In-store branding vs. online branding

Many companies have a highly detailed brand reference manual, which governs everything from the color of marketing materials to the behavior of customer facing personnel.  Social media guides are also coming into frequent use by companies, to guide marketing departments in their efforts to improve brand recognition and product awareness through online channels. 

All online communication begins with content development.  While the form and style of communication receives a bulk of the attention from marketing departments, often times the content development process is left to the creative inspiration of the department employees – and for many businesses, that “department” is one person, churning out content day after day.  Content Savants is well-positioned to help companies in this effort, having creative processes in place with a well-experienced team of developers to provide content that fits with not only the business objectives of our clients, but also matches the personality of the business.

We also provide support in the development of social media strategy and style guides.  While we remain ready to support businesses in their social media objectives, we also would like to encourage businesses (both small and large) to put in writing for themselves what they see as their optimal social media strategy.  A highly detailed plan is not necessary to give the social media team (or employee) a practical direction on the development of postings, memes and blogs.  The content developer need only take a page out of the traditional marketing books to carry out the task. 

Floor Staff Policy Social Media Policy
Floor staff are required to be in uniform, which is functionally designed according to the employee’s role, and with colors that are reflective of the company’s brand identity and logo Social media team must use templates provided, which are made consistent with the business branding, its colors and media layout, with the logo overlaid onto the media in a way that does not distract from the main message but conveys positive association with the brand and logo
Floor staff must be appropriately groomed (for restaurants, this point is key, and includes covering of head and facial hair, as well as washing hands and general hygiene requirements) Social media must be proof-read, colloquial expressions must be reflective of the target audience and used with limitations, grammar and spelling must be correct, as well as alignment of graphics and text to portray a positively-remembered aesthetic
Floor staff must greet customers with a smile, initiate and advance orders according to standard phrases (“would you like fries with that?”), and must treat both customers and fellow employees with respect and courtesy Social media must be respectful of its audience, without negative implications for any groups of people, and for purposes of brand development, may frequently use pre-approved promotional phrases, content patterns and messaging according to a pre-determined template
Floor staff must arrive 5 minutes before their shift begins, may take breaks at designated times, and must be attentive during the work day to meet and fulfill the requirements of their roles and according to procedures in the employee manual Social media must be published on a regular basis, and must be developed according to the objectives of the social media campaign for which they are designed – internal approval of content must be followed to ensure policies have been followed with respect to content and messaging
Floor staff are subject to disciplinary procedures for non-compliance with the rules and processes as outlined in the employee manual. Businesses may suffer consequences in reduced customers or customer loyalty through a lack of effectiveness in their social media strategy, or worse, a backfiring of sentiment against the brand for social media that is posted irresponsibly and without compliance to company policies

From our view, social media platforms are a parallel to the natural communication that we have with other people on a daily, even hourly basis.  Planning for a social media can therefore match its real-world equivalent:  floor staff.  Here are some key areas of consideration, for comparison:

For all businesses, taking the time to write down key themes to be developed in their social media campaigns – no matter how simple or small in scale – to ensure that the content developed for social media is aligned to and fits with the business’s overall goals with respect to customer engagement and business development.  While development of social media presence is an iterative process that improves over time, taking the time to write down some key principles and templates can enable step-sized improvements in a shorter amount of time.

New FB feature can improve business targeting

Facebook is currently in a phase of testing a new capability that will allow page owners the ability to share and reveal content specifically targeted at pre-determined contact groups.  This capability will be connected to Facebook Stories and Messenger. 

Companies that use Facebook as a way to communicate to their customers – most frequently being entertainment, retail, fashion and specialty businesses – will typically develop content that is relevant to the wide body of users and followers.  With the opportunity to narrow content broadcasts to a select few, businesses can better target their messaging and hone in on key interests to the defined customer audience. 

The content development process typically begins with profiling either the existing base of users via key interest and demographic indicators, or profiling the specifically the target audience that the business aims to develop and convert to sales.  Having the ability to better target content is something that businesses have long been waiting from Facebook.  This current testing effort is indication that Facebook is further responding to these requests, and enabling businesses to better leverage their promotions on this increasingly critical marketing platform.

This development would be par for the course in a social environment that aims to reflect and complement the way people naturally communicate.  On a social level, we all have friends, family and contacts with different interests.  Our communication to each group is different, and tailored to their interest, or our common interests.  In a similar fashion that perhaps a college student wouldn’t discuss details of last weekend’s frat party with close family (or maybe they would?), the message to new versus existing customers may be very different.  Social media communication can reflect real-life communication, and with that, increase our engagement overall. 

We believe that is the best foundational view for content development, and hope to see Facebook and others continue to replicate a natural social structure in their social communication platform.   

Five content tricks to boost social media performance

Content Savants aims to continually enhance and improve upon social media content, and as such, we are ever in search of tips, tricks and hacks that help to boost performance of social media postings.  By “boost performance”, we mean increase social engagement, likes, comments, and… most importantly, grow sales for you and your business.

Use Video Content

Research on social media marketing says again and again, videos perform better than stills.  According to research by online content consultant BuzzSumo, Facebook video posts enable over 70% more engagement than posted photos.  For the same set of clicks it takes to post a meme, the video content will outweigh the benefit by far, according to this and many other research reports. 

The challenge with video content isn’t imagining why or how it draws better engagement, nor is it in the effort of posting.  The challenge is in the development, requiring much more time and complexity.  The good news is that still, video content represents a minority of postings (~10% on Facebook and Instagram).  Your business can stand out better, enabling much greater value for the work you put into video content. 

Use the right language

While it remains true that nearly any content posted on a regular basis can have a positive result for engagement with potential customers, what makes content development a professional art is the fact that there are some patterns which can distinguish a “good” post from an “average” post.  We’re not even talking about a “bad” post – in this context, meaning one that works against your business interests.  Offensive material would, for most industries, count as a bad post.  What we’re looking at here is the opportunity to optimize postings from simply “Product x available” to “Shop now for your new Product x”.  The former is a rather bland statement that merely announces availability, compared to the latter which touches on enthusiasm and personality.  Here are some other examples:

“OK”“Great!”
See our new Product XCheck out Product X
Top 10 new productsThe most sought-after products
of the year
You’ll love…You’ll be amazed… or You’ll be inspired…
Let us show youCome and explore
Be sure to check out our latest productsDon’t miss out on limited-time offers

Leverage built-in features

Instagram has a great sticker as part of Instagram Story called the countdown, making it possible for individuals and businesses to set a countdown clock for publishing new content.  This feature is brilliant for generating curiosity and interest, particularly for product launches, business openings, special events and live streamed content. 

Use quizzes

Through a Facebook lead gen campaign, you can also set up quizzes by using the lead form.  Typically this feature is used to interact with the audience after they have clicked on your Facebook ad, and is meant to help categorize customers by obtaining their initial feedback on an offer or opportunity.  Giving customers a quiz enables more active engagement and begins the customer on a journey.  Questions that are on-topic (relevant to your products or services) while invoking common knowledge can give the prospective customer a good feeling for being smart and knowledgeable, effectively creating a positive association with their first experience. 

Avoid the mistakes

As mentioned earlier, there is a way to place “bad” content online, and defeat the purpose of your own efforts.  That’s why we recommend playing it safe from the start, avoiding political, religious or other potentially contentious issues.  A quick search on Google will reveal gargantuan mistakes made in the past by well-known global brands.  While they can buy their way out of a PR disaster, small and medium-sized businesses wouldn’t have the resources. 

More subtle mistakes that many marketing teams make is to focus on branding.  Brand and image are important, but the leveraging of good branding at the early stages of a marketing campaign is far outweighed by the need to educate your customers and raise awareness of the business.  That’s why content rules the day for fast-growing businesses, enabling posted messages to reach more effectively into the customer’s needs and motivations for seeking out your products and services. 

Closely related to an excessive focus on branding is a more practical mistake that is all-too-common, not giving customers a way to respond.  Clever memes and stories are great to entertain your audience (and that has value), however give your customers a link, a phone number, a web address… anything that allows them to initiate a connection and reach out directly. 

And finally, the most impactful mistake that companies make is to start a social media campaign and quit too early.  Real results take time.  At the heart of social media marketing is an effort to connect with customers, and to make your business a part of their thinking.  Specifically, the aim of a social media campaign is to trigger action, preferably immediate action, but if the customer is not ready to respond, the posting must set a trigger which reminds them of your business at a later time.  In this way, consistency and perseverance are everything when it comes to sustainable success.

Inspiring Word of Mouth through Social Media Posting

In academic marketing jargon, social media is often considered to be a variation on word of mouth marketing.  This view is a flattering portrayal of social media platforms in all their variations, and conforms to the standard approach to what these platforms would have its users believe, that social media posting is like a person-to-person conversation, but done through a digital platform.

While we know social media networks and the postings that are shared have a sort of conversational look and feel, particularly where comments and chat sessions are involved, the sort of mindset that is required of making an effective social media posting is entirely different from that of a personal conversation. 

Consider the following:

Conversation Social Media
Look them in the eyes and make yourself immediately vulnerable to their opinions (expressed verbally or expressed through gestures) While the social vulnerability remains, the sense of your listeners’ opinions are delayed, there is no split-second feedback that you get from a conversation
Often spontaneous, with thoughts transferred to communication near instantly While many social media postings are indeed an instant reaction to a thought (and then regretted later) social media by nature allows people to think about what they write or public in advance, and gives people time to cultivate a well-thought message (not that many people use that opportunity)
Generally unrecorded – the memory of the conversation is reliant on the other person’s ability to internalize messages, which in turn often depends on their emotional reaction to not only the words, but also the tone used to express Recorded, for all posterity to see – therefore the memory of the message is also influenced by ways external factors can influence and change the meaning through a different context than the one originally intended.
In your face – it is nearly impossible to ignore someone who is speaking directly to you, the listener therefore has nowhere to hide The audience may or may not regard anything you say

So conversation and social media are totally different.  What of it?

We know the value of word of mouth marketing, or referral-based marketing.  Social media’s greatest strength is in enabling a mass marketing message to be communicated at little cost to those who have spent time (and money) in developing and cultivating their online social networks.  Prioritizing this type of network has brought amazing success to many businesses.

Focusing only on this aspect of social media may doom the businesses which fail to obtain maximum leverage from their social media investment.

How to maximize the investment?

The key here is to remember that everyone who sees your post not only has their own followers, but also has individuals in their network with whom they have actual – real, live – conversations on a daily basis.  Breaking through the digital realm into the organic, analog world is an amazing feat in terms of the value-for-money impact it can have on your marketing campaign.

How can that be done?

There’s no magic to making it happen.  We’re talking about hard-core messaging that is designed to elicit a human reaction that is so strong, that the reader or the viewer wants to walk away from their desktops or smartphones to tell someone else about what they just read.

While that precise scene rarely happens – ie., someone jumping from their desk and talking about what they just read – we know that people like to talk.  What they talk about is highly influenced by what catches their attention and gives them a way to garner attention from others. 

What kind of attention do people seek?

Tools of leadership (otherwise known as manipulation) are a key driver in relaying messaging.  Therefore, social media content which conveys authority and knowledge are those which are most useful to the type of people who influence others. 

Few companies have a plan to develop word of mouth marketing.  Part of the reason for that reticence is that there is no budget for word of mouth marketing.  As said by Jonah Berger in his book Contagious: Why Things Catch On, speaks about difficulty of developing a plan of action.  As he has said, “You can shape it, you can encourage it, you can drive it, but you can’t buy it.” 

That’s why Content Savants is pleased to present what may be your company’s first word of mouth advertising campaign strategy, in these succinct steps:

Step 1 – Shape it:  More than what you want someone to talk about, decide how you want someone to feel when mention of your company, or your product, or service comes up in conversation.  What feelings do you want to associate with your business?

Step 2 – Encourage it:  The key here is to ensure that the messaging is relevant to the viewership.  Implementing this strategy often means that social media campaigns must be more finely targeted.  Rather than mass distributions to a large list of followers, narrowly-defined lists to followers with similar characteristics are often critical to the success of a message or posting.  In this step, relevance is everything.

Step 3 – Drive it:  Make people want to recount the message.  Driving references, or more specifically referrals, requires that the content give the referring person a way to enhance their standing or stature vis-à-vis the ones they are conversing about.  In the world of social media, memes which sound smart are top priority.  Here are general content themes for driving word of mouth discussion:

  • Data which offers explanatory insights about which products/services work well and which ones do not
  • Information which succinctly explains why designs or works of art are better than others, with a bonus for characterizing admirers of competing works of art (thinking of fashion designs) as being inferior in terms of class and taste
  • Anecdotes which explain how things work, in a social or political context especially – and these tend to work better if they are cynical in nature
  • Funny messages which have a dual use in explaining human behavior
  • Comments which explain the universe and human nature in a way that someone who got in trouble should have known better.

Great ideas, now what?

Remember that investment into social media is not just about frequency, timing and the audience.  It is also about content, and ensuring that the messaging has the intended outcomes. 

This article is about driving word of mouth marketing into your social media marketing strategies.  Will it have the intended outcome?

Chat Bots – Pursue or Avoid

At Content Savants, we have been receiving some interest among clients regarding the use of Artificial Intelligence and chat bot services on their websites.  To be sure, there has been quite a bit of growth in this area, and off-the-shelf applications are making it possible for small businesses to afford and implement the service on their websites.  Having this technology available on a company website can convey tendencies toward innovation with an orientation toward cutting edge technology.

It can also drive your customers insane and totally destroy any notion of building a personal relationship with your customers.  For telecommunications companies – the ones who really don’t want to talk to you no matter how personable they try to make you feel – chat bots are a perfect way to manage high volumes of customer calls (to be sure, if their services were well-designed to begin with, customers wouldn’t need to dial up customer service). 

Nonetheless, expectations on the part of customers to receive a fast response are increasing.  As your business grows (thanks, in part, to your social media marketing efforts), you will also have greater interactions from a larger base of customers.  Customers may let a small business slide in terms of response times, but large companies should know better.  So it begs the question, is offering a chat bot to respond to customer queries better than a slight delay in response? 

In our view, it is better, if it helps your customer to feel in control.  Chat bots are more effective when inquiries are standard, and where customers use standard language or nomenclature that a computer can recognize and respond to.  For customers who are less grammatically inclined, and which may have individualized inquiries, chat bots will be an enormous frustration. 

The important question to ask is, does the customer have an alternative?  If the alternative is easily available and clearly visible – such as a direct line number to call or an email for customer service – then chat bots can be very convenient for customers seeking a quick reply on an easy question. 

Otherwise, we recommend avoiding chat bots like the plague.  The time and effort you will need to spend in repairing your customer relationship will not be worth the menial savings in customer response time (not to mention the expense in licensing and development costs).

Increased sales – what it’s all about

For most business owners, the whole reason behind publishing blogs, memes and other online comment is to increase sales and, ultimately, profitability.  So many advertising agencies like to talk about branding, awareness, brand equity, engagement, and so many other fancy industry words, that often times the core purpose of advertising – increasing sales – can be quickly forgotten. 

There is no doubt that business awareness and branding are important, but only insofar as there is a direct chain of causality (whether clearly defined or not) which leads to more purchases than what would have occurred were it not for the marketing campaign. 

The good news for businesses with a strong online presence is that data continues to show, increasingly, that customers are using the internet to inform their purchases.  Whether by direct purchasing online, or through research that slowly builds over time and ultimately leads to a purchase, businesses which make information about themselves and their products/services available online are benefitting.

In this way, branding and awareness are not just abstract marketing concepts.  Issues of trust, customer identity (how they will identify with your business), and cultivation of positive association are all key to your content development strategy.  A 2018 report by Mary Meeker noted that among those who discovered a product on social media, 55% would purchase the product at a later time.  Facebook remains the leading platform through which the idea of purchasing something (any new product) is seeded in someone’s mind.

Making information like this useful requires a long term play in social media theme and content development.  While small business marketing teams may not have the time and resources to plan out a comprehensive, multi-year marketing campaign, there are some essential questions to answer, which when studied, lay the foundation to long term content development that can enable positive customer responses, ensure memory retention of your business, and trigger purchase decisions when customers are ready to make a move.

Two key considerations to include in your social media content development efforts:

  • Convey an understanding of your audience:  To do that, you clearly need to understand your customers and what motivates them.  More than just having a mental understanding of your customers, however, developing content which conveys an understanding is important to connecting with them.  Content which is personally meaningful to customers will mentally stick.  This mental stickiness between your business, its products/services, and their personal lives is what will bring them back when the time is right.
  • Track your messages and their success:  Without a comprehensive tracking program to monitor your social media postings and their responses, it will be difficult for you to discern over time which techniques and messages are most effective.  While all marketing efforts must point to the end game result (more sales), interim results can tell you a lot about how effectively you are reaching customers.  Keep track of engagement statistics, and be sure to actively respond to customer comments and direct message inquiries.

Customer engagement – more important than ever

Engaging directly with customers includes responding to individual inquiries as well as replying to emails and direct messages on your full range of social media accounts.  This effort can be time consuming and tedious, and more often than not, your attention is focused on a few, loud, high-maintenance customers.  Too much attention risks diverting resources away from development of fresh and original social media posts.  Too little time risks alienating key customers. 

Nonetheless, as search engine algorithms increase in complexity, and marketing budgets from larger competitors increases, small business owners still have leverage.  Small scale remains a blessing on social media, and search engines are increasingly taking note of your response.  Facebook already publishes a response time on your website, so that customers who send in inquiries can now approximately how long it will take for them to receive a reply.  Fortunately their calculation weighs recent activity stronger than previous performance, therefore this metric is one which is well within your control to improve upon. 

Facebook also started (in 2018) tracking the content of responses, rating higher those with characteristics of genuine interaction.  The precise metrics (or words and phrases) they look for remain a secret, but it underscores the importance of ensuring your online content remains authentic, conversational, and in natural language. 

Search engines are also using comment performance data to rank your website.  Key words and diverse content are not enough to rank well on organic searches.  Comments and quick responses to comments are also tracked on major social media platforms, as well as your own online website. 

While replies to comments – as always – must be unique, the good news is that they do not need to be lengthy.  A short comment which addresses the user’s question or comment (likely by repeating key words in a meaningful context) will be seen as more relevant. 

The real challenge is to invoke user responses without specifically asking for it.  In other words, asking your followers to respond by liking, sharing the post, or adding views to the “comments below” are being de-prioritized.  Social media platforms are aiming to discourage the use of customer baiting as a way to artificially inflate their engagement numbers (there is some doubt as to whether or not these methods work in any case). 

The important thing to remember is that for search engines and social media platforms, the fundamental goal is, as always, to reward original and high quality content.  Social media consultants always try to get around these rules by streamlining content creation and development and by using little tricks to encourage people to engage more in their platforms.  Such tactics can produce short-term results, but the more they are used, the more the major online platforms tend to focus on ways to cut down their effectiveness. 

Online content which attracts attention is informative, interesting, and engaging.  Fortunately, each online posting does not need to be an Ivy League level research paper (that wouldn’t be very engaging anyway).  It does require that content providers raise their level of art, and that content continue to be fresh and original. Fresh and original content requires research, practice and consistency. 

In order to continue engaging your customers effectively and efficiently, we recommend the following steps be incorporated into your social media strategy:

  • Focus on the purpose:  every social media or blog posting has a purpose.  Usually, the actual purpose is to attract customer attention in a way that converts to sales.  As a posting, that is not very interesting, but some businesses may take the approach that any content is good content.  We would agree that often times any original and new content is better than no content (although not always), for only a little additional effort, businesses can research trends or interesting topics relevant to their line of work, and develop themes around that.  The benefit of a theme-driven development plan is that it naturally lends itself to numerous new blogs and social media postings, as in a series of articles, which can then build customer interest and interaction over time (think, 3-part movie series).  A purpose-driven approach to content development is then the first step in truly engaging customers.
  • Keep it crisp:  classic instruction to public speakers goes something like, “get up, speak up, then shut up.”  Customers are much more drawn to savor your content when it is presented straight and to the point.
  • Develop key motivators:  you know your customers and what motivates them.  Is your business emotionally driven?  Fill your content with stories and images of excitement, hope, dreams and other emotional themes.  Are your customers seeking assurances of competence?  Particularly true for healthcare and legal professionals, fill your content with themes of strength and leadership.  Whatever is most appropriate for your specific business, there are key motivators which you can weave into your social media messaging.

All of these activities can be done within your current social media strategy, and over time will help to increase engagement of customers and interest in your business offer.

Finding the right social media consultant

There are many important aspects about social media consulting, and at the end of the day the most important factor in choosing a good social media consultant is that there is a good rapport between the consultant and the client.  The importance here is that the working relationship be collaborative and transparent. 

When it comes to developing content that is appropriate for the business, nearly everything will be original and custom.  There is no assembly line for custom-made content.  There are processes which can be followed, but as a creative profession, any process or otherwise, attempt to streamline development, will always have exceptions.  There is no McDonald’s of good content development.

With that in mind, there are a few other traits that businesses tend to look for, rightly or wrongly, and these are discussed below:

  • Experience:  Much is said of choosing a social media consultant with substantial experience.  For many skilled professions, we know that perfection comes from practice.  While there is some merit to this idea in the context of social media marketing, there are some other things to keep in mind:  those who are highly experienced may follow a more pro forma approach, and be inflexible to changing methods or adapting to new trends.  This point is critical, as with social media, the landscape changes so quickly, your social media consultant should be equally adaptable.  Where there is a lot of change, there is nobody who has “experience” in what is new.  Businesses which highlight a long list of clients without also speaking of the fast-changing landscape and the need to continually learn and adapt their methods may be avoided.
  • One-stop shop:  Larger marketing agencies will promote their potential to do a wide range of tasks, from graphic design to content writing and campaign management.  These firms often charge a hefty premium for their one-stop solutions.  Businesses which operate on a large scale may find added value from hiring out online marketing, enabling them to focus on their core product or service offer.  For smaller businesses, however, there is little justification for this premium service.  In many cases, a small consultant which can offer reliable and regular service in blog writing, meme development or PPC campaign management is sufficient, and offers much greater value for money.
  • Creativity:  As a core part of the marketing process, advertising and content development are by nature creative activities.  Younger agencies often take a bold approach to their own business promotion by using unconventional terminology in describing their services, or even individual titles (the CEO of a now-defunct marketing agency in the US had taken the title “Grand Poubar” – perhaps to show that his organization was hip?).  Having a little fun with the process is quite an attractive proposition for many customers, but creativity is serious business and very challenging.  Whatever the CEO calls himself or herself, the important factor is that they take their marketing work seriously.
  • Analytics:  Online marketing is becoming increasingly sophisticated.  It is no longer just about posting a web page and adding some product descriptions.  That is good news for people who are comfortable with numbers.  Collecting information on your online performance, and then turning this information into meaningful analysis which can help to guide future activity is critical to optimizing your online performance.  This type of activity is helpful for businesses that already have a sophisticated marketing plan.  For small and medium-sized businesses, there is little that detailed optimization can do that consistent and frequent online activity (postings, blogs, customer replies, memes and other video/graphics shares) cannot do.  In other words, for SMEs, the key is consistency.  Knowing your customers and tracking some high-level metrics is helpful and important for monitoring the effectiveness of your content, but at this stage in the game, few businesses need in-depth customer analytics, what they really need is consistency.

While all of these points are helpful for social media consultants, what is most important will depend on your business situation.  In summary:

  • Experience brings knowledge and skill, but adaptability to a quickly changing market landscape is even more important.
  • The convenience offered by a one-stop-shop agency is attractive, but also comes at a price.  With a little self-management, businesses can get substantial value for money from smaller, specialized consultants.
  • Creativity is essential, but the working relationship with the consultant is even more important.  Non-creative messages which are relevant to your business and its audience are far more valuable than creativity for the sake of creativity.
  • Data analytics are developing quickly, however they are so far more useful in optimizing a campaign for a very large audience.  Small and medium-sized businesses should first focus on consistency and frequency – on “making noise”.  All other data metrics are vanity.

The rise of story-based marketing

The story format was introduced to social media in 2018 by Snapchat, and soon after the other platforms followed suit.  This unique little approach has been highly popular, particularly among Millennials:  nearly 68% of millennials read stories on Instagram.  On Facebook, it is just under half. 

The immense popularity of this format is also turning heads with social media marketers and content developers.  And why wouldn’t it?  True content development is unique, interesting, personal and original.  Whereas it is easy to forward a meme and hope for a large following to develop, creating online stories is, by its very nature, a personal process.

Stories are more than just writing blogs, they tailor issues and topics to show a personal perspective.  Their ease of creation have been a primary driver of their popularity, but the authenticity is what engages readers and help them form an emotional connection with the writer. 

Story content is short-lived, so businesses which make use of this format can do so as a one-time effort to gauge response, and then if positive, may re-align their marketing budget (most likely weighing its effectiveness against blog writing) to enable the best possible engagement with customers. 

Because stories are of a personal nature, they can be more effectively used to make a personal connection with customers over time.  They are not necessarily calls to action if an immediate online transaction is your primary goal.  Nonetheless, if building relationships with customers over time is seen as a value-added marketing strategy, stories should be considered and then tested as a routine marketing activity.

Back to Basics – Drawing Customers to your Online Presence

Building an online presence is more than just activating a website.  With the popularity of template websites enabled through WordPress (originally intended for frequent bloggers), or DIY website development on platforms such as WIX, the volume of businesses self-managing their online presence exploded.  Along with that there was created a vast wasteland of online content receiving nothing more than the occasional click, often brought upon by a Google search that happened to contain a lucky phrase that matched something on the website.

The fastest and easiest way to bring customers to your online URL is pay-per-click advertisements on Google and other online platforms, including those focusing on social media content such as Facebook (and all the rest).  Without a PPC budget, however, businesses must focus on organic search rankings through an SEO strategy.  Companies which outsource this work find that often times they get what they pay for.  Red Hat SEO techniques – ones which try to cheat the system – frequently produce good short-term positive results, but are eventually red-flagged by the search engine algorithm, and businesses can spend thousands of dollars and many months to restore their credibility in the sight of the search engines.

While an effective SEO campaign takes quite a bit of time or money (or both), low-budget businesses can see positive action with limited investment through a few approaches.

Emails:  Now considered a bit old-fashioned and for many businesses, would require a very manual process to carry out, direct emails can still draw attention, and may be particularly effective if your business or service offer is high-valued with a small base of customers.  Semi-original emails sent out in small volume (less than 10 at a time) are often not flagged as spam by the receiver’s host service, and therefore can serve as an effective way to highlight your business to the recipient. 

Emails are still a great way to communicate with customers, as an easy format with which to include visuals, white papers and other educational content, links to other online resources, and all of that with a personal touch. 

As always, some level of personalization is required, lest your business be seen as just another email spamming enterprise.  Nonetheless, even if a customer does not read your entire message, or for that matter simply deletes most in-coming messages as part of a routine, a personalized subject header can be sufficient to remind customers of your presence and thereby build additional brand equity.

Here is an example of where multi-channel marketing strategies may be most effective.  If you go to all the trouble to send out a personal email to an individual customer, picking up the phone and dialing direct could have a greater impact.  Emails are most effective when they are a follow-up to some other direct communication.  As a simple reminder that your business exists?  Emails can help if they are not perceived as spam.  There is a grey and sometimes very thin line between the two.

Social media:  Once again, multi-channel marketing is important to give your customer a sense of sophistication in your product or service.  Content Savants devotes a significant portion of its attention on social media content development and publishing strategies. 

There is a lot to discuss in this category, however looking at if from the perspective of driving customers to your website, then that is absolutely essential.  Memes and other postings don’t need to always be clever or colorful.  A simple link with a descriptive comment can be sufficient to drive traffic.  Too frequent posting will bore your followers.  Too occasional, and you miss out on the opportunity to provide diverse and creative content. 

Influencers:  Akin to buying an audience, online influencers (including social media influencers or professional bloggers), can be an effective way to reach a niche audience.  Although this type of promotion is not without a cost, the good news is that as influencing grows in prevalence as its own category of online marketing, the niche focus becomes more intense.  What that means for your business marketing efforts is that there are more likely cost-effective options for social media influencers or bloggers, ones who have already attracted and cultivated the audience you are intending to reach. 

While the influencer market remains a cowboy frontier, the most effective way for you to separate the wheat from the chaff is to search online and find social media influencers and bloggers who are relevant to your business.  Otherwise, if your ad campaign is not necessarily targeted to a specific customer group, an accurate user profile – targeting a type of consumer – will be necessary along with matching that user profile to the profile of followers of your intended influencer.  As with many marketing campaigns, accuracy in profiling is often as much an art as it is a science.