Volume 3, 1 April 2012
SOCIAL
IMMEDIA TELY Connect, Share, Expand
SOCIAL
IMMEDIA TELY Connect, Share, Expand By Digital by Design Volume 3, 1 April 2012
CONTENTS INTRODUCTION START AT THE BEGINNING TONE - YOUR BLOG - FACEBOOK
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- Basic status updates - Multimedia status updates - Pictures - Links - Facebook Ask - Tabs
3 4 4 4 6 6
- Tweet - Retweet - Hashtag - Tagging
7 7 8 9
- YOUTUBE CONCLUSION
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INTRODUCTION Social Media is the latest and greatest way to network, be it with clients, partners or potential sponsors. No matter what it’s about, it has a place in Social Media. This eBook is here to tell you where your content should go and why it should go there. CONNECT with friends, fans, colleagues, clients and the people that could take your business to the next level. SHARE your passion. Post about the things that you love most about your company and what you do every day. Let people know what drives you. EXPAND your contacts, your clients, your sales and ultimately, your business. START AT THE BEGINNING- Create a Social media account For the sake of those of you out there who would love to develop an online presence and get involved in the Social Media way of life but are perilously clueless, here’s an overview of how to create an account on most social media sites.
VALID URL The first thing you do is type in the website’s url in order to go to the site’s home page. If you don’t know the url, simply search the website’s name on a search engine of your choosing (e.g: Google, Bing, Yahoo!, etc.). VALID EMAIL ADDRESS You’re going to need a valid email address. This is to ensure that an alternate avenue of communication between you and the social media site is available, to keep you up-to-date on new developments and changes, to send you notifications and information about your account and its progress and also as a security measure to lessen the risk of a password change
without your permission and to provide you with the option of changing your password safely in case you forget it. If you do not have a valid email address, settings one up is relatively similar to setting up a social media account. YOUR NAME Most sites will require your full name. This is not so that they know who you are and can monitor your online activity. This is simply to limit the number of fake accounts that are made in order to protect other users from spam and inappropriate content. USERNAME Some websites require that your account has a username. This is simply a name you choose for yourself to use on that site – it doesn’t have to
resemble your birth name at all and can often involve numbers and punctuation marks. Other users can find you by your username and all your activity on that website will be linked to the name you have chosen. This is partially to protect your privacy and partially to ensure that each person who has an account on the site has a unique name. All the better to manage your account data with, my dear.
you. There is often the option of adding information about your favourite movies, where you work, what kind of food you enjoy eating as well as a profile picture and other personal data. The extent of this information can be determined purely by you so don’t feel that you have to provide it when registering with a social media website. You, ultimately, get to decide what goes on your profile and what doesn’t.
BIRTH DATE Depending on the website, you may have to add additional information like your birth date. In some cases, this is to prevent young users from being exposed to mature content. In other cases, it is simply to ‘flesh out’ your profile on that site and give other users more information about
PRIVACY SETTINGS Every site gives you the option of customising your privacy settings, in order to ensure that you are only sharing information about yourself with the public at large that you are comfortable with.
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There are finer details and points that differ from site-to-site – this is simply a very basic overview of what creating a social media account involves.
TONE Handle your online business with extreme care No matter what you’re saying on any of your various Social media accounts, the way you say it will always matter. The tone that you choose to communicate your message with can determine who will respond to your post and who won’t, give any reader/viewer an impression of what your company (and therefore your brand) is like, enable them to decide whether they want to give you their business or not and either broaden or restrict your online market. Words are important. The way you string them together is even more important. Subtle nuances in preferred vocabulary and sentence structure do manage to communicate different messages and leave different impressions. Social media involvement is in no way a less-important or less-concrete form of advertising – the market for your social media activity can, in fact, be larger than the market for your offline means of advertising. Handle your online presence with the utmost care. Each social media site or platform has its own tone and its own unique means of communicating. We’re going to go into which site has which tone and which site you should use for communicating which content.
YOUR BLOG Regularly update your blog Your blog is going to be the place where you put your most extensive and professional social media content. Write articles. Write as many articles as you want. They key here is to regularly update your blog with relevant and captivating content. You get to decide how often you’d like to post something new on your blog but the content is the hardest thing to maintain. Broaden your ideas on what is appropriate and what isn’t in terms of content that pushes boundaries and really gets people thinking. Write about the latest staff retreat. Let your clients know who makes up their favourite company. Turn your company into real people – that way, your market will find it much harder to forget the human aspect of your company, therefore making it harder for them to dismiss the personality of your company. And that’s very important. Write about a conference the Vice President of the company recently attended and presented at. What did they talk about? Don’t provide a transcript of their speech; simply give a summary of their message. Highlight the interesting points and enable readers to give their opinion.
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Showcase your company’s view of the industry you’re involved with by using interesting articles that challenge commonplace ideas or take a new angle on an old topic. Don’t focus solely on what your company alone is doing. By no means promote your competition but allow your company to be a channel through which people can learn more about the industry that you represent. That way, your market gets context, therefore enabling them to understand you better. You can use your blog as a multi-media platform but we recommend sticking to articles and written content over visual and audio content. If you would create a podcast, your blog can be a good place to host it but don’t overwhelm the viewer. Blogs were originally created to host written content – though they have adapted to host many other forms of content, people still expect to predominantly read blogs.
FACEBOOK Maintain a professional yet relational tone Though you probably think of Facebook as a site for far more colloquial content, Facebook has evolved to cater to companies and businesses around the world. And evolved quite well, we might add. It is possible to maintain a professional yet relational tone on your Facebook fan page and without compromising the way in which you enjoy communicating your brand. E.g. 1: ~ We R *sUpEr* ExCiTeD about tha new products in our new RaNgE!!!~ Status updates like this are inappropriate and will falsely represent your company online, something that you should always avoid doing. E.g. 2: We’ve just brought out a brand new range of products that are getting everyone here at [company name] excited. Let us know what you think! Follow this link and comment: [link] This is a far more appropriate use of language and tone. It’s professional yet friendly and doesn’t overwhelm the user with information. It also provides them with a structured place to give their feedback, instead of leaving them to communicate solely via comments on Facebook. This can also drive traffic to another online platform, therefore exposing your clients to more information and possibly leading them to look at your products and services as well as reinforcing your online brand. Now, to talk about the vast range of mediums one can use on a Facebook page. Facebook is definitely the most diverse social media platform your company can use, structured to enable the maximum use of different means of communication and a great place to really showcase your brand’s personality.
BASIC STATUS UPDATES Connect with fans These should typically be updated a handful of times a day. Don’t spam your fans with the same messages over and over again, every half an hour – it will most likely result in the loss of said fans and that is exactly the kind of situation you want to avoid. Instead, use your status updates to let your fans know what your company is doing at the moment. Tell them about a competition that you’re running and how to enter, advertise the winners of competitions that have just ended, promote a new product that’s just come out, write a brief phrase
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about new company developments, showcase an award that your company has just won – think relatively short and informative updates that keep your clients up to speed with company developments. Also, share information about initiatives or groups that your company supports, news about your company’s brand ambassadors (if you have any), small developments in your industry – any relevant and interesting information that your Facebook fans will want to know. Connect with your fans through posing questions related to recent events or news (note: this differs from the Ask feature mentioned later). Enable them to interact with your company on your Facebook page – reply to their comments, keep track of what they’re saying, enable them to post on your wall to give your company feedback or pose a specific question to you. Facebook is the perfect place to really get to know your market.
MULTIMEDIA STATUS UPDATES Keep your updates fresh and unique
Facebook also supports picture, video and podcast status updates. Feel free to make use of these features but also ensure that this footage is available on another site of yours - after a while, these updates will be lost in the mass of your fans’ news feeds and the influx of information and feedback on your profile. Perhaps keep a tab on your blog or website with all your videos and/or podcasts conveniently grouped together and saved.
PICTURES Ensure ultimate browser experience Facebook is the place to host your company’s photos. Recently have a team-building retreat? Create an album for it on your profile and post the pictures there. Have pictures of all your products available for viewing. Did you host an event to promote eco-friendly ways of running a business? Post those photos on Facebook, as well. People are generally visual so cater to that side of them with a diverse collection of pictures that showcase what your company is all about. Keep your photos and photo albums organised to ensure the ultimate browser ease. Continuity and flow are just as important in the success of your Facebook fan page as content – if people find it difficult to look through your page, chances are they won’t fan it or visit it again.
LINKS Be smart with your links Links are going to help generate a large portion of the content on your Facebook page. Facebook is not the right platform for long, drawn-out comments on your latest development, product, company event or conference. Rather, Facebook is a great platform through which you can promote the sites that are hosting the full attraction. Has your company released a new line of products/a new service package? Write a short line about it on your fan page and provide a link to the correct page on your website. Have you uploaded a video of your Vice President’s speech at a national conference? Advertise it on your fan page but keep the actual footage on another platform. Written a gripping article on your blog? Share the link with your Facebook fans and pair it with a catchy tag-line to grab attention.
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Always provide some amount of information with any link that you share; never just post a link and hope that the thumbnail will tell your fans all they need to know. This gives you yet another opportunity to write a catchy one-liner about your content and to attract an even wider range of attention.
FACEBOOK ASK Get your fans to contribute their opinions Present your fans with polls that you can quickly create on your Facebook fan page. With this new app readily available for you to use, it’s easiest now more than ever before to find out what your market wants, what makes them tick and what kind of information, product or service they will respond to most effectively. Generate interaction by asking your fans something that is relevant to both your industry and their lives. This way, they will want to become involved in the poll and contribute their opinion. It’s the ultimate form of market research, without the long, drawn-out surveys and hours of menial labour. What more could you want?
TABS Be creative with your Facebook tabs The default tabs host your page’s pictures, videos, notes and information. The information tab should not be neglected! It can provide your fans with valuable insights into what your company does, give your page a better chance of SEO success and attract potential fans that are interested in your field. It’s also another opportunity to project a flattering image to the public. Your Facebook fan page is not limited to the few default options Facebook provides you with. It is now possible to download various applications (through Facebook) that enable you to fully customise tabs on your page, therefore opening your Facebook fans up to that much more of your brand. Facebook tabs can be used for many different things. The more creative you become, the more effective your fan page will become. Below are a few examples of how the tabs are currently being used but don’t let that dictate the beginning and end of your use of the new tabs feature. Tabs can host competition pages (seeing as it is against Facebook rules to host any sort of competition directly through Facebook or that relies only on Facebook interaction) or a page that shows your latest products and/or service packages. Tabs can also link your Facebook page to your other social media accounts. This way, your fans are provided with a look at the content you post on your other social media platforms without it clogging up your main Facebook page or their news feeds. The latest and greatest use of the Facebook tab is a welcome page, complete with compelling designs and well-worded brand information. It acts almost like a technological, link-enabled flyer for your company and its one of the simplest ways to attract traffic to your page – grab your potential clients’ attention with the first look they get at your company’s online presence. Your welcome tab should be short, to-the-point and visually enticing. It should communicate basically what your company does and give clients and fans an idea of why they should be using your company above others. Definitely invest in some good visual graphics and/or pictures to take your welcome page to the next level. Once someone enjoys your welcome tab, they’ll want to look at the rest of your Facebook page and that is, ultimately, the aim. Many companies also create tabs exclusively for competitions they are hosting. This means they design a visual flyer that tells you what the competition is about, showcases attractive graphics or pictures that are in line with the theme of the competition and a means through which you can enter the competition, be it a link, a convenient place for you to enter in your email address or an entire application hosted on the Facebook page. Facebook tabs are extremely useful if used correctly – be creative with your approach to them. Never treat them as a feature that is only suitable for one thing. Their versatility is their greatest quality – exploit it. Feel free to include various mediums on your tabs, including videos and podcasts. Did your company recently create an advert that is now fighting on TV? Embed the video on your welcome tab so that fans and viewers can get an idea of what you’re company is all about in an easy, visually-pleasing way that enables them to absorb information without having to read it.
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TWITTER Go ahead and create a Twitter strategy Now there’s a site many people misunderstand. There’s a general misconception that Twitter is there to host meaningless content that is constantly updated, regarding their minute-to-minute activities and thoughts. False. Twitter is the best site to stay in touch with your fans in real-time and constantly communicate with them. It doesn’t mean compromising your company’s brand or having to completely throw away any professionalism in order to maintain the right tone. There is a way to manage your Twitter account effectively without letting go of your brand principles. Twitter updates should be short, concise and informative. Let go of the flowery usage of many words in order to paint just the right picture – use vocabulary with punch, words that convey a lot without having to spell it out. You have a 140-character limit so use it effectively. Yes, links do count as characters. This platform is a great place to start conversations and keep up-to-date with what people are saying as they’re saying it, therefore giving you yet another place to interact with your market and stay on top of what they want, where they want it and how you can cater to them more effectively. Keep your tone professional yet relational and try to avoid an over-usage of shorthand. Shorthand, acronyms and abbreviations that are widely understood and common in your company’s field are perfectly acceptable as long as they don’t make up the majority of your tweet or your general content – they should not present a way to eliminate communicating in the usual manner or excuse you from putting as much thought into what you’re tweeting compared to what you’re posting on your blog. Any and all social media interaction that your company performs should be done so with a clear goal in mind, be in line with the digital content strategy that your company has worked out and maintain your company’s brand personality and standards. Twitter is also a great place to share links to your articles, other people’s articles that present information relevant to your field and your followers, your videos, your podcasts and any and all information that you feel your online followers should be exposed to.
TWEET This is the term used for Twitter’s version of status updates. It’s the 140 characters or less that you or your company post(s) on Twitter. The content of a Tweet can vary greatly, as discussed previously.
RETWEET This is when you see another person/company’s tweet and decide that you would like to share it with your Twitter followers. It’s the same concept as sharing something on Facebook or reblogging an article or post on a blog-hosting site. Before you retweet, make sure that the content of the tweet is in line with what your brand represents, the field your company operates in/from and that the information within the tweet will be meaningful to your clients and fans. Do not retweet something merely because it has something to do with your industry – Twitter followers are even more demanding than Facebook fans and are only invested in information that will make a difference to them in some way or another or pique their interest. Think before you click.
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HASHTAGS To some people, this is an entirely foreign word. Well, here’s the moment when you learn what a hashtag is and how it can benefit your company’s Twitter presence. A hashtag is a word or series of words linked together with a hash at the beginning, e.g: #REthinkMkting. This hashtag translates as retweet think marketing. What hashtags do is provide a way of grouping together all discussions that are occurring on Twitter through the discussion topic. Once you include a hashtag in your tweet, you are acknowledging that your tweet has something to do with that topic and are making your tweet easier to discover by people who are also involved in that discussion. A hashtag acts as an embedded link – once someone clicks on a hashtag, they are taken to a page (similar to a search results page) that displays all the tweets that include that hashtag in order of time. The latest tweet will appear first. This list is constantly updated as new tweets are created and posted with this hashtag included. This way, people can see what anyone and everyone on Twitter is saying about a certain topic. If you use a hashtag, your tweet will also appear on the results page with all the other tweets concerning that topic. Anyone interested in that topic will be able to see your tweet. If they like your tweet, they may look at your Twitter profile. And from there, it all depends on your content and your relevance to that person. It’s a great way to attract new fans and clients and expand your market, your following and your social media presence. To make this seem less like unintelligible jargon, here’s a screenshot of the results page after clicking on a hashtag (the hashtag was randomly chosen and does not represent any particular affiliation with that topic); This also gives you a visual platform through which you can better understand the other Twitterrelated features we’ll discuss shortly. The green highlighted word saying #REthinkMkting is the hashtag. As you can see, this is present in all the tweets shown on the page. If your company had said something about this topic and included the hashtag in your tweet, the tweet would also be included on this page and visible to any and all who choose to view it. It’s the most innovative way of holding discussions online without having to create a forum or having to tweet differently in order to participate. Twitter automatically shows you the latest ‘trending topics’ in your region on the left-hand side of your home page. Trending topics is the name Twitter uses for the list of hashtags that are being used the most at that particular point in time. This means your company doesn’t have to work to find what the public at large is discussing in real-time – you merely have to look to the left of your screen and there they all are, organised and ready for your convenience. Again, don’t merely become involved in a popular discussion in order to let people know that your Twitter account exists. Only become involved in discussions that are relevant and in some way meaningful to your company, your company’s brand and your company’s online audience.
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The icon at the top of the page that says ‘#Discover’ is another way for your company to keep up-to-date with current topics and conversations that aren’t necessarily restricted to your company’s region or area. Once you click on the #Discover icon, you are taken to another results page that displays the most popular topics on Twitter at the moment across the globe. Use it to become involved in international discussion regarding a topic that’s appropriate.
TAGGING Tagging on Twitter works much the same way as tagging on Facebook. It enables you to ‘tag’ another Twitter account in your tweet. This means people who are following your Twitter account can see that you are in some way involved with this Twitter account. The tag also acts as an embedded link, therefore enabling people to click on the account name tagged in your tweet and be taken directly to that account’s Twitter profile. Your tweet will also automatically appear on the tagged account’s Twitter profile, therefore opening your Twitter account up to anyone that views said Twitter profile. It’s a great way to spread yourself across the network that is Twitter and expose your company to an even larger online audience. In order to tag an account in your tweet, you need to be following that account on Twitter. Then, you simply type in an‘@’ symbol and a list of all the Twitter accounts you follow automatically pops up. As you type in more of the account name, the list of the profiles your company is following lessens based on account names that contain the letters and characters you are typing. Click on the account you want to tag and you’re done. It works exactly the same way on Facebook, so use this feature when your company is in partnership with another person or company for a certain competition, event or drive in order to let your online audience know who’s involved and to let the partnering companies’/person’s online audience be exposed to your company.
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YOUTUBE Youtube is a site dedicated to host video content. It has millions of registered accounts and even more people that view videos without registering first. It’s the perfect platform through which your company can host visual content. There are a number of types of visual content you can host on Youtube. TV ADVERTS that your company has released and created can go on your Youtube account – this is useful because even once the advert is no longer flighting on TV, it is still available for viewing on your Twitter account with no time-limit. Youtube can easily act as an archive for all visual content your company produces. Also look into uploading the video of the Vice President’s speech we spoke about earlier for your viewer’s convenience as well as webinars.
WEBINARS Webinars are the latest way to host seminars for people interested in your company without having to organise a venue, pay for travel expenses and take time out of your daily life to attend. They can be organised in a variety of different ways but they encourage user interaction, something your company should be looking for in order to stay in touch with their market. You could host live webinars, where your market, clients and fans send in questions through various social media platforms in real-time and a company representative answers them. Alternatively, you could plan a webinar and advertise it extensively, asking people to send questions and queries in that are then addressed in the recorded webinar that is later posted. Webinars are a new way to keep your market informed and to let them know exactly what your company’s views on certain topics are and where the company is going.
Mochumentaries Another new content-creating technique that is starting to hit companies’ online presences worldwide is the ‘mocumentary’; a mock-documentary. Companies are pushing the content boundaries with hilarious and engaging videos that make constructive fun of their industry. Humour is something people have responded to for centuries and has always proven effective (as long as it’s tasteful). Mocumentaries show people that your company acknowledges the humorous aspect of the field it is involved in, embraces it and in doing so, distances itself from that stereotype. Don’t shy away from something daring if it will attract an audience.
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Visual content is very rich content in terms of information so be careful not to upload and create too much and risk overwhelming the viewer. Don’t be a video shrew, though – visual content is something that everyone loves to be a part of and watch so definitely consider it for your company and your company’s online presence. Vimeo Youtube is not the only video-hosting platform on the Internet – Vimeo is also quite a large name in the video community and boasts an impressive following. Research the various video-hosting sites in order to make an informed decision on which site you would like to represent the visual aspect of your company’s brand.
CONCLUSION Social media is no longer a novelty in the professional world, yet many companies aren’t involved. It’s an ingenious and invaluable tool through which your company can easily CONNECT, SHARE and EXPAND its clients, market and online audience while gaining valuable insight into what makes these people tick. If you want to give your company an edge, invest in an online presence that handles itself professionally and intelligently while growing in leaps and bounds through interactive and engaging social media usage.
Contact Us Website: Facebook: Twitter: eBooks: Tel:
www.digitalbydesign.co.za www.facebook.com/DigitalbyDesignSA @DigitalbyDesign www.issuu.com/digitalbydesgn 087 809 3221
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