Does Social Networking Have a Place in Your Marketing Plan?
By Joe Ferry on Jan 4, 2010 in Featured, Social Networking | comments(2)


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The frenzy surrounding social media in 2009 has created an expectation among some small business owners that it is the magic bullet solution to all their marketing problems. They think that if they just throw up a Facebook Fan Page, get a Twitter account, and post their profile to LinkedIn, the business will start rolling in and they can abandon more traditional tactics.
Wrong.
Certainly, the numbers indicate Social Networking is a hugely popular venue, a place where millions of people gather daily to communicate. According to the online competitive intelligence service Compete.com, social media growth continues to skyrocket. The top three social networks—Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn—collectively received more than 2.5 billion visits in September 2009 alone. Twitter grew by more than 600 percent in 2009, while Facebook grew by 210 percent and LinkedIn by 85 percent.
As of this writing, Google and Yahoo are the only websites that receive more daily traffic than Facebook and the trend suggests that gap is narrowing. In fact, if Facebook were a country, it would be the world’s fourth largest (thanks to John Jantsch of Duct Tape Marketing for that factoid).
Establishing and maintaining an effective Social Networking presence takes more than just opening a few accounts. It take strategy, integration, and persistence to build relationships that eventually will contribute to your bottom line. Don’t even think about using Social Networking for business unless:
You are willing to commit. Effective Social Networking can’t be done in fits and starts. Establish a system and stick to it. If additional opportunities to participate arise, take advantange of them.
You are willing to be useful. Your audience doesn’t care what you had for breakfast or how the boss at work is making your life miserable. Add relevant information to the conversation.
You are willing to be generous with your knowledge. Willingly share your expertise and passion.
You are willing to listen. If all you did was listen and respond to pertinent topics, Social Networking would be a tremendous marketing tool for your business.
You are willing to build relationships. Social networking is not about selling…it’s about giving customers an opportunity to buy by getting them to know, like and trust you.
You are willing to be patient. Social networking takes time. Like a fine wine, Social Networking gets better with age.
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