Archive for category Social Media Marketing

Is Your Small Business Using Twitter for Customer Service?

A solid customer service program may be one of the best marketing investments you can make as a small business owner. Your receptionist is often the first human contact a potential customer has with your company, and you client services team maintains regular contact with your key accounts. These people can make or break major deals for your company, so are you leveraging all the tools available for managing client relationships?

Major companies, including Best Buy, Comcast, and Wells Fargo are using Twitter to address client concerns and rectify customer service issues. For a first-hand account of how this works, check out this article on ATT&T’s use of Twitter for customer service.

While your small business may not have the millions of users these global corporations have, you can still use Twitter to maintain contact with your customers in real time. Twitter is totally scalable, so if only a few hundred of your customers use Twitter, you and your staff can focus on these users. Follow your users; watch their tweets; discover what they’re saying about your brand.

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The Power of B2B Social Media

So maybe you’ve heard your niece talking about Facebook or your son watching some horrible video on YouTube, but using these tools to grow your small business?  Unheard of, right?

The fact is that businesses who market to other businesses are increasingly using social media as part of their overall marketing strategy.  Social media is here to stay, and small business owners who market and sell to other businesses must learn how to integrate social into their business-to-business marketing plans.

This post offers 10 reason B2B companies should engage their target audience using social media.

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Measuring Social Media ROI: Two Examples

A common question I get from small business owners is “How do I know my social media marketing is helping grow my small business?”  What they’re really asking is what’s the ROI for this social media thing?

While ROI is the standard for measuring most marketing efforts, pinning down hard numbers can be difficult when dealing with social media marketing.

But don’t loose heart. There is hope!  Read more about companies successfully tracking their social media ROI.

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A Complex Web: 50 Social Networks for Marketing Your Small Business

“Social Media” as a term typically conjures the Big Three of Social Media: Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn, but social media marketing has grown far beyond the reach of these majors sites.

Your social media marketing strategy should invovle networks that fall into these broad categories:

  • Social bookmarking
  • Professional networking
  • Niche social media
  • Job sites

Take some time to familiarize yourself with these 50 social networking sites and explore ways to integreate them into your online marketing strategy.

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Social Media Marketing: Are You Sharing Information About Your Small Business on Twitter?

The new rule of conversational politeness: If you don’t have something nice to say, go to the Internet and let the whole world know.  The Internet offers the small business owner the chance to market and sell to customers around the world, but the trade-off is that the same medium that allows worldwide commerce also provides the platform for global brand-bashing.

TweetsMentionBrandsIn just minutes, an angry customer can rant on blogs and post negative reviews on websites and forums, compromising your years of hard marketing work. Social networks have only enabled this process.

Many marketers feared Twitter, with it’s massive size and ability to Retweet interesting information, would provide the ideal medium for brand abusers to spread their spew.  But is Twitter really the unbridled hate-fest many online marketing types have always suspected.

No.

This study by Pennsylvania State University found that only 22.3 percent of Tweets actually involved brand sentiment, and of those sentiment-related tweets, only about 34 percent involved negative sentiment.  In all the tweets analyzed, few than 7 percent of all tweets contained negative brand sentiment.

SentimentTweetsAdditionally, almost 30 percent of tweets involved information seeking or providing information to others. Despite the 140-character limit on tweets, members of your small business’ target audience are engaging in conversations directly related to companies and brands.

Small Business Social Media Conversations

What does this mean for your small business? It’s good news! Social media, it seems, is delivering on the hype of 2-way marketing conversations.

Find your target audience and engage them. You customers want to hear how your small business can make their lives easier or more fulfilling.

Build social media marketing into your overall marketing strategy and begin to meet your customers where they already are.

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Comprehensive Guide to Tracking Your Inbound Social Media Marketing Efforts

RulersHow effective are your small business’ social media marketing tactics? Many small business owners post links on social media sites like Twitter and Facebook, but have no conception of what’s supporting their marketing objectives and what is waste, or even how to determine which analytics are important.

There are many factors involved in tracking social media marketing success, like engagement and reputation, but one one metric that’s simple to track is inbound referrals to your website.  A large percentage of social media marketing activity involves promoting your website to your target audience, so you absolutely must know what traffic is coming from where.

Here’s a quick tutorial on how to setup your small business social media tracking and analytics system.

Required tools

  • Google Analytics account: if you don’t have one, sign up for an Analytics account. It takes a bit of effort (you may need to involve your webmaster), but the payoff will be apparent for the life of your website.
  • Google URL Builder: in conjunction with Analytics, the URL Builder allows you to gain quick insight into the performance of your social media links
  • Spreadsheet program: such as Excel or Google Docs spreadsheet

Social Media Tracking Method (the short version)

  1. Determine the target page on your website for your social media campaign
  2. Plan which social networks you will target
  3. Enter your URL into the URL Builder, entering the necessary parameters
  4. Record the parameters in your spreadsheet for reference
  5. Link your content on the social networks
  6. Track in Google Analytics
  7. Adjust your tactics

Social Media Tracking Method (the full version)

Step 1: Let’s say your small business sells hand-made t-shirts in-store as well as online. Your marketing strategy revolves around a “hot deals” page on your website that offer “buy now” opportunities for your 6 top-selling designs. All inbound activity will be directed to this landing page.

Step 2: Your small business has a decent following on Twitter and and active fan group of Facebook, so they will be the primary target of your social media marketing activities. You also post images of your products on Flickr, so you’ll track inbound links from there as well.

Step 3: a guide to the URL Builder

  • We’ll start with Twitter

    Screenshot of the URL Builder

    Screenshot of the URL Builder (click for larger)

  • Enter the base address (e.g. www.shirtstore.com/hotdeals.php) into the “Website URL” box
  • “Campaign Source” = the site where you’ll post this particular link, so for the Twitter links, enter “twitter”
  • “Campaign Medium” = the kind of link you’ll be using, like a banner add, text link, email campaign, etc.
  • “Campaign Content” = used to differentiate different kinds of content pointing to the same landing page
    • The Twitter component of this online marketing campaign will have two sources:
      • Post links, i.e. links you’ll post in your feed
      • Bio link, i.e. the link in your profile information
    • You’ll give them both unique names for tracking purposes
    • Since we can only build one URL at a time, we’ll do to the post links first, so enter “post_link” into this box (you can’t use spaces)
  • “Campaign Name” = used to identify the larger campaign this link is a part of. Since your marketing efforts are focused on the Hot Deals landing page, enter “hot_deals_fall_09″
  • Finally, click “Generate URL,” and your URL is built!

You’ll have to go through this process for each different link on your social media properties. So two for Twitter, changing the Campaign Content field for each kind, and for each Facebook link and Flickr link you’ll post.

Step 4: As you can see, this analytics systems results in a large inventory of URLs. To keep track of what values you’ve used for each tracking parameter, setup a spreadsheet that store each value used. Use the furthest-right column to leave yourself notes about how each URL was used, where and when. Again, the initial setup is a bit time consuming, but your efforts will provide solid social media analytics so you can focus your marketing efforts on activities that bring results.

Step 5: Now that you have your list of URLs in your handy spreadsheet, implement them on your target social media sites.

Google menuStep 6: Once your links are in the wild, you can move on to the exciting part: tracking the campaign results. Login to your Google Analytics account and click on “Traffic Sources” in the navigation on the left. The two sub-sections of interest in our case are “Campaigns” and “Ad Versions.” These reports will quickly overview the progress of your campaigns and the versions of your links you’ve posted on the social networks.

Additionally, you can view the Campaigns based on the other dimensions you set when building the URL, namely source, medium, and ad content.

Step 7: Watch your campaign for the next days and weeks to see which links are driving traffic to your website. Maybe you find that posting image links in your Facebook status drives twice the traffic as the Flickr photos, so you spend more time on that approach. Any combination of results is possible, but without analytics and metrics, you are completely in the dark about the effectiveness of your small business social media marketing efforts.

Hopefully this tutorial to setting up your social media analytics system has been helpful. Please comment if you have any other helpful social media marketing tips!

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LinkedIn Strategies for Building Your Small Business Network

LinkedIn IconHave you built social media marketing into your small business marketing plan?  Did you know LinkedIn can be used as a powerful tool for sales prospecting and building relationships with potential clients.

Read this article from Inc. to gather comprehensive insight into how you can use LinkedIn to build your small business network.

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Tracking and Measuring Your Small Business Social Media Marketing

Your small business may have a Twitter account and maybe even a Facebook fan page, but have you seen any ROI from these activities?  Building active social media communities is a time-consuming task, so how do you know if it’s worth the time and money?

Amy Martin with Digital Royalty has put together this video to give you serious insight into how your can track your small business’ social media marketing activities.  In just 6 minutes you’ll have a solid grasp on ways to objectively measure the time and money you’ve spent on social media marketing.

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Social Product Development for Small Business

You may not have realized it, but social networks can be a rich resource for developing new products and services for your small business. This blog post discusses two approaches to social product development: product led innovations and problem led innovations.

Read-up to understand yet another way social media can help you grow and strengthen your small business.

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Make Your Emails Social

Want an easy way to promote your social media properties without doing any extra work? Just leverage the ubiquity of your email signature.

You might already use a signature in Outlook or some other email client that includes your name and contact info. Take your signature to the next level by including links to your Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and YouTube pages.

With Outlook, it’s possible to include HTML in your signatures.  If you think you’re up to it, you can download free and beautiful social media icons to use in your emails, or your website for that matter.

If you can’t include HTML, you can still get the benefit from plain text signatures.

Here’s a quick example:

Patrick Woods
President
www.megaphoneproductions.com
Follow me on Twitter: http://twitter.com/patrickjwoods
Connect with LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/patrickjwoods

With very little effort, your email signature can promots your small business’ social media assets with every person you communicate with.

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