Posts Tagged ‘facebook’

Why Pinterest Isn’t Right For Your Business (Yet)

Friday, May 11th, 2012

Pinterest is the hottest new thing in social media right now. But it’s a classic example of the rush to new technologies that may or may not work out. Google+ launched in beta version during the summer of 2011, and quickly grew to 10 million users before even opening its doors to the public.  In September, after removing the “beta” tag and opening to the public users flocked to the service, and by the end of the year boasted a user base of more than 62 million users. However, early in February 2012, Mashable reported that users were spending just 3.3 minutes per month on the site compared to 7.5 hours per month that the average Facebook user spent.

This is not a cautionary tale about users leaving the mega-popular Pinterest site; I don’t think that will happen any time soon. It is, however a cautionary tale about how much time and resources businesses should be devoting to marketing themselves on the site. Pinterest does not at this point have a strategy for making money, and seems a ripe candidate for acquisition by a larger company.

Land’s End, a clothing company based in Dodgeville, WI is a company that maintains a presence on Pinterest, having pinned 143 items, and maintaining 12 boards. As a result, they have grown their following base to 1881 users who follow the brand. In comparison, on Facebook, Land’s End boasts 939,959 likes. On Facebook, Land’s End can market directly to their fans, utilize valuable demographic information about them, and control their message. On Pinterest, companies have no access to demographic information and have few ways to control what’s being said about their brand.

Until Pinterest offers a way to reach fans directly, provide demographic information or even analytics to the brands that want to leverage its large (and growing) user base I find it difficult to devote time and energy into the site. My experience with Google+ has made me cautious about diving into every new hot social media outlet. The hours of time that many companies have spent in developing a Google+ strategy have all gone to waste since so few people actually use the site. While Pinterest doesn’t look like it’ll suffer the same fate as Google+, the lack of ways to effectively target users make any efforts essentially a crapshoot.

The best way to take advantage of Pinterest right now isn’t in developing your company profile, it’s in making the images on your company’s website attractive and “pinnable.” Affix a watermark with your company site on each image, so as it gets pinned and repined users still know where it came from.

Pinterest is the new, exciting thing on the social media landscape, but as always, we should be cautious about where we allocate our resources to ensure the best return on effort. Perhaps in the future Pinterest will offer user information and a platform that is valuable to marketers, but until then I’m focusing my efforts elsewhere.

What IS social media for Business?

Tuesday, February 7th, 2012

Social Media is a ubiquitous term, but what does it mean for your business? Is Facebook a business solution? What is Twitter, or LinkedIn for that matter, and how could it possibly help me sell my products and reach my customers?

An old adage says that you can’t be seen if you’re not where people are looking. Right now, customers, clients and just about everybody is flocking to social networks and sharing information about themselves and the products they use. This is a golden opportunity to create a strong relationship with a brand loyal customer. Your customers are proactively seeking your brand out because they like what you offer and are looking for information, services, and news. In a world where traditional advertising is a fact of life and we are hit with thousands of ad impressions every day, brand loyalty is more important now than ever.

This is why you need to be involved in social media. Facebook’s user base has grown to over 800 million, Twitter’s nearing 500 million and LinkedIn reaches well over 150 million professionals. Putting your message in front of those eyes and developing a targeted message to engage and interact with your existing customers helps to grow your brand image and the impression users make of you. Being inactive in social networking gives the impression of being unprepared and uninterested in reaching out to your customers.

Facebook, Twitter and other similar networks are a free and easy way to share news about your company, promote special events, introduce new products and listen to and engage your customers. I caution any business that gets involved in social media not to ignore their fans and followers. Once a company profile is created, it must be maintained, keeping content fresh and responding to the posts on your page and the responses you generate. Managing your presence can turn a customer’s poor experience into a good one and a good experience into a great one. Handling criticism and problems with tact and professionalism with such a forward facing entity displays to the world how much you care about your customers.

 

Updating Your Facebook: The Social Media Equivalent of a Welcome Mat

Tuesday, October 18th, 2011

Providing links to your social media platforms but never updating them makes potential customers think you’ve dropped off the face of the Earth.

You still here?

Unless you’ve boarded up the windows of your business for good, it’s probably a bad idea to abandon your social media platforms.  You don’t need twenty-seven new and exciting updates every day of the week.  In fact, you don’t even need one new post every day.  Just post consistently.  If you think you can post three days a week, post on the same day at the same time.  That way, reading your wonderful updates will become part of the daily routine of your fans.

Worried that you might forget to update/find yourself temporarily incapacitated/get stuck in traffic?  Use HootSuite, a website that allows you to schedule posts and updates in advance.  You can write all your updates on Sunday in your stretch-waistband flannel pajama pants, schedule them to go out during the upcoming week, and forget about it.  Basically, you set it and forget it.  (That might already be a slogan for something else.)

If you exist in real life and want to exist on your social media sites but don’t have the time to update, Baer can help.  We’re expert social media managers with an eye for detail.

Need proof?  Click to check out these Facebook pages, personally groomed and maintained by our social media managers: