Showing posts with label James Jorner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label James Jorner. Show all posts

Friday, February 23, 2018

Who Dominates Social Media In 2018?


4 Industries That Will Dominate Social Media in 2018..

All it takes is the right mix of attention, commitment and effort..



Once seen as purely a tool for entertainment, social media has become an indispensable marketing tool for many industries over the past few years, rivaled only by word of mouth.

According to a first-quarter-2017 report by 4C Insights, overall social media spend was up 60 percent compared with a similar period the previous year. CMO Survey predicted a 17 percent annual compound growth rate from 2016 through 2021 for social media spend. It estimates that the social media advertising investment will represent 25 percent of total online spend in 2018.

Yet, there are some who are not convinced that social media can generate revenue. Clearly, the success hasn’t been uniform across all industries—some are raking in billions of dollars, while some are barely active. But based on the recent trends, we’re likely to see more social media activity from some traditionally inactive industries.


Hospitality

Much like social media, the hospitality industry is a dynamic sector characterized by constant shifts and evolution. Its adoption of technology over the past couple of years has only added to the rapid change.

When it comes to social media, however, the industry’s usage is still in its infancy. We’re just now seeing prominent brands starting to utilize it to their advantage as they integrate marketing with services, such as bookings, into social media channels.

As chefs encourage their customers to post photos of their food on social media and reviews continue to influence buying decisions, mobile pay transactions are taking center stage in the industry. Reports show that 43 percent of restaurants will be adopting mobile pay by the end of the year. The mobile pay industry is expected to hit the trillion-dollar mark in a few years, meaning that hospitality will have no choice but to be part of it.


In order to quickly adapt to such changes and ensure their effective implementation, the industry needs to first catch up with the new ways of communication—social media being the dominant one.

As they try to learn about the behaviors and expectations of their tech-savvy customers, these companies will rely on social media.




Although most of the business-to-business world has been embracing social media, manufacturing has been lagging. This has been mostly due to the accepted assumption that the average customer doesn’t spend enough time on social media. But that’s in the past, and manufacturers have realized it.

“Now, most manufacturing companies have some kind of presence on social media,” says Raymond Sam of GearScope. “According to an annual report by the Content Marketing Institute, the average number of social media platforms used by manufacturing companies is five, and most manufacturers prefer the big five platforms in this order: YouTube, LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter and Google+. On the question of the most preferred paid content promotion methods, 85 percent of marketers say their organization uses social promotion.”




Whether it’s educating customers, boosting brand awareness, enhancing B2B relationships or sourcing customer feedback, manufacturers can benefit from social media in many aspects of their businesses.

Emphasizing the importance of making use of social media, Michael Del Gigante, president of MDG Advertising, says, “Manufacturers have been slow to integrate social media into their marketing strategies, but it’s an essential tool for content promotion and lead generation.

Manufacturers that don’t embrace it will find themselves falling behind their social-media-savvy competitors.”


Pharma

You can’t talk about compliance issues hindering the adoption of social media without mentioning pharma.

While the communication lines of pharma are highly regulated, the number of pharmaceutical companies using social media to reach and engage with their consumers, potential hires and other healthcare professionals has been steadily increasing

How’s pharma navigating the big world of social media? Lux Narayan, co-founder and CEO of Unmetric, tells Forbes of the “four-silo” approach pharmaceutical companies have taken to ensure that they reap the most from social media.

When conducting research for its report, Unmetric found that pharma has organized itself into four areas to boost its social media presence:

--Corporate social profiles that typically talk about the company history, overview, and staff.
--Careers in pharma.
--Over-the-counter branded pages, discussing products.
--Community pages, discussing diseases without mentioning drugs (unlike the branded pages).



As patients get used to going online to find treatment recommendations, emotional support and general engagement with their peers, the industry will need to gear up its efforts on social media to stay connected to its consumers.

Finance

The finance industry is heavily regulated. The compliance issues alone have been enough to make would-be social media users in the industry think twice about testing the platform for marketing.

Speaking to Hootsuite, financial services expert Amy McIlwain said, “In addition to compliance, one of the reasons financial advisors initially held back was the belief that their clients––baby boomers and seniors––were not on social media.” She went on to say that the situation has changed with baby boomers flocking to platforms such as Facebook and Instagram. She continued, “LinkedIn reported in 2014 that more than 5 million high-net-worth people in North America were likely to use social media to assist with financial decision-making.”


Another important currency in finance is trust.

When money-in-motion events such as job change, retirement or graduation occur, customers look for trustworthy financial advisors. To build this trust and ensure that they remain on the minds of their customers, financial institutions will have to turn to social media.
To reach its audience, which now includes avocado-toast-consuming millennials, the finance sector will need to get on with the times and start using social media.

Industries such as tech, fashion, real estate, retail and marketing have shown that all it takes to see success with social media is the right mix of attention, commitment and effort—and, yes, a budget, too.

Guest Authored By James Jorner. James is a content strategist and marketer at Effective Inbound Marketing. His company specializes in online branding and digital marketing for businesses. Follow James on Twitter.

"With promises of further advancements in technology, faster Internet speeds and generally better connectivity in 2018, social media is likely to be embraced by more brands across many industries.

No matter how much success they’re having with other platforms, most industries are quickly realizing that social media is no longer optional.

It’s now an important part of the overall business development
strategy.." -JamesJorner
  • Authored by:
    Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at GetMoreHere.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. 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 ;)

Friday, January 6, 2017

Your Social Media Legal Issues?


Every good thing comes with its downside. This is the case for social media in legal issues..


When aggrieved victims share their stories of woe on social media, other users will often cheer them to take the matters to court, where they would get justice and possibly a windfall from the case. However, with the unbridled use of social media, the same platform that encouraged them to take a legal route will turn back to hurt their case.


This is the situation with a plaintiff in the Largent vs. Reed injury lawsuit case, in which she claimed that a motorcycle accident left her with severe physical and mental pain. After the defendant established that there were pictures of the plaintiff going to the gym and enjoying life, the defendant requested that the plaintiff provide the defendant with her Facebook username and password.

In another case, the plaintiff in Allied Concrete Co. vs. Lester filed a lawsuit against defendant in a wrongful death action. A Facebook post that included a photo of him holding a beer with a shirt declaring his "love for hot moms" caught the attention of his lawyer. Upon the advice of his lawyer, he cleaned up his Facebook page and deactivated his account. The trial court hit both the plaintiff and his attorney with sanctions for spoliation of $180,000 and $542,000, respectively.


What lessons can be learned in the above cases and several similar cases where social media became the undoing of litigants in court cases?


Social media posts can serve as evidence in court

We're in the Facebook age, and the rules that apply to electronic discovery now bind a litigant's Facebook data if there is evidence that warrants that the content of their pages be examined in relations to the case.

Gabriel Levin, an injury attorney at The Levin Firm, shared this piece of advice:
"If you're involved in a case and you're worried that the content you shared on social media could affect your case, instead of deleting said content or deactivating your account entirely, changing your profile to "private" should help you keep your opponents from viewing contents you've shared online."  

Given that a defendant would have to provide reasonable evidence that the content on a plaintiff's profile would help in discovering admissible evidence, if your posts are private, they'll have a hard time proving that.


Let your posts on social media reflect what you say in court, or simply go silent on social media when you're involved in a court case.

Deleting social media posts during litigation is a bad idea

As we've seen from the example above, deleting posts that you think your opponent could use against you in a court case could be treated as destruction of evidence or spoliation - a serious offense in a civil or criminal law case.

Guest Authored By James Jorner. James is a content strategist and marketer at Effective Inbound Marketing. His company specializes in online branding and digital marketing for businesses. Follow James on Twitter.






"In order to keep your social media activities from hurting your chances in a court case, begin to clean your pages before you even have a court case.

No one knows when anything might come up.."


    • Authored by:
      Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at GetMoreHere.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Los Angeles, CA 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 ;)
    Follow Me Yonder..                     Instagram