Although each man's description was accurate, each perceived only part of the elephant; none had a perspective of the entire beast.
It's the same with many business executives and their views of social media:
- "Social media? Twitter isn't appropriate for our market."
- "Our company already has a Facebook page!"
- "We don't have time to maintain a blog."
- "Several of our people use LinkedIn."
Phase I: Observation
"You can observe a lot just by watching." A bit of research and observation up front will make your participation later much more productive and prevent false starts and missteps.
Some of the questions to answer in this phase:
- Where are people talking about our company, industry, and competitors? Which social media platforms do they congregate on?
- What are they saying? What are the hot topics?
- Who's doing the talking? Which voices seem to have the most influence?
- What opportunities do we have to respond and participate? What kind of content seems to be most popular?
- What questions are people asking that we can answer?
Every company with more than a handful of employees is already involved in social media—whether those running the company know it or not. That's because nearly half of all South African are now active on at least one social network. And though employees may be using these networks primarily to share pictures of the kids or to plan which clubs to hit next weekend, most will bring up the workplace at some point:
- "Our new CEO, John Doe, is an incompetent jerk."
- "I sure hope our new product works because we've really skimped on the testing."
- "If I owned any stock in this company, I'd dump it now"
One common objection voiced by executives about social media is that it can't be controlled. That's true, but when it comes to what a company's employees are saying, it can, at least, be guided. Developing a social media policy is a crucial first step toward making social media a constructive, rather than dangerous, communication channel. If you would like a copy of our Employee Guidelines drop me a mail on sue@scream-media.co.za
In short your guidelines should include
- The company's approach to social media. What are the goals, limits, and rules? A small restaurant will use social media much differently than a heavily regulated financial services company.
- Guidelines. What's acceptable and what's not? Don't rely on "common sense." Spell it out.
- Consequences and questions. Let employees know what will happen if guidelines are violated, and point them to someone who can answer questions for any "grey area" issues.
- What are the objectives?
- Who will be involved?
- Which social media platforms will be used?
- How will results be measured?
- What types of content will be produced?
- Who will create the content?
- How will content be optimized across platforms? (e.g., executive profiles on LinkedIn link to the company blog; blog posts are tweeted and posted to LinkedIn Groups)
With the groundwork laid, monitoring in place, and plans developed and approved, the company can begin "officially" participating in social media—or, more likely, reassessing initiatives already in place, as many firms have already jumped into the social media fray without proper planning.
Participation can take a variety of forms, from simple monitoring of and responding to brand mentions to actively creating thought-leadership, informative or entertaining content, and promoting across social media venues.
For companies that produce content, a blog is often at the center of the effort. More than half of B2C firms and nearly three-quarters of B2B vendors maintain company blogs.
The key to successful social media participation is engagement. Sharing content shouldn't be viewed as broadcasting to the market but rather as seeking to start conversations. The point is to draw in interested parties, key influencers, and ultimately sales prospects by engaging them in discussions and building business relationships.
Phase IV: Integration
Most companies think of social media first in terms of marketing and PR activities, and they begin their social media efforts in those areas. But those at the highest level of social media maturity and integration are using social media for a variety of purposes across the organization.
Just as it would make no sense to provide telephones only for the sales force, or email access only to accounting, there's no need to limit social media interaction to the marketing department.
At this advanced stage, companies may be using social media not only in marketing and PR but also in a variety of other areas, including the following:
- Human Resources. HR departments use social media to recruit and prescreen candidates, improving new hire quality while reducing recruitment time and cost.
- Customer Service. While no organization should overly rely on social media to resolve customer-service issues, it can shorten the "time to answer" some customer queries and reduce costs. Large enterprises that have incorporated social media into their customer service options include Woolworths (check their Facebook page)
- Sales. Social media has changed the buying cycle. Prospects are now much more informed before they even begin a dialogue with sales; they've researched alternatives, developed a short list of vendors, and know what key features they're after. The ability of buyers to do all of this before ever contacting a vendor has increased their expectations of salespeople as well; they expect sales pros to know what their company does and what challenges their industry confronts. Social media is valuable to the sales force not only for prospect research but also for generating leads and building credibility.
- Product Development. Whose input could be more valuable to product development efforts than your customers' and prospects'? The Wall Street Journal has described social networks as the new focus groups because of the high value and relatively low cost of use. Because of potential legal issues involved in using someone else's ideas, firms often use public networks for basic research and rely on their own branded online networks, with clear rules spelled out, for more direct suggestions.
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