Posts

child prodigy calculating the benefits of outsourcing social media

If you’re thinking about outsourcing social media right now, you’re not alone

Many of the tech companies, e-commerce founders, and startup CEOs we have been talking to recently are looking into the benefits of outsourcing content creation for blogs, social media, and more

But there’s often a misunderstanding of the need for social media content. We see errors on 2 opposite ends of the spectrum. First, some companies make hiring a social media specialist the first thing they do. They spend 100% of their marketing budget (however small) on social media, when research shows social media only accounts for about 2% of B2B website traffic and 7% of e-commerce. (We get about 5% of our traffic from social. I’ll share how below!)

On the other end of the spectrum, we see some companies that think social media isn’t worth it at all, so they don’t bother creating any share-worthy content. This is also a mistake because while social media may not drive a ton of directly-converting traffic, it does influence your buyers in some way. For example, we only get about 6,000 visitors from social each year out of a million. But they convert to leads at 0.9%. That’s nearly 60 leads per year.

So why outsource social media and content marketing? Because it allows you to maximize the return on investment, without spending all your marketing budget on social media. In this post, I’ll show you how.

Quick Takeaways:

  • Outsourcing your social media and content creation is more cost-effective than hiring a full-time writer or social media person
  • While social media only delivers a small amount of traffic, it does influence your buyer’s journey and can deliver leads if done right
  • Outsourced content marketing services can provide SEO, strategy, creation and sharing expertise that you can’t get from one in-house staff person

Benefits of Outsourcing Your Social Media Efforts

There are many benefits to outsourcing your content and social media efforts. Here we’ll list some of the pros and cons.

1. Saves You Time and Money

Outsourcing your blog writing or social media marketing saves you time and money because you don’t have to spend the time hiring someone, training them on your business, only to have them leave after 9 months for a better gig.

And outsourcing saves you money because outsourced services are just cheaper. Why spend $70,000 / year (the average for a social media hire) when you can outsource to an expert for half that.benefits of ourtsourcing social media visualized

Image source

2. Productivity

When you hire a person, you tell them what you expect and hope they meet your expectations. The  you setup weekly one-on-ones and quarterly review and annual performance discussions to keep them honest and accountable. But if it isn’t working out, you need to discuss with the employee, you need to inform HR if there’s a problem, you have to consider letting them go if they don’t perform and take the risk of getting sued.

Trust me, I’ve been there too many times. Instead, when you outsource social media marketing, you only pay if you get what you expect. We deliver 2 blog posts per week for most clients and about a dozen shares of each for those who pay for social media. If we didn’t deliver on our calendar promises, we don’t get paid. It’s that simple. Outsourcing allows you to focus on the productivity of the people to whom you are outsourcing.

3. Expertise

When you outsource, you get to focus on your core business. Our writers have a combined 600 years of writing and social media experience. So you get to stay focused on what you do best. And we can focus on creating the highest-quality, share-worthy content possible.

4. Scale Up (and Down) as Needed

The data shows that the more content you publish, the more traffic and leads your business is gonna get:

blog frewquency increase gets better roi

We prove these results every mont with our clients when we send them charts like the one below that go straight up and to the right. Outsourcing your content marketing strategy right now can help you to get to that consistency that today’s buyer (and Google) demands. What do I mean? Your buyers are there searching every day for answers to questions and challenges.

We help to maintain a consistent brand voice and publishing / sharing schedule. Are you publishing every day? Outsourcing helps you increase your frequency without breaking the bank. It also allows you to scale down when you start to see those exponential traffic numbers going up, and focus on conversion, and other types of content like e-books and webinars.

Check out this video interview on the compounding power of consistent content:

5. Access To The Best Digital Marketing Tools

As a business owner or startup CEO, you don’t have time to run down the rabbit hole of figuring out what are the best digital marketing tools you might need. As an agency, we use the following tools to support your content marketing strategy:

  • SEO Strategy and Measurement: Semrush
  • Content publishing: WordPress
  • Content Planning and Workflow: DivvyHQ
  • Social Media: Hootsuite
  • Social Media analytics: Buzzsumo
  • SEO Optimization: Yoast
  • Content Editing: Copyscape and Hemingway apps

Just to name a few. Here’s an Semrush screenshot of one of our clients progress just this year:

And here’s a social media engagement analysis via Buzzsumo:

We (invest in) utilize these tools to maximize our client’s results.

The Challenges of Outsourcing Social Media

In fairness, it’s not always roses and champagne when you outsource. Some of the cons of outsourcing include

  • “Just do it!” As one of our clients said recently, if we worked for him, he would probably just send us random things and say “just do it!”
  • They become more expert on what you sell through added training and experience on product details.
  • You can get more than just social media from employees. You can ask your employees to do anything and they need to comply.
  • You can demand more hours from in-house employees and require in-office meetings.
  • Finding the right agency to outsource can be challenging just like finding an employee can be.

How To Outsource Social Media

Find An Agency That Does The Strategy

You’re not just asking some random person to create social posts. You want to make sure they have expertise in building a strategy that allows you to reach your target audience and differentiates your brand. Do the people have experience on the client side, if not in your industry?

I started Marketing Insider Group with the goal of providing practical strategy for brands based on my experience working inside technology companies, B2B brands, service businesses and startups.

Find An Agency You Like

Do you like the people at the agency where you plan to outsource? Here at MIG, we have a no a-holes rule. We’ve fired clients for being difficult because it makes everyone miserable. Life is too short to work with mean people!

Find an Agency That Commits to Measuring Results

There are plenty of agencies that will take your money in exchange for doing stuff. But an agency that is committed to measuring results will only work on things that deliver results. That makes them aligned to your goals (not your ego).

Find an Agency That Has Expertise in Your Area

This is a little bit tricky for us, because we have learned and become experts in over 30 different industries over time. So at some point, some of our clients have given us the benefit of the doubt. So while every company thinks they need an industry expert, some really industries really do require some industry expertise. Healthcare, Insurance, Financial Services, Government, Non-Profits. These are just a few examples. Interestingly, we haven’t met a deeply technical, um technology we couldn’t master. But insurance? Whew!

Define Your Goals

Our client goals are traffic, social engagements, subscribers, leads, demos, or revenue. We use our measurement approach as a selling tool and as a way to get our new clients to think about their goals.

Define How Often You Want To Post

We sell once or twice weekly blog packages because that is what works for our clients. We don’t do less because the results start to fade. And of course we do more for some. Our social media clients post on the major platforms each day except for Twitter which has a faster stream. For Twitter, we focus on 12 hourly posts 5am (ET) or 8am (PT) – 5pm (ET) or 8pm (PT)

Define What Type of Content / Which Platforms

Our goal is to get people to come to your website and convert to new customers. We use articles, social posts, newsletters, e-books and more to accomplish this. Think about what you need, or better yet, ask your outsourced agency to provide the strategy.

Make Sure There’s a Calendar / Plan You Can View and Change

We’re huge believers in annual content planning that our customers can view, edit and co-manage. We change the plan all the time but having a strategic, SEO-driven, customer-validated plan is key to success.

Define Your Measurement Plan

We use some simple measures to show reach, engagement, conversion and in some cases retention of new customers through content marketing.

Conclusion

There’s a lot to consider when outsourcing social media marketing. In general, outsourcing can be more cost-effective and more productive. With economic headwinds and uncertainty, many startups, B2B SaaS companies, business services, e-commerce and technology companies are turning to outsourcing to deliver a better return on their marketing investment.

Are you ready to outsource your social media or content marketing? Marketing Insider Group has a team of 35+ experienced writers ready to produce content for YOUR business. Check out our weekly blog content service or schedule a free consultation. 

The post Why Outsourcing Social Media Right Now Make Dollars and Sense appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.

Email marketing almost feels like a retro form of digital marketing nowadays. With the development of social media and general content marketing, sometimes your email efforts might hit the backburner. Resist this urge! Email marketing is important to your efforts, and needs time and attention to maximize its output.

We all know that email marketing isn’t dead – but before sending a single email, businesses need to understand the importance of segmenting email contact lists. Yes, segmentation can be tedious but consider this,  77% of email marketing ROI came from segmented, targeted, and triggered campaigns. Not to mention with sites like Constant Contact it’s never been easier to read your metrics.

Furthermore, MailChimp reports that email opens and unique opens of segmented campaigns were 14.31% higher than non-segmented campaigns. Clicks from segmented campaigns were also more than 100% higher compared to non-segmented campaigns. Finally, when emails are segmented, there are 9.37% fewer un-subscribers.

Most businesses are already implementing some form of segmentation when it comes to marketing communication, but it’s usually only based on demographic information. The truth is, the more you’re able to personalize messages, the higher your chances of engagement and conversion.

Here’s a quick brush up on email segmentation from Max von Collenburg:

Quick Takeaways:

  • Email marketing is still alive and well in today’s digital marketing space
  • Segmenting your email list can lead to better leads and conversions
  • By utilizing effective segmentation you can maximize your overall content marketing strategy

Here are a few ways to effectively segment your contact list and make the most out of your email marketing campaigns:

Segmentation by Demographics

Source: Marketing Charts

The most basic way to start segmenting your contacts is to use demographic data such as location, age, industry, and job level. Demographics can tell a lot about what a prospect might want or need, so the more info you can get during a prospect’s signup, the more options you’ll have for segmentation. That being said, you should only be asking for as much detail as your sales team needs to qualify the lead. Anything more will overburden your audience and potentially send them packing.

Here are some common ways to segment by demographic:

  • Geography: Retail companies and location-based apps that make email offers based on location are particularly effective, but B2B and global organizations can also take advantage of geographical information. For instance, businesses can alter their messaging for US and UK audiences to address how some words are spelled differently in both countries.
  • Age: Are you targeting Millennials or Gen Xers? Segmenting by age will help you send the right message to the right people. Make lifelong customers by considering that their needs today may be different from their needs 10 years from now.
  • Occupation/Industry: If your product appeals to a wide range of audiences, it’s important to remember that they may come from different fields. A marketer and developer may both appreciate your automation tool, but the former will want to know how to use it and the latter how to integrate it into the current system.
  • Job Title: Similar to segmentation by industry, a company CEO will usually have different priorities than someone in a more technical role, even if they’re in the same company. Technical workers might want to know more about the actual usage of a product whereas upper management might only care about the bottom line.

Segmentation by Behavior

Demographics are a solid starting point when it comes to segmentation, as they answer the ‘who’ and ‘what’ to guide your email marketing strategies. Behavioral segmentation, on the other, hand digs deeper, as it answers the ‘why’ and ‘how,’ allowing you to gain insights into buying intent.

Here are a few ways marketers can segment their emails by customer behavior:

  • Last Website Activity: Keep track of your browsing behavior to determine interests. What pages they’ve opened, how long they stayed, what icons they clicked, what videos they watched, etc. and start the conversation based on those metrics.
  • Past Purchase: Using purchase history is an excellent driver for personalized communications. Offer discounts on products that could be complementary to the last item they bought. Recommend upgrades when new product lines are released. The options are endless.
  • Amount Spent: If your products have a wide range of prices, spending can be an effective segmentation strategy. Send out targeted emails featuring products that are priced within the customer’s purchase or product browsing history.
  • Buying Frequency: Does your customer buy weekly, monthly, or annually? Are they purchasing the same products on a regular basis? Segment your list based on customers’ buying frequency and purchase history and send them a message during their time of need.

Segmentation by Customer Lifecycle Stage

Source: Hubspot

Lifecycle stage is about identifying which stage of the sales cycle your contacts are in. Interactions with contacts should vary according to what stage they are in; after all, you won’t want to send emails for a free 7-day trial offer to users who are already paying customers.

Here are the ways you can segment your email contacts list by customer lifecycle stage:

  • Prospect: Prospects are contacts who know about you and have opted in to receive messages from you every now and then. These are the individuals who have signed up for the company newsletter and nothing else, so the goal is to send them communications that pique their interest and inform them about your product or service.
  • Lead: Leads are not mere subscribers, but individuals who have shown interest in your offering. Perhaps they’ve filled out a form to download an eBook or a whitepaper you’ve published. A good way to target leads is to use content that’s similar to what they’ve already consumed. The idea is to encourage brand engagement as much as possible.
  • Marketing Qualified Lead: Abbreviated to MQLs, these are individuals who have shown significant interest and engagement but are yet to become full-fledged sales opportunities. MQLs are indicators that these leads should be pursued by the marketing team with content that encourages sales conversions.
  • Sales Qualified Lead: These leads are those that your sales team may deem worthy of personal or direct sales follow-ups. It’s a good idea to keep an eye on these leads as they’re the ones who are closest to a purchase decision. It’s now on your sales team to close those leads like a boss.
  • Customer: Customers are pretty self-explanatory, but even though they’ve reached the ultimate goal, you should still make the effort to delight them and turn them into brand advocates.
  • Advocate: Advocates are contacts who love your brand and products enough to refer new customers without solicitation. They can bring in new business or help generate leads you could not have gotten yourself. Don’t just take them for granted, reward them for their efforts with discounts, freebies, and other exclusive offers.

Conclusion

These ideas are just a few of the countless ways you can effectively segment your contact list. The key is to remember that this strategy isn’t reserved for businesses with advanced automation software, it’s for anyone who cares about customer relationship management. The most important factor to consider is how to make segmentation work for your unique business and marketing objectives.

Do you want to use some of the marketing strategies seen here on MIG’s site but need some help or advice? Marketing Insider Group has a team of 35+ experienced writers ready to produce content for YOUR business. Check out our weekly blog content service or schedule a free consultation.

The post How To Effectively Segment Your Email List appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=2464

Digital marketing is the keystone of any modern-day marketing campaign. With the emergence of SEO and social media, there’s never been a better time to be in the B2B space online.

The ever-growing world of social media and even the traditional forms of email marketing have created ideal platforms to share your content directly with clients and prospects alike. This is great for your marketing spending and your overall bottom dollar.

But how exactly do you know that your digital media campaigns are working?

Here’s a quick video to lock down the basics of measuring your digital media campaigns from Zaryn @ Market & Hustle.

Quick Takeaways:

  • Digital media campaigns are important for raising brand awareness in prospects and leads
  • They can also build brand trust and recognition with customers you’ve already secured
  • Providing content people want to read is the most important part of the puzzle

Here’s the big picture for understanding metrics and which ones should matter to your business:

Identifying KPIs:

What’s the point of putting in all this effort if you can’t tell what’s working? When creating your content marketing process, you have to define your key performance indicators (KPIs).

Examples of KPIs include:

  • Measuring how a content marketing campaign impacts your sales team’s productivity
  • The percentage of customers that were marketing-generated, and what business was earned from content marketing
  • Measuring hours of work put into content marketing vs money put into ad spending

KPIs are your benchmarks for success, and every other metric is what defines your KPIs.

Follower and engagement growth

An easy metric to check out the success of your social media is how many followers you are gaining and how many times your posts are being engaged with.

You can check out what posts lead directly to a prospect or customer clicking through to your profile and clicking the follow button to stay up-to-date with your company.

Socialmediaexaminer.com says:

The number of social media followers you have matters because bigger numbers translate to higher levels of engagement and more traffic.

Followers aren’t everything though, engagement is! Engagement is any comment, like, or share that happens to one of your posts. Driving up engagement leads to social media platforms suggesting your content to their users.

Being on the front page of someone’s social media timeline is the golden goose of digital marketing. This is done through quality content appropriate to each platform and consistent monitoring of what is successful and what isn’t.

Conversion rate

Source: Disruptive Advertising

Views are great, but what happens after the initial click? Is the reader just leafing through your website? Are they sharing it? Are they actually purchasing your product or scheduling your services?

Conversion rate shows how many prospects are becoming customers. This metric is the real shining gem of your content marketing efforts! Converting prospects should be your number one goal with content marketing.

Oftentimes the places where you are producing and publishing media give you excellent analytics tools to help assess what ads or content is producing the best conversion rate.

By figuring out what content does the best across what platforms, you can make better, more informed decisions on what media to spend the most time on.

Value comparison between efforts

Deciding the best formula of what media to use and how much is the point of analyzing your digital marketing campaign. Since blog writing and distribution are large portions of that effort, here’s some tips on how to go about comparing success.

Blog writing: 

Your blog is the keystone of your website traffic. Writing perfect blog posts and publishing regularly on a schedule is how you attract new eyes to your website, and in turn your product or service.

You know this, but when was the last time you actually checked up on your articles’ metrics? By using Google Analytics or SEMrush, you can check on your lead generation rates, conversion rates, and more.

Another easy metric that falls under your content category is time on page.

Monica Carol of Team Bonding NYC says:

“There’s a strong correlation between how much time users spend on the page and the quality of the lead.”

If your content is quality, users are more likely to stick around and read it, increasing the average time on page per user. With quality content comes quality leads!

Email marketing:

Good SEO practices aren’t the only way you’ve been sharing your content though. Through sites like Mailchimp and Constant Contact you’ve been growing your email lists and staying in front of your customers’ eyes.

Much like other SEO tools, successful email marketing services offer excellent metrics like open rates, conversion rates, and forwarding rates (not to mention what times your emails are the most successful).

By experimenting with different formats and timed releases, you can find what’s drawing the most leads and conversions through your email marketing efforts.

Customer retention rate

Source: Marketing Charts

What is customer retention? Customer Retention is the measure of the percentage of customers who continue to use your product over time. Some companies measure the opposite of retention: churn rate. Or the percentage of customers who leave in a given time period.

Customer success is a complex challenge to solve. The required investment of time, energy and resources to set up a successful customer can drain a business while it figures out what it takes to make them stick.

Ultimately, the only way a company can be successful is if the cost to acquire and retain a customer is largely outweighed by the monetization that customer will return to your business (about 3-5x that cost).

So how do you know if you’re retaining customers acquired through your digital media efforts? There’s a few ways!

You can ask – Using surveys through your email marketing efforts can help you figure out just who has been using your product or service over a longer period of time. This also builds brand trust because people want to feel like your business cares about them.

Analytics – Often websites will show you on the backend how many customers you have are repeat customers. Diving deep into the extra layer to see how many came from your digital media efforts is a good step in hitting your KPIs.

Look at the voices on your social media – Seeing individual voices in your business’ community discuss your business, service, or content can give you a good read on how many newer customers you are attracting and if there are any older clients steering the overall conversation online.

Wrap up

Metrics for your digital media efforts aren’t always easy to identify, but this list is a great place to start! What’s important to remember is you have to be able to piece small metrics into a larger picture. Yield from a great digital media campaign comes with critical thinking and data analysis.

Now it’s time to define your key metrics and get to work on figuring out what’s successful with your digital media campaigns and what you can improve on!

Do you want to use some of the marketing strategies seen here on MIG’s site but need some help or advice? Marketing Insider Group has a team of 35+ experienced writers ready to produce content for YOUR business. Check out our weekly blog content service or schedule a free consultation. 

The post How to Analyze the Performance of Your Digital Media appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=2458

Digital marketing is the keystone of any modern-day marketing campaign. With the emergence of SEO and social media, there’s never been a better time to be in the B2B space online.

As exciting as it may be, digital marketing seems to have taken over as the king from traditional offline marketing efforts. This isn’t a particularly bad or good development, but rather a natural evolution of the craft.

Heck, Biztech.com says:

A whopping 3.92 billion people use social media. The average millennials and Gen Z hop around about seven social media platforms per month.

With numbers like that, it’s easy to dismiss the “old ways” of marketing.

So this leads us to the natural question… is digital marketing the only form of marketing in 2023? That is, is it the only form of marketing worth a hoot in today’s market?

The short answer? No! There’s still plenty of ways you can use offline marketing to generate leads for your business. In fact, using digital marketing and offline marketing in tandem is the best way to maximize lead generation and conversion rates in your prospects.

Here’s a quick video about offline and online lead generation from Patrick Dang:

Quick Takeaways:

  • There are still many impactful ways to generate leads offline
  • You don’t have to focus your attention on just offline or online generation – they should work in tandem
  • While SEO is important for lead generation, physical copies of your content and messaging are another method of gaining attention from prospects

Let’s talk about why you should be using other forms of marketing.

Neglecting offline tactics can cause you to miss part of your target audience

Let’s face it, you can’t easily target every one of your customers with online tactics. Certain people who need your products/services may not spend much of their time using computers.

This is where newspaper ads, direct mail flyers, or industry events can complement your online efforts, reinforcing your brand with local prospects.

You can’t afford to not be reaching out with physical copies of your messaging and information.

This point is particularly dependent on your target audience and various buyer personas. If they make up a young, tech-savvy population that spends much of their time online, then digital efforts are likely to be more effective.

But it’s not likely that all of your buyer personas fall into this category, which is why you need to embrace alternative outreach techniques to target them effectively.

For B2B companies, offline lead generation yields more leads

There’s nothing quite like the experience of having a face-to-face interaction with potential clients. It’s still the best way to convey sincerity and personalized service, which is why offline lead generation is still important.

This is mostly attributed to the level of personalization you can impart when communicating with prospects offline, and we all know that a little marketing personalization goes a long way.

Source: Marketing Charts

In the B2B realm, offline lead generation reigns supreme. One study showed that 76% of B2B lead generation comes from offline sources compared to 18% generated via online methods.

Of course, this particular case is circumstantial, but over three-quarters of leads generated is a figure that simply cannot be ignored.

Here’s some offline marketing ideas for your business to implement alongside your digital marketing efforts:

  • Physical mailing lists / flyers
  • Cold calls 
  • Throwing company events
  • Utilizing publication media advertisements
  • Company swag giveaways
  • Giving tours
  • Poster campaigns in your town

Get creative! If done correctly and effectively, any of these suggestions can bring more eyes to your product or service.

Let’s talk about why digital marketing is still important too!

Your target audience is (probably) online a lot

In the United States alone, roughly 223 million (82% of Americans) have at least one, if not more social media accounts. This is driving more and more companies to take advantage of various social media platforms to network across them.

In summary, it’s a digital world. By using social media to place banner ads and links to your website you can generate tons of eyes to your business, not to mention increase your brand’s reputation within the community. An online presence builds credibility with your target audience.

Digital marketing makes it easy to analyze metrics

Measuring success is subjective to each content strategy, and key metrics can be extremely different from each other. Do you want to have more overall clicks than last quarter? What about what happens after the viewer clicks your article – are they converting to a new customer? How many are/aren’t?

These are all just examples. Brainstorm what success in a content marketing campaign looks like to YOU.

Here’s a few metrics to look at when measuring the success of your digital marketing campaign:

Traffic:

Traffic is about pageviews and users. Services like google analytics can give you an accurate read of this data. It also helps you see exactly where your views are coming from.

Conversions:

Views are great, but what happens after the initial click? Is the reader just clicking your ad then exiting the page? Are they sharing it? Are they actually purchasing your product or scheduling your services?

Conversion rate shows how many prospects are becoming customers. This metric is the real shining gem of your content marketing efforts! Converting prospects should be your number one goal with digital marketing.

SEO:

Source: WSI Proven Results

Seeing how your organic search rankings are performing is crucial to a healthy digital marketing strategy. Luckily – there’s some B2B tools designed to help you analyze your key metrics and strategy.

Wrap up

The best marketing strategies expertly combine both online and offline methods to suit their target audiences. It really depends on your audience’s demographics and preferences, as well as the nature of your business, product, or service offering.

Remember that offline brand recognition can lead to online traffic and conversions.

Continue to test a combination of marketing strategies until you find your lead generation sweet spot. Once you discover the perfect brew tailored for your business, build on it and watch as a steady stream of conversions result in a robust bottom line.

Do you want to use some of the marketing strategies seen here on MIG’s site but need some help or advice? What luck! Marketing Insider Group has a team of 35+ experienced writers ready to produce content for YOUR business. Check out our weekly blog content service or schedule a free consultation. 

The post Is Digital Marketing the Only Form of Marketing in 2023? appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.

How To Connect, Converse, And Convert Through Social Media Listening written by John Jantsch read more at Duct Tape Marketing

Marketing Podcast with Brooke Sellas

In this episode of the Duct Tape Marketing Podcast, I interview Brooke Sellas. Brooke is the CEO & Founder of B Squared Media, an award-winning digital marketing agency focusing on social media management, advertising, and social-led customer care. She teaches a Digital Marketing course (virtually) at the University of California in Irvine. She’s also the author of a new book — Conversations That Connect: How to Connect, Converse, and Convert Through Social Media Listening and Social-Led Customer Care.

Key Takeaway:

People aren’t starved for content on social media. They’re starved for connection. If you’re thinking about social media as the destination for your marketing campaigns, you’re already doing it wrong. In this episode, Brooke Sellas, Founder of B Squared Media and author, dives into why knowing how to listen, share feelings, and offer opinions is the key to effective social media management. Brooke shares her tips for having meaningful conversations that build relationships and connect with your audience on social media.

Questions I ask Brooke Sellas:

  • [1:41] How do you define social listening?
  • [2:36] What are some tools powered by machine learning and AI that are out there today to help with social listening?
  • [4:01] What is social penetration theory and how should we be using it?
  • [6:27] How do you balance that idea of being vulnerable and showing your core, but not sharing too much or sharing too soon?
  • [7:44] How do you engrain this idea of conversations not campaigns into your social media team members?
  • [9:46] What percentage of social media posts and content is total unmitigated crap?
  • [10:52] Is there a place for some of what many people may consider cliche posts?
  • [13:25] Would you agree that if you’re not getting some dissent, maybe you’re not pushing it enough?
  • [14:28] Is there a place for opinions under your brand umbrella?
  • [16:33] What should I be posting?
  • [18:29] What is social-led customer care?
  • [22:11] How could I use social to build more brand affinity so that when people walk into retailers they ask and look for my product?
  • [23:41]how do we get our customers to produce some really authentic user-generated content for us?
  • [26:14] Where can people learn more about your book and your work?

More About Brooke Sellas:

  • Her book — Conversations That Connect: How to Connect, Converse, and Convert Through Social Media Listening and Social-Led Customer Care
  • BSquared.media

Take The Marketing Assessment:

  • Marketingassessment.co

Like this show? Click on over and give us a review on iTunes, please!

John Jantsch (00:02): Today’s episode of the duct tape marketing podcast is brought to you by blissful prospecting, hosted by Jason bay and brought to you by the HubSpot podcast network host Jason bay dives in with leading sales experts and top performing reps to share actionable tips and strategies to help you land more meetings with your ideal clients. Recently, they did a show on the four day work week. I’m a huge fan. I think everybody should be looking towards trying to create that, Hey, we get most of our work done in like two hours every day. Anyway, so let’s try out the four day work week. All right, listen to blissful prospecting, wherever you get your podcasts.

John Jantsch (00:48): Hello and welcome to another episode of the duct tape marketing podcast. This is John Jantsch and my guest today is Brooke Sellas. She’s the CEO and founder of B squared media and award-winning digital marketing agency focusing on social media management, advertising, and social led customer care. She teaches a digital marketing course at the university of California in Irvine, and is also the author of a new book. We’re gonna talk about today, conversations that connect how to connect, converse, and convert through social media, listening and social led customer care. So Brooke, welcome to the show.

Brooke Sellas (01:27): Thank you so much for having me. I’m so excited to chat with you today.

John Jantsch (01:32): So part of the, part of the subtitle, I guess, is actually there’s two terms in the subtitle I really wanna get into, but the first one is let’s just jump right into, you know, how do you define social listening?

Brooke Sellas (01:44): Oh, that’s a great question. So for me, social listening is using tools which essentially those tools then use artificial intelligence and machine learning to look for keywords, right? It’s really just that simple. You put in keywords about your brand, your industry, your competitors, your products, and the social listening tool goes out there into the worldwide web and on social media channels and listens for those terms that you’ve put in and then brings all of the information back to you on what’s being said about those terms. So it’s, you know, if we were to do it manually without the tools and without the artificial intelligence, it would be like trying to drink through a fire hose.

John Jantsch (02:30): Yeah. So, so the most basic tool, I mean, I’ve had a Google alert set up for my name, I don’t know, 20 years. Right. So what are some of the new what’s the, some of the new tool set you’ve mentioned, you know, machine learning AI. So what are some of the new tools?

Brooke Sellas (02:44): Yeah, so Google’s actually great. And I say that like, look, you could set up a Google alert, you put your, you know, your company name or your name into Google with quotations. It’s going to bring back, you know, instances of when that keyword is found. But we use at B square media, we use sprout social mm-hmm, which is a social media marketing tool. They provide a suite of different types of tools for social media marketing, but there’s a lot of them out there there’s mention.com. Yeah. Right. And mention, allows, I think for one free listener. So if you wanna dig, dip your toe in the water, check out, mention.com. They’ll let you set up one, but there’s other ones too. Talk walkers, another one, sprinkler. There’s a lot of different tools that now offer this service. My advice, if you’re just getting into social listening, know what you want to do first and then ask as you’re demoing these tools to be shown. Right. Show me, don’t just tell me how your tool can help me accomplish this thing that I’m trying to do.

John Jantsch (03:43): Yeah. Yeah. That sounds like a hard task. Know what I want to do first? Right? You introduce fairly early in the book, something you call social penetration theory and I’m have to tell you that that sounds painful actually

Brooke Sellas (03:56): Terrible name. I know, obviously not named by marketers

John Jantsch (03:59): so, so at the base, you know, what you’re talking about with this idea is that, you know, you think about, I think you use the analogy of the onion, you know, you get to the core. So I guess I’ll let you explain in your own words, you know, what is it and how do, how should we be thinking to use it?

Brooke Sellas (04:17): Yeah. So if we jump in our hot tub time machine and go back a few years, I was looking to complete an undergraduate thesis and I was really into Facebook at the time. I kind of saw that there was like a business case for Facebook. So what I did was I looked at this social penetration theory, also known as the onion theory, which says as human beings, the way we form relationships is through self disclosure. So if I like you and I meet you, Hey John, how’s it going? You know, that’s cliche, that’s number one. And I say, what do you do for a living? And you say, I’m a marketer. That’s a fact, right? That’s two, but we’re not really building a relationship with cliches and facts, right? It’s very surface level. It’s like the breath it’s going around the outside of the onion. We would appeal that onion back through the layers and get to the core of who someone is. So if we start to share opinions and feelings, those third and fourth level disclosures, that’s where we start to build trust, move the relationship forward, become loyal to someone. And what I looked at in my thesis is does this theory apply to social media? Can brands use this, you know, opinions and feelings type content to better connect, converse and convert their audiences? And what I found was yes, because humans are still humans. ,

John Jantsch (05:49): You know, and so much of what applies in social media where we’re not face to face, I think applies if you’re at a cocktail party, right. I mean, people use that analogy all the time. And I will say that, you know, if I’m at a networking event or something and somebody I’ve not met, uh, walks up to me and says something like, so what’s your favorite food to eat? You know? Or just something that like, sort of random, but too personal, you know, or just like really wants to like dive into, you know, what are you working on? That’s exciting for you today. I mean, you know, people do that kinda stuff. They’re just like, yeah. Ooh, I, I don’t know. We gotta get through like the fact stage or something. Right? Yeah. So how do you balance that idea of sure. Be vulnerable show, you know, show your core. I mean, that’s how people want to, but not do too soon.

Brooke Sellas (06:39): right. That’s a great point that you bring up and nobody’s brought this up yet. So I’m glad that you did. It’s always looking at breadth, you know, around the surface of the onion and depth at all times. Yeah. Because when we think about social media and specifically we’re constantly hopefully building our audience. So we’ve got people who may have been with us all 10 years. We’ve been in business who follow are followers of, of the page and engage with us. But we may have people who been with us a year or we may have people who joined us today. So we constantly have to get that media mix of our content. Right. And I think what’s so amazing is that if for the new people, if you already have that opinions and feelings, content, you’re already having those conversations with those people, who’ve been with you for a long time. It actually takes them less time to get to depth, right. It takes them a little less time to kind of jump in because they already see that you’re warm, you’re welcoming, you’re having these back and forth conversations and it just makes it easier for them to then supply their own opinions of feelings.

John Jantsch (07:42): One of the, this, you might actually say, this is the underlying story or plot for the entire book. Is this, I, this notion of thinking conversations, not campaigns. And particularly in this day and age, when everybody sees social as a channel, a marketing channel, and that they’re building teams that they’re giving tasks to do social media. I mean, how do you get that? I mean, it’s almost culture, right? Yeah. Ingrained as opposed to, you know, people thinking, no, I have a task. I, my task is to meet business objectives by using social media.

Brooke Sellas (08:15): Right. Yeah. And I think the big thing that I try to help marketers understand is if you are having these opinion and feelings, conversation, it’s so much easier for you to bring back home a voice of the customer data, which then helps you that much more easily meet those goals that you have, right? Those business goals that you’re trying to meet, right? Because everything that we do, if we’re gathering these really good opinions and feelings from our customers and would be customers can drive product packaging can drive sales messaging can drive more social content, can drive, you know, our advertising copy. So it really goes well beyond social media, even though we’re using that medium to collect this information.

John Jantsch (09:06): And now let’s hear from a sponsor, you know, everybody’s online today, but here’s the question. Are they finding your website? You can grab the online spotlight and your customer’s attention with Semrush from content and SEO to ads and social media. Semrush is your one stop shop for online marketing build, manage, and measure campaigns across all channels faster and easier. Are you ready to take your business to the next level, to get seen, get Semrush, visit Semrush.com that’s Semrush.com/go. And you could try it for seven days for free.

John Jantsch (09:46): in your opinion, or in your research. What percentage of social media posts, content, et cetera, is total unmitigated crap.

Brooke Sellas (09:57): 99.9, 9%. I’m sorry. I really feel badly letting people down, but yeah, I mean truly, and we know this, right. We can go take a look right now and we would find it most content lives in cliches and facts, which is not good.

John Jantsch (10:13): And don’t, let’s not forget the well worn quota host.

Brooke Sellas (10:17): Oh, we,

John Jantsch (10:18): Yes, I don’t. Where does that

Brooke Sellas (10:19): Fit? I cliche. I would, you know, I would probably label that as cliche. You know, it, here’s an interesting little homework assignment for anybody who’s listening and does use social listening start labeling your content. Be honest with yourself, start labeling your outbound, social media content with your social media listening tool as cliche fact opinion and feeling, and then you can start to collect data points for yourself. Oh my God. 99.9, 9% of our content is cliches in facts. We need to try to do more opinion and feeling type content.

John Jantsch (10:52): Is there a place for some of that that we’re kind of laughing about? Like sometimes I will be snarky about people posting quotes and then I’ll get a lot of people that go, no, I love those. You know, so, I mean, is there a place for like some amount of that?

Brooke Sellas (11:05): I think there is, but that’s, I would never be the decision maker on that. I would let the voice of the customer tell me. So if I, if we, you know, try those quote posts and we put those out and we label it as, you know, cliche, but we see that we’re getting the engagement and the conversation, right. Not just engagement. I want to converse mm-hmm because we have to connect. Then we can converse. Then hopefully we can convert, but just the smashing the like button, that’s not gonna do it for me. But if we see that people are commenting on those quotes and they’re like, oh my God, John, you’re amazing. I love when you post these, keep doing it, the customer’s telling you to do it. They’re telling you what you’re want, what they want and you give it to them. And that usually ends up pretty good.

John Jantsch (11:49): So this is not a very useful part of the segment of the show. I’m warning you right now, but let’s just, let’s just get the trolls out of the way right now.

Brooke Sellas (11:57): Ugh. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I think it’s just a fact of being in social media, right? It used to be like, oh, well, if you have to deal with the troll, I think it has now shifted to well, when you have to deal with troll, right. And especially when we’re talking about being vulnerable and posting opinions and feelings as a brand, or, you know, trying to align your audience with your own brand values, there will be trolls

John Jantsch (12:25): And well, I guess in some ways you’re expressing opinions by doing that and that’s just gonna attract trolls. Right.

Brooke Sellas (12:30): Exactly right. And that’s okay. They’re dissent is allowed. That is part of the conversation. Dissolution is also allowed. We want to align more with the people who are, you know, like us similar to us and align with our brand values. So if someone doesn’t align and leaves, that’s fine. If someone gives dissent in a conversation, they’re sharing their opinions. That’s fine. Yeah. You have to decide with your troll policy. When does it cross from dissent into, you know, actual trolling and then what are your rules and regulations around dealing with those types of people? Because guess what, as I say in the book, some of those people are, you’re paying customers. So what do you do then? It’s not as easy as like, oh, just ban them, block them, delete what they said. It’s it. Doesn’t, it’s just not that easy. It’s much more nuanced than that.

John Jantsch (13:23): I mean, I think you’re, you would say, would you agree that it goes far as saying if you’re not getting some descent, maybe you’re not pushing it.

Brooke Sellas (13:31): yes. My real from the heart answer is yes. My marketing answer is I know how scary this is. You know, when we’ve, I’ve been talking about the book now for about a month and every person I’ve talked to is like, you’re what you’re telling us to do is so scary. Hmm. So I get how scary it is, but at the same time, it’s beautiful. I mean, think about your own personal relationships. I hope you have lots of different people in your life and they all have different backgrounds and different viewpoints and you learn from those things. And I think it’s no different with, you know, the brand to audience or community or customer relationship. We want to learn from all of those opinions as long as they’re constructive and not hurtful.

John Jantsch (14:20): So, because we’ve been talking a lot about opinions, there are a lot of very strong, personal opinions out there circulating in the world right now.

Brooke Sellas (14:27): Very,

John Jantsch (14:28): Is there a place for that under your brand umbrella? I mean, obviously you can make a case for be true to who you are, but you can also make a case for does anybody who is buying your product really care, what your personal opinion is on X?

Brooke Sellas (14:46): Yeah. I think that’s a great question. And I think, you know, more research is needed around that, right? We need more brands who are willing to take the risk, and then we need to study that because I’ve seen it both ways. I’ve seen brands post about black lives matter or pride, right. And have PE people in their community really latch on and appreciate that. I’ve also seen those same brands push people away because they’ve really stood their ground with a certain opinion. So, you know, I think one of the examples that I give that kind of falls along with this isn’t in the book is Nike. When they started working with Colin Kaepernick mm-hmm and people were out there burning their Nike shoes. That was the marketing story, right. That that’s the story that we all heard. But the true story is that, you know, the campaigns that they did with Kaepernick had millions upon millions of views, millions upon millions of positive comments and over, you know, the next few months after they partnered with Kaepernick, they, their stock prices, rose people bought more. So I think the people who moved away from Nike, and again, I understand this is a huge brand that can take these kinds of risks, but the people who moved away and decided to burn their shoes and never buy again by that’s okay. Because the people who, you know, aligned with that value and aligned with Nike’s opinions and feelings bought more, and we saw that in their stock prices.

John Jantsch (16:16): Yeah. Probably every one of those videos that got posted burning shoes sold about eight pairs. Right. I mean, they were probably like burn baby burn. Right. right.

Brooke Sellas (16:24): And also like, you know, from the other end of that, like, just from the consumerism point of that, Nike’s like, well, yeah, I already gave us your money. So do what you will with the

John Jantsch (16:33): Product. Good point. So I guess the, I guess I’ll ask you the really big, giant question that you probably get asked all the time. And I know there’s an, it depends answer as part of this, but what should I be posting?

Brooke Sellas (16:46): Ah, I, you know, I think more opinions and feelings, content, and it doesn’t have to be risky. It doesn’t have to be black lives matter or pride. It could literally be, you know, if I’m assuming a lot of marketers listen to this podcast, you know, how do you feel about Instagram’s latest update. We already know, right. We’ve seen it. The conversation been happening all around, but that’s a layup. That’s a layup question that allows you to get that voice of the customer data back opinions back. And then you could say, here’s how we feel. You know, you are gonna align with some of those people or, you know, maybe lose the others. And it, they could be little easy layups like that with the book I just published, I was using cover art all throughout publishing. And then as I’m writing, I’m like, oh, you know, I should probably ask my customers what cover they wanna see.

Brooke Sellas (17:39): So I created kind of two throwaway covers because I assumed the cover I was using was going to be the one they chose and they didn’t. So I actually went to print with the cover. Most people chose because that’s what voice of the customer does. It allows us to see what the customer wants, see what they align with. Right. And that was that there was nothing risky in that. I mean, I could have, if I really wanted to gone to print with the cover I wanted, but why would I would be going against my own advice at that point?

John Jantsch (18:09): Yeah. And I will say on that topic, because there is a picture of the post that you did, that you have a lot of great examples and pictures and that I think will, that are helpful to drive home some of your points. So let’s, I, I started the show by talking about the first idea in the subtitle of a, of social media listening. And I want to end really giving you a chance to unpack the second topic in that is, you know, explain what social led customer care is.

Brooke Sellas (18:40): Yes. So most people, I know brands won’t wanna hear that but most people don’t follow brands on social because they wanna see those like fun kitty and puppy memes or, you know, facts about the next product release. They actually, over 70% of people use and follow use social media to follow brands, to ask a support question. And customer care is actually a little bit deceiving, even though that’s the technical term for it, because it eludes that we’re just talking to customers. We’re just talking about support and retention. Yeah. Right. Yeah. So somebody’s already purchased and post-purchase, they come to us on social for a question or a complaint that does happen a lot. But I think what a lot of people miss about customer care is acquisition. And so I’ll give you this example too, if you’re using social listening, one of the very first labels or tags, you know, they call it labeling or tagging depending on your tool, I’d set up our acquisition and retention tags.

Brooke Sellas (19:49): And we did this fun little project actually, while I was writing the book, we went to all of our customer care clients. And we said, how much of your social chatter, you know, coming into the brand, do you think is acquisition? And how much do you think is retention? And every single customer said, oh, acquisitions probably like zero to 5%, it’s all retention. So we started tagging all of these conversations as such. And what we found was that every single client had over 20% acquisition tags. And that means customers who aren’t yet customers coming in and

John Jantsch (20:26): Asking like presale questions. Yeah,

Brooke Sellas (20:27): Yeah, yeah. Three purchase questions. In the buying moment, we had one brand who literally has four product lines that month, over month have somewhere between 60 and 80% acquisition, mind blowing mm-hmm . So now we’re working with their sales team to create more, you know, nurture content for the types of questions that we’re getting were actually getting retail values put into the conversation amount. So I’ll give you an example, July, they had 70% acquisition on one of their product lines. We attributed the retail value of the products mentioned in that conversation to about 1.2 million in revenue. Now, imagine, which is, this is the next step we’re going to be doing with them. If they gave us links that were attributed to the social media team, and we were able to capture 20% of that 1.2 million. Now we’re talking about a $240, $240,000 in revenue attributed to organic social. And then what happens when that happens? The C-suite starts to say, oh, wait, social media is valuable. because I still don’t think they quite get that yet. Right. Because customer care again is, has this whole like myth around it that it’s only about the customer and it’s not

John Jantsch (21:47): All right. I’m gonna ask you a, a question that is a fairly specific use case. And it’s it’s because I want to know the answer to this myself. sorry, listeners. Hopefully this applies.

Brooke Sellas (21:58): No shoot. I love this. I love it. It’s exciting. It’s like a game

John Jantsch (22:01): exactly. So imagine I’m a brand who does not sell direct to consumer. So I have a channel of retailers or distributors or something. How could I use this to actually, I don’t know. Sometimes people use the term pull sales or push sales, you know, so push ’em into the dealers, you know, build more brand affinity so that when somebody walks into the dealer or Walmart or wherever they ask for my product,

Brooke Sellas (22:26): I love that question. And that’s a great, that’s a great segue into social listening beyond, you know, customer care because you can use, remember we talked about social listening, being keywords. So like, let’s just use, say you’re working with a company that doesn’t sell direct. It sells through retailers, but it’s printers, right? Let’s just pretend it’s printers Uhhuh. You could put the keyword into social listening best all in one printer. Right. That keyword phrase, as we go on with this example, and then again, the artificial intelligence is gonna bring you back. All the instances of people online, talking about best all in one printers. If you then could go into those conversations and make the recommendation for the dealer or the reseller or the retailer.

John Jantsch (23:16): Yeah.

Brooke Sellas (23:16): You could then still close that business. I mean, it’s the same kind of project. It’s just not warm. Right? It’s not inbound. It’s outbound. So it’s a little bit colder, social selling, but I still bet you would capture some percentage of that conversation towards revenue.

John Jantsch (23:34): All right. One last question. I’m going longer than I usually do sometimes, but I want to give people the chance, get this question all the time. How do I get first off and then use, you know, we used to call it user generated content. Certainly you could talk about it as customer care content and you know, how do we get our customers to produce? So some really authentic social content for us. And I’m not meaning like, how do we get them to just do the job? But it’s like, how do we get them enthusiastically wanting to participate in that way?

Brooke Sellas (24:05): It’s so interesting because I, this is the same answer I give when people talk about community, how do I know if I can build a community or if I have a community. And I always say community happens in the conversation, not in the, not with the content. It happens in the conversation. So does U GC are user generated content. If you’re having those opinion and feelings, content, and John says something spectacular about my product, I then say, and we’re conversing, right? So we’re already having this back and forth. So there’s a little bit of like trust there. Yeah. I could say to John, I cannot, like, I couldn’t have described our product better. Would you be willing to create a post? You know, that says that, or can I snip this conversation and use this in one of our own posts and more than likely, I mean, going off of experience here nine times outta 10. Sure. John says, yes.

John Jantsch (24:54): Yeah. Cuz I’m a fan. Why wouldn’t I? Yeah.

Brooke Sellas (24:56): Right. You know, you already have

John Jantsch (24:57): That. I did it voluntarily. Right. right.

Brooke Sellas (24:59): You already given us the information and we are kind of coming back to you and going, oh my gosh, you’re a rock. This is amazing. Can we use this? And John, because most of us are like, oh, give me the limelight. Yes, please. It’s going to say yes. And then other people might chime in and see that right. Community audience and see our conversation and say, well, I think you’re amazing too. It, we are built as human. Right? It’s all about psychology. We learn by mirroring one another. It’s all about reciprocity. All these same psych psychological concepts happen on social. It’s just a different medium.

John Jantsch (25:38): Well, and it circles very directly back to your social listening too. Right. Because I bet you that we’re missing those like golden moments that our customers are out there actually sharing because we’re not listening.

Brooke Sellas (25:49): Right? Yes. Yes. You’d be surprised, you know, people tag brands or mention brands just fine. But a lot of

John Jantsch (25:56): Times I do it all the time. You’re

Brooke Sellas (25:57): Not being mentioned. Yes.

John Jantsch (25:59): Well I do it and I tag them and I like never hear from ’em too. You know? So you man, in my

Brooke Sellas (26:04): Way, I wanna help those people.

John Jantsch (26:06): exactly. Yeah. Our awesome Brooke. Well, thanks so much for stopping by the duct tape marketing podcast. Uh, we’ve been talking about conversations that connect you and tell people where they can connect with you or, and certainly find out more about the book.

Brooke Sellas (26:19): Definitely. So if you visit our website, it’s just B squared.media. So it’s our business name B squared media. But with a.media, you can find out all about our services, the book me, or you can just literally Google Brook sells. I think I’m the only one so far and all of our sites will pop up. You can connect with me directly through social. Twitter’s my favorite platform. So if you wanna come talk with me there, happy to have a conversation with you.

John Jantsch (26:48): Awesome. Well, Brooke, again, thanks for taking the time out today. And hopefully we’ll run into you one of these days, soon out there on the road. Hey, and one final thing before you go, you know how I talk about marketing strategy strategy before tactics? Well, sometimes it can be hard to understand where you stand in that what needs to be done with regard to creating a marketing strategy. So we created a free tool for you. It’s called the marketing strategy assessment. You can find it @ marketingassessment.co not .com .co, check out our free marketing assessment and learn where you are with your strategy today. That’s just marketingassessment.co I’d love to chat with you about the results that you get.

This Duct Tape Marketing Podcast episode is brought to you by the HubSpot Podcast Network and Semrush.

 

HubSpot Podcast Network is the audio destination for business professionals seeking the best education and inspiration to grow a business.

 

Everybody’s online, but are they finding your website? Grab the online spotlight and your customers’ attention with Semrush. From Content and SEO to ads and social media, Semrush is your one-stop shop for online marketing. Build, manage, and measure campaigns —across all channels — faster and easier. Are you ready to take your business to the next level? Get seen. Get Semrush. Visit semrush.com/go to try it free for 7 days.

 

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=1859

When growing your professional network as a company or an individual, LinkedIn is one of the most well-known and powerful tools for making connections by finding employment or employees, discovering services and products, collecting leads, and developing your brand, company, and thought leadership portfolio. In fact, LinkedIn is the most used social media channel in the B2B industry.

While organic and unpaid growth is easy and versatile on LinkedIn, paid promotion through this platform’s multiple advertising options is also a simple and effective method for furthering your marketing efforts. With paid LinkedIn ads or “sponsored content,” you can target the precise demographics your marketing is intended to reach. While it may cost money to advertise on this platform, the opportunity to target specific decision-makers and audiences directly proves its worth.

LinkedIn gives advertisers many ad options when deciding on a paid piece of promotional content or direct message. To achieve goals from lead generation to website conversions, employee recruitment, and product or service sales, ad and message options include:

  • Sponsored Content
  • Sponsored Messaging
  • Text Ads
  • Dynamic Ads
  • Carousel Ads
  • Follower Ads

Spending on B2B advertising in the United States is projected to grow to 14.57 billion dollars by 2023, so it’s essential to leverage the following tips to effectively stand out in this growing and competitive space and reach the 810+ million professionals on LinkedIn.

Quick Tips:

  1. Format Your Ads for Maximum Impact
  2. Keep Your Buyer Personas Updated
  3. Identify & Target Decision Makers
  4. Run A/B Testing
  5. Monitor & Understand Your Analytics
  6. Gate Your Content
  7. Use a Variety of Ad Types

1. Format Your Ads for Maximum Impact

Familiarize yourself with the most effective practices for writing and formatting the different kinds of LinkedIn ads so that they’re displayed to your audience as intended. Keep headlines and descriptive copy short, concise, and punchy. Be aware of specific length limits such as headlines under 150 characters and descriptive copy under 70 characters—deviating from these guidelines can truncate text and cut off your intended message, leading to less engagement. Use images that are approximately 1200 x 627 pixels, as content with larger visuals has up to a 38% higher CTR (click-through rate) than smaller thumbnails and images that are too big.

Different ad types call for different image sizes and copy lengths, so be sure to reference LinkedIn’s Sponsored Content Advertisement Specifications.

2. Keep Your Buyer Personas Updated

By knowing exactly who you’re marketing to, you can target ads to be shown to your specific buyer personas. This helps better collect spot-on leads and ensures you’re increasing your ROI. Outdated buyer personas can be as detrimental as having none at all, so it’s important to revisit these profiles and make adjustments as the industry, your company, and other environmental forces change.

3. Identify & Target Decision Makers

Speaking of buyer personas, you’ll want to specifically target the person or persons who will be purchasing your product or service. Luckily with LinkedIn’s Company Targeting, you can execute account-based marketing (ABM) campaigns and target your ads to reach the inboxes or feeds of decision makers from the companies and industries you’re aiming for, raising the likelihood that they’ll become profitable leads and customers for your business.

4. Run A/B Testing

LinkedIn is the ideal platform for A/B testing your ads. Start by creating two versions of the same ad and then change one component: perhaps target different demographics, change an image or video, utilize a different CTA (call to action), or whatever differentiator you’d like to implement.

Test their effectiveness by running both variations simultaneously. After observing your results, you can determine which ad or ad type performs better and utilize that information for future campaigns. On the flip side, this can help you determine if neither option works well and if you need to create a different ad entirely.

A/B tests help you better understand how to effectively communicate with your potential leads, customers, employees, and others who are representative of your buyer personas. Your marketing and advertising efforts can only improve alongside your understanding of your audience.

5. Monitor & Understand Your Analytics

Whether from organic marketing efforts or paid LinkedIn advertising, you’ll gather data about your efforts’ performance that you can leverage in future campaigns. LinkedIn has built-in analytic tools. With this data, you can better target the most appropriate demographics, understand what formats work or don’t work, measure leads and conversions, and gain other insights to improve your ROI.

6. Gate Your Content

Don’t give out every piece of valuable content without collecting a lead. You’ve done the work to create content to grow your business, so be sure to strategically gate your content with a form or other contact collection method. With LinkedIn advertising, you can place these gated content pieces directly in front of their intended target audience and efficiently collect that lead. An excellent tool for this is LinkedIn Lead Gen Forms which can be used in your ads to quickly generate high-quality, data-rich leads that come straight from the user’s LinkedIn profile. This not only generates leads but strengthens analytics to benefit future campaigns.

7. Use a Variety of Ad Types

With LinkedIn advertising, you can experiment with the different types of ads. You can create sponsored ads with images or videos, or even message ads that go directly into targeted inboxes. You can experiment and be creative with the type of rich content ads you’re promoting about the service, product, or event you’re advertising. Not only that, you can continue repurposing older, relevant content by reincorporating it into different ad formats and placements and refocusing toward different target audiences.

Effectively Execute Your LinkedIn Ads

The potential for effective, targeted, and specific advertising is broad and evergreen. By leveraging these tips for effective LinkedIn advertising, you can garner quality leads, grow your business and brand far and wide, and stake your place in your industry as an exemplary thought leader. Do you want expert assistance to boost your LinkedIn advertising efforts? Let’s get started today.

The post 7 Marketing Tips for Successful LinkedIn Advertising appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=1786

chess piece showing content marketing strategy for brands

SEO. Social media. Websites. Blogs. Developing an effective content marketing strategy can feel daunting with so many options and strategies available. Earlier this week, we shared the results of our approach to developing content. Here in this post, I am sharing how we do it for brands like yours.

We speak with brands on all points of the content marketing journey. From those who are still learning what content marketing is and why it’s important to those who are implementing their campaigns and need guidance, we help brands develop processes that allow them to effectively reach their customers.

Quick Takeaways:

  • The use of content marketing continues to grow. Over 80% of marketers are intently focused on creating content that builds brand loyalty.
  • Content marketers should focus on solving their target audience’s problems.
  • Connect with your audience on platforms where they hang out. Create content in formats that they prefer to consume.
  • Brands need to recognize that employees are their most powerful marketing resource and figure out how to activate them.
  • An effective content strategy involves data, brainstorming, alignment with the consumer journey, and constant monitoring of key metrics.

As many brands have figured out, content marketing is critical to a brand’s survival in today’s economy. Content Marketing Institute’s 2022 Benchmarks, Budgets, and Trends announced that 43% of marketers report their organization’s content marketing budget has grown since 2020..

74% percent of marketers say their campaigns were more successful compared to one year ago with 66% expecting their content marketing budgets to continue to increase. Respondents indicated that the more their content marketing matures, the more likely it is to succeed.

One thing is clear: content marketing is a marathon, not a sprint. We are here to help you and your brand get to the finish line with loyal customers whose needs have been met.

Here is how we do it:

1. Content Marketing Objectives

How we think about and approach marketing has shifted in the past decade. Buyers are now completely in control of their purchasing journey. It’s up to brands to fulfill the consumers’ needs with a seamless, quality experience. However, one thing has not changed: defining the objective of a content marketing campaign.

This step requires an analysis of five areas within a brand:

  1. current audience insights
  2. business case
  3. current state
  4. mission statement
  5. budget

In short, where is the brand now? What is our mission statement? Who are our current customers? How much budget do we have to spend?

2. Defining the Target Audience

Since the buyer is now completely in control of their experience and has high expectations of the brands they’re willing to build relationships with, understanding the buyers is critical.

It goes far beyond the traditional basic data like age, gender, race, income level and location.

In content marketing workshops with clients, we always consider various other factors that may contribute to a person’s decision to buy a product. Are they happy in their lives, both personally and professionally? What frustrations are they currently experiencing? Where do they get their information? What are they curious about?

The list of possible questions is extensive but it helps us begin to build the framework for a successful content marketing campaign.

3. Publishing Content

Defining where and how your target audience consumes information frames where you will be publishing content.

We’ve noticed some confusion when it comes to platforms. We don’t blame you! There are at least a dozen social platforms that millions of people frequent. Add to that the scores of content management systems that you could build your hub with. It’s easy to get lost.

However, we place the most value in the location where a brand can own their content – just look at what the best in content marketing are doing. While they are a great place for content distribution, the constant flux in social media algorithms and user agreements make them an unreliable platform to build a content marketing strategy.

4. Content Marketing Workflow

Next, we identify the best way we can work with you and your brand. This process includes defining how we will ideate, approve, create and publish your content marketing campaign. For some clients, this is a relatively simple process. Others have required additional steps set by law or previously defined internal procedures.

5. Editorial Strategy

Once we have a good understanding of a brand’s goals, who their target audiences are and what platforms to reach them on, we can start defining the editorial strategy. This includes figuring out content themes, topics, and types. For example, at Marketing Insider Group, we identified four key themes:

  • content marketing workshops
  • content agency
  • employee activation
  • content marketing for events

Then we built out topics around these themes, such as tools to use or how to use video in your content marketing strategy. How these articles are actually written depends on the topic but the content may include general articles, lists, how-to articles, infographics and why posts.

6. Brainstorming

Part of building an effective content strategy includes brainstorming. We collaborate with our clients to explore the various ways we can reach your target audience. It can be (and in my opinion, should be) one of the most fun parts of the process.

We implement tactics such as design thinking where each individual comes up with a list of ideas and then the group categorizes them.

Don’t worry, analytical types. We use data-driven tactics to brainstorm.

  • Google is one of the first places we start. It provides suggestions based on the volume of searches done for a topic.
  • AnswerThePublic is another great resource to categorize the most frequently asked questions around a keyword.
  • BuzzSumo helps us identify content that has performed well in a specific time span. We are able to look at our own content as well as what competitors have done that’s worked. The platform also enables us to find high performing content by topic.

7. Consumer Journey: Where Does the Content Fit?

The journey to reach a consumer who has never heard of your brand is going to vary from the consumer who follows you on social media. We work with brands to determine what demographics should fall into the three stages: early, middle, and late.

This stage also determines the frequency in which we create or repurpose content and how we reach the consumer (blog posts, email, social).  One thing we always have in mind: buyers are not searching for product specifically. They are looking to solve a problem.

8. Content Distribution

Your content marketing campaign has multiple platforms to choose from: website, social, podcast, video, paid advertising, and harnessing employee activation. It’s here that we work with our clients to help determine which tactics will best help reach their goals.

We encourage the brands we work with to look within when deciding the best way to promote their content as their strongest marketing tactic exists on the payroll: employees. When employees share their employer’s content, it can generate up to 8 times more engagement and increase 14 times more brand awareness than brand-only content.

9. Content Marketing Measurement

Research indicates that for every one buyer, there are 100 pieces of content produced. This statistic makes measurement a key component of a content marketing strategy and is also most likely where your CEO will be most interested.

Early in the process we help brands determine what metrics need to be monitored depending on their goal(s) and buyer stage and provide them with a dashboard to help keep track. Our reporting schedule varies but is optimized to ensure a brand has a successful content marketing campaign.

Let Your Content Differentiate Your Brand

Good content marketing is imperative for distinguishing your brand and positioning yourself as a thought leader in your industry. It can be hard to keep your ideas fresh all the time, especially because your competitors are going to be turning out content as well.

Not only that, but every time you come up with something new and exciting, you can bet that your competition will be following behind shortly. Here are some tips for differentiating your brand using content marketing.

1. Position Yourself Strategically

It’s important to differentiate yourself from the competition by using your content to show your unique perspective.

 

Before you can get your brand into a good position, you need to get to know your target market, key content marketing trends in your industry and some research on what your competitors are getting up to.

Find out what sort of creative direction the competition is pursuing. Look at the kind of tone and aesthetics they favor. Some good places to get a sense of this are their logo, mascots, and even the colors they select.

  • What sort of themes are they working with?
  • What is their message?
  • What kinds of campaigns are they running?

If you want to stand out, you need to know what you’re trying to stand out from. Make your brand unique so it can fill a niche. Take what your competitors are doing and do it better, or put a fresh spin on it.

2. Focus on Customer Experience

“Customer experience can be an excellent way for you to differentiate your brand. Instead of approaching this with the mindset of there being one ideal customer experience, try and find out what your customers are looking for. Different customers use different brands because they enjoy the unique experience that brand provides,” writes Jerry Estes, content marketer at Revieweal.

The experience should align with your positioning; it should suit your brand’s personality and also include variety.

3. Create Quality Content

There are a lot of good ways to create quality content your customers will love. One good way to start is figuring where your niche will be. Think about an area that is underserved and therefore hungry for content that appeals directly to them. You can amass a loyal following of people if you are able to appeal to a niche that has not been receiving much attention from other brands.

Another good direction is to make your primary focus educating and informing people. Find out what your customers’ most common questions are and create content that addresses those questions. Use forums and blogs to find out which topics are most popular when people search for your brand or industry, then create content based on that information.

4. Pursue a Long Term Growth Strategy

Fads will come and go, but they should not determine how you lay out your strategy. Your strategy should be based on long term growth, and not the flavor of the month.

The internet has a very short attention span, and a rapid turn-around cycle. If you start trying to work this week’s sensation into your strategy, your brand will end up looking out of touch very quickly.

“Think long term and also see how far your boundaries extend. Look for new areas, that lie within your sphere, where you can expand and continue on with sustained growth. Just remember that you should make sure that when you do expand, you don’t contradict your brand’s positioning or message,” recommends Doris Tanguay, ecommerce content writer at Essay Services.

5. Use Online Resources to Improve Your Content Writing Skills

A lot of people have great content ideas but struggle with writing good copy. The good news is there are many resources available online that can teach you how to write like an expert.

Here are some good ones to get started with:

  • Studydemic / Academadvisor
    Use these resources to get your grammar knowledge up to speed. You can really discredit yourself and your brand if you’re publishing content with bad grammar.
  • Assignment Writing Service / Essayroo
    These online proofreading tools will give you content copy that is flawless. Just a single typo is all it takes to make you look like an amateur.
  • StudentWritingServices
    Writing is so much easier when you’re using a guide. This writing guide will walk you through the process from start to finish.
  • UKWritings / BoomEssays
    Editing can be tedious, and not a lot of people enjoy doing it, but these resources will make the process easier and faster.

6. Segment and Distribute

A lot of brands struggle with segmenting based on the wants and needs of the different segments of their audience. When you’re segmenting your audience, it’s smart to be thinking about where each group lies in their journey, in terms of awareness, engagement, conversion, and loyalty.

Segment your content based on pricing, customer care, product lines, and services. It’s also important to factor in geographical location and relevance to your segmentation.

Differentiation affects both your short term profits and the long term viability of your brand. If you’re just a less interesting version of someone else, why would anyone bother with your brand? It’s important to position yourself well, and keep up with what other similar brands are doing, so that you can find a unique angle to work on.

Best Examples of Brands with a Great Content Strategy

Thanks to the explosion and the proven value of content marketing, it seems like every brand these days has its own publishing house and an elaborate content marketing strategy to boot. They’re creating content on dedicated websites to target their demographic, convert visitors, increase their exposure, and establish themselves as voices of authority within their industries.

However, like much of the content out there on the internet, most branded content is not exceptional. Some brands just don’t get their customer base, while others recycle articles, photos, and videos instead of producing original pieces and are too pushy trying to sell their products.

If you’re gearing up to start your own branded content website, and want to get the most content marketing ROI, you should research what the best-of-the-best brands are doing. We spoke to five of them — IBM, Casper, GE, Barneys, and Williams-Sonoma — about how they built their sites and consistently put out excellent content.

These content creators discuss about their content marketing strategies, their methodologies, and their goals when it comes to building a branded content site.

IBM: Creating a real-time content desk

Tami Cannizzaro, who designed a real-time content desk for IBM way back in 2014 has this to say about branded content or messaging: “I don’t think I’ll get too many opinions to the contrary when I suggest that effective marketing is getting harder every day. Consumers seem to have developed an allergic reaction to anything that smacks of selling. Banner ads are essentially wallpaper with a dismal .1% conversion rate. Television ads have been all but eradicated by the DVR. Text ads are brand destroyers unless they’re pushed at point of sale while the discounted coffee is still piping hot. I could go on.”

So what can you do to insert your brand into a welcome conversation? Successful marketing is all about building relevance and utility for your brand. A social network is often the beginning of the conversation and should extend into the entire brand experience. Here’s what Tami and her team did about it at IBM: They built a real-time content desk. It’s a system that changes the way we build and disseminate branded content.

There are essentially five stages—here’s how you can build one for yourself:

Monday – The Beat Box: Ask what’s happening in the world that’s relevant to your customers and find the hot conversations. Social listening tools can help to identify the latest topics. An agency like Sparks & Honey can help you tap into significant cultural trends. They run a daily report on relevant world events, consumer trends and general cultural shifts. Build themes that align to the identified areas of interest in the marketplace.

Tuesday – Editorial Sync: Figure out what content you want your audience to consume and how. This is best done by a seasoned PR expert working with your marketing team to provide guidance and direction. Examples might include the fact that election season is coming up and you want to show how your software can help to identify the right candidate, or it’s Valentine’s Day and you’re selling overpriced gifts for lovers.

Wednesday – The Angle: Brainstorm on what content will be produced. Our agency, Ogilvy & Mather, supports the desk with a creative team and content strategist to develop a mix of short, consumable content as well as longer-form content. A fact-filled SlideShare, a report that ties in to an upcoming holiday, a short video series—all great content candidates.

Thursday – The Deadline: Determine how you will deploy the content across branded properties. Lay out a strategy for how content will be amplified through paid, owned, and earned media. Adding technologies like retargeting can help to bring consumers down the funnel.

Friday – The Analytics: Perform a weekly assessment of winners and losers. What types of content are consumers engaging with and sharing? Understanding which content types and themes are successful is critical to increasing brand engagement.

The real-time content desk helped IBM become experts at creating content that resonates. The nirvana for this type of desk is “news jacking” in conversations, like pushing a SlideShare into a competitors’ conference stream or being the top tweet that goes viral during a popular world event.

As consumers, we hate being sold. As marketers, we know we need to sell. In order to be heard by consumers today, brands need to align with how people experience the world and find a meaningful, relevant way to make the right connection. A content engine like IBM’s is a great way of driving that engagement.

Casper: Focusing on awareness, not conversion

Casper is a startup that provides “outrageously comfortable” mattresses sold directly to consumers — eliminating commission ­driven, inflated prices.

Since its launch in April 2014, the brand has grown rapidly, generating $30 million in revenue over a 10-month period and expanding its team from five to hundreds of people.

While Casper has always powered an on-brand, on-domain blog, the brand made a surprising move in June 2015, announcing its launch of Van Winkle’s, an off-brand, independent editorial venture.

Quality Journalism Exploring All Aspects of Sleep

Per Casper’s announcement on its branded blog, Van Winkle’s is an “independent editorial venture, staffed by an award-winning team of journalists. Van Winkle’s’ original features and stories explore all aspects of sleep, from science to pop culture.”

Luke Sherwin, Casper’s Co-founder, explains the editorial strategy further, saying the site will publish “weekly in-depth features, hard-hitting investigative pieces, columns, explainers, and relevant product reviews.” Reporting will also cover cultural topics and issues “through a lens grounded in rest and wakefulness, like the societal implications of Benzodiazepine, experimental interrogation techniques, or the limitations of quantification.”

The brand is clearly putting the mission of providing quality content at the forefront of its strategy, staffing experienced journalists from Maxim, Travel + Leisure, Salon, Mic, Gawker Media and Men’s Journal. The team will be led by Elizabeth Spiers, a former editor in chief of the New York Observer and a founding editor of Gawker.

An Independent Venture

While we’ve seen unbranded content marketing endeavors before (i.e., L’Oreal’s Makeup.com), it’s typically a move done by brands that a) are trying to disassociate from a negative brand perception, b) are trying to repair trust issues with customers, or c) have a house of brands rolling up into the same parent company. Casper fits none of these cases.

Instead, it seems the reason for the site was simply to fulfill a journalistic gap for an area of existing interest. As Sherwin describes it, Casper sees itself not just as a seller of mattresses but as a lifestyle brand at a time when people are concerned about work-life balance and are wearing fitness bands to track not just their activity but how much sleep they are actually getting. It seemed that if it wasn’t up to Casper to fill this void, then who?

While the site is funded by Casper, Van Winkle’s maintains its independence in terms of its branding, online identity and budget. The site is not designed to be a marketing vehicle or to drive traffic to the Casper site. It isn’t even part of Casper’s marketing budget. Van Winkle’s has no indication of its association with Casper, with the exception of a small “Published by Casper” disclaimer at the footer of the site.

Van Winkle’s online identity is also separate with independent social accounts and an unassociated URL (vanwinkles.com instead of something like casper.com/vanwinkles). Finally, it’s interesting to note that the goal of the site is to be “as self-sustaining and independent as possible. There will not be any shoppable links or e-commerce.” Most brands that choose an un-branded strategy will typically still include shoppable links sparsely throughout their content.

While still in its infancy, the site has already drummed up buzz and been covered by Wall Street Journal and the New York Business Journal. At a time when content is the “in vogue” marketing strategy of the moment, Van Winkle’s is an exciting experiment that will interesting to watch and sure to influence other brands’ content marketing strategies.

The Strategy

Van Winkle’s editor-in-chief Jeff Koyen does not consider himself to be a marketer. Instead, he’s a journalist who manages other freelance journalists. Like traditional reporters, they strive to tell good stories and raise awareness about certain issues. For Koyen, that issue is sleep.

“We are not converting people to Casper.com, which is what makes Van Winkle’s unique,” he said. “We are not measured by conversions or mattress sales.”

The goal is to invent a new vertical, sleep, and try to have “more eyeballs on Van Winkle’s. If we do create the sleep category, ultimately, Casper will benefit from it. They will get people to say ‘Gee, we need a better mattress.’ It’s my job to create cultural awareness. My competitors may benefit from it too, but it’s ultimately up to Casper to position themselves in a way that they will be there when customers want to make a purchase.”

So, what has Koyen found that his readers are most interested in when it comes to sleep? “Not surprisingly, posts about boners perform well,” he says. “I did one on morning erections. Another one is about how to wash your sheets. Those two posts had a far reach on social.”

Van Winkles.jpg

Koyen’s advice for other brands hoping to start their branded content websites is this: Don’t be too cautious. “It takes bravery to let an editorial entity launch and run on its own,” he says. “When most people get to launch day, they think someone on the brand side will blink and say, ‘I don’t know if this story is on message for the brand. They may overthink it to death. If you want something that’s publishable, you need to be brave and trust your editor. If you just want to convert eyeballs or sell Red Bull then don’t do this. If you want to do higher level real journalism, you have to find the right editors and make sure they answer to themselves.”

Why It Works

Undoubtedly there will be many skeptics and naysayers of this seemingly risky endeavor, but there are several factors in this site’s strategy that have set it up for a successful future. First, the site is powered by an experienced team of journalists who know how to create compelling content. Regardless of the topics they write about, they’re staffed to be able to meet the high-quality expectations they’ve set for themselves.

Second, the site’s broad topic of “sleep” influences all aspects of life. Since sleep can be woven into just about anything, they’ve given themselves the flexibility to be able to write about topics that will be genuinely interesting. Six months from now, they won’t find themselves writing a stale story just because it’s the only thing left that fits in the site’s overarching theme.

Third, the unbranded strategy fits perfectly with Casper’s mission. Casper’s direct-to-consumer business model eliminates inflated prices and benefits consumers. Any business that is built on benefitting the end consumer has a leg up on an honest and trustworthy brand perception. Launching an unbranded editorial site, filled with amazing content, with no direct strategy to drive e-commerce enhances that positive perception even more.

Finally, the executive team’s expectations are realistic, open and prepared for adaptation. Sherwin does not expect the site to be a destination that readers will check every morning. Instead, the objective is to provide interesting, valuable content that will spread itself.

Sherwin explains, “We live in a world where being a destination site is not necessarily the primary goal of all content sites. The quality of the content still has value.” Casper’s CEO, Philip Krim, is also aware of the risk and prepared to alter strategy if need be. He explains, “If it isn’t well received we’ll have to reevaluate, but if we do succeed in creating some awesome content then I think we’ll have an interesting standalone business here.”

Barneys: Provide exclusive content

Your brand has a unique perspective and access to individuals and information that other brands don’t. On The Window, which is the branded content site for Barneys, the staff knows this.

The content that does the best on the site, according to editorial director Marissa Rosenblum, is interviews with Barneys’ designers and “things you could only get from visiting The Window,” she says. “This is because of the access we have at Barneys. You can’t read about the exclusive collaborations we’re doing elsewhere.”

The Window has a plethora of this kind of original content, from written pieces about their designers, to pictures from Barneys’ photo shoots, and videos of their runway shows.

The Window.jpg

If brands want to succeed, they need to stick to the old advice and write what they know, says Rosenblum. “Tell the stories you’re an expert on, and people will care about your brand’s point of view. They’re interested in what we have to say about emerging designers, fashion, and style. We’re still trying to sell them something, but it doesn’t change the fact that our point of view is well respected and regarded.”

Williams-Sonoma: Aim for return visitors

Success cannot simply be defined by how many visitors your branded content site converts. Don’t forget that loyal, returning customers are crucial to your brand.

Merritt Watts, the senior manager of content at Williams-Sonoma, says that with their website, Williams-Sonoma Taste, they want to keep people coming back for more content. “A return visitor means we’re truly connecting with our customers. They may not be purchasing every time they visit the blog, but when they do they’ll come to a trusted place — a place that’s already successfully shown them cooking techniques, offered inspiration for hosting a memorable holiday brunch, and recommended some restaurants to visit on their trip to Austin. That’s the kind of long-term success we are after.”

Williams Sonoma Taste.jpg

To encourage customers to return, Watts and her team of in-house and freelance writers produce content that adds value to their customers’ lives. “Our main target is the home cook,” she says. “They don’t have to know how to sous-vide or be able to whip up a soufflé without a recipe (though we have a hunch that plenty of our customers do!) (editors note: Seamless?!) but they are people who want to be inspired, who love getting their kitchens a little messy, and setting a table for friends and family with a meal they’re excited to serve.”

Some recent pieces for their demographic cover planning a spicy cookout, how to construct ice cream sandwiches, and making homemade pasta by hand.

GE Reports: Find the scoop

In creating GE Reports, Managing Editor Tomas Kellner (read a full interview with him here) says that the brand wanted to tell their own stories and appeal to a B2B audience. They also hoped to be seen among influencers as more than just an appliance company.

To do this, they report on innovations in technology. They find out the latest on topics like 3D printing, medicine and science, and information technology, and then aspire to have it distributed by other publishers like Gizmodo and Fortune, which have large readerships.

“With one of our stories on 3D printed jet engines, we got hundreds of thousands of views on the site, and it got picked up by other sites, which generated another large universe of impressions,” says Kellner. “Ultimately, the impression is more important than the traffic you bring back to the site.”

GE Reports.png

Since GE produces technology, Kellner has access to these stories in innovation. He looks inward at what stories he thinks would be a hit among his readers, and then he assigns them. “If I just try to sell to my readers, they’re just going to walk away,” he says. “You have to be authentic and tell the truth, but also be informative, newsy, and useful.”

How Can We Help Your Brand Succeed in Content Marketing?

For as much as I have helped brands create successful content marketing campaigns, I truly enjoy the discovery process because I learn something, too. Whether it’s working to get past an internal hurdle or reaching an obscure target audience, we’re here to help brands succeed!

Curious about how we can work together? Contact us today!

The post How We Help Brands Like Yours Develop a Content Marketing Strategy appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.

online reputation

Where do you go to discover new brands?

If you answered “the internet,” you’re in the majority. Search engines are the most popular method of brand discovery among consumers ages 16-64. More than a quarter of consumers also use brand websites, social media, and digital ads to find brands.

This means the online reputation of a business is critical to its ability to attract and retain customers.

But brands are not alone in building said reputation. The internet has created active audiences. Consumers contribute to the way a brand is perceived online through reviews, social media, and more. A brand’s press coverage is shared faster and more widely than ever before. Industry “best-of” lists and expert reviews are available in a single click.

Brands simply cannot control every single thing that’s published about their brand online. But they can implement strategies to control the larger narrative, and that’s what we’re going to cover in this article. In the following sections, you’ll learn more about why the online reputation of a business is so important, plus 9 actionable strategies you can use to control yours.

Quick Takeaways

  • More than 90% of consumers say they are more likely to choose a company with positive reviews and that just one bad review can change their mind about a business.
  • Conducting a brand audit is the best way to get a grasp on your company’s current online reputation.
  • It’s critical to control the first page of Google results for your branded search terms — 98% of users never go past page one.
  • Consumers trust online reviews just as much as word-of-mouth recommendations.
  • Responding well to bad reviews can actually build trust and improve the online reputation of your business.

Why is the online reputation of a business so important?

The online reputation of a business is the new storefront. It’s what people see first, and it’s what makes them decide if they want to know more.

It only takes a few minutes for consumers to get a sense of your current online reputation. A quick Google search or scroll through product reviews are enough for them to make a decision about whether they want to go further.

The clearest way to understand why a brand’s online reputation is so important, however, is by the numbers. Consider the following:

  • 91% of customers are more likely to choose a brand with many positive reviews
  • 84% of customers trust online reviews as much as word-of-mouth recommendations
  • 94% of customer said just one bad review convinced them not to use a business
  • 71% of U.S. workers said they would not apply to a company experiencing negative press

To boot, research has found that it takes the average online user 50 milliseconds to form an opinion about a brand. Your first impression seriously matters. If you don’t control what people see first when they encounter your brand online, you risk losing business.

How to take control of your business’s online reputation

Perform a brand audit

The first step to taking control of the online reputation of your business is to know where it stands. You can do this by conducting a brand audit. A brand audit is the process of evaluating how your brand is currently positioned on the market and  perceived by the public. It’s a good idea to do them often — many brands make it a part of their quarterly review process.

This five step framework can help you get started on conducting yours:

The 5-step process for conducting a brand audit.

Image Source: NetBaseQuid

Here’s a quick summary of the 5 steps:

  • Benchmarking past and present efforts – Assessing whether or not your past and present marketing efforts met their goals.
  • Competitor comparison and monitoring – Measuring your efforts against those of your competitors.
  • Identifying trends – Looking for what’s trending with your target audience and considering how your marketing efforts align.
  • Sentiment analysis – Looking at reviews and other user content to determine how consumers feel about your brand.
  • Understanding news vs. consumer perceptions – Looking to see if what the press says about your brands and what consumers are saying lines up.

Create a reputation management strategy

Once you’ve completed your brand audit, you have the information you need to create an online reputation management strategy. Your reputation management strategy will contain two main components:

  • Addressing issues that exist with your current online reputation
  • Creating a plan for monitoring your online reputation going forward

While the idea of creating this strategy may seem daunting, you can start with some simple steps that make a big impact:

Set goals

What are the most important things you want to achieve through online reputation management? Are there specific issues you need to address right away? Are there gaps (ex: no online reviews) that you want to fill? What new tactics do you want to implement? Be sure to take time to set clear goals that set your strategy in the right direction.

Know your resources

What human resources do you have internally to dedicate to online reputation management? How much time can your team spend on it? Do you have technology tools that can help? What other resources exist for you to leverage?

Make a priority list

What are the most important things to address first? Make a list of priorities for your strategy and address them by order of urgency and potential impact.

Create an execution plan

A well-defined plan keeps your strategy focused and your team accountable for follow-through. Set deadlines for tasks where it makes sense, identify who is responsible for each initiative, and identify how you’ll keep track of progress (example: a shared work plan in Google Sheets).

Control your first page of Google results

One initiative that should be at the top of your priority list is taking control of the first page of Google results for your company’s branded search terms. Remember that search engines are the number one method people use for brand discovery. Now consider this: a whopping 98% of people will never scroll past the first page of Google results.

You need to control what users find on that first page. But how do you do it? The answer is with a strong SEO marketing strategy — a comprehensive approach to improving search rankings and controlling which content ranks highest.

As it relates to managing your online reputation, your SEO marketing strategy should focus on ranking controllable web pages (like those from your own website and blog) for brand-related queries. When you do, you push negative content down in the rankings (where barely anyone sees it) and move positive content to the first page.

There are many moving parts involved. The graphic below sums them up well:

7 steps to a strong SEO marketing strategy.

Image Source: Mangools.com

Let’s quickly consider each in further detail:

Keyword research

Find the queries your customers are performing related to your brand. You can do this using Google autocomplete (type in your brand name and see what shows up after it) or Google Analytics Queries report. You can also enter your brand name into SEMRush’s easy-to-use Keyword Magic Tool to get a list of top queries related to your brand.

Identify topics

Choose topic clusters that determine which high-level topics you’ll cover in your SEO strategy and the keywords you’ll target to rank on page one of your Google results pages.

Publish great content

This one’s the key. Create thought leadership content and publish it consistently to increase your brand authority in important areas. Also create valuable content around customer reviews (highlight them on your website, create a dedicated testimonials page, etc.). Finally, claim and optimize third-party sites that typically rank on Google’s first page (like Yelp and Google My Business).

Optimize on-page SEO

Execute proven on-page SEO tactics like keyword usage, metadata, images, and other technical SEO components to optimize rankings for each individual web page on your site.

Get quality backlinks

Backlinks from highly reputable websites increase your brand authority and make you appear trustworthy to online audiences. Link building is a bit of a long game — you have to create high value content over time in order to earn backlinks. Once you start, however, your link building strategy will build momentum and your backlinks will make a clear impact.

Track your progress

How will you measure your success? Two of the most important metrics to use for your SEO strategy are rankings and organic traffic. Both are clear indicators of whether your content efforts are successful. Managing the online reputation of your business requires you to go a bit beyond those numbers, too, and pay attention to the story being told about your brand.

It’s a good idea to set aside regular, dedicated time to assess the progress of your SEO strategy and make adjustments as needed.

Update regularly

Your SEO strategy is a continual effort. Don’t let your content get outdated. Doing so can cause your online reputation to suffer. Update your content regularly to be sure that brand and product information is accurate. Align your efforts with current trends in your industry and in the marketing world. Know how Google’s ranking factors change (they often do) and adjust accordingly. Refresh your best content to keep it relevant and high-performing.

Updating your strategy and your content is one of the simplest parts of your SEO strategy and makes a huge impact on its success.

Market like a PR firm

Thinking with a public relations mindset can help you control your online reputation beyond the content you create yourself. Marketing like a PR firm mainly means generating positive press and user-created content that contributes to your reputation. It also means responding to poor reviews to minimize their impact.

Generate positive press

Some ways to build positive press for your brand include:

  • Guest posting on quality websites
  • Publishing press releases about important events and announcements
  • Co-marketing with reputable brands
  • Making company leaders visible through interviews, event appearances, podcast appearances and the like
  • Making a positive social impact through charitable partnerships
  • Quickly and genuinely addressing mistakes

Optimize user-created content

There are two main ways to encourage user-generated content that contributes to the online reputation of your business:

  • Customer reviews and testimonials
  • Creating shareable content

Reviews are second only to actual product quality when it comes to reasons consumers trust your brand.

Reviews are one of the top builders of brand trust, second only to product quality.

Image Source: MartketingCharts.com

If you’re not already encouraging your customers to review your brand, it’s time to start. You can offer incentives to motivate them (like a discount or free giveaway). Make positive reviews visible by linking them on your website or putting them directly on product pages.

Second, make the content you create highly shareable to build brand advocacy. People love to share content online. When you get your engaged audience to share yours, you’re not only impacting your online reputation but boosting your brand visibility. Make your content more shareable with easy steps like including social media buttons on your blog and sharing blog posts on your social media pages.

Respond to bad reviews

It’s easy to see a bad review or negative press and want to ignore it, hoping it will lose its impact as time passes. But it’s also a bad idea. The thing is, every business experiences at least the occasional bad review. Potential customers actually look for your worst reviews to decide if they warrant a change of direction or if they’re forgivable mishaps.

Always respond to bad reviews as quickly as possible, and do it in a genuine, solution-oriented way. What I mean is: don’t just say I’m sorry and call it good enough. Listen to the feedback, thank your reviewer (when it makes sense), and offer a solution that can actually rectify their issue and turn their negative customer experience into a positive one.

When customers see that you do, it builds their trust and boosts the online reputation of your business.

Over to You

Taking charge of your brand’s online reputation requires publishing frequent, consistent, high-value content. The team of writers and SEO experts can deliver you optimized, ready-to-publish content every week so that you can focus on controlling the larger story.

Check out our SEO Blog Writing Service or schedule a quick consultation with me to learn more.

The post How to Take Control of Your Business’s Online Reputation appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.

social media content types

Social media in 2022 is just part of the way we live. People spend more than two hours scrolling their feeds every day, and they use 7+ different platforms every month!

It’s a huge opportunity for brands to grow their visibility and connect with potential customers where they already are.

But figuring out the types of social media content to post can feel complicated. There are so many options! What works well for one platform might not perform well on another. Users have different preferences depending on their age and other demographic factors. Not to mention that social media trends and best practices change at a rapid pace.

Before you figure out exactly what your social media plan will look like (or how you’ll update it if you already have one), it’s important to know what types of social media content are already getting the most traction. That’s what we’ll cover in this article. In the sections that follow, you’ll learn why social media is so critical to your content strategy, plus 6 types of social media your audience needs to see on your platforms.

Let’s dive in!

Quick Takeaways

  • Finding content (i.e. articles, videos, etc.) is one of the top five reasons people use social media.
  • Social media stories are a great channel for sharing more casual, everyday content with your audience.
  • Infographics are shared 3x more than any other type of visual content on social media.
  • You can use social media to amplify your blog articles and other content to drive more traffic to your website.
  • Half of adult internet users report they purchase products from social media ads.

What’s the deal with social media and content marketing?

It’s kind of crazy to think about the ways social media has evolved in the nearly 20 years since MySpace (what’s that, again?) and Facebook put it on the map. What used to be a way for young people to connect with their friends became a way for anyone to share updates on their everyday lives and eventually evolved into the massive platforms for sharing and consuming news and media that we now know today.

Social media is critical to your content marketing strategy because it meets your audience where they already are — and where they’re going specifically to look for brand content! Recent research from Hootsuite found that “finding content (e.g. articles, videos) landed in the top five reasons internet users aged 16-64 use social media platforms.

Finding content is one of the top five reasons internet users use social media platforms.

Image Source: Hootsuite

For brands, social media is a place to share original posts and amplify your content from other channels (i.e. your blog, video library, etc.). It’s also a way to connect with your audience and engage with them in an ongoing way. This is important — about 90% of consumers report that they’re more likely to visit a brand’s website, buy their products, and choose them over a competitor when they follow them on social media.

Image Source: Sprout Social

The foundation of any brand’s ability to succeed with social media marketing is to create and share tons of engaging, high-value content on a frequent basis. To do that, you’ve got to know which types of social media posts your audience wants to see.

In the next section, we’ll walk through 6 of the top-performing types of social media content and how you can incorporate them into your strategy.

6 Types of Social Media Content That Your Audience Really Needs

Videos (with captions!)

Video is the most-consumed and most-preferred type of online content for internet users. Cisco predicts video will account for a whopping 82% of all online traffic by the end of 2022. Even more importantly, 9 out of 10 people report wanting to see more videos from brands. On social media, video posts earn 48% more views than posts without them.

In other words: the numbers are hard to ignore.

HubSpot also found that social media is the second-most common purpose for videos created by brands.

Social media videos are the second most common purpose for the videos created by brands.

Image Source: HubSpot

Fortunately, creating video content is simple today. Smartphones are the only tool you need to record HD videos. You can post videos from external channels (like your YouTube page or website) or you can do it directly on the platform (like social media stories and live streams).

It’s a good idea to experiment with different types of videos to see what your audience responds to the most!

Stories

Stories are one of the best channels for video content on social media, but they’re also a great place to post photos, highlight important posts, and share interacting content like surveys, polls, and other more.

The great thing about stories is that by nature, they’re a more casual way to interact with your audiences. While of course you need to maintain the same level of care and quality standards you do for other types of social media content, you can also share more everyday-type content that keeps your brand visible and top-of-mind to your followers.

Interactive posts

Interactive posts have huge potential to boost your social media marketing ROI. There are many different ways to be interactive on social media, but here I’m referring to more than just comment sections. I’m talking about content that’s interactive by nature — live streams, polls, surveys, Q&A content and more.

The exact way you can post this type of content depends on the platform. Instagram, for example, pioneered interactive social media stories with features like rating scales, Q&A boxes, polls and more. Twitter is known for its in-tweet (and anonymous) poll feature where people can be totally honest in their responses. Facebook Live was one of the first places we saw users interacting directly with brands over live streams.

Interactive content is an awesome way to grow engagement. They also present an opportunity to collect really valuable insights from your audience about product preferences and other opinions that matter to your larger strategy.

Infographics

Infographics are great for condensing complex, detailed content into a digestible social media post. If you’re covering a technical topic, lots of numbers and statistics, or just a high volume of information that needs to be in one place, infographics can be a great tool for doing it.

Infographics lend themselves especially well to social media as the most shareable type of visual content — they’re shared 3x more than videos or any other type of regular images on social media.

Here’s a list of 40 great infographics to inspire you.

Links to external content

Social media should absolutely be leveraged as part of your larger content strategy to amplify the content you create in other places — on your blog, YouTube channel, website and more.

I recommend sharing every blog post on social media. You can also revive older content or timely topics when it makes sense. Encourage your readers to share your content, too, by adding social share buttons on your blog article pages.

Social sharing buttons appearing at the top of a recent MIG blog post.

Image Source: Marketing Insider Group

You can also consider sharing content from other brands and news sources to give your own take on current events and topics. It’s a great way to encourage discussion and engagement with your audience.

Promotional content

Say what?! Promotional content? You might be wondering why this one’s on the list. After all, organic traffic is best, right?

Well, yes. But that doesn’t mean promotional content is never a good idea — especially on social media. Here’s why:

  • 40% of internet users between the ages of 18-34 report having bought a product on a social media platform
  • 80% of consumers report purchasing a product after seeing it recommended by an influencer
  • 50% of all adult internet users say that social media ads help them find products and services that interest them

Promoting content by paying to boost posts or running social media ads increase brand awareness and help drive traffic back to your social pages and website. Don’t shy away from mixing promoted content with other content you share organically.

Boost your social media success with great content

You can’t share great content on social media unless you create it regularly! The team of writers and SEO experts at Marketing Insider Group can deliver you optimized, ready-to-publish content every single week for a year (or more!).

Check out our SEO Blog Writing Service to learn more or schedule a quick consultation with me to get started.

The post 6 Types of Social Media Content That Your Audience Really Needs appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.

Did you miss our previous article…
https://www.sydneysocialmediaservices.com/?p=1345

woman shushing to show secrets of content marketing

Content marketing is leading the way for effective marketers. Many businesses hire content marketing agencies to help develop and distribute their messaging. However, there are some potential content marketing agency problems you want to consider.

The advent of the internet and social media has revolutionized the world of marketing. Information is more accessible than ever before. Consumers can be more selective in the brands they want to patronize.

For this reason, content marketing is crucial to a company’s success. Brands must deliver the right message to the right audience at the right time. Content marketing agencies can help build a successful strategy for this. In fact, 46% of marketers spent up to $10,000 last year on content marketing efforts. Businesses appreciate the value of investing in content and hiring qualified professionals to create high-quality material.

Source: Statista

A good agency can help build your audience. They can create valuable messaging that earns your audience’s trust. This, in turn, can increase your revenue. After all, 71% of consumers will spend more money to support a brand they trust.

Content marketing agencies offer numerous benefits. However, they also have their downfalls. Do your research. Make sure hiring an agency is the best decision for your business.

Quick Takeaways:

  • A content marketing agency provides expertise, objectivity, resources, and saves you time.
  • When you hire a content marketing agency, there’s going to be a learning curve.
  • Agencies could sacrifice content quality based on your budget.
  • A content marketing agency might bump the priority of your assignments.

Why Consider a Content Marketing Agency?

There was a time digital marketing simply involved sending promotional emails to prospects. Today, consumers expect to receive useful information. Emails don’t just sell a product. They provide helpful information that educates the consumer.

Content marketing agencies are full-service allies for your company. They can supplement an overwhelmed internal team. Or they can completely take over the role of creating articles, guides, information graphics, and reports. All of these drive traffic to business websites.

People search the internet because they have a problem or a question. Content that solves those problems and answers those questions earns customer loyalty. When your audience views you as a reliable resource, they’re more likely to value you and spread the word about your offerings.

Agencies employ a long-term strategy that drives traffic and growth. They present your company as a resource, enabling you to develop ongoing relationships with your customers. This leads to loyalty, conversions, and word-of-mouth advertising.

The Role of a Content Marketing Agency

Content marketing is part of a company’s digital marketing campaign. Agencies assist businesses in solidifying their online presence. They help develop high-quality content that engages people.

By delivering useful, targeted information, an agency attracts potential customers. They can provide anything from email campaigns and web content to social media posts and even develop articles that employ a weekly blog subscription service.

Source: Pinterest

Some benefits of outsourcing to a content marketing agency include:

  • Expertise: An agency provides a collective experience and skill set. They’ve tried numerous approaches. They’ll know the best way to develop strategized content for your business. They also have a well-rounded team working for you. They can provide a wealth of knowledge on multiple content topics.
  • Objective third-party perspective: A content marketing agency has no personal ties to the inner workings of your business. This perspective gives them the freedom to offer insights and recommendations. They can identify missed opportunities without the pressures of internal bias or loyalties.
  • Valuable contacts: Content marketing is only successful if it reaches the right people at the right time. It can be challenging to build relationships with publications that target your audience. An agency can provide a list of contacts to help deliver your message effectively.
  • Timesaving efforts: A content marketing agency is continually evaluating the latest trends. They do all the research and analysis needed to develop a successful marketing strategy for your brand. Then, they create and distribute your content for you. This saves you the time of gathering, writing, and publishing your content.

A content marketing agency can help in many ways. However, there are potential content marketing agency problems. It’s best to know them to determine whether hiring an agency is the right option for you.

4 Potential Content Marketing Agency Problems

Content marketing can be achieved with the help of an agency. It could also be done by an internal team. Before you decide which is best for you, do your homework. Here are four little-known facts about content marketing agencies.

1. There’s a Learning Curve

A professional agency brings diverse experience to your projects. However, no one knows your brand better than you. Before committing to a long-term relationship, discuss your business in detail. Find out whether the agency has worked with brands in your industry.

Keep in mind an agency will need a little time to become well-versed in your field. As you set your content calendar, allow padding for edits, rewrites, and polishing in the beginning. It shouldn’t be long before the agency is creating quality content that resonates with your audience.

Source: Athletic Institute of Excellence

2. Transparency

When you outsource your work, you surrender some control. While this can be hard, it doesn’t have to be a negative. Employ an agency that understands the balance of taking the lead while keeping you informed.

Hiring a content marketing agency doesn’t mean you have no say over your messaging. There should be checkpoints where you give approval and feedback. A strategy shouldn’t be implemented before you know what it is.

If you find yourself in a relationship without transparency, you might have to reconsider your agreement. An agency should be able to explain their strategy clearly. They ought to come to you for consent. If they don’t, they may not be a reputable company.

3. They May Sacrifice Content Quality

Hiring a content marketing agency can be pricey. As you may expect, fees are typically charged hourly or per package. What you may not know is that many agencies use freelance writers. These writers charge the agency their own rates. Then, the agency has to mark up their cost to cover the fee of the writer and any other project expenses.

Depending on your budget, an agency may have to employ the cheapest writer available. Not the best one for the job. This could mean you’ll be getting a writer with less experience. This may result in more mistakes and more work. When discussing fees, be sure to ask about writer experience and how it correlates with your budget.

At Marketing Insider Group, we only hire the best writers. And then we treat them like the best. We respect their rates and experience. We do not force them to join client calls. We let them do what they do best: write. They also love that our clients are n it for the long term. So they can become experts at the tone and topic needed for each client.

4. They Might Bump Your Priority

Content marketing agencies only have so many writers. As assignments come in, they’re constantly having to re-prioritize their workload. Some jobs get bumped down the list based on deadline, relationship with the company, and even budget.

Turnaround time is impacted by edits, rewrites, and the addition of new projects. A quality agency has the capacity to adjust schedules without causing delays. They should be able to reassign projects or move deadlines without upsetting your timeline. You’ll want to ask these questions ahead of time to ensure your deadlines won’t be jeopardized.

Powering Your Content Marketing

Looking for a reputable content marketing agency? We bring you real-world marketing experience to create programs that don’t just make an impact. They also matter to you and your business. We’re ready to help you develop content that converts. Let’s begin driving more traffic and bringing more leads to your business.

Schedule a free consultation to learn about our how our content marketing agency’s Weekly Blog Writing  Services makes quality content seamless.

The post 4 Little-Known Truths About Content Marketing Agencies appeared first on Marketing Insider Group.