2. Here’s the deal ...
Social Media has revolutionized the way we communicate and it is forever changing
the way we interact with our customers and prospects.
By leveraging the power of Social Media you will be able to connect with more people,
tell your story in a more relevant and meaningful way, deliver better customer service
and ultimately grow sales.
The broadcast model of advertising is broken; those with the loudest voices no longer
win, they just annoy the most people. It’s not enough to tell people to buy, you’ve got
to tell them why. You have to solve a problem, provide a solution or satisfy a need.
In this book we offer Strategies for Success in this new arena, we give you a
“JumpStart” guide and some solid how-to tips, training and techniques designed to
both educate and inspire.
3. What is Social Media?
It’s compromised of two elements; the “Social” and the “Media” - the social part is
the communication, the connection with your customers and prospects. The media
part is the technology, the social networks where the conversations are taking place.
Social Media is a conversation online that’s open to anyone with an internet
connection and an opinion. The conversation is real, complex, organic and human.
Social Media is not a strategy or a tactic (although both have their place in
marketing) it is a channel for conversation and communication, difficult to organize,
impossible to control. This is a place to have real, genuine interactions with people.
From our perspective, it’s marketing; if it doesn’t move the needle - it’s not worth
doing (and this starts with moving the customer service needle).
4. What’s In It For YOU?
What if you could turn your best customers into Brand Ambassadors - people
who not only bought from you and enjoyed the experience and bought some
more, but told their friends about it and suggested that they do the same?
This is the new world of Marketing as opposed to the old world of Advertising.
Social Media enables you to have an unprecedented level of communication
with your customers, as you utilize that communication to give great service
and contribute value to their lives, they will love you more, talk about you
more and help you grow.
The reality today is this: 90% of people trust peer recommendations while only
14% trust advertising. People understand that real ads cost big money and
must produce ROI - so there is an inherent distrust of traditional advertising.
5. Resistance is Futile.
Business resistance to Social Media is futile. Your customers are there, your
competitors are there and your prospects are there.
Your business is already being talked about in Social Media, so the only
question is; are you part of the conversation?
Social Media is much more than another marketing channel - it’s PR, customer
service, collaboration, thought leadership, networking, loyalty & brand
building ... and customer acquisition.
With Social Media you have the opportunity to move your marketing from a
one way broadcasting of your “message” to a two way communication and
conversation with the people who should matter to you most - your customers.
6. It’s About Word of Mouth :
Old Model : Treat a customer well and they tell someone. Treat a customer poorly and they
might tell 10 people.
New Model : We get treated poorly and now can easily can tell a hundred or a thousand or
hundreds of thousands.
Your customers have the ability to snap a photo with their smart phone, post it and their
thoughts to Facebook, send out a Tweet to their followers and write a review on Yelp - all in
real time, from your location. This can be very, very good - if you take care of them. If
something goes wrong, it can be bad - if you fail to fix it.
For a company, ‘engaging’ in Social Media (not ‘using’ it) means discovering the
conversation, participating in it, contributing to it and ultimately influencing it. The people
that are likely to talk about a misadventure with your brand online are very, very likely to
talk about the positive way you fixed it. You have to be part of the conversation - or at least
listening to it - to do the right thing.
7. This is the “Social” part :
In many respects Social Media is like a giant party, there are many conversations
going on and many groups of people having them. Find the people who are
interested in what you’re interested in and sidle over and talk with them.
Social Media is supposed to be a dialogue, not a monologue. This is real people
talking to real people, don’t hide behind your brand, get in front of it. Here’s
where you can humanize your brand, put a face - or faces - on your company. Ask
questions. Give responses. What if your best customers told you what else they
would buy if you sold it? They can. They will. If you ask.
Social Media is free, real, transparent and authentic. You are going to make
mistakes - that’s human. The question is; how are you going to fix those mistakes?
No more ignoring, no possible sweeping under the rug or hoping it will go away.
8. This is the “Media” part :
Facebook is about friends and family. Facebook is where people are - and it’s where you
need to be, as a brand or company, to be found when they go looking. As customers join
your page you have the opportunity to interact with them ... and by extension their
friends who may join you - if you give them a reason.
LinkedIn is about business, it’s the new age rolodex, it’s the modern resume. You’ll find
groups built around what you do - join them and participate in the discussion - when you
have something to add.
Twitter is text messaging for adults and a giant river of information, as you grow more
comfortable with it you’ll learn how to search for relevant people and topics.
YouTube is modern day television, and the #2 search engine after Google. It’s not
replacing cable - but adding to it. People want to watch the internet and YouTube is
where they can watch you and your company in a personal and intimate way if you wish.
9. 5 Stages of Social Media :
Listen : Pay attention to what’s being said.
Converse : Join in, be a part of the conversation.
Contribute : Add content and be of value.
Connect : Engage people and add them to your list.
Convert : Win the customer, earn the sale.
10. Listen :
You have to be aware of the conversation before you can participate in it.
Listen by setting Google Alerts for your company and key words and phrases.
Search Twitter by key words and #hashtags and follow everybody that seems to
have something interesting to say about what you’re interested in. Check out
Social Mention, it’s like Google alerts but specific to social media.
Set up your profiles and pages, even if you’re not able to do everything at
once, set up the accounts across the board with the same user names, it’s like a
land grab - set up your accounts (and fill out the profiles) wherever you can,
this gives you a consistent identity across the various social networks so they
are there when you need them. Don’t make yourself crazy about it, add a
photo or logo, bio or company description and contact info. Keep a list of
where you are and come back to them when appropriate.
11. Listen :
Create your Strategy. What do you want to accomplish by putting this effort into social
media? Time is your most valuable resource and this requires an investment of time. Don’t
let all the tools and technology get in your way - there really isn’t anything radically new
in “Social” Media - you are merely talking to your customers and prospects, listening to
what they need, want and feel while telling them a bit about what you do, what you’re
passionate about and how it relates to (and benefits) them and the world at large.
Learn the Ropes. Like anything else, there is a certain amount of lingo and behavior that is
unique to the social networks and these conversations - nothing complicated and you will
catch on in no time at all. By paying attention, you’ll be a master in no time!
Build your Brand’s Presence. It’s important to build your ‘outposts’, your profiles and
pages that will help people find you - be consistent with graphics and contact info. It is
important though to post with some regularity to show you care.
Search Google, Twitter & Social Mention for what you’re interested in ... and yourself!
12. Converse :
Once you’ve gotten your feet wet by listening and setting up your profiles (or
outposts), it’s time join in the conversation. This does not meaning post-post-post or
tweet-tweet-tweet and hope for the best, this means following conversations and
watching (listening) to what others are saying and weighing in, agreeing, making
an additional point, providing additional information or a new perspective. If
someone asks a question take a minute to answer it (or ask a question of someone
who seems to know their stuff) - no big secrets here, you’re engaging in a
dialogue, the only new element is the venue; online.
One way of getting into the conversation is with ‘Other Peoples Content’ - by re-
posting, re-tweeting or ‘liking’ what others are sharing is the internet equivalent of
applause - it’s also reasonable and appropriate to say “Cool, Thanks, Good Stuff”.
13. Contribute :
As you grow more and more comfortable in this arena, you’ll want to contribute to the
conversation, to share what you know and what you’re into. The 80/20 rule certainly
applies here (perhaps even 90/10) - when you post, tweet and share make it about
others, find great ideas from other people and share them with your network (of
course acknowledging the source!).
This can be as simple as hitting the share button on Facebook to ‘share it forward’ or
forwarding a tweet that resonates with you, posting a link to an article, news story,
blog post or video that is interesting and valuable.
Do you have some news to share about your company? Did you just write a brilliant
blog post or put up a cool YouTube video? Then share that as well, but make sure it’s
part of the mix - not “me-me-me” - it’s bad manners! It’s nice to be recognized, it feels
good to have information you share validated by your peers, so do it for others!
14. Connect :
Social Media is all about making real connections - you are in the process of forming a bond with
people, letting them know who you are and what makes you tick and what you do (and why) as you
learn the same about them. The connections you are making are very valuable; no telling where they
might lead and, as importantly, you don’t know who they know. You might meet people online (or in a
coffee shop - doesn’t matter) with whom you ‘click’ - but they don’t really need your products or services
(today) however, they understand that you are a real person and a nice person who knows what you’re
talking about so why wouldn’t they recommend you to their friends? They would - and it’s with that
introduction that your network really begins to flourish and grow and your influence begins to spread.
HOWEVER! Remember this one CRITICAL thing: to truly engage people and connect with them for the
long term, you MUST add them to your email subscriber list, newsletter list or contact datebase -
anything where you can contact them outside of the networks. Remember; your Facebook page (and
those hundreds or thousands of friends) belongs to Facebook, not you. Your Twitter account may connect
you with thousands (or eventually tens of thousands) of people - but the account belongs to Twitter. If for
some reason your account is suspended or terminated - poof, goodbye connections. Tough luck.
15. Connect :
True engagement means making a connection that puts you in control of your network. The most
simple and clear cut way to do this is to get people to join your email list, an opt-in process of
them saying “Yes, send me more”. People can subscribe to your newsletter or sign up for a
webinar or special deal announcements, they can download a white paper or complimentary
eBook or watch a special video in exchange for signing up with their name and email - give
something of value in exchange for their digital ‘currency’ : their contact info and permission to
use it.
If you are providing valuable information - ideas, training, tips, techniques, inspiration, motivation
- whatever form that may take, then people are willing to subscribe to your newsletter/blog etc.
Don’t abuse this relationship - whenever you mail to your list, make sure the content is created
with one thing in mind : what’s in it for THEM? You have an agenda (fair enough) but people will
not really care what you say until they know how much you care. Give, give, give and you will
eventually build a strong and loyal following - people who consider you a reliable expert with
something to say.
16. Convert :
Build Value, Build Social Equity
Do you want people to place an order, request a
catalog, visit your website, watch a webinar?
Give clear calls to action, Space out your offers
Make it easy for people to buy from you
17. Social Media Marketing
Old marketing is interruption based, new marketing is permission based. It’s a simple question; do
you think you’ll grow your business faster talking to people who are interested in what you do and
want what you got, people who are just deciding when to buy and from whom - or should you yell
from the rooftops and radio sets and hope for the best?
Traditional marketing just doesn’t work anymore - people are getting better at ignoring ads with
DVRs, caller ID, spam filters - junk mail goes right to the recycle bin, newspapers are on life support,
radio has to compete with ipods and satellite.
The new marketing is all about Social, Search, Video and Email. It’s about being available, providing
information and value and earning the right to a sale. The difference is; along they way to earning
that sale you have very likely developed a loyal customer, maybe even one that will spread the word.
People are going to Google and the social networks to get answers to their questions, the only
question is “Will you be there to answer them?”
18. Social Media Strategy
You can’t approach new media with old thinking
Traditional marketers don’t understand channels where you have to talk and listen at the same
time. There is way more to social media than a ‘follow us on facebook’ button and a website to
take orders
What do you want to accomplish? Drive more traffic to your blog? Have a big Facebook page?
Increase your Twitter followers? Double your email list? Generate awareness? Become a more
recognized expert? Increase awareness and build your brand? Deliver extraordinary service?
Based on these strategies and goals you’re developing, what are the various ways you can move
forward towards success? What are the social media tools and platforms that will best support you?
Don’t think Social Media is the answer to everything - if your product sucks, social media won’t fix
it. However, if your customer service sucks ... social media can help.
19. Developing Strategy
The 5 “W’s” :
What - are you going to do?
Where - are you going to do it?
When - are you going to start?
Why - are you going to do it?
Who - is going to do it?
20. Social Media is like a party -
You meet people, chat with them, ask some questions.
Then you join the discussion more often, becoming part of the community and then you begin to
add value to the community.
You’ll begin to ask questions and trust the responses, and you’ll begin to answer questions and
help others. It’s nice, fun easy and becomes natural.
Unlike a traditional party, social media has no boundaries of time or space, other people can easily
listen in from anywhere and then they can join in - if you give them a reason, and your community
grows and then your friends bring their friends and your community grows even more.
... and most of all, it’s fun. You may feel, as we did, that in the beginning it’s a bit much to figure
out and kkep up with - don’t worry, it get’s easier, and easy tends to be fun. You’ll come to enjoy
this new world of communicating, especially as you see the results in growing your business!
21. Success Strategies
- Social Media for Business -
This book has been created from some of our extraordinary seminar and
workshop material as part of the Summer 2011 Video Training Series, if
you’d like to stay in touch and up to date with the latest version - join us at
www.SocialJumpstart.com & www.Facebook.com/SocialJumpstart
mike@SocialJumpstart.com @MikeWolpert
2007-‐2011
All
rights
reserved.
Soci@l,
Soci@l
Jumpstart
and
Social
Jumpstart
are
trademarks
and
tradenames
exclusively
owned
by
Moose
&
Wallaby
Consulting,
Inc.
All
other
marks
are
owned
by
the
respective
third
parties.