your Marketing

How to Use the LinkedIn Mobile App to Grow Your Marketing

The LinkedIn Mobile App can help you grow your marketing program from the comfort of your phone.

linkedin-mobile-app

Increasingly people are on the move, and smart phones are on the rise. In 2015, 64% of adults had a smartphone, up from 35% in 2011. Worldwide there are 3.7 billion unique mobile users. Those numbers are growing rapidly.

With the rise of mobile access and technology, people use phones in many of the same ways they use computers. You can scan, email, write, research, talk, bank, and — thanks to the LinkedIn Mobile App — apply for jobs, post articles, communicate, and engage with peers.

LinkedIn believes the app is “a faster way to tap into your professional world. Get news and info that matter for your professional day, a daily brief on what’s happening in your network, and a quick way to reach out and keep in touch.” Sounds good for those of us who rely heavily and increasingly on our phones.

Here are some ways in which you should be using the LinkedIn Mobile App to help your marketing efforts:

1. Update

A cornerstone of inbound marketing, writing updates and engaging daily (or hourly) with connections is important. Within an update you can include text, links, and photos and mention other LinkedIn members. You can also choose to share your update with your entire LinkedIn network and/or first-degree connections and/or your Twitter feed.  

2. See who’s looking

Discover who has viewed, liked, or commented on your profile and content. The app lets you reply directly if you’d like.

3. Engage

Keep up with your network by finding, commenting, liking, and sharing. Repeatedly, we hear of the importance of engaging with connections and truly trying to value their posts, especially before sharing your own agenda.

4. Edit your profile

Notice a mistake on your company profile? Make an immediate change, even without your computer. Maybe you’re at a business meeting or out to dinner, and you notice that something hasn’t been updated on your company profile. You can fix it immediately.

5. Send & receive messages

This is a staple, and one that is critical. Again, if you’re at a business meeting, at a conference, or just without your computer and you need quick access to someone who you don’t have in your smartphone address book, you can find them and contact them through the LinkedIn Mobile App.

You can also access Lynda.com to watch tutorials and get training, get daily updates from LinkedIn Pulse, use LinkedIn Lookup to find connections, and use LinkedIn SlideShare to access over 18 million tutorials, infographics, and professionals.

There’s no need to cease connecting or marketing when you’re without your computer. The newly updated LinkedIn Mobile App can help you get the job done efficiently.

 

 

Which social media channels should your B2B business use?

Which social media channels should your B2B business use?

B2B social media

The number of social media channels is astounding –and is growing daily.  Which of these channel(s) should your business leverage?  Here is what you should consider when determining which social media channels you should use for your B2B business.

Your ideal customer

Who is your ideal customer and on which social media sites are they active?  Taking time to understand who your customer is and understanding where they spend their time is invaluable.  If you want to reach potential and current customers you need to be where they are – you need to make it easy for them to find you and to engage with your business.

Competition

Identify which social media channels your competition is using.  Do these align with the channels your ideal customers are using?

Don’t be follower.  If your research has shown that your potential customers are using a social media channel that your competitors are not using, don’t assume your competition knows something you don’t.  Play where your potential customers play.

Content

What type of content do you have, and what type of content do you feel will best attract and engage potential customers?  Video, for example, is better suited for YouTube than Twitter.

Finally, it is essential that your business is an active participant on social media.  Only take on what your business can handle and/or consider outsourcing.

11 content curation tools for your business

11 content curation tools for your business

The internet is a fire hose stream of content.  Being able to navigate the deluge of content and identify the content that is valuable to your customers and to your business is essential; it can also be incredibly time consuming.  Content curation tools can save time and increase productivity.

content curation

Here are 11 content curation tools that will help you establish your business as a thought-leader and trusted resource.

Bundle Post

With Bundle Post you connect and control Alerts and RSS feeds based on keywords.  Bundle Post saves the content from your feed channels as a social media post, allowing you to view, edit or delete the content within the channel, all in one place, then merge selected curated content with scheduled posting times you create for each of your social media accounts and networks.  Bundle Post offers a free 30 day trial.  After that subscriptions start at $19.99 per month.

ContentGems

ContentGems monitors more than 200,000 news sites, blogs, and social media accounts.  With ContentGem you can filter content a number of different ways including: custom keywords, sources, and media types.  With ContentGems it is easy to share content via social media (one-click publishing and the ability to schedule posts). Freemium and premium options available.

feedly

feedly enables you to organize, read and share the content of your favorite feeds, blogs and news sites.  If you liked Google Reader, feedly fills that gap. Free and premium versions available.

iFlow

iFlow allows users to discover, create, and curate ‘flows’ on any topic. Flows are topic-based streams that let users stay connected and updated with selected topics. These ‘flows’ may be followed, which results in users being continually updated with content relevant to selected topics. Flows can be set up to include detailed filters to provide for high quality of content curation. iFlow also allows users to create their own private flows. Users may invite others to contribute on their flows or can even keep their flows private. iFlow is free.

Individurls

Individurls is quite similar to feedly.  One of the strengths of this content curation is how easy it is to use on your mobile phone.  Individurls is free.

Netvibes

Although Netvibes is one of the original content curation tools, it remains a solid (and not outdated) solution.  Netvibes offers a number of ready-made feeds and widgets.  Both freemium and premium versions are available.

Newsle

Newsle is a great tool to keep you on top of what is happening with people within the industry and within your social network.  It is also a great tool if there are specific writers or journalists whose content you want to keep track of.  With Newsle you identify the people and Newsle sends you an email when those individuals are mentioned in the news.

paper.li

paper.li enables you to create your own online newspaper based on content you select.  You add various sources and specify filters on these sources and a paper is produced.  You can then add or remove “articles” from the paper.  While paper.li can be used for free, the paid version allows you to brand your newspaper.

Post Planner

Post Planner is a solution for those who are avid Facebook users; PostPlanner is a Facebook app. With PostPlanner you enter in keywords and search for trending content within your niche.  You can then sort this content to view the content with the most likes or shares so you can see the most popular content.  While PostPlanner does offer a free version, to get the most from this tool you will need to upgrade to one of the premium packages.

Scoop.it

Scoop.it offers users a great experience and a constant stream of content.  Scoop.it automatically finds and features comment from places like Twitter and Google blogs based on your target keywords and interests. It is also customizable, allowing for additional sources to be added to your stream(s).  In Scoop.it you create boards of content around specific topics and then add content to these boards.  Scoop.it allows for one-click publishing to your blog and social networks.  Scoop.it offers a free trial, after that plans start at $12.99 per month.

Trapit

Trapit positions itself as a “smart” curation tool, increasing in intelligence and relevance the more you use it. It features more than 100,000 vetted content sources and includes “hidden gems” that have the potential to make your presence stand out. How does it do this?  Trapit uses the same Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning Technology from which Siri is derived.

 

 

 

4 ways to succeed with content curation

Curating content is an essential component of your content strategy and to demand generation.  Content curation can help you grow your business by establishing your business as a thought-leader within the industry and as a trusted resource.

Here are four factors to doing content curation successfully:

Know your audience

Identify your audience.  In many cases your target audience is your company’s buyer persona.

Take the time to know your audience.  For example, take the time to understand what type of information and/or resources they are likely to be looking for, learn what platform(s) they are most likely to use (e.g. Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook), learn their interests, and learn their passions.

Be relevant

Curate content that is relevant to your audience.  The content you curate should provide your audience with value and knowledge.

Quality, quality, quality

Content can be stuff.  Content can be clutter.  If you want the content your business curates to stand out, you make sure the content you curate is quality – every time.  Quality is a differentiator.

Be consistent

Share content on a regular and consistent basis.  This will not only increase your visibility, but it will also establish you as a trusted resource – as the go-to resource for information and for knowledge.

This article also appeared on DC Velocity.