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Despite the plethora of studies,
statistics and reports showing that an effective social media campaign has
a positive impact on building a brand, many business people (including marketing
professionals) remain in a foggy “I know I should be using social media, but
I’m not sure how or why” state.
According to one report by Social Media
Examiner, 85 percent of marketers who use social media aren’t clear on which
social media tools would work best for their business.
To see the big picture of how social media
can specifically help you, consider these five impacts a social media campaign
can have on your personal or business brand.
1. Enhanced brand recognition and thought
leadership. It’s simple math: The more frequently you show up on social
media, the greater your brand exposure and the more recognizable (and credible)
your company, personal brand, product and business become.
For example, let’s say you want to get more
gigs as a speaker for your industry’s top events and conferences. Today, most
meeting planners start their search on Google. If you come up -- not once,
but dozens of times -- as an expert, you’re more likely to be seen as a
thought leader and invited to speak. You can’t buy that type of publicity.
Well, actually you can, but it’s expensive. It’s much better to get it for free
through the smart use of social media.
2. Increased trust through leveraged
credibility. Let’s say a major influencer in your industry
retweets you, links to a blog post you’ve written or interviews you for an
article on their website. What does this say about your brand to their audience
-- and yours? Fundamentally it’s a thumbs-up that proclaims “We have
enough trust in your expertise to put our brand behind yours.” That’s leveraged credibility, and it helps create
the kind of trust necessary for brand success. A 2009 study from Mext
Consulting showed that if consumers trust a brand:
•
83 percent will recommend it.
•
82 percent will use its products and services
frequently.
•
78 percent will look to it first for the
thing they want.
•
50 percent will pay more for its products and
services.
3. Competitive advantage in cold conversions. The
third social media marketing bottom line for your business or brand is a competitive
advantage in converting visitors who come to you cold via internet search (as
opposed to through referral or personal contact) into members of your tribe.
Let’s say a potential customer has narrowed the field down to you and one other
competitor. If you have an active (and quality) social media presence (be it
with a blog, Pinterest, LinkedIn or another channel), and your competitor
has a weak social media presence, which brand do you think is going to catch
their attention? And the answer is ... the one with the more engaging social
media.
While this might not be the only criterion
that will factor into their choice, we know social media does influence
customers’ decision making. A 2015 report -- “Navigating the New Digital
Divide” -- from Deloitte noted that customers who use social media to shop
before or during a visit to a store are 29 percent more likely to make a
purchase that same day. A 2011 study from the ODM Group showed that 74 percent
of consumers rely on social networks to guide purchasing decisions.
4. Greater percentage of referrals closed. A decade ago, if you were looking for a consultant in change management to facilitate your annual off-site retreat, you’d call up a few of your colleagues and ask for some recommendations.
Next, with your list in hand, you’d call
(most likely from your land line) each of the candidates, interview
them and ask to be sent (through the mail) some marketing materials. After
perusing their various promotional pamphlets, you’d narrow it down to a few finalists
and ask them to come in for a second interview. Then you’d make your decision
and contract someone to do the job.
Today, if you’re looking for a consultant in
change management to facilitate your annual off-site retreat, you search the
keywords “change management consultant,” and more than 26 million results pop
up. You can eliminate about half the results on the first few pages because you
can tell at a glance they don’t match what you’re looking for (job postings,
Wikipedia entries, white papers etc.) and are left with six to 10 others
that seem to fit the bill.
Next, you click through to each potential
provider and, if you’re a typical user according to the Nielsen Norman Group,
you spend less than a minute on each site -- 59 seconds, to be precise. A few
consultants make the case within that time frame for why you should stay
longer, by impressing you with their:
•
Obvious expertise
•
Social proof
•
Overall credibility
•
Clear brand visuals and messages
•
Content that shows competency
•
Easy user navigation
Having identified one to three consultants
who look promising, for each of these, you might look at their LinkedIn
profile, check out their Twitter feed, view one of their videos on YouTube or
listen to their podcast, read a couple of their blog posts or skim through an
Ebook, and, just for good measure, search their names. Satisfied that they’re
serious players in the field, you fill out the contact form on their website.
You get a response back and, via TimeTrade,
vCita or other online scheduling software, you arrange a time to talk by
phone. At the top of the call, they begin telling you about who they are and
what they do. Politely, you stop them, saying, “There’s no need to cover all
that. I’ve already searched you and been to your website. What I need to know
is this: Do you have experience facilitating these types of off-sites with some
of the participants joining remotely from China?”
5. More cash and customers. Finally,
while social media is by no means a total solution to increasing your sales, it
can’t hurt. In fact, research from social sales expert Jim Keenan showed that
in 2012, nearly 79 percent of salespeople who used social media in their
selling process had better results than their counterparts who weren’t using
it.
The takeaway here is
that social media can act both as a flag to alert potential clients to your
brand and as a funnel to flow those same people into your website, where it
then becomes your job to convert them.
Written By: Karen Tiber Leland
Credit: Entrepreneur.com
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