Social media marketing is something you need to be doing. It’s too
effective when it comes to growing your business to ignore it. As more
businesses make it a larger component of its marketing strategies, I see
more mistakes being made.
Here are four mistakes you don't want to make on social media.
It will benefit you much more if you are great on three social media outlets, rather than mediocre on more. Pick the social networks that your business thrives on, and focus on making your impact even bigger.
With just a small handful of social networks to worry about, it makes answering messages and engaging with your followers much more manageable. The faster you can reply and the more you can engage, the stronger that connection will become. Social media is a great tool to build relationships that create life-long brand supporters.
Here are four mistakes you don't want to make on social media.
1. You're not interacting with followers.
Guess what the number one line of communication is for customer service? Social media.
The
majority of consumers are constantly plugged into social media, which
is the reason social media is a major customer support tool. I see a lot
of businesses that understand this, but its social media feed is just a
long list of support replies.
Since your followers are plugged
in around the clock, use it as an opportunity to create raving fans of
your business. Every business is going to have a different audience and
target market, so you need to think of content that your followers would
be likely to engage with.
For example, if your audience is
millennials, memes might be a good play. Memes spark engagement, like
comments and social shares, generating buzz about your business.
Remember, your social media posts don’t have to be traditional
advertisements to convert followers into customers.
2. You're overly promotional.
Continuing where the previous point left off, don’t post ad after ad, and expect your followers to stick around.
An
offer here and there is fine, but if your followers feel that all of
your posts are glorified advertisements, they will find other accounts
to follow and leave you behind. They don’t need you. You need them.
3. You don't include calls-to-action (CTAs).
Collecting
followers alone isn’t going to magically translate into increased sales
and revenue. Every social media profile gives you a place to put your
website link, yet so many businesses miss out on an opportunity to
collect leads, or push traffic directly to an offer because it simply
puts its website’s homepage URL in these sections.
Don’t do that.
Instead, put a link to your newsletter offer, downloadable whitepaper or
a direct-to-purchase offer. Most clicks originating from social media
and hitting your homepage are wasted clicks. Nobody has time to try to
find offers. Send them directly to your offers, and this will greatly
increase your conversion rates.
You should also mix in some CTAs in your posts. CTAs don’t have to be promotional.
Let’s
assume you created a very informative infographic for your blog and
want to drive traffic to it. Most businesses would just post the URL on
social media and hope people will check it out. By including a strong
CTA, such as, “You have to check out this cool infographic we just did
-- especially point No. 3,” will drive significantly more traffic than
just listing the post title and a link.
4. You spread yourself too thin.
You
have to accept the fact that you more than likely can’t be active on
all social media channels, unless you have a dedicated social media team
or outsource your social media to a digital agency.It will benefit you much more if you are great on three social media outlets, rather than mediocre on more. Pick the social networks that your business thrives on, and focus on making your impact even bigger.
With just a small handful of social networks to worry about, it makes answering messages and engaging with your followers much more manageable. The faster you can reply and the more you can engage, the stronger that connection will become. Social media is a great tool to build relationships that create life-long brand supporters.
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