Do you ever feel like you're walking a social media tightrope? Just about to tumble? Yep, then it's time to take a closer look at Social Media Marketing for your small business.
4. Sue-Ann Bubacz
Are You Walking a Social Media Tightrope?
writemixforbusiness.com/social-media-tightrope/
Are you walking the Social Media tightrope too?
Do you ever think youāre going to fall oļ¬ any second? Ever wrestle with yourself, thinking:
To Tweet or Not to Tweet, That is the Question.
My little Shakespearean parody here is from an intro I used while sharing a recent post by Ryan Biddulph of
BloggingfromParadise and I think he makes an excellent point.
I concur. That is, I agree there is a certain excitement, if not other positive results from the ability to connect, even
ātalk,ā to folks you respect and admire, via Twitter.
Heck, Iāve had quite a few jump-up-and-down-in-excitement encounters on Twitter and, like Ryan, I want to shout it
from the rooftops, so everyone knows. But seriously, the validation that you are someone too is even more
satisfying, especially for a creator.
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5. Inļ¬uencers Have Inļ¬uencers Too
Heck, even superstar Copy Hacker Joanna Wiebe gets a thrill out of a follow from someone she admires. I had to
chuckle when she writes in a āletter to selfā blog post, the following,
James Altucher (who nearly gave you a heart attack when he started following you on Twitter this
summer) ā¦ ā~Joanna Wiebe
(P.S. I had my own little heart attacks when Barry Feldman and Henneke Duistermaat, to name just a couple,
followed little old me!)
Interestingly, Joās post is about time management, one of the major issues for planning a SMM strategy and
deciding how and where it ļ¬ts best in the scope of marketing your business.
Time is a resource you need to invest for SMM results but, as Joās post points out, thereās an element of distraction
to social as well. Addictive, perhaps?
You must show up for SMM, and so, social automation isnāt how you connect with people or start a conversation to
build relationships. If youāre not talking, youāre broadcasting. Youāre automating, not participating.
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6. So, tweetingāor participating in social generallyārequires you be there because, as Ryan ļ¬gured out, interactions
happen between people.
Not people yammering on about their breakfast or sending out automated messages because business using
social channels is intentional.
I like Twitter and feel itās been a plus for my business in many ways, as Iāve already told you with a Megaphone, but
lately, Iām weighing things out. Reviewing. Evaluating.
Itās time to think about the beneļ¬ts or detriments of Social Media Marketing for business, overall. But, more
importantly, for your business and situation.
So, First
Tweeting (or using any social media, for that matter) without thinking brings to mind the old, āThink Before You Inkā
alert from the tattoo world, or in publishing.
But maybe we all need to step back and decide, āto Tweet or NOT to Tweet,ā and why.
Iāve been thinking a lot about Twitter as a platform with everything in the news lately and with the direction Twitter
seems to be going.
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7. Besides, many of my Twitter business connections are more enamored and getting better results, too, with LinkedIn,
among others. Hereās a Complete Guide to LinkedIn by John Soares as a reference or refresher or to examine
LinkedIn for SMM consideration.
The New Year may be the perfect time to test LinkedIn and see if shifting some SMM time and work to there,
outperforms Twitter for business results.
LinkedIn seems the most business central of the social channels, and I notice a lot more conversations going on
there. Maybe, itās because you can say the whole of your thought rather than frame it to a speciļ¬c number of
characters. Hmmm.
Iām also looking forward to seeing what changes LinkedIn will roll out with the ļ¬nal word now out that Microsoft is the
proud new owner of this platform.
Automating and Participating
Also, upgrading to Buļ¬erās Awesome Plan will help, making a more automated āpresenceā to allow me to expand
SMM eļ¬orts to other channels. WARNING: This doesnāt replace interactions. You know the human type.
If youāre not talking, youāre broadcasting. Youāre automating, not participating.
Awesome with Buļ¬er is on my Wish List for Santa, and you may want it too.
Hereās why: because as your experience and success using SMM increases, integrations on other platforms make
sense. And, it looks like a great way to learn and grow, if youāre ready.
Buļ¬er as a productivity tool to help with time and social posting management creates a way to alleviate one of
socialās red ļ¬agsātime suck. Buļ¬er also oļ¬ers the bonus of giving you detailed analytical data. Useful social data! A
deeper look at your audience and social share information.
Add Buļ¬er to the Social Media Marketing Strategy and Budget for 2017!
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8. Still, Twitter is a time and work kind of social marketing, especially for a small shop like mine. And yet Iām torn. Itās
kind of like being at a party, mingling and enjoying short, snappy chats with a variety of characters as you work the
room. Only guests at this party include a whoās who of inļ¬uencers from every single industry and the world. Do I
want to leave here?
Buļ¬er allows me to stay, and move on, too.
Less time, less work, and better analytics are the immediate advantages I expect from using this tool. The ability to
schedule content, rather than manually post it, frees up time. Time to expand social reach and initiate new business
opportunities. Like on LinkedIn, using Johnā Guide.
I like the free version of Buļ¬er Iāve been using but, now I need more. So, after researching for a while now, I feel
Buļ¬erās Awesome Plan oļ¬ers the most bang for the buck for a smaller operation without excessive SMM demands.
Like I say and admit, good things are happening from working it on Twitter for over a year now. Quality connections
are exploding, and Iām building relationships with both peers and prospects.
The Twitter social ROI isnāt just a matter of dollars and cents or easily measured, either.
And part of why accurate strategizing is helpful and integrations may be better than skipping from one social
channel to another. Increasing recognition of your brand by broadening your social reach may lead to new
audiences and unexpected outcomes. Like my last guest post.
Sometimes it seems the best feature in Twitter is in the role of an instant news line. That can be a good thing but,
the political bitchfest of late isnāt business enticing. And, in my mind, is NOT a part of Social Media Marketing for
most businesses.
Social Media Marketing ROI isnāt always a matter of dollars and sense, or easy to measure.
Bitchfest or Business-Social, You Decide
In a popular post on Medium, Timothy R. Meyers questions FaceBookās āsocialā atmosphere, calling it a āwar zone.ā
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9. Heās noting the same bitchfest, along with a big public ļ¬ght vibe there too, making this social channel a hostile
environment more than anything else.
How social is that? How businesslike?
Timothy goes on to say:
āFacebook is a war zone. A global, social, and electronic village where people were hiding in their homes afraid to
come out, afraid to speak, afraid to live.ā
He also notes fake news issues, advertising interference, and other problems with the FB experience of today, as
further taking away from a truly social exchange.
This is the most highlighted section in the piece:
āFacebook has become a swamp of crass and obnoxious street ļ¬ghts and post-election hysteria where people are
judging and sentencing others on the spot. It is the mecca for confrontational sound bites, click traps, and
associated public lynchingās where people are hung on the spot if they dare to have their own opinion.ā
Businesses swear by FB results and FB driven traļ¬c. FB groups are a popular and possibly useful way of engaging
with like-minded people in a business-social space. Or as an interactive study group. Private mastermind and other
work groups seem an appealing theme for business purposes.
And yet, I remain on the FB fence.
Good thing Iām working on a documented strategy, contemplating and analyzing information to form an updated
Social Media Marketing Strategy. The truth is, the best SMM evolves from:
1. documenting a strategy with business objectives in mind
2. implementing a plan to reach them, and
3. determining a way to measure results.
Tracking results is a beginning, not an end.
Analyzing the data to determine areas for improvement, iterating endlessly to level up, and working to eradicate
weaknesses, as well as testing, testing, testing, are keys!
Not to mention, relationship building, at its ļ¬nest.
On Second Thought
Jennifer Mattern and Sharon Hurley Hull recently did a podcast, reminding me of several important issues as a
freelance writer and business. But, when it comes to their viewpoint on SMM, any business can beneļ¬t from this tip:
consider the signiļ¬cance in how you measure results from social.
For example, Jenn mentions how she uses Twitter as a way to stay in touch and connect with writing colleagues.
Sheās not looking for business there. Sharon reminds, too, how social sharing and interaction is a service in itself
and goes beyond the scope of creating content, as a general rule. But, she also says, you want to promote your
content and share the content of those who share your work. Whether your work was published on their site or not,
isnāt the question. Value to your audience and sharing support are ļ¬rst.
I āmetā Jenn on Twitter and it turns out, many of my favorite writing pros and friends were Jennās writing buddies, too.
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10. Jennās All Indie Writers site includes marketing and writing resources, helpful for all sorts of digital projects for my
site or clients. See the beneļ¬t?
Like Jenn, I realize I am keeping the conversation going by connecting on Twitter with people Iāve met, often oļ¬
Twitter, like Sharon. Or Ann Handley, who ļ¬rst visited here when I reviewed and created an infographic from her
book, Everybody Writes. (Iām still laying on the ļ¬oor from this one!)
Iāve stayed in touch with Ann since, in part, by connecting on Twitter.
Possibly my greatest Twitter victory EVER was this recent outcome from Ann Handley sharing a piece of my work
(for the ļ¬rst timeā¦YAY!!!) on the MarketingProfās feed:
Psst. Did you see what Barry said!! Oh my goodness. (I know, knock me ļ¬at on the ļ¬oor AGAIN!!)
Engaging Engagement
How do you measure that? Well, engagement, for one thing, the exciting engagement Ryan says gets you noticed)
but some of these beneļ¬ts can be slippery, hidden to some degree, too.
Itās not just sales that matter. Getting to know highly successful people in your ļ¬eld is an important part of
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11. connecting, learning, and growing your business.
If you need help with Twitterāto get started or to up your gameāSharon Hurley Hall has you covered! Sharonās a
go-to source for me, and in this Guide to Twitter Marketing on the Crazy Egg blog, she gives you details and how-to
explanations for everything.
The ability to share information, ask a question, or knowing where to go for resources are valuable commodities but,
impossible to measure.
In this econsultancy article by Celina Burnett, she talks about ways to measure the value of social media beyond
dollars. She talks about brand tracking and even cost reduction, things you donāt always hear much about. Celina
points out examples for measuring results, like one company using social media as a customer service platform,
with this surprising result:
Setting up social media customer service channels has allowed BT to deļ¬ect 600,000+ contacts a
year from the more expensive phone channel to social media, saving the business Ā£2m a year.ā
~Celina Burnett, econsultancy.com
I love this example, from Harvard Medical School showing how a workļ¬ow looks for SMM using goal-setting and
attributions to link objectives to key results, in this post by Jay Shemenski.
To borrow Jayās graphic, I recommend you use this map as a handy reference to build out a SMM Strategy, with
accuracy and intent, to ļ¬t your business and audience needs, speciļ¬cally:
Your Social Media Mindset
On the other hand, Cal Newport oļ¬ers up a compelling argument in the New York Times, sparring against the use of
social media to the extent of saying, āyour career may depend on it.ā
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12. I do see Calās point in this article, and thatās why each business or individual needs to look at and weigh the
beneļ¬ts and detriments to using social media.
Some brands have no choice, needing to be present among competitors in their market or to maintain worldwide
social interactions for a relevant digital brand presence. Interaction. Hmmm.
Being interactive and not just promoted as a SMM measure may be the golden goose to the perfect strategy. The
smaller you are, though, the heavier this task weighs. It comes down to valuable time. And a commitment of
resources.
Maybe thatās why Joanna Wiebe is so carefully examining time suck and the pull of social media at this point of
year-end audits and new year scheduling.
Maybe thatās why Cal Newport denounces social media as if those of us trying to use it ( even in a strictly business
fashion?) are in some way trained rats, hooked on internet interactivity. Craving and needing a ļ¬x at frequent
intervals. It may, he says, in fact, be a Pavlovian response becoming ingrained, forming a habit.
Yikes. Look out! Social distraction may be an actual addiction, Joanna!!
Again, Cal has an interesting point, and I think Joās assessment for getting a handle on time management for your
best biz and self, parallels this ļ¬nal quote from Calās article:
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13. If youāre serious about making an impact in the world, power down your smartphone, close your
browser tabs, roll up your sleeves and get to work.ā ~Cal Newport
Social Media Tightrope or Noose?
Finding the right balance. Time constraintsāone big issue for engaging in Social Media Marketingāis a factor. But, if
youāre still accomplishing ādeep workā like Cal, Jo, and me too, recognize as a vital key to professional success,
Social Media Marketing can be an asset for any business.
If you canāt find your balance and donāt do the work, your social will die, no noose
needed.
The beneļ¬ts of SMM range from:
authority and reputation building to
growing a network of core service partners, to
attracting leads and increasing sales, to
making friends, to
quickly ļ¬nding research, and a whole lot more.
But, like any business endeavor, a well-researched and strategized viewpoint will lead to better results. Along, of
course, with consistency and work, until your balancing act resembles an agile acrobat on the social media wire.
Look at you! Sparkly and consistently balanced as you go, attracting more and more attentionā¦
Special Note: Pick up this Social Media Marketing Checklist and Up Your Social Tightrope Skills right away! P.S.
Share this post, please. Itās the social thing to do!
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14. Sue-Ann Bubacz
Sue-Ann is a boutique business owner for more than half her life! She
loves creating content to help businesses grow. Working and deadlines are
great, but boating in the wind and ļ¬oating in water sure is fun too!
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