So you've set up your Facebook page for your business, and you have a good engaging website, maybe even some videos : client testimonials and "why" videos......you've built it....."they" should come......where are they???
You have 137 Facebook page "likes" and your articles / posts attract a handful of "likes" and certainly no "shares".
What's gone wrong.
You've fallen victim to McDonaldisation.
As pointed out by Macionnis and Plummer, 2012, much of social life is being or has been defined by the principles that guide the operation of fast food chains. Close intimate social groups have given way to fast, efficient but distant ones.
We live a great part of our lives via networks. And these newer networks have if you let it forgotten the oldest ideas of sociology that we move through life with a sense of belonging : our social groups are founded on associations with those that we identify with and interact with.
So if your posts on Facebook are one way....your product, your opinions, your sales pitch you are ignoring the basics of group dynamics ...that the group encompasses people with shared experiences, loyalties and interests.
Social groups think of themselves as special and as a collective "we".
What you are trying to do on Facebook is create a primary group. Sociologist Charles Horton Cooley, identified primary groups as small social groups whose members share personal and enduring relationships with sincere concern for each others welfare.
Members : belong together, have strong links, view each other as unique and irreplaceable.
By contrast a secondary group is large, impersonal, and has weaker emotional ties.
Your content to be engaged, of value, shared, liked needs to tap into the values of a primary social group.
If your intent is to attract a certain ideal client, then you need to understand what primary social groups and interactions your ideal client has. What are those values and experiences?
Only then can you have meaningful engagement with them.
Why else would a garden shears company Fiskars have a group of scrapbookers as a major contributor to R&D and a resultant 300% increase in sales. Because Fiskars listened and understood the social connections that their ideal clients had and tapped into that primary social group with value.
Your action plan......have you really though about your Facebook content, who it is aimed at and is it of value to them. Or rather have you just applied the same direct marketing techniques that didn't work by direct mail ....so why on earth would they work in a virtual community?
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Thursday, 10 October 2013
Thursday, 13 December 2012
Social Media Success for Financial Planning
We had a great conversation today with an adviser who posed the question : what have financial planning businesses done to be successful with social media and has that activity generated business?
We see many advisers who have dabbled.
They have a twitter account, Facebook - but it's not a business site more an extension of their social world and blended with clients often it's happened very much by accident, they have a linked in profile and sometimes they've written an article on financial planning and posted it on a company site and perhaps tweeted it.
Maybe they've been a little bit more advanced and using Hootesuite that blog has been tweeted and made its way to Facebook, where it's scored some likes.
What next?
The question: "what next" is actually the wrong question...."what should I do first" is the right way to go.
Lon Safko, The Fusion Marketing Bible, 2013, discusses the three major tools of social media, what he calls "the Trinity" - blogging, micro blogging and social networks.
Blogging is vital as not only does it improve SEO results but provided your content is what your desired audience values then you hit the mark as becoming someone trusted and regarded as a subject matter expert.
Directing people to your blog via Twitter espouses Safko, works provided you have great content and content that is original or adds value. Retweets and tweets about articles might provide information to your followers but for originality or interpretation and WIFM why wouldn't they go direct to the original authors?
Either by making your content original or actually writing an opinion piece on a topic that is relevant to your target audience that actually adds value by making it easier for them to understand a topic makes you ...useful....followable.
Finally all this activity is great but pointless unless you can generate a community that you can engage, share with, bond with, consult and learn about - then you don't have a base to build your business from.
So actually the first step is to decide ....who is your market? Where do they congregate? What do they follow? What are they interested in? What are the concerns they have?
It's about listening. In the Hypersocial Organisation, Gossieaux and Moran gave countless examples of corporations listening first to their target market before engaging successfully versus those who embarked on a social media strategy that was quickly seen as a marketing push.
Demonstrating that you care, understand, empathise and share similar values to your target market are critical factors in successfully engaging them to use your services.
It has to be genuine else it is easily seen through.
So the answer to the question posed?
Businesses in financial planning that have successfully used social media have:
- listened to what their clients and people like their clients want
- they have created original content based on those insights
- they have communicated that content via blogging and micro blogging
- they have engaged their followers via Facebook - appropriately separated from their personal page - and twitter
- they follow people who can add value to thier target market and to their own business
- they have engaged their followers by doing what social media is designed for : communicating and engaging
- they then have offered face to face group engagements on the topics that generate a buzz
- they have attracted friends of followers
- they are consequently seen as leaders, opinion leaders, subject matter experts....someone who can be trusted ......
- they collaborate and contribute
And by doing this they have built loyalty and their business.
We see many advisers who have dabbled.
They have a twitter account, Facebook - but it's not a business site more an extension of their social world and blended with clients often it's happened very much by accident, they have a linked in profile and sometimes they've written an article on financial planning and posted it on a company site and perhaps tweeted it.
Maybe they've been a little bit more advanced and using Hootesuite that blog has been tweeted and made its way to Facebook, where it's scored some likes.
What next?
The question: "what next" is actually the wrong question...."what should I do first" is the right way to go.
Lon Safko, The Fusion Marketing Bible, 2013, discusses the three major tools of social media, what he calls "the Trinity" - blogging, micro blogging and social networks.
Blogging is vital as not only does it improve SEO results but provided your content is what your desired audience values then you hit the mark as becoming someone trusted and regarded as a subject matter expert.
Directing people to your blog via Twitter espouses Safko, works provided you have great content and content that is original or adds value. Retweets and tweets about articles might provide information to your followers but for originality or interpretation and WIFM why wouldn't they go direct to the original authors?
Either by making your content original or actually writing an opinion piece on a topic that is relevant to your target audience that actually adds value by making it easier for them to understand a topic makes you ...useful....followable.
Finally all this activity is great but pointless unless you can generate a community that you can engage, share with, bond with, consult and learn about - then you don't have a base to build your business from.
So actually the first step is to decide ....who is your market? Where do they congregate? What do they follow? What are they interested in? What are the concerns they have?
It's about listening. In the Hypersocial Organisation, Gossieaux and Moran gave countless examples of corporations listening first to their target market before engaging successfully versus those who embarked on a social media strategy that was quickly seen as a marketing push.
Demonstrating that you care, understand, empathise and share similar values to your target market are critical factors in successfully engaging them to use your services.
It has to be genuine else it is easily seen through.
So the answer to the question posed?
Businesses in financial planning that have successfully used social media have:
- listened to what their clients and people like their clients want
- they have created original content based on those insights
- they have communicated that content via blogging and micro blogging
- they have engaged their followers via Facebook - appropriately separated from their personal page - and twitter
- they follow people who can add value to thier target market and to their own business
- they have engaged their followers by doing what social media is designed for : communicating and engaging
- they then have offered face to face group engagements on the topics that generate a buzz
- they have attracted friends of followers
- they are consequently seen as leaders, opinion leaders, subject matter experts....someone who can be trusted ......
- they collaborate and contribute
And by doing this they have built loyalty and their business.
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