Friday, 7 September 2012

Social Media For Financial Services - What You Need To Know

With the Financial Standard launching a scholarship to support financial advisers who are taking the lead in social media, http://www.financialstandard.com.au/smileys
PCE thought it worthwhile to look at some of the aspects of success in social media community building.

As fans of Gossieuax and Moran and others such as Iggy Pintado, looking at their research and writings makes sense for any one grappling with how and what they should be doing to engage clients via social media.

1) People trust people in their tribe.

As humans we have simply not evolved to engage with businesses who deliver to us content embedded with jargon and that is positioned to us in a way that portrays why dealing with said businesses is a good choice for us. What really matters are stories shared with us around the campfire. In other words we look to people we know and we trust to give us green light signals about our purchasing options and choices.

2) Building relationships is predicated and successful only when there is reciprocity.

A bond between people or indeed between people and a corporation is only successful if the bond is mutual which means there needs to be some give and take. In a social media sense this means that in order to engage a community you as the business need to bring something of value to the conversation / to the community.

3) People want to hear, read, see, experience what other people say about you, your services, your service encounters that you deliver.

It however is more than the what you do. People want to know and understand the why. Why is it that others have chosen to work with you. Testimonials are not enough. True engagement that is required is the power of the open forum. In essence an ongoing and virtual conversation about why you do what you do.

4)Forget traditional segmenting.

The financial planning business who talks to us about A,B,C and D segmenting based on revenue should forget about social media marketing.

What needs to occur is a mind shift in your business so that you explore and think about your clients in terms of the communities or using Gossieaux and Morans language the tribes you have in your client base and which tribes within your client base and beyond you would like to engage with.

5) Become truly customer focussed.

This means you need to assess your client service encounters and reshape them so that It speaks to the interests of your core identified communities.

6) To do that you need to listen.

Where is the community that your business can engage with value congregating? What interests do they have? What forums do they engage in? What are they saying?

7) Throw out the rule book.

Easier said than done. This means getting the people in your business to allocate time, budget and resources to placing emphasis on social media strategies. This requires a single dedicated and senior person in you business (senior in regard to hierarchy not necessarily age!) responsible for the strategy. It requires time to spend in forums to respond in a consistent customer focussed manner with alignment to the goal of the business that is importantly something the business can deliver on.

But let's make it clear that you can't do any of the above without the business knowing who it is they want to deal with, what problems those people and people in that community have, what it is that the business does for those people and the results that are provided. This is essentially your raison d'ĂȘtre.

Without that you will sadly get lost in the socia media clouds.













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