Posts belonging to Category 'Social Media'

4 Facebook Tips for Small Biz from the Top 10 for Big Biz

Last week I caught a great blog entry from Social Media Examiner – “Top 10 Facebook Pages and Why They’re Successful” written by Amy Porterfield.  The top 10 pages are pretty amazing, but they are all professionally done by big brand companies with marketing budgets most of us small business owners don’t have.  However, after further review, I filtered out these four things that you can do with no budget, just some time and creative thinking!

Note: The fan pages I present as examples are managed by individuals who are running their own business.  Nothing fancy, but they consistently use techniques that support one of Amy’s points with no cash budget, something we can all appreciate and learn from.

Know Your Audience!

Amy highlights for Red Bull and Jone’s Soda

As you work through your social medial plan for the month, think about what your Facebook audience wants to hear – what will capture their interest?

Susan Jacobs – Assist2Sell Real Estate

Facebook Fan Page for Susan Jacobs Assist2Sell Real Estate

Susan is a real estate professional, great networker and a former Chairman of the Chamber of Commerce.  Her audience is the network she has built over the last 20 years in the community.  Knowing this audience she places a lot of emphasis on chamber and community events, using links and pictures when possible so that posts can be easily shared.  Like most small business owners her personal life is very close to her professional life, so there are some content ties between her personal and business profiles that help build on the personal relationships she uses for referrals.  Great Job Susan!

Use Pictures and Video

Amy highlights for Burt’s Bees (mentions in multiple others)

For anyone with a visual product or service this is the first recommendation that I make!  It’s not too difficult once you set up your process, it adds a ton to each post and it enables the all important “share” link to the bottom of your post.  I really wish my business was more photogenic!

Dorsey Signs and Designs

Business Signs by Dorsey Signs and Designs Warrenton VA

Stevi is one of my new small business Facebook Heroes because of her daily posts!  Most of them include a picture and show three things: a different type of “sign and design”, the quality of her work and a mention of the business or organization highlighted.

Garden Muse/Ideascapes

Facebook Fan Page for Garden Muse/Ideascapes Warrenton VA

I love the way Fabienne presents the stories of her work.  She provides before and after pictures with little write-ups on different jobs that really make us a part of the process.  Don’t you want a landscape designer who can look at your before picture and really “muse” about the possibilities, then make it happen.

Get Fans to Engage and Act

Amy highlighted in at least 7 of the 10 pages!

So do you think this is important?  Amy provides several great examples – asking people to post pictures, contests, Facebook Stories, etc.  Most of these are pretty cheap but take some time and planning to really get them set up and going right.  What I would like to focus on here is using the content of your posts and campaigns to engage your audience.

Great Harvest Warrenton

Facebook Fan Page for Great Harvest Bread Warrenton VA

Great Harvest in Warrenton is a place I want to visit every morning when I see their daily picture post of fresh baked bread!  Pablo and his staff do a great job of engaging their audience with pictures and headlines, as well as their participation in the community.  I especially like the “campaign” he started this week relating to ‘80’s music.  First, it identifies with his primary demographic (those who remember the ‘80’s).  Second, popular music gets people engaged.  People are likely to comment and share a post for a bread called “Tainted Love”!  Third, those of us who have visited the store know there is always a familiar tune in the background.  I really hope Pablo leverages this campaign!  BTW, Great Harvest Warrenton is a great place to cash in on your Foursquare efforts – I got a free cup of coffee Friday!

Use Campaigns

Amy’s highlight for Oreo

Every month I have my clients fill out a form with events, activities, projects and products they want to promote in the upcoming month.  Then I put together a media calendar where I can lay out all the different posts for these events and activities.  Once we have the big picture I look for the gaps and connections where we can use a campaign.  A campaign is a grouping of messages under a single name or brand, where the name or brand catches people’s attention, ties together a couple key messages and engages your audience.  When done right, like the OREO Back to School campaign, it provides a steady stream of great content.  Guide your campaign ideas around the general value you bring to customers or something your audience will identify with, like Back to School or ‘80’s Music.

Thanks to Amy for a great post that really opened my eyes!  Don’t dismiss the creativity, adding tabs and other things she pointed out and recommended.  Most of what the big guys are doing is within your grasp as a small business, that’s the beauty of social media.

A lot of what I do is taking the success of big business and making it practical for my small business clients.  My biggest recommendation in Social Media for Small Business is to start with one thing and do it well, then build on it.

  • Know your audience
  • Use Pictures and Video
  • Get Fans to Engage and Act
  • Use Campaigns

But most importantly – BE CONSISTENT!  Set up a simple schedule to start and stick with it.

5 Ways Every Business Can Leverage Social Media

Why Social MediaI was speaking with a group of small business owners last week at the Greater Warrenton Chamber Business Seminar on social media.  Social media was the topic and “WHY” was the question.  Here are my top five reasons that every small business owner should consider jumping on the social bandwagon.

#1 Build Credibility

Social Media provides an opportunity for you to “publish” and establish your expertise.

Writing blogs that demonstrate you are an expert in your industry, pictures that show work you have completed and videos that teach or demonstrate are great ways to establish your expertise.  Make sure your posts provide value.  After all, it’s tough to establish expertise when your posts are all promotional.  And don’t forget to find other experts and knowledge seekers in the industry so that you can comment and share their content.  It will build great credibility with people who can promote you.

#2 Promote Your Network

The foundation of networking is that by knowing and promoting our network, they will more likely learn about and promote us.  Social Media is a sharing, referring, mentioning gold mine!

The biggest networking mistake I see every week is that we aren’t leveraging social media to really launch our networks.  If you are serious about a networking group, like everyone’s fan page, subscribe to their blogs, follow them on Twitter and connect and recommend them on Facebook.  Pay special attention to their posts and make an effort to share and comment on their posts.  It’s a great way to help out your network..  On the other side, make sure you are posting content that your network will want to share, stuff that will make them look good. 

#3 Communicate with Customers

Frequent contact and interaction with customers is a critical sales tool.  It builds trust and increases the chance that you will be top of mind when it’s time to buy.  Social Media provides the tools for “opt-in” frequent messaging.

Provide your customers with daily posts of value – reminders of features, hints for products, upgrades, anything that will keep them informed and loyal.  Another great approach is to post content that generates interaction.  Ask them about creative ways to use your product and answer their questions, anything to keep them involved.

#4 Promote Your Business

Yes, finally, you can promote your business.  The value of social media is that you can be more effective by mixing self promotion in with other information and discussion, subtly branding over time.

Be creative in how you mix in your promotional message.  One of my favorite sources for social media ideas is Social Media Examiner.  When possible promote yourself while promoting others.  You might want to talk about the work you are doing with a charity organization or write about one of your customer’s and your part in making them great.  Don’t forget about social media paid advertising.  You can ultra-target in many areas using the demographic and interest information social media sites collect.

#5 Generate Leads

Social Media provides tools to rapidly expand to and effectively manage a much larger network.

By posting great content and adding value for your fans, followers and connections, you will generate quality leads.  However, you can use tools like LinkedIn to proactively target companies and people within those companies to make bigger sales.  I mention LinkedIn specifically because it allows you to identify people within your target customer and then figure out how your network coincides with theirs.  As a business owner (pronounced “sales person”), you know the value of the warm introduction to a target customer.  Social media provides a way to better identify those opportunities.  Once you have made the initial contact, mix social media with your visits, calls and emails to build the relationship and move towards the sale.

Go Social!

I haven’t met a business owner yet who couldn’t benefit from social media in some manner.  Don’t get overwhelmed!  When I work with people who are getting started we begin with one or two tools and focus on doing those consistently well.  Then we add in additional tools, continuing to build the network and more importantly the value!

Using Facebook for Your Events

Facebook Events is an application that lets you schedule your business events from a Fan Page and invite friends and fans to attend.  Events can be “Public” in which case anyone can RSVP and attend or “Private”, which only allows invited guests to RSVP.  Either way this app is a great way to help get the word out about your next event!  Thanks to Becky O’Brien of Optimal Wellness for helping me test the process!

Add an event from your Fan Page

Sign in to Facebook and go to your Fan Page.  One of the tabs should be “Events”.  If you don’t see an Events tab click on the “>>” tab or the “+” to see more options, “Events” may be there if you have other tabs.  Your Events tab will show and at the top right is a button to “Create Event”.  This will bring up a page to enter your event information.

After you fill in the event information it’s time to invite people.  Realize that the people that you are able to invite are “Friends” from your Personal Profile, not Fans.  You might want to filter and select from that list or choose not to invite people at this point if it is a business event.  You can always post and share from your Fan Page after creating the event.  Don’t forget to add an image to your event so that you don’t get the standard event picture!  When you create the event it builds and event page that allows people to post comments and see who else has been invited and who has accepted, if you click on the boxes to allow those things.

When you are done entering the event information, click the button to “Create Event”.  This will bring up your new event page.  From here you can invite more Friends (once again from your Personal Profile) using the link on the left under the picture.  At the top there is a link to edit the page if you need to make changes and…..

Update Your Fans!

Clicking the link to update your fans will bring up an update box for your event that lets you invite your friends to the event.  You have the capability to do some filtering on your list by region, gender and age.  Add a subject and message then click send.  Your friends will see the invitation in their news feed and have the opportunity to comment, share and RSVP directly from the post.

You can send additional updates as your event approaches.  You might want to consider planning this out and using additional updates to announce speakers, VIP guests that have accepted the invitation, door prizes that have been contributed or other special news relative to the event.

Sharing Events

The best thing about social media is the ability to quickly share information.  This is true of Facebook Events as well.  When you see events posting to your News Feed from your network, click on the share button to send to your friends if you think they may benefit.  When posting and updating your events, encourage your fans to share with their friends!

Please comment with any additional tips or lessons learned while using the Facebook Events Application.

Five Social Media Tips for the Overwhelmed and Panicked

 

This scene from the movie classic Raising Arizona reminds me of a conversation between a Social Media expert and the typical small business person!

“Well you’re on Facebook, right? You’re not on Facebook, you don’t have a page? And what about Twitter, well you just have to be tweeting…and blogging, are you using WordPress, Blogspot, what, you aren’t blogging? And make sure you use Hootsuite, or Tweetdeck or you won’t have any idea what is going on!”

I often catch myself doing it with my students and clients, and then slow down when I see the eyes glaze.  Because of the value of social media and the ease of linking things together and sharing, it is difficult to talk about only one media at a time.  For those who are overwhelmed and panicked, here are some tips for fitting social media to you.  Make sure to leave a coment with your biggest challenge in social networking!

  • Some is better than none!  Start with one application and build as you get comfortable.  What you start with depends on the business and objectives.  I like to get professional services people up on LinkedIn first and then get them blogging before digging into Facebook and Twitter.  For retail I might focus on Foursquare first, followed by Facebook and Twitter.
  • Learn to Subscribe and Comment. Find blogs to subscribe to, people to follow on twitter and Facebook Fan pages to “Like”.  Track those with experience and see how they do it.  Write comments, respond to questions and ask them questions about their sites.  It’s a great way to learn and an easy way to start getting your name out there.
  • Carve out an hour a day.  Most social media is free, but if it’s a significant part of your marketing plan you have to put in the time.  At first you will spend the hour learning more than posting, but as you get more comfortable and experienced the hour will become more and more productive.  To start try spending 20 minutes learning more about social media, 20 minutes reading and commenting on other peoples posts and 20 minutes on your posts – thinking through what and when you will post throughout the day.
  • Read a good book on Social Media.  I recommend the book Trust Agents because it focuses more on the philosophy and strategy of social media than how to use any specific tool.    What you really need to understand is how you can add value to the network you are trying to build. For the “how-to’s”, there are a ton of step-by-step blogs out there.
  • Slow and steady wins the Race. Listen, you may go a couple days and not have time to post anything.  It’s ok to jump back in!  Even if you can only spend 30 minutes every other day, it’s better than nothing and you will see some results.  Just like most other types of marketing, a little every day is better than a marketing dump every two weeks.

Don’t try to solve world hunger in your first week of social media!  You will become quickly overwhelmed and likely stop after a couple weeks.  Instead, pick one media app and go with it, focusing on establishing a routine and setting aside the time.  You will get people telling you about a ton of other tools that are out there.  Write them down for reference but make the time and get comfortable with the first thing before taking on the second and third.

It won’t be long until you shift from finding the time to network online to forcing yourself to stop so you can get some work done!

What’s your biggest challenge to social networking?

Mom, Mom, Mom, Mom, Sean, Sean, Sean, Sean…

See how annoying that is? Are you doing the same thing through your Facebook and Twitter Posts?

This is a family favorite scene from the movie Get Smart and it came immediately to mind yesterday while I was reviewing my Facebook feeds.  A local organization that I “Like” posted about 20 things in a matter of 2 hours, pushing all my other posts to the third or fourth page.  Now I’m open to a little creative marketing blitz now and again, but there was no creativity and the posts were long!  It was like Jamie, Jamie, Jamie, Jamie….

If social medial is going to be a significant part of your marketing strategy I recommend that you develop a media schedule that spreads out your posts and mixes them up a bit.

Spread posts throughout the day instead of posting everything in the hour you spend on Facebook during the day.  Develop a media schedule and use a scheduling tool like Hootsuite or Tweetdeck to spread out the messages.  Place the messages during times your audience is most likely to be online so that you are more likely to receive a response.

Pick your key message and nail it.  When it comes to messaging 1+1+1+1=ZERO, if you try to announce 4 different products in 140 characters your followers see “stuff”.  Pick the one message that they will most likely click or share and nail it.  The great thing about social media is that it’s acceptable to send messages 2-4 in separate posts throughout the day or week.

Mix it up! This is the hardest for me (and for many of you from what I see).  The media schedules that we create for clients mix different types of posts to keep fans and followers engaged.  For one client we recommend educational facts, promoting others, entertaining and self-promotion.  If you only promote yourself every time, using very similar posts, it’s going to get stale.  There are some exceptions, especially if people are waiting to hear from you.  For example, one ice cream store tweets their daily ice cream flavor.

Lay down the foundation and fill with spontaneity!  Many of the posts you will make next week could be written right now.  So why not do it right now.  We create a monthly schedule for clients that lists post ideas around the events we know will be happening over the next month.  This way they can write and schedule the posts early, mixing them and spreading them according to the Social Media Plan.  On a daily basis they can fill by adding posts about what is happening in the moment.  And if they are out for a day, they still have the scheduled messages providing a consistent presence.

As with most marketing there is nothing new under the sun.  Social media offers some great tools, but it’s still important to stick with the basics – a clear and consistent message that touches your audience frequently when they are most receptive.  So, create a social media schedule that gets you in front of people without annoying the crap out of them!

Excuse me Mother. Yes Sean. There is a flying man outside my window!

Much better communication, wouldn’t you say?

Why Facebook for My Business? Top 3 Reasons

Using Facebook for BusinessYesterday, my friend Becky O’Brien from Optimal Wellness recommended that I write something about why a small business owner, even an independent distributor should use social media.  To keep it simple I’ll focus on Facebook, but the same general principles apply across applications with some unique benefits for each.

  1. Customers are using Facebook and don’t seem to mind brief, useful posts from businesses they “like” – this sets up for you to have multiple touch points with a lot of customers and potential customers every day.  Social Media is still a “passive” media where people understand a little promotion and it’s acceptable if it’s kept short and there is value mixed in.  But, don’t get greedy by overdoing it.
  2. Businesses like “word-of-mouth” business and Facebook is “word-of-mouth” times 100 – Let’s say your average fan has 100 friends and that you have 200 fans, not a bad start for a small, local business.  If even 2 fans share one of your posts you have the potential to hit 400 people with your post!  Build up your fans and you can see how quickly that number could jump.  Oh, and these are word-of-mouth referrals FROM people who have chosen to “like” you, TO people who have chosen to be their friend!
  3. Facebook advertising can be tightly targeted to a specific audience – I get Facebook advertising targeted to Naval Academy Graduates because it is in my profile.  You can target by location, age, sex, relationship status….. That means if I sell wedding dresses I can target engaged women, ages 18-30 and filter out those who are already fans.  That’s tight!

Facebook is warming up to business more each day, and I highly recommend jumping on the band wagon before business dominates and people start looking for less commercial alternatives.  If you are just getting started remember to be consistent without being overbearing, spread posts throughout the day and week and add posts with value that are worth reading and sharing.

I’ll close with a link to a simple example of how my sharing on Foursquare, combined with Facebook to create awareness for a local small business.  The post is

Sigma College of Small Business will be offering a 3-hour workshop titled “Facebook for Business! Beyond the Basic Fan Page” on August 17 and August 25 in Haymarket, VA.

Just Checked-in! Foursquare Could be Best Yet for Business

Foursquare Social Media for Small BusinessA couple weeks ago, I finally purchased my new Droid phone.  This led to an increased frequency in my Foursquare posts – the posts you see on Facebook and Twitter stating that someone has just “checked-in”.  Now that my friends and followers are seeing these posts I’m getting more questions about Foursquare, so I decided to shed some light for those that are in the dark on this unique social media application.

It’s Good for Businesses

Quite frankly, if it didn’t show some value for my small business customers, I wouldn’t be so enthusiastic about Foursquare.  It’s good for business because it has the potential to send out your brand from a trusted source to hundreds of people every time a customer enters with a cell phone!

Here’s How it Works

Let’s say I am sitting at the Sigma College of Small Business offices in Haymarket, VA and decide that I need a cup of coffee and something sweet.  I walk across the parking lot to Cupcake Heaven.  While I wait for my tall decaf coffee and afternoon treat, I turn on my Droid, open the Foursquare app, select Cupcake Heaven from the list of nearby venues, add a note about how great the service is and “check-in”.  This automatically sends a post to my Facebook and Twitter accounts and all my friends and followers see my comment and that I am at Cupcake Heaven.

So, do the math.  If 5 customers like me walk into the store and each of us has 200 friends and followers, the name of that store is promoted to 1,000 people that day.  Cost and effort to the store – ZERO!

Why Would a Customer Check In?

Just read your Facebook posts.  I get posts from people when they wake-up, go to bed, eat, stub their toe, etc… So people will check-in just to be social.  However, Foursquare offers tools for businesses to encourage customers to check-in.  As the manager of Sigma College of Small Business I “claimed” my venue and can now offer specific promotions to people who check-in.  Promotions can be based on number of check-ins or given to those who check-in the most – The Mayor.  That’s right, if you are the person who has checked in to an establishment the most, you are given the title of Mayor, which is announced to all your friends and followers.  People will definitely check-in for free stuff and a title!

There’s More!

As the registered owner of your venue, you have the capability to see who is checking in at your place and how often they are checking in – a great way to keep tabs on some of your most loyal and vocal customers.  If you are a retailer or restaurant and not using this free tool, you need to put it on your list of things to check out.  I’m still researching all the benefits, but this one seems to be a no-brainer, just set it up and let your customers promote your business!  Did I mention FREE?

I’ll certainly be adding a few slides on Foursquare to my “Leveraging the Online Social Network” class this coming Tuesday!