Rachel Stinson
Rachel Stinson is an avid reader and writer, love music and movies. She is associated with Elephanation
Dos and don’ts of social media promotion business so that you may become an exemplary venture for your audience and other businesses in your niche.
We are all caught in the loop called social media. We share content and information with audiences in an ongoing cycle. It has increased awareness and knowledge of various subjects in ways unimaginable, a great deal of credit for which goes to business promoters using content marketing.
A big chunk of information you get from the internet is basically businesses spreading the word about their brand through content marketing. However, while at it, some fail terribly. How to know what tips and tricks work well in promoting a business on social media? After much discussion and research, we put this checklist on the table. It clearly states the dos and don’ts of social media promotion business so that you may become an exemplary venture for your audience and other businesses in your niche.
We are not ruling out the promotion completely, but the trend shows that people tend to try out brands with diverse, informative, and responsive social media feeds. Principal analyst at Altmeter Group Brian Solis has put forward the following three pillars on which the foundation of brand promotion stands: listen, learn, and engage. Suppose you want loyal customers who bring in more. In that case, your social media feed’s sole purpose should be listening to clients’ concerns and using that knowledge to improve your brand/service, and organic likes and sales will follow naturally.
Share your brand stories more than the specifications of the product. You can make your social media feed a better experience for visitors by promoting the following:
Don’t spam your audience by posting unnecessary or the same information repeatedly. If you constantly inundate your followers with the aforementioned several times a day, they will likely hit the ‘unfollow’ button very soon. And rightly so! Make sure your posts don’t revolve around the same topic, the same information, or irrelevant, nonsensical subjects.
The 80/20 rule states that 80% focus of your social media strategy should be your audience or how your brand can be of use to them. Only 20% of the strategy should be about self-branding. Hence, to succeed in social media marketing, you must understand your audience on a priority basis. Your social media feed must be tailored following the following factors of your target audience:
It’s better to choose from various social media sites at your disposal rather than mindlessly running a campaign everywhere. The latter can get you in trouble if you don’t have enough manpower to fuel all your campaigns, unique and independent of each other. Also, not all social media sites will be suited to your target audience and business needs. For instance, if you are running a business of bespoke jewelry, Instagram would serve your promotion far better than LinkedIn. Emphasize quality more than quantity. Run successful, effective campaigns on social media sites that your target audience visits most often.
Social media has become a vast customer care center where people post problems and concerns regarding a brand, and the brand owners address the issue in the form of comments or tweets! Don’t cut the cord. Have handy at all times a customer service manager who replies back with free advice and solutions to your customers. Train the customer service manager to get things done for your customers over the internet and see how this streams in sales.
You can evaluate your campaigns' success on almost every social media site. Set metrics which define goals and success for your business. CPL, CPC, and CTR measure different conversions – know which are most important to you. If your pointers to success or failure are likes, shares, or retweets, keep track of them. But by the end of the day, don’t overlook that evaluation is crucial to success. If you fail to recognize the specific factors which spruced up your social media campaign, to your loss, you might not ever use them again.
We often come across checklists at the end of school course books, ensuring that we don’t miss out on any detail from the chapter. Same works with social media checklists. Making a generalized checklist for your content keeps you very of committing small slips and big blunders. Here are a few key things you can check for before making your content public on social media sites:
It’s always reviving to indulge in experiments, and try and err out of one’s comfort zone. If you get comfortable with just one approach to social media marketing, people will not stay interested and engaged for long. Therefore, ensure you keep tweaking your products and the social media campaign, introducing quirky new features and developing new links with other communities. These are all the reasons why the world is hooked on social media!
It’s easy to lean on promotional content when you are out of ideas for the social media campaign. However, don’t rely too much on that. Keep a weekly or monthly schedule for the content on your social media accounts, design posts in bulk, and keep them in store for the week/month. This will prevent your social media campaign from unexpected periodic dry spells and keep the audience engaged.
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Rachel Stinson is an avid reader and writer, love music and movies. She is associated with Elephanation
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