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Social Media Strategy

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7 STEPS TO YOUR BRAND’S

Social Media Strategy

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STEP 1:

ESTABLISH YOUR GOALS & OBJECTIVES

What are you using social media for? The answer to this question will guide the rest of your brand's social media strategy. These goals should align with your larger marketing goals, but apply specifically to the advantages that social media offers.

Here are a few examples of social media goals to get you started. Add your own and circle no more than 3 that you want to focus on!

BUILD

READERSHIP

DRIVE TRAFFIC TO WEBSITE

COLLECT

LEADS

CREATE BRAND AWARENESS

SHARE

PROMOTIONS

OBJECTIVES ARE SPECIFIC, TANGIBLE WAYS of measuring the success of your goals.

Have you heard of the concept of SMART goals? The concept was initially in the '80s developed for a management magazine by George T. Doran, but are now commonly applied to any goal- (or objective-) setting practice.

Guess what? It works perfectly for your social media strategy. Each one of your objectives should be:

You can set a goal to reach a certain number of followers on Instagram, get a particular number of e-mail signups, or opt for a specific number of leads, but make sure you de-cide when you want to achieve it by and how you plan to do so.

ex. "Generate 50 new leads by May 31, 2015 via weekly Facebook posts with a link to contact page." ex. “Reach 350 blog views a day by June 15, 2015 by participating in weekly Twitter chats.”

STEP 2:

PICK YOUR PLATFORMS

According to a quick and dirty Internet search, there are now over eight hundred social media platforms. Who has time for that? The good news is, you don't need to be on eight hundred platforms. You don't even need to be on the top seven platforms.

To use social media effectively, it's important to know who you are trying to reach, where to find them, and how they're using specific platforms. If you’re not sure what each platform is used for or who is using them, this infographic from DIgital Information World might help.

With your target audience in mind, ask yourself the following questions for each platform you are considering. Use the results to decide whether your business should be on it.

IS MY TARGET AUDIENCE IS USING (PLATFORM)? WHAT PERCENTAGE?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

HOW FREQUENTLY DO THEY USE (PLATFORM)?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

ARE THEY USING (PLATFORM) TO FIND BUSINESSES LIKE MINE?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

HOW MANY OF THEM ARE USING IT FOR THAT PURPOSE?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

DO I HAVE THE RIGHT CONTENT TO SHARE ON (PLATFORM)?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

IF NOT, DO I HAVE THE TIME AND RESOURCES TO CREATE THE RIGHT CONTENT?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

THINK ABOUT THE AMOUNT OF TIME you can realistically commit to curating or

creating content for all of these outlets. Sure, you can put up the same blog post on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram. But each of those requires different

character limits, timing and image sizes. As you use social media more and become more familiar with your tools and platforms, you can always ramp up your output.

CUSTOMER SERVICE

IMPROVE SEARCH RANKING

__________________________

__________________________

__________________________

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STEP 3:

DEFINE YOUR VOICE

This is one (of so many places) where a deep understanding of your brand comes in handy. Your brand's voice is what will set you apart from all the clutter in an endlessly scrolling feed. Keep in mind: this may align with your personal voice, but that's not a given.

Consider the values that you associate with your brand. Do you want your ideal client to think of you fun, approachable and bubbly? Authoritative, educational and innovative? Take the time to decide how you want your business to be perceived online.

Try answering the following questions:

WHAT SETS YOUR BRAND APART FROM COMPETITORS?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

WHAT IS YOUR BRAND'S MISSION?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

WHO IS YOUR BRAND SPEAKING TO?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

WHAT TRAITS WOULD YOUR IDEAL CLIENT LOOK FOR FROM SOMEONE

PROVIDING YOUR SERVICES OR PRODUCTS?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

WHAT DO YOU WANT YOUR IDEAL CLIENT TO FEEL WHEN THEY READ YOUR

CONTENT?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

WHAT ARE 3 PERSONALITY TRAITS YOU WANT YOUR IDEAL CLIENT TO

ASSOCIATE WITH YOUR BRAND?

________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Imagine your brand as an individual with a personality that aligns with your chosen values. How would that individual speak to your ideal client in a one-on-one

conversation? That's how each of your posts should sound.

STEP 4:

CHOOSE YOUR TOOLS

Ready to make your life way easier? Use scheduling tools! There are plenty of free and paid options out there. Not only does this save you time, it also helps you avoid getting sucked into your Facebook or Pinterest feeds when you want to be working. (I recommend Buffer, especially now that they offer scheduled pins for Pinterest.)

Check out these options, take some notes, and determine what works best for you:

PROS:

CONS:

PROS:

CONS:

PROS:

CONS:

PROS:

CONS:

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STEP 6:

CREATE A CONTENT RATIO & SCHEDULE

If there is one thing your consumers will look for after content, it's consistency. Consistency among the type of content you're posting, and when you're posting it.

A CONTENT RATIO defines what percent of your content is dedicated to what types

of posts. Generally, self-promotion gets a bad rap. Many social media experts advise creating a ratio that puts self-promotion on the lower end. Think about the brands whose accounts you haven't hidden or unfollowed. Odds are, they are putting out meaningful posts that aren't a constant sales pitch.

For example, Rallyverse's Golden Ratio: 30 percent owned, 60 percent curated, 10 percent promotional

However, you can share your own content without it coming off slimy. Buffer leans heavily toward sharing their own content, favoring a 90:10 ratio (90% their content, 10% outside content). They've got valid reasoning for their seemingly lopsided sharing ratio. They put value first and self-promotion second. By providing consistent, high-quality content, their sharing doesn't have that ugly shadow of self-promotion. It's how they share their brand's values and their work and engage with their audience.

THESE THREE OBJECTIVES ARE THE KEY to content marketing that keeps people coming

back (according to Jeff Bullas). If you know your audience and aim for each post to fall into at least one of these categories, you're on the right track.

WHEN CREATING YOUR INITIAL SCHEDULE, take advice from the interwebs into

consideration, but don't get too hung up on it. Yes, there are optimal times and days to post on different platforms, but your ideal schedule will depend on your business and audience. Use analytics from your chosen scheduling platform to determine when your audience is the most responsive and edit your schedule accordingly.

STEP 5:

DEVELOP A CONTENT PLAN

Okay, this one could - and should! - take you a solid block of time. Content is what will bring potential customers in, and content is what will keep them engaged. To make your content plan easy to reference, designate 3-5 broad topics that relate back to your brand. For example, say you run a small design shop that targets creative entrepreneurs. Your content topics may be "Graphic Design Tips + Tricks", "Wrangling the Web", "Design Inspiration", and "Client Features".

Jot down at least ten ideas for content topics:

_________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________

Now it’s time to curate the best topics! Ask yourself the following questions for each idea, and cross out any that get a “no”:

DOES IT FIT MY BRAND?

DOES IT ALIGN WITH THE SERVICES OR PRODUCTS I OFFER?

WILL THIS CONTENT BENEFIT MY IDEAL CLIENT?

IS THIS TOPIC BROAD ENOUGH TO COME UP WITH CONSISTENT CONTENT FOR

IT?

Try coming up with a number of article ideas. If you can't, it may not be the best content topic.

IF YOU'RE FEELING UNINSPIRED, check out business's or industry leaders you

admire. This is important to remember: look outside your industry! Pick individuals and companies from a variety, so that you can pull inspiration to come up with unique content for your industry. Pay attention to which of their posts receive the most

attention, and peruse the comments to see the kinds of questions people are asking. Keep track of it all in a document to reference when you're in need of ideas!

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STEP 7:

TRACK & ANALYZE

At this point, you should be feeling pretty good about your new social media strategy! Just skipping ahead? That's okay, you still deserve a pat on the back.

THE FINAL STEP IN CREATING YOUR SOCIAL MEDIA STRATEGY is implementing it, then tracking and analyzing your results. A concrete strategy is dependent on your unique brand and audience. You can make predictions based on other marketing efforts or similar business's, but really knowing what works is only possible through trial and error.

There will be new, hot platforms that take over the market, your business will grow and scale back, your audience will evolve. Your document should be living and responsive to change. Keep track of what methods work best and take time every few months to evaluate what you could do better.

YOU’RE DONE!

Questions? Feedback? Just want to drop a line?

Hit me up!

theresa@honesttreescreative.com

www.honesttreescreative.com

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