9 Reasons Why Social Media Marketing Should Top Your To-Do-List This Year!
1.) You get to see your target market, up close and personal.
Part of what makes marketing with Facebook and Twitter so cool is the
interaction you get to have with your customer base – you can read their
tweets and status updates to get insights into their daily lives (and
maybe adjust your marketing strategy as a result).
2.) You can respond to problems immediately.
If there’s a problem with your product or service, you want to know
about it immediately. With the feedback you get in the process of social
media marketing, you’ll be the first to know when there are issues –
and you can take steps to resolve them right away. Study after study has
shown that consumers appreciate companies that respond to customer
complaints (and don’t hesitate to rant online to anyone who will listen
when companies don’t take the time to make things right).
3.) Your competition is Tweeting and Facebooking like crazy.
The early bird gets the worm, and the sooner you start up Facebook and
Twitter pages, the sooner you can start amassing a ton of fans and
followers. This isn’t something you want to fall behind the competition
on, because it’s much harder (and more expensive) to play catch up than
it is to get in on the game early. Truth be told, your competition is
probably already marketing with Facebook, and maybe even Twitter and
LinkedIn, too.
4.) People are receptive to your messages.
People view Twitter and Facebook as social networks, not marketing
machines. As a result, they’re less likely to see what you post as an
advertisement and will be more likely to hear what you have to say.
5.) It will get you more sales.
Not surprisingly, when you stay in front of your customer base, they’re
more likely to buy from you when they need the products you sell.
Social media marketing doesn’t just keep your company’s name in front of
potential buyers, but it also gives you the opportunity to constantly
give them incentives to buy. Try Tweeting or posting recharge cards, good
only to those who are your Facebook fans or Twitter followers, You’ll be surprised at the results!
6.) You will find customers you didn’t know existed.
If you follow specific keywords in Twitter, you can find people who are
looking for the products you sell (and then direct them to your site).
Using Twitter for marketing is great that way – telling people who want
your products how to get them from your company is just an @ sign away.
7.) Customers you didn’t know existed will find (and buy from) you.
In the process of marketing with Facebook, you’ll probably join a ton
of groups related to your products, industry and customer base. By
posting links in these groups, you’ll help influence customers to check
out your site. Post a link today, and two weeks later you might see a
sale from it.
8.) It’s free.
How can you
argue with that? If you handle your own social media management, running
a social networking campaign is as cheap as it gets. If you hire a
social media management or online PR agency, it will cost you a bit
but it’ll be an investment that you’ll be likely to see a return on. If
you’re intimidated by interacting with people online or your writing
skills leave something to be desired, hiring an online PR agency is
definitely the way to go. Posting poorly written content or conveying
the wrong kind of messages on social networking sites can seriously
affect your digital PR presence.
9.) The social media marketing arena is a (fairly) level playing field.
Unlike the brick and mortar world where you need to have millions of
dollars to run traditional ad campaigns, all companies start off on
pretty equal footing when it comes to social media marketing. The people
who thrive and go viral in cyberspace are the people with the most
clever, attention grabbing tactics and the most useful, link worthy content.
If you want to get lots of traffic and really increase your sales
online, you’re going to have to outwit, outnetwork and outwrite your
competition while offering superior products and customer service. Isn’t
that what business is all about, anyway?
No comments:
Post a Comment