Remember Eddie Murphy's The Nutty Professor? In the
film, he portrayed both Professor Klump, the responsible, well-respected
gentleman of a scientist, as well as Buddy Love, his genetically created alter
ego who was a skinny, loud-mouthed womanizer.
Completely different personalities, yet both
appealed to Miss Purdy in different ways. Sometimes she wanted to be engaged
intellectually. Other times, she wanted to hit the comedy club for a few
drinks.
The way in which we interact and engage with others
in real life is dependent on different factors. After all, you wouldn't
interact with your co-workers in the office the same way you would at happy
hour on Friday afternoon.
It's for this reason that your social media
marketing strategy should have the ability to speak to a diverse audience in a
variety of ways in order to appeal to all of their needs. So let's dive in to
the seven personalities every successful social media manager has.
1) The Informant
With so much content and information at our
disposal, our first inclination as buyers is to find resources that assist in
our decision-making process. It's why Google -- and sometimes even your Twitter
feed -- is your Yellow Pages. Buyers are looking for information. Marketers are
breaking their necks to create and provide it in high volume. And you know what
else is crazy? Buyers are taking to social media almost as much as search
engines in order to find that information.
Takeaway: Spend as much -- if not more -- time
strengthening your social strategy as you do conducting and implementing
keyword research. Focus on being an informant. Share your resources as they
become available so your followers have easy access. Share other industry
related resources as well, even if published by others. If it's resourceful to
you, it's resourceful for your audience as well. Don't worry about directing
followers elsewhere, as sharing resources builds authority and trust. After
all, the outdoor cat always goes back to where they know they're being fed.
2) The Inquirer
A successful social strategy is more walkie talkie
than it is megaphone. If you're always promoting something and pushing your
message across, you'll drastically see a decrease in engagement and,
ultimately, value. Don't be that guy who loves to tell you about his day but
could give a crap about yours. Nobody likes that guy.
That feeling you get when someone asks how your day
was, and genuinely cares ... well, your followers feel that too. Consider the
value of engaging a large following in the form of questions in order to show
you care, and also, to learn more about them. The benefit is two-fold:
relationships development as well as more defined buyer personas.
Takeaway: Not sure what content your audience
craves? Or what product update would make their lives easier? Ask! There's no
greater resource for inspiration than by staying plugged in to your target
audience. Make it a habit of working questions in on a daily basis. A great
social media manager understands the importance of customer feedback and its
effect on improving the product/service and/or customer experience. Start by
understanding what answers your key team members would find most helpful in
improving their job. Craft your questions around this. Rinse. Repeat.
3) The Helper
Similar to #2, this is more about answering
questions than it is about asking them. Too many companies have a static social
presence, which harkens back to my point earlier: Think walkie-talkie, not
megaphone.
Nothing allows for direct access to a brand quite
like social media. Consumers often take to social to find out answers to their
questions they can't get from a website or advertisement. It's the brands
supplying them with these answers that develop relationships that often will
result in a purchase.
Takeaway: Actively monitor your social accounts for
any questions and/or comments regarding your company, and make it a daily habit
to respond to them. Focus on being friendly, responsive, prompt, and most of
all -- helpful! As consumers, we're often drawn to brands that have gone above
and beyond to assist us. It's why I frequent the same pizza place in my town
fairly often. They always tell me to grab a free soda on the way out. You help
me once; I come back for years.
4) The Thought Provoker
Aah, the elusive "thought leader." Why is
it so coveted a title?
Well, for starters, it's extremely rewarding to earn
the respect of followers and other industry influencers. More importantly, though,
is what spawns from that type of respect: customers. We all want to do business
with people who know what the hell they're talking about. Who are the best at
what they do. So ... how do we find those people/companies? They're actually
pretty easy to find.
Takeaway: All thought leaders share a common trait:
They don't rely on other people or resources in order to be resourceful
themselves. They're simply resourceful by nature. By way of experience. Who are
the leaders at your company? Keep an open dialogue -- whether it's with a lead
product designer or C-level executives -- and let their expertise be the basis
for some of your posts. There's undoubtedly someone at your company who knows
the industry like no other. Their type of expertise should be broadcasted, not
hidden on their resume some place. Start quoting them in social media updates.
Conduct and post interviews. However you can, make sure you're establishing
your company as a thought leader rather than a piggy-backer.
5) The Class Clown
The cardinal rule of online sharing is this: Nothing
goes viral quite like funny. We're in the midst of a humanized marketing
evolution, wherein consumers not only value seeing personality, but they often
also prefer brands that display it over those that don't. Particularly through
social media, consumers are often looking to watch or share the next funny
tidbit they come across.
Takeaway: Consumers have a sense of humor. They'll
buy tacos from a talking Chihuahua. The day after the Super Bowl, we're not talking
about the commercial with the best message, but rather the one that made us
laugh. Keep this in mind. Post funny pictures. Share funny videos or articles
you may have come across that made you laugh. Nothing will humanize your brand
more effectively than a small dose of humor every day. And as we've seen from
mass media, nothing sticks in the minds of your consumers quite like a good
chuckle. Don't take your brand so seriously all the time. Consumers aren't
looking for a stiff.
6) The Entertainer
Much in the same vein as having a chuckle, your
followers are also looking to be entertained to some degree. Simply throwing
all blog posts on all social platforms accompanied by nothing but a link and
title will do one thing ... nothing. There's so much going on in social. It's
information overload. If you're not considering how you can entertain and
inform in order to stand out, then well, you won't.
Takeaway: Sharing content doesn't have to be boring.
In fact, it shouldn't be. Don't share your content, present it. Can you film a
quick one-minute video to accompany it through social media? An amazing
infographic that sums up your new ebook? Consider a user’s mind frame when
scrolling through social. Strip it down to bare bones. When you’re scrolling
through social you're looking for one thing only -- something to click on.
Don't overthink it. Focus on getting people to click
on your updates. Once they've done this, that's where the substance comes in.
Think visually -- it's the most effective way to entertain.
7) The Go-Getter
If you're not using social media as a prospecting
tool, you're doing it wrong. The best social media marketers recognize that
there's an audience out there that needs their help, but hasn't found them yet.
Specifically on Twitter, it's extremely easy to monitor hashtags of relevance
in order to identify these potential prospects.
Takeaway: Monitor Twitter hashtags in order to
identify groups of people -- AKA chunks of your market -- who have similar
questions. Answer them. Take part in the conversation (search.twitter.com or a
social media monitoring tool like HubSpot's Social Inbox should be your best
friend). People ask questions to get help. By reaching out, you're not only
establishing your brand as a resource, but you're also positioning yourself as
the likely option when it comes time to buy.
Split Personalities
The key to social media success is recognizing that
your audience has varying agendas when it comes to social, and as a result,
conveying multiple personalities in order to appeal to them. Being great at one
isn't enough. The social media manager is quickly becoming a crucial role
within any business, since it not only functions as real-time PR, but it's also
quickly becoming the manner in which companies are getting found online.
The point here is not to hire seven different
people. The point is to find one person who can pivot and adapt to these
various personalities in order to maintain a powerful presence.
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