How to use Social Media to build a small business brand

Brand Strategy, Social Mediaon March 24th, 2010No Comments

I had an interesting conversation this evening with Lisa Peyton, the founder of the Thoroughly Modern Marketing blog, about how to use social media marketing to build your brand as a small business. In a nutshell, this is what I told her:

1. Keep it real.
2. Keep it relevant.
3. Keep it meaningful.

But to expand, here’s what I was thinking:

Keep it real. By that I mean, be YOURSELF. Don’t be all corporate or attempt to be overly professional in your posts on social media channels like twitter, facebook or LinkedIn. Be human. People want to engage with people, not with these false identities known as businesses. If you’re a small business, customers probably like the people that make your business work. Embrace your people and their unique personalities. Yes, that means occasionally tweeting about what you had for lunch, but see points 2 and 3 for more on that!

Keep it relevant. To the extent possible, stay within your sweet spot. Tweet about things that you know. If your business sells shoes, find compelling and unique content about shoes and share it. This can establish category expertise and ensure that your audience looks to you for the latest relevant information on shoes. The point here is to establish yourself or your brand as a voice in the category.

Keep it meaningful. Relevance only gets you so far if you’re not adding insightful points of view to the content. Relevance might get you ‘followed’ or ‘friended’, meaning gets you contacted. Stand out from the crowd by connecting the dots for people. Teach, share, and add value. Retweeting, for example, can be relevant. Overlaying a point of view can create meaning, as can engaging in REAL dialogue in these channels. If I look at your brand and see that you’re blasting one-way messages without much interaction, you’re not creating meaning.

-Scott

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Word of the year: Unfriend

News, Trendson November 17th, 2009No Comments

In a sign of the times, the New Oxford American Dictionary has selected “Unfriend” as its Word of the Year from its list of new entries for the upcoming edition. As in to “unfriend” someone from your Facebook list of friends. As in Facebook has 300 million members. As in HOLY CRAP, that happened fast! For more, check out this link.

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Stop calling me a consumer. I am a person.

Cool Stuffon May 29th, 2008No Comments

With 168 members and growing, this Facebook group reinforces the notion that people are people, not consumers or market segments. One too many meetings with executives who focus their unsuccessful sales efforts on companies or demographic segments and you see the value in this discussion. People—with all their little quirks and intricacies—buy your products and services. Act accordingly.

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