The document provides guidance for social media beginners on how to get started effectively on social media platforms. It recommends starting slowly on one or two major platforms preferred by customers, such as Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc. It stresses the importance of creating a professional yet personable profile with a photo, monitoring competitors' activities to identify influential accounts, and consistently engaging with others by following, liking, sharing, and commenting on posts to build relationships. The document advises maintaining a helpful tone without overtly pitching products and services, in order to be embraced by the social media community.
2. SOCIAL MEDIA IS NOT A TREND.
Social mediaâs not a trend. Itâs essential.
Just as your customers rely on the phone
and email, they rely on social media. Itâs
where you connect. To believe otherwise
can limit and threaten the growth of your
business or career.
I intend to help you blast through the
hardest part: getting started. Right here.
Right now. Here you go: the essential
how to guide, no experience required.
Just four years ago, I felt like you do.
Social media was another language.
Foreign. Frightening.
Your insecurities are natural⊠Will I look
lame? Am I too late to the party? Will
anyone care what I have to say?
Let âem go. Relax. Social media is a
conversation. You can join any time.
Join now. Youâll be welcomed.
3. BE SELECTIVE. START SLOW.
Your early foray into social media might seem a bit daunting and it
can indeed quickly overwhelm you if you try too much, too soon.
Donât make this mistake. Thereâs no need to dive headlong into a
long list of networks, or even the top four, right out of the gate.
Pick just one or two. Each will have a learning curve, but none is so
complex that you wonât be able to grasp the basics and begin.
Naturally, the question on your mind now is, which social media
networks make the most sense for you?
The answer: the networks your customers prefer.
Dig in a bit to ïŹnd out which networks theyâre using. Visit their
websites. Or simply ask them.
4. Identify a handful of companies in your space that
are active in online marketing. Visit their sites. Are
they blogging? The number of shares they get on
their posts may indicate the most active media
channels.
Do they have social media icons? Look for the
f, g+, in, P, bird, and camera logos (that is,
Facebook, Google+, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Twitter
and Instagram). These are the likely suspects.
Click through to their social media pages. Do they
have sizable followings? Is there a lot of activity
there or do things look a bit static?
You want to be where the conversations are
happening. After looking into several competitors,
it wonât be hard to ïŹgure out where the action is.
Join the crowd. Get started with the one or two
networks where youâve determined competitors
and the market at large are connecting.
FIND OUT WHERE PEOPLE CONNECT.
5. FACTOR IN THE INFLUENCERS.
In addition to competitors and customers, itâs helpful to consider
the social media activity of other inïŹuencers. The most inïŹuential
social media players are generally writers and publishers. Which websites,
bloggers, and authors have authority in your industry? You might discover
some are active with video and podcasting as well.
The experts in your ïŹeld are likely to have established audiences, which
should help you make smart choicesâand provide good examples of how
to interact in various media.
6. CREATE A THOUGHTFUL PROFILE.
Every social media network offers you the opportunity to create a proïŹle. You
can get by with just completing the required ïŹelds, but youâll be sabotaging
your success if you do. Take your proïŹle seriously and do your best to ïŹll it
out completely.
Of course, the rules vary widely across social media proïŹlesâfrom Twitter,
where youâll have only 160 characters to work with, to LinkedIn, where you
can write a lengthy bio and post any kind of media you choose. So I wonât be
able to give you speciïŹc guidance per the channel of your choice. However,
consider the following when writing your proïŹles:
âą Use the keywords that are most relevant to your profession
to enable others to ïŹnd you via search. Frequently, youâll ïŹnd hashtags
(the # symbol) preceding keywords.
âą Be professional, but personable. Your proïŹle plays a large part in
swaying others to follow you (or not), so be authentic and interesting.
âą Avoid applauding yourself unnecessarily. Be humble, but conïŹdent.
âą Post links, where possible, to your website.
7. UPLOAD A NICE PHOTO.
Too many social media users are inappropriately creative when it comes time to post a proïŹle picture.
Do not use family photos, pets, landscapes, or any odd depictions of yourself or persona.
In a physical social situation, you wouldnât introduce yourself by whipping out a picture of your dog.
This is a social situation. Show them your smile.
Use a simple headshot of you looking into the lens, cropped closely.
8. UPLOAD HEADERS AND BACKGROUND IMAGES.
Again, you must play by different rules across the various media, however, most social networks have followed
Facebookâs lead by offering you a space to upload an additional image that acts as a page header (sometime
called âcover photoâ). On Twitter, you also have the opportunity to customize your pageâs background.
Put some thought into this and your proïŹle page will become that much more welcoming.
You might elect to show your city, workspace, or the like. Commonly, marketers will use graphics from their
website or something representative of their brand, which is wise. Itâs unwise to neglect your header image
because a generic one will be automatically placed there creating the impression you donât care.
9. Yes, youâre going to need to learn how your network of
choice operates. They have much in common, but all
differ in signiïŹcant ways.
Invest a little time in learning the ropes. You need
not read books or enroll in a course (though you have
that option). Instead, acquaint yourself with the
network youâll use by:
âą Asking for some help from a friend.
âą Downloading an eBook or guide.
âą Searching for blogs which offer guidance
from experts.
SOCIAL MEDIA EXAMINER IS THE GO-TO WEBSITE FOR GETTING UP TO SPEED AND STAYING UP TO DATE.
THIS EBOOK IS BASED ON A POST I WROTE FOR THEIR BLOG.
LEARN THE NETWORKâS FEATURES.
10. START FOLLOWING MEMBERS.
Your path to engaging on social media begins by following others whose
updates will appear in your feed when you sign-on. Donât overthink this
process. You can always reverse your decisions later by unfollowing, so
fear not and simply begin following folks.
âą Start by following people you know.
âą Most networks will suggest people to follow based on your proïŹle.
Go for it.
âą Enter keywords in the search tool to ïŹnd people with common
interests.
âą Follow inïŹuencers and bloggers in your niche.
âą Consider following those who follow the people you follow.
(You follow me?)
âą Follow customers.
âą In a short time, people will begin to follow you. Follow them back.
11. LISTEN.
In social media, the word âlisten,â really means
âlook.â Translation: though itâs tempting to being
posting immediately after joining a social network,
youâll do yourself a world of good by
observing how others behave and interact.
Youâll pick up on nuances of the network. Youâll
form conclusions about what is good and bad
protocol.
Thereâs no formula for how long or how much
listening you should do, but you will indeed learn
a lot by watching from the sidelines to begin with.
12. ENDORSE.
Endorsing other peopleâs updates may be slightly
less signiïŹcant than sharing, but itâs thoughtful and
wonât go unnoticed. Itâs also easy and can be done
with just a click.
Of course, the most well known of all endorsements
is the Facebook âLike,â a thumbs-up icon. Each
network has one or more forms of endorsements
including a + on Google+, like on LinkedIn, and
âfavoriteâ on Twitter.
Donât endorse every update you read, but do it
when you mean it. Youâll ïŹnd plenty of content and
comments worthy of a click.
13. SHARE.
The best thing you can do to build relationships
via social media is to share the content you
discover and enjoy.
Social media is very much reciprocal. People
will notice and appreciate you have taken the time
to share their blog posts, images, video, etc., and
will likely return the favor.
Social media experts often claim as much as 80%
of your updates should be shares. I donât
wholeheartedly agree, but do suggest thoughtful
sharing is a regular and large part of your social
media activity.
14. COMMENT.
The heartbeat of social media is conversation,
so while sharing and endorsing can be
thoughtful and smart, commentary is better
still. When you get rolling and your network
grows into the hundreds or thousands, you
wonât have the time to comment on every
update you see. However, the best content
you come across will provoke thoughts, just
like any conversation.
Express yourself. Agree. Disagree. Answer
questions. Ask questions. Cite examples.
Offer links. Say thank you.
Again, at its best, social media is a
conversation and when you put
something into it, you get something out
of it. Itâs fun. Enjoy it.
15. JOIN GROUPS.
The social media you joined is a big, big network
with hundreds of millions of members. You have
the option to interact with more like-minded people
by joining (or creating) far more focused groups,
communities, chats (and so forth). Donât hesitate
to try them.
Along your journey, youâll ïŹnd some of the most
valuable exchanges occur within groups and
as result of your participation, opportunities
continuously present themselves.
16. BE CONSISTENT.
You need to budget time to do social media.
How much is up to you, but understand youâll be
taken far more seriously if youâre active on a daily
basis. Yes, you can shut it down for a day,
weekend, or take a break without threatening your
good standing.
The caution I aim to make here is if you merely
check in with a post now and then, you probably
wonât be taken seriously.
17. If you want to buy advertising on social media, do it.
Most will accommodate you and many are quick to
attest to its effectiveness. However, outside of the
âsponsoredâ opportunities some social media offer,
relentless sales messages are not tolerated.
The more you pitch your products and
services, the more youâll be rejected.
However, you need not conclude social media isnât
for marketing. In fact, it is. The trick is to market
with a utility mindset. When you teach, advise and
help people, your contributions will be embraced.
Promoting an event, special offer, sale, new product
or the like is all fair game. You simply need to strike
a balance so as to not put people off. Your updates
should be valuable.
Try a softer approach to selling. Think of your
offers as friendly invitations. Itâs far more effective to
pull than push on social media.
DONâT PITCH PRODUCTS.
18. Of course, as you surf the web you come across social media
icons everywhere. And thatâs as it should be. If youâre going to
participate in social media, youâll want to take advantage of
every opportunity to let it be known.
Consider showcasing links (usually represented by
icons) to your social sites across all customer-facing
touch points:
âą Website
âą Online properties (including other social media)
âą Email signature
âą Newsletter
âą Business cards
âą Advertising
TELL PEOPLE WHERE TO FIND YOU.
19. BE REAL.
Your digital presence is not a veil.
Donât try to be anything other than
yourself on social media. Write as you
would speak.
When you let the authentic you come
through you will attract the right people,
make the right connections, and
accomplish what social media is really for:
building relationships.
20. THANK YOU. AND YOU. AND YOU TOO.
YEAH,
THATâS ME
Mr.
Social
Media
Pants