Planning a social media campaign

I have been working on this for some time now within the company I work for and thought I would share my understanding, feelings and perceptions.

Social media is a term that encapsulates technology and social interaction, social media has been around for a very long time (around 30 years and were USENET  newsgroups), since then we have seen many different forms of online communication take shape that now fall under the umbrella of social media and are often referred to as social media tools.

  •          Email
  •          Instant Messaging
  •          Forums
  •          Blogs
  •          Wiki’s
  •          Social Networking
  •          Video
  •          Pictures
  •          Pod Casts

 

Now the above list is just a few examples of social media that are currently in use.

I often get asked the following question

How do I start a Social Media campaign?

So here are my views on creating a social media campaign

 

Re-Search (Using search to research)

You can start simply by searching the likes of google, yahoo, live etc for your company’s name, domain name and products. Ignore the results that are for your site, look at some of the content discussing your stuff, see what they are talking about and make notes.

Then look at other types of search such as Technorati and twitter’s search.

From this information you will start to get an idea of your company’s perception and penetration is within the online community.

 

Personify

Understand your target audience or demographics, Build a number of persona’s.

Wikipedia says:

Personas or personae are fictitious characters that are created to represent the different user types within a targeted demographic that might use a site or product.

Personas are given characteristics and are assumed to be in particular environments based on known users’ requirements so that these elements can be taken into consideration when creating scenarios for conceptualizing a site.

 

Identify and Plan

Now you have completed your research, you need to plan your social media campaign, this should involve you looking at your specific industry in which you want to engage, understand the user demographics (A 37 year old gardener may not use twitter or LinkedIn but may have a Facebook account and only use YouTube to watch (not post) videos.

People use different tools for different reasons, I use my Facebook account for my friends and is not associated to my LinkedIn profile which is strictly for business networking, I use twitter to communicate in both areas, The point is, I can be marketed through various ways (professional and personal).

So, what questions need answering?

  • What social media tools are popular within your industry?
  • What social media tools are popular within your demographics on a personal level?
  • What are the most popular websites in the industry?
  • What are the most popular blogs in the industry?
  • What are the most popular discussion forums in the industry?
  • What are they talking about?
  • Who is your competition online and offline? Same or Different?
  • Are they talking about your company or product?
  • Are they talking about your competitors company or products?

These are just some of the questions that I ask to clients to try and get them to think about the complexities of what they about to do as most think it is easy to deliver a social media campaign because it is just a blog isn’t it? Well no its not, it is the difference between success and failure.

 

Create

Now you are almost ready to start the engagement process, but first you must use the information you have gathered to create your relevant profiles within the identified social media tools, I believe it is best to use an individual’s profile and not a company profile as it seems to me personable and elevates the trust perception, but this is my perception. You can look at creating profiles on Facebook, mySpace, LinkedIn, Twitter, youTube etc.

 

Engage

I suggest starting off by using your research so far to engage in relevant discussions and communities that are already in place, especially the ones that are popular within the industry. This will allow you to start communicating with your target audience, remember you are not here to sell anything or to promote brand awareness, you are here as a member of the internet community, think, you wouldn’t go to a book club and try and get everyone to buy your book on your first visit.

Try and add value to the discussion, raise interesting points,  answer questions, promote similar topics on other websites. By doing this, you will understand the industry from your markets perspective, from there you may be able to identify anything that is missing or an opportunity. Then you can look at creating a blog or starting a discussion about that opportunity, giving something new to the community.

Always been open and honest about who you are, what you do and who you work for, do not lie.

Be careful when you engage otherwise you might land your company in trouble, read this post on how an agency damaged a relationship with FedEX via twitter for proof.

 

Monitor

Remember the Re-Search you did earlier? Well do it again and keep on doing it, things change, new discussions appear that you may not be aware of. After that, do it some more, enough is not enough!

 

Commit

This now leads nicely on to commitment, which I am not sure whether you need to commit to it before or after, I have put this last as you will be reading this before implementing it, so if you think it would take too long to implement a social media campaign, then you need to re-evaluate your objectives.

Social media is not a quick fix and takes time for you to build up relationships and an online audience takes time to build.

Some companies have found they do not have the time to blog on their own blog, the way they get round this is to invite members from industry who participate online to blog for them! Imagine that, you can get someone to help promote you brand for you. Brilliant

Engage, Engage and do it some more!

 

Please add your thoughts and comments, I would be grateful for the feedback.

 

Thanks

5 comments so far

  1. Craig Hepburn on

    Hi Ollie, you make some great points i especially like the idea of “re-search” and my mantra is about how you as a person or an organisation can “engage” and be useful in your networks and take advantage of the tools and that are available to help you keep informed. I also like to talk about the idea of developing a social marketplace and move away from overly used terms such as web 2.0 and social media as these are vague and dont really signify a business case or purpose. Developing the social marketplace: sites such as eBay, Amazon, http://www.Dellideastorm.com or Zopa (social lending) or sites such as Digg.com, LinkedIn, Trip Advisor and Yelp where the main drivers behind their continued ascendancy are reviews, opinions and recommendations by a connected community who pride themselves on credibility and reputation by being engaged.

    Engagement is a holistic characterisation of a consumer’s behaviour, incorporating more detailed behavioural characteristics such as loyalty, satisfaction, involvement, word of mouth promotion and complaints but very few businesses or organisations are measuring this let alone actually integrating it into any of their digital marketing strategies when building a social marketplace or social media strategy.

  2. osouthgate on

    Thanks for your comments Craig, very insightful.

    I do agree with you that Social Media is a very vague term and does not detail business justifications, but the term has helped me to deliver educational training to the company I work for where the only elements of any internet activity was through the website and email only. The company produces Conference, Exhibitions and Training around the world, but based in the Middle East.

    Your definition of engagement is completely right and I will take some of these idea, loyalty being my favorite and and see if I can add this into my educational workshops to see if we can come up with anything in future campaigns.

    One thing that always comes up though is dealing with the “complaints” aspect, the majority of people in my company see complaints posted online as negative and want them removed asap, whereas (you? and ) I feel as though we should embrace the complaints and work with the community to fix the issues, this is where product development can be done for you without the need for focus groups.

  3. Shane Wang on

    Hi, Ollie, Hope you enjoy your life in the Middle East.
    It is a very interesting article. Do you know any software/web tool will help you to trace those campaigns along the way?

  4. osouthgate on

    Hi Shane
    There are a number of tools out there.

    http://www.Trackur.com and
    http://www.radian6.com/cms/solution are used for reputation tracking.

    I would suggest using netvibes and create custom rss feeds based on search results for various keywords etc and collect info from the likes of

    Technorati
    BlogPulse
    Google Blog Search
    Twitter
    etc

    but it depends on where you campaign sits.

    Read this article, it maybe helpful http://www.marketingpilgrim.com/2007/08/26-free-tools-for-buzz-monitoring.html

  5. Marcel LeBrun on

    Hi Oliver,
    Great article. I notice you mentioning dealing with complaints in your comment/discussion with Craig. I did a presentation on Brighttalk a little while ago on the top 10 conversations to listen for in social media and also talk about how to respond to heach one – you might find it interesting (sorry you have to register for Bright Talk to see it – didn’t realize that at the time)

    Top 10 Conversations to listen for in social media – http://tinyurl.com/cwjkqb

    Thanks for mentioning Radian6 for social media monitoring tool. Let us know if we can be of help to you in any way.
    Thanks,
    Marcel
    CEO Radian6


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