In Social Media, No One Cares Unless YOU Care

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Care about social media

Depending who you listen to or read in the social media space, the best reason to use social media for your brand varies. It can be for listening; resolving issues; lead generation; focus groups; recruitment; and much, much more.

All good reasons. All good value. And yet….

While these are all solid enough reasons to be on social media from a brand’s point-of-view, they mean nothing unless you have an audience. Not just an audience, but also one that actually trusts and supports you, and will listen when you speak. Without that, you’ll just be another tree in the forest that no-one hears fall.

So how do you build that most valued of commodities in social media (and business in general) – identity and trust? Especially in such a crowded space to start with? Thankfully, it’s not that hard – but it does take work and stamina. Let’s dig in.

Step 1: The Message is the Key

The big mistakes that brands make when jumping into social media is they see their competitors doing it, so think they need to as well. Wrong answer! (Insert buzzer noise here). For sure – social media can (and does) offer a fantastic additional tactic to add to your existing marketing mix. Yet only if it’s right for you – so make sure you’re doing it for the right reasons and not because of forced impressions.

Once you’ve gotten that out of the way, the most important part comes next – defining what your message is going to be, and how that is going to build the loyalty and brand identity that will define your success in this space.

The core points to consider here are:

  • What’s our brand’s value proposition, and how do we convey that?
  • Who will be our spokesperson/spokespeople, and in what capacity? How do we want to be perceived – thought leaders, the company that listens, educators, or something else?
  • How will we ensure the message we’re sharing is consistent and built to last?

These are some of the initial questions to ask, and answers to provide. Without these, you’ll be floundering pretty quickly and people will move on to the next brand. Don’t let that be you. Think about the above questions, and make sure you have the answers (or know who the person is with the answers).

And, for the love of God, please make sure you actually know internally what your business stands for before you go outside!

Step 2: It Ain’t What You Do, It’s The Way That You Do It

Once you have your goals defined, and know exactly what will be said and who will be saying it, you move on to the next most important part – building your brand identity with these components.

This, probably more than anything, will be the part of the puzzle that either builds your identity and success, or sees you crash and burn on takeoff (I watched Top Gun again the other night, so forgive the gung-ho analogies!).

While it’s crucial to have the right people and message defined, it’s just as crucial (if not more so) to take it to market properly. What you say, and how you say it, is going to be the difference between you and your competitors. And if there’s one thing social media has taught all brands, it’s that people are always waiting for you to slip up.

To ensure your message is understood in the way you want it to be seen, you need to be consistent across every touchpoint: If you’re setting up a blog, make the editorial guidelines clear, both for internal bloggers and guest authors, determine the message from the blog, and make that core across all posts.

On social networks, the people that will be the “official” voice of your company need to share communications with each other regularly, and know whose role it is to reply to a certain question or issue.

Finally, on social media-led promotions that carry over to the offline space, ensure the same people promoting and answering online are attached to any offline teams as well, to keep the message clear and integrated.

These are just some of the ways to ensure the messaging from your brand is consistent and clear. That’s one of the first steps to building a true identity online. On top of that, obviously you need to make sure that your brand’s look and feel ties into this identity too.

The last thing you want to do is confuse people when they visit one of your online outposts (blog, social network, Pinterest board, etc.) and find a different colour scheme or look and feel at each place (unless you’re building external resources as a separate part of your brand identity, for SEO or thought leadership reasons).

Get the message consistent; get the look consistent; the rest will start to fall into place.

Step 3: The Long and Winding Road

Of course, this is all pre-identity stuff. Or, at least, pre-social media identity (you have identified what your brand stands for internally, right?). That’s the (relatively) easy part – the hard part is making sure that message is seen and, more importantly, retained time and time again.

And that’s where many brands fail, by expecting social media to be the quick fix to all that ails them. It’s not. Social media is not a fire sale – it’s a long-term investment and tactic, strategy, campaign, call it what you wish.

If you’re expecting your brand to be immediately identifiable through your actions on social media, you’ll be sorely disappointed. Instead, it’s the consistency of the message and voice that will build your identity, not the speed in which you bring that to market.

Customer loyalty isn’t something that can be bought – and the brands that identify the most with their customers’ needs will be the ones that are rewarded with loyalty, referrals, and word-of-mouth marketing.

Social media can enhance the reach of these referring voices to the Nth degree – but you need to make sure you’re deserving of it to start with. Get your identity right by planning it and building it up the right way, and the world (social media or otherwise) can truly be your oyster.

The choice is yours.

This post originally appeared on the Zync blog.

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About Danny

Danny Brown is Chief Technologist at ArCompany and an award-winning marketer and blogger. His blog is recognized as the #1 marketing blog in the world by HubSpot. Danny is also co-author of Influence Marketing: How to Create, Manage and Measure Brand Influencers in Social Media Marketing.

15 comments
warrenss
warrenss

Danny, fantastic advice. It really does take passion and daily execution! Too often we look for the quick fix and easy way. Thanks for keeping us grounded.

Bhaskar Sarma
Bhaskar Sarma

Step 1 and 2 sounds like what you would feel on Jan 2 when you have signed up for a gym membership and are so raring to lose weight/get in shape that it's almost scary. Step 3 is March, and you are plateauing, and the changes are not so prominent that you can boast about them. Step 3 is when most people quit

Suzanne Mannion
Suzanne Mannion

Danny, I think you made a very good point. I truly believe that building a solid identity is the key to a social media success and it’s very important to complete all the steps, no matter how useless it might seem in the beginning. Also, when it comes to social media identity, I would like to add that a relevant step is listening. As I mentioned in this article, http://www.newsmakergroup.com/blog/pr-and-social-media-is-crisis-plan-needed-to-adapt/, a survey from Dell computers found that while 98% of companies do some form of social media marketing, only six percent value online listening. So this is pretty worrying and I completely agree that in social media, no one cares unless you care. So, when we will learn to really listen and communicate so that we create our own audience, brands will be more powerful in the online environment.

Tn Perennials
Tn Perennials

Oh so true. no one care like you do about your website, social media or anything else.

marklongbottom
marklongbottom

late to see this but as ever excellent words. So important to know who you are > know who you want to talk to > know where and why you want to do it too < if all this is in place you're more likely to be believable. After all people need to believe you believe in yourself before they share you with their friends.

ozio media
ozio media

The most difficult thing for many people to understand about the use of social media for marketing is that it is about raising awareness of your brand and not another avenue for driving direct sales. This requires a long term, structured strategy to present yourself and your business that requires consistency and patience if you are going to succeed. Unlike the more traditional forms of advertising, social media requires businesses to interact and relate to their customers, which can be expensive and time consuming but also represents a sustainable investment in the future.

Carmelo
Carmelo

Hey Danny, Awesome stuff (and love your writing!) I see social media strategies as well as any marketing campaign as a life-long adventure. It's like climbing a long stairwell that really never ends. Unless you screw up! Then, the instant you do, the stairs fold up into a slide and whooshh!! Down you go back to the bottom and hope you're not too bloody to start over again. You can keep it simple or make it complicated but you do have to know what you're doing and mind your Ps and Qs! Thanks, again. Carmelo

HowieG
HowieG

You bring up something interesting because it is why so many fail on social. For a well known well loved brand it is easy getting facebook fans and twitter followers. People look for you. You don't have to rope them in. Starbucks didn't work to get their facebook fans other than having tons of customers and customers knowing they have a page. But getting people to actually respond to your content. That is really hard. Most businesses fail. It is hard getting your content seen on the networks. Why blow it when it is seen? Social isn't a love fest. I won't click like on content unless I like it. Don't be freaking boring. Be different.

Cision NA
Cision NA

Hi Danny, You had me at: "It’s the consistency of the message and voice that will build your identity, not the speed in which you bring that to market." OK, you had me much earlier than that, but your message really sunk in when I read that. We're on an on-going quest at Cision to decide if sites like Pinterest & Instagram are right for us. Luckily, we have exceptional leaders who don't rush into using platforms just because they're all the rage, but instead evaluate if they're right for our brand and audience. We don't want to just contribute to the noise - we want to educate and offer some food for thought. I will revisit this post often, as it really resonated with me from the 'why' standpoint. You outline 'why' in such a thorough way that it not only helps from a social perspective, but also asks readers to look at the bigger picture. Thank you for sharing such thought-provoking content! Best, Lisa

Danny Brown
Danny Brown

Hey there Lisa, First, great to "meet" you - I had some great conversations with Yvette before she moved on, so looking forward to chatting more with you too! :) It's been interesting to watch Cision's moves in the space. I'm very wary of "influencer measurement tools", purely because the term and definition of an influencer is so subjective. But, I like what you guys are trying to do with your software - will keep an eye out for updates. It's so true what you say - you need to evaluate what's right and what's something you can spend time on but be aware of the fact it might just be a lesson in where not to be. The brands that can get that mix and discovery right will do pretty well for themselves in the long run. Here's to discovery. :)

Cision NA
Cision NA

Hi Danny! So nice to "meet" you too, and thank you for the warm welcome! I know I'm a little bias because I work for Cision but in all honesty, I truly believe in what we're doing, the industry we serve and all the people behind it. Going to work every day is SO FUN and part of this is due to people like you. It's motivating to have conversations about things like "influencer measurement tools," whether it be with forward-thinking co-workers or you. You're right: here is to discovery! Look forward to reading more and chatting more soon! Best, Lisa

Jose Palomino
Jose Palomino

This is solid advice. Step 1 is especially so important, and I love that you bring it up in a social-media context. Our value propositions are worth nothing unless they are integrated throughout the entirety of our businesses -- and similarly, social media is worth nothing unless it is fully integrated into our businesses. You can't just get a Twitter handle for your business and assume you have a social media strategy. Your strategy must be connected to the very foundation of your business -- the essential "it" of what you do and offer.

Danny Brown
Danny Brown

Cheers, Jose, appreciated! It's funny - step one is so important and yet often the ones that so many fail at. People jostle for control of the message and the branding, when all they need to do is be there, be consistent, and let the rest shape itself. Hey ho... ;-)


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