Social Media
The countless Web sites that make up the online social media promote communication and conversations among millions of people â but you can use them to reach even a small target audience.
Social media content includes âwords, pictures, videos and audios,â and many individuals and groups connect to it constantly, from YouTube users and Facebook members to people who read â or write â blogs.
âSocial media is already redefining the way people live and do business.â
Most of these individuals use products or services like the ones you sell. Heads-up businesspeople are learning how to leverage social media tools to encourage the online population to talk positively about their products.
This level of engagement has four aspects:
- âCommunicationâ â The Internet and its social media exist to communicate, from e-mail to âtweetingâ (Twitter), âjottingâ (Jott), blogging and surveying. For instance, you can use SurveyMonkey for quick market research. To begin communicating with your stakeholders, you could develop an e-mail newsletter. To see if it works well, turn to an online resource like Constant Contact.
- âCollaborationâ â The Internet is a robust global tool for professionals who want to work together. To get employees to collaborate, you could create a company wiki. You may even want to engage customers. Charles Schwab developed the collaborative Schwab Client Forum for this purpose.
- âEducationâ â Organizations use social media to spread information about their products, services, causes or classes. The Web provides amazing versatility in this regard; for example, you can download lectures on nearly any subject. One application might be to develop a blog to involve customers in discussing your products or services.
- âEntertainmentâ â Firms that entertain people while communicating about their products can sell more. An off-the-wall creative approach can get people talking about your product. Test your idea first. The Web world is very diverse and what is funny to some may offend others. Always remember that, on the Internet, negative emotions can rapidly turn frighteningly viral. To use entertainment effectively, you could create and upload a YouTube video that tickles customersâ funny bones about your product line. Blendtec did this beautifully with popular videos showing its appliance âblending,â actually pulverizing, such objects as metal money clips, soda cans and iPhones.
The World Wide Toolbox
Social media tools and applications are diversified, versatile, feature-laden and powerful.
âA picture is worth a thousand words, an audio podcast is worth a thousand pictures and a video is worth a thousand audios.â
The most common categories of social media sites, tools and applications are:
- âSocial networkingâ â Use these sites to connect with other people and to share information, not unlike traditional networking. Popular tools include Facebook, Friendster, LinkedIn, Ning, Orkut, Bebo, KickApps, MOLI, Fast Pitch! and Plaxo. Facebook enables Internet users to connect via numerous clever applications. Businesses use it to promote products or services with word-of-mouth advertising. Facebook is also useful for contacts within organizations. MySpace, one of the first, most popular social network sites, grows daily by 230,000 new users working in 15 different languages. It is great for reaching targeted groups, and features numerous popular applications, including blogs, instant messaging and widgets, which are on-screen tools, such as clocks and weather reports. LinkedIn, a primary business network, has 24 million professionals in 150 industries. Itâs a good source of job listings and candidatesâ rĂŠsumĂŠs.
- âPublishâ â These sites disseminate information, for instance, data about your company or products. Publishing sites include TypePad, Blogger, Wikipedia and Joomla. Blogger allows Internet users to publish their own materials on any topic. Available in 41 languages, it enables the instantaneous sharing of all types of information in multiple formats, including video, making it a superior marketing tool. Millions of bloggers use WordPress, which employs âopen-source softwareâ to let users develop their own blogs or Web sites. Multiple authors can co-develop blogs on WordPress, which offers 60 templates to simplify Web site construction.
- âPhoto sharingâ â Popular photo-posting tools include Radar.net, SmugMug, Zooomr, Flickr, Picasa, Photobucket and Twitxr. Flickr lets users share visual content easily. People at different locations can work together to organize photos and videos, so this is a great application for families and friends, as well as businesses that want to distribute visual images. Flickr account holders can upload 100 megabytes of visuals monthly. It has more than three million users.
- âAudioâ â Itâs not just used for music. Some firms communicate with their employees and customers via audio files over the Web. Popular tools include iTunes, Rhapsody and Podbean. Podcast.com enables you to podcast (personal on demand broadcast) digital audio or video files to selected users. Marketers can use podcasts to reach targeted consumers and professionals can use them to showcase their expertise.
- âVideoâ â In a world where almost everyone grew up watching TV, videos are powerful and compelling. Popular tools include YouTube, Metacafe, Hulu, Viddler and Google Video. YouTube, an Internet sensation, enables users to share their videos with the world. Businesses use YouTube to market products and services. Highly versatile, YouTube even works with the Apple iPhone. Brightcove, an online video publishing service, lets companies display films to build brand awareness and disseminate recruitment information. It is also an effective platform for distance learning.
- âMicrobloggingâ â Get your message across on Twitxr, Twitter and Plurk, among others. Twitter is a popular âword-of-mouth engineâ for instant communication in 140-character messages. Businesses use Twitter to communicate quickly with employees and to conduct basic market research by evaluating usersâ comments and reactions.
- âLivecastingâ â Some tools for broadcasting in real time include SHOUTcast, BlogTalkRadio, TalkShoe, Justin.tv and Live365. Through BlogTalkRadio, users can create and broadcast their own radio shows over the Internet. This service offers numerous professional features, including functions that enable users to field telephone calls during their broadcasts and to distribute MP3s (digital audio files using data compression). Itâs an excellent way to disseminate audio content, such as product information, educational materials and public relations fact sheets. Live365 also lets users broadcast audio content. Its business-related broadcasts include Smallbiz America Radio and Real Estate Nation. You can even broadcast business meetings.
- âVirtual worldsâ â Assume an identity online and interact with others in a controlled, self-contained environment. Popular tools include There, Second Life, ViOS and Active Worlds. Second Life enables users, called âresidents,â to commingle and interact in the guise of avatars (virtual alter egos in various forms, from humans to robots, animals or mythical creatures). Second Life has some 15 million accounts registered worldwide. Its participantsâ interactions often involve trading. Entrepreneurs can use Second Life to promote products or develop online businesses. Companies that are active on Second Life (e.g., CNN, Coca-Cola, Dell and Disney) often have 24-hour staff to voice the avatars that greet you in their Second Life stores. The American Cancer Society raised more than â200,000 real dollarsâ in this virtual world, where John Wiley & Sons publishing has a bookstore you can visit. Sun Microsystems uses it to run a âvirtual campusâ for staff training. Often, 70,000 users are logged on simultaneously.
- âGamingâ â Similar to virtual worlds, these online environments feature competitive games like World of Warcraft, Entropia Universe or Halo3. In EverQuest, a âthree-dimensional...multiplayer online role-playing game,â users interact in specific roles. Firms like Pizza Hut have used EverQuest as a âviral marketing tool.â
- âProductivity applicationsâ â This category is a catchall for business productivity tools, such as ReadNotify, Zoho, Zoomerang, Constant Contact and Eventful. Acteva helps organizations manage events. Its software generates attendee lists, name badges and other materials. With Google Docs, users can collaborate on the development and editing of documents, including spreadsheets. It features the versatility of a commercial suite of office programs, and has surveying and polling capacity. The free desktop application MSGTAG tells you when others receive and view e-mails youâve sent.
- âAggregatorsâ â These tools pool information, such as marketplace activity. They include Digg, Yelp, iGoogle, Reddit, FriendFeed, My Yahoo! and Google Reader. The TiddlyWiki aggregator works well for collaborative online ventures, like project management, and for publication of user manuals and product tutorials. Digg lets users relay Internet content and Web site information to help keep employees, salespeople and clients up-to-date with Web-based information. Yelp is a popular rating service for retailers, restaurants and other businesses that need public feedback.
- âRich site summaryâ (RSS) â This tool keeps you updated on the most current information from Web sites you select. Popular tools include RSS 2.0, Atom and PingShot. One RSS, FeedBurner, is an âaudience engagementâ and publicity application that enables companies to promote their online content. It provides useful data about visitors to your blog and their reactions to it.
- âSearchâ â These tools help you find what you want on the Web. Popular versions include Technorati, Redlasso, EveryZing, MetaTube, Yahoo! Search and IceRocket. Google Search is the Internetâs most popular search application (130 million U.S. users in May, 2008). It lets companies link their Web pages and targeted online ads to pages that searchers select and visit often.
- âMobileâ â Many businesspeople see their cellphones as their most crucial technological devices. Useful social media cellphone tools include Jumbuck, CallWave, airG, Jott and Brightkite. Jott, a âvoice transcription service,â lets you call a number from your cell to transcribe a note to anyone, including yourself. It is an effortless way to remind yourself of upcoming tasks and meetings. CallWave offers a lot of cellphone tools, like voicemail-to-text, âsynchronized video,â audio conferences and e-mail faxes.
- âInterpersonalâ â These Web sites help people communicate with each other. They include WebEx, iChat, Meebo, Acrobat Connect and Skype. Go To Meeting is a popular online meeting application that also offers VoIP (voice over internet protocol), âmeeting recordingâ and multiple-user screen sharing, which is great for slide shows.
Strategy
Your choice of social media tools for promotion depends on your marketing strategy. Begin by assessing whether your company is already engaging online audiences. Where are you active and what results are you achieving? In each area, social media offer methods for securing valuable feedback on your PR, marketing or online advertising.
âIn the vast social media ecosystem that lies outside your company, beyond your reach, there are no set rules of behavior.â
Sorting through all your social media options can be bewildering. To help, try to approach the decision by using a rating scale that ranks social media options from zero to four to denote gradations from ânot valuableâ to âextremely valuable.â Alternatively, develop your strategy by using a âSWOT analysisâ to evaluate âstrengths and weaknesses,â as well as âopportunities and threats.â
âMost online communities created by businesses fail because âmost businesses focus on the value the online community can provide themselves, not the communityâ.â [ â The Wall Street Journal Online]
To determine strengths and weakness, ask what your company does best â and worst â and how those attributes will translate via social media tools. For opportunities and threats, ask what external factors might work against your firm online and what elements might work for it. This audit will point you in the right direction.
âIf technology trends continue, there will be more convergence to free Web-based applications that make using social media tools easier, more powerful and more accessible.â
As you plan, develop and implement your strategy, follow three basic rules for social media marketing:
- Your goal is to enable positive online conversations about your products.
- The Internet is about influence, not control. You cannot control how people react to your firm and its social media activities â but you can influence their responses.
- All online business relationships fully depend on this form of influence.
âWith social media, everyone is a publisher.â
With these rules in mind, create a realistic, 12-month âsocial media macro strategy.â Focus on no more than 12 online tools to start. Introduce one each month. Use your staff, customers and other constituents to measure your progress.
The Web is a nearly infinite expansion of word-of-mouth advertising, but donât get paranoid about online chatter. Just fully leverage its positive aspects.