Setting up your social media marketing resources effectively is crucial before launch. Learning on the fly is perfectly normal, but realising that your materials, profiles or software aren’t up to scratch after addressing the marketplace is unacceptable.
1. stuartjdavidson.com http://stuartjdavidson.com/social-media-strategy-setting-up/
Social Media Strategy Series: Setting Up
Episode Guide
Part 1: Introduction
Part 2: Research And Planning
Part 3: Setting Up
Part 4: Management
Part 5: Engagement
Part 6: Conversion
Part 7: Adjustment
Part 8: Growth
Setting up your social media marketing resources effectively is crucial before launch. Learning on the fly is
perfectly normal, but realising that your materials, profiles or software aren’t up to scratch after addressing the
marketplace is unacceptable.
Setting up is part of the process of pre-launch preparation. Using your research and planning, you would have
established which social media platforms you will be actively participating on and what software will be needed to
assist you in executing your strategies.
So now it’s time to get your hands dirty.
This process is often overlooked and undervalued. Companies with the in-house capacity to pass branding to their
graphic design team, or optimising web copy to their copywriters, will be at an advantage. But for the one-man
bands who do not enjoy such luxuries, its time to outsource it entirely, or learn it yourself.
2. I would recommend going with the first option, unless you have lot’s of time on your hands.
The foundations of your social media campaigns start with your profiles. Call it the smell test, so to speak. They
must attract and retain attention.
Internet users will typically spend between 10-20 seconds on websites. Those that gain trust early retain
viewership (Source: How Long Do Users Stay on Web Pages? ). I would imagine this principle would be similar in
social networking, although my guess is the average time would be lower.
If you instantly capture people’s imagination, then you will have won their interest and the prize is the chance to
showcase your content.
Here are the 3 most common mistakes of setting up campaigns in social media:
1. Inconsistent
Usually a result of businesses trying to match branding to their audiences, without sufficiently taking into
account their corporate identity. A good example is an out of place looking background graphic, with a small
company logo in the corner. It’s great that the target audience has been addressed, but it doesn’t bode well
for brand identity or recognition.
2. Irrelevant
Sometimes an extension of the first mistake. I have seen businesses go with logo designs that set the
stage for their whole branding and copy. When you step back and look at the whole picture, it just doesn’t
reflect their identity, vision or culture.
3. Incomplete
One of my top pet peeves in social media. There just isn’t any excuse for launching campaigns with
incomplete profiles and it’s quickly picked up on by users. Don’t lose readership or reputation right off the
bat by being sloppy.
3. Imagine if you launched your social media campaign without taking sufficient time in setting up your marketing
resources. You might start tweeting without a bio or profile branding. You could build your list but have no email
templates or auto-responders ready. You might even start engaging with your target customers but not have a
website to drive people to.
It would just be messy. So it’s paramount that you have everything in place before launching your social media
campaign.
Here is a quick overview of the typical web components required in social media campaigns. You can use this as
a checklist of marketing resources needing to be set up prior to launch day.
External components
Website
Landing pages
Email software
CRM
Press release
Primary social networks
Facebook
Google Plus
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
Rich media sites
Video: YouTube / Vimeo
Photo: Instagram / Flickr
Social bookmarking sites
Digg
Delicious
Reddit
Secondary social networks
Quora
StumbleUpon
Foursquare
4. Social media software
BuzzBundle
Hootsuite
SproutSocial
Complementary or specialist platforms
BizSugar
Triberr
EzineArticles
The general areas of setting up social media campaigns can be attributed to three distinct job roles. That is why it
can be hard for small businesses to find what they would call a great social media manager. Without resources to
hire a team of people, the responsibilities fall on one person.
Web Design and Development
OK, so most of the time this will be given to a different person or team. But the overlaps are wider than you think.
Being able to create custom Facebook tabs, bespoke email templates and tailored landing pages all require
various coding knowledge.
The better social media managers will have a sufficient understanding of web design languages such as HTML,
CSS and PHP, and be able to translate conceptual designs into marketing web resources.
Branding
If a complete corporate branding package is required then again, the best bet would be to seek a specialist.
Setting up social media accounts will always encompass elements of branding, be it; Twitter backgrounds,
Facebook covers, LinkedIn banners, PPC ads, social content, promotional materials, email graphics… you get the
drift.
I wrote a piece for the Smart Insights blog on improving your Social Media campaigns using Graphic Design,
which you can read here.
Copywriting
Social media managers have to be great writers – it’s part of the territory. Content is the main driver in social
marketing. I’m sure you have heard the popular social media cliché that content is king?
What is online engagement without words? How could emails be sent without text? And what would happen to
advertising without compelling headlines?
For a more in-depth breakdown on the major activities that should be undertaken prior to campaign launch, read
my article – Social Media Campaign Launch: Checklist.
There have been many instances where brands haven’t quite understood how valuable the setting up phase in
social media marketing is. Take these two campaigns that backfired for instance:
5. Setting Up Branding – HealthNet
HealthNet faced total embarrassment when it was learned that they were fabricating tweets and Twitter handles in
their advertising and on their billboards. The tweets were ironically punctuated with the hashtag #healthnetcares.
Setting Up Video – Paddy Power
Paddy Power, not a brand to shy away from controversy, created a commercial which was subsequently banned
in four days. “Surely some kind of record,” the brand boasted.
Social media is a risky environment for brands. But it can also serve to do more harm than good to small
businesses too. Think of setting up your social media campaigns like planting a tree.
A tree needs good foundations in order to survive, grow and mature. If it is not set up properly with the right soil, a
suitable pot, the correct watering schedule etc, then chances are it will shrivel up and die a slow but painful death.
A tree can be saved by quickly adjusting as you go along, but the healthiest tree’s will be the ones that were given
the best chance at the start of life. Remember, some tree’s are born into harsh environments and are not handed
the luxuries or opportunities others are.