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Small Business Social Media Tips and How to Get Started

Small Business Social Media Tips

Small business owners navigate towards Social Media for a variety of reasons but mostly because it does not require a large budget! While every business owner should rely on social media marketing, it is critical that you have a game plan moving forward. Here are some Small Business Social Media Tips to help create that plan.

Recognize that a lack of social media presence can make customers question your legitimacy

If you are in the B2C space it is important to recognize social media as a must have. Businesses with a social media presence are viewed as legitimate companies, while ones without a presence would oftentimes be portrayed as sketchy.

Try to push as much content in the beginning as possible

When starting from zero it is important to just get as much information on your social media profiles as you can. The reason is twofold. First, it fills your page with content so it appears to be an active and engaged profile. Second by studying the data behind what you are publishing you will begin to realize what your customers like and dislike. This leads us right to our third point.

Know your target customer and what platforms they use

If you are using the wrong social media platforms to reach your target audience your message can be falling on deaf ears. Build a loyal following by knowing what your customers want, and on the platforms that they use most often.

Watch what others do

If you are struggling to find your starting point, looking at other companies in your field. You do not have to build a template from scratch. Look to others for guidance, find out what you like and dislike about their social media campaigns, and move forward with that!

The 10 things you should do right away – tips for Small Business Social Media Tips

Hootsuite is a software that we use at MarketKeep a lot. It is a platform that houses all your social media platforms on one dashboard so it is easy to post, track, and engage with your target audience. When we started our social media profiles we used the following methods to help us get where we wanted to go.

 

1. Start with a plan

Just like a business needs a business plan, your social media actions need to be informed by a carefully crafted strategy. As we establish in our six-step guide to creating a social media marketing plan you must:

  1. Set social media goals and objectives. It’s important to go beyond vanity metrics such as likes and retweets and also focus on factors like leads generated, conversion rates, and web referrals. Use the S.M.A.R.T goal framework—goals that are specific, measurable, attainable, relevant, and timely—when establishing your social media goals.
  2. Conduct a social media audit. This means determining who is already connecting with you on social, which networks your target audience uses, and how your social media presence measures up against your competitors. Here’s our social media audit template to make this a cinch.
  3. Create or improve your existing accounts. After choosing which social networks are best suited for your small business, build up your social presence on each network, in accordance with your broader business goals and audience. If you already have existing social accounts, ensure they’re updated to reflect your brand values.
  4. Find inspiration. Look at what content those in your industry are already sharing, and use social listening to discover insights about appealing to prospects and setting yourself apart from your competition. It’s also advisable to look at industry leaders (Nike, Coca-Cola, Amazon, etc.) to see what they’re doing right and how to implement those tactics in your own strategy.
  5. Create a social media calendar. This is an essential part of your all-important content marketing plan. It should include the intended dates and times that you want to publish Facebook and Instagram posts and tweets, as well as any other social media content.
  6. Test, evaluate, and adjust your strategy. You should be constantly fine tuning your strategy based on performance metrics. Analyze things like number of clicks per post, the reach of your social campaigns, and the number of page visits resulting from social— then adjust and improve based on this data.

2. Decide which platforms are right for you

Not all social media platforms will be suitable for your business and the goals and objectives you’ve set. Below we offer a high-level look at the most popular platforms.

With this information, you can begin the process of whittling down which social sites make the most sense for your business. It could end up being one, some, or all.

3. Know your audience

Determining the traits of your target audience is a critical component of market research. Without this information, you’ll have no idea how to appeal to them.

You need to know things like age, gender, location, pain points, goals, average income, etc.

One of the best ways to conduct successful market research is by creating audience personas for your customers. You can create an audience persona by:

  • Collecting demographic data from social media, surveys, focus groups, and customer interviews
  • Looking for trends within this data (behaviors, ages, occupations)
  • Establishing their pain points and goals
  • Turning these traits into representations of people, complete with names, job titles, career histories

Read our complete guide to creating audience personas to learn more.

4. Use social media to promote and sell your products

Using social for promotion isn’t as easy as simply tweeting about your brand every once in a while or using Facebook advertising. You need a strategy in place to optimize your results.

For starters, use the famous 80/20 rule (also know as the Pareto principle) of social curation: 80 percent of your social promotional and selling success (the event) comes from just 20 percent of the cause (your social curation). Therefore, your social content across all your channels should be no more than 20 percent promotional. The other 80 percent should be about your customers—engaging with them and sharing relevant content that they will find valuable.

Then, you have to use each social channel according to its strengths.

For instance, if you’re selling T-shirts or jewelry, your best bet is using Instagram or Pinterest due to their image-centric nature. If you’re an apparel, beauty or jewelry retailer in the U.S., you now have the ability to tag your images in Instagram, so detailed product information, as well as a link back to your site, appears alongside the image.

Similarly, on Pinterest, small businesses can sell their products directly on the site, thanks to Buyable Pins, allowing customers to make a purchase in only a few clicks.

5. Incorporate images, videos, and graphics whenever you can

Use visual elements as much as you can, no matter what social platform you’re using. Sixty-seven percent of marketing decision makers say that they use visual content on social media for its engagement value, according to Lewis’ The State of Visual Communications in 2016.

Incorporating visuals—from static images to videos, GIFs, and memes—in your social media content is easy. Just make sure that whatever visual asset you’re using is relevant to your content and the audience.

6. Choose quality over quantity

It’s tempting to put your brand on as many social platforms as possible in an attempt to reach as large an audience as possible. But there’s no benefit to spreading yourself too thin.

When quantity increases, quality usually drops because you’re more focused on quotas: a certain number of tweets per week or a certain number of Facebook posts per month.

Instead, focus on quality over quantity. Go where your audience is and deliver them value. You’ll be rewarded for it.

If you’ve done your research and created audience personas, you should know which platform(s) your target customers prefer. Focus your efforts there, sharing quality content that solves their problems, makes their lives easier, entertains them, etc.

Remember the Pareto Principle: The majority of your social content shouldn’t be promoting yourself, it’s about adding value for the audience.

7. Use the right tools

Save time and effort by using the tools that make social media easier.

In 2017, the average daily time spent on social media by users was 135 minutes. Running a small business demands your time and attention in many other areas—you can’t afford to get sucked into social longer than you have to.

To streamline your social marketing, it’s helpful to use a social media management solution like Hootsuite to increase your productivity. Here are just a few of the features within Hootsuite that are designed to make your job easier:

8. Monitor and respond to all social media conversations around your business

Social media can act as a stand in for the face-to-face conversation in today’s digital world. Responding directly to the audience allows you to humanize your brand. Fail to engage your audience and they might think you’re not invested in what they want. And that’s not good for your bottom line.

More than 80 percent of all customers expect a business to reply within 24 hours of a social media posting, according to Altitude Software’s 2016 The Omnichannel Evolution of the Customer Experience.

Social media engagement also offers an opportunity for you to demonstrate your brand’s unique personality.

Don’t hesitate to reply with a bit of humor, all the while showcasing your business’ expertise. Using photographs of you and your employees at work is also an effective way of connecting with the audience, as data shows that image-rich social content drastically increases engagement.

9. Schedule content to free up more time for engagement

Sharing relevant content is important, but it shouldn’t get in the way of the time you need to actively engage the audience. Free up more time for engagement by using Hootsuite’s Bulk Composer to schedule hundreds of posts across multiple social networks.

10. Find inspiration from successful brands and those in your space

There’s no shame in using winning strategies on social that other brands have used to great effect. Taking inspiration from established brands on social media and experiment with some of their tactics on your own channels.

You can also monitor and take inspiration from what your competitors are doing. If you see a great idea, you can adapt it for your own campaigns.