Archive for social media

Attracting or retaining users?

Comment on Techno//Marketer: Are you social media fading? Dealing with dead apps and inactive users (part 1)

A recognisable post for any community manager from Matt Dickman, but equally relevant for any user of a social media platform.

A segmentation of users in engagers and slackers is largely inevitable. The key question is whether you have many potential engagers in your slacker group. Could a scoring mechanism based on membership tenure, logins, subscription, profile and engagement be useful to identify those users that should be more actively engaged?

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Social media or microsites?

Comment on Is Social Media Killing the Campaign Microsite?

Brian Morrissey on MediaWeek discusses social media platforms as an alternative to microsites. This could work well provided a number of conditions are met:

  • limited campaign content – social media break down when you have a complex campaign message
  • your target is using your social media platform of choice

Either condition is unlikely to be met in business marketing.

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Social media for business marketing

Comment on Buzz Marketing for Technology: Is Social Media more difficult in B2B than B2C?

Buzzmarketing makes a point about the difficulty of applying social media to business marketing. That is certainly consistent with my experience. Subject areas in business marketing tend to be complex and technical and do not lend themselves well to social media marketing. In practice, they have difficulty resonating with users of social media platforms, of which only a tiny fraction may be interested in the subject matter.

Social media are, of course, built around individuals. The atom is an account with a detailed user profile. In business marketing, the atom is is conten. That’s why business uses knowledge management and content management systems, and not social media.

The same distinction applies to viral marketing.  It’s hard enough for a video to go viral, but in business, it’s nearly impossible. Fortunately for business, there is usually little value of videos being watched by a myriad of random users.

Branding is the exception. It applies to business and consumer marketing alike, but with quite a different twist. Brands in consumer marketing are often strongly associated with advertising. In business marketing, it’s more about alignment of a whole organisation reflecting the same image while working towards a common goal.

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