Showing posts with label Engagement Metrics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Engagement Metrics. Show all posts

Friday, February 9, 2018

Social Media Startup Mistakes YOU Can Avoid?


15 mistakes startups make on social media that yours can easily sidestep..

Too many platforms being used? Lack of visuals? Misuse of hashtags? No social media manager? The list goes on..



If you're a new business owner, you likely know all too well that establishing a strong social media presence is a must.

Like any marketing tool, however, social media is useful only when it's used effectively. Just posting a cute picture of your cat with your brand logo up in the corner won't cut it.

So, if you recognize yourself here -- and are vowing to make your social media work (better) for you -- here are 15 social media mistakes and how to avoid them.



1. Not Having A Target

Every startup needs a business plan, and your plan for using social media needs to be part of it. The key to setting goals for social media is identifying your target customers, then determining where to find them. If your demographic is women, look to Pinterest, but if you're aiming for customers under 25, check out Snapchat.

2. Not Using Metrics

Having a target helps only if you measure how well you're hitting it. With tools like Facebook Insights and Twitter Analytics, you can track how customers reacted to specific posts, how often your brand is mentioned, which demographics responded most favorably and much more.

3. Using Too Many Platforms

It's easy to get caught up in the excitement of launching your brand, and join every site available. However, trying to juggle Facebook, Twitter, Google+, LinkedIn, Instagram, Pinterest, Snapchat, and a partridge in a pear tree will lead only to burnout. Start with just a couple of platforms and post regularly.



4. Posting The Same Content To Multiple Platforms

Copying and pasting is for spammers, not entrepreneurs. Another reason to start small is so that you can adapt and optimize your content to the conventions of each platform. Reading a press release about your new product through Twitter and then seeing a photo of it on Instagram will keep customers engaged on multiple levels.

5. Losing Out On Traffic

You may do your best work at 2 a.m., but that doesn't mean your customers will be awake to read it. Make sure you are posting when your base is online. According to Buffer Social, Facebook engagement rates are highest on Thursdays and Fridays and hit a weekly low on Saturdays, whereas click-through rates on Twitter peak on the weekend.

6. Writing Too Much

The good things you have to say about your startup could fill an encyclopedia, but on social media, less is more. Facebook posts with 250 characters or less get 66 percent more engagement, and although all tweets are necessarily short, those with 100 characters or less still get 17 percent more engagement (again, according to Buffer Social).



7. Misusing Hashtags

Hashtags help cut down on characters and craft targeted exposure for your brand, but only if they are used strategically. Tweets with hashtags have double the engagement, but engagement drops when more than two hashtags are used. Photo captions crammed with hashtags are less likely to be read.

8. Not Paying Attention To Visuals

The impact of visual marketing is well established. Tweets with images are retweeted 150 percent more often, and Facebook posts with images get 2.3 times more engagement than their text-only counterparts. Blurry photos and a lot of stock footage will make your business appear amateurish. Instead, up your game with high quality images, infographics and videos.

9. Neglecting Your Bio

On sites like Instagram, your bio is the first thing potential customers see. Successful businesses combine necessary information with creative flair to make their brands stand out. Describe the values behind your company in a few brief words, show the human side of your business with photos of your team or even use emojis to demonstrate how to use your product.



10. Not Responding To Customer Complaints

Every business gets occasional complaints, but when a customer posts an angry rant to social media, the rest of your customers are there watching how you handle it. Always respond to complaints promptly and in a professional manner. Ignoring the complaint, deleting negative comments or posting a sarcastic retort will only make matters worse.

11. Not Asking For Customer Feedback

Never pass up an opportunity to find out what customers think, especially when it comes to a future product launch. Customers respond best when given a number of options. Post open-ended questions to get a dialogue started in the comments section, create polls and surveys for anonymous feedback or form focus groups using Google+Circles or Facebook Live Q&A.

12. Promoting Too Much

While it may seem counter intuitive, promoting your business too much can backfire. According to Social Media Today, just 20 percent of your posts should promote your brand and 80 percent should be other content. If you sell a line of protein supplements, for example, link to news articles about nutrition, share your favorite smoothie recipes and post photos of you and your protein-fueled kids crossing the finish line at your local 5K run.



13. Lacking Engagement

Social media doesn't work if you don't socialize. Growing your business requires connecting with like-minded individuals via private messaging, commenting, or sharing their content, not just pushing your own. If you aren't trying to find ways to add real value to the lives of your target audience, you could potentially be making a fatal social media mistake.

14. Not Creating A Social Media Policy

One off-color remark or embarrassing photo can do a lot of damage when shared umpteen times. Every company needs a written code of conduct for its social media users. Profanity and racist or sexist language are clearly problematic, but you should also consider the values of your base. If your company sells vegan-friendly clothing, for example, avoid posting a selfie with a plate of chicken wings.

15. Not Hiring A Social Media Manager

By now, you're wondering how you can possibly devote the time necessary to launch a social media campaign effectively. The answer may be that you can't. Resist the temptation to enlist your tech-savvy teenage nephew or your already-swamped secretary and instead hire a professional. Look for an applicant with technological background, writing skills, marketing experience and entrepreneurial vision to take your startup's social media to the next level.

Guest Authored By AJ Agrawal. AJ He is CEO and Co-Founder of Alumnify, an alumni-engagement platform. He's a Growth Marketer, Entrepreneur and Content Creator for Entrepreneur, Forbes, FastCompany and Fortune Magazine. Follow AJ on Twitter.





"15 mistakes startups make on social media that yours can easily sidestep..

Too many platforms being used? Lack of visuals? Misuse of hashtags? No social media manager? The list goes on.." -AJAgrawal



    • Authored by:
      Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBr@nd.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, CO  where I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)

    Monday, January 22, 2018

    YOUR 2018 Systematic Social Media Marketing?


    Social media saw significant growth in 2017. Mobile social media usage grew 30% year over year, Instagram monthly active users grew to 700 million and Snapchat and Pinterest continued to see increased engagement metrics.

    Brands of all sizes cranked up spending to ride the social media wave, with advertising spend on social media increasing by over 60% in 2017.



    While impressions on social media platforms didn’t increase by over 60%, the cost of advertising on social media has risen as a result.
    Take Facebook, for example, which charges by CPM: Average CPM on Facebook increased by 171% year over year, while CTR has remained flat.
    How should advertisers cope with rising costs on social media, which has become a necessary marketing channel? The solution lies in taking a systematic approach when implementing your creative, distribution and campaign management.

    There are many out-of-the-box solutions that can help you successfully implement a robust system for media buying on social platforms. They usually exist in two camps. The first camp starts with scrum management tools. Several software options exist today that assist project planning and management between creative and marketing teams, specifically for social media needs, such as Sprinklr and Falcon. Tools in this camp facilitate the best-case scenario among cross-functional teams. They automate project management tasks, facilitate discussions among teams and enable file and data sharing in one place for each project. These benefits are critical elements to deliver on-brand creative assets in a timely and smooth manner.



    The second camp of tools tackles campaign management.

    They aim at a perfect system that manages your media buying based on your specific needs and goals. Reality is less than perfection, but it is one giant step closer to successfully automating media buying. Kenshoo and Nanigans are examples of tools that belong in this camp. Their major value-add is that they cut out inefficient spend.

    The software bids on your target audience and frequently checks in on campaign performance -- much more frequently and accurately than a human could. Imagine you have set up over 50 campaigns running across all social media platforms and each campaign targets 10 audiences -- that is 500 ad sets to monitor at once. The automatic system leverages software capability to monitor all assets at 30-minute intervals or less. This allows your campaigns to run more efficiently because you are eliminating inefficient spend at least twice an hour across all of your assets.



    Now that we understand the importance of systemizing social media efforts, you might assume that that's it.

    On the contrary, the more impactful benefit of system implementation is that it builds a culture that is poised to scale. There are inevitably social media platforms that software solutions haven’t reached.

    The average internet user today has seven social accounts. To reach them everywhere, you need to implement systems on as many platforms as possible. To contend with platforms that software does not cover, you must create a culture that celebrates efficiency and automation in order to build a custom solution.

    In addition, there will be newer platforms that reach various audiences where existing software solutions have not yet caught up. Figuring out how to succeed on newly established platforms requires efficient systems and a culture that supports them.



    With culture in mind, you will soon discover that each social media platform has its own context. Audiences, interactions and content are unique to each platform.

    As a result, your systems for project management and media buying will and should differ from one platform to the next. Take Facebook and Instagram, for example.

    Your Facebook audience demonstrates different behaviors than your audience on Instagram. As a result, the solution that you build to generate target audiences should be different between Facebook and Instagram. The signals that flag engaged audiences should be different between these two platforms. Reaction numbers may be a signal that you use to measure Facebook engagement, while video watch rate may be a more appropriate signal to measure Instagram engagement.

    Guest Authored By Lu Chen. Lu is Senior Director of Marketing at THINX, Digital Scientist, Digital Marketer and Public Speaker. She also writes Sci-Fi. Follow Lu on Twitter.





    "Build systems and build a culture that is system-friendly to optimize social media spend in the future.

    As social media advertising costs continue to rise and new platforms pop up, taking a systematic approach ensures efficiency over time.." -LuChen


      • Authored by:
        Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBr@nd.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, CO  where I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)