Effective Social Media Engagement: 5 Tips to Swear By
Engagement on social media is one of the cornerstones of an effective social media program; but too many people go about it the wrong way.
So what can you be doing when it comes to social media engagement to ensure that you are doing it the right way? People are constantly talking about engaging on social media – ourselves included – but so few people give effective tips on how to engage with your fan base properly. Sure, every person and brand is going to develop their own unique voice when it comes to social media, but there are certain DOs and certain DO NOTs that everyone should be following when it comes to engaging with their fan base on social networks.
Today, we have decided to feature some of those tips to help your brand engage effectively on social media to ensure that you don’t run the risk of losing your audience or worse, having them comment negatively in a social forum.
1. DABC: Don’t Always Be Closing
In the Mamet-penned monumental monologue in the classic film Glengarry Glen Ross, the character of Blake (played by an Oscar-nominated Alec Baldwin in the film adaptation) gives a haunting speech to a group of terrified realtors wherein he tells them that they should follow the ABCs of selling: Always Be Closing. That might have worked for those realtors, but the reality of social media is that a better piece of advice would be to follow your DABCs.
You can’t always be closing when it comes to engaging on social media. Sure, the goal for most social marketers is to eventually convert leads generated on social networks into customers, but we can’t jump into our engagement attempting to close. We need to build a rapport with our leads and the only way to do that is to engage with them on a human level, not on a salesman-only level. That’s sure to turn them off.
It also brings us to our next point.
2. Talk Like a Human
If there’s one thing that people hate about engaging with certain corporate accounts, it is that it feels like just that: all business. There is no emotion or opinion behind a comment or post. Now, of course one has to take into account the political aspect that comes with running a social media program as a large company. Those in charge of engaging cannot say whatever they want. There is an image to maintain and thus, a certain standard to keep.
That said, if you feel like social media is the right place for your business to have a presence, then develop a strategy for engagement before you get started. People are going to reach out to your brand, and they want to feel like they are talking to someone there, not a computer directing them to simply call a customer service line for more information.
3. Don’t Discriminate
You might think that the only place where you stand to benefit from your engagement is with your industry’s influencers. And while it might be true that engaging with people who have thousands of fans or followers might lead to a quick gain, it is not always going to pay off. There are far more people out there with seventy-five or one hundred followers than those with seventy-five or one hundred thousand.
In a social media case study we did about Old Spice a few weeks ago, we noted that where Old Spice found the most success was in their ability to engage with any type of user in the same way, whether they were famous or simply Twitter fans with a few dozen followers. The payoffs were enormous for Old Spice and any marketer should take this as a lesson that it doesn’t pay to discriminate when it comes to engaging on social media.
4. Fashionably Late is a Social Faux Pas
Social media is an ongoing conversation. People are talking constantly and, when it comes to your brand, they are talking to you. And when it comes to all that social media has to offer and the fact that a recent study showed that the average online attention span is roughly 8 seconds, you can’t expect people to be waiting around for your response for too long.
We live in a fast-paced society and nothing embodies that better than social media. So when someone engages with your brand, do everything you can to respond as quickly as possible. You are half of the social conversation, so you can’t be late to the party.
5. Never Ignore Questions or Negative Comments
We thought we would save the most important for last. This is one rule we advocate above all others. When it comes to your brand’s image both in the eyes of your customers and the general public, the two types of posts you never want to ignore are questions and negative comments.
First, let’s look at questions. When someone goes out of their way to engage with your brand and ask a question, they are generally doing so because they want an answer. They are, for lack of a better analogy, calling for more information. This is a traditional call to action that we see in ads and commercials, and social media takes the first part of that CTA out of the equation. So when someone has a question, answer it! You wouldn’t have a hotline for leads to call in to if you didn’t have anyone manning the phones, would you? This is the same concept.
Next, you should never ever ignore negative comments. In doing so, you are basically burying your head in the sand while the whole world sees your flaws. If anything, negative comments are a great way to do two things. First, they are a chance for you to show the world how much you care about your customers by dealing with an issue on the social stage for all to see. Second, they are a great way to turn people into brand advocates. Social media is one of the best avenues in which to generate new brand advocates and negative comments are one of the ways to go about doing this.
What is your strategy when it comes to social media engagement? Tell us in the comments below or on Twitter!
A very attractive raed. I am absolutely fresh to social media, and the reason I have gotten involved is because I am interested in finding new ways to connect with business prospects on a human level. One hunch, which I plan to carry out come easter-time or so, is to write and share a new study/report with my fellow members of a social media forum. I hope that it will make some kind of impression that will spill over positively on my present and future business objectives. And, if not, I just have to try something else. I’m NEW to this thing, after all 🙂
That’s very interesting, Lars. What aspect(s) of social media do you plan on discussing in the report?
Actually, the report will be about a thraed on a career forum about using telemarketing when applying for a new job. I found the content of this thread a perfect springboard to elaborate on my ideas of new uses for telemarketing (which I work in), aimed at employment agency professionals on different social media platforms, who hopefully will be interested in developing training materials for job seekers. I think that a tailor-made training program for job-hunting telemarketing would be good thing, both as a morale-boosting tool and as a means to actually finding employment.
Sounds great! We would love to see it when you have completed it. We’re always interested in reading about the new and innovative ways in which people are using social media.
Unfortunately, it will be ten pages plus and in Swedish. As a professionally trained translator I know that it will be too much work to do it all, but I will try to work up a brief in English.
Not to worry – thanks a lot! And good luck!