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Social Media 101: Your Actionable Guide to Getting Started

social media

Despite the rise in popularity, there are still plenty of social media skeptics who need to understand the value of a social presence for small businesses.

Don’t get me wrong. I’m a huge fan of social media, but I don’t consider this to be an invalid question.

Really, the two major concerns are:

  1. It turns out social traffic (while being the easiest and fastest to acquire) is not that useful after all. A few years ago Chartbeat did a research to find that very few social articles had high read time. It turns out people seldom read what they share!
  2. Social shares don’t bring links. Buzzsumo did further research just a few weeks ago and found that there was no correlation between the number of shares and the number of incoming links. It looks like people share and link to for different reasons.

So why invest time and money into social media marketing? Let me explain.

1. Traffic

If you do everything right, you will get some nice traffic spikes. Here’s one of mine to get you inspired:

 

 

But can a site rely solely on social media traffic? I don’t honestly know a site that could succeed on social media traffic only, but there are plenty of examples of social boosting traffic. If you’re doing it well, social media can hold its own in driving web traffic.

 

2. Brand Awareness and Authority

Don’t roll your eyes on me here. Brand awareness is not one of those buzzwords a sneaky employee uses to pretend he’s actually working hard.

Brand awareness refers to likelihood that potential customers have heard of your brand. Brand awareness is at the very top of the conversion funnel so it’s the first step in building potential customer relationships. Social media is often the first tool used to begin cultivating brand awareness.

 

 

In fact, social media can contribute to every section of this graph:

 

 

Brand awareness results in gradual traffic and conversion growth:

 

 

The actual goal of social media marketing is not to improve your sales though. It’s to build the army of people who’ll promote your brand for free, over and over again. The hope is that they’ll turn into raving brand advocates.

3. Reputation

Some brands believe that the less they are on social media, they less they provoke their customers to leave negative comments. Some people believe that the less communication happens online, the better.

The harsh truth is that, whether you are online or not, your customers are there discussing your service and product. Whether you are there to join that conversation is what makes a real difference.

 

By using your powerful social media presence, you may be able to turn an unhappy customer into a brand advocate with stellar customer service

 

Tips For Building Your Social Media Presence

Assuming you are convinced, let’s go through the actual steps: How to set up your social media presence.

When starting out, stick with major social media networks. Don’t try to be everywhere or you’ll be overwhelmed. Starting out with 4-5 social media accounts is ideal. Now set them up using the following checklist:

Here’s a quick cheatsheet for you refer to when setting up your major social media accounts:

 

(Download it here)

The following meme is a great reference for understanding how each of social media networks work:

 

Social Media Automation Tools

Now that you understand the platforms, we’ve listed a few tools that will save you time and help you automate your posts across platforms.

MavSocial: Mass-Posting

MavSocial is a free social media management platform allowing you to share (and schedule shares) on multiple social media channels at a time. While native sharing is preferred in most cases, MavSocial saves a ton of time:

 

DrumUp: Queuing and Re-using Important Updates

DrumUp is another social scheduling program I use on a regular basis. It allows you to queue your most important updates to repeat them based on your schedule. This makes sure something will always go up on your profiles even if you are too busy to post an update.

Cyfe: Monitoring Your Stats

Cyfe is the business monitoring platform allowing you to create dashboards to track lost of data from one page. I use it to monitor my social media accounts, social advertising stats, analytics, and so on.

Tweetdeck: Monitoring Twitter

Tweetdeck brings my brand mentions to my desktop allowing me to monitor them all the time and react quickly and efficiently.

 

Further Reading

Obviously, it’s impossible to share all the social media marketing tips and tricks in one article without turning it into a book, so once you feel you are ready to move further, here are a few more articles that are worth the read!

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