Part 2: Taking Advantage of the Online World (chapters 7 and 8) Using Social Networks to Your Advantage, Putting it All Together
Chapter 7: Using Social Networks to Your Advantage
In this chapter, we will talk about
how you can use social networks to increase interest in your business. The different
networks offer unique advantages, including the potential to advertise on them.
You need to evaluate which ones will be most helpful to your business.
Understanding the Different Networks
As a small business owner, you
should take advantage of online social networks. To do that, you must first
understand some of the specifics of each network you are considering. Who
belongs to it? What primary purpose does it serve? How large is it? What
information does it ask its members to provide, and how does it store and sort
that data? And finally, how can you use the network to your advantage? Let’s
look at Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter to illustrate this point.
On Facebook, members create a personal
profile. They determine who their friends are, who can see details about them,
and who can see the articles they post on their Facebook pages. Your Facebook
homepage is set up to resemble a newsfeed, with the news made up of everything
your friends have posted to their Facebook pages. Items in a newsfeed can be
liked, disliked, and commented on by anyone seeing them, creating ongoing
conversations among groups of friends. Facebook tries to predict what members
would like to see in their newsfeed, and it filters updates based on these
predictions. Interacting with members of your network on Facebook is often
described as attending a party—the subject matter is conversational, personal,
and full of likes and dislikes.
Facebook also offers an advertising
exchange and you can place ads for your business targeting the right type of
customer in the right context. For example if a Facebook user has been posting
updates about a home remodeling, a general contractor can have ads about his business
appear in the target user’s newsfeed.
Tom
runs a fishing charter service. “People come for the fishing, but it’s also
about the experience,” says Tom. How does he enhance and communicate the value
of the experience he offers? “I post a
lot of pictures from different trips on my Facebook page, and I tell customers
that they should connect with me on Facebook so they can see their pictures.
When I tag them in their pictures, the photos pop up on their Facebook pages.
They love it, and best of all, all their friends can see the pictures. I get a
lot of calls from people who have seen their friends’ pictures from my trips
and are interested in booking charters of their own.”
LinkedIn is organized as a network
for professionals. It shares some characteristics with Facebook, such as
members having the ability to manage whom they link with and what data is
visible to whom. Conversations on LinkedIn tend to focus on professional topics;
you will not find funny cat videos on LinkedIn newsfeeds.
On LinkedIn, members identify
themselves with their professional interests and expertise. Members can create and join
groups, in which people of like interests can share ideas and recommendations
with each other. LinkedIn Groups are a
good way to gain entry into a community. If your major customers are in the
business world, for example if you want to reach lawyers or large company
executives, LinkedIn is a good option. If you want to reach yoga instructors,
Facebook could be a more effective channel.
Twitter is a network defined by its
very short communications. Each post, or “tweet,” can have a maximum of 140
characters, making tweets the Internet’s version of the one-liner. Unlike with
Facebook and LinkedIn, anyone can sign up to follow and receive tweets from
another person on Twitter. Businesses often use Twitter to monitor when someone
mentions their product or service, gives a compliment, or complains. On Twitter
you can also broadcast information about promotions, specials and new products
and services to people following your business.
Susan
runs a food truck that offers healthy menu items for lunch. She changes the
menu every day and goes to different locations at different times of the day. “We
use Twitter to let our clients know about the lunch specials and where our
truck is going to be. It has been very effective in getting new and repeat
customers,” says Susan.
Advertising on Social Networks
Before we discuss advertising on
social networks, we should also discuss the fact that consumers are now accessing
these networks from their mobile devices.
As a small business owner, you must be aware of this when building
content or creating advertisements. If you build something that is difficult to
read or navigate from a smartphone or tablet, you are likely to miss out on many
potential customers.
Facebook supports two forms of
advertising. Sponsored updates appear in members’ newsfeeds and sponsored ads run down the right side of the computer
screen. Not all Facebook members are individuals; companies and organizations
create “fan pages” to disseminate information and to alert followers about upcoming
events and promotions. As a small business owner, you can build a Facebook
page, attract fans, and provide them with updates about your company, products
or related topics. The tone of these
updates should reflect the nature of your company. For example, a CPA will have
business-like updates, while a personal trainer may well have more informal
ones. Ideally, your fans will like your
updates and share them with their friends, thereby exposing your business to
thousands of potential customers in the networks of your “fans.”
LinkedIn offers similar news-feed
capability, though it currently does not support sponsored ads or sponsored
updates. Your contacts can “like” and comment on your posts, thus exposing you
to people in their networks and providing your business additional visibility.
In a perfect world, whenever you
posted updates on your Facebook page or your LinkedIn newsfeed, you could count
on your post being seen by all your fans or contacts. It doesn’t always work
this way. Facebook for example tries to predict what its members want to see,
so not every post will make it onto every fan’s newsfeed. Also, as newsfeeds
are updated chronologically, fans who don’t check Facebook regularly might miss
your update. In reality, your fans will see less than 20 percent of your
updates. So updates are a good means to engage with your existing clients,
especially when combined with a newsletter, but they may not help you broaden
your customer base.
Advertising on the social networks,
on the other hand, is an excellent mechanism to reach new clients. As a small
business owner, you can target Facebook members based on location, age,
interests, recent posts, and recent comments.
You can then pay for sponsored updates to appear in the Facebook
newsfeeds of these individuals. These targeted updates let you market to customers
who may otherwise be very difficult and expensive to discover. In addition, Facebook provides you with
analytical tools that let you understand the effectiveness of your sponsored
updates. These can help you improve the effectiveness of advertising on
Facebook.
Creating Your Own Business
Networks
We are entering
the next generation of online communities. State-of-the-art Internet platforms such as
Ocoos are building the next generation of virtual communities on the Internet. Small businesses
that use the same platform to develop their online storefronts will have an easier
mechanism to link to each other. Within a platform-specific virtual community,
businesses that provide complementary services can recommend each other and provide
space on their website for a partner business. For example a wedding planner
can recommend the florist or limousine service she works with regularly. Or the
florist can recommend the wedding planner. Each business could also designate a
section of their website for promoting their partner business.
The
impact of these platform-based virtual communities can be significant. Customers
who would have found your business through an Internet search or from review sites
like Yelp or Trip Advisor will now be directed to you from other businesses
that have already earned their trust. This
provides additional value to your customers. Once they have built
relationships with one business, they now have “expert” references that they
can rely on. These are more valuable than recommendations from unknown
consumers on sites like Yelp and Trip Advisor. When they reach your business, they
are better-qualified prospects and already inclined to become customers. In
this way, all of the networked businesses benefit from each other’s marketing
efforts.
Overall,
these virtual communities create a powerful web of interconnected businesses on
the Internet. This helps raise the profile of entire groups of companies in the
network and enables these companies to compete effectively against their rivals,
both big and small.
Chapter 8: Putting it All
Together
With many demands on your time, it is easy to put
off doing the work needed to market your business online. Hopefully we have
shown you that this work is worth doing. And after you have done it, you need
to develop habits that will let you enjoy the benefits of creating an online
presence for your company. In fact, the one thing worse than having no web
presence is having one that is outdated.
Because it is important to manage your web presence
on an ongoing basis, we wanted to outline a routine that can work for most
small businesses. This will keep your online storefront up-to-date, and it
won’t require too much time or effort on your part. Think of this as the
successful routine of an Internet-savvy business owner.
Weekend: (1 Hour)
- Social Media
- Update social media—Facebook/LinkedIn/Twitter/Business
Networks—concurrently.
- Why? Some of your
customers spend a lot of time on social networking sites and this creates
new opportunities for your business.
- Web Analytics
- Review the previous week’s
visitors to your website and look for trends.
- Review the effectiveness of
any advertising.
- Build Relationships
- Review previous week’s
customer list.
- Write and send thank-you notes
to customers and update CRM information.
- Send Reminders
- Email customers to reconfirm
next week’s appointments.
- (SEO)
Write Blog Post
- Customer story, industry
news.
- Share blog on social media.
Monday: (15 Min)
- Daily Client Notes
- Close day and add notes on
today’s clients.
- Add offline transactions into
system for future analysis.
Tuesday: (20 min)
- Social Media
- Update Facebook/LinkedIn/Twitter/Business
Networks.
- Browse and respond to any posts.
- Daily Client Notes
- Close day and add notes on
today’s clients.
- Add offline sales for day.
Wed: (15 Min)
- Daily Client Notes
- Close day and add notes on
today’s clients.
- Add offline sales for day.
Thursday: (20 min)
- Social Media
- Update Facebook/LinkedIn/Twitter/Business
Networks.
- Browse and respond to any posts.
- Daily Client Notes
- Close day and add notes on
today’s clients.
- Add offline sales for day.
Friday: (15 min)
- Daily Client Notes
- Close day and add notes on
today’s clients.
- Add offline sales for day.
What happens as a result of this routine and these habits?
- Better Marketing: You will enjoy a strong social
media presence, effective email marketing, and timely customer follow-ups.
- Smarter Business: You will gain insight
into how your marketing is working, knowledge on what is driving online
traffic to your business, and information on sales data including which
dates, times and customers are most valuable.
- Loyal Customers: Tracking notes will provide you with better knowledge of your
customers. Weekly, monthly or yearly follow-ups and reconnection will
boost customer retention and repeat business. Service reminders will
reduce missed opportunity. All of these lead to better time management.
- Improved Search Engine rankings: Just one blog post per week will create 52 pages on the web related
to your business and help improve search engine rankings.
We know that many businesses are
still not taking advantage of the opportunities and capabilities that currently
exist online. We built the Ocoos platform to provide an easy means for small
business owners to get online and capitalize on opportunities created by the
Internet. We wrote this book to explain what some of these opportunities and
capabilities were and then to detail how you could deploy them in your
business.
Being a little apprehensive of a
new technology is understandable. But the Internet wasn’t designed to be
difficult. It is intended to help make our lives easier. At every point along
its evolution, it has moved toward simpler, more accessible ways of doing
things. There has never been a better time to go online and start exploring
what your business can accomplish.
We have given you the starting
points. You now understand the basics of how marketing and finance have been
impacted by the Internet revolution. You have learned how people find businesses
online and share their feedback about those businesses. You know what questions
you should ask yourself when deciding what kind of web presence you need for
your business, you understand the options available to you when building a
website, and you know how to use social networks to promote your business. You now
appreciate all these benefits and are keen to take advantage of them.
There is no reason
to delay getting started. Learning any new skill
requires some effort, but practice will make it easier. The first time you try
to post an update on your business’s Facebook fan page, you might be a bit
unsure. But as you do it repeatedly, it will become second nature to you and
you will start to realize the benefits of your efforts.